Saturday, March 28, 2015

MY ELECTION DAY REPORT

Today March 28, 2015 is the elections in Nigeria. We will be electing our President, Senatorial and Members of House of Representatives. I arrived at my Polling Unit @ Ward 6, Unit 16 @ St Maria Gorretti Grammar School in Ikpoba-Okha Local Government Area of Edo State. @ 7.30am. There were already hundreds of people waiting. There are several security operatives here too.

The INEC officials arrived @ 8.15am. They started setting up immediately.
Although the INEC officials were on time but the accreditation the not start till 10.30am. They said they were waiting for their supervisor to open the system up.
 
When they started the accreditation the process became wired up and people started struggling which invents ally resulted. In fighting.
The turnout is very heavy.

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

MY PREDICTIONS FOR THE MARCH 28 GENERAL ELECTIONS

As I promised yesterday that I was going to present my analysis using the Vanguard Newspapers as a guide.
The newspaper gave the following States to GMB. I agree with vanguard position but GEJ will score 25% in many of these states.

Adamawa
Bauchi
Borno
Gombe
Jigawa
Kaduna
Kano
Kastina
Kebbi
Kwara
Niger
Ogun
Osun
Oyo
Yobe
Sokoto
Zamfara


President GEJ will get the following
Abia
Akwa Ibom
Anambra
Bayelsa
Cross River
Delta
Ebonyi
Enugu
Kogi
Nasarawa
Plateau
Rivers
Taraba
Ondo
Benue
Edo

He will score at least 25% in the following states
Imo 
Lagos.
Kaduna   because of Sambo.
Kano      because of Shekerau Minister of Education
Niger
Kwara
Sokoto
Oyo
Ogun
Jigawa.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

I am back

I want to apologies to my numerous readers and well wishers for my not updating you on current happens on recent times. I am fully back.

Aspirants are making their intentions known in their various Local Government Areas.

As the elections for 2015 draws nearer, aspirants for various offices are busing themselves visiting their various LGA's. Among those that have visited the APC Secretariat in Ikpoba- Okha are Hon Ayemenkhue Edokpolo a House of Assembly Aspirant, Mrs Amen Ogbemudia- Uhunmwangho, Mr. Noma Ogbomo also for the House of Assembly. Hon Ohonbqmu has medicated interest for the House of Representative for Ikpoba-Okha and Egor constituency. Why Hon Jim Adun and Hon Samson Osagie are battling for the Senate.

Monday, March 23, 2015

ELECTIONS FEVER GRIPS NIGERIA.

The elections that was originally slated for the 14th of February but was shifted to the 28th of march is finally here. All the political parties are campaign and taking the messages to every nook and crannies in the country. The fear however, is that there might be violence immateriality the results are announced.
According to today's Vanguard Newspapers, They say that the following States are leaning towards General Mohammed Buhari,

Adamawa
Bauchi
Borno
Gombe
Jigawa
Kaduna
Kano
Kastina
Kebbi
Kwara
Niger
Ogun
Osun
Oyo
Yobe
Sokoto
Zamfara

That the following States are leaning towards President Goodluck Jonathan.
Abia
Akwa Ibom
Anambra
Bayelsa
Cross River
Delta
Ebonyi
Enugu
Kogi
Nasarawa
Plateau
Rivers
Taraba
Ondo

Too Close to call
Benue
Edo
Imo
Lagos
My personally analysis will follow later.


Monday, June 16, 2014

More political trouble in Edo State as APC Legislatures Suspends 4 PDP members.

Hell broke loss last week at the Edo State House of Assembly as the APC house members suspends the 4 PDP members who recently defected from the APC to PDP. The suspended members backed with other PDP members went into the House, sat and also suspended the Speaker who is the leader of the APC. As expected a free for all fight broke out and the Police had to come in to maintain peace. The APC went to court, got a interim injunction. Restraining the PDP suspended members from entry the complex of the house of Asmebly. It also stop them from entering the. Official home. Although, they appealed the Judgement but today Monday they went to the house in breach of the judgement. They say it is a kangaroo judgement. At their sitting in the House today they're sorted to playing indoor games as both parties were present in the House chambers.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Political wahala in Edo State

