Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Babangida to quit politics in 2015


Former Military President General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida has said that he will no longer play active politics as from 2015.


General Babangida who was answering questions from newsmen after casting his vote Tuesday said by 2015, age will no longer be on his side as he would be clocking 74 years at that period and will no longer be energetic enough to play active politics.


According to him, "By the next election God willing I will be 74 and you don't expect me to be running around going to our villages seeking for votes, I will be a statesman".


It would be recalled that General Babangida who stepped aside as military president in 1993 attempted to contest the presidency along with the president elect, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan but failed in his bid as former Vice President Alhaji Atiku Abubakar was nominated as a concensus candidate by the Northern Elders Political Forum.


He traced the low turnout in Tuesday's election to the crisis that engulfed part of the country last week but commended the electorates for the outcome of the election which he described as very peaceful.


When asked whom he was supporting as the next governor of the state, the former Military President simply said, "I am praying hard for my brother and I am confident that he will win" but did not name the brother he was referring to.


Vanguard


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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Video - Amobi Okoye brings American Football to Nigeria

 



NFL star Amobi Okoye introduces American football to kids in his native Nigeria.


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Monday, April 25, 2011

Nigerian government to re-open embassy in Ivory Coast

Nigeria is set to re-open its embassy in Cote d'Ivoire as peace is gradually restored in that country. Nigeria closed its embassy when it came under attack by supporters of former President Laurent Gbagbo.


Foreign Affairs Minister, Odein Ajumogobia told NAN that the embassy in Abidjan would soon be re-opened, adding that all staff and families of diplomats who were relocated to Ghana, during the peak of the crisis, would return to their post.


"As a general protocol, when there is crisis in a country, we ask staff to evacuate their families so that they can concentrate on the work at hand.


"In this case, the embassy in Cote d'Ivoire came under attack, so we evacuated everyone, but peace and stability is being restored. So we will reopen the embassy soon," he said.


Cote d'Ivoire was thrown into a four-month civil war, following the refusal of erstwhile President Laurent Gbagbo to cede power to Allasane Ouattara, winner of the Nov. 2010 election.


The development led to the death of thousands of people and exodus of people from that country to neighbouring Ghana, Burkina Faso and Liberia while Gbagbo, after spending days in his bunker, was arrested on April 11, and handed over to UN forces.


Speaking on what next for Gbagbo, Ajumogobia said that he should be treated with respect as a former president regardless of whatever charges against him.


Vanguard


Related stories: Nigerian Embassy in Ivory Coast attacked


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Nigerian Seyi Obakin Makes Prince William's Wedding List

Seyi Obakin, the only Nigerian on the Prince William's Royal Wedding official guest list released at the weekend by St James's Palace, will receive the Royal Wedding Cake on behalf of Centrepoint.


Obakin, a chartered accountant and Chief Executive, Centrepoint, a charity organisation in London was listed alongside David Bekham, Sir Elton John, among others on the merit section of the guest list. He is one of the three Africans invited for the wedding and the only non African monarch after the Crown Prince of Morocco and King of Swazi in the list.


Prince William is a patron of Obakin's Centrepoint and has met many of the young people supported by Centrepoint over the years


Obakin joined Centrepoint as Finance Director in 2003 and was promoted to Chief Operating Officer in 2006. He became Acting Chief Executive in May 2008 and was appointed to that role permanently in January 2009. The royal wedding cake will be donated to Obakin's Centrepoint.


Vanguard




Time Magazine Lists Lamido Sanusi on World's 100 Most Influential People


Yet another reward for hard work has come the way of Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), with the inclusion by the New York based Time Magazine in its 2011 TIME 100, the magazine's annual list of the most influential people in the world.


The Time 100 list, now in its eighth year, recognizing innovation, activism and achievement of the world's most influential individuals, listed Sanusi who was appointed CBN Governor in 2009, as number 11.


Also on the list were world renowned Nobel Laurel in Economics, Prof. Joseph Stiglitz; the German Chancellor Angela Merkel; U.S. President, Barack Obama; British Prime Minister, David Cameron; U.S. Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton; and Lionel Messi, FIFA Footballer of the year, among others.


According to Richard Stengel, TIME Managing Editor, "the TIME 100 is not a list of the most powerful people in the world, it's not a list of the smartest people in the world, it is a list of the most influential people in the world. They're scientists, thinkers, philosophers, leaders, icons, artists and visionaries; people who are using their ideas, their visions and their actions to transform the world and have an effect on a multitude of people."


A statement by Mohammed Abdullahi, Head, Corporate Communications and spokesman of the CBN, recalled that this is the second time in the history of the TIME 100 that a Nigerian is being listed by TIME, just as Sanusi is one of the only two Africans who made the current list.


The award, just like in the past, it is believed, rewards the CBN Governor's courageous leadership, at a time when the sector required tough and decisive intervention.


Soon after assuming office as CBN Governor, Sanusi, former executive director, Risk Management and chief executive of First Bank, dissatisfied with the perceived rot in the nation's banking industry embarked on a stress test of Nigeria's 24 banks in June 2009 to ascertain their health status.


Addressing a media parley last year, he expressed shock that the outcome of the test jointly conducted by the CBN and Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) need confirmed much more than in thought. While nine of the banks- Afribank, Bank PHB, Finbank, Intercontinental, Oceanic International, Spring, Union and Wema, failed the test on all-three counts of capital adequacy, liquidity and corporate governance. Unity Bank was found wanting in capital adequacy, and was subsequently directed to recapitalize within one year along with Wema Bank.


In an unprecedented move that jolted the entire industry and economy, Sanusi, invoking his powers under the enabling laws, removed on August 14 and October 2, 2009 respectively, the executive management teams of eight banks, sparing Wema, whose new owners and management took over also in June 2009.


A managing director and four executives were appointed for each of the eight rescued banks to run the institutions under CBN supervision for two years, with an immediate task of ascertaining the true position of the banks.


Sanusi soon followed with a publication of the list of recalcitrant big bank debtors particularly to the rescued banks, as a result of which many scampered to pay off to avoid crime watchdog- the Economic & Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).


His vision and actions earned him the reputation as one of the most respected and authoritative voices on financial and economic matters on the continent, including a special invitation in November 2010 by the US Congressional Sub-Committee on International Monetary Policy and Trade, to give testimony at a congressional hearing titled "The Global Financial Crisis and Financial Reforms in Nigeria."


In January this year, Sanusi was named African and Global Central Bank Governor of the Year 2011 by the Banker Magazine, a publication of the Financial Times.


Daily Independent


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