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Showing posts with label March 11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label March 11. Show all posts

Saturday, 11 March 2017

Here’s The Full List Of Winners At The Zee Cine Awards 2017…Read full details

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The Zee Cine awards took place last night, and saw a lot of big names from the Bollywood fraternity in presence. The star studded evening was attended by Alia Bhatt, Amitabh Bachchan, Salman KhanKareena Kapoor, Anushka Sharma and several others. Also, Bebo performed for the first time on stage after delivering her baby in December.

Check out the full list of winners:

Best Actor: Amitabh Bachchan (Pink)

Best Actress: Alia Bhatt (Udta Punjab)

Best Director : Ram Madhvani (Neerja)

Best Film (Jury): Pink

Viewer’s Choice Best Film: Dangal

Viewer’s Choice Best Actor (Female): Anushka Sharma (Sultan)

Viewer’s Choice Best Actor (Male): Salman Khan (Sultan)

Best Debutant (Male): Jim Sarbh (Neerja)

Best Debutant (Female): Ritika Singh (Saala Khadoos)

Best Debut Director: Aniruddha Roy Choudhury (Pink)

Best Actor in a Comic Role: Rishi Kapoor (Kapoor & Sons)

Best Supporting Actress: Shabana Azmi (Neerja)

Best Supporting Actor: Rishi Kapoor (Kapoor & Sons)

Best Song: Channa Mereya (Ae Dil Hai Mushkil)

Best Background Score: Airlift

Best Music: Ae Dil Hai Mushkil

Best Playback Singer (Female): Neha Bhasin (Jag Ghoomeya, Sultan)

Best Playback Singer (Male): Arijit Singh (Ae Dil Hai Mushkil title track)

Best Lyricist: Irshad Kamil (Jag Ghoomeya)

Best Sound Design: Sultan

Best Choreography: Kala Chashma by Bosco-Caeser (Baar Baar Dekho)

Best Cinematography: Shivaay

Best Dialogue: Pink

Best Production Design: Neerja

Best Editing: Neerja

Best Visual Effects: Shivaay

Best Action: Shivaay

Congratulations to all the winners!

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Dakuku assures US on compliance with international code

Overah challenges Omo-Agege, Iwurhie over Sapele/Abraka/Agbor Road project

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A former member representing Sapele/Okpe and Uvwie Constituency in the House of Representatives (2007 – 2011), Hon. Joyce Overah, says he facilitated the rehabilitation of the Sapele/Eku/Abraka/Agbor Road project when he was in the House and not Hon. Evans Iwurhie currently representing Ughelli North and South Constituency in the House or the incumbent senator representing Delta Central, Ovie Omo-Agege.

Iwurhie and Omo-Agege have been at loggerheads over who facilitated the ongoing project.  Overah, who spoke at the weekend, said: “I was actually the person who facilitated it.”

He went on: “That project has always been in the budget of the federal government since I facilitated it between 2007 and 2011. The federal government initially awarded it at the cost of N2b and it was to commence at AT&P in Sapele to Amukpe, near Sapele, and to Eku/Abraka/Agbor and end at Ewu, when Uffot Ekaette was Minister of Niger Delta and Elder Godsday Orubebe was Minister of State.

“As of that time, the project was divided into four parts of N500m each with a promise that more funds would be released to it. I was to supervise from Sapele to Aghalokpe axis, Hon. Halims Agoda to oversee Ethiope West and Ethiope East axis, Hon. Mercy Amonai  to supervise from Ubiaruku to Agbor while Hon. Doris Amonai was to supervise from Agbor to Ewu axis.”

“Unfortunately, it was yet to commence when Ekaette left office and, when Orubebe came in as Minister of Niger Delta, he chose to face the East/West Road first, and left that project. That  is how the current government inherited it and since the Delta State government has completed the AT&P to Amukpe axis, the newly awarded contract starts from Amukpe to Ewu.”

Meanwhile, some  residents along the road have erected all kinds of idols and illegal structures along the road with a view to claiming compensation from the company handling the project.

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PDP crisis rages despite Jonathan’s intervention

We took Otukpo thieves out of business —Ali, Sole Administrator

The Head-to-Knee Pose

We still hope to find our families – Boko Haram child survivors

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More than 30,000 children have lost or been separated from their parents during insurgency which has left nearly two million uprooted after fleeing Boko Haram in north-eastern Nigeria”

Running his fingers over the wide scars on his knee and thigh, 13-year-old Usman recalled the moment he thought he would die.

The boy was fleeing a Boko Haram attack on his village in northeast Nigeria with his mother last year when two militants knocked him to the ground, and approached him wielding knives.

“I was scared that I would die … that I would never see my mother again,” said Usman, explaining how he limped to a nearby camp for the displaced in Bama town in Borno State, the heart of the jihadists’ brutal seven-year bid to create an Islamic state.

