Saturday, May 28, 2016
Crush Café Abuja rewards customers with Champions League Finals Giveaway!
Kano state governor sacks his SSG, makes new appointments
Presidency lists President Buhari’s achievements after first year in office
Let's learn some KITCHEN tips, your kitchen is the most important room in your home. Alot comes out from there, so let's learn some few tricks.
1. If you happen to over-salt a pot of soup, just
drop in a peeled potato. The potato will absorb
the excess salt.
2. When boiling eggs, add a pinch of salt to keep
the shells from cracking.
3. Never put citrus fruits(Oranges,Lemons, limes,
etc) or tomatoes in the fridge. The low
temperatures degrade the aroma and flavor of
these fruits.(That's why our tomatoes don't last
in the fridge)
4. To clean iron cookl-ware, don’t use detergents.
Just scrub them with salt and a clean, dry paper
towel.
5. When storing empty airtight containers, throw
in a pinch of salt to keep them from getting
stinky.
6. If you are making gravy(stew) and accidentally
burn it, just pour it into a clean pan and continue
cooking it. Add sugar a little at a time, tasting as
you go to avoid 'over-sugaring'it. The sugar will
cancel out the burned taste.
7. Burned a pot of rice? Just place a piece of
white bread on top of the rice for 5-10 minutes to
draw out the burned flavour. Be careful not to
scrape the burned pieces off of the bottom of the
pan when serving the rice.
8. Before you chop fresh red peppers, rub a little
vegetable oil into your hands and your skin won’t
absorb the spiciness.
9. If you aren’t sure how fresh your eggs are,
place them in about four inches of water. Eggs
that stay on the bottom are fresh. If only one end
tips up, the egg is less fresh and should be used
soon. If it floats, it’s past the fresh stage.
10. To banish ants from the kitchen, find out
where they are coming in and cover the hole with
petroleum jelly(Vaseline). Ants won’t trek through
the jelly. If they are coming under a door, draw a
line on the floor with chalk. The little bugs also
won’t cross a line of chalk.
11. Don’t store your bananas in a bunch or in a
fruit bowl with other fruits. Separate your
bananas and place each in a different location.
Bananas release gases which cause fruits
(including other bananas) to ripen quickly.
Separating them will keep them fresh longer.
12. To keep potatoes from budding in the bag,
put an apple in with them.
13. If you manage to have some leftover wine,
cocktail drinks at the end of the evening, freeze it
in ice cube trays for easy addition to sauces
(white wine works wonders in sauces, i don't joke
with them) in the future.
14. After boiling pasta or potatoes, cool the water
and use it to water your house plants. The water
contains nutrients that your plants will love.
15. When defrosting meat from the freezer, pour
some vinegar over it. Not only does it tenderize
the meat; it will also bring down the freezing
temperature of the meat and cause it to thaw
quicker. # Noteevery woman should have vinegar
in her kitchen.
16. Do you cry while peeling off onions, then try
this. After peeling off your onions, refrigerate the
onions for atleast 5minutes, then dice it. You will
be glad you did.
17. For aluminum pans that are looking dull, just
boil some apple peels in them. This will brighten
up the aluminum and make your house smell
yummy.
18. If your salt is becoming lumpy, put a few
grains of rice in with it to absorb excess
moisture.
19. Always keep an aloe Vera plant in your
kitchen. It’s invaluable when you scrape your arm
or burn your finger. Just break off a leaf and rub
the gel from the inside on the injury.
20. When making a soup, sauce, that ends up too
fatty or greasy, drop in an ice cube. The ice will
attract the fat, which you can then scoop out.
This works wonders
21. To reuse cooking oil without tasting whatever
was cooked in the oil previously, cook a 1/4″
piece of ginger in the oil. It will remove any
remaining flavors and odors.
22. If your milk always goes bad before you can
finish it, try adding a pinch of salt to the carton
when you first open it. It will stay fresh days
longer.
