Issue 44 - Nigerian Watch
Transcription
Issue 44 - Nigerian Watch
E E GEJ VS BUHARI F R Study predicts no outright winner in February – special report p7-10 Your next NIGERIAN WATCH available from Jan 23 NIGERIAN WATCH THE UK’S LEADING AFRICAN NEWSPAPER WITH THE LARGEST CIRCULATION BEFFTA COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR 9 - 22 Jan 2015 Issue No 044 FORTNIGHTLY To Inspire, Inform and Entertain nigerianwatch.com ‘A SUPERB LEADER and example to every Nigerian and millions of others, including Brits’ Baroness Linda Chalker’s verdict on our Ambassador as diaspora embraces “Tafidaism” NEW YEAR’S HONOURS Queen recognises diaspora champions Pages 4&5 ARE YOU READY FOR 2015? It’s going to be an historic year, says Samuel Kasumu Page 6 PECKHAM PLAYWRIGHT’S LIBERIA PLAY STORMS LONDON STAGE – p14 2 NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 Follow us on Twitter @NigerianWatch NEWSWATCH Who wants to be President? NIGERIAN WATCH Publisher Tevin Jemide Publisher/Managing Director Maryanne Jemide Managing Editor Jon Hughes Art Editor Cathy Constable Contributors Obah Iyamu; Harriet Ogbeide; AJ James; Ayo Akinfe; Funmi Odegbami; Samuel Kasumu; Ngozi Mbana; Ekanem Robertson, Jessica Onah, Laura Adenuga; Edel Meremikwu Chief Cartoonist Harold Ogbeide Office address Nigerian Watch Chartwell House 292 Hale Lane Edgware Middlesex HA8 8NP Email editor@nigerianwatch.com marketing@nigerianwatch.com sales@nigerianwatch.com Website www.nigerianwatch.com Tel: 020 8588 9640 Fax: 020 7160 5232 Nigerian Watch is a monthly newspaper owned by Green World Media Ltd. Views expressed in this newspaper do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the publisher. All rights reserved. No part of the newspaper may be reproduced in any form without the written consent of the publisher. ISSN 2051-4670 An audacious and timely new board game has been launched in Lagos entitled “Who Wants To Be President?” During the game players go through all the processes aspiring political leaders go through with ultimate the aim of winning “elections.” The steps include seeking party nominations, campaigning in the 36 states of Nigeria, for cajoling votes, negotiating for the best deals, strategising, disrupting the plans of the opposition, countering their moves and so on. The game ends when one of the players presents the card calling for “Instant Elections” or one of the players reaches the end. Only players who have won votes in 21 states would be eligible to have his “votes” counted. The player with the most “votes” win and is declared president. The game was developed by Charles Igwe (left), the widower of the late producer and writer Amaka Igwe. He said the game was created primarily as a form of family entertainment and to educate as many Nigerians as possible on the intrigues, strategies and politics of running for and winning elections. “I wanted to bring back the good old days when families would sit around together and have fun playing a board game,” Mr Igwe said. “The game mimics all the drama and backdoor deals that go on in the political space and by seeing them through this game, I hope Nigerians will be better informed about their country and about the politics that surrounds them.” LEEDS’ NIGERIANS APPEAL FOR HELP The National Association of Nigerian Communities in the UK has issued an appeal for anyone who may have known a Mr Olabode Obadina to contact them immediately. The Leeds branch of the organisation are sad to announce the passing away of Mr Obadina, aged 74, who lived at the Woodhouse in the Headingly area of Leeds. Mr Samuel Afolabi told Nigerian Watch, “The challenge is that we need to find his family or anyone who knows him. His burial will be taken care of but we need to know who he is and what faith he was, Muslim or Christian, so we know what kind of ceremony to do.” If anyone has any information they should contact either Mr Afolabi, Welfare Officer of NANC Leeds, on 07915604995 or Sam Leigh on 07939564998. MARCH FOR PEACE IN EAST LONDON TOMORROW Nigerian community leaders will stage a march for peace in east London tomorrow (January 10) to call for more action on knife crime following the murders of two Nigerians towards the end of 2014. The latest victim was 15-year-old Joel Adesina, a promising footballer who was stabbed to death on Friday December 6. In what appeared to be a totally unprovoked attack, Joel was knifed in the stomach following an altercation with a gang of other youths. He collapsed in Bethnal Green and was taken to hospital but died three hours later. His death was the second recent murder of a Nigerian in London. On Tuesday October 14, 25-year old Olamide Fasina was chased by a gang of armed men into an alleyway in Thamesmead and stabbed. Following the October murder, a group of Nigerians formed Oh! Mother to campaign against knife crime and is organising the march. Bridgette Peters, the coordinator of Oh! Mother, said, “We’ll be meeting at Shacklewell Street [E2 7EG] at 2pm near where the attack took place. May God use us to stop all this killing, enough is enough.” l A 20-year-old man has been arrested in connection with Joel's murder. DANCO FOOTWEAR UK Shoe Wholesale See our entire current collection of Ladies shoes and handbag sets, exclusive Da Vinci ® men’s shoes or the Rsb ® Children’s footwear at our Cash and carry showroom at 124 Shoreditch High street, London. View styles for forthcoming collections at our showroom at 10 Chase road, Park Royal, London. 020 7613 5076 / 020 7613 5529 www.dancofootwear.com info@dancofootwear.com KIDSWEAR a www.danikids.com Like us on Facebook facebook.com/NigerianWatch NEWSWATCH NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 3 SIMPLY THE BEST Baroness Linda Chalker’s accolade to Nigeria’s Ambassador to the UK at the launch of a book celebrating “Tafidaism” L-R: Dr Nkem Ezeilo, Baroness Chalker, Dr Tafida, Mohammed Lere (SA to the Kaduna State governor on trade and investment) “A superb leader”, head and shoulders above the rest, is how long-time friend and champion of Africa Baroness Linda Chalker described Nigeria’s ambassador to the UK Dr Dalhatu Sarki Tafida OFR, CFR, at a glittering party to mark the launch of the first book in a series to celebrate Nigeria’s heroes. In Dr Tafida Nigerians are blessed to have such an inspirational man at the helm she declared to the hundreds of Nigerian community leaders and members of the diplomatic community who gathered at the Millennium Gloucester Hotel in Kensington for the event held shortly before Christmas. The Baroness told the gathering that “it is a very great honour for an English lady to pay tribute to someone I admire so much. I have known a number of Nigerian High Commissioners and many more High Commissioners since entering parliament over 40 years ago. But I have to say I don’t think that I’ve ever come across somebody who has so taken the hearts and minds not only of his staff and the Nigerian community but of almost everyone he meets. “I don’t think I’ve ever heard a bad word said about Dr Tafida because there are no bad words to say about him.” She said he was respected and revered among British parliamentarians and the diplomatic community for the job he has done since assuming the role of High Commissioner seven years ago. “It’s very hard when you’ve had a very notable career such as he has to end up doing one of the busiest jobs on behalf of the President in a country that I think is very important to the great majority of Nigerians.” She continued, “Since 1966, when I first came to Nigeria I have watched the country grow. Of course, like every developing country it has had its stresses and strains but by golly the ingenuity and work I see going on is impressive and that comes through leadership. “Leadership is a word I use quite sparingly these days,” she added, “But not tonight, because this man is an example to every Nigerian and to millions of others, including Brits. To do a job thoroughly, to do it with understanding and compassion and always to have his community first.” Addressing Dr Tafida directly from the stage she concluded, “And that, you, my dear friend, have done every day of every year you have been with us here in London. I didn’t know you years ago, I wish I had, but I know many Nigerians who have known you for a long time. You have not changed, wherever you have gone, wherever you are, you have given us leadership. Thank you Dr Tafida for being a superb leader.” With such a glowing testimony from someone who herself is highly respected among parliamentary and diplomatic circles around the world it is clear why Dr Tafida was chosen as the subject of the first book to be launched in what is intended to be a series celebrating the lives and times of great Nigerians, as an inspiration and example for others to follow. Entitled The Legacy of Dr Dalhatu Sarki Tafida OFR, CFR: A Time Conscious Disciplinarian, the book is not only an honour to the longserving diplomat but also designed to discourage the Nigerian habit of late-coming and the African Time syndrome. The publications are the brainchild of Bimbo Afolayan Roberts, the chairman of the Central Association of Nigerians in the UK and the annual Nigerian Diaspora Direct Investment Summit. He told the gathering, “Dr Tafida, elder statesman, is an example of best practice to us all. We felt the need to celebrate his legacy as an inspiration for the next generations.” He marvelled at how the High Commissioner combined the two attributes of being “a very strict disciplinarian and very good guy”. “One of the major issues we have as a community is time management,” he said. But good time management is a prerequisite of the business of developing Nigeria’s full potential. “What we have learnt from Dr Tafida should rightly be passed on to future generations.” And then he declared this the dawn of a new era of Tafidaism, adding, “Tafidaism is time consciousness.” Dr Tafida responded by saying he was overwhelmed by all the love and affection shown to him by the Nigerian community in the UK and was humbled by the fact that such an event was organised in his honour. With typical humility he said the transformation of the Mission was not his achievement alone but owed much to