For two months, Usman heard nothing about his mother until two aid workers brought good news. They had tracked her down to her brother’s house in the nearby city of Maiduguri.

“We cried when we saw each other, there was so much joy,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, sitting next to his beaming mother, Biba, in the cramped, dusty yard of his uncle’s home.

More than 30,000 children like Usman have lost or been separated from their parents during an insurgency which has left nearly two million people uprooted after fleeing Boko Haram.

While two-thirds of these children are being cared for by a relative, the remainder – around 10,000 – are forced to fend for themselves, according to the U.N. children’s agency (UNICEF).

With many of them relying on the help of local communities or displaced families to survive, aid workers are striving to reunite these solitary children with their parents.

But tracing and tracking down relatives can take several months – leaving them prey to child marriage, sexual abuse and forced labour in the meantime, aid agencies say.

“Children may even resort to begging, hawking and transactional sex to survive,” said Rachel Harvey, chief of child protection for UNICEF.

TRACING AND TRACKING

When children arrive in a camp or community without their parents, or alone, they are quickly referred to local aid groups which carry out family tracing and reunification programmes.

Aid workers and volunteers take down as many details as possible from the children and share the information with their colleagues across northeast Nigeria, who go from camp to camp, community to community, reading out names and following leads.

But with three-quarters of the 1.8 million people displaced by Boko Haram living in communities across six states, rather than in camps, the work can be arduous and time-consuming, said Myriem El Khatib of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

“It is much easier to trace relatives living in IDP (internally displaced persons) camps as people tend to gather together based on the village they fled from,” said El Khatib, co-ordinator of the ICRC’s Restoring Family Links programme.

“Outside of the camps, the displacement pattern is more random, and there are many areas which we still cannot access due to the insurgency. The average process takes many months.”

Even when parents or relatives are tracked down and told about their children, reuniting them is not always simple.

The makeshift foster families and caregivers who look after unaccompanied children may refuse to let them go, according to the Centre for Community Health and Development (CHAD).

Some people send the children to work or attempt to marry them off for money, while others hope having another child under their care will result in more humanitarian aid, said Shadrach Adawara, family tracing and reunification officer for CHAD.

“In one case, an uncle refused to release his brother’s children, because he wanted to marry the eldest daughter off.”

“Thankfully, a call between them resolved the issue, and the children returned to their father,” said Adawara, adding that aid workers regularly check up on reunited children, and refer them to services from healthcare to psychosocial support.

 ‘TEARS OF HAPPINESS’

In some cases, children may decide not to go back to their parents or relatives, several tracing officers said.

They may have suffered abuse or had been forced to work by their parents, or decide to spare their struggling families the added burden.

When 17-year-old Fatima, a former Boko Haram captive who escaped after two years while heavily pregnant, was reunited with her mother, they could not stop crying and hugging – having presumed each dead for so long.

But Fatima soon realised she and her baby could not stay with her mother and younger siblings in her hometown of Monguno.

“I saw the poverty, and many responsibilities of my mother … and decided it would be better for me and my baby boy to live with my older brother in this (Bakassi) IDP camp,” Fatima said, cradling and rocking her two-year-old to sleep.

While Fatima is relieved to be with her brother, she is one of the lucky few. Only some 400 children – out of 32,000 living alone or without a parent – have been reunited with their families so far, according to figures from UNICEF.

“It can be very frustrating because it can take so long,” said El Khatib of the ICRC. “But it is worth it when you see the emotion from the families … whether it is tears of happiness or just a pat on the arm and saying: ‘Nice to have you home’.”

Back at her brother’s house in Maiduguri, Biba fusses over 13-year-old Usman – much to his embarrassment – as she recalls the day they were reunited after two long months.

“I could not stop smiling,” she said. “Everybody in the neighbourhood saw my face, and knew he was finally back.”

Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters that covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience.

 

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Lagos’ chance to join the league of world’s cleanest cities

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By Gbenga Coker

One of the major challenges of cosmopolitan cities in the world is  environmental pollution. What invariably separates the men (clean cities) from the boys (filthy cities) is how  effective,  and even preemptive,  multiethnic  cities  are in managing their waste disposal processes. That is the bedrock of a clean society. For Lagos, with its titanicpopulation, coupled with  the  congested city  centres, which had given rise to satellite towns and slums,  the inability to maintain  statewide  pristine  environmental sanitation has been a serious clog in the wheel of progress.

Though attempts  were  made in the past by successive administrations in the  state  to tackle the problems headlong,  the  issue of proper waste disposal  and transformation of Lagos into  an immaculate environment,  proved a  hard nut to crack. The desire for a cleaner Lagos  pigheadedly remaineda mirage. While concerted efforts were made to make the state live up to its sobriquet, the Centre of Excellence,  by making its environment cleaner and serene, little result was achieved as  Lagos state continued to expand  to accommodate itsgrowing population.