23. If two drinking glasses become stuck together
after stacking, it’s not impossible to unstick
them. Just put ice in the inner glass and dunk the
outer glass in warm water. The warm glass will
expand and the cold glass will contract, making
the glasses separate easily.
24. For splinters under the fingernail, soaking the
affected finger in a bowl of milk with a piece of
bread in it, it will help.
Thursday, May 26, 2016
A Moth Nicknamed 'Tomato Ebola' Ravages Nigeria's Tomatoes
Tomato farms in the northwest and central regions have been ravaged, prompting the governor of Kaduna state in the north, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, to have reportedly declared a tomato state of emergency in the sector. El-Rufai is quoted as saying 80 percent of Kaduna's tomato production — and the state is deemed by the U.N. to be the tomato capital of Nigeria — has been hit by the disease.
That's because a pesky pest — a moth — has got to Nigeria's tomato crop. The insect goes by the name Tuta Absoluta, aka Tomato Leaf Miner, says Daniel Manzo Maigari, Kaduna state's commissioner for agriculture.
The moth attacks the leaves of the tomato plant, and larvae produced by the moth feed voraciously on the plants and cause a 100 percent loss in yield. No amount of spraying is said to kill the larvae.
Maigari said "You spray it, after about three hours, it comes back to life."
Some Nigerians are calling the pest that has ravaged the crop "Tomato Ebola."
Nigeria's federal agriculture minister, Audu Ogbeh, confirmed Wednesday that the pest has spread to at least six states and poses a threat to national food security.
Ogbeh warned that the moth can also attack pepper and potato plants.
"So we are confronting something quite serious. But the good thing is that we are tackling it right now as experts will commence work immediately." He added "We are bringing the commissioners and governors of states to jointly attack this pest, which, if not dealt with, will create serious problems for food security in our country," he said and that everything was being done to address the phenomenon.
Meanwhile, Maigari, Kaduna state's agriculture commissioner, is quoted as saying that some 200 farmers have collectively lost more than $5m over the past month in his state.
Tomatoes are a central ingredient in many Nigerian dishes and very much part of the diet here, so the scarcity means many people simply can't afford toms.
In some eateries, where tomatoes were served routinely, they've vanished. A "suya" (kebab) spot in the capital Abuja is still selling tender grilled skewered meat, with sliced onions, shredded cabbage and spiced pepper powder as garnish. Gone are the gorgeous red, diced tomatoes that used to brighten the popular takeout meal.
The tomato crisis is a blow for President Muhammadu Buhari, who has been urging his compatriots to return to the soil and farm, to diversify Africa's largest, petroleum-heavy, economy. Nigeria is suffering because of the calamitous current market price for crude oil, its main export.
Nigeria is looking to Kenya to try to combat the tomato menace. Kaduna's government has dispatched agricultural specialists to Kenya to meet experts on the Tomato Leaf Miner, to learn how to tackle the pest. Maigari, the Kaduna state agriculture commissioner, told journalists, "We have sent some of our officials to Kenya to meet our partners. Kenya has a good advantage over us on this issue," he said. "We understand that they use a plant extract to take care of this problem. But we do not have that knowledge yet. We expect them to return very soon with short- and mid-term solutions."
Ogbeh, the federal agriculture minister, confirmed that the disease is relatively new to Nigeria, so expertise on how to curb its spread is limited.
Maigari said the problem was so "severe" that businessman Aliko Dangote, Nigeria's and Africa's wealthiest man, has had to suspend production at his recently-built tomato processing plant in northern Kano state because of a lack of tomatoes.
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Why Rivers should be involved in implementation of UNEP Report on Ogoni clean-up — Governor Wike
Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Ezenwo Wike and Minister of Environment, Hajia Amina Mohammed during the visit of the Minister to the Government House, Port Harcourt on Thursday.
The Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, on Thursday said his state government requested to be included in the implementation of the UNEP Report because it is interested in a safe environment for the Ogoni people.
Also, the Minister of Environment, Amina Mohammed, said the implementation of the UNEP Report was above politics, hence the Rivers State Government would be involved in implementation process.