Trouble is brewing in the APC in Edo State. The whole problem started when the party held their ward and local government congress. If you will recall that the ANPP, the CPC & the ACN formed the APC. But before the merger, the ACN had about three major factions with several other lesser factions. The factions where lead by Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu, Dr. Egberamwen Odobo who is the Deputy Governor and the Governors faction. However, as the faction battle persisted the Odubu faction was forced to work with the Governor's factions. It was at the Congress that the Ize-Iyamu's faction was roundly defeated. Being that it is the ward that determines who goes to the LGA, State and Federal. It is also the foundation of who becomes what in the system Like Governors & Presidents. As at press time, the Ize-Iyamu faction has concluded plans to decamp to the PDP. They have even gone as far as to Aso Rock, the Nigeria Presidential seat to meet with President to formalize modality of their coming into the PDP. Another leader of one of the lesser faction, chief Solomon Iyobosa Edebiri had already decamped into the PDP.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Nigerian Soldier beat up a Police woman in the street of Benin City.

Yesterday, March 18, 2014 around 3pm @ the Mega Petrol Station, Omoruyi street @ Sapele Road, just by Mr Biggs. A Hausa Soldier driving a coaster bus conveying what looks like military personnel im mufti, came down from his buses that he parked in the middle of the road and beat up a Police Woman who was controlling the traffic. He slapped her, tore her head open with his belt. I came down from my car and accosted the soldier, The women in the bus were siding with the driver. In my anger I asked him if he could beat up a muslim woman like that? As the argument went on the station DPO @ Adesuwa Police station came in, i went to park my car before I came back they had all cleared the scene. This morning I went back to see the DPO but they said he was on official assignment. I told his deputy that there is need for the police woman & the DPO to make a written report to the Defence Hqters and other military post around here. If this matter is not treated properly the soldier would be tempted to assault another person again. I told them that when we need them to fight Boko Harran he is on the street beaing up a uniformed Policewoman serving the nation.