the help of his staff. “We will continue to do our best and even better for the people,” he said. The biography of Dr Tafida was written by Dr Nkem Ezeilo, who spoke to several people close to the high commissioner, including his wife and staff. It is the first in a series and over time more will be published, highlighting the need to address other serious issues. Dr Ezeilo added that punctuality was a good one to start with as it has become a characteristic of Nigerians in the UK, who regularly show up late for events. See comment, page 11 4 NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 Follow us on Twitter @NigerianWatch HONOURSWATCH A host of Africans and friends of Africa were recognised in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours Missionary receives award in DRC outpost Veteran missionary Maud Kells discovered she was to deep in a remote patch of central Africa. be honoured with an OBE while checking her emails The award recognises 75year-old Maud’s lifetime of work at a medical centre in the impoverished and war-ravaged Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Ms Kells, from Cookstown, Northern Ireland, is still currently in Mulita in the east of the country, due to return in March, and cannot be reached directly. However, her sister Margaret Keane, 77, spoke of breaking the news to her after finding the letter at Maud’s bungalow. “She is absolutely de- lighted,” Margaret told the local newspaper the News Letter. “She said: ‘I’m not getting that! They couldn’t honour me like that!’ She could not believe it.” Ms Kells it materialises only turns on her solar-powered laptop once a week to check emails. Margaret said the machine did not have enough power to let her download the Cabinet Office forms which are needed to accept the award, so she had to fill them in for her. Ms Kells has worked in the DRC since 1968 for the charity WEC International, and its Ireland director Norman Cuthbert said, “She works on her own and has done for many, many years. She studied nursing here and then one day as a Christian she felt God was calling her to go overseas. “She’s a tough lady. I think the last time she was out there she got sick for a while, but seems just to get back on her feet again. We’re sometimes a bit concerned because we’re so cut off from any news.” The DRC has been the scene of a long-running and extremely bloody conflict for decades, and Mr Cuthbert believes she even had to be airlifted out once due to rebel activity. CAMPAIGNERS AND COMMUNITY ACTIVISTS WIN AWARDS Brendon Batson, the former West Brom defender who was one of the pioneers for black footballers in the 1970s, has been awarded an OBE for services to football. Mr Batson, previously an MBE, worked for the Professional Footballers' Association and more recently has been an adviser to The Football Association on equality and football development. Batson said, “When we look at the way things have evolved over the years as a whole I am very pleased with the development of black players but there is still a long way to go to address the lack of representation in coaching, management and governance.” Meanwhile, Linvoy Primus, the former Portsmouth defender, receives an MBE for services to football and charity. Mrs Lou Lockhart-Mummery, founder member of the Independent Monitoring Board at Heathrow Airport was awarded an MBE for services to prisoners and detainees. Independent Monitoring Boards work inside every prison, immigration removal centre and some short term holding facilities at air- 20 % discounted deals availaBle for arik airline ,klM roYal dutch airline and British airwaYs MONEY BACK GUARANTEED CHEAPER TICKETS TO NIGERIA AND GHANA lagos harare accra lilongwe captown abidjan dakar dar es salam nairobi entebbe kinshasa khartoum Banjul lusaka Jamaica £455 gBp £490 gBp £452 gBp £450 gBp £495 gBp £490 gBp £465 gBp £455 gBp £470 gBp £480 gBp £520 gBp £430 gBp £465 gBp £560 gBp £810 gBp EASTER AND SUMMER DEALS FOR LAGOS AND ABUJA Airline Fare air france £440 gBp klM £455 gBp arik airline £510 gBp ports. Sheffield community stalwart Alva Guy Lambert, 70, received an MBE for almost 40 years of distinguished service to the AfroCaribbean community in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. Mr Lambert joined the West Indian Association in 1974 and went on to establish Sheffield’s first credit union. He has held the roles of treasurer, manager and chairman of the association, and in 1994 was appointed as director of the new South Yorkshire Afro-Caribbean centre on The Wicker. An MBE was awarded to Uduak Archibong PhD, Professor of Diversity at the University of Bradford, UK, where she directs the Centre for Inclusion and Diversity and provides strategic oversight for equal- ity and diversity across the institution. A long-standing race campaigner, the honour was given in recognition of her services to higher education and equality. She is also Visiting Professor at the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal South Africa, Visiting Professor at the Central University College in Ghana, Fellow of the West African College of Nursing and Fellow of the Royal College of Nursing. MBEs also went to Ms Jane Caroline Miller, Senior Health Adviser at the Department for International Development for services to Development in Africa, particularly towards ending Female Genital Mutilation; Ms Claire Louise Gott Design Package Manager, WSP UK for services to Civil Engineering and charitable services in Cameroon; and Anthony Olusola Ademola Ageh, Controller of Archive Development BBC, for services to Digital Media. exclusive offers discounted price save up ASWAD STAR ADDS BIG GONG TO STELLAR CAREER Brinsley Forde, founding member of reggae band Aswad, has been made a MBE for services to the arts. The 61-year-old first found fame as a child actor in the BBC children’s comedy series Here Come The Double Deckers – first screened in 1970. A former student of John Kelly Boys’ School in Crest Road, Neasden, (now Crest Academy), he also made appearances as a pupil in the ITV sitcom Please Sir, and the James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever. Aswad, which formed in the mid 1970s had been the backing band for Jamaican star Burning Spear. After their formation Forde played a key part in the film Babylon, about the disillusionment of black communities in south HONOUR FOR ROYAL GARDEN PARTY ‘HOUSE BAND’ LEADER The founder and leader of the Melodians Steel Orchestra UK Terry Noel received an MBE in the New Year Honours for his services to music. Mr Noel formed the Melodians in October 1987 and has been the band leader ever since. The Melodians is a ‘not for profit’ organisation and became a registered charity in 1994. The Melodians currently has 34 members, aged from 11 to over 70. The achievements of the Melodians in the past 27 years have been numerous and diverse including playing at eight successive Commonwealth Day services in Westminster Abbey, 14 concerts at the Royal Albert Hall, numerous Royal Garden Parties including the Queen’s Golden to £150 Jubilee at Windsor Castle and the 55th Venice Biennial among countless other credits. virgin atlantic £550 gBp British airways £568 gBp 1.terms & conditions applied to all bookings and below fares 2.fare and taxes is subject to change. 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In recent years Mr Forde has carved out a successful career as a broadcaster after becoming one of the first DJs on BBC digital station 6 Music with his Lively Up Yourself programme. He has also presented radio documentaries and the VH1 programme Soul Vibrations and collaborated with acts such as Dizzee Rascal. Speaking about his honour he said, “I’m really proud. The important thing is that someone thinks you are worthy of nominating and has appreciated what you have done.” info@cheapestairflights.co.uk Like us on Facebook facebook.com/NigerianWatch NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 HONOURSWATCH 5 list. AJ James rounds up the notable community heroes to have made their mark on society Volunteer maths teacher awarded MBE for services to education A man who runs free maths classes for primary age children has been recognised in the New Year Honours list with an MBE. Nigerian Gbolahan Bright has been running the Bright Academy maths clubs for primary age children in London and Essex for the past 20 years. “I have gained a lot from this society. I have been blessed and it would have been ungrateful of me if I did not give back,” he said. Mr Bright’s honour is for services to education in East London. It was his wife, Afolasade’s involvement in local politics, first with Hackney council and later with Barking and Dagenham, that saw him start on the idea. “Being a Christian I am not one to sit on the fence. I wanted to give all it takes to make it work,” he says. “I feel so humble to be recognised at this level.” The couple arrived in the UK from Nigeria in 1990. Mr Bright is a chemistry graduate and has been a teacher for 36 years. “That is my life. I have a passion for teaching.” He now works parttime as a mathe m a t i c s lecturer at Barking and Dagenham college and was ordained as a pastor in 2012. Together with his wife, he now runs four free maths clubs, taking children from the age of seven - though they will sometimes include six-yearolds with older siblings already in the class. The couple say the aim of the clubs is to encourage children to aim to be the best. “If the foundation is strong then you can build a good structure, therefore the focus is at primary level,” he explains. The couple’s own three children all gained GCSE maths while in primary school. The eldest, Joshua, 22, went on to gain a bachelor’s degree from Queen Mary University London at 17, a masters at 18 and now works for a global investment bank. Mrs Bright says having a mathematician for a husband was a big advantage. “He believes that you have to catch children while they are young. He knows that without maths you can’t really do much. You can’t really get anywhere in life without it.” The couple realised other parents might struggle to help their children with maths problems, so they set up their first club to help other families. “We are very