Speaking at the Government House, Port Harcourt on Thursday when he granted audience to the Minister of Environment, Governor Wike said although the UNEP Report was a Federal Government project, it was necessary for the Rivers State Government to be included in the processes.
He noted that it was necessary for the Federal Government to spell out the extent to which the Rivers State Government would be involved and the nature of its involvement.
He said: “We are interested in supporting the Federal Government to achieve the clean-up of Ogoni land,” the Special Assistant on Electronic Media, Simeon Nwakaudu, quoted the governor as saying. “That is why we seek that the state be carried along.”
“By requesting that we be carried along, we are not asking for contracts. We are only seeking to be involved in the process through information .
“Because we are committed to Ogoni land being cleaned up, that is why we are clamouring to be involved.”
In her remarks, Ms. Mohammed noted that the concern raised by the Governor was being addressed as the implementation of the UNEP Report was beyond politics.
She said the clean-up exercise was a long-term project that would last 25 years.
According to her, the interaction with stakeholders had led to more inclusion as they head towards the launch of the UNEP Report.
FG sets June for Ogoni clean-up - By Caleb Ayansina
ABUJA—The Federal Government, yesterday, fixed June this
year to commence the clean up of environmental pollution in the oil-rich Niger
Delta region.
Minister of Enviroment, Mrs. Amina Muhammed, said that the
government was working diligently to review and update its first National
Implementation Plan, NIP, developed in 2009 to address the problem of pollution
holistically in the region. Muhammed, who stated this at the National
Stakeholders’ Endorsement Workshop for the Reviewed and Updated National
Implementation Plan, NIP, for the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic
Pollutants, POPs, held in Abuja, solicited the cooperation of all stakeholders.
The minister represented by her Minister of State, Ibrahim
Jibril, said that they would be guided by experts from the United Nations on
Environment to ensure productive exercise.
Read More
Read More
UNEP Report: Ogoni Clean-up Will Last For 25 Years -FG
— May 20, 2016 4:08 am | Leave a comment
It also declared that the implementation of the report of the UNEP in Ogoniland is above politics, hence the Rivers State government will be involved in the process.
The minister of Environment, Hajiya Amina Mohammed, spoke yesterday when paid a courtesy visit on Rivers State Governor, Chief Ezebunwo Nyesom Wike at Government House, Port Harcourt.
Muhammed stated that the new committee set up by the Ministry of Environment, to plan the launch of the programme will have two representatives of the state government.
She said the interaction with stakeholders has led to more inclusion as they head towards the launch of the UNEP Report.
Responding, governor Ezebunwo Nyesom Wike, explained that the state government requested for inclusion in the implementation of the UNEP Report because it is interested in a safe environment for the Ogoni people.
Wike, who stated that though the UNEP Report is a Federal Government project, it is necessary for the state government to be included in the processes, pointing out that it was necessary for the Federal Government to spell out the extent to which the state government will be involved and the nature of its involvement.
He said, “We are interested in supporting the Federal Government to achieve the clean up of Ogoni land. That is why we seek that the state be carried along. By requesting that we be carried along, we are not asking for contracts. We are only seeking to be involved in the process through information. Because we are committed to Ogoni land being cleaned up, that is why we are clamouring to be involved.”
Nigeria: Ogoni Clean-Up Will Bolster Nigeria's Politics - Parker
interview
By Abbas Jimoh
Dr. Tamunoiyoriari Sampson Parker
is the immediate past commissioner for health in Rivers State. In this
interview, he explained how the clean-up of oil spill in Ogoniland would
benefit Nigeria.
As a former
commissioner for health in Rivers State, how important is environmental
clean-up to the state and Nigeria as a nation?
The Ogoniland
clean-up exercise is important in many ways. A healthy environment is
one of the key requirements for the health of a people. This is because
the level and distribution of health are intrinsically linked to the
environment. For instance, the quality of air impacts on nutrition
through possible contamination of water, food and other micronutrients.