Time to Engage by Kingsley Omose

Time to Engage
Years back when I resided in a quiet neighborhood in Surulere, Lagos, I had cause to visit Orile-Iganmu, a densely populated and blighted community in the Coker axis of Surulere, and what I saw and experienced there left me tongued tied for over two weeks.
I could not comprehend how Orile-Iganmu, a community about ten minutes drives from the Lagos Island business district, where financial deals and business transactions were done in the billions of Naira, could be so blighted and poverty ridden.
But what was more distressing for me was that Orile-Iganmu was just about thirty minutes walk from the part of Surulere where I was then residing, and it struck me that if for any reason people in Orile-Iganmu were ever to go on rampage to protest their appalling condition, my family was in deep trouble.
Not having the resources at that time to relocate my family from what I considered then to be a real threat to our future wellbeing, I decided that the best option was to engage with residents of the Orile-Iganmu community, become their friend and do the little I could to improve their living conditions.
My thinking was that if Orile-Iganmu was ever to implode and some members of the community were to invade more affluent parts of Surulere, they would pass by my gate, counting me as one of their friends thus sparing me and my family a worse fate that would befall others in my neighborhood.
In my search for engagement opportunities, I began attending the monthly meetings of the Opeloyeru Community Development Association, which was part of Orile-Iganmu that served as the link between the community and Surulere through Opeloyeru road, the main gateway into Orile-Iganmu
The main challenge facing the community then was that roads in Orile-Igamu became rivers of water during and after the raining season, leaving the community flooded and its roads impassable, its economy in doldrums, its people sick, in despair and despondent.
Babatunde Raji Fashola had just been sworn in as executive governor of Lagos State and with his rallying campaign slogan of “Eko Oni Baje”, we decided in the Opeloyeru CDA to take this issue of getting the government to reconstruct Opeloyeru road.
Through civil advocacy visits and series of letters and electronic mails sent to Governor Babatunde Fashola, we were able to bring the plight of the Orile Iganmu community to the governor’s attention resulting in the setting up of a government committee headed by Dr. Jide Idris to look into the matter.
A government delegation led by Dr. Steven Jagun eventually visited and went on an extensive tour of Orile-Iganmu, and representatives of the various community development associations in the community as well as a large number of residents were on hand to welcome them.
The result of all these initial interactions and engagements with the Lagos State government is that seven years later, Orile-Iganmu has undergone massive infrastructure upgrading that has radically transformed the community and in the process improved the quality of life of its residents.
While it is not yet uhuru for the community, one positive outcome has been the blossoming and flourishing of the local economy of Orile-Iganmu, a natural fall out of the fact that many roads are now motorable, leading to the establishment of more businesses, more employment and better living standards.
The quality of houses in the community have also improved and more people are relocating to Orile-Iganmu, as its attraction has always been the proximity to Lagos Island, and with the new express road and railways passing by the community, things are certainly looking better for the formerly blighted community.
To improve the human capacity development of its residents, especially its youth, we formed the Orile-Iganmu Progressive Association, an NGO which has been running a newspaper and free computer training institute in the last five years and has since added a football academy and now a film institute.
Since we started running the free computer training institute, we have observed that university and polytechnic enrolments have drastically increased among our grandaunts, many of whom were secondary school leavers stuck in the sands of time.
With the help of corporate sponsors and sacrificial giving of time and substance by members of OIPA, we have run workshops and trainings for handiwork, leadership training, book club, camping trips for members of our Youth Vanguards, industrial attachments in manufacturing concerns and much more.
Members of the Youth Vanguard currently run a monthly sanitation exercise in Oril-Iganmu community, have become model youths and citizens , regularly invite upstanding speakers for talks and seminars in the community, and many of them who are now in tertiary institutions attend meetings when on holidays.
We have also gotten the Parents Teachers Association of one of the foremost primary schools in Nigeria based in Ikoyi, Lagos to adopt a disadvantaged primary school in Orile-Iganmu, and in the last three years their efforts have transformed the school that has seen government also improving its infrastructure.
You may be wondering by now what is the rationale for this write up, well it is no other than the recent development that has gripped public attention and drawn the ire of Nigerians, where six million young men and women applied for 4,556 vacancies in the Nigeria Immigration Service.
The resulting death of 20 of these young men and women (unofficially 39 of them are said to have died), in various centers across Nigeria, following a stamped in some of the centers were 520,000 out of these six million young men and women had been invited for a screening exercise, sad as it may seem is not what is troubling me.
I am also not troubled that the Ministry of Interior and the Nigeria Immigration Service may have been motivated by profit motives in opening up the application, to fill 4556 vacancies, to six million young men and women who paid N1000 each, and of which only 520,000 were shorted listed for screening.
What is troubling to me is seeing photographs of tens of thousands of young men and women across the various centers where screening was conducted for the 520,000 Nigerians, and the numbing thought that another 5,480,000 did not even make it to the screening exercise and what will become of them.
What is equally troubling to me is that we do not even know the actual number of young men and women beyond the six million, who applied online for the Nigeria Immigration Service vacancies, that are currently unemployed and for how long they have remained so, and how they are keeping body and soul together.
Suddenly, I am feeling as vulnerable as in the days after I visited Orile-Iganmu, when I realized that my family was residing less than thirty minutes walk from a blighted and poverty ridden community which was likely to implode at any minute due to their appalling conditions, and with implications for my family.
Short of relocating my family from Nigeria, which is not even within my contemplation and an escapist approach to the problem, or retreating behind the walls of a heavily gated community, the fact remains that we are living in the midst of tens of millions of unemployed young men and women.
No one knows the tipping point or what will trigger these young men and women, millions of whom are graduates to take the laws into their hands as we are already witnessing in many parts of the North East of Nigeria where religious fundamentalists have possessed their minds to our chagrin and pain.
This is not the time for playing the blame game or pointing accusing fingers at governments at all levels for the high level of unemployment among young men and women, this is the time for an all hands on deck approach to tackling a problem which has the potential to overwhelm us all, this is the time for engagement.
This is why I related the above account of what we were able to collectively achieve in Orile-Iganmu which fell within my area of influence as opposed to it just being within my area of concern, in which case I would have only condemned and pontificated without doing more, and the community may have been worse off today.
We need to individually and collectively creatively engage the mass of young men and women who are currently unemployed or underemployed to keep many of them occupied, so that with eventual government intervention, our efforts will collectively become the seed that drastically curtails the scourge of unemployment in Nigeria.