The waterways and canals had been turned into  dumpsites, while  the ugly sight  of  people defecating openly into the  canals and drainages  became a  routine. Areas designated as  public parks and  open spaces,  were  turned to safe havens for criminals. All these  aberrations largely turned the state to an eyesore and  one of  the dirtiest in the country despite being the commercial nerve  centre, not only of Nigeria but the West  Africa  sub-region.

Apparently determined to reverse the  horrid  trend, the administration of  Asiwaju  Bola Ahmed  Tinubu  set up Kick  Against  Indiscipline (KAI) to ensure  a  neater and cleaner Lagos. With the establishment of KAI, it became an offence to litter the environment and failure to properly dispose waste was no longer tolerated. The  culture  of indiscriminate throwing of waste out of vehicles abated, as commercial vehicles were mandated to provide  wastebaskets.

Equally, the Lagos State Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) was repositioned to offer quality and timely services in the area of waste disposal, while dumpsters were provided in major locations for the populace to dispose their waste.  The fear of  KAI officials and their mobile courtsbecame the beginning of wisdom for  Lagosians  who realized  that  failure  to  observe environmental norms  would henceforth have  dire consequences.

Lagos residents suddenly realized that the  task to keep  a tidier Lagos was no longer a joke.

In the area of environmental pollution, emission test on vehicles was introduced and made compulsory, while a great leap was achieved in curbing blockage of the waterways, drainages and canals with refuse. No doubt,  the steps by Lagos  towards  a  garbage-free environment were on a sound footing.

Consequently,  the  Babatunde  Raji  Fashola  (SAN) administration concentrated on the beautification of Lagos  landscape, with a view to creating  an aesthetic, serene and idyllic environment so that Lagos could wear the look it deserved.

Obviously determined to consolidate on  the efforts of his predecessors  in  actualising  a cleaner Lagos, the incumbent administration of  Akiwunmi  Ambode, decided to raise the ante with the inauguration of  the  Cleaner Lagos Initiative.

To bridge the lacuna and cater for the inadequacies that had  bedeviled  prior attempts by Lagos State to  achieve a cleaner environment,  Governor  Ambode  pushed and ensured necessary legal reforms (legislation) were  put in place. So,with  the new  Environmental Management and Protection Bill, passed by the Lagos State House of Assembly, Kick  AgainstIndiscipline (KAI), will be transformed into the Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Corps Agency.

This agency will spearhead enforcement of the stringent penalties imposed on defaulters. This bill, which has been accented to by  Ambode, would ensure, among others, that structures on sewage systems without approval  aredemolished, all commercial drivers have litter bins in their vehicles, enforce the ban on street trading as well as ensurethat residents obtain permits before sinking boreholes.

Meanwhile, when KAI officers are fully integrated into LASECORPS, the agency will be tasked with monitoring and maintaining surveillance along the highways, streets and public drainages, canals, markets and parks and will have the primary responsibility of ensuring that citizens  fulfill  their civic duty by paying the Public Utilities Levy- a property-based charge, payable by property occupants for the management of solid and liquid waste, wastewater and environmental intervention for Lagos State.

In the same vein, LASECORPS  will be supported by PUMAU (Public Utilities Monitoring Assurance Unit) a unit that will have oversight responsibility by using innovative monitoring tools to ensure the new standards are effectively enforced.

Depending on the nature of the offence,  defaulters of the  new  laws will face stiff penalties  ranging from N250,000  to N5,000,000 and/or imprisonment.  The state government has deliberately set a stringent penalty in order to discourage environmental misdemeanor and consciously navigate an attitudinal change towards acceptable ecological norms.  The  message is clear, mess up Lagos and pay  through the nose.

On the mandatory provision of litterbins in commercial vehicles, the law expressly says: “If the driver fails to provide the litter bin, the driver will also be penalized alongside the passenger or the occupier of the vehicle who commits the offence”.

On all illegal structures built on the sewage systems without approval,  the expressly stated  that  such structures will be demolished.

Also in the new law, anyone who wants to sink borehole or any structure connected with the supply of water must obtain permit from the office of drainage services.

Though, the new environmental bill was meant to ensure a cleaner Lagos, tackle air  and water pollution, prevent diseases and halt  the deterioration of the environment to avert advert effects  on socio-economic activities, the  attendant  benefit of creating about 27,500 new jobs for teeming  Lagosians,  will indeed be a welcome relief.

With this giant leap towards ensuring a  well protected  and dirt-free environment, Lagos, under the leadership of Ambode, despite  its  huge population  (human and vehicular),  is set to provide the best salubrious environment for Nigerians to live in.

 

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How that well-behaved son of yours could be addicted to porn!