For the people of Rivers State, water and land are closely linked to
livelihood; hence pollution constrains us and impacts negatively on our
health and sustainable growth. This clean-up exercise is very vital and
should be sustained.
How would the people benefit from this exercise?
Apart from the
numerous environmental conventions, which Nigeria, as part of the
international community should uphold, there are also important
considerations linking Ogoniland, and other places in Rivers State with
the global marine environment. So if we degrade these areas, we are also
indirectly creating negative externalities for other parts of the
world.
Because of the
concern for our immediate environment and the larger global environment,
we need to take the following conventions and protocols seriously: the
Stockholm Declaration on Human Environment; Convention on Wetlands; the
Vienna Convention on the Protection of the Ozone layer; the Basel
Convention on the Control of Trans-boundary Movement of Hazardous Waste
and their Disposal; the Yokohama Strategy for a Safer World; the Hyogo
Framework of Action 2005-2015, which was followed by the Sendai
Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030. These international
efforts indicate that the Ogoni clean-up is not only a local but
actually a national and global issue, which we must take very seriously
to avoid or mitigate future disasters that can affect Ogoni and Rivers
State and possibly spread to the entire world.
How would the country tackle this challenge?
Apart from the
disaster risk that results in the vulnerability of our people to health
hazards, there are also opportunities. Given that the natural resources
in our environment must be exploited to add value to the lives of the
Ogoni, Rivers State and other parts of Nigeria, efforts must be made to
step up health, safety and environmental activities, especially on the
part of industries and agents of government.
We can also create
associated industries and sectoral efforts that create sustainable
opportunities for our people. This is aimed at conserving the
environment, and other productive activities within these areas, such as
ecotourism, new avant-garde green industries in the maritime and
associated sectors, as well as in industries that produce compounds and
equipment that facilitate human activities in these sectors. If we are
to take an inventory of the human activities needed to support the
industrial sectors, maritime resources and marine transport industries
in the prevention and mitigation efforts, we can see that we would not
only help to create a healthy environment, we shall also help to promote
sustainable economic activities for both the Ogoni and other people of
Rivers State and other Nigerians.
Do you think this exercise would extend to other affected areas of Rivers State?
It should, but as
you know, a successful effort in one place makes it more likely in
others. But as I have stressed, we must refrain from a reactive effort
to try to create a more sustainable model of disaster risk reduction
approach as advised by the Sendai Framework 2015-2030. In this new
global approach, we must have a continuous model that takes a proactive
review of our entire environment, mapping the risks and vulnerabilities
of all our people through local government and state collaborations with
the private sector and affected communities. In doing so, we must put
prevention and mitigating processes in place, including early warning,
community empowerment and vulnerability reduction mechanisms.
As we say in health
care, prevention is better than cure, but in sustainable environmental
disaster management, it is by far better and cheaper.
When the
Ogoni issue started, the state and the federal government shared similar
political ideologies, don't you think the current differences in
political affiliation would impact negatively on the project?
After elections we
must develop a culture of collective and shared interest in community
development. That is the reason we all offer ourselves for public
service. This clean-up is not for a political party but to ensure that
our people in Ogoni and other affected areas do not see industrial
development as an irreversible disaster to their health and livelihood
irrespective of our political persuasions. In that respect, I am certain
we all share an equal commitment. It must be so.
Are you
saying that such issues are capable of eroding the political differences
among major stakeholders at the state and federal levels?
Well, I am saying
that when it comes to the development of our people, they must come
first before our political persuasions. If anything, our persuasions
should compel all of us to act more in the collective interest. I am
positive we can cooperate and collaboration in this endeavour because
that is what the people expect from all of us. The wellbeing of the
people of Rivers State is more important than any of us.
Monday, May 23, 2016
Nigeria: Buhari Launches Ogoni Clean-Up Project Amid Three Years of Unpaid Staff Salaries
By Ernest Chinwo and James Emejo
https://www.google.com.ng/intl/en/options/
Port Harcourt and Abuja — President Muhammadu Buhari will on June 2 flag off the Ogoni clean-up project in Ogoni, Rivers State.
