Olusegun Obasanjo, former President goes local, patronizes Nigerian made shoes

Chief Olusegun Obasanjo
– Former president, Olusegun Obasanjo, commends Governor Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia state for promoting home made products

 – Ikpeazu says Aba remains the small and medium enterprises (SMEs) capital of Nigeria, where young Nigerians are engaged in the business of making of shoes, clothing and other products

 Obasanjo has commended Governor Okezie Ikpeazu for promoting home made products. Former president of Nigeria, Olusegun Obasanjo has encouraged the purchase of indigenous products by placing an order for made-in-Aba shoes.

Obasanjo placed the order for the shoes during the 2016 Tony Elumelu Entrepreneurship Forum in Lagos, Daily Post reports. Speaking as one of the panellist at the forum, Obasanjo commended Governor Okezie Ikpeazu for promoting indigenous products.
Governor, I listened to you and I commend you for what you’re doing in Abia. Please keep doing what you’ve told us you’re doing,” he said.

Ikpeazu, who serves as the marketing officer of made-in-Aba product said Aba remains the small and medium enterprises (SMEs) capital of Nigeria, where young Nigerians were engaged in the business of making of shoes, clothing and other products. The Abia state governor added that a firm that had an order to supply up to 50,000 military boots was currently in Aba, where Aba shoemakers were making the production.

 Ikpeazu said: “I am happy to announce here that Aba which is the commercial nerve centre of the Abia State and Old Eastern Region of Nigeria, is also the SME capital of Nigeria, where young people are in the business of making shoes, bags and clothes, including the one I am wearing. “Let me also announce here that a private firm, that has an order to supply 50,000 military boots is currently in Aba, where our shoemakers are in production for the firm.

To help us better understand that Nigeria has great products, these are samples of some of Nigeria made shoes:



President of The Nigeria Guild of Cinematographers dies a day to his Birthday

Prince Afam Chiazor
What is going on in Nollywood? Why is it losing some of its best brains? What could be the cause of this sudden sad news again?

The Nigerian movie industry woke to the sad news that the President of Nigeria Guild of Cinematographers, Prince Afam Chiazor who is supposed to be celebrating his birthday today, died last night.

Several of his colleagues and fans who took to his Facebook wall to wish the Cinematographer a happy birthday were shocked to hear of his sudden and shocking demise. The cause of his death is yet to be known. 

What could be the cause of sudden death in Nollywood? Like some people will say, people die everyday and there is nothing so special with deaths recorded in Nollywood, the Nigeria Movie Industry. People tend to magnify it because of the popularity of the industry among its people.

Could this really be true? Feel free to share your opinion with us.


May the soul of the departed rest in peace. Amen.

Modeling and Pageantry going to the next level in Nigeria and Africa




                                                                                    By Emmanuel Esegbue Bertrams


Nwa Ada Ndokwa Organization is a socio- cultural organization set up to promote the social and cultural heritage of  Ndokwa people who occupy Ndokwa East,  Ndokwa West and UKwuani Local Government Areas of Delta State.

A principal focus of the non governmental organization (NGO) is to project and promote the social and cultural values of the Ndokwa woman, using beauty pageantry as a vehicle toward achieving the goal.

The organization also is concerned and proactively involved in protecting the rights of the girl child, fighting cultural practices against women, such as female genital mutilation and oppression of widows etc.

Behind this human and societal developmental institution, is a young woman, whose antecedent easily defines her as a woman living a purpose driven life.

Queen Valeen Oseh combines beauty and brains and she has gradually emerged as one of Ndokwa daughters who are determined to add value to her father’s land by ensuring that her education and brand identity as a model and beauty queen with multiple awards in pageantry are utilized to provide a voice and direction for the coming generation of Ndokwa Youths, especially ‘woman and the girl child’.

Queen Valeen Oseh is a First Class graduate of Computer Science, of the Delta State University, Abraka. She is currently rounding up her National Youth Service programme at the Taraba State University, Jalingo where she is currently lecturing. After participating and winning various laurels in pageantry, she established the Nwa-Ada Ndokwa Organization in 2012, to organize the annually Nwa-Ada Ndokwa Cultural  Beauty Pageant which she has organized annually since 2012.

She is currently putting resources together to host the 2016 (5th Edition) pageant with a promise to move the pageant to the next level.

Queen Valeen Oseh granted this interview to Emmanuel Esegbue Bertrams, a veteran Journalist and media consultant.

Below are excerpts of the interview.


Introduction
I am Queen Valeen Oseh by name, a first class graduate of Delta State University (Delsu) I read Computer Science in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Computer Science Unit and graduated in 2014.