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By Bunmi Sofola

MARTIN stands out as an exceptionally polite, thoughtful young man the moment you meet him. With a master’s degree under his belt, he is everything you would hope for in a son or future son-in- law. But it is a testament to the pervasiveness of pornography that, by 15, Martin was addicted to hard-core internet filth. Having grown up in the first generation of children with free access to internet porn, Martin is speaking out to say that not only must we warn our sons about the

corrosive effects of porn – we must also tell our daughters. Because, according to him: “Porn has become more than the most powerful form of sex education in young people’s lives. It has also become a template for the way young men view and treat women.

“Porn brought me to the brink, triggering anxiety, depression and invasive sexual thoughts about every woman I set eyes on. It also had an incredible derogatory impact on the way I viewed every member of the opposite sex. Porn not only destroyed my peace of mind. It stopped me seeing women as human beings.” Martin believe that if this can happen to him, a well brought up, highly intelligent young man, it can surely happen to anyone. Raised in a happy home, Martin was a friendly, outgoing child who loved sport and excelled academically. As he entered puberty, like most boys his age, he stared becoming curious about the opposite sex. “The difference was that I hit adolescence just at the time when porn started being more easily and quickly available on the internet.

“My family had a computer and after school I had an hour to kill before my mum came home from her job as a lecturer. I had been introduced to women with no clothes on through my older brother’s girlie mags, so it was not long before I was drawing the curtains and exploring what else I could find for free on the web. By the age of 15, I had been given a computer for my school work, allowing me to surf the internet in the privacy of my bedroom. Initially, I viewed ‘normal’ sex scenes. But before long the internet led me down dark paths never available in the days when the only access to porn was through top shelf magazines. My taste for porn became insatiable. What gave me a kick and satisfied my craving one day didn’t work the next.

“During my teens, the internet went from dial-up to broadband and the static images of sex turned into sites featuring pages upon pages of live- action video clips. Before long, I was led into watching more explicit stuff to get the same fix-scenes filmed to look like rape, and degrading clips of guys pasting round the same girl. As I worked hard at school and got good marks in my exams, my parents never saw any reason to check upon me, so they never fitted computer filters. They had no idea what was freely available. I often swapped stories of the extreme acts I had seen with my friends at school the next day. I hid it from my parents, of course, but among my friends there was no guilt or embarrassment. I counted myself lucky to be growing up at a time when you could access porn for free at the touch of a button. There was no downside that I could see.

“Sadly, there was already a price to be paid – and not just for me. Even before I’d dated my first girlfriend, porn was colouring my view of women. It had an incredibly damaging impact on the way I viewed girls because the videos portrayed them as objects whose role was to be used and dominated by men. After I lost my virginity at 16, I compared every girl I slept with to those I’d seen on the screen. I’d make fun of them with my friends if their bodies did not live up to my high ideals. At the university I had even more freedom to indulge my habit, and began looking at porn up to four times a day. Yet the girls who fell for my innocent looks had no idea how much porn affected the way I treated them. Sex to me was never about intimacy or affection. I saw it as the opportunity to play out what I had seen on screen.

“I found it incredible that I never met much resistance to my request. Girls seemed to know what I expected – probably from seeing porn themselves. And, surrounded by other young men who grew up with the same influences none of my behaviour seemed unusual. All my mates acted the same. We all put down women with the same judgemental comments. It became a challenge to see how much we could get girls to do so we could brag about it. We persuaded girls to send naked pictures of themselves that we promised to keep secret, but which we kept on our phones and then showed each other.

“At 25, and already with a master’s degree, I landed a job I was extremely proud of. Yet, Instead of feeling on top of the world, I was becoming concerned about the grip porn had over me for it had started to affect my mental well being. As well as making me more demanding of women, it also made me more critical of myself. I was 15 when I realised I was never going to match up to the bulked-up men with 12in manhoods I saw on my computer. As a result, I felt so ashamed I tried to avoid being seen naked in the shower after sports. Months after I started work the insecurity that I was not good enough became worse. I felt so insecure I suffered bouts of impotency when I had

sex. I would then be so panicked that I would spend the evening after I got home from work searching the web for new clips to arouse me and reassure me nothing was wrong. Afterwards, I felt an incredible low – I felt degraded and alone.

“Pornography had warmed its way so far into my brain that it affected my thoughts when I saw a woman. I had developed such an underwear fetish that if I so much as glimpsed a woman’s bra strap, I would start fantasising. If I met a lady who was much older or married and whom I had no sexual interest in, unwelcome images of her in a sexual situation would pop into my head. I kept it a secret, but inside I was depressed. I had also given up hope of ever finding love. I believed relationships were meaningless.

