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Dagrin in car crash

Dagrin, real name Olaitan Oladapo, is currently with Miosofunyin Entertainment where he released his sophomore rap album Chief Executive Omoita late last year. He is nominated in the Album of the Year, Artist of the Year and Best Rap Album categories of the 2010 Hip-Hop World Awards


.As was reportedly exclusively earlier, Dagrin is still at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital,

where Doctors are working hard to stabilise his condition after a

nasty crash that left him comatose, yesterday.

We have now obtained pictures of Dagrin, lying in hospital,

as well as those of his badly-damaged car…

Here’s what happened exactly, according to our reporter who visited LUTH today

He went to his father’s place at Meiran on Tuesday and left 7pm the

same day for his fried’s place. The friend’s name is James. He was

leaving James place on Wednesday morning at 2am.

The incident happened infront of Alakara Police Station in Mushin.

The truck was parked outside the police station on the road. The truck

was a truck delivering cement. He ran under the truck and his car was

crushed.

The police removed Dagrin’s plate number before his folks who had

rushed him to the hospital came back to the scene.

He first rushed to T & S (Tai Solarin) Hospital at Olosha in Mushin

and the doctor advised the family to take him to LUTH for intensive

care since they don’t have the facilities required.Though they gave

him first aid there.

He has been unconscious since the incident, but 5.49pm Thursday

evening, the family got relaxed that he is getting conscious.

His father and Tunde went in to see him at 5.35pm after a long wait

outside without anyone being allowed inside the ward he is being

treated.

He had a cut in his face, jaw and a swollen head, but no fracture.

Read more…

Full List Below:


EIGHTY PERSONS, foreigners and Nigerians, the living and the dead, among them four former Heads of State and two of their wives, as well as former Governors and Ministers – indeed the top echelons of the country’s political and military establishments, including technocrats – have been indicted by the United States law enforcement officials over the N27 billion Halliburton bribery scandal.


Among the foreigners are Jack Chagoury, Gilbert Chagoury, and T.W. Oerlemans, an Australian; but they are rather small fish compared with indicted former Nigerian Heads of State Ibrahim Babangida, Sani Abacha, Ernest Shonekan, and Abdulsalami Abubakar.

Maryam, the late wife of Babangida; Mariam, the wife of the late Abacha, and his son, the late Ibrahim, are included; likewise Mike Akhigbe, the second in command in the Abdulsalami junta; former Abia State Governor, Orji Kalu; and former military Governors of Rivers State, Anthony Ukpo and Samuel Ewang.

Also among the dead are Abdulkadir Ahmed, former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor; and renowned economist, Pius Okigbo, who headed the probe panel on the Gulf Crude Oil Excess sales set up by the CBN in 1994.

But among those alive are former Petroleum Minister, Rilwanu Lukman, and newly re-appointed National Security Adviser, Aliyu Gusau. (See full list).

According to the report of the investigators, the 80 persons received part of the N27 billion bribe facilitated by foreign contractors for Halliburton to get the contract to build the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) plant, Africa’s first, in Bonny, Rivers State..

The scandal dates back to 1994 when some foreign companies put up bids for the construction of the plant that was to cost $6 billion.

To win the contract, a joint venture company, named TSKJ, was set up – comprising equal holdings between some companies, Technip (French), Sanmprogetti (Italian), KBR (U.S.), and part of the Halliburton group and Japanese engineering and construction company, JGC.

The investigators said the consortium bribed political leaders and top government functionaries through Tri-Star Investment Limited and Marubeni Inc.

They also recruited British lawyer, Jeffery Tesler, to co-ordinate the affairs of Tri-Star, as well as Wojciech Chodan, an American, to co-ordinate the affairs of Marubeni.

TSKJ mandated Tri-Star to solely take charge of bribing Nigerian officials at senior level, Marubeni was restricted to bribing junior level officials.

Tesler disclosed in a court deposition that TSKJ mandated both companies to bribe the officials.

As part of the investigation, the Swiss Justice Department followed the steps of the Police Judiciare of France, which in 2003, started an investigation that revealed fraudulent Halliburton payments to Tesler.

In the U.S., KBR and Halliburton have admitted to violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) by engaging in a decade-long bribing scheme to secure contracts in Nigeria.

Both agreed to pay a combined fine of $579 million to settle criminal and civil charges brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Department of Justice.

Those Indicted

  1. Ibrahim Babangida
  2. Maryam Babangida
  3. Ernest Shonekan
  4. Abubakar Abdulsalami
  5. M. D. Yusufu
  6. T.W. Oerlemans
  7. Pius Okigbo
  8. Aminu Saleh
  9. Don Etiebet
  10. Aliyu Mohammed Gusau
  11. Edmund Daukoru
  12. Victoria Ihonde
  13. Toyin Olakunrin
  14. Gilbert Temisan Grant
  15. Gabriel Abolade Soyoye
  16. Patrick Dele-Cole
  17. E. Ihetu
  18. Onya (NNPC personnel)
  19. Sani Abacha
  20. Joshua Dogonyaro
  21. John Shagaya
  22. U. J. Itsueli
  23. Ombu Isokariari
  24. G.O. Ejiga
  25. Babagana Kingibe
  26. Hakeem Bello-Osagie
  27. J.O. Maduka
  28. Sena Anthony
  29. Dalhatu A. Bayero
  30. Ogenyi (NNPC official)
  31. I. Dapchi
  32. M.A. Olorunfemi
  33. Wilfred C. Eze
  34. Umar Baba
  35. Orji Kalu
  36. Jeremiah Useni
  37. Abba Gana
  38. Ibrahim Abacha
  39. Oladipo Diya
  40. Chamberlain O. Oyibo
  41. Judith Attah
  42. Abdulkadir Ahmed
  43. Anthony Ani
  44. O.O. Okwara
  45. Philip Asiodu
  46. Endo (Marubeni Nigeria)
  47. Hamman Tukur
  48. S.J. Ollerearnshaw
  49. Dan Etete
  50. B. Soyode
  51. Akin Ogunleye
  52. Tom Ikimi
  53. Gidado Idris
  54. Sola Alabi
  55. Ismaila Gwarzo
  56. Mariam Abacha
  57. Halilu Akilu
  58. Abdullahi Mohammed
  59. Hamza El-Mustapha
  60. Ibrahim Aliyu
  61. Edmund Ayoola
  62. Anthony Ukpo
  63. Samuel Ewang
  64. Ismaila Usman
  65. Tunde Soleye
  66. Christ Akerele
  67. Umaru Shinkafi
  68. Philip Chukwu
  69. Bunu Sherrif Musa
  70. Rilwan Lukman
  71. Aret Adams
  72. Mike Akhigbe
  73. Faruk Iya
  74. Hassan Adamu
  75. Prince Nzekwe
  76. Gen. Adeyosun
  77. Jasper Jumbo
  78. Jack Chagoury
  79. Gilbert Chagoury
  80. Mohammed Atiku
Read more…
I won’t allow my daughter do what I did with Ojukwu
By Alvan Ewuzie[alvanatsun@yahoo.com]

Bianca Ojukwu exudes beauty.
And it is not beauty without brain. To say that she is intelligent is to state the obvious. It only takes a brief interaction to unravel the bundle of giftedness masking under the rather innocent smiles and affectionate disposition of this lawyer who seems to relish in accomplishing unconventional things. She made waves as a beauty queen in 1988 and capped it up with marrying a man old enough to be her father. All that is history given that Bianca has made an outstanding success of a relationship everyone thought was doomed to fail, a situation not helped by stiff family opposition.

Over two decades after, Bianca’s marriage to Dim Odumegwu Ojukwu has turned out the longest relationship the Ikemba ever had with any woman. That’s another unconventional success. In this interaction she gives the recipe for successful marriage and makes an unusual foray into the enigma called Ojukwu.

Then the big irony: Bianca wont let her daughter do what she did with Ojukwu. It is an interesting discussion. Excerpts:

How long have you been married to Dim Odumegwu Ojukwu

We have been into a relationship since 1989 but we got married formally on November 12, 1994. We have been together for over 20 years because we have been living together since 1989.

How old were you and how old was he at the time.

Well I was 22 while he was in his mid 50s

People considered you too young for him at that time. How did you feel then.

Its not your conventional relationship. Looking back now I certainly realise that I was very young at that time but it didn’t seem to matter because we had so much in common and we had good communication. The gap was not there in our day-to-day interactions. People found the relationship a bizarre one because of the age difference but it is only now when I look back, now that I have children of my own that I realise that it was rather unusual.

You were so much in love at the time that you didn’t notice any disparity in your ages.

I don’t know whether I would classify it as being in love. I just know that the difference tended to melt away when compared to the common grounds that we had. We had a similar background and we had so much to talk about. We had common interests and we just did a lot of things together. We went to see plays at the theatre, we went on vacations and there was just no disparity in our interaction. I didn’t feel it at the time.

How come you are feeling it now

No I don’t feel it now because we have got used to each other having been together for so long. I always say to him I am like the furniture in your house. We are too used to each other. I can complete his sentences and he can complete mine. Really I think at the end of the day that’s what is imperative in every relationship. You must be able to communicate. He understands me fully and he appreciates that mine has been a life of dedication to him. I know the travails he has been through and I appreciate that a man such as him needs somebody to step in and play the role of wife, sister and mother simultaneously and give him peace of mind in his day to day life.

Would you say therefore that you were psychologically prepared to be Ojukwu’s wife

I come from a political family. If that is being psychologically prepared well I am not the one to say so. But I think I had to shoulder a lot of responsibilities beyond what somebody of my age would reasonably be expected to go through. I had to learn in the process. I think I have done well because it requires diplomacy and the fact that sometimes you have to get out of your skin to mediate in conflicts that will generally arise around a man of his stature. It’s been quite challenging but I thank God that I have been able to navigate the terrain.

Has it ever occurred to you that people never gave this marriage a chance, yet it has lasted this long. How does that make you feel

I feel blessed. I have known friends in more conventional marriages, who break up, remarry and break up again in this space of time and I am still here. I thank God for his grace because nobody gave this thing a chance of survival. In all honesty I was really young at that time and I did believe that I could handle it. Now when I look back I wonder how I did it. That was not a situation your average 22-year-old could handle. Normally the disparity ought to make the interests different. But the truth is that I didn’t miss those things the average 22-year old would want, like going to parties, clubs and the like. Those were not my interest. Though people have always said that I am very old fashioned and I didn’t have those things that propel people of my age. I wanted a stable marriage. I wanted to live with a man that I had a lot in common with and a man that I could spend the rest of my life with. Having said that the truth is that it requires a lot of sacrifice, commitment and hard work to be able to make it work.

Was it that you had to grow up to him or he had to come down to you? How was the mix

No question about that, I had to grow up to him. I had to learn to interact with people who were a lot older than I was. Generally from the time I was 22 people who were coming to our various homes were people of his age. They were his friends and by extension they have become my friends too. I give God the glory. He has some of the most dedicated, committed and loyal friends who are dedicated to him and to his struggle. I feel privileged to have met those categories of people. I consider them as family. So I had to grow up to his life.

You were not scared by that calibre of people

Don’t forget that I am the daughter of a former governor. My father was the Governor of old Anambra S tate, now consisting of Enugu and parts of Ebonyi. So I was certainly not intimidated because we had such regular high calibre people visiting us. There were Presidents, ex-presidents, Ambassadors, governors were frequent visitors. I was not intimidated in the least. It was just a progression. Just that the same calibre of people were now visiting in another house. The routine was basically the same, just a little bit accentuated.

Let’s talk about Ojukwu. What kind of a man is he?

I think you are in a better position. Having spent the better part of two hours with him today, I think you are probably in a better position to do that. As you can see he is a very complex man, very complex. He can be like a volcano about to erupt this minute and the next he is like a kitten. His persona switches so rapidly that it is really quite hard to pin him down, to paint a complete picture of the man. There would always be that mystery. He is kind, caring and, as you have witnessed, he is a very stubborn man. A lot of the time he gets impatient and most people find that rather intimidating. But he can be very meek. One just have to find that meeting ground of interacting with him. Once you can do that then you are on safe ground. But he can be quite difficult to decode.

Obviously he loves you and says it to anyone who cares to listen. What are the things he does differently to you that also gives you the impression that he really does love you

I think it is the absolute trust that he has in me, the faith. I think every man is looking for a replacement for his mother. That’s one thing I have learnt. In life every man looks for that woman who would not just be his wife but his mother, whose paramount objective is to ensure that he can be the best man he is meant to be. I wouldn’t say that he loves me in an irrational way. Perhaps in me he has been able to find that combination of wife and mother. The mother element is very important because its only your mother that you would trust so absolutely to be able to deliver the best judgments and to be able to pull you back when they think you are doing something wrong. It is just to have absolute trust in your judgment and go to bed with both eyes closed. A lot of people don’t have that in their families. A lot of men find that their wives tend to be quite demanding and impatient and the men then reflect that in their attitude. But I think a woman cannot get the best out of any man by nagging him or making him feel bad and less of a man. But if you let him be a man then you get the best out of him. That’s what has helped this marriage to stay the way it is today.

You are a lawyer but you seem to be averse to politics even when you grew in a political home so to say

Well, I have seen quite a lot in my life with Ikemba and I have seen that you need to develop very tough skin to go into politics and unfortunately that’s something I am yet to develop. Until Nigeria offers an opportunity for one to be a decent politician without having to sell their soul I will continue to be averse to politics. I have hope that we will get to that stage soon because the Nigerian people are no longer willing to just sit back and watch and accept whatever is rammed down their throat. The recent election in Anambra is a pointer to that.

I understand that one or two political offers had come your way. You don’t want them or you just prefer being Ikemba’s wife.

Being Ikemba’s wife is a job on its own. These are issues that are being constantly discussed. Right now my prerogative is my husband and my family. I have a very young family. I don’t want a situation that would have my attention divided. I would like to help determine the path that my children would take. I would like to be instrumental to raising and shaping their lives. I am not saying that I cannot do that and serve the people at the same time. These were offers that were made even before the elections but I just do not feel that the time was ripe for it.

Your relationship with Ikemba is the longest he has had with any woman. Does that make you feel special

[long laughter] it must be one of two things. Its either that I am made of a sponge like material that I can absorb or that I am made of a shell like object, like a turtle back and I have found a way of making things work. Some times you are lucky in life. You just come across somebody that God says this is the person that you will stay with for the rest of your life and you just have to work at maintaining that relationship. He is working and I am working too and we both appreciate the fact that we need each other and that we both need to be as committed as we can for the relationship to work. That’s what we are doing, building on it everyday. That’s just the key. It does not make me feel special. Its not like being in Las Vegas everyday. But the high points are always more than the low points. I think if you can get 70 percent you have done very well.

How do you relate with his other grown up children and perhaps if there are other living wives.

[laughs] I like the way you put it, living wives. The fact is that at the time I met him he was a bachelor. He was not living or married to anybody at that time and that’s probably why we were able to go through a Roman Catholic wedding. We had our wedding in a Roman Catholic Church and that would have been impossible if he were designated a married man, otherwise he would have been a bigamist. I am just making the point that I met him as a bachelor. Of course he had been in a lot of other relationships but I have not had the opportunity of interacting with those people that he had had relationships with in the past.

What about his children

Oh yes. You know he has three children that are older than I am. We get on quite well. Most of the children don’t live here. They live abroad. My marriage to their father is not anything new because they live in societies where such things are not abnormal as such. They know their limits. We hold family meetings and things like that. Some times issues come up that we don’t all agree upon. At such times Ikemba steps in and sorts things out, that’s normal but generally we get on well. So far its been quite cordial and when they come on vacation they stay here and I am glad to tell you that they all have their rooms here. I have tried to make sure that we are one united family.

What I deduce from the foregoing is that you are Ojukwu’s only legitimate wife

That’s correct. If there is any body else who can present a wedding picture, a marriage certificate in the church then I am willing to defer to that person. However, we live in Africa and the church format is not the only acceptable mode. There is the traditional mode. In my own case I did not start with the traditional marriage because my parents were initially opposed to the marriage. I only went through the traditional marriage after the birth of my children. My children were present at the event. Any woman who has been married in the traditional mode is also an acceptable wife. The only time both modes come into conflict is when there is a legal contention. That’s why I am making it clear that he went through both processes with me.