child-centred. We help them regardless of their background, social or religious. We create an atmosphere of fun. It’s not just about learning. We do debates, develop their presentation skills. A lot of them have been successful in a variety of fields,” says Mrs Bright. “We view every child as gifted. It is our job to motivate them”, her husband adds. “It is not just about mathematics. The aim is to encourage the children to aim to be the best. We want to get them away from things that distract them and give them a positive influence instead. “We want to have an impact irrespective of a child’s background. It is beyond mathematics. The aim is to bring the best out of each child. It gives us joy.” HONOUR FOR GRANDMA NOMINATED BY KICC Dr Pamela Oriri Scholastica Ayewoh-Bernard, 59, from Bedford, received an MBE for services to the African and Caribbean community in the town. Dr Ayewoh-Bernard, who has five children and qualified as a coagulation scientist at Cranfield University, has given 18 years voluntary service to creating opportunities for young people from the African and Caribbean community in Bedford. She became involved with Youths in Focus, established to give Bedford’s young Black community a better chance in life by providing free extra tuition to those studying for their GCSE and A-Level exams. She initiated a self-help and support service to bridge gaps identified in mental health service provision for African, Caribbean and mixed-heritage sections in Bedford an in 2010 she helped re-activate the Bedford African and Caribbean Forum (BACF). She became executive manager and successfully secured £95,000 for BACF projects in 2011-2012 and was also behind a project to put together a charity cookbook of cultural dishes from Africa and the Caribbean Islands. She ensured that 50 per cent of the first year sales profit was donated to BACF and is currently working with 10 senior Africans and Caribbeans living in Bedford to get their real life stories and their reasons for coming to the UK. The grandmother said of her honour, “When I received the letter about the MBE it was very emotional, I was so pleased but just didn’t know how it had happened. The first thing I did was ring one of my children. “Later I found out it was because I had been nominated by the community at the KICC Church in Kempston. “My late husband and I started the BACF in 1994 and it became a registered charity in 2004. Originally I was working as a volunteer but in 2008 the administrator passed away and there was no-one to help them get the funding so I retired early and started work on a full time basis for the charity. “I want to encourage the Black children in Bedford to aim for the sky and let them know anything they set their mind to they can achieve. I want them to have role models in the community.” CHEAP FLIGHTS-AFRICA Guaranteed- Taxes included Book & Confrim *£75* (deposit) Hotels, Insurance & Car Hire available Abidjan Abuja Accra Addis Ababa Asmara Bamako Banjul Cairo Cape Town Conakry Dakar Dar'salaam Douala 525 535 480 395 695 669 685 305 530 655 519 483 440 Dubai Durban Entebbe Freetown Gabarone Harare Jo'Burg Kano Khartoum Kigali Kinshasa Lagos Libreville 329 620 465 649 750 485 488 555 435 599 625 488 459 Lusaka Luanda Maputo Mogaddishu Monrovia Nairobi Niamey Nouakchott Port Harcourt Sanaa Tripoli Tunis Windhoek 545 625 709 935 705 440 505 775 665 475 245 185 745 0207 586 1234 WWW.goclassic.co.uk 6 NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 KASUMUWATCH Follow us on Twitter @NigerianWatch The SAMUEL KASUMU Column One year, two elections – it’s going to be historic and explosive If there was ever a year on the political landscape that will go down in history then 2015 will certainly be it. Not only will we have a General Election here in the home of democracy, and a national election in the largest country in Africa; but we will also see the candidates for both the London Mayoral elections and the United States Presidency raise their heads above the parapet in preparation for 2016. This year will be a year like no other, a clash of the titans, and the world will be watching. What makes this year even more exciting is the unpredictability with regards to results. In the United Kingdom this will be the most open election in decades. The pollsters are all very apprehensive about predicting which way things will go as the two major parties battle it out. No one in Westminster foresaw the rise of the UK Independence Party (Ukip) when I spent 2011 and 2012 working with the Conservatives to broaden their appeal. It was something that only became apparent towards the latter part of my time with them, but even more surprising in recent times is the fact that Ukip seem to be taking away votes from Labour in Northern constituencies. In Nigeria this will be the first time where there is a single clear opposition party to take on the incumbent PDP. The APC have been impressive in their candidate selection process and have also been able to avoid any major early divisions. In General Buhari the APC has a leader that has run the country, has “This year will be a year like no other, a clash of the titans, and the world will be watching” a military background that gives him the experience to overcome the Islamic insurgents, and of course benefits from the experience of many electoral defeats in the past. He is quite old for a potential new head of state at 72, but the question put to Nigerians will be whether they are happy with the progress of the country on the balance of things or if they think it is time for something new. One thing is for sure, Nigeria will never be seen as a one party state with a fragmented opposition ever again. We can only wonder why it took so long for people to figure out this was the best way forward. This year’s elections will also be very special because it will be the first time that technology and social media forms the backbone of elections in both Nigeria and the UK. Of course, social media was an effective tool in the past, but over the last four to five years we have seen the use of social media grow significantly. The need to adapt to this change has led to both Labour and Conservatives employing professionals from the Obama election campaign. Voting is the beginning not the end of our role When it’s all said and done, when the people have decided who they will elect, and when those who are defeated move on, we should all be aware that those who govern will need the support of a nation if they are to truly do a good job. Far too often we simply disengage from politics as soon as we have cast our vote at the ballot box, leaving people that are human like ourselves to govern with limited accountability. This year’s elections should be an opportunity for us to say that things will be different. We must not hold people to account once every four or five years. It must be a daily, weekly, and monthly activity. I will be hitting the campaign trail myself because it would be hypocritical not to show my support for a government that I believe has achieved a lot in the last five years. The Conservatives have introduced the Help to Buy scheme, allowing many first time buyers to enter the housing market. They have of course launched the Start-Up Loans initiative, helping 10,000s to access finance to set up and grow their own business. They have begun to reform a failing education system, allowing parents to set up and run their own schools, and continue to ensure that Britain plays its part on the international stage. I can go on and on about the achievements of this government, especially when reflecting on how the economy has turned around. The country must be reminded of the challenges that were left behind by Labour. We must remember that when we vote we are not only making a decision about a government for today, but we are thinking about the country that we want our children’s children to grow up in. This must be what governs our decision come election day in May. Christmas chaos has taught me valuable lesson My wife and I live in a relatively secluded area just outside of London. The Christmas just past was the first time since we married that we had both our families with us and I must say that it wasn’t what I had prepared for. Our house was full for a whole week and with a quick return to work, it has meant that we haven’t actually had a real break. When you are used to having just you and one other person in your house things can get very overwhelming as the numbers increase. At first this new experience left me rather offended. I wanted to use the holidays as an opportunity to rest and reflect with a busy start to the year ahead. My plans were not centred on the idea of entertaining people for a sustained period of time. But by the time we finally got to the point where it was just my wife and I (just a day before returning to work) I felt like the experience was actually a blessing in disguise. It reminded us that family is something important. You do not choose your family and ultimately they don’t choose you. But they are the people that love you unconditionally, are there for you when others won’t be, and in the case of mothers, their love for you is beyond something that can be described. My Christmas on deeper reflection wasn’t just the most expensive, but was also the best. It was an opportunity to once again understand that anyone with a family that is alive and healthy has something that so many people would give so much to have… even if sometimes family equals a noisy house. To advertise call 0208 588 9640 or email sales@nige- Like us on Facebook facebook.com/NigerianWatch NEWSWATCH NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 7 PRESIDENTIAL NIGERIA 2015 ELECTION SPECIAL GENERAL BUHARI PRESIDENT GOODLUCK JONATHAN ARE WE HEADING FOR A RUN-OFF ON VALENTINE’S DAY? Oxford University academics Zainab Usman and Oliver Owen have produced daring projections for Nigeria’s forthcoming elections. While all such predictions need to be handled with caution their analysis provides a fascinating guide to the contests ahead, for both the state governorships and presidency. Their conclusions were premised on the belief that the incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan would be challenged by a northern Muslim, which he is in General Muhammadu Buhari. And their data crunching has revealed the very real possibility that for the first time in Nigeria’s history the Presidential election might well be a dead heat and require a run-off. Their report entitled Incumbency and Opportunity: Forecasting Nigeria’s 2015 Elections made the following headline findings… l In order to win the Presidency in 2015, the successful party will have to control the majority of Nigeria’s 36 state Governorships. l This numerical analysis indicates both the PDP and APC could each secure 17 states in Governorship elections. l In the 2015 elections half of the State Governors will have completed their maximum two terms, so state-level elections are likely to be extremely competitive across the country. l To win, a Presidential candidate needs an overall majority and at least 25% of the votes in two-thirds of the states (24 states). On current indications, if President Goodluck Jonathan runs as PDP candidate he is likely to get an overall majority. However, he may not automatically get the necessary one-quarter of the vote in two-thirds of states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). l Of the 28 governorship elections taking place, 18 states (or two-thirds) will have vacant seats. 