“In a bid to free myself from my porn addiction, I started going to church with a friend where I also made new friends. I was made to realise that sex was something precious between two people. I was able to talk to people who accepted what I had done and supported me nevertheless. I haven’t looked at porn in three years and it’s been a hard fight to break free. Until recently I still had flashbacks of some of the videos I saw. That is why I’m deeply concerned about the effect freely available porn may have on the next generation, who can view 24 hours a day on smart phones. I frequently meet youngsters who think nothing of showing each other graphic images on their phones of girls who think they have to pose naked to be liked.

“Like I did, these boys don’t see porn as a bad thing – not yet anyway. I want to tell this generation, and the next, that porn is not harmless fun. I am scared for the girls growing up with men who behaved the way I did. It hurts in more ways than people realise and can do untold damage.”

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OBJ to deliver church anniversary lecture

I dream of a Lagos without connectivity challenges, dumpsites waiting to explode —Gov. Ambode

‘Buhari fit to resume work tomorrow’  (Read full details)

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President Muhammadu Buhari is fit to resume work tomorrow, after spending 51 days medical vacation in the United Kingdom, a source in the Presidency has said.

The source, who is conversant with the president’s medical history, at the weekend dismissed the rumour of the President’s incapacitation on account of his declaration that Vice President Yemi Osinbajo will continue to function for more weeks, saying President Buhari was as fit as a fiddle.

President Buhari on his return to the Presidential Villa on Friday morning said in remarks to members of the Federal Executive Council and military chiefs, at the First Lady’s Conference Room at the Presidential Villa that “I am feeling much better now. There may however be need for further follow up within some weeks. I deliberately came back towards the weekend, so that the Vice President will continue and I will continue to rest.

That understanding was later reversed towards evening of Friday, when Presidential sources hinted the President will resume tomorrow. That generated reactions, with some Nigerians expressing doubt whether the President has fully recovered to commence rigorous state duties.

Special Adviser to the President on media and publicity, Femi Adesina, in a tweet on his handle at noon last Friday, ‎said the President would transmit a letter to the National Assembly to make his return to work formal, and constitutional.

Meanwhile, Buhari has appealed to Nigerians not to bother visiting the villa to welcome him.  He said, “rather than sending delegations to Abuja to welcome me, may I appeal to our people to continue to pray for the country’s unity, progress and prosperity.”

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Troops kill two Boko Haram terrorists, soldier feared dead, two others missing (Read full details)

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One Soldier was feared killed and two others missing during a fierce gun-battle between troops of Operation Lafiya Dole and remnants of Boko Haram insurgents around the Gwari/Ganye axis of Borno State.

One Soldier was feared killed and two others missing during a fierce gun-battle between troops of Operation Lafiya Dole and remnants of Boko Haram insurgents around the Gwari/Ganye axis of Borno State.

Spokesman of Nigerian Army, Brig-Gen. Sani Usman, disclosed that the clearance battle, which lasted for over two hours, also led to the injuring of an Army officer and 13 soldiers, before they were evacuated to Maiduguri for treatment.

In a statement made available to reporters yesterday, Usman said two Boko Haram terrorists were killed, explaining: “This occurred when our troops were advancing towards Sa’ada village in their heightened efforts to clear the remnants of Boko Haram terrorists in some locations within the area.”

He said the wounded soldiers were in stable condition, adding that concerted effort was being made to recover the two others missing in action.
He further revealed that when the troops met heavy presence of Boko

Haram terrorists in the area, they engaged them and destroyed the terrorists’ makeshift camps at Gwari and Ganye villages. “The troops had to withdraw to Forward Operation Base at Kerenoa,” Usman added, noting, “to sustain the tempo of the clearance operations of terrorists hiding in remote areas and some villages, troops of Operation Lafiya Dole, have been carrying out ambushes, raids, cordon and search operations in the theatre and North-East generally.”

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Joy Bewaji peels marriage onions in Wedding Blues…Read full details

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A scene from Joy Isi Bewaji’s Wedding Blues. PHOTO: BusinessDay

What is the classic definition of marriage in Africa, nay Nigeria? To whom is the woman married – just the husband, or his entire family? What is the bride or wife’s role in marriage? In an era where whether to cook for the husband or not has assumed such a heated topic on social media, what exactly is the role expected of the modern Nigerian woman in a marriage? Importantly perhaps, what is the man’s expectation of his wife? Not least worth considering is, what vibe does a woman perceive from her would-be husband? Is it a partnership of equals or master-servant?

These were some of the core issues that played out at the performance of Joy Isi Bewaji’s Wedding Blues last Sunday on the last day of British Council Lagos Theatre Festival 2017 at Freedom Park. It was produced by Bikiya Graham-Douglas’ Beeta Universal Arts Foundation (BUAF), with Festival Director, Lagos Theatre Festival, Mr. Kenneth Uphopho, directing. It was one of the festival’s main plays, having won the British Council’s Play Writing Competition ahead of the festival. It was designed to nurture a new generation of playwrights, as the art is fast becoming endangered. It was a flurry of dramatic performances on the last day of the festival that brought theatre-lovers and critics from around the world.