You mean you are not aware of any other women who went through those processes with him.

I am not aware of any body that went through a church wedding with him. You know the Roman Catholic Church is very strict in that respect. If they had any such information they would not have done the wedding. No catholic priest would wed you if he considers you a bigamist. They wed you strictly on the basis that you are a single man.

Is he still the romantic man you met in 1989

Oh my. I think romance runs in his veins. He will never change. I am the one who is not romantic. I am very practical. But he is very poetic. By virtue of his education and interactions in life Ojukwu was raised as an aristocrat so he tends to focus more on the classics, the arts, literature and so on. When you look at him in that light you find that he cannot but be romantic. In everything he does, it comes through. Its part of his everyday life. Even now when he is not as strong as he used to be, he would still come to open doors for me to get into the car. He would ensure I am served a drink before him and things like that. He is a typical gentle man. Without a doubt if Ikemba is nothing, else he is a perfect gentleman.

Why did you say you won’t allow him to present himself again for an elective post

I think he has done his bit. There comes a time in every man’s life when you just need to find the nearest beach, find a deck chair, sit by the ocean and reflect. I think he is at that stage in his life. He has done nothing but live and breathe the Igbo course. Sometimes he would hear of some injustice somewhere and he would stay awake all night, trying to find how it can be redressed. I remember the situation of the Apo six. He would wake up at night and say to me ‘whats happening, have these people been found, what are you gleaning from the media. Any time an Igboman suffers any form of injustice, it makes his blood boil, even in situations when he feels helpless. At such times I simply pray to God that he does not have a blood condition because he see him so agitated. At such times, I also tell him to stop knocking his head against the brick wall. I think he has sacrificed everything including his family. There are things he ought to have done but didn’t have the time to do because of his struggles. Now, I think that whatever time he has left should be used for his family, to nurture the family and let other people carry on from where he left off.

You are the closest person to him and I want to know whether people will ever get to read his memoirs

Like you and everybody else I also keep my fingers crossed. But I can tell you that he has been writing but slowly though. Some times he wakes up, remembers an incident and then writes. One thing I know is that he is not writing the account in sequence, he puts down incidents as he remembers. At the moment, there is a group currently showing very strong interest in getting him to complete and publish the memoirs. But I do not know how soon that will be. And it is something that we all really need to see, to know what really happened or more importantly how his mind was working at the time, his fears, anxieties and aspirations, what he wanted to achieve and why he took some of the decisions he took. A lot of people still do not have a real grasp of those things and we need to get into the innermost recesses of his mind to know them.

But is he really working on it

Yes, I know for a fact that he is working on it but at a snail speed.

You still look trim and fit, how do you manage to keep this fit.

Do you know what it takes to run this house, run my NGO, run my law chambers? There are so many things I am doing that some times I don’t even have time for lunch. I think I am overworked. I don’t think it has to do with any beauty routine. The work is enough to keep me trim. We have a swimming pool that I only use when my kids come on holiday and I join them there occasionally. I have a gym which I rarely use. But when I get the opportunity I walk around the compound for health purposes but strictly speaking, I don’t have a beauty routine.

You said your parents were opposed to the marriage but what we know is that it was your late father who was opposed to it.

I think it will be unfair to say that it was just my father that was opposed. My mother had her reservations also, just that she had a different style of showing it. Mothers being what they are, they would hardly cast their daughter adrift completely no matter the circumstance. They don’t want to come out openly and deny or lambaste you. Mothers always try to nurture. But my father was left with the tag of being the chief opponent of the marriage. My mother had her reservations and to tell you the truth, as a mother I would do the same thing.

Right now I am the proud mother of a 12 year old daughter. Even if she was 25 or 30 and comes to tell me that she wants to marry a man twice her age, I would still refuse. Yes I know your next question, yes I did it but that does not make it the usual pattern. Its not conventional and it can only be handled by somebody who is mature and wise beyond their years. And I tell that I support my father’s action. He did the best thing any parent would do for his child. It would have been disappointing if he gave his support without any form of resistance. Basically he did the right thing. My mother had her reservations too, just that my father's own was more prominent because he was more domineering. But the truth is that it was his resistance that has largely helped to make this marriage successful.

Really

Yes. Because my husband then had to be very careful. He knew that if he didn’t treat me right and things didn’t go too well, he would have my father to contend with. And my father also gave me a crucial advise which I have always cherished. You know we were living in Lagos and my father told me that if I ever had plans of raising kids with my husband I must ensure that we come back to settle in the east. My father had this very strong sense of identity of where he comes from which was why he insisted that my kids be born and raised here in the east. It was his advice and one that I would ever treasure and it was the best decision I ever took.

When did you eventually come back to live in Enugu

After our wedding we moved to Abuja, After a few years we now came to live in Enugu.

Do you agree with people who say that the Igbos have neglected Ojukwu

It was said that the Igbos neglected Zik, Okpara and Akanu Ibiam. But before you can substantite that statement you have to look at Ndigbo as a people. We are republican in nature. So its hard to determine the level of love, adulation and respect the Igbos give to their leaders. But in all fairness I think that Ojukwu has been luckier than most Igbo leaders. I have been with him to so many parts of Igbo land and I am moved to tears by the kind of reception he is accorded. I have seen a whole market dismantled just to get his car to pass in the tick of massive traffic. I saw youths dismantle a market just for his car to pass. When you go with him to a place like Aba, the reception is better seen than described. So I think the Igbos love him tremendously and they have shown it to him.

Take the Anambra election for example, the other candidates had so much money and support from the centre. But Peter Obi had virtually nothing, he was like the under dog. Yes he was governor but don’t forget that he no member of his party in the state House of Assembly. But he had one man and this man had only five words to say; This is my last wish. How many other people could do that and get the kind of response Ojukwu got. People came back from all parts of the world in response to that call, though some of them were disentranchised and so could not vote. They have shown him love. They love him and see him as their treasure. Of course if there is any one that can come up boldly to berate him in the newspaper, it would be an Igbo man but they still love so much. As for neglect, well do not forget that his father was the first millionaire to come from Igboland and the first African to enter United Kingdom without a visa, yet his son is such a simple man.

Ojukwu can live in a card room box. Even if it an old, haggard looking 504 car Ojukwu would enter and be driven to his destination. That simplicity is the greatest bond between him and Peter Obi. Peter would come here to visit us like any other Person, yet people who are not even governors would come with a convoy of seven cars. He is very modest and frugal man. You would see him queue up at the airport. If you permit him he would travel on the economy class. Both of them are alike because they consider themselves first and foremost as servants of the people. They do not brazenly display the paraphernalia of power. Peter Obi certainly does not do that. His popularity with the populace is phenomenal. He may not have that with the elite who thinks that he should defer to them but he defers more to the masses. In that light Peter Obi and Ojukwu are very much the same.

If you go to Peter Obi’s house he would refuse to serve you champagne. I think the highest he would probably give you is red wine or stout. If you ask him he would tell you that he knows the cost of champagne because he trades in such commodities and knows their astronomical cost and thus considers it rather criminal to drink such stuff randomly. He says people can do that in their houses if they wished but he would do no such thing in his own house. His style is not usual and he is a very principled man. Many people do not like the fact that he is very frugal administrator. He is a hands on person who could step in and do things himself. If you visit him he will be serving you by himself in spite of the retinue of staff. He is unassuming and his people like it. You cannot believe his level of simplicity.

That’s the bond between him and Ojukwu. Do you know that Ojukwu never handles money. As I talk to you he probably does not know the colour of one thousand naira note. People administer those things for him. Ojukwu is so contented with whatever he has. As long as there is water to drink he is fine. You know before we moved to this place, we were living in a very small house and he was happy there. To a very large extent he built this new house because of me. I was the one who told him to get a bigger place and he would say no matter how big the hose is you only get to stay in one room and just one bed eventually.

I tell you for two years this house was completed and furnished yet Ojukwu did not move into it. He considered it too big. I actually tricked him into moving here on the night of a Good Friday. I just told him to get into the car for an outing and that was how I brought him here having moved some things to this place earlier. We left the old furniture in the former house. He was raised in affluence but he has little or no regard for anything that connotes wealth. I think such people are very rare to find, people who are willing to divest themselves of the paraphernalia of wealth and power. Somebody once said that it a great man to be little. I never really understood the significance of that statement until I came to live with Ojukwu. If Iwere asked to chose three words that would define him by way of an epitaph I cant do batter than saying that he was a simple man
Read more…

SHAGARI,IBB,ABACHA,ATIKU,ODILI,IBORI,DANJUMA,OBJ etc etc etc

• Obama's Nuclear Summit Yields Early Dividends

A report that past Nigerian leaders stole more than $89.5 billion from the national purse over a period of 38 years, from 1970 through 2008, has cast a shadow on efforts by Acting President Goodluck Jonathan to attract fresh foreign investment, which is part of his agenda in Washington.

Jonathan flew to the American capital on Sunday for the global nuclear security summit that began on Monday.

According to the findings of international illicit financial outflow watchdog- Global Financial Integrity (GFI), Nigeria lost more money through illegal outflows than any country in the world during the period.

The top five countries are Nigeria ($89.5 billion) Egypt ($70.5 billion), Algeria ($25.7 billion), Morocco ($25 billion), and South Africa ($24.9 billion).

In total, Africa lost $854 billion in illegal financial outflows.

The report paints a grim picture of the looting of resources and estimated that developing countries are losing as much as $1 trillion every year.

“The amount of money that has been drained out of Africa – hundreds of billions decade after decade – is far in excess of the official development assistance going into African countries,” said GFI Director Raymond Baker. “Staunching this devastating outflow of much-needed capital is essential to achieving economic development and poverty alleviation goals in these countries.

“Sub-Saharan African countries experienced the bulk of illicit financial outflows with the West and Central African region posting the largest outflow numbers.”

The report said illegal financial outflows from the entire region outpaced official development assistance at a ratio of at least two to one.

“This report breaks new ground in the fight to end global poverty with analyses and measurements of illicit financial outflows never before undertaken.

“As long as these countries are losing massive amounts of money to illicit financial outflows, economic development and prosperity will remain elusive.”

Baker recommended transparency in the global financial system as a solution to the problem.

Back on the summit, President Barack Obama’s effort has started reaping early dividends as China has agreed to work with the United States on possible sanctions against Iran and Ukraine’s decision to rid itself of nuclear bomb-making materials.

Obama said the risk of nuclear attack has increased, calling it a “cruel irony” after the end of the Cold War.

He noted in his opening address to the first full day of the summit on Tuesday that the risks of nations going to war with nuclear weapons have decreased.

Nevertheless, he told representatives from 47 countries that, “The risk of a nuclear attack has gone up.”

Obama was speaking of the threat of terrorists getting their hands on nuclear materials.

He had opened the summit on Monday night after two days of meetings with selected Presidents and Prime Ministers of the 47 countries assembled to recharge efforts to keep nuclear materials out of terrorist hands.

China’s incremental move toward U.S. ambitions to sanction Iran and Ukraine’s plans to get rid of highly enriched uranium put some wind in Obama’s sails as he presses global leaders to join him in locking down all nuclear materials within four years.
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How Do You Start Your Day?
By Dayo Olomu

How do you start you day? Do you just wake up in the morning, have your bath and go to work? If you answer yes to this question, may I say that in this day and age, that is not how to start an eventful day?

Everyday spend time thinking about your future, your life, your values and your choices. Decide where you are going and write it down. I do it early in the morning; some of my clients do it before bed. Find what works out best for you and use it.

I start my day with what I call the golden hour when I sharpen the mind by means of keeping myself physically, intellectually, emotionally and spiritually fit. It is about renewing yourself, which will in turn give you time to recreate yourself and boost your confidence.

The first thing I do is to shape up spiritually by prayer, reading the Bible and reading a booklet called "Word for Today" which I have been reading for years.

Then I move onto shaping myself physically by exercising. I do 50 press-ups every morning.

After that I shape up intellectually by reading a chapter of the book I am reading at the moment or anything that will shape me intellectually.

During this process I look at my things to do for today list and allocate the ABCD strategy.
A is Action Now,
B is before the end of the day,
C is Can wait till tomorrow and
D is you delegate it or delete it

By the time my family wakes up I am ready to shape up emotionally. And we listen and dance to vibrant music together. The favourite ones in the family are "A Higher Place" by Peyton, "Moving On Up" by M People and "Move It" by Reel to Reel
May I also add that it is important you go to bed early to get a good night's sleep?

Benjamin Franklin noted that "early to bed, early to rise makes a man (or woman) healthy and wise." Keeping an ambitious; rigorous daily schedule seems to help. If you do what you've always done, you will get what you've always gotten. I guarantee it!

Peak performance people know the value of controlling their daily direction. They know that starting the day with some inspiration reading or vibrant music or stimulating conversation will tend to invigorate the entire day. That is why every motivational speaker recommends listening to tapes in the morning, rather than the bad news on TV

Here are some Constructive Tips for everyday Planning that one of my teachers, Bob Proctor taught me:


Plan your day "tightly." Schedule progressive action activities.
Schedule your outgoing telephone calls so they can be taken care of at one sitting. There is less chance of finding busy lines early in the morning or late in the afternoon.


Plan things that you can work on or think about while you are in transit or waiting around. Have material to read or other constructive work handy for odd moments that inevitably crop up.

The best way to stop wasting your life is to plan your time. Plan tomorrow tonight; don't wait for tomorrow morning.


Set your alarm back one hour and you will gain nine forty-hour weeks each year.

Sir Walter Raleigh who built the great tobacco empire was asked how he accomplished so much in such a short time. Raleigh replied, "When there is anything to do, I start it."
Don't look at a thing; Start it.
Don't imagine that it is difficult; Start it
Don't put it off for a day; Start it
Don't pretend that you must think it over; Start it

Don't start half-heartedly; put everything you can muster into your start."It can't be done," but with a forceful start you can do it
You have probably done things throughout your life without using this extra force at the start.

Think how much more you could achieve by making an enthusiastic start at each task, every morning.

Start your day with purpose.

This is me now: Some people are so pissed at me for not replying their comments...now they think I'm snobbish. Me snobbish? I used to be...now I'm so busy chasing after other things that I don't even remember what it is to be snobbish, how much more being it...

If I don't reply your comment, don't think I'm trying to diss you...I appreciate you guys more than you know, I just don't remember to reply, or maybe I just play down the importance of replying comments...I apologise...I'll improve on that. Pls keep your comments coming.

Meanwhile, the second edition of my Magazine...yeah, the same one I've been making a lot of noise about for over six months...will be out in a week...
I'm so excited right now that I can't even continue typing...will bring you all the details later.

Ciao for now! Muah!
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COULD THIS BE IBBs HOUSE ?

He ruled Nigeria for 8 years (85-93) People have all sorts of things to say about him...I don't know why, but I sorta like this guy... i mean the man has taste see what he did for himself his late wife and their chilren ! See house ! Or did not have the foresight to build a house like this for them ?

Here's what the home of Nigeria's former head of state might look like and Maybe the Next President come 2011 insha allah naija will give it to him as our final parting gift.

Photos:All Photos are those of a master dribblers abode .The palace pictures were readapted/recreated fromThe album of an Estate Agent of known African Dictators !

The IBB mystique was shattered sometime in 2006. Before then, I was one of those Nigerians who thought he was a genius. I have never had any personal interaction with him, but those who have had regaled me with stories of his intelligence. Their narration bordered on apotheosis of the man called Ibrahim Babangida. It seemed he had a charmed life of sorts and was endowed with enough craftiness to manipulate himself out of any situation. I have a feeling that if he had retired quietly to his Villa in Minna, sipping cognac, reading newspapers and never making any comment, I would have forever believed that he was the Maradona who could dribble anybody and anything to score his own goals.

My delusion ended successfully when he attempted to run for presidency. That was when I knew that he was not as smart as I (and I dare say millions of other Nigerians) had believed.

Why on earth would IBB think he should make it back to Aso Rock? To use the time honored (even though worn) question: what on earth did he forget in Aso Rock that he is going back to pick up?
I will not catalogue his known sins here. He was once quoted to have said that Nigerians have a short memory and if it is true that he said so, then it is time he was told that Nigerians have not totally forgotten about the annulment of June 12, 1993 presidential election and the concatenation of events which it triggered.