The project is a cornerstone of the Buhari administration's environmental policy.
But indications
emerged at the weekend that the clean-up project, might be threatened by
the failure of the federal government to pay the staff of Hydro Carbon
Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP), the specialised agency created
during the last administration to carry out the exercise.
The Minister of Environment, Hajiya Amina Mohammed, had confirmed the project will last for 25 years.
HYPREP staff have
blamed the non-payment of salaries on the previous leadership of the
Ministry of Petroleum under Jonathan which, despite so many meetings and
promises, failed to deliver.
However, despite a
stronger commitment to the project by the present administration,
there's still no clarity regarding the payment of the salaries, a
situation which could have negative implications for the commencement
and sustainability of the project-and even demoralise staff from putting
in their best.
Mohammed had
reportedly held a meeting with representatives of HYPREP staff a few
weeks ago but a concrete feedback was still being awaited.
Expectedly,
non-payment to affected staff has resulted in untold sufferings and
inconvenience for HYPREP employees during the three-year period they've
been denied entitlements.
On May 1, 2013,
while on a field visit, three members of staff, Dr. Zaaki Labbo, Dr.
Aloy Agunwa & Mr. David), lost their lives to a fatal vehicle
accident. The then National coordinator who was the lone survivor of the
accident, sustained severe injuries and spent several months in
hospital.
THISDAY further
learnt that members of staff had lost their homes and had their children
kicked out of school, as well as subjected to untold hardship.
A particular member
of Staff endured the death of his wife and baby during childbirth
because he could not afford the N25,000 hospital bill, it was learnt.
However, the
project has now been moved from the Ministry of Petroleum to the
Ministry of Environment, a move which had been welcomed by experts who
have stated that the project should have been overseen by the Ministry
of Environment in the first place.
HYPREP was anchored
on a 2012 report by the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)
on the clean-up of Ogoni land following decades of environmental
degradation.
This report recommended the establishment of an organisation or unit to oversee and facilitate the remediation process.
HYPREP was set up
under the Ministry of Petroleum Resources with over 100'members of staff
recruited, from within and outside the country.
These included engineers, chemists, lawyers, accountants among others.
The project started
on a good footing with a lot of work done in order to prepare for the
pilot phase of the remediation. Emergency measures were completed, a
budget was prepared, work plans were put in place, and units created for
efficiency and division of labour.
In January 2014,
the then Group Managing Director of Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC), Mr. Andrew Yakubu had approved the sum of N2.5
billion for the outstanding salaries to be paid. However, the previous
administration did not implement the approval before it left office.
Again in 2014, some
members of the HYPREP staff also went to the 7th Senate and the House
Committee on Environment to convey their plight.
Senate President,
Senator Bukola Saraki, who was the Chairman of the Senate Committee on
Environment and Ecology at the time, waded in and appealed for these
salaries to be paid.
With the advent of
the Project being moved to the Ministry of Environment, it is hoped that
the competence and technocratic attributes of Hajiya Aisha Mohammed
would bring an end to this sordid tale.
Experts believe the
remediation of Ogoni land and the restoration of its communities
deserve urgent attention without any encumbrances of outstanding salary
issues. Though the present government has shown the sincerity of purpose
to actualize the recommendations of the UNEP Report, this could only be
substantiated by payment of outstanding entitlements to staff.
The son of Chief
Albert Badey, one of the four prominent Ogoni indigenes killed 22 years
ago, Mr. Suage Badey, has expressed regret that both the people of the
area and government have failed to recognise the role played by the
"Ogoni Four" decades after they were brutally murdered while searching
for peace.
He recalled that on
May 21, 1994, Badey, who was former Secretary to Rivers Government;
Chief Edward Kobani, Chief Theophilus Kobani, and Chief Samuel Orage
were killed at Giokoo, Gokana Local Government.
The young Badey,
former chairman of defunct Action Congress in Rivers State, spoke with
journalists in Port Harcourt on issues surrounding the death of the
"Ogoni Four" and violence in Ogoniland.