Bedecked in her scintillating traditional wedding attire, Temi (Damilola Adegbite-Attoh) is the bride of choice, trained abroad and well exposed. As she sits admiring herself in the mirror with the makeup artist fusing over her, her mind is a boil. Her mother’s joyous singing at the glorious day of her daughter does little to put Temi’s mind at ease. If anything, her mother’s marriage tutorials worsens Temi’s mood and gives her instant headache to which, though everybody desires a great marriage for her, nobody offers her common aspirin.

Her mother, Omobolanle (Bola Haastrup), is the dutiful wife, who reels off the duties of a wife to her daughter on her wedding day, about waking up early to sweep, clean, cook and be at the beck and call of her husband at all times and about being subservient to her in-laws so she could occupy a good spot in their hearts. In fact, it’s all about what the bride should do to keep her home and secure her husband. Even Temi’s objections to the tutorials and the place of love in her mother’s checklist is waved off as idle talk. For the mother, being a dutiful wife is all there is to it.

Temi’s mother dismisses the mistreatment she receives from her father, as nothing. Such mistreatment, she says, does not distract her from her duty as a wife!

Temi’s sister (Osas Ighodaro Ajibade) has her own peculiar advice for the bride-to-be. Temi must get pregnant at once; in fact, it has to happen on the wedding night so Temi can secure a strong foothold on her husband’s home so other roving women do not snatch her man from her. She waves off Temi’s objection, preferring instead to pursue a higher degree and career. Temi’s sister is a victim of her husband’s chronic womanising. In spite of having a child for her husband shortly after marriage, her husband went ahead to impregnate another woman. In fact, Temi’s sister is a bitter woman on account of her husband’s infidelity to which she promptly warns her sister to be wary.

Not least in the list of advisers is Temi’s Aunty (Bikiya Graham-Douglas), a radical feminist on the move, who does not see the value in a man beyond occasionally getting one into her bed when she needs to. She is a wild businesswoman, who lives large on her own means and terms; she believes men are a waste of time. She can’t stand their suffocating grip on women unfortunate enough to succumb to the marriage trap and be wives. She prefers to live free from any such encumbrances as a husband. Temi is wide-eyed at her revelations.

Temi’s father Bankole, (Toyin Osinaike) is a vain man, who desperately needs his daughter to properly connect to the rich family she is marrying into. He assures his daughter that having as many sons as possible is a sure way of cornering a large chunk of her husband’s family wealth to herself and him! And by the time he invites the pastor (Paul Morgan) to pray for her daughter marriage success rather than offer her the aspirin she needs to relieve her headache, Temi is confused enough to want out of a marriage yet to hold. She feels unable to play the impossible, burdensome roles she is being expected to play as wife, as they would crush her ambitions in life for which she got education.

But that is when her husband-to-be, Sola (Patrick Diabuah) walks in. Her stern look is cause for concern. When she blurts out to him why she is pulling out of the marriage, Sola, on bended knees, reassures her and allays her fears. Sola tells her he wants a wife to love and not some domestic help to slave for him. Reassured, Temi walks into her marriage with confidence, knowing that her husband will give her the room to be her own woman and live her dreams even as a wife.

BEWAJI’S concern in Wedding Blues is the unabating patriarchy tendencies in African, nay Nigerian societies. Should a modern, educated girl (bride and wife) still be dominated by the concerns that plagued her mother, and even grandmother? Should wives still cower before their husbands, a little removed from the status of domestic helps? What kind of space should a wife enjoy in her husband’s home? Are men scaring off women from the marriage tangle because of men’s mean hand that objectifies women? Do men marry for the complementarity reasons or other less noble ones?

Bewaji posits that women these days are not ready to take second place positions and rightly so, too. A union of equals is what women crave and it would be silly for men to continue on the misogynist path. It hasn’t quit led anywhere before; it would lead nowhere now either.

However, Wedding Blues’ plot structure does not build up to that dramatic climax that creates enough anxiety in the audience before its resolution comes. Having been worked up by the anxiety created by her mother, aunty, sister, pastor and father, Temi is scared enough to call off the marriage. But it is only the groom who is made aware of her fears. He is the only one she informs of her decision to call off the marriage. Those who scared her are ignorant of it. Whereas it is they, in fact – her mother, aunty, sister, pastor and father – who ought to be sufficiently thrown in a fainting fit, particularly her mother and father, for daring to call off the marriage. Her parents are more invested in the marriage other than the reasons Temi wants to marry. But they are not made to fret, not even made aware of Temi’s fears; they are spared the trauma of her decision.