10 of these 18 states have 40.9% of all registered voters. l Therefore if voting patterns are similar to 2011 a run-off election situation would be likely. This would be a historic first under Nigeria’s present electoral system. l However, this run-off outcome is likely to be determined by the choice of candidates put up by the main APC opposition party and the issue of North-South ‘zoning’. l It is difficult to predict the outcome of this run-off. If it does not favour an outright win for the PDP, it may further weaken its chances at the subsequent gubernatorial elections given that half of the seats are vacant. l 2011’s results are only a useful guide to 2015 if conditions stay the same, including INEC’s conduct in voter registration and election management. l Therefore, with high incentives for many actors to rig, it will be important for stakeholders in democratic consolidation to focus on issues such as registration and collation, which are likely to be hot in all states. Full report, turn to page 8 8 NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 Follow us on Twitter @NigerianWatch NEWSWATCH NIGERIA 2015 ELECTION SPECIAL Continued from page 7 THE RATIONALE A s the 2015 elections inch nearer, the spaces of Nigerian public discourse are beginning to fill with speculation as to the chances of various contenders, the possible alignments of political forces, and likely outcomes. Yet most of this discussion is conjectural and instinctive rather than analytical. Here, we attempt instead to make some projections about 2015’s elections by generating conclusions from 2011’s election results, turnouts and voter numbers. Our central assumption is that since 1999, the parties which have controlled Nigeria’s 36 state Governorships have been able to strongly influence the result of Presidential elections in each state. In 2011, President Goodluck Jonathan won the election with 22,495,187 total votes across the country, winning not only states where the ruling PDP governed, but also all states in the SouthWest apart from Osun, thanks to an electoral pact between the PDP and the now-defunct ACN which ran most South-Western states. Although President Jonathan did not win in 12 Northern states (including nine which returned PDP Governors but where a majority voted for Muhammadu Buhari of the now-defunct CPC for President), he was able to get over the 25% of votes threshold in all but four (all Northern) states; of which only two were PDP. This indicates that local voter appeal can be an important modifier of the power of incumbency. But in 2015, the landscape appears very different. As control of the 36 states and Federal Capital Territory (Abuja) is key to how national elections are won, we must first examine the state-level elections. In 2011, one of the authors analysed gubernatorial election results (as posted by Nigeria Elections Coalition). Some interesting findings emerged: 1 Nigeria’s elections conform to a rule of thumb, (as propounded by political scientists such as Nic Cheeseman) about elections in Africa and more widely: when incumbents run for re-election, they win over 85% of the time and typically with over 60% of the vote – in 2011, 17 of Nigeria’s 20 then-incumbent State Governors were re-elected – exactly 85%, with an average winning vote of 69%. 2 Although based on a small sample, this margin of victory was similar whether the winning Governor was from the national ruling PDP or another party, suggesting that state-level incumbency might be more important than being part of a national ruling party. 3 Any candidate contesting for a ‘vacant’ Governorship is more likely to win, and by a larger margin, if they are from the same party as the previous incumbent. (See calculations below). As well as pointing to the importance of incumbency, and the role of constitutional mechanisms such as term limits in maintaining democracy, these results also offer a way to predicting possible outcomes the 2015 polls. In what follows, we explore what the figures may tell us. We are aware of two weaknesses in our methodology. One is the small size of the data sample – drawn from just one previous national election under the same conditions. The other is our assumptions – for 2011’s data to have predictive value, a number of conditions must remain the same; we debate whether or not they are likely to in the section on ‘assumptions’. THE POLITICAL LANDSCAPE IN THE RUN-UP TO 2015 T he first thing to note is that the alignment of political forces today is very different to 2011. Whereas the PDP went into the 2011 elections controlling 27 state governments, currently it controls 20 and can rely on the likely support of two more Governors, from Ondo (Labour) and Anambra (APGA), making 22 in total. The APC opposition meanwhile controls 14 states, as illustrated right. This is a rapidly changing dynamic, however, as alliances continue to be built and reconfigured. Secondly, 20 Governors entered the 2011 elections in the strong position of first-term incumbents looking to come back; but in 2015, only 10 of 28 Gubernatorial incumbents will be recontesting – 7 for APC and 3 for PDP. The other 18 races will be ‘open’ with no incumbent, while 8 states where elections are held at different times will not be holding Governorship polls. This means more elections will be competitive, with fewer places where an incumbent Governor can be sure to ‘deliver’ a state’s vote for their Presidential candidate. This makes results even less predictable, but as 2011 shows – even outgoing parties without an incumbent re-contesting retain a marginal advantage. We can therefore assume that states which have been run by a particular party will still be more likely to support that party’s Presidential candidate. ASSUMPTIONS T he usefulness of 2011’s figures in predicting outcomes of 2015 rests on seven assumptions. We note that all of these are open to debate: 1 There will be elections in 2015: We work on the assumption that any attempt to delay these could lead to a major constitutional crisis and radically alter political alignments. It is possible that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) could choose not to hold elections in states where the security situation prevents it; they are legally entitled to do so. Currently, three states (Borno, Yobe and Adamawa) in the North-East are under State of Emergency, although Yobe’s successful by-elections show that elections are not necessarily impossible under such conditions. Still, if elections were not held, it would not alter the conditions which we note as likely to lead to a Presidential run-off. 2 INEC’s commitment to running free and fair elections will remain the same, although the electoral commission remains restricted in some aspects of capacity and control, and local-level implementation varies. Recent trends such as decisions not to use electronic voting machines in Ekiti and Osun elections may cast doubt on this. Overall, INEC’s management of state elections has improved since Anambra in December 2013, but it remains to be seen if INEC can scale up the achievement to a national exercise. 3 Improvements made in 2011 will remain and restrict rigging to the postcollation process: Whereas 2007’s poorly-run election allowed votes to be completely fabricated, registration and accreditation has since been tightened, so that the main avenues for rigging are more restricted to the use of actual voters, or at least their cards. This might mean renewed attempts to register voters fraudulently in order to increase numbers, but the only other avenue for outright rigging would be post-poll collation at local levels, which should therefore be a focus for observer groups. 