His renewed declaration of interest in the highest office in the land questions his integrity. IBB annulled a free and fair election simply because he wanted to perpetuate himself in office. Then, 17 years after, he turns around to take advantage of 'democracy'?

Fine; he gave a half hearted verbal apology for the June 12 annulment, but did he make any restitution for the lives and properties lost in the process?

Add to the fact that the man spent eight years in Aso Rock and had to 'step aside' only when the public outcry raged to the highest heavens, then we need not employ a soothsayer to tell us that allowing IBB near Aso Rock again won't be in the best interest of the nation.

How can we be sure that IBB will not spend another eight years in office and seek more terms to perpetuate himself in office like former President Olusegun Obasanjo almost did?

If he says his intention is to fill up the second term that should go to the North but which the incumbent President Umaru Yar'Adua may not be able to use due to his state of health, then he should give us another reason.

The greatest mistake will be to assume that 68-year old IBB has learnt to be left handed in his old age.

What on earth does he have to offer Nigerians that he cannot do from his enclave in Minna? He was quoted as saying on a TV interview that he wants to return to solve Nigeria's problems because he has been there before.

His 'being there before' cannot solve Nigeria's problems, sad to say. Obasanjo 'had been there before' as a military head of state and after eight years of civilian rule, he could still not solve the problem of power, let alone other major problems Nigeria is bedevilled with.

General Buhari 'was there before' as a military head of state and when he was put in charge of Petroleum Trust Fund, did we witness any major revolution? So, why should we believe IBB? Since he retired to Minna, in what way has he contributed to national development?

What IBB should be doing now is answering questions on the various allegations against him. If Nigeria were not a tired country, a man like IBB would be answering questions before a commission set up to investigate his administration's role in bringing this country to its knees. He would probably be entering a guilt plea to save himself. He would not go about telling us he is a messiah who has returned to solve the problems he helped created in the first place.

If IBB is really interested in this country, he needs not go to the polls to prove it. He can set up a foundation and invest his enormous wealth (wasn't he once listed as the 76th richest man in the world?) on charity. That way, he would still have impacted positively on Nigerians without assaulting our collective sensibilities with his desire to rule us again.

Let me state that I have nothing against his joining politics, though left to him and his supporters, this country would never have witnessed civil rule.

If he wants to be a 'moneybag' politician, he's rich enough to do so; but to jump on the presidency train is, frankly, a distraction that will cloud other viable candidates who may be interested in contesting.

For now, Nigeria can ill afford to be distracted in choosing her leaders.


IS THIS THE HOME OF A MESSIAH ?


The US led Carson-Babangida meeting lasted for about two hours in IBB's Minna Hilltop residence.

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“The minister is travelling to Benue to see his mother after he comes back; he will be travelling to Ghana. You know people are trying to cover themselves nowadays. It will be good if you help us by contacting your editor not to publish this story. I must tell you that I agree with you totally about the building of the hotel in Gboko but please my boss doesn't want to be linked into it. I am now protecting my Boss; I must be honest with you. Please! What do we do? I've work with the former minister of justice for three years before Aondoakaa came. When Aondoakaa assumed office, he now asked me to work with him. All we are saying here is that, his younger brother Odu is the one that build the Hotel. But if I were to be the Minister, I will not build such a Hotel in my village”, stated the Personal Assistant [PA] to Mike Aondoakaa in the person of Alhaji Diri over the new Hotel secretly erected by the embattled former minister of justice and attorney general.

New information recently made available indicates that Mike Aondoakaa recently commissioned a 4-Star Hotel in Gboko. The Hotel which goes by the name “Old Band” was supposedly built using the younger brother to Mike Aondoakaa as cover. The younger brother goes by the name Mr. Odu. This is as a source who is currently employed by Mike Aondoakaa confirmed to our correspondent that “the Hotel has just been commission recently. The minister was there pretending as if he is not the owner of the Hotel. He used his younger brother Odu as the co-financier of the Hotel located in Gboko. The hotel, Old Band Hotel cost over N500 million and there is no concrete evidence of a job the former minister's younger brother Odu has done to enable him build such a Hotel.”

Further inquiry revealed that the Aondoakaa's erection of the “Old Band” Hotel to be an open secret in Abuja and amongst select editors of major national dailies. According to the information gathered, the contractor who built the Hotel for Mike Aondoakaa is brother to a reporter attached to NEXT Newspapers. The NEXT reporter is the older brother to the contractor – and he lives at one of the many houses owned by the contractor in Abuja. In addition, a distant cousin to Aondoakaa who used to be employed by Daily Mirror was reported to dish out N3million monthly to select editors of national dailies. The editors were five in number. The money was dished out to silence the editors and the newspaper.

Aondoakaa's activities while at the realm of affairs in the ministry of justice have raised many eyebrows as to the level of near criminality. On his appointment as the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, the first action taken by Aondoakaa was to beckon on the President to issue a directive compelling the EFCC, ICPC and other anti-corruption agencies to first seek clearance from his office before instituting a case against any suspect. With this move, he rendered the anti corruption agencies toothless.

Aondoakaa recently was stopped at the Abuja Airport on his way to Rome. Following some clarifications and clearances, he was released to travel. Many suspect, Aondoakaa to be on the run.

Stay tuned Pics of hotel coming soon. scoop relayed via ukpakareports,Modernghana, and 9jabook reporters
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LM Ericsson (Nigeria) Limited is set to embark on a mass retrenchment of its Nigerian workforce to pave way for Indian nationals which the company is currently in the process of employing en masse.

In November 2009 A publication was issued on an Impending mass sack


read article here http://www.9jabook.com/profiles/blogs/crises-rocks-lm-ericsson-as


Main Article:

More than Four hundred and thirty Nigerian employees of Ericsson will be affected by the purge because of Ericsson’s plan to engage cheaper labour from India.

About fifty Indians have already been employed and flown to Nigeria to familiarize themselves with Ericsson’s operations before the affected employees last day at work.

Those mostly affected are engineers in the Network Operations Centre (Front office and Back office support) dept of the company who were employed from Zain in August last year.

The decision to embark on the mass sack was conveyed to employees during a meeting held on7th of April 2010 at 9am at the Air Force Officers Mess, Kofo Abayomi Street, Victoria Island, Lagos by the management of the company..

investigations revealed that after the decision to sack the employees was conveyed, the management of Ericsson immediately put up vacancy availability on its web site specifically for Indians. See link http://www.ericsson.com/article/100330_opportunities_in_india_20100330101055

Further investigations revealed that Ericsson had entered into a multi-million-dollar service agreement with Zain last year, (Zain was recently acquired by India’s Barti). Part of the deal was to provide engineering and Network operations services to Zain including employing about four hundred and fifty employees in Zain’s Network Operations Centre.

Before the management of Ericsson formalized the employment of the engineers in August 2009,some key issues that were of the greatest concern to the employees were discussed. Issues like salary structures, harmonization of salaries between Ericsson and Zain staff transferring to Ericsson, promotions and salary increases, career advancement in Ericsson, possible job function changes, possible breach of contract between Zain and Ericsson, plans for redundancies, possible sale of Zain amongst others. Ericsson guaranteed the engineers secure and long-term employment.

An authoritative source at Zain confirmed that Zain has not reneged on any part of the service contract it entered with Ericsson adding that the management of Ericsson was just in search of cheaper labour from India at the detriment of Nigeria employees.

Checks at Ericsson also revealed that in total disregard to standard labour and employment regulations, the company is not offering the affected employees any severance package.

They contacted Mr. Blair Mackenzie, Ericsson’s Human Resources Director for comments on the sack but he said he is not authorized to discuss the subject. He suggested we speak to the Managing Director or the corporate communications department.

Attempts to reach Omasan Ogisi of Ericsson’s corporate communications for comments also failed.


adapted from thewillnigeria

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Crises Rocks LM Ericsson, as Mass Sack of Nigerian Workers Loom

By huhuonline
Nigeria News | Tue, 24 Nov 2009


It is no news that the excruciating heat of the credit crunch is taking serious toll on many businesses in the world and that has been making some companies, out of their managerial defects to lay off their staff in an indiscriminate manner with total

disregard to labour legal provisions. No doubt the operations of end-to-end telecommunications infrastructure giant, LM Ericsson in Nigeria may soon be grounded if it caries out its threat to retrench its Nigerian workers..

This is because the morale at the company with headquarters at Walter Carrington Crescent, Victoria Island in Lagos, has hit an all time low now. The workers who have vowed to resist an impending mass sack with everything in them are no longer motivated to put in their best in any way. Consequently, they are silently protesting the highhandedness of the management of the company which earlier illegally banned them from active participation in unionism. Huhuonline.com gathered that after Ericsson sent out a circular to members of staff that due to its current reorganization exercise as a way to cut cost, some of them would be the way out of the company, Nigerian workers in the company could not imagine the justification for the grim news. Sources reckon that the Nigerian operation of the Swedish company has continued to yield a lot of profit for the company despite the economic meltdown that has halted economic activities all over the world. Infact, we learnt that the Nigeria operation is only one of the few operations of the company that has continued to be profitable inspite of the recession.

There are indications that the decision of the company to send local workers packing is fallout of its activities In South Africa. LM Ericsson was said to have ran at a loss in 2008 in South Africa but was unable to retrench workers as a cost cutting measure as a result of strong labour laws in South Africa. The result of its loss in South Africa is now about to be visited on Nigerian workers, as the company feels that anything goes in Nigeria as Labour Laws are hardly recognized let alone been enforced. We also gathered that as a result of protest by Nigerians working in the Company, the management decided to carry out its intention through the back doors. Local workers have been asked to resign and reapply to the company. This was vehemently rejected as it amounts to the same mass purge of the local workers by another deceptive guise. Local workers have continued to mobilize as the management seems detrimental in carrying out its intimidating mass sack threat.

Meanwhile, there are indications that the company may have flouted immigration laws and Expatriate Quota regime in its employment of expatriate staff. Huhuonline.com discovered that foreign workers hired as consultants for just a three month period end up working for the company for years. At a time, it was gathered that there were close to 300, such expatriate consultants who illegally worked for the company. Sources say that the problem is, these expatiates do not contribute as much as the local workers, they are better remunerated. The company accommodates, feeds and places them on a high salary scale, hey equally use state-of the-art-official cars.

Huhuonline.com checks also have it that the management of the company has reserved a couple of positions in the company for only expatriate workers despite the fact that there are \several Nigerians better qualified to handle such positions. Hence the tension at the company is now palpable. Though, the Precision Electrical and Related Equipment Senior Staff Association (PERESSA) which is affiliated to the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria is poised for a showdown with the management of LM Ericsson. In a letter dated han 30th of October 2009and signed by T.K. Olatunji, Ag Gen. Sec, the group warned of dire consequences, should the company's management proceed to to retrench local workersin the guise of cost cutting. However, the group requested for a meeting with the management of Ericsson but threatened to mobilize the full force of the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria for appropriate response, if the planned move is not suspended.

Information gathered at the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) for comments showed that te Commission may take actions if L.M. Ericsson continues to flout Nigerian laws by carrying out actions that are impossible in other countries. L.M. Ericsson is one of the leading telecommunications equipment suppliers in the world and the supplier of choice for Nigeria as most operators deploys for their services. Operators that make use of Ericsson switches and other equipments include MTN, Zain, Zoom Mobile, MTEL and a couple of others. Meanwhile while LM Ericsson was reacting to this scandal through it Director, HR and Blair Mackenzie maintained that Ericsson like any other global corporations has had to respond to global financial crisis to remain competitive and well poitioned for the future, and that Ericsson has embarked on a cost reduction and right sizing exercise and the sub-Saharan part of this adjustment is currently underway and will also affect Nigeria. As a result of this exercise there are likely to be some job losses.

It was further confirmed that the exercise would be handled with utmost sensitivity and professionalism, Ericsson has communicated openly about there structure and potential for redundancies through letters, emails, workshops and all-employee meetings since July 2009, and provided all employees with opportunity to provide feedback on the proposed restructure as well as suggestions for avoiding job losses. For those that could ultimately b affected by the redundancies, Ericsson Nigeria has consulted labour lawyers to ensure that those employees are treated and compensated fairly and in accordance with the provisions of Nigerian labour law.

It is unfortunate to see Nigerian citizens turning out to be an object of ridicule and victims of labour chastisement by foreign nationals, this is one, too many a call. Such national slap is apparently sending a signal that Nigeria is a country where rights of labour can be trampled on without recourse to justice. However, as a good people great nation, Ministry of Labour and other stakeholders in the country need to look into these irregularities to ensure that the constitutional rights of Nigerians as it relates to labour are not flouted by any alien who would not respect local content and other rules of engagements. It is not just LM Ericsson there are several other companies in Nigeria found culpable of a similar act. There are cases of machines and chemicals deforming people while in active service and due compensations are not given to them.
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goodluck1.pngMODERATOR: Council members, distinguished guests, welcome to today's meeting of the Council of (sic) Foreign Relations.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Before we begin our conversation with His Excellency Dr. Goodluck Jonathan,

the acting president of The Federal Republic of Nigeria, there are -- Your Excellency, with your indulgence -- a few housekeeping and protocol issues that we must address.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">First, please completely turn off -- not just put on vibrate -- all cell phones, Blackberry's, and any other wireless devices that you might have. The purpose of this, of course, is that we want to avoid interference with the sound system that we have.

Secondly, I'd like to remind everyone that today's meeting is on the record. The media is present, and you may be quoted on anything that you say here today.


Thirdly, I'd like to recognize and extend a special welcome to members of the acting president's delegation, including the Honorable Foreign Minister Mr. Odein Ajumogobia. (Applause.) The honorable minister of Petroleum -- who I understand is not here, but she is also a part of that delegation. But the honorable Minister of Finance Mr. Olusegun Aganga, I believe, is here. Sir, you are most welcome. (Applause.) Also, a special welcome to their excellencies the executive governors of Rivers State, Imo State, Edo State and Zamfara State -- Your Excellencies. (Applause.) And of course, our new ambassador, Ambassador Adefuye, is here. Ambassador. (Applause.) And I understand as well that the former ambassador, and my dear friend, Wakili Hassan Adamu, is here. (Applause.) And the U.N. Ambassador Joy Ogwu is here, I believe. (Applause.) It's great to see you again.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">And to all of the other senior officials who are a part of the acting president's delegation, a warm welcome to all of you.

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">

Before I introduce his excellency the acting president, you should know that we're going to deviate just a bit from our standard interview format. The acting president would like to make a statement, and he has said that that statement will be no more certainly than 10 minutes, but probably under that. And we certainly are very happy to accommodate that.

But to accommodate the change, I'll probably forfeit a few of my own questions, because we do want to take as many questions as we can from the audience. So with that -- but before I proceed, I see our ambassador, Robin Sanders, is here. (Applause.) We'd like to welcome her and all of the other dignitaries in the audience.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">


rgb(51, 51, 51);"">Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan is the acting president of Nigeria. He is an indigen of Bayelsa State in Nigeria's Niger Delta. He's a biologist by training, and holds a Ph.D. in zoology -- and a master's degree in something I didn't even know existed, hydrobiology and fisheries biology.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">He was the deputy governor from 1999 to 2005, and later became governor of Bayelsa State, from 2005 to 2007. In 2007, Dr. Jonathan was nominated by the PDP, Nigeria's ruling party, as the running mate to PDP presidential candidate Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar'Adua. The Yar'Adua/Jonathan team prevailed in that election and, on May 29, 2007, Dr. Jonathan was inaugurated as Nigeria's vice president -- the first time in the 50-year history of Nigeria that a citizen from the South-South Geopolitical Zone has held that high office.

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">

On January 13th, 2010, a federal high court conferred on Dr. Jonathan the power to carry out state affairs while President Yar'Adua received medical treatment in Saudi Arabia. On February 9th, 2010, Dr. Jonathan assumed office as acting president, following a resolution to that effect by the Nigerian Senate.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">Now, Dr. Jonathan -- and I base this on my own personal knowledge of him -- is a man of uncommon loyalty, impeccable integrity and immense commitment to Nigeria and to the welfare of the Nigerian people. Ours is the first public event of his four-day official visit to Washington.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">And Your Excellency, on behalf of the Council on Foreign Relations and its membership, we are delighted to have you here today.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, the acting president of The Federal Republic of Nigeria, Dr. Jonathan. (Applause.)