I am rounding up my youth service this October 6th 2016, and I am currently serving in the Department of Mathematical Sciences, Taraba State University where I lecture.
           
I am the CEO Tisova Relief Concepts, organizers of the annual Nwa-Ada Ndokwa Cultural Beauty Pageant which is a traditional pageant designed to rekindle the cultural values of Ndokwa people & empower the girl child.

Asides being a First Class graduate, I am a Model, Actress, Presenter, Fashion Designer, professional make up artiste, motivational speaker, writer, Editor of articles of any kind, Farmer (currently thinking of starting my personal farm), project manager, Events planner, and a Giver. The list looks endless but it is what it is.

When did you host the 1st pageant?           

The 1st Pageant was organized in 2012. By that time, it was Nwa-Ada Ukwuani Cultural Beauty Pageant and it held annually till year 2014 when we changed the name to Nwa  Ada Ndokwa Cultural Beauty Pageant to reflect the nationality of Ndokwa Nation as one unified ethnic nation with one history and one future.

What inspired the vision to organize the pageant?

First and foremost, Nwa Ada Ndokwa was a dream I had for somebody else. As a growing child, I was fortunate enough to have schooled outside my Local Government which includes my nursery, primary, secondary, diploma and degree education which I did in Delsu and that exposed me to a lot of events and concepts. These exposures made me think, first of my origin, which is Ndokwa and how they could benefit from social events like pageantry.

At that time there was a tall pretty girl I always admired and wished she could start up events like this. I held on to that dream for her for years until after I attended a Pageant in 2012 and emerged Second Runner Up that I personalized that dream. I realized being tall, pretty and beautiful wasn’t just enough. We have dreams for other people yet fail to put ourselves in that dream, its just like individuals expecting so much from the Government without thinking of what they can do for themselves and also the Government. With that understanding, I decided to start and not wait for manners to fall from heaven as I believe that Ndokwa can produce the next MBGN and MISS WORLD.

As a student I contested Miss Ndokwa Delsu Chapter in 2009 and Miss Ndokwa (NUNS) National. Actually I am the first FUNS National Queen. I also won the Miss Ndokwa Delsu Chapter.

I also contested Nwada Anioma and emerged Second Runner-Up. This was 2012 and Miss Peace Delta State which I won that same year. Also, I participated in Delta Talent Quest Acting Reality TV show; a Project of the Delta State Government and I was the only Ndokwa person out of the 10 persons that were selected among thousands that auditioned for the event in Warri, Sapele and Asaba; that made it to the house where we were camped for one month and I eventually emerged the 3rd position in 2011 with Three hundred thousand naira cash prize from the state Government. I have been a State Ambassador since 2011.
           
All these experiences I gathered gave me the knowledge and inspiration to come up with the Nwa-Ada Ndokwa Concept and it took a cultural dimension to change people’s mindset towards pageantry.
           
How were you able to combine your academics with these pageants you participated in and organize?

Actually, at that time I started, it was very challenging but I didn’t lose sight of my academic pursuits because my priority was coming out with a First Class. I was able to juggle both of them in such a way that there wasn’t a clash between both.

My events were usually scheduled to hold during the holidays, December to be precise. The ones I participated, I ensured they were not during school time, I also read ahead.

Can you give us a clear picture of the objectives of the Nwa Ada Ndokwa which you desire to achieve?

NWA-ADA NDOKWA is not just a pageant, it is a vision. It is a voice for the girl child. The pageant was conceived to showcase and promote the cultural heritage of Ndokwa people.

It is to promote the growth and development of Ndokwa tourism industry. It is to train and groom young and talented Ndokwa daughters with the aim of promoting the cultural and traditional values of womanhood.
           
We are using the pageant as a vehicle to fight social vices like Prostitution, rape, female genital mutilation, gender equality, etc. This we will achieve through female rights Advocacy and demonstrating the power and values of women in our family system and community lives.

It is also designed to serve as a serious voice for the womenfolk of Ndokwa nation especially the girl-child, female and women in general. We are interested in promoting feminine gender. We are the voice against rape, female genital mutilation, prostitution, human trafficking, cultural practices against widows and relegation of women generally in relationship, politics and business.

What reform(s) do you have in place to address the general perception that pageantry is a morally depraved event?

We don’t actually encourage undue exposure of cleaverage, because of the general outcry against such practice. But it is wrong to completely dismiss the bikini culture because it’s foreign and English. If you look back into the mainstream African Cultural heritage, you will notice that what we call mbenuku is actually the English swimsuit. It merely covers the breast and pelvic region.
           