4 2015 will be an overwhelmingly twoparty race between the PDP and the APC in the Presidential elections: this currently seems self-evident, and the APGA and Labour parties are likely to support PDP. 5 Presidential polls will take place before Governorship elections: as on previous occasions, this means that incumbent governors are influential in controlling the presidential vote. If the order were reversed, the rule may not hold true. 6 Election security management will reflect that of 2011, in which security agencies were widely acknowledged to have improved their practices: Many new security challenges have evolved since 2011 but if the agencies can stick to their record of improvement, the environment may remain predictable. If not, or if attempted disruptions overwhelm them, the outcomes will be much less clear. UNKNOWN FACTORS T urnouts are crucial but hard to predict. If a voter register is realistic, party mobilisation and levels of public interest in the candidates dictate the turnout. Anambra’s 2013 election, with a 25% voter turnout, offers a stark indicator of what happens when they are disinterested. Reports by civil society observers were that large numbers of residents stayed at home, or even sold their voter cards before election. Such low turnouts can favour riggers, as they allow lots of unused votes to be creatively redistributed, in front of a largely apathetic public which may not enthusiastically defend its mandate. And, as we have seen, incumbents have a greater ability to rig due to their control of resources and the environment. As PDP are incumbent in more states, this might at first glance seem to favour that party more, but as there are a number of states in which the party may struggle to clear the 25% margin, low turnouts are a big risk for PDP too. Money is hugely important in politics, but is of limited use without genuine support. Paid-for support is expensive and unreliable, while dedicated support is more consistent (and cheaper). While incumbents may have more to spend, they may not necessarily have more to offer in mobilising voter enthusiasm. Historically, parties’ appeal to voters has been based on ethnoregional or faith identities, although the 1999 and 2007 elections broke a mould with three major parties (the PDP, ANPP and AD/ACN) all picking Southern Christian and later, Northern Muslim Presidential candidates respectively. For 2015, parties have so far made little effort to formulate policy messages, and membership structures vary from very weak to strong between parties across the country. While the PDP has struggled to convince the electorate of its ability to deliver on key issues such as poverty reduction, security or combatting corruption, the APC’s positioning as a more progressive party has been watereddown by the large number of floor-crossers the party has incorporated and its tactic of negative campaigning has also alienated some potential supporters. It will be interesting to see to what extent both parties are willing or able to mobilise voters with policy messages rather than simply appeal to identity politics. Like us on Facebook facebook.com/NigerianWatch NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 NEWSWATCH 9 NIGERIA 2015 ELECTION SPECIAL THE NUMBERS T he current political alignment of state government is as follows. Note that APGA and Labour Party states have tended to ally with the ruling PDP party. • People’s Democratic Party (PDP) – 20 • All Progressives Congress (APC) – 14 • All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) – 1 • Labour Party (LP) – 1 2011 RESULTS ANALYSIS In May 2011, gubernatorial polls took place and results were announced in 25 states, excluding the Imo (re-run) and 9 others which were not due for reelection. 20 states had one-term sitting governors running for re-election, and 5 states had vacant seats after Governors had completed two terms. Their average share of the votes looked like this: 8 54.08% 3 47.3% 5 58.16% 3 62.7% 2 51.15% 15 68.22% 2 74.95% Based on this we can see that in 2011 elections being an incumbent governor typically gives an advantage of 15% when seeking re-election (69.01 – 54.08 = 14.93%). The marginal advantage of being an incumbent party contesting a ‘vacant’ seat – i.e. where a governor has completed two terms and is not coming back – is calculated by subtracting the average vote-share of winning non-incumbents from the average vote share of those who won seats just vacated by the same party: 11.2% (62.7% – 51.5%) SOME OTHER OBSERVATIONS: • If you’re contesting for an ‘empty’ seat, you’re likely to win by a larger share of the vote (62%) if you’re from the party which was just in power than if you’re from an opposition party (51%). • Anyone not in power at the start of STATE GOVERNORSHIPS There are 28 gubernatorial seats up for election in 2015: 10 incumbents are contesting for a second term • Three are in PDP-controlled states • Seven are in APC-controlled states. 18 vacant seats • Fourteen are in PDP-controlled states • Four are in APC-controlled states PROJECTIONS OF STATE GOVERNORSHIPS TO BE WON 2015 69.01% Using the trends in the 2011 elections, if other conditions remain equal, based on the current landscape, we make the following preliminary projections. CURRENT NO. OF STATE GOVERNORSHIPS 17 2015 ELECTION PROJECTIONS CATEGORY Sitting Governor gets second term 2. Non-incumbent candidate wins 2a. Where opponent beats one-term sitting governor who is running for re-election 2b. Where candidate wins ‘empty’ seat where there is no first-term governor running for re-election 2b.1 Of which candidate from immediate previously ruling party wins ‘empty’ seat 2b.2 Of which candidate from party previously in opposition wins ‘ empty’ seat 3. Average winning share of PDP sitting Governors 4. Average winning share of non-PDP sitting Governors AVERAGE WINNING SHARE OF VOTE 1. NUMBER OF STATES CATEGORY the race (whether national opposition or ruling party, whether running against a sitting governor or an empty seat) typically gets a lower margin of victory (47%) than incumbents running for re-election (69%). • The advantage of being an incumbent first-term governor running for re-election is not larger for PDP Governors. In fact, non-PDP incumbents won with average 75% share of the votes, whereas PDP incumbents won an average of 68%. It thus seems that being in power locally matters more than being allied with the national ruling party, although more research and larger samples would be needed to prove this. Incumbents: Based on 85% Rule APC 7 6 in APC states =6 PDP 3 3 in PDP states 1 in APC states =4 Seats to be vacant: Based on winning vote share in 2011 gubernatorial elections: 6040% APC 4 2 in APC states 6 in PDP states =8 PDP 14 8 in PDP states 2 in APC states = 10 Assumed to be incumbent in states with no election in February 2015 APC 3 3 PDP 3 3 APGA 1 1 LABOUR 1 1 TOTAL APC PDP APGA LABOUR 14 20 1 1 17 17 1 1 PROJECTIONS: • If the rule that incumbents win 85% of the time with a 60% share of votes holds, for the 10 states with incumbents running for re-election in the governorship elections, a likely outcome is that the APC wins 6 seats REPORT AUTHORS: Oliver Owen and Zainab Usman while the PDP wins 4. • There are 18 vacant seats which will have no incumbent contesting. In 2011, the PDP won 60% of such seats while opposition parties (although before uniting as the APC) collectively won 40%. Working with this admittedly crude assumption (based on just five vacant seats contested in 2011), the PDP is therefore likely to win 10 governorship states while the APC gets 8 states. • Therefore in states holding elections in 2015, it is likely that the PDP ends up with 14 states and the APC with 14. If these figures are added to the other states without governorship elections, the tally is: PDP: 14 states + 3 non-participating states = 17 APC: 14 states + 3 non-participating states = 17 APGA = 1 non-participating state Labour = 1 non-participating state Total 36 states This could mean that PDP and allied parties will control 19 states, fewer than the 22 it currently does. However, these are broad generalisations and it is difficult to identify the specific states in question. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION PROJECTIONS G oing by the initial rule we applied, if the PDP candidate is incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan, he might seem to have an 85% chance of winning with about 60% of the votes. However, given Nigeria’s Federal system, the proportion of vacant governorship seats and the rapidly changing alliances in the political landscape, other variables may come into play. We can assume that states largely support the same party for Presidential elections as they do for Governorship elections (although in 2011 a number of mainly northern states, as well as ACN states in in an electoral pact with PDP in the South-West, bucked the trend). Going by the 85% assumption, if local incumbency is the prime factor, since 22 of the states are currently PDP or allied parties in the current dispensation, the PDP may win the Presidential vote in 21 states (19 PDP states and 2 APC states), and the APC meanwhile would win Presidential votes in 15 states (12 currently APC and 3 PDP states). This is likely to be enough for a simple majority.[1] If however, we go by the projected trends in the governorship elections as useful pointers, we end up with a different result, with both parties winning in 17 states each. The absolute numbers of voters cannot be predicted but it may be significant that the APC goes into the election controlling two states with the largest number of registered voters, Lagos (6.1 million registered voters in 2011) and Kano (5 million). Also remember that section 134 (1) of Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution lays down two conditions for a victory; one is a majority of votes cast, but the other is a minimum of 25% of registered voters in two-thirds of Nigeria’s states (i.e. 24 states). Currently, with support of Labour and APGA, the PDP controls enough states to ensure that. However, in 2011 Bauchi state did not reach the needed minimum even when controlled by PDP, delivering only 16.05% of the vote for the party’s candidate, while Katsina, also PDP, only just scraped over the minimum with 26.1%. So it is reasonable to assume that if support or turnout is low in PDP-ruled northern states, not all may deliver the 25% minimum needed to secure a win for the party’s candidate. In such a circumstance, the Constitution states that candidates would be forced into a second-round run-off election. Such a situation has not previously occurred under Nigeria’s present electoral system. Therefore, of three possible outcomes – outright PDP win, outright APC win, or a run-off election – the most likely outcome based on our projections from current data is that neither party would “These were not young people that had come back to make a difference” manage both factors for an outright victory so there would need to be an additional run-off election. Neither is it clear which party that situation would favour. On one hand a nationally incumbent party may retain more resources to continue mobilising, but on the other, both the voting public and important political intermediaries may perceive momentum in the opposition which galvanises support for their popularity. If the presidential