ACTING PRESIDENT GOODLUCK JONATHAN: Thank you. Thank you. Please be seated.

Coordinator, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, I would thank you for the special privilege given to me to make a statement before responding to questions. I made that request because probably I may be one of the few, or if not the first, to address you as an acting president. (Laughter.)

Of course, the circumstances that led to me being addressed as acting president are very well known to most of you. Those circumstances were quite disturbing to us as a nation. But definitely, the concern of quite a number of key players globally, especially from America and the other parts of the world, helped to stabilize us as a nation.


And I feel in that sense I'm addressing the Council on Foreign Relations, which is a very powerful body -- let me use it as an opportunity to appreciate all what you have done individually and collectively. Today, as a nation, we are stable and we are moving forward. I feel like -- (applause) -- I have to make this opening statement before I respond to the issues that you will raise.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">I wish to commend the esteemed members of the Council on Foreign Relations for its continued interest in Nigerian Affairs. We are always ready to work with the council on areas of mutual interest, especially those that foster greater understanding, facilitate growth and promote the mutual development of our two nations.

In this regard, the signing of the Binational Commission last week opens up a new vista of opportunity for Nigeria-U.S. relations. The BNC marks a new threshold for greater collaboration between the private sectors of our two countries, which we must support to drive our economies.

Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, there is no doubt in my mind that we are presented with an opportunity to make a lasting impact on the future direction of Nigeria.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">When I was a young man growing up in the Niger Delta, as expressed, I had great dreams for the future. I was fascinated by science and discovery, and the transformational powers of technology. So I pursued a course of study in science, and for 10 years I remained in the field of science as a teacher nurturing the growth of young scientists in Nigeria. When I ventured out of the classroom in 1993, it was again another opportunity to apply my background in science to protect the delicate ecosystem of the Niger Delta.

In both the classroom and my environmental-protection work, I came face to face with the challenges of sustainable development in Nigeria. The challenges of insufficient funding of critical sectors, mis-prioritization and low infrastructural base were always an obstacle to surmount. But as an individual, I continued to make progress and never conceded to these difficulties although, of course, I was later diverted to politics in 1999.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">Throughout my political career, I have applied the lessons of scientific inquiry and technological innovation to meet the challenges that my constituents face.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Today, I am confronted with the greatest test of my political career. While we continue to pray for the recovery of our president, Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, it is my responsibility to work with all Nigerians to improve the pace of development and to do so facing the right direction.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

We are choosing for ourselves what I will call foundational responsibilities which, if well shouldered, will form a solid base for the development of Nigeria from this point onward.

In this responsibility of consolidating and deepening our democracy, we are committed to ensuring that the remaining period of the administration is not a transitional period but one which we hope will one day be viewed as a watershed, a transformational time in our young democracy.

For us in Nigeria, this is our time. Either we continue with more of the same or we change the game. There's no doubt that we are being faced by some challenges in our country. But we have stabilized the politics. And we are determined to consolidate on the gains so recorded.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

And for now our domestic focus must be on electoral reform, delivering peace dividends to the Niger Delta and the rest of the country, and standing strong on our resolve against corruption.

Internationally we are determined to restore Nigeria's image and traditional role as the key member of the international community. In an increasingly uncertain world, Nigeria is a key partner in our collective efforts to maintain peace and security in Africa and beyond.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Nigeria will reiterate its commitment to fight terrorism and rededicate our efforts to promote development, democracy and a shared value for human progress.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, I thank you for the opportunity to share our thoughts and hopes with you on the present and future. Thank you very sincerely. (Applause.)

MODERATOR: Mr. Acting President, we thank you very much for those very inspiring words. And you can see we have a full house today. There's a lot of interest and concern about Nigeria. We'll begin now maybe three or four core questions here. And then we will ask the audience to also participate.

Mr. Acting President, it was reported in the press that you met with President Obama yesterday afternoon. And could you give us your impressions of that meeting? And very generally what was discussed? Not the specifics. (Laughter.)

JONATHAN: Actually the meeting was supposed to be a private meeting. But the meeting was quite fruitful. The American ambassador to Nigeria and our ambassador here, other ministers and, of course, the secretary of State.

But anyways, we looked at contemporary issues in Nigeria -- (inaudible) -- official relationship between America and Nigeria. The meeting was quite warm and friendly.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">MODERATOR: Mr. Acting President, you have at most 12 months remaining in your current office. What do you hope to achieve? And what are your core priorities?font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

JONATHAN: Definitely when you have a very short period, you cannot really even as a politician promise people what you cannot deliver. But one thing I promised Nigerians, and the rest of society that has interest in Nigeria, is that we must set up clear goals.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">There are certain things that we can achieve even for the next six months; certain things that are quite disturbing to the country, certainly the issues of conducting elections that are always questionable.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">These are human issues. We don't need -- (inaudible) -- to solve it. So I have promised Nigerians and the rest of the world that 2011 elections in Nigeria would be credible. (Applause.)

I said so, because either I consider myself as a victim of elections that have been questioned. I worked very hard as the Governor of Bayelsa state then for us to have won the presidential election in 2007.

But the impression was that all things are not done properly. And it gave me worries. And I promised that the elections I was to provide for 2011 would be credible.

We are looking at reforming our electoral processes. But I mentioned to people that even without reforming the electoral laws we have, the present laws can enable you to conduct elections that will be more than 70 percent acceptable.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">And we have experimented that. We read this issue to President Obama yesterday. We conducted state-concerned elections in Nigeria. And one of -- (inaudible) -- the governor is here, in Edo state.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">We have also conducted a governorship election in one of our states, Anambra state. And only on Saturday, two days ago, we conducted local council elections in the Federal Capital Territory.

In Nigeria, local elections in the states are conducted by the state electoral bodies. But in the Federal Capital Territory -- (inaudible) -- national body that conducts the elections. 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">So that can give you -- (inaudible) -- for the state-concerned election conducted by this electoral body in Edo state, the governorship election conducted in Anambra state and the local council election conducted in Abuja, I show you clearly that we can conduct elections that will be acceptable. 10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

It gives me hope. And I'm quite sure, and I can promise Nigerians and indeed the American audience, that 2011 elections in Nigeria will be credible. You don't need more than one here to achieve that. If I don't -- (inaudible) -- give me 10 years, I cannot achieve it. (Applause.) 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">The issues of corruption that also bother us is also human factor. In every society, it's difficult to say you can eradicate corruption. But we've set up the machinery to make sure that we continue to reduce it. The war against it will be sustained and will continue. (Inaudible.)'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">The issues of security, let me maybe talk about it. Niger Delta, the challenge we have in the Niger Delta, the amnesty program, as some call it, we have restructured the management. And we're trying to -- (inaudible) -- start their training this month.

These are issues that you cannot really say you are going to conclude it in a year, because the issue of young men who have taken arms to fight -- (inaudible) -- some of them the capacity is quite low.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So it takes a lot of time to train them, even for them to be in position to make a living through the same means. So it's not something you can say you can even complete in a four-year administration. But I can assure you that we've set up a solid base. And I have a clear focus on the program, with timelines, that you'll see that we are progressing.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

We also have this challenge where we have -- (inaudible) -- crisis in some parts of the country. Maybe if you take some parts of the north where, among the Muslim faithful, there are some sects that sometimes rise against the rest, because it's assumed that the others are not doing what is right.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

And sometimes this is wrongly interpreted in the rest of the world as specifically a religious crisis in Nigeria, as if the Christians and the Muslims were at war. The Christians and Muslims are never at war in Nigeria. They will never be at war based on our own circumstances.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">But we have this sectarian violence. These are things, security challenges, that would strengthen our security forces or be able to bring it down drastically.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So there are some key areas where -- (inaudible) -- 60 percent or more. But there are the areas of basic infrastructure that you need a gestational period, the planning period that is a period of education. Those areas will make sure that our road map is very clear.

If you take one of the greatest areas where we have challenges is the issue of power. Ordinarily by now, Nigerians needn't be talking about power, because most of you who have been to Nigeria, you see the volume of gas we burn every day from the oil industry activities. If we even have to convert 50 percent of the gas we burn to power, I don't think we'll be talking about power. But (decisions ?) are not planned for a very long period of time.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">So -- and the power infrastructure is one that -- it looks at the law of nature -- (this is a little ?) of all or nothing. You must complete all the processes for the bulb to light. If one micrometer is not completed, the bulb will never glow.

So those are areas where we will have the definite road map. If you look at even the -- and it's one of the greater challenges we have, is the power sector.

And as -- when I appointed the ministers, up to this time, we have not appointed a minister for power, because we are -- we've set up a committee, we are really reexamining it, we want to change the focus. I am presently coordinating a committee that -- to handle the power sector. When we settle this deal very clearly, then we can bring in a minister to drive the process. But we are still talking at the committee level.

So in a summary, there are certain issues, there are certain challenges we have that within the next 12 months will surely succeed up to 50 percent, 70 percent. So it's really -- it has to do with the human factor. But basic infrastructural areas -- I cannot promise that we'll achieve so much, because the time is short. But you will see a clear road map. Even if it is (road ?) infrastructure, even if it is the aviation sector, the transport sector, you will see a clear road map, and you will appreciate that we are moving forward. If we are not moving, you will know. If we are moving, we'll -- you will know.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

MODERATOR: Wonderful. (Applause.)

Mr. Acting President, it was very reassuring, and I think that the areas that you talked about are certainly the key challenges facing Nigeria at this point.

But -- most questions concerning your administration have focused on internal domestic issues, but what about foreign policy? What are your foreign policy goals? And how much of your foreign policy agenda do you hope to achieve over the next 12 months? And are you going to have the time, the political will to actually devote your personal attention to foreign policy issues?

JONATHAN: Thank you. Foreign policy is one area that results is always even difficult to benchmark, even for a sophisticated country like the U.S.

And before this time, you know that Nigerian foreign policy centered on Africa, as recently -- in those days when most African countries were still under colonial rule, when apartheid held sway in South Africa, and Nigeria was committed to ensuring that African countries -- most of African countries are liberated from colonial rule; they govern themselves and so on. But now -- in fact, this year -- about 16, 18 African countries are celebrating 50 years of independence, including Nigeria. We are celebrating in October. I hope most of you will come to Nigeria at that time. (Soft laughter.)'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">So really, that is -- the issue of fighting a foreign government running African countries is no longer the issue.

But we still have challenges in Africa. There are quite a number of African countries that we have not a democratic government or pseudo-democratic (setting ?), and we believe that as a continent, all African countries must elect -- must have a true democratic society and to elect their leaders. And that is main focus of Nigeria now -- what, with the ECOWAS -- of course Nigeria is the current chair of ECOWAS and a leader in the West African sub-region, working with the ECOWAS and working with African Union to make sure that all African countries where we have crisis -- whether in Cote d'Ivoire, whether in Guinea, whether in Darfur -- we will come up with a very stable system of government. And that's why the issues of (Niger ?) that just happened were quite disturbing to us, and our position has been very, very clear.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So our main focus now is to see that at least within the continent of Africa we have democratic (setting ?) and true democracies, not just false democracy where somebody becomes the president for 10 years, 15 years and maybe hand over to his son, his own in-law. That is a (very false setting ?. We want a system where people will elect their leaders. It's not a monarchy where a king will hand over to his first son and so on.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So those countries where we still practice what we claim to be a democratic (setting ?) but rather, if you look at it, it's more like a monarchy -- we feel that those institutions must be corrected. So that is (the sense there ?.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

But the next most important priority is that Nigeria as a nation believes in global peace, and that is -- internationally, that is our strongest focus -- but the people in the world must live in peace. We don't believe that a group of people or one individual, a group of individuals should be a terror to the rest of the human society. And of course I believe that's also one of the key areas of interest to America. And so our interests kind of -- there's a convergence of interests at that level.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So these are the key areas -- drive our own foreign interest.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">It's difficult for you to benchmark. I can maybe talk about elections in Nigeria, and if I conduct election today -- and of course there will be international observers, so if (all of you ?) from the group give hundred percent to my election, I can say yes, I've achieved a hundred percent. If they give 50 percent, I can say, well, I've achieved 50 percent. But for foreign (elections ?), it's difficult to benchmark. But that is our focus as a nation.

MODERATOR: Wonderful. Very good. Thank you. (Applause.)font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Mr. Acting President, public safety and security are huge challenges facing Nigeria. Public safety and security affect all aspects of your national life, from human rights protections to the attractiveness of your investment climate. 10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

The Nigerian police have been accused of gross human rights violations, including unlawful killing of criminal suspects. What are you going to do about this situation, and what new policies and programs are you going to put in place, particularly to professionalize the Nigerian police?'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">JONATHAN: Thank you. Definitely it's an area we all know, as Nigerians, that we have challenges -- the area of security. And that's one of the areas that worry us, because the free movement of small arms and light weapons into African countries is worrisome. And it's one area that we always plead for the developed society that manufactured these weapons to see how they could help us control the movements, because it's a big challenge in Africa. Every African country you go -- or a number of them, you have this kind of ragtag army that carry all kinds of small arms and light weapons, and becomes a security threat to the rest of society. And we ask: Who manufactured these weapons? Why are they shifting to Africa?10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

And we always feel that is -- when we meet a country like the United States -- (inaudible) -- this is one area you -- the American authorities must help Africa.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

And that is why, even when we talk about the proposed U.N. treaty on small arms and light weapons, we believe that America must play a key role to make sure that we (can't let ?) that -- because if we don't control it, most African countries would continue to be under pressure.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">(If ?) what we are accusing the Nigerian police (is started ?) -- it would be an investigation. There was some kind of -- since the -- in fact the (RZZRA ?) also (shoot particulars ?) in one of our northern states, and the government is investigating. Well, from the preliminary information we have, if you see how some of these criminals brutalize the police, you need to be a superhuman being not to begin to contemplate vengeance. 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">So we see that there are some (pockets ?) where the police went a little too far in an attempt or maybe, after senior colleagues (maybe just murdered ?) -- an overreaction and (go beyond ?) their status as law enforcement agencies, which we're investigating.

But basically what the -- the problem we have in the police now, which we have set up (nationally ?) to create a special fund -- is that they are not well-equipped scientifically to confront the level of criminality that the free movement of small arms and light weapons have created in Nigeria and indeed most of African countries. So it looks like some of the criminals are a little more sophisticated than them. They carry stronger weapons than them. And in that case, it becomes very (difficult ?) for them to protect themselves.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So we are setting up a fund that both public and private sector will participate. In fact, for the whole of last year, we and the governors were all debating, and the private sector. And we've all agreed that we must equip the police very well; we must give them enough equipment, including helicopter gunships, because of the level of criminality in the country.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

And if we set up that fund and they are well equipped, both scientifically, using modern methods of detecting crime and fighting crime, and the conventional method, well, they would contain the excesses of the -- of the criminal.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

But the areas of -- we have been accused of human-rights violations. If you go into a deep investigation, you will have even sympathies for some others who have said that -- I'm trying -- I'm not going -- (inaudible) -- for them, but as a government we're investigating. And anybody that is found guilty, of course, we'll not allow you to continue to be in the police. But this area that -- (inaudible) -- I believe that the developed societies, including America, can help African countries, if we can control the manufacture and the free movement of small arms and light weapons into Africa.

It looks like presently Africa is a dumping ground for the weapons used in the developed societies. And, of course, if you manufacture the weapons or they were used by the forces in the former Soviet Union and so on, and they have no need again for these weapons, and of course they dump them into Africa. But the criminals use it to terrorize the rest of innocents and distant African citizens.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

MODERATOR: Mr. Acting President, thank you very much for that response. (Applause.)font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

I believe that, in order to have the half an hour that we wish to have for audience participation, we'll stop at this point. I just wanted to make one observation. On the question of police training and cooperation and collaboration between Nigeria and the U.S., we had a very robust program when I was in Nigeria.

We did not have willing partners. You have to have willing partners on the other side in order to have effective cooperative programs. This is an area where I think the U.S. would be willing to really support Nigeria. But, Mr. Acting President, we have to have that willingness on the Nigerian side, things like community policing and other things, so that these programs can be effective. But it's a very good area, I think, for U.S. attention.