Even in the earlier times, take the time of Adam and Eve for instance, when they became conscious of their nakedness, they covered their breast and pelvic region with leaves and felt dressed.
           
However, humanity has moved and gone a long way in terms of fashion and moral values. If we criticize indecent exposure in pageant, what do we say about the new fashion wave that sees people supposedly fully dressed, but with their breast and pelvic regions exposed by handless tops and skirt slights?

So, considering that our culture frowns at immorality either in fashion or language, we now tailored our pageant in conformation with the ideals of our cultural heritage.

What are your major challenges in your effort to organizing the annual event?

My major challenges have been funding and inability to get sponsors to partner with us.

Another challenge would have been inability to attract contestants but this is minor because it’s subject to finance. Contestants want to be sure of what they would get when they win, so good sponsorship with attractive prizes would motivate beautiful girls with talent to come out to showcase their natural endowments.
 Also, we have parental factor. Some parents would not want to allow their children to come out to contest due to the wrong perception that pageantry is an indecent art. I also want to use this medium to appeal to parents to allow their children come out and participate because their fears is actually the reason  Nwa-Ada Ndokwa is in existence.

If you have the needed funds, what improvement would you record in your future editions?

With needed funds, we will do more research on our cultural heritage, give the events a wider and more intensive publicity, and get great (attractive) prizes both materially and financially to attract contestants.

Also, we need fund to put the pageant on the world stage by giving it national and international coverage so that Ndokwa Culture and identity will get world attention.

We will be able to get professional consultants to tutor and groom our contestants as resource persons during their camping period.

We would also be able to purchase a bus to convey the contestants and crew members to strategic locations during camping as well as get a branded car for The Queen to enable her carryout her pet project during her one year reign.


Checkout for the publication of part 2 in a week time… stay connected with us till then.

FG outlines developmental programmes to revive the nation's economy

The Federal Government says it has outlined various developmental programmes that will revive the nation’s economy, restore the value of the naira and “drive hunger from our land.’’ President Muhammadu Buhari said this in a national broadcast to mark Nigeria’s 56th Independence Anniversary in Abuja on Saturday . 

Buhari said the programmes, included the constructions and rehabilitation of new roads, housing and power projects across the country, adding that already the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing had received N197.5 billion for the execution of some of the projects. According to him, already contractors have recalled 9,000 workers laid off and several hundreds of thousands of workers will be reengaged in the next few months as our public works programme gains momentum. 

He said the affected roads were the dualisations of Calabar- Itu Road in Cross River/Akwa Ibom, Lokoja-Benin Road, Ehor=Benin city and reconstruction of outstanding sections of Benin-Shagamu Expressway Edo/Ogun. Others were the expansion works on Lagos-Ibadan Dual carriageway (Ogun/Oyo); rehabilitation of Onitsha-Enugu Expressway (Anambra/Enugu); and rehabilitation and reconstruction of Enugu-Port Harcourt dual carriageway. He said the rehabilitation of Hadejia-Nguru Road, dualisation of Kano-Katsina Road in Kano State, dualisation of Kano-Maiduguri Road, dualisation of Azare-Potiskum Road, Azare-Sharuri Road, Bauchi State, would also be carried out. 

The president revealed that rehabilitation work would also be carried out on Ilorin- Jebba-Mokwa-Birnin Gwari Road, while Oju/Lokoja-Oweto Bridge over River Benue in Benue would be constructed. “Other major highways are in the queue for rehabilitation or new construction.’’ 

On railways, Buhari disclosed that Federal Government had provided its counterpart funding to China for the building of the standard gauge Lagos-Kano railway. He said, “the General Electric is investing 2.2billion dollars in a concession to revamp, provide rolling stock, and manage the existing lines, including the Port Harcourt-Maiduguri Line.’’ He said that the Lagos-Calabar railway would soon be on stream. 

On housing, the president revealed that the government had initiated the National Housing Programme. “In 2014 N400 million was voted for housing. In 2015 nothing. Our first budget this year is devoting N356 billion,” he said, adding that much of the housing projects would be private sector-driven. He, however, said Federal Government would be initiating a pilot housing scheme of 2,838 units uniformly spread across the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory. “We expect these units to be completed within four to six months. These experimental Nigeria House model Units will be constructed using only made in Nigeria building materials and components.’’ 

He expressed the hope that the housing initiative would reactivate the building materials manufacturing sector, generate massive employment opportunities and develop sector capacity and expertise.

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