election does not favour an outright win for the PDP, it may also further weaken the PDP’s chances at the subsequent gubernatorial level given the proportion of vacant seats (18) to incumbent re-elections (10). The deciding states for the presidential election and the overall fortune of the two parties will be those 18 vacant seats, which also happen to have 54.4% (40.03 million) of 2011’s registered voters, including 10 of the 14 states with the largest number of registered voters, underlining just how open this race really is. [1] However, remember that five of those Jonathan-supporting states in 2011 were ACN states voting according to a cross-party pact, and this may have dampened voter enthusiasm – despite the pact in Lagos, only 1,281,688 of the 6,108,069 registered voters actually contributed to Jonathan’s win, so we must allow the possibility that greater numbers might turn out for an incumbent party’s own candidate. Turn to page 10 10 NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 Follow us on Twitter @NigerianWatch NEWSWATCH NIGERIA 2015 ELECTION SPECIAL Continued from page 9 SOME CAVEATS I ncumbency advantages are very dependent on specific local factors, such as candidates, coalitions, party machinery, electorate sophistication, local issues and more; therefore it is hard to make a solid prediction on the outcomes. Importantly, the 2015 elections appear as if they will be a twoparty race in all states, although this may also change if heavyweights in the two major parties who lose primaries decide to leave them. In such a situation, the advantages of incumbency calculated from the 2011 multi-party elections may have less predictive value at the gubernatorial elections because the APC is a merger of three parties with varying strengths; the ACN, CPC and ANPP. This is additionally complex in states (such as Kano, Imo and Kwara) where PDP governors crossed over to the APC. In that case, the advantage of incumbency would go beyond 11% because we would need to consider what proportion of the 2011 vote for other parties in the merger (i.e. CPC and ANPP) will be scooped up by APC. Additionally, in most of the states where the governor crossed over from the national ruling PDP with some or all of his supporters, the PDP still has a solid state structure. While we are able to make some plausible projections where incumbents are re-contesting in 2015, it is difficult to do so for the 18 vacant seats because the parameters so far cannot test the strength of the opposition merger. What we can say however is that these seats will be hotly-contested. Since presidential elections occur before governorship elections, it is possible these projections may have little predictive value on the outcome of the presidential elections because the patterns of voting for the governorship and presidential elections are considerably different.[2] Moreover, there is no clear pattern – beyond an assumed incumbency advantage – by which states vote for a presidential candidate. Several factors come into play such as the interaction of local and national coalitions, incumbency, popularity of presidential candidates, local actors – governorship candidates and power brokers, relative party strength and structure, type of identity allegiances, and historical political behaviour of states. The large number of vacant seats (18 of 28 up for election) will test the cohesion and organisation of the parties. One possibility is that the incentive for an outgoing or ‘lame duck’ Governor in a state with strong presence of an opposition party to ‘deliver’ that state to their presidential candidate is highly variable. [2] Five ACN states in the South-West voted PDP in the presidential elections while nine PDP states voted CPC in the presidential elections in 2011. Zainab Usman is a DPhil Candidate at the University of Oxford. Oliver Owen is Junior Research Fellow in International Development at the Oxford Department ‘The most important office is not that of the President but that of the citizen’ Speaking at the recent TedX Euston Nigeria’s hottest media mogul Chude Jideonwo explained his infamous “Sani Abacha is Satan” tweet On the 8th of June last year the managing partner of the pioneering Red Media Africa group and award-winning journalist Chude Jideonwo woke up and noticed something “truly disturbing” was happening on his Facebook (FB) timeline. June 8 is a red-letter day in Nigeria as it is the anniversary of the death of the notorious dictator Sani Abacha. Mr Jideonwo was shocked by the content of what he read. “People were talking with nostalgia, saying stuff like ‘Abacha wasn’t so bad’, or, ‘He was bad but things are even worse now. Because, you know, he made people lose a few thousand jobs, killed a few hundred business leaders, killed ten or 20, nothing too serious’. So my inner-man told me you have to join this conversation. So I twittered this statement from the bottom of my heart; Sani Abacha is Satan.” The feedback on FB was swift, he reported. “I was told I shouldn’t take sides, that you are a young leader, we expected more from you, and my favourite, from the Christian brethren, thou shall not judge.” After giving it a lot of thought Mr Jideonwo sent a second tweet, “General Sani Abacha is Satan.” The audience roared with laughter at the anecdote but Mr Jideonwo signalled its serious intent when he said, “Here it gets a laugh but for me it’s more than just a wisecrack. For me it is my life’s truth.” He detailed his life. “I was born in 1985 when Babaginga took over Nigeria and I grew up under the ruthless, decadent administration of Abacha. God forbid those days should ever return. “Corrupt leaders are not just bad because of what we can see they do, they are vile because of the things we cannot see, the traumatised hearts and powerless minds.” He continued, “I grew up in a country where children would say I want to be President so I can chop money. A country where young people’s ambitions were shackled beneath a certain level, you were not permitted to create, to innovate, to think, to dream or believe. “I lived in a country where everything got worse every year. Every year Xmas got more boring, uninteresting. Things would disappear from the table, milk would disappear, sugar would disappear….. “People would lose their jobs and move to one room slums, like my father, who lost his job under Babaginga’s structural adjustment, and soon the gorgeous beetle car that had so defined us was gone. “And soon the monthly visits to the Principal’s office began because I couldn’t pay my fees. “I can almost now smell the fear. People would tell you if you said the wrong thing you would be killed. Imagine being in High School and fearing if you said the wrong thing you would be killed? “I grew up thinking of this world as this dark, ugly place where everything was impossible. This dark place where citizens have no power to act for themselves. I didn’t ever think it would be different. How can people forget? How dare you forget. “And so my life’s work is to ensure my generation never forgets and to ensure those dark days never return.” In 2002 Mr Jideonwo embarked on a career as a journalist for the Temple, which had survived the Abacha regime, despite being intensely critical of it. In 2002 he then joined the New Dawn movement where he was the right hand man to the TV show’s host Funmi Iyanda. Mr Jideonwo recalled that she “acutely understood the significance of the democracy just won. She knew this wasn’t a time for pointless TV but in a time of big change we had a duty to help people find their voices. “I became infected with this sense of purpose that the media is this incredibly powerful tool with the highest capacity to transform people and society.” So the foundations for Red Media Africa, of which he is a managing partner and produces such things as the digital websites Y! Africa, YNaija and The Future Project was born, to inspire and galvanise a generation of young Africans, using what he calls “the limitless power of the media”. The group’s flagship brand is the Future Awards, which grew from the answer to the question “how do we sell hope to young people? How do we remind them that all the things we take for granted didn’t exist for Nigerians a few years ago? How do we show them role models that remind them how powerful they actually are?” He continued, “In our continent 70 million young people are out of work, a quarter of countries are still under dictatorships, there is insurgency across the Sahara, and now we have Ebola. The media cannot afford to be a bystander. The media in Africa needs to go beyond telling stories, it needs to programme big ideas, take big risks. The media has the duty and capacity to do more.” Red Media came into being in 2010 during the period when the then President Yar`aradua had been missing for months. In Jos people were being slaughtered. Power supply was at its lowest. Amid the confusion, Chude and his friends formed a coalition demanding answers, using social media and old fashioned protest – the youths were famously pictured pushing back against armed troops, fearful that the void would lead to a return to the bad old ways. It marked the first protest movement in Nigeria to adopt social media to such devastating effect, making the protests the first to go viral, using live streaming. “This was not the most important first, however,” said Mr Jideonwo. “It was the first time in a generation the nation’s youth had taken charge of the conversation.” He said it had subsequently changed the way young people see their role in nation building and the way they engage government for ever. “For Africa to keep the sexy hashtag ‘Africa rising’ we need young people who are gainfully employed, who can demand better government or solve their own problems,” he said. Putting his money where his mouth is he announced that this year Red Media will launch citizenship schools [for 200,000 young people over next two years] on how to influence their communities to demand better from their local and state governments and solve their own problems in spite of their leaders. “In a democracy the most important office is not the office of the president but the office of the citizen,” Mr