We're now going to ask the audience to join in this discussion. And I would like to ask everyone, raise your hand, please wait for the microphone to reach you, speak directly into the microphone, please stand, please state your name and your affiliation, and please ask questions and not statements or comments, so that we can have a full participation in this very unique session that we're having this morning.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So let's start. Here's a gentleman right there; he's already got his bid in. 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">QUESTIONER: Gabriel Pellathy with Westinghouse Electric Company. Thank you, Mr. President, for being here. You had referenced the power sector. Can you get a little bit more specific in terms of what your sense is, timetables? Will nuclear be part of that power source, things of that nature? If you could add a little more in terms of specifics. Thank you.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

JONATHAN: Thank you. I may not be too specific in terms of a timeline, but presently, Nigeria generates power through two main sources: hydro turbines, using hydro systems through the dams; then we have some turbines using gas to fire the turbines -- the ones that use water, the hydro, and the ones that use gas to turn the turbines.

These are the two main sources of power in Nigeria, and it's not adequate. Though another problem we had was the attempts of the gas factor. We are just exploring new gas reserves and new gas wells. The gas wells, the results that were -- been exploited. We had the arrangement, of course, with the multilateral organization, and we are selling more of the gas. And so there is not enough for domestic use, except the ones that -- (inaudible) -- and very difficult to build that. We have to get that to use.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">But we are going into two new areas. We also want to use the Tamal (ph) turbines that were fired with coal, because we have quite some coal reserves. We are giving out the coal (blocks ?) now so the people can generate power. But that has not come on board.

We have plans, but that's a long-term plan also, to generate power using nuclear. But nuclear power is not the one you can just wake up and generate, because you must follow the International Atomic Energy Agency guidelines. And if you deviate from their guidelines, the rest of the world will begin to suspect you and think you want to use nuclear power for something else.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">Presently, Nigeria uses nuclear power for the exploration of the oil industry. That's an area we use nuclear technology, for the oil industry. But we also want to use the nuclear technology for power generation. But we must follow the guidelines and position of the International Atomic Energy Agency. And we are following; they are giving us the roadmap, and it will take us another -- from their own program, this is something that will come up between the next eight to 10 years. So it's not immediate, and we're not going to deviate from that. We didn't want to be suspected by the rest of society as if we want to use the nuclear power for something inimical to global peace.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">QUESTIONER: Thank you.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

MODERATOR: Please. font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

QUESTIONER: Thank you. Maria McFarland from Human Rights Watch. Mr. Acting President, I'm going to follow up a little bit on the ambassador's question about police violence. Earlier this year, we were happy to hear you pledge to end the culture of impunity in Nigeria, which is a factor not only fueling police abuses and hundreds of extrajudicial executions in recent years, but also this recurring violence in places like the state of Jos.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Can you please tell us, how are you going to break that culture of impunity? In the past there have been arrests, people have been charged, but those arrests have not resulted in prosecutions and convictions. What tangible results, what concrete steps, will you take to break that? Thank you.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

JONATHAN: Thank you. I've said it all, but you have also almost answered the question, because the issue of impunity is when somebody commits an offense and when no punishment's meted out. So that basically will continue to do the same thing.

If you take the case of Jos that you just mentioned, the crisis in Jos, somehow it is certain in plateau state in Jos is somehow unique, because Jos is on a very high level -- I'll just call it a plateau, in Nigeria, and the climate there is very, very conducive -- in fact, the first set of Europeans that came into Nigeria, most of them preferred staying in Jos than even Lagos, that was the federal capital. font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Because Nigeria is a very warm, tropical country, but the climate in Jos can drop off to minus 2 in some parts of the year. So the climate is very, very conducive. So it is a cosmopolitan place. So you have a number of settlers who came in. Some of them came in through our history of what we describe as a jihad, when some of the leaders for the Muslims moved from the north towards the south in terms of expanding the religion. 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">And within the period, there is that part of Nigeria. I think the whole process stopped, and some of them settled to live there. And so part -- some Nigerians even from the south, especially if you go to a place like Jos, you arrive a number of (southeasterners ?). They are very aggressive, these men and traders who have settled in Jos. So you go -- you also see high population of the west, or the group -- (inaudible) -- Ibos. And of course the northern and the Hausi-Fulani group that settled there.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So over the period, there is this feeling of the indigenous population feeling that the settlers are trying to take a better portion of the economic interest in the area. So there is always this special conflict. And this is a conflict that is from the early '60s, and it continues to come up from time to time. And when we get into government -- (inaudible) -- 2008, the conflict came up again. And because of -- just look at government elections. In Jos, the (most ?) problem is because of this conflict between the settlers and the natives. That has been (the most ?) problems. But they look for every little immediate cause. 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">They look at our -- (inaudible) -- election as a -- (inaudible) -- that the chairman of the council supposed not to come from that sector. It caused a major crisis in 2008, when a lot of people were killed. And of course, this 2009, this crisis came up again.

What has happened in 2008? The central government then wanted to set up a kind of board of inquiry to look into each, what is the causes and to commence appropriate measures to be taken. But of course, the states resisted. In a way, it was -- I mean, after the ambassador -- (inaudible) -- of the states. So we allowed the states to do it. 10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

But what -- instead of what we call administrative boards of inquiry or judicial commissions of inquiry -- it takes a long time (to/too ?) -- so when this thing happened happen again in 2009 -- from 2009, 2010, that time the president has been away, and I was then the vice president -- I made it very clear that this time around we are not going to set up any administrative or judicial commission. The police will do their work. The police must investigate crime as individual (actions ?). So if anybody that is directly or remotely linked up with the crisis -- the ones they arrested and prosecuted -- if you go through the courts and the courts announce that you are not guilty and they charge you or acquit you, there you go. But if they -- if you have a case to (answer ?), you should be prosecuted -- (inaudible) -- passed through this commission. And that's the only way you can.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">And the problem is that people expect things to be done so fast. But when you have a major crisis that involves so many people, sometimes, within the investigation -- (inaudible) -- you are prosecuting more than 500 people that are involved in the massive killing. It happens all over the world. This is not something that the police -- they don't have a magic wand to complete the investigation in a week, because they are not investigating one person who has -- committed more than one person -- (inaudible) -- but you're investigating over 500 people that are involved in massive criminal activities.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">So it takes time. And as you know, the position of the laws in Nigeria and most other countries is that it is better for 10 people -- 10 guilty people to go free than for one innocent person to be punished. And because of that premise of the law, for you to prosecute anybody, you go extra lengths to make sure that you are not punishing an innocent person. And it takes time. font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

But my directive now is to make sure that that culture of impunity is no longer a factor, is that the police should arrest anybody who is directly or indirectly linked up. And whenever we get a -- (inaudible) -- we can link a text message to your phone, that you (search ?) a text message, that is to get any crisis about -- (inaudible) -- so they'll go to the courts and prove that you are not a part of the conspiracy, not us to decide. And that the police are doing. And I believe that if we follow that trend, it will -- (inaudible) -- law that you cannot commit a crime and get away from it.

And I told my -- (inaudible) -- that this investigation must continue. It is not something we are going to do it in a month or two months. We will continue until we make sure that anybody who is remotely or directly involved in the -- (inaudible) -- crisis is prosecuted.

In terms of bringing peace to the area, we are using other methods. So while the police are looking at the criminal aspects of the crisis, we are conducting with the religious leaders in the areas, we are conducting with the -- (inaudible) -- with us in the area almost every week. And we (used ?) to meet with one group or the other to make sure that what has been happening, this (serial ?) crisis that continues from the early '60s to date, is brought to a reasonable level of control.

But basically what has been happening in that part is because of the social conflict between the so-called settlers that appears to dominate the economy of the area and the indigenous population that failed at -- (inaudible) -- change in economic activities. (Inaudible) -- this is the (remote cause ?) of the conflict.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">But most cases, when does conflict happen? Because some parts of this -- some of the settlers belong to the Muslim faith, and most of the indigenous population are Christians. So sometimes where this -- when this conflict, which has turned ethnic, comes, people begin to (paint ?) the religious coloration as if the Christians and the Muslims have conflict in the -- (inaudible). No, there's no conflict between the Christians and Muslims. While that is the partition, it's just because of the groups that are fighting kind of belong to two different religions. So religion more or less looks like kind of the wind that could actually spread a wildfire in one way or the other because of the -- (inaudible) -- of some of the religious leaders that -- (inaudible). But the conflict is not a religious conflict.

The government is now prosecuting; people that are involved in the crisis are no longer taking the option of setting up judicial commissions, administrative panels of inquiry, because (that tried ?) to waste a lot of time and reduces the effect of (trying ?) to protect some people who have committed crimes.

MODERATOR: Thank you very much. (Scattered applause.)font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Dr. Mikell?font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

QUESTIONER: Thank you. Gwendolyn Mikell, Georgetown University.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">Mr. Acting President, I was heartened by your promise to have credible elections in 2011. My question concerns the independent Nigerian electoral commission. For those of us who were there last time or people who were watching, the confidence in that commission and in the way in which it relates to the electorate is going to be critical. So I'm wondering what has been done, what you plan to do, what kinds of things are going to be put in place so that north, south, east, west, civil society, whatever, there is confidence that that commission is moving along and the election actually will be able to be credible.

JONATHAN: Thank you. The issue of perception is -- (inaudible). It's more psychological than real. They who have the perception that the body cannot do what is right, even if they do what is right, people find it very difficult to believe. And that is (too real ?) over there. Now, you've got electoral body, the INEC, because the feeling is that INEC cannot conduct credible elections in Nigeria.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">Basically, I am, in a way, a bit lucky now, because most of the commissioners in INEC -- especially at -- (inaudible) -- because we have to -- (inaudible) -- commissioners in INEC -- (inaudible) -- and the chairman; then we have -- what they call the resident electoral commissioners, that every state has one. We have to have seven of them; that is to have six -- (inaudible) -- in Abuja that handle the elections at the state level.10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

At the national level, most of the officers have completed their tenure, or complete their tenure in a couple of months. So we are going to review them individually. And the ones we feel that's not good enough to be reappointed, we will not reappoint. And -- (inaudible). We'll make sure that we bring people the information, the names of the people -- (inaudible) -- will be happy that they will conduct clean elections. But that is psychological, because, like I said, it has to do with perceptions. So we have that -- we're a bit lucky in that respect.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">Before the 2011 elections, there will be a lot of changes in INEC. And no matter -- (applause) -- who talked about the chairman -- not just the chairman. The chairman himself, the tenure is going to expire by (the end of ?) June. But not just him alone. Quite a number of the commissioners in INEC, their tenure (by the end of ?) June, most of them -- more than two-thirds of them -- their tenures are going to expire. So we're going to cross-examine them and also listen to the public opinion (of the society ?).10pt; font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

But even the (present ?) INEC and -- (inaudible) -- state, they can conduct elections. The perception is -- I have admitted that the perception is quite (critical on the human side ?). It's psychological, not real. At the same INEC-conducted election in those states, the governor was adamant about when that election was to be conducted. The governor was very apprehensive. Luckily, the civil society -- (inaudible). (Laughs.)font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

MODERATOR (?): Fortunately.

JONATHAN: And -- (inaudible) -- called me, and he was worried whether INEC would manipulate the elections in the states. And I said, look, I've given clear directives, and anybody that -- (inaudible) -- from that, I will fire the person. I've given clear directives to the police. And to prevent -- (inaudible) -- elections. I've given clear directives to INEC that we will not accommodate any wrongdoing. We will not (ask ?) the government. We have changed (our thinking ?). We have changed -- (inaudible). And Nigeria was sure delayed in that regard. We cannot begin to talk about -- (applause) -- we cannot begin to talk to other leaders: And look, you must conduct clean election. You will not have a (totalitarian ?) agenda, you must not run your country as a monarchy when you yourself, you have issues that people will raise.

So for you, you have to lead by example. People must lead, we must show clear example. And one area that we must demonstrate to the rest of Africa is our standard of elections. And I -- when I truly governed initially was not to show. But at the end of the elections -- (inaudible) -- to Abuja to express appreciation.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">But in the same -- INEC conducted elections. We conducted election in a number of states. Here's where we have logistics problem, has to do with the voters' registration. But in terms of the pattern of the voting and so on, it was, at least to -- for the observers of that election, it gave a clear -- they can score it 70 percent on that vote.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">We've just concluded a local council election in Abuja. It was done on Saturday. I left that Saturday night. By the time I get back home, I will get a clear picture, because they have given some briefing, but not comprehensive enough, because I'm so busy here. But basically, even if you look at that election, handled by the same INEC, the elections are credible. But maybe some of you have gotten a little more information than I have. But elections so far are credible. So all I'm saying is that the issue of INEC not being in a position to conduct elections, I'm convinced that INEC can -- even the present INEC -- can conduct elections in Nigeria that will be free and fair.

What happened in our previous elections is just one missing link. Because -- and it has nothing to do with the laws. That's why I normally emphasize that. Even if you don't change any of our laws, we can still conduct elections, if INEC just count and refuse to compromise. The missing link is that our election law says that at the end of voting, electoral results must be announced at the polling unit. The polling unit is made up of -- most of the polling unit is -- is to handle voters of not more than 500 voters. There are very few polling units that will have a little more than 500. But most polling units vary from about 150 to about 500 voters. That is, by arrangement, a polling unit.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

But every person who is contesting election is supposed to have an agent in every polling unit. If you are contesting an election, in every polling unit from within that unit you will have your own agent. You have also observers, both security observer and others. And I will now say that at the end of the elections, the results must be declared, at least of the unit. But it's always a problem declaring results at the unit level, because of conflicts, sometimes the pressure and so on.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">So in most cases, they take the results at the end of the voting to the local vote headquarters, where they collect the results. And during that process, people feel that there are wrongdoings. People may change results. And that has been the problem in Nigeria. And this time we said, look, if you cannot declare the results at that polling unit, that will cancel that result. So all results must be declared at the polling unit. And that is what our poll in Anambra -- that's what our polling, they do. font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

And if we mention that even with the present laws, even with the present INEC, conducting elections, that globally can score us quite high. And we have been insisting on that. So I have no fear about elections. My conviction is that 2011 elections, you will be happy with those. (Applause.)font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

MODERATOR: The gentleman in the back. Yes. Yes, please.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">QUESTIONER: Mr. Acting President, my name is Ufo Eric-Atuanya with Rimsom Associates. Just following up on the issue of perception, so many times as a person of Nigerian descent operating in diaspora, we are faced with the media. And a lot of times, the media often reports -- majority of the times, all we hear about are negative things coming out of Nigeria.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

And I'm made to understand that there are some proactive things that the administration has done, and some that you may even be involved in, especially in areas like the Niger Delta, and perhaps capacity-building when it comes to trying to develop the small- and medium-size enterprises. So I'm just curious to hear directly from you, what are some of these proactive things that the Nigerian government is actually doing? Because a lot of times all we hear about are the negatives.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">JONATHAN: Thank you. Well, normally -- before I got into government, I didn't know much about the media. But when I got into government, the information that they always tell us is that negative stories sell. (Laughter.) The positive stories don't sell. So if the governor of Rivers State -- even if he's building the best hospital, it is difficult for the media to tell the world that he's building the best hospital, so many of these governors. But if anything is minor -- (capitalize on ?).'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">As you mean and observed, the Rivers State government is arrested by maybe ESPC (sp), or ICPC (sp), or the police, so when -- even if it's a fraud of only $500, it will be in all the papers. But that is not only in Nigeria, but that is the issue of the media, so -- because, of course, negative stories will always sell. While here in America as acting president of Nigeria, if I do anything that is slightly (a decision ?), I think all the media in the world will flatten me. But no matter the difficult things we do, maybe nobody (really want to ?).'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">But that is basically -- but one thing government will do and intend to do. You know, I've just had talks at presidential advisory committee to really look into most of these things and tell us what we must do. And where we are not going right, they will help us. They'll say, look, you have to go this way, you have to -- and it's made up of quite a number of credible Nigerians, including some who are from the diaspora. Then, I've just installed the cabinet last week, and the ministers -- we just had our first executive council meeting. The ministers themselves are now just taking over. So the -- immediately the ministers start, you will see that most of our programs will become very clear.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">The issues of the Niger Delta, that we have somebody who is coordinating, the special adviser to the president on the Niger Delta. And he has his blueprint. In fact, I didn't come with it, but he just gave it to me as I was coming, and I forgot this room may ask. We did an amnesty program. It divided into three stages. You have the disarmament, which is when they voluntarily surrender their weapons; then the rehabilitation program, that has commenced; and after that, we're going to the reintegration.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

The rehabilitation will expose them to some form of training, and to reorient their thinking, while some of them have been in this armed struggle for years. And all over the world, people who carry weapons, who use all kinds of -- (inaudible) -- they take the -- a little more alcohol than they require. Or some of them, they even gone into drug taking and things like that. So you must change their thinking. So that is the rehabilitation processes. And within these rehabilitation processes, some stipends have been paid as upkeep allows for them to take care of them and make them to pass through that.