"On the day they
were killed, they were suing for peace, reconcile all parties and adopt
peaceful approach, but unfortunately, the process consumed their lives,"
he said.
He expressed regret
that while the four sacrificed their live while searching for peace, a
section of the people still referred to them as "vultures".
He said there was need to put the records right and encourage the people to embrace peace instead of violence.
"Ogoni needs to
come back to the drawing board and ensure peace. We need to adopt
peaceful approach. Let this day be a memorable one for us to embrace
peace," he said.
He said Ogonis should embrace peace saying that the violent approach to issues affecting the area would not help matters.
He said the four prominent Ogonis deserved to be remembered because they contributed to the development of the area.
He said for
instance, his father, assisted in the establishment of the state
polytechnic (now Kenule Sarowiwa polytechnic) at Bori, creation of new
local government areas in Ogoni while the other three elders assisted in
developing the area.
He said his the
family had set up a body known as "Albert Badey Centre for Development"
to address peace locally and internationally.
"We are doing our
best to affiliate it with larger NGO's affiliated with the United
Nations. This is because insecurity has become a world- wide problem,
especially in Africa.
"This is one of the fundamental problems that led to the crisis in Ogoni and led to the death of the four," he said.
The young Badey
called on government and leaders of Ogoni to embark on massive
sensitisation of the people ahead of the flag-off of the implementation
of the UNEP Report on Ogoniland to avoid the pitfalls of the past.
He said plans by
the federal government to clean up Ogoni land was a step in the right
direction and required the support of everybody to achieve a peaceful
exercise devoid of suspicion.
Meanwhile the Ogoni
people under the auspices of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni
People (MOSOP) have for the first time remembered the "Ogoni four",
describing them as fallen heroes.
A statement issued by the Media/Public Affairs Advisor of
MOSOP, Mr. Bari-ara
Kpalap, quoted MOSOP President, Mr. Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, as saying
the four: Chief Edward Kobani, Mr. Albert Badey, Chief Samuel Orage and
Chief Theophilous Orage "paid the supreme prize that we may live".
"These martyrs were
murdered in cold blood at Giokoo, the traditional capital of the Gokana
people of Ogoniland in controversial circumstances some twenty-two (22)
years ago," he noted.
Pyagbara, who spoke
from New York, United States of America where he is attending the
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Populations, cautioned his people to
eschew violence and ensure that they did not repeat the mistakes of the
past.
MOSOP President,
said: "As we remember these great sons of our land in deep sorrow, we
urge all Ogonis to stand by our resolve that never again shall we allow
the regrettable happenings of the past to reoccur in our land. Today,
whilst we continue to suffer the huge implications of their demise, it
will undoubtedly be in our national interest to unite and work together
to ensure that their death would not be in vain."
"These late
founding fathers in collaboration with other Ogoni leaders championed
and led the Ogoni struggle on the principle of non-violence and
articulate peaceful advocacy. Thus the strict adherence to these tenets
earned us acknowledgeable and applauded global recognition and support.
It is in this regard that we reiterate our condemnation of recent
violence and needless killings in Ogoni and called on perpetrators to
give peace a chance and stop undermining the peace of the area.
Violence, we must say, is an ill wind that blows no one any good. This
occasion should therefore provide the platform for the reform of our
attitude and approaches with recourse to the peaceful and non-violent
disposition of the martyrs."
"The deceased, in
conjunction with other Ogoni leaders, fought and died for the
rejuvenation, protection and defence of our environment; political and
economic participation as of right; self-determination and resource
ownership and control amongst others. It is indeed gratifying and
consoling that the environmental issue, a core of the Ogoni campaign is
about to be realised, which goes to prove that they struggled and died
for a just, legitimate and credible cause. Ours is not only to
co-operate and provide a conducive atmosphere to ensure success of the
remediation and restoration exercise but also to work relentlessly for
the attainment of the yet to be achieved goals of the struggle."
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