Jideonwo said. “This rot and decay that we met was not caused by us, I was born into it. But it is my problem to solve.” Along the way he has been told that criticising the government is no way to run a business. But that is by “the people who want to protect their interests and investments, by people who want to maintain the status quo, add a couple of zeros to their bank balance”. He had no truck with such people. “That is the Nigeria that got us Abacha. And by God I refuse to go back there”. Mr Jideonwo concluded with a clarion call, “You and I cannot leave activism to activists. We have to make change wherever we are, wherever we can, with whatever we have. Because in a democracy the most important office is not the office of the president but the office of the citizen. “Why do you think Obama and Cameron give ‘yes you can’ speeches? Why do you think Hong Kong and China are having a conversation about voting? Why do you think Burkino Faso finally got rid of its 27 year old disease? “It’s a simple social phenomena; when citizens show that they have finally had enough governments decide that enough is enough.” He continued, “I am not an entrepreneur. I am not an activist. I am a citizen of the republic of Nigeria – and wherever I am, I will do whatever I need to solve the problems. We have so many problems, people out of school, out of jobs, infant mortality, maternal mortality, terrorism – we should all be mad. Everybody should be an active citizen because Africa won’t maintain its rise if African citizens don’t speak forth. “Yes, we need strong patriotic visionary leaders but more importantly we need strong patriotic visionary citizens who will tell them what to do, who will get them to do it or shove them aside and show them how it’s done. “Whatever you do, we need to see change as a lifestyle and as a culture. We cannot choose between minding our business and minding our country. Africa needs its citizens, desperately, today, tomorrow and every single day.” The audience roared its approval as Mr Jideonwo left the stage. Like us on Facebook facebook.com/NigerianWatch NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 YOURWATCH Letters to the Editor NW COMMENT Let us know what you think. Put pen to paper and send your letters to: The Editor, Nigerian Watch, Chartwell House, 292 Hale Lane, Edgware, Middlesex HA8 8NP, or email us at: editor@nigerianwatch.com Letters to be included in the next issue must be received by no later than January 18, 2014. Anonymous letters will not be published. Please include your full name, postal address and contact telephone number. Names and addresses can be withheld, if preferred. Letters may be edited for publication. INEC and post-election violence I write to use your pages to take issue with the former Minister of Foreign Affairs and elder statesman, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi, who recently called on both Presidential candidates to sign a post-election no violence pact. First, I wish to correct Professor Akinyemi. His appeal for free, fair and violence-free elections should have been directed to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to perform creditably, because the 11 eyes of Nigerians and indeed the world are on them. Being the largest black Nation on Earth, Nigeria's performance will be seen as a reflection on the black race, ie that they are not capable to govern themselves. Inec must live up to the people’s expectation as an impartial referee. If it does this, there will be no aftermath disturbances as widely predicted. Contrary to what Professor Akinyemi believes, party leaders cannot guarantee the actions of their supporters. It is common sense that if people’s votes are falsified or ballots rigged and wrong results declared that trouble will likely follow. Nigeria's judicial system cannot immediately correct the wrong, until after a long judicial process. Yet the people will be immediately aware of electoral issues as they happen thanks to social media in all its forms. I am indeed sick of the debate on TV and Nigerian Newspapers about aftermath trouble after the elections. lnec must do an honest job to avoid the predicted calamity. Call for Audience Members The BBC’s flagship ethical and moral debate programme The Big Questions will be broadcasting from Peckham, London, this Sunday (January 11) and we we would like to invite Nigerian Watch readers to be part of the audience. There will be two shows filmed on this day - one in the morning and one in the afternoon. The Big Questions is hosted by the experienced television and radio presenter Nicky Campbell, and airs on Sunday mornings from 10-11am from locations all around the country. The show addresses tricky moral questions facing the nation today, consulting front row experts and a select studio audience. Beliefs, informed opinions and personal stories are all aired during three lively debates. As an audience member, you may even get the chance to contribute to the discussions yourself, although due to the number of people in the audience we can’t guarantee this. If you’d like a seat in either of the audiences, please get in touch with Phoebe or Leona, making sure to leave a contact phone number at the following: audiencetbg@mentorn.tv 0141 611 9624 and 0141 611 9638 I n the world of celebrity the highest measure of popularity and influence is to become known by your first name, think Robbie (as in Williams) and Kylie (as in Minogue). In the worlds of politics and diplomacy the same has only been clearly achieved when your name becomes an “active verb”. Nigeria’s ambassador to the UK for the past seven years Dr Dalhatu Sarki Tafida, OFR, CFR, has achieved that status. Hence 2015 dawns as the era of Tafidaism. So what is Tafidaism? Essentially it boils down to time consciousness, an end to Africa time. Not simply because arriving late is tedious for all involved but because it shows a disregard for international standards, playing by the rules and respect for others. This bad habit also raises doubts over our ability as a people to organise and deliver. By example, that has won him world renown, Dr Tafida has led the way. Few today are prepared to risk the wrath of being late for an event at which he is present. Those that are can expect a public rebuke and rightly so, whether His Excellency is hosting or a guest. We should all resolve this year to follow his great example. Let’s make putting an end to Africa time our community’s New Year’s resolution. With that I wish all our readers a happy and prosperous New Year. Maryanne Jemide, MD Victor Osubu, via email Study in the UK with a scholarship of up to £2500 (Glasgow and London) GCU offers scholarships of up to £2500 for self-funded international students. High-quality programmes and award-winning support make us a top choice for students from over 100 countries. Brighter futures begin with GCU www.gcu.ac.uk +44 (0) 141 331 8630 studentenquiries@gcu.ac.uk To advertise call (UK) 0208 588 9640 (Nig) 07084556093 or email sales@nigerianwatch.com 12 NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 Follow us on Twitter @NigerianWatch EMBASSYWATCH NEWS FROM THE NIGERIA HIGH COMMISSION, LONDON End of year party bids fond farewell to Sam Adelemi… Kindred spirits: Minister Adelemi and Dr Tafida The traditional end of year party for staff at the Nigeria High Commission was tinged with sadness this year as Nigeria’s High Commissioner Dr Dalhatu Sarki Tafida, OFR, CFR, reluctantly bid a fond farewell to one of his most trusted lieutenants Minister for Trade and Investment Sam Adelemi. Only tinged, mind you. Rarely can someone have left an organisation for pastures new with such goodwill from his colleagues. Dr Tafida delivered the most telling testimony to Mr Adelemi when he said, “Honestly, I did not want you to go back. But it is part of the life of a diplomat that when called upon you must go. “In your time with us you have added value to the section of trade and investment and the Mission. You are one of the few. Your work has been consistently fantastic and you have made our work here very easy. I know there is a great reception awaiting you in Nigeria.” As Mr Adelemi had been recalled home there was much speculation about him becoming a minister, with many of his colleagues politely reminding him not to forget them should that come to pass. For over an hour colleagues and community leaders queued up to pay tribute to Mr Adelemi and a picture emerged of a dedicated officer and inspirational man, manager and section leader who made his staff feel valued and an integral part of the team. A humble man who was always ready to praise and encourage not only his own staff but all staff. One of the mission’s drivers spoke movingly of how Mr Adelemi had invited him into his home for refreshments and a conversation and when he expressed his surprise at the honour Mr Adelemi had told him, ‘We’re all human, we’re all equals”. In that sense Mr Adelemi is cut from the same cloth as the High Commissioner himself and clearly underscores why Dr Tafida tried to resist the calls from Nigeria for Mr Adelemi to return home. In his thank you address Mr Adelemi accentuated how much he and Dr Tafida are kindred spirits. He said the success of his department was down to the team ethic and hard work of his staff but overall it was down to the enabling environment created in the Mission by Dr Tafida. “I was good before when I was in Nigeria,” he told the gathering. “I became better when I got here under the tutelage of Dr Tafida. If what today you have been saying about me is genuine it is down to His Excellency. “The way he received me a little over three years ago was exemplary. The way he talked and advised me, having watched him since, I have gained so much from him. If we had 10 people like Dr Tafida we could move Nigeria forward very rapidly. What I have achieved here is because of the enabling environment His Excellency created. Addressing Dr Tafida directly, he said, “I thank you so much. You will never leave my mind or heart wherever I am.” … and celebrates a year of many successes Aside from bidding farewell to Minister Adelemi, the end of year party celebrated the many great successes it scored in 2014 and the