When they are fairly -- when they are fairly brought out from that kind of a cocoon, then you expose them to some kind of career training; some of the areas who also expect the international bodies and developing partners and countries like the U.S. that is quite helpful to us, to play some role in terms of capacity building. There are quite a number who have to train them all over the world, not -- or we are training them in Nigeria. We're also training them in other parts of other parts of the continent; especially in ceasefiring and the other related areas. So that after that -- and of course they have to be engaged in this -- in trades, that they will be earning, getting money. Either they will take paid jobs in companies, or probably will be given seed money to start their own business in -- you know, the area of business.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

So we have a number of things lined up. What may not be so obvious -- but I can tell you they've let the various committees come up with their blueprints, then they will discuss it. After some months, tends to be clearer. And I don't really want to begin to guess and to tell you something that tomorrow you take me to task: You said it is ready, and now what have you done? So give us some -- a couple of months, and the issues should be clear. (Applause.)

MODERATOR: Thank you. Unfortunately, I think we have come to -- I was hoping we could take one more question, but the ambassador has indicated that they must leave at this moment. So please, let's give the acting president a big round of applause. (Applause.)'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">And I'd like to ask everyone to please remain while the acting president leaves.font-family: 'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

Mr. Acting Vice President, we're very, very grateful to you. You've really made our day here at the Council, and we're very honored to be your host this morning. Thank you so much.

MR. : Thank you. Thank you very much.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">JONATHAN: I have to thank all of you very sincerely for your interest in Nigeria. Please continue to encourage us. We will not disappoint you.'Verdana','sans-serif';"">

rgb(51, 51, 51);"">MODERATOR: Thank you. (Applause.)

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Despite the depression that the Nigerian film industry has been experiencing in recent times, Lagos-based film maker, Kunle Afolayan, picked five major prizes at the African Movie Academy Awards held in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State on Saturday night.
Kunle Afolayan

His words The Figurine beat films from other African countries and the Diaspora to win the Heart of Africa for the Best Film from Nigeria; the Best Picture; AMAA Achievement in Visual Effects; and Best Film in Cinematography categories.

The Figurine also produced another major winner in Ramsey Nouah, who won the Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role based on his role in it..

While other Nigerian movies such as AMBO-produced The Child, Fulani and The Tenant also asserted themselves on the scales of the awards whose jurors were drawn from different parts of the world, films from other African countries won in key areas as well.

Among others, The Perfect Picture, a Ghanaian film by Shirley Frimpong-Manso, won the Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role and the Best Director categories, beating Nigerian stars such as Bimbo Akintola (Freedom in Chains), Stephanie Okereke (Nnenda) Kunle Afolayan (The Figurine) and Jude Idada (The Tenant).

The Child won the Best Achievement in Editing and AMAA Achievement in Costume, while The Tenant, produced by Canada-based Jude Idada and Lucky Ejim won in the Best Screenplay category.

At the awards sponsored by Bayelsa State Government and United Bank for Africa Plc were Emmy Award-winning actor, Glynn Turman; renowned film producers, directors and teachers such as June Givi and Dorothy Wenner ; and a Ghanaian legend, King Ampaw, who bagged the Lifetime Award for Filmmaking.

While Bayelsa State Governor, Timpreye Sylva, said that the government was proud to support AMAA to promote Pan Africanism through culture and tourism, UBA's Corporate Affairs Manager, Mr. Charles Akhigbe, described it as a veritable platform to connect people in Africa and beyond.

In her remarks, AMAA's Chief Executive Officer, Mrs. Peace Anyiam-Osigwe, said it was established to propel what she called the African dream.

"The continent needs to stir real dreams about itself. We need to tell our own stories and come together to promote our dreams," she said.
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WANDE COAL, with a total of seven nominations, leads other artistes nominated for this year’s edition of Hip Hop World Awards. Wande Coal, who won the Next Rated category of the awards two years ago, really had a good time last year with his album entitled Mushin 2 Mo’ Hits, and it is no surprise to many that he is getting such recognition now.

Other music stars with a lot to hope for at the awards ceremony slated for May 29 this year include Kefee, Darey Art Alade, the duo of Nwachukwu Ozioko and Ali Obumneme, better known as Bracket, with five nominations.

It is that time of the year when the bubbles of excitement, long kept aside to germinate since last year, will begin to burst into full events of spectacle. The first indication of such fascinating times and scenarios was set in motion on Tuesday April 6, 2010, when organisers of the trend-setting award dedicated to excellence in music unveiled the list of nominees for this year.

The unveiling of the nominees’ list, as released by the screening committee of the Hip Hop Awards, was greeted with excitement by players, analysts and followers of the industry. The list, which contains the names and works of the big names currently making waves in the music industry, did not come with too many surprises. The list of nominees for the 2010 edition will, however, lead to a keen contest, the kind of which has not been witnessed in a while.

When the Hip Hop World Awards debuted with the maiden edition held in 2006 at the MUSON Centre in Lagos, it caused more than a few to raise eyebrows as a result of the depth of knowledge shown by organisers of the awards. But that was to be expected by people who have been in the game for a long time with the exciting magazine, Hiphopworld, and when the follow up editions of 2007 and 2008 came by, even turning out more glittering and better organised, the whole industry shook with the reality that a revolution has been set in motion.

Incidentally, “Revolution” was the title of the edition in 2006 and with each edition having a fantastic title with the last being “A Prize To Die For,” a fitting title for the 2009 edition of the Hip Hop World Awards, arguably the most organised and keenly contested awards in the country, and so far, largely unmatched as regards content, organisation and delivery..

For the 2010 edition, the key categories of the award is populated by the biggest names with the exclusion of a few stars like 9ice, DJ Zeez, Asa and D’Banj missing, primarily due to the fact that they did not release albums for the period under review, December 2008 to November 2009.

Dagrin, who has suddenly become a household name in recent times as a result of his well received album titled C.E.O, coupled with the biting power and clarity of his lyrics, is staking a claim for the Album of the Year award. Joining him in the quest for that same pedestal is Wande Coal who ruled especially for the major part of 2009 with his album, Mushin to Mo’ Hits. Darey Art Alade with the fantastic UN-DAREY-TED album containing the smash single, ‘Not the Girl’ is in reckoning while P-Square and Bracket complete the list with Danger and Least Expected respectively.

The same artistes nominated for the Album of the Year category dominate in the Artiste of the Year category with Dagrin, Wande Coal, Darey, Bracket all in contention, while Gabriel Amanyi popularly known as the ‘eccentric microphone tester,’ Terry G, taking up the final slot with his very popular street anthem, Ginajh Ur Swagger – Season 1.

The Song of the Year category, one of the most sought after as the popularity of songs are put to test has Bracket in with ‘Yori Yori,’ Kefee with ‘Kokoroko,’ ‘You Bad’ by Wande Coal, Terry G’s ‘Free Madness’ and ‘Alanta’ by Art Quake. Recording of the year throws into the fray ‘Keeper of My Dreams’ by Lara George,’ ‘Heaven Please’ by Timi Dakolo, P Squre’s ‘I Love U’ and ‘Strong Ting’ by Banky W.

Cobhams is once again in reckoning in the Producer of the Year category and he is up against Tee Y Mix, Don Jazzy, Sossick and Dokta Frabz for their various outputs from the refreshing production efforts while Jude Okoye (for ‘Danger’ video by P- Square), Wudi Awa (for ‘Kokoroko’ video by Kefee), Clarence Peters (for ‘Finest’ video by Knight House), Bobby Boulders (for ‘Ako Mi Ti Poju’ video by Naeto C) and Mex (for ‘Safe’ video by MI) are slugging it out in the Best Music Video category as the award goes to the director of the winning music video.

Darey, with a total of four individual nominations, is also in reckoning for best R ‘N’ B single with ‘No Stars’ while ‘Never Felt A Love’ by Femi Adeyinka, Banky W’s ‘Strong Ting,’ Djinee’s ‘Overkilling’ and ‘I Love U’ by P-Square are the others in contest in the rhythms and blues arena. Other categories include Best Pop Single, Best R ‘N’ B/Pop Album, Best Rap Single, Best Rap Album, Lyricist on the Roll, Best Collabo, Best Vocal Performance (Male) and Best Vocal Performance (Female). Other categories are Best Street Hop, Next Rated, Hip Hop World Revelation of the Year and Hip Hop World Hall of Fame, a non-competitive category.

9ice, whose new album is really beginning to catch up on the terrain and who was the biggest winner last term around, is one of the big stars missing due to the date of releasing his album around December 2009, while Asa also has no nominations due to the same reason, but MI has two to his credit thanks to an unreleased track titled ‘Somebody Wants To Die.’

Feelers from industry watchers are extremely positive that the screening committee of the awards has done a good job reflective of the strengths and weaknesses of the performers and efforts on display.

Who wins the Lyricist on the Roll category, would be awaited with eagerness owing to the fact that Mode 9 has won the prize in all the past editions of the awards.

Omawunmi, Next Rated last year, is up against Djinee, Ill Bliss, Kel and Wande Coal for the Revelation of the Year award.

GT ‘D’ Guitarman, who released his album titled The Truth late last year has one nomination, while Banky W, Terry G and Dagrin have one each with P-square with four nominations.
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Veteran actor, Okpala, douses death rumours
ACE actor in the popular television series, The New Masquerade, Chief Chika Okpalla alias Zebrudaya, yesterday refuted rumours of his death, saying he is very much "alive and kicking."
Okpalla, in his usual comical manner, said in Enugu that he is still breathing "like the rock of Gibraltar."

The comedian disclosed he has been alarmed through over 400 telephone calls on the rumour of his death, which he said started making the rounds since Easter Day.

He joked: "But why should people call a dead Man? They should be calling my wife and not the supposed dead man."

Okpala was rumoured to have died along the Enugu-Abakaliki expressway in the communal strife between the Ezza and Ezillo communities in Ebonyi State.

But the veteran actor said: "People want me to live longer than I am now. How did the rumour even come about? It came to me as a surprise. Between Easter and now, I have received about 400 calls over the rumour. They should have been calling my wife instead of the dead man."

Suggesting the possible source of the rumour, Okpala recounted he had actually travelled to Abakaliki, using the Enugu-Abakaliki highway where he was trapped in the crossfire of the communal war while returning to Enugu from Abakaliki.

He said he actually ran into the Ezillo gunmen unaware that that there was a communal war going on but was saved by the police.

His words: "As I was returning to Enugu from Abakaliki, at Ezillo, I heard two gunshots behind me and I thought that the boys who previously snatched my car at my gate in Enugu had trailed me again.

"But when I got to Ezillo market, I saw a group of boys who had blocked the road carrying guns, machetes and clubs but I didn't know there was communal war there. I turned around but they had also blocked the other end leading back to Abakaliki..

"So I was trapped and the only option left for me was to drive into the Ezillo Police Station where I was told it was communal war. But three hours later, the road was cleared and I returned to Enugu. That was two months ago. As you can see, I am still alive."
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Steven Seagal sued for sexual assault

Steven Seagal
Seagal currently stars in his own reality TV show

Movie actor Steven Seagal is facing legal action from a former personal assistant who claims he sexuallyabused her and illegally trafficked women.

In papers filed with Los Angeles County Superior Court, Kayden Nguyen claims she wasassaulted three times before fleeing his home in New Orleans.

The 23-year-old also claims the actor kept two Russian attendants who wereavailable to him at all times.

Seagal's lawyer says the allegations are "ridiculous and absurd".

'Sex toy'

He added that Ms Nguyen is "a disgruntled ex-employee who was fired".

Her $1m (£650,000) legal action accuses Seagal of sexual harassment, illegal trafficking of females for sex, failure toprevent sexual harassment, retaliation, wrongful termination and falserepresentation about employment.

Ms Nguyen, who responded to a magazine advertisement to be the star's executive assistant, claims heasked for a massage on her first day.

Seagal proceeded to use her as a "sex toy" and subjected her to a "vicious sexual assault," shealleges in court documents.

Ms Nguyen adds that co-workers at the actor's production company refused to listen to complaints about hertreatment....

After her departure in February, personal property that was left behind was not returned because she had refused to signdocuments stating there would be no legal action, she further claims.

Action star Seagal, whose movie credits include Under Seige and Flight ofFury, currently stars in his own US reality TV show, Steven Seagal:Lawman.

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He was said to have brought her from Egypt

Criticisms continued to trail the alleged marriage of former governor of Zamfara State, Senator Ahmed Sani to a 13-year old Egyptian girl.pix200707062243171.jpg

The former governor reportedly paid $100,000 as bride price to the parents of the minor.

But in a statement made available to our correspondent in Lokoja on Monday, the National Council of Women Societies condemned the action of the senator, describing it as shameful.

Speaking through its National President, Hajia Ramatu Usman, the umbrella women’s organisation said Sani’s action did not come to Nigerian women as a surprise because, according to them, many northern governors had been using religion as an excuse for not passing the Child Rights Act.

She further stated that the council had been mounting a campaign against young girls being given out for marriage at ridiculously early ages of 12 or 13 years, adding that the action was against all reasoning.

According to Usman, “Vesico vaginal fistula has been attributed to under age marriages due to the practice of early marriages in Nigeria, where young girls are given out for marriage at ridiculously early ages as 12 or 13 years. They get pregnant and when they are ready to deliver, their pelvises are so small for the babies to pass through.

“The baby gets stuck in the birth canal and in some cases dies. The baby‘s head wears a hole between the birth canal and the bladder (VVF) or rectum (RVF).

“So, when the dead baby is eventually delivered, the young mother is left with a dead child and she begins to drain urine and/or stool continuously. She develops sores on her skin and smells horribly from the constant drips of urine and stool on her clothes.”

The body therefore advised parents to avoid giving out their under age daughters in marriage in order to check cases of this health risk, which it said is particularly common in the northern part of Nigeria.

The statement further said, “It is a shame that while we are seeking ways to view closely what pushes parents into giving out their underage daughters into early marriages, a former governor of a state is celebrating this act of child trafficking and abuse.”

It also called on well-meaning Nigerians to mount pressure on northern governors to immediately commence work on the Child Rights Act.

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PHOTO: R-L: NIGERIA ACTING PRESIDENT DR GOODLUCK JONATHAN WITH CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR AFTER THE INTERVIEW AT HIS WESTIN GRAND HOTEL SUITE. IMAGE: CNN.

CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR: Tonight, we have Nigeria's acting president, Goodluck Jonathan, leader of Africa's most populous nation and its biggest oil exporter. 

.

Good evening, everyone. I'm Christiane Amanpour, and welcome to our program. 



Nigeria's acting president, Goodluck Jonathan, is in Washington for the nuclear security summit, and he gave us his first interview since assuming power. He took office in February after President Umaru Yar'Adua had been languishing from a mysterious illness since last November. 



And within weeks, he's had to deal with a new explosion of violence in a long-running land dispute near the city of Jos in which hundreds of people have been killed. And at the same time, he's faced an insurgency in the oil-rich delta region, fueled by small arms imported from the West. 



And when he met the U.S. president, Barack Obama, at the White House this week, Goodluck Jonathan was urged to tackle election reform and corruption. I sat down with the acting president after that meeting, and it's the first time he's given an interview to anyone since taking office. 



AMANPOUR: Can I ask you first, what an extraordinary name. How did "Goodluck" come to be your name?

GOODLUCK JONATHAN, ACTING PRESIDENT OF NIGERIA: I don't know. I have to ask my father. (LAUGHTER)



AMANPOUR: You don't know? 



JONATHAN: No.



AMANPOUR: Have you had good luck? And do you think you'll need more than good luck to face down the incredible array of challenges that's on your plate? 