That would have been the conflict point before a resolution is attained. Indeed, some audience members were wondering if the play had ended; they still looked forward for more, but it never came. But it is imagined that Wedding Blues is a work in progress and needed adjustments can still be made. But clearly, Bewaji has placed her fingers on a disturbing social situation just as her other play, Story of My Vagina. Indeed, they are both complementary plays that deal with the issues of how men can fully embrace women for who and what they are without punches always being pulled.

Vía Uzomedia http://ift.tt/2myK4re


Scientists grow potato under Mars-like conditions in Peru

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"Preliminary results are positive," the International Potato Center (CIP) said this week after a potato grew under simulated Mars atmospheric conditions in an experiment in Lima.

Potatoes on Mars? Scientists are reporting promising results growing the tuber under conditions that mimic the Red Planet in an experiment in Peru linked to US space agency NASA.

“Preliminary results are positive,” the International Potato Center (CIP) said this week after a potato grew under simulated Mars atmospheric conditions in an experiment in Lima.

The CIP, in a report, said a potato was planted in a specially constructed CubeSat contained environment built by engineers from the University of Engineering and Technology in Lima.

The experiment ran from February 14 to March 5.

“Growing crops under Mars-like conditions is an important phase of this experiment,” said Julio Valdivia-Silva, a Peruvian astrobiologist at UTEC in Lima who previously worked at NASA.

“If the crops can tolerate the extreme conditions that we are exposing them to in our CubeSat, they have a good chance to grow on Mars,” he said, adding that several rounds of experiments will be conducted to find out which potato varieties do best.

Potatoes, one of the world’s largest food crops, are believed to have first been cultivated by the Inca Indians in Peru around 8,000 to 5,000 BC.

The potential ability of potatoes to grow under such conditions could signal promise for food supplies under climate change and extreme environments.

“The results indicate that our efforts to breed varieties with high potential for strengthening food security in areas that are affected, or will be affected by climate change, are working,” said CIP potato breeder Walter Amoros.

The custom environment for the Potatoes on Mars project was based upon designs and advice provided by NASA.

The scientists “concluded that future Mars missions that hope to grow potatoes will have to prepare soil with a loose structure and nutrients to allow the tubers to obtain enough air and water to allow it to tuberize,” CIP said.

They used very dry soils found in the southern Peruvian desert, noting they are the most Mars-like soils found on Earth.

The CIP experiment is set to last five years.

Vía The Guardian Nigeria http://ift.tt/2nhNmxh


‘Buhari fit to resume work tomorrow’ 

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President Muhammadu Buhari is fit to resume work tomorrow, after spending 51 days medical vacation in the United Kingdom, a source in the Presidency has said.

The source, who is conversant with the president’s medical history, at the weekend dismissed the rumour of the President’s incapacitation on account of his declaration that Vice President Yemi Osinbajo will continue to function for more weeks, saying President Buhari was as fit as a fiddle.

President Buhari on his return to the Presidential Villa on Friday morning said in remarks to members of the Federal Executive Council and military chiefs, at the First Lady’s Conference Room at the Presidential Villa that “I am feeling much better now. There may however be need for further follow up within some weeks. I deliberately came back towards the weekend, so that the Vice President will continue and I will continue to rest.

That understanding was later reversed towards evening of Friday, when Presidential sources hinted the President will resume tomorrow. That generated reactions, with some Nigerians expressing doubt whether the President has fully recovered to commence rigorous state duties.

Special Adviser to the President on media and publicity, Femi Adesina, in a tweet on his handle at noon last Friday, ‎said the President would transmit a letter to the National Assembly to make his return to work formal, and constitutional.

Meanwhile, Buhari has appealed to Nigerians not to bother visiting the villa to welcome him.  He said, “rather than sending delegations to Abuja to welcome me, may I appeal to our people to continue to pray for the country’s unity, progress and prosperity.”

Vía The Guardian Nigeria http://ift.tt/2mxDAqA


Troops kill two Boko Haram terrorists, soldier feared dead, two others missing

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One Soldier was feared killed and two others missing during a fierce gun-battle between troops of Operation Lafiya Dole and remnants of Boko Haram insurgents around the Gwari/Ganye axis of Borno State.

One Soldier was feared killed and two others missing during a fierce gun-battle between troops of Operation Lafiya Dole and remnants of Boko Haram insurgents around the Gwari/Ganye axis of Borno State.

Spokesman of Nigerian Army, Brig-Gen. Sani Usman, disclosed that the clearance battle, which lasted for over two hours, also led to the injuring of an Army officer and 13 soldiers, before they were evacuated to Maiduguri for treatment.

In a statement made available to reporters yesterday, Usman said two Boko Haram terrorists were killed, explaining: “This occurred when our troops were advancing towards Sa’ada village in their heightened efforts to clear the remnants of Boko Haram terrorists in some locations within the area.”