often unsung heroes among the back room staff who make it all possible. L-R: Henrietta Abraham; Chief Oladimeji; Deputy High Commissioner Olukunle Akindele Bamgbose; HE Dr Tafida; General Ogide; Bimbo Afolayan Roberts and (standing) the award winners (named below) GYRATION AS FATALISM All set arranged on gyres Immutable and in seeming gyration Moving in circles like the moon With the capacity and predilection to mourn. It’s all about hide and seek with fate Always losing but feeling safe Pulling through in perilous safety Mother and child in filial love A love for sure to wither. When the sibling becomes a prey It isn’t neurosis but normal Decreed and reeled out as heavenly norm Pure hide and seek with fate. Ahmed Inusa STAFF OF THE YEAR AWARD Mr Layo Akinfala CERTIFICATE OF COMMENDATION Mr John C Nwokeoha; Mrs Deborah Macaulay; Mr Shabazz Abdulrahaman; Mr Ahmed Rufai; Mr Ugochukwu Ikebata LETTER OF COMMENDATION Ms Mariya A T Yusuf; Mr Timothy B Banjifetugas; Mr Christopher B Whyte; Miss Onyekachi Duroha; Mrs Henrietta Onuche LONG MERITORIOUS SERVICE AWARD Mr Sunny U Kpohraror; Mrs Jenny Okany; Mrs Monica Shaahu; Mr Ananth N Satchi; Mrs Dorothy Barber; Ms Felicia Ekechukwu; Ms Rakiya L Ibrahim; Mr Moses Bakare; Mr Sule B Mohammad Orchestrating the ceremony was head of chancery Minister Ahmed Inusa who told the gathering that 2014 had been another year of “successful Tafidaisation” at the Mission, recognising the excellent leadership of the High Commissioner Dr Dalhatu Sarki Tafida, OFR, CFR. Among a host of high-level dignitaries to visit the mission, Mr Inusa noted President Jonathan had visited twice and the first lady Dame Patience several times, adding, “She was so satisfied with the reception she received and dedication of our staff Mrs Vera Enubuje that she took her away to be her staff.” Over the year bi-lateral relations with the UK had grown from strength to strength, particularly in regard to the Boko Haram insurgency, and the volume of trade between the two countries had nearly doubled from £4bn to £7.2bn, which of course owes much to the outgoing Mr Adelemi. One of the great initiatives to be introduced in 2014 was the tour of Nigerian communities across the UK, which has been an unprecedented success in building bridges and strengthening community cohesion while boosting business (see page 13). Another major highlight for all Nigerians was the national conversation in Nigeria. Dr Tafida had played a pivotal role in ensuring the diaspora not only in the UK but also Europe had a voice at the table. Subsequently Chief Adebayo Oladimeji and Christian Udechukwu represented the diaspora. Finally a minute’s silence was observed for colleagues who had sadly passed away during the year. Minister Inusa said, “In the course of the year we lost our beloved Foreign Minister Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru, our indefatigable finance attaché Mr Abdullahi Lukman Mohammed and also the father of Mrs Folake Abdulrazaaq, pa Hezekiah Olufela Davies.” The mission’s resident poet, Minister Inusa read a poem he had written on life and death in their remembrance (see left). It was then time to reward the Mission staff whose dedication and excellence had shone throughout the year (see panel). Finally, it was the turn of His Excellency to give his end of year address. He told the gathering that the mission would not rest on its laurels. “The end of year is a time when we look at what we have achieved and whether there is room for improvement. There is not one organisation in the world that doesn’t require improvement.” In order to continue improving he implored the audience to “tell us what we are doing well, what we are not doing so well, or indeed not at all, and we will listen and act accordingly.” A hallmark of Dr Tafida’s tenure in office has been openness and a determination to listen to the people he and the Mission serve. He thanked the Mission staff for their support and dedication and for doing their jobs to the best of their ability. “All the efforts of the past year have been geared to bringing us closer to our compatriots in this country, to serve them better.” And he thanked community leaders Chief Bimbo Afolayan Roberts (CANUK) and Henrietta Abrahams (NIDO South) for their sterling efforts on behalf of Nigeria and Nigerians. “You make our work here so much easier,” Dr Tafida said. Like us on Facebook facebook.com/NigerianWatch NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 EMBASSYWATCH 13 Building bridges and boosting business in Belfast The Central Association of Nigerians in the UK (CANUK) and Nigeria High Commission completed the third visit of their community Town Hall outreach initiative over the weekend of December 19, with Belfast, Northern Ireland, playing the perfect host to the delegation from London and other major UK cities. The trip follows on from previous visits to Manchester and Glasgow, writes Lagun Akinloye. The ‘Town Hall Meeting’ initiative aims to build greater understanding between the various Nigerian communities within the UK while bringing them closer to the internal mechanisms of CANUK and Nigeria High Commission. The delegation was received by Sebastian Adegboyega Aluko-James, the Chairman of the Nigerian Community in Northern Ireland, alongside many other Nigerians residing in Belfast and surrounding cities. The arrival of Nigeria’s High Commissioner to the UK Dr Dalhatu Sarki Tafida, OFR, CFR, was marked with pomp and pageantry with Nigerians waving flags and cheering aloud. The first port of call was the beautiful offices of Invest in Northern Ireland (INI), the regional business development agency. There a high-level meeting was held under the chairmanship of INI’s Regional Director for India, Middle East and Africa Barry Clarke. The very great potential business and partnership opportunities between Nigerian and Northern Ireland were discussed. Following speeches by Dr Tafida and the Minister of Trade Sam Adelemi, follow up meetings were promised and a strong L-R: At Belfast Town Hall with the Mayor; the welcome party at the airport; and meeting Mr Aluko-James commitment to growing social and economic ties between the two countries were agreed upon. The next stop was a visit to the Bryson Charity Group, one of the UK's oldest registered charities, which has been helping disadvantaged people in Northern Ireland since 1906. The luncheon was attended by staff and board members from Bryson Intercultural and was aimed at recognising the contribution of Nigerian citizens living in Northern Ireland while also sensitising the delegation on the good work Bryson undertakes in the local community. The day ended with a tour of the exquisitely built Belfast City Council offices where the delegation met the Lord Mayor of Belfast Councillor Nichola Mallon. Tea, coffee and biscuits were served in the inner chambers of the council as the Lord Mayor spoke of the role Nigerians play in the everyday life of Northern Ireland and how important they are to its growth. The following day the eagerly-anticipated Town Hall Meeting was held at the Wellington Park Hotel. An African themed band played rhythmic beats as the invited guests streamed in with the High Commissioner and the Chairman of CANUK arriving alongside other dignitaries. The welcome remarks were given by the Chairman of the Nigerian Community in Belfast, Mr Adegboyega Aluko-James followed by an address from CANUK Chairman, Bimbo Afolayan. Both went into painstaking detail about their respective organisations, their objectives and the impact they are having on their communities. In his keynote address Dr Tafida focused on the need for increased unity between Nigerian communities throughout the UK and the wish for Nigerians in Northern Ireland to continue positively contributing to whichever fields they are in engaged in. The High Commissioner further remarked on the many issues faced by Nigerians in the Northern Ireland, which included visa requirements, the halting of asylum seekers from Nigeria and those who have fallen foul of the law. He thanked the Nigerian community in Ireland for their efforts in projecting Nigerians in a positive light and opened the floor for questions and answers. Questions revolved around the need for a greater participation of the High Commission and CANUK in the daily lives of Nigerians in Northern Ireland and the desire to be recognised on a greater level when creating ideas and putting proposals forward to the benefit of Nigeria on the whole. The event ended with a dinner celebration. Future trips to Cardiff, Liverpool and various other cities in the UK which host Nigerian communities are in the planning stage as CANUK and the High Commission work tirelessly to build bridges and create partnerships with Nigerian communities around the UK to the benefit of all. Lagun Akinloye is Assistant Public Relations Officer at CANUK Winter specials London Heathrow to Lagos From £530 economy class £1635 business class Return fares, including taxes and charges. To book visit arikair.com/special-offers fly world class Fares are subject to availability, exchange rate variation and conditions apply. a r i k a i r. c o m 14 NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 Follow us on Twitter @NigerianWatch LEISUREWATCH The Fortnight NOW BOOKING: BLACK PLAYS at the National Theatre Every morning from Saturday Jan 24 to Saturday Feb 29 a fascinating series of talks will take place to explore a diverse collection of plays from dramatists of African and Caribbean heritage. Combining performances, clips of past productions and lively discussion, each session will examine a topic, from decolonisation to sexuality, protest theatre to cosmopolitanism. www.nationaltheatre.org.uk What to see and do over the next 14 days... In Black and White – Prints from Africa and the Diaspora LIBERIAN GIRL BY DIANA NNEKA ATUONA “War is not the answer. Peace is the answer. On the other hand…” Between 1989 and 2003 the Civil War in Liberia saw over 200,000 people killed, a million others displaced into refugee camps, and over 15,000 children recruited into ‘Small Boys Units’. First-time writer Diana Nneka Atuona‘s Alfred Fagon award-winning play tells one teenage girl’s story of survival