JONATHAN: Well, the issue of good luck, I don't really believe that the good luck is an issue. But as the president, I've been facing myriad of (ph) challenges. What some people will attribute to good luck could have been disastrous under some circumstances. 



AMANPOUR: Well, let me ask you this. You are now Acting President, because the President, Mr. Yar'Adua, is unwell. 



JONATHAN: Yes. 



AMANPOUR: Have you seen him since he has come back from his medical absence in Saudi Arabia? 



JONATHAN: No, I have not seen him. 



AMANPOUR: Why not? 



JONATHAN: Well, when somebody is seriously ill, either the president or a citizen of Nigeria, and by virtue of being a president is a public figure, but still when you are seriously ill, we would respect the opinion of the family. And in the thinking of the family is that (inaudible) insulate him from (ph) most of the key actors in government (ph). 

I have not seen him. The Senate president (ph) has not seen him, Speaker of the House of Representatives has not seen him, and other senior government officials. 


AMANPOUR: Doesn't that cause, when all the senior members of government, including yourself -- doesn't that cause anxiety amongst the people? 



JONATHAN: Yes, it does. It does. Obviously, it does, but we cannot over-influence his family's thinking. 



AMANPOUR: Would you prefer that the family allowed you to visit him? 



JONATHAN: Yes, of course. But I will not want to force. 



AMANPOUR: What is his actual state of health? This also is a mystery. 



JONATHAN: I can't say exactly. It's only the medical doctors that can. 



AMANPOUR: Have they told you? 



JONATHAN: No, they haven't. 



AMANPOUR: Have they made any public statements? 



JONATHAN: Not quite. Not now. At the beginning, yes, but he left for Saudi Arabia, I think in the second week or so or within the first week we are told that he has acute pericarditis. After that, no other statement has been issued. 



AMANPOUR: So if he can receive religious leaders, why can he not receive at least the Acting President who's acting in his name? 



JONATHAN: Well, religious leaders are there for (inaudible) blessings. But probably that is why they asked the religious leaders to go and pray for him. We are a very, very religious society. 



AMANPOUR: Do you believe that those around him -- his family, his loyalists -- are trying to undermine you or your new cabinet or your efforts as acting president? 



JONATHAN: I wouldn't say they were trying to undermine me, because the laws of the land are very clear. 



AMANPOUR: Do you think he will ever come back to government? 



JONATHAN: I can't say that. It's difficult for any of us as mortals to say so. 



AMANPOUR: So you are now Acting President, and you have essentially a year, because elections will be held this time 2011. 



JONATHAN: Yes. 



AMANPOUR: What is your most pressing issue? 



JONATHAN: The most pressing issue for Nigeria now, in terms of basic infrastructure, is power. What outside power. 


AMANPOUR: You mean electricity? 


JONATHAN: Electricity. But outside that, what is central to the minds of Nigerians now is an election that their votes will count, free and fair elections, because we've been accused of a country that our elections somehow questioned. And I promise Nigerians that they will surely get that, and I've done some experiments. The next thing that Nigerians get worried about is the issue of corruption. You know we've been accused of people who have privilege position in government amassing wealth at the expense of society. So they expect us to take these two issues seriously. 



AMANPOUR: So what can you do to take those issues seriously? Obviously, the issue of good governance, of free elections, free of corruption is central, and you heard the United States has also said just now that you must remove the head of the election commission, Mr. Maurice Iwu. Will you do that? 


JONATHAN: You see, the issue of the -- the electoral body -- the issue is that whether the president electoral body -- we called an Independent Electoral Commission, INEC -- can conduct free and fair election or not. And I told them that, yes, they can, because I have done it with the same people. 



But issue of the people is INEC, I told them that, look, between now and ending of June, most of the officials at the national level -- they're called commissioners -- their tenure will end, and we're going to review them on individual merit. And if some people still cannot go back, we have to replace them. 



AMANPOUR: Do you think he will stay or will he be removed? That's something that the U.S.. 

(CROSSTALK)



JONATHAN: ... among -- among the commissioners at the center that their tenure will end by June this year. And we are going to review...



AMANPOUR: So he will be out by June? 



JONATHAN: All of them we'll review. And any one of them that we feel is not competent definitely...



AMANPOUR: Do you feel that Mr. Iwu is competent? 



JONATHAN: (inaudible) I know that this question continues to come up. What I've said is the issue is beyond Mr. Iwu. 



AMANPOUR: I know. But I'm specifically talking about him, because it's come up in your meetings with U.S. officials. 



JONATHAN: Yes, I agree that within the period that he's chairing INEC, there are quite a number of controversies. I agree. There are quite a number of concerns. There are quite a number of controversies. There are a number -- the perception is that the feeling back home and in the international community is that he cannot conduct a free and fair election. 



So I know what I'm telling you, that this (inaudible) Iwu, I'm not trying to hold brief for him. The Iwu we are talking about has conducted free elections. These past three elections were credible. So the issue is -- because the issue is beyond Iwu (inaudible) set up an electoral system and our regulations and laws that will make sure that anybody who is appointed to that office should be able to conduct acceptable elections. And that is my focus. 



AMANPOUR: OK. Will you run in 2011? Will you present yourself as a presidential candidate? 



JONATHAN: For now, I don't want to think about it. I came in as the vice president (ph) to run with President Yar'Adua. Of course, getting close to -- to period of election he took ill, and I have to take over under somewhat controversial circumstances. Only last week, I reconstituted the cabinet. So let us see Nigeria move forward first. If the country is not moving, what -- what will I tell Nigerians I want to contest for? Yes, I'm a politician and I would be interested in politics, since I'm still relatively young. 



AMANPOUR: But the -- the reason I ask you is because...



JONATHAN: Yes, but I cannot even tell myself now. I must assess myself. 



AMANPOUR: I understand. 



JONATHAN: You cannot just wake up and say you want to contest an election to be the president of a country. First of all, you must say, can you really bring the dividends of (inaudible) three months after which we review ourselves. And I used to tell people, look, if I'm not satisfied with what is happening (inaudible) election? 



AMANPOUR: Well, I'm asking you because there is this informal agreement amongst various locations north and south which has been closely followed about taking turns at the presidency and that power must shift. For instance, Mr. Yar'Adua, who is from the north, has not even finished one term, and he should have a second term, according to your informal agreement. You're from the south. 



JONATHAN: Yes. 



AMANPOUR: So it's kind of not your turn, so that's why I'm asking you -- and everybody's very interested as to whether you will present yourself for elections. 



JONATHAN: Yes, those interests are there. I was part of a lot of meetings in the ruling party (inaudible) even (inaudible) within the ruling party (inaudible) but, basically, the issue of whether I will contest or not is it (inaudible) I used to say that, if I contest elections, the elections in Nigeria are not only the presidency election, et cetera (inaudible) of Nigeria. 



There are options for me if I want to contest election. I recontest as a vice president to anybody. I can contest as a president, because the laws allow me. But that is not my own priority now. My priority now is to see how, within this little period left, what impact can we show? 



AMANPOUR: But let me just get something straight. You say that you can contest and it's possible that you will contest, yes? 



JONATHAN: It is, of course. 



AMANPOUR: Yes? It's possible that you will contest then? 



JONATHAN: These are options. I don't want to think about it. 



AMANPOUR: One other question on elections. Mr. Ibrahim Babangida, former Nigerian military leader who seized power, essentially, and ruled for about eight years in the late '80s and '90s, says that he wants to contest them again in 2011. Is that acceptable? 



JONATHAN: He's very free. There is no law stopping Babangida from contesting. Babaginda and any other military head of state are very free to contest. 



AMANPOUR: What would that say about modern Nigeria? 



JONATHAN: It depends on the people, and that's why we say that -- yes, it depends on -- I will say that the votes of the people must count. Babangida is a leader that has been head of state for about eight years plus, just like you said. Babangida has his friends. He has done some good jobs, even though some people may see -- nobody will be a leader that who will not see you from both left and right. But as an individual, Babangida is very free to contest the presidency. Other military leaders are interested in contesting the presidency, not only Babangida, and they are all free. On that 11th day, Nigerian votes will count, and not me.

AMANPOUR: Mr. Acting President, one of your big challenges, as well, is to try to re-energize the peace process, the amnesty process in, in fact, your homeland, isn't it, the Niger Delta area? 



JONATHAN: (inaudible)



AMANPOUR: Exactly. So there was a whole system set in place, but it seems to be fraying, and there's a lot of concern, particularly given how vital it is as an oil-producing part of the world. What are you going to do about that? 



JONATHAN: Well, the amnesty process (inaudible) what's happened is that people don't really understand the total concept of the amnesty. The amnesty is divided into three phases, the disarmament phase. That is the phase where militants surrender their weapons. Then rehabilitation phase and reintegration phase. 



Some of these militants have been in that armed struggle for a very long time. And when young people are involved in carrying weapons against the state for very long time, there is a tendency for them to go into some forms of aberration-type behavior (inaudible) excessive alcohol or some of them they even (inaudible) so you have a process that you must follow. 



After the disarmament, the next is rehabilitation. You have to rehabilitate them. Then you have to properly integrate them into the society. So during the process of rehabilitation, you must re-orientate their thinking and make them to learn some skills that will enable them and a decent living through the proper reintegration process. 

What's now -- we are trying to make the best -- up to this time, we have not gotten the kind of (inaudible) but now (inaudible) we (inaudible) Niger Delta before the minister of defense, who handled the disarmament, was also coordinating the rehabilitation, and that was giving us a lot of problems.

But now we are (inaudible) rehabilitation. The disarmament was the military exercise, so the minister of defense (inaudible) so the case of rehabilitation and reintegration has now moved into the hands of this president adviser to the president on the Niger Delta. We have a good program. 



So by the first batch of trainees (inaudible) or so are going to move to their camps in the crossover state (ph) by the third week of April, so we have to do them in batches. The total number of militants are about 20,191, little more than 20,000 (inaudible) so it's a lot of youth. And it's not easy to manage those number of people. 



AMANPOUR: What about Jos, which we just saw an explosion of violence there between Muslim and Christian? What can you do about that? 



JONATHAN: No, no, no, it's not a problem between Muslim and Christians. That is quite wrong, actually. The problem of Jos is -- Jos occupies a plateau, quite a high land area in Nigeria. And that's an area where a number of people settle outside the indigenous population (ph). In fact, even when Lagos was a federal capital territory, most -- most Europeans who came to Nigeria, they preferred to stay in Jos. 



Because of the elevation, the temperature is very low. It's like a sub-temperate climate where the temperature sometimes could drop up to minus two. No part of Nigeria that (inaudible) well, because of that climate and the mining of tin and others (inaudible) within that area. 



So there's a lot of settlers from the southeastern part of Nigeria, from the southwestern part of Nigeria, and from the extreme north, so most of these settlers now play big in the economy, local economy. So the indigenous population feels that they have been excluded from the economy, and that has been bringing conflict from the early '60s. 



AMANPOUR: But what can you do about it? 



JONATHAN: Of course, we have (inaudible) in terms of what we are doing, we are discussing with the traditional rulers (ph), we are discussing with religious leaders, we are discussing with opinion leaders. That is to appeal to them (ph), and they are responding. 



Of course, we're also providing security, because, first of all, you must provide adequate security to make sure that people don't carry weapons and intimidate or kill others, so that is being done. 

Then we also are appealing to their conscience using their leaders, both opinion leaders, both their religious leaders, both traditional leaders. And it is paying off. 



AMANPOUR: It is paying off? 



JONATHAN: Yes. 



AMANPOUR: Do you think that kind of violence will stop? 



JONATHAN: (inaudible) I cannot say it will stop completely, but our commitment is to make sure that it stops. 



AMANPOUR: With issues like Jos or the Niger Delta, with the fact that, as you mentioned yourself, there's a severe power and electricity crisis, and all sorts of other issues, how do you make international investors feel confident? Even kidnappings there are, as you've said yourself, need to stop. 



JONATHAN: Realize Nigeria is a very big country. And some of these issues people raise in the media that makes it look as if the whole country is rampant (ph).

It's not quite so. We have a letter of international investors even in the Niger Delta, you have the oil companies everywhere. Yes, we have these occasional issues of kidnapping, but it doesn't stop (ph). But we are also strengthening the local security system, the police force. We are trying to set up a special fund to make sure that we're strengthening the police to maintain law and order. In addition to making sure that we provide what the people will need and appeal to different groups, to see reason why (inaudible) we are also doing what we think is right to increase the security, because you must secure the area. 



AMANPOUR: You've just had meetings with President Obama. What was the most important issue that you discussed? I know President Obama discussed many things, including the issue of a joint fight against terrorism. 



JONATHAN: Yes, of course...



AMANPOUR: It was the Nigerian youth who tried to set himself and set a plane on fire over the United States. 



JONATHAN: Of course, that is an unfortunate incident. But I know you know more than me. When that issue came up, it was a global issue, and everybody traced the history of a young man. This man -- this young man left Nigeria long ago, and he got indoctrinated in the West. 



AMANPOUR: But do you nonetheless think it's an issue that has to be combated, terrorism? 



JONATHAN: Of course. Nigeria -- you know that the Non-Proliferation Treaty, Nigeria is one of the countries that signed it. We believe that the whole globe must be peaceful. We cannot (inaudible) cannot encourage that. Nigerians are not terrorists. We know the problem as African leaders. We are suffering from the use of small arms and light weapons. In fact, in Africa, the use of small arms and light weapons is more devastating to us than even the issue of nuclear terrorism, because Africans have died from small arms and light weapons, more than the nuclear terrorism, because most of these weapons used in the former Soviet Union are no longer relevant, and they've all been shipped into Africa. 



Most of the small arms and light weapons manufactured in America and other -- in European countries are shipped down to Africa, and this is a cost of most of this crisis we're having, this insecurity we're having, so we totally support. 



AMANPOUR: You've got 12 months, essentially, to enact the reforms you're talking about, bringing about the changes, whether it's to election law, whether it's to the issue of peace. How much do you really think you can achieve in this short period of time? 



JONATHAN: We'll do our best. Some of this (inaudible) human issues that you can achieve significantly, like we talk about electoral reforms and conducting clean elections. We don't need 100 years to do that. We don't even need a year to do that, because they're human factors (ph). And a few months, we should be able to set up a system that can conduct free and fair elections. But all that is like basic infrastructure that needs a period that -- that you conceptualize it, you figure out the design, you figure the planning, environmental assessment, and so on before you the physical execution of the projects. Those ones will take some time. 



But still, people will see that you've set up a clear roadmap. If you think the most challenging infrastructure that we have, the power infrastructure, the electric power infrastructure, we must set up a clear agenda that people will know that we are moving forward and we have milestones that we can benchmark you. 



Definitely a government that -- we have 12 months, and especially -- especially it's an election period. Immediately after elections, government’s activities tend to slow down because of, of course, they are key positions that are in government. 



So we have that kind of a challenge. We don't really even have 12 months. We can't even claim to have 5 months. But what we promise is that within the shortest possible time, we take (inaudible) cannot take everything. We take the things that we believe we can leave some footprints, but most importantly for Nigerians to see that we are -- we are serious and we are committed. 



AMANPOUR: On that note, Acting President Goodluck Jonathan, thank you very much for joining us. 



JONATHAN: Thank you. 



AMANPOUR: And that was our conversation with Acting President Goodluck Jonathan. And that's it for us now today.

Courtesy of CNN.

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Breaking News: EFCC declares Ibori wanted

EFCC declares Ibori wanted The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has declared the former governor of Delta State, James Ibori wanted on corruption and money laundering charges. The commission said this in a statement issued by its head of media and publicity, Femi Babafemi. "Following persistent public enquiries over the status of the case involving the former governor, we will like the public to know that James Ibori is wanted by the Commission for interrogation," the statement said. It stated that letters of invitation had been sent to Mr Ibori's known addresses in Lagos and Abuja, and a warrant obtained for his arrest. It had been earlier reported on Mr Ibori's disappearance after the anti-graft agency commenced a massive hunt for him over his role in the illegal disposal of about 500 million units of Delta State-owned bank shares while he was governor of the oil rich state from 1999 to 2007
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as the song goes by DJZEEZ !
bobby eh ,
Ronke Ojo a.k.a Oshodi-Oke has appeared in more than 300 home videos produced in Yoruba language. Easily one of the most visible Nigerian film actresses around, she speaks with ‘NONYE BEN-NWANKWO about her career and the rumoured breakup of her marriage.
You seem to take part only in movies produced in Yoruba language…

No. I do both Yoruba and English movies.

But you are not prominent in English language movies…

I started with the English genre. My baby’s father was an actor here in Nigeria before he left for the US. We were always going to locations together. Later, I crossed over to the Yoruba genre. Sometimes, the English movie producers invite me to feature in their movies. I was part of the cast of Oby Edozie’s movie that was shot in London. We will conclude the remaining part of the movie here. I have produced a movie in both Yoruba and English languages.

So you produce movies as well?

Yes. I am a producer.

How come most Yoruba actors and actresses have produced movies?

In the Yoruba movie industry, I will say that is where the money is. But talking for myself, I would say I like production. I am a script writer. I write stories and things like that. I can’t keep it to myself. And I know that producing movies will be another way I can touch other people’s lives. I like being a producer because I am a writer. In the Yoruba industry, you earn more money than you get from English language films.

Are the stories you write based on true life experiences?

Some of them are products of my imagination while others are based on true life experiences. Some people give me story ideas. When they share their stories with you or give you an idea, you can develop it. That is the way I do my jobs.

Are you working on a new film at present?

Yes, I am working on a new project. I did it with Sunday Esan. When I travelled abroad, I noticed that black men there still behave like African men. Although most of them have not been to Africa, they exhibit the same traits as our African men here. Some of them beat their wives and all that. It is as if the black skin is the same all over the world. Men expect too much from us. They are older than us, yet they want to act like babies. I think people should appreciate women more. I have seen so many things and I felt it was time I did a story on that.

Going down memory lane, how did you get into the movie industry?

I have been a lover of the arts since I was a little girl. I like watching movies a lot, especially Indian films. I like entertainment. There was a day I was passing by Palm Groove/Onipanu in Lagos. This was between 1996 and 1997. I met the likes of Jide Kosoko and some other people. I talked to one of them and he said I should come and join them. Initially, I was in the English movie industry. I was going for auditions and rehearsals at the National Theatre. But I am sorry to say that in the English movie industry, tribalism is common. Only a few Yoruba actors are among them. Although crossing over to Yoruba language films wasn’t easy for me, I met a better atmosphere. Other actors and stakeholders embraced and accepted me. They encouraged me and all that. It may be because I am Yoruba, I cannot say. But they were not like the other people who would just look down on you. That was how it started..

And since then, you have not felt like quitting?

No. The industry is part of me. I love it and I enjoy what I am doing. The money is not really coming, but we are comfortable. In my own little way, I am okay. But the thing is that when you enjoy what you are doing, you may not think of leaving it. I am happy doing this and I know in my own little way, I have touched the lives of some people.

Can you count the number of movies you have featured in?

No. I have lost count. I have featured in well over 300 movies. I have lost count.

Were your parents in support of your choice of career?

Oh no! My father was never in support. He was a customs officer. He graduated from Obafemi Awolowo University. He wanted me to go to the university. He wanted me to be a newscaster or an air hostess.

Why didn’t you yield to his wish?

He had problems in the customs and he left. I couldn’t complete my education. Things were very bad. After I finished my secondary education, I told him I could not sit at home doing nothing. I suggested to him that I should go into acting since it is what I enjoy. My mum asked me if I really wanted to do this. In a way, she supported me. But my father never liked it. At the end of the day, he didn’t have a choice.

How was it like growing up?

It wasn’t really fine. It was bad. That is why I like Saheed Osupa’s song, ‘I remember when I was nobody’. That song goes a long way to lift up my spirit. I never knew I would be somebody in life. I went through tough times. Not that it is really easy now; but it is still better than it was when I was growing up. Some people who you thought were your friends would turn you down. We had nobody. We struggled to get to where we are now. I never knew I would get here. I may not have made it in life yet. To chop na wahala. But I thank God. It wasn’t a nice experience at all. I was the first born in my family and I had younger ones to care for. Thank God things are okay for all of us now.

Do you intend to complete your education?

I have been dreaming of doing so. I have been saying it for the past four, five years, but I keep postponing it. I don’t have any excuse. But my husband is now on my neck. I think with his support now, I will do it before the end of this year.

Most people still think ‘Oshodi Oke’ is your surname.

Yes, people think so. But that is not my real name. My name is Ronke Ojo. Oshodi Oke is just a pseudonym.

How did it come about?

I featured in a movie titled ‘Oshodi Oke’. It was the movie that brought me into the limelight. Sunday Soyinka produced it. I was working with him then. I worked with him for about four years.

You have been associated with a few scandals…


The scandals have never made me want to leave my job. There is this colleague of mine that some people barged into her private life and took some pictures from her laptop and posted them on the Internet. She was a guest at one TV presenter’s show the other day and she said, ‘When you are coming into the movie industry, you should come in with an extra shock absorber. Anything can happen at any time. If your shock absorber is not strong, you will be pulled down.’ As for me, I have extra solid shock absorber.

Do the negative things they say and write about you affect you?

At times, they do get to me. I am human. But when you look at it, it is a price you have to pay as a celebrity. Everybody cannot like you. I am used to it. The fact is that they don’t really write scandalous things about me. However, whatever anybody writes, I am okay with it. I don’t see it as a big deal.

Once, it was rumoured that your marriage broke up. How true is this?

My marriage is 100 per cent intact now.

Did you say now?

I said now because anything can happen at any time. Nobody prays for evil or for a bad thing. But as I am talking to you, my marriage is intact. As an African man, anything can happen. Things do happen. I am not different from any other person. My husband is a man. He is an African man. He would always behave like an African man.

So, how did the story come about?

I was in London when some people called me and started asking me about that. I told them I didn’t know what they were talking about. I had travelled to Canada for a film festival. When I returned to London, I told them I didn’t know what they were talking about, since I was not in the country.

What happened later?

When I came back, I had to ask my husband what happened. He told me that nothing happened.

Did he say he did not go back to his former girlfriend?

Yes. He said nothing like that happened, and I agreed with him. I accepted what he told me. My marriage is okay for now. I don’t know about tomorrow.

But did you know about your husband’s ex-girlfriend that he went back to?

The lady lives in Surulere (Lagos). I knew about her even before we got married. My husband and I have been together for 11 years. We got married last year. We had been together even before I had my baby and before he had his own baby. He has a daughter and I have a daughter too. Our relationship was on and off before we finally decided to get married and settle down. Maybe during the period our relationship was on and off, he had a lady friend and I asked him about her. I knew the girl wanted to see me. She just wanted me to know he was dating her. You know how some girls behave. But after our marriage, my husband said he and the girl had not seen each other. Since then, things have been fine with us.

You said both of you had been together for 10 years before you decided to tie the knots?

Yes.

Why did it take you that long to get married?

I have seen a lot in life. As an actress, you will be exposed to a lot of things in life. You don’t rush into marriage. You don’t marry because you want to marry. You must marry your friend, the person you understand. Having a baby for someone is different from getting married to him. If you jump into marriage, you will jump out of it as well. If you rush in, you will rush out. You must get everything right before you get into it. You have to ask yourself if you really must get into that marriage. You must be sure of what you want to go into. I know it is God that perfects marriage. But you still have to ask yourself if you are ready to get into it. You have to be very ready. That was why it took us that long. We just had to be sure.

How has it been since you got married?

It is not the same as an ordinary relationship. It is a good experience though. It has its own ups and downs. You are not as free as you used to be. As an actress, you can be called upon at any time. But now, you just cannot wake up and take off. It is fun though. I like it.

How come you didn’t marry the father of your baby?

The distance contributed to it. He stays abroad and I can’t just live abroad.

Why? You travel all the time.

Yes, I know. I only travel. I can’t just pack my things and live abroad. So many things contributed to our not getting married, but the biggest factor was the distance. I don’t do ‘abroad marriage’. I am going to make my money in Nigeria. I am a Nigeria person.

Are you still friends?

Of course, we are. We still talk. As long as my daughter lives, we will be friends. He is my friend and we talk.

Do you belong to any cabal in the movie industry?

I don’t belong to any group. I was in one caucus and we went for training together. I was there for a year and I left. I have friends in the industry but I don’t belong to any caucus.

Many people are fascinated by your large boobs

Yes. I know that.

Have you ever found the size of your boobs embarrassing?

Initially, I used to hide them. I never liked the size. I saw them as something that wasn’t normal. I felt they were too large. Before anybody would abuse me, I would abuse myself and tell the person that I am orobo. I used to wear undersize bras so that I would tuck in the boobs. I wouldn’t want people to notice them. But I later changed..
.
Why the change?

A colleague, Foluke Daramola, made me to appreciate my boobs. She told me I was okay. Now, people want to have big boobs. Initially, it wasn’t like that. Foluke told me I should not hide them because my boobs fit me. She encouraged me a lot. I decided to listen to her and people started liking them. People appreciate them a lot.

Do you wear clothes that expose your cleavage?

I used to wear such clothes when I was much younger. That was before I had my baby. But now, my baby is about six years old. I wouldn’t want her to see my picture later in life and feel embarrassed. I see myself as a mother now. I don’t really wear such clothes unless I am on a set and the script says I should wear them.

What are your aspirations?

There are many things that I want to do. I am planning to go into music. I want to have my own studio. I want to have my own drama school. Singing runs through my family, but I never took it serious. I went to the US the other day for the premiere of my movie. I was given the mic to sing for 10 minutes, but I ended up singing for more than four hours. Nobody sat down. People danced and danced. That was when I decided that I should think of getting into music professionally..

Do you think you will be an actress for life?

I want to be a champion forever. I want to remain at the top. That is when I will appreciate what I do. The likes of Bukky Ajayi are no longer stars; they are moons. I want to be like them. I want God to help me to get to that level.
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Devil evangelists: Robbers took my car & asked me to give my life to Christ —Sun reporter
From MOLLY KILETE, Abuja
richard-jideaka%5B1%5D.gif
Monday, April 12, 2010Friday, March, 19, 2010 will forever remain indelible in the mind of Richard Jideaka, the Sports Correspondent of The Sun Newspapers, Abuja office. It was a day the former Secretary General of the Sports Writers Association of Nigeria (SWAN), lost his car, a Toyota Sienna space bus to armed robbers.


After robbing him of the car, the robbers asked him to give his life to Christ if he survived the attack. Jideaka’s ordeal in the hands of the robbers, started shortly after he left the office on the fateful day at about 7.30 pm. After work, Jideaka headed for his home in Kubwa, a satellite town in Abuja.

The journey to Kubwa, was smooth as usual until a few metres to his house. His driver had barely stopped to buy him a recharge card when four young hefty looking robbers suddenly overtook his vehicle and ordered his driver out of the car at gun point. They forcefully moved the driver out of his seat and ordered him to take to the passenger’s seat behind...

Obviously confused about the attitude of the strange men, a now distraught Jideaka, requested to know why they were manhandling his driver. The response was precise. “You will find out when we get to the police station.” Immediately, Jideaka was also forced to move to the back seat of the car at gun point. The robbers sped off with him and his driver. The incident soon attracted his neighbours and family members, who ran to a nearby police station where the case was reported.

Richard took up the story: “It was when they forced me into the back seat with my driver that it dawned on me that they were robbers and not policemen as they claimed to be. They took my phones and the money on me and within three minutes they drove off with us with their gun pointed at my head to an unknown destination.

“While in the car, the robbers called me a 419ner. That I should regard myself kidnapped and that they were sent by my colleague to kill me and steal my car. Next they said if I am not a 419ner, where did I get money to buy a big car. When they saw my laptop, they felt convinced that I was actually a 419ner or that I was into yahoo, yahoo deals. I told them I am a journalist but they refused to believe me until they saw my tape recorder.

“They took the rings on my finger and asked me which one of them was my juju. I told them that none of them was a charm. One of them then threw the rings into his pocket and asked me to bring my wristwatch and the money in my pockets. I quickly handed them over. They commended me for cooperating with them and promised not to kill or harm me because I am a good man.

“Along the line, they asked me to pray that they do not encounter police on the way. That if they do, they would shoot me first. I prayed that we do not meet police on the way and they said ‘Amen’. Thereafter, they urged me to give my life to God if I survived the attack and I told them that I had since given my life to Christ. They said I should do that again, and I said okay.

“At a point, they asked me where I work. Sensing that they were thinking of asking for ransom, I told them I work for a new newspaper based in Abuja. The next question was where my wife works and I told them my wife is a retiree who was still waiting to be paid her gratuity by the ministry she worked with in Abuja. One of the robbers then concluded that I had nothing and that holding on to me would be of no benefit and therefore, I should be dropped in the bush. All along, I and my driver were not to fix our gazes on any of them. They had their guns already pointed at our heads.

“When I stole to look at the speedometer, I discovered that they were almost running the full speed of the car. I said silent prayers that we do not crash. I discovered that they were heading for the city centre instead of the Zuba they made us believe they were going. After about eight kilometres drive at break-neck speed, they branched off the expressway into the bush and asked us to come down and run for our lives. We obeyed immediately and dashed into the bush.

Together with their operation car [a Camry 1996 model] they drove off

“After spending sometime in the bush, we eventually trekked out and met some securitymen guarding some equipment and asked them where we were. They told us we were between New Tipper Garage and Katampe Hill. We then crossed to the other side of the road and boarded a bus back to Kubwa where my wife had already reported the incident to the police. “All my neighbours had gathered in front of my house and were offering prayers for my safety. As soon as they sighted us, the shout of praise the Lord rented the air even as they rushed to greet me.

“My wife and children who had locked themselves in the house, praying for my safety, rushed out of the house when they heard the shout of praise the Lord to find me in the hands of our jubilating neighbours who were too happy to see me return safely.”

As at press time, last weekend, Jideaka, was yet to recover his car.

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Ramsey Noah emerges AMAA Actor of the Year

Popular Nollywood actor Ramsey Noah on Saturday emerged the Best Actor of the year at the African Movie Academy (AMAA) Award held in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital.


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The award was for his spectacular performance in the flick, The Figurine, which also emerged the best film of the year..

The sixth AMAA award was witnessed by an array of movie stars from Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya and the Diaspora. Two American movie stars, Ms C.C.H Pounder and Glynn Turner, also attended the event.

Nollywood acts alone carted away nine of the twenty-four awards handed out including Cinematography and Visual Effects of the year won by the film The Figurine..

Ghanaian, Ugandan and Kenyan movie industries also proved that they had a considerable acting and production talents as they carted away awards in eleven categories including the Best Actress of the year won by the duo of Ashaku Mensa-Doku and Lydia Forson in a movie The Perfect picture.

In his speech, Governor Timipre Sylva of Bayelsa said though the economy of the state and indeed the nation needed all the revenue that could be accruable, his administration is convinced its investment in the AMAA is not wasted as the award has shown to the world that the state and the Niger Delta is safe and ready for tourism, which is the new forte for Bayelsa.

Sylva noted that the continued hosting of the event would encourage the anticipated investors to come to the state to invest and also come into a Public-Private Partnership initiative with the state government.

“This administration places huge importance on arts and culture for the promotion of the African values. We will encourage home grown talents.

“Beyond the glamour of the award, it is expected that the talents discovered would be used to correct the wrong impression about the African continent. I hope they would be used to switch the paradigm from the negative to the positive story of the African people and culture.

Use it to tell the story that Bayelsa State is safe for investors to come,” he said.

The Chairman of the state Hosting Committee and Director-General of the Tourism Bureau, Mr. Nathan Egba, said the state shares a mutually benefiting relationship with the AMMA organization, which has helped to promote the fielding tourism industry of the state over the years.

Addressing the huge gathering of movie stars, producers and politicians, the representative of the Group Executive Director, Communications of the United Bank of Africa (UBA), Mr. Charles Aigbe, said the relationship between the bank and AMAA award had hit three years and the partnership was in furtherance of the firm belief of the bank in the promotion of the African culture through the movie industry.

In her comment on the noticeable developments in the African Movie industry, the Chairperson of the Award Jury Committee, Keith Shiri, said though the number of entries for the awards for 2010 increased with over 280 entries received for 24 categories, the harsh economic condition grossly affected the industry with a reduction in film production and exit of professionals from the industry.

Shiri, however, noted that the few movies produced and submitted for entry for the award showed an improvement in technical and production expertise and increased number of the involvement of the women behind the cameras.
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