He said the wounded soldiers were in stable condition, adding that concerted effort was being made to recover the two others missing in action.
He further revealed that when the troops met heavy presence of Boko

Haram terrorists in the area, they engaged them and destroyed the terrorists’ makeshift camps at Gwari and Ganye villages. “The troops had to withdraw to Forward Operation Base at Kerenoa,” Usman added, noting, “to sustain the tempo of the clearance operations of terrorists hiding in remote areas and some villages, troops of Operation Lafiya Dole, have been carrying out ambushes, raids, cordon and search operations in the theatre and North-East generally.”

Vía The Guardian Nigeria http://ift.tt/2mOakOM


How we designed PDP to rule for 60 Years, says IBB (Read full details)

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Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida

Former military president, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida has said that right from inception, the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was conceptualised to rule Nigeria for 60 years and beyond.

The former leader stated this, when the chairman and members of the party’s strategy and intra-party committee paid him a visit at his Uphill mansion in Minna, yesterday.

He said retired military officers were solidly behind the party. “From formation stage, I saw the PDP as IRA (Irish Republican Army). We are the military wing of the PDP. We took a lot of interest. When I say we, I mean my boss, T.Y. Danjuma, Obasanjo, Gen. Aliyu Mohammed and I. We started it,” he explained. “I thank God we came up with the old concept. I believe one of our compatriots, who said PDP would rule for 60 years.”

Babangida expressed confidence that the party can still rule for 60 years, if they put their house in order. Presenting a copy of the report to the former leader, chairman of the committee, Professor Jerry Gana called on Babangida and other well meaning Nigerians to prevail on the ruling APC to stop muzzling opposition parties, with the aim of turning the country into a one-party state.

Vía Uzomedia http://ift.tt/2nbRKRL


IPMAN protests illegal increase in fuel pump price, adulteration (Read full details)

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PHOTO: GOOGLE.COM/SEARCH

The Imo State Head of Operations of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), under the office of the National Coordinator of Anti Pipeline Vandalism and Product Adulteration, Mr. Henschel C. Nwaozuzu, has sent a petition to the Imo State Commissioner of Police, Taiwo Lakanu, to investigate the alleged unwholesome practices of some independent petroleum marketers in the state.

In the petition, Nwaozuzu urged the officials of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), to step up its duties and sanction the offenders. He alleged that some fuel stations located in Owerri metropolis and environs, sell either above pump price or adulterated products or engage in meter adjustment and racketeering of petroleum products.

The Guardian survey revealed that some stations were dispensing petroleum products at above the stipulated prices.

The State Chairman, Independent Fuel Marketers, Chris Amadi, said the products were purchase and transported at higher costs.

Vía Uzomedia http://ift.tt/2nbKAg6


New FAO report projects millions of Nigerians going hungry (Read full details)

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A food retail market in Lagos SOURCE: Google

Govt Denies Threat To Food Security

The newly launched United Nation Food and Agriculture Cadre Harmonisé report has revealed that nine million people in 16 northern states may experience food insecurity between the period of March and August 2017.

The investigation carried out in 16 states of Adamawa, Borno, Yobe, Kastina, Kebbi, Sokoto, Gombe, Bauchi, Kano, Kaduna, Plateau, Niger, Taraba, Zamfara, Benue and Jigawa revealed that 10 percent of the population in the states might be affected.

The report explained that seven million people, representing seven percent of the population in the 16 states would be food insecure between March and May, while nine million people would be affected between June and August.

The report admitted that though the level of food insecurity has largely improved since last Cadre Harmonisé analysis in the country, however, the problem is still alarming in Northern Nigeria and humanitarian assistance needs to be escalated in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe States to save lives, as well as reduce consumption deficit of the worst affected populations.

It further stressed the need to scale up humanitarian assistance in other 13 states Crisis experiencing levels of food insecurity (Cadre Harmonisé phase 3).

The report attributed the food insecurity in the country to the consequences of conflict in the North-eastern states, which have led to an increased IDPs influx and movement, as well as disruption of market supply and infrastructures compounded with high food prices caused by currency inflation, which have significantly limited the population’s access to food.

The FAO Officer in Charge, Patrick David, who spoke during the presentation of the report in Abuja, said assisting the most vulnerable people and increasing households’ resilience to food security threats will contribute to saving many lives.

He said: “It’s very important to know who these people are, where they are and what they need. The Cadre Harmonise would be very helpful in making strong recommendations to decision makers to know how much food and livelihood support to be provided for them.”

The Deputy Country Director, World Food Program, Douglas Mercado said Cadre Harmonise would provide the basis for them to work with. The federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development has, however, denied the report by the Food and Agricultural Oganisation, maintaining that the international community is only trying to undermine the present administration’s efforts at improving food production in the country.

Vía Uzomedia http://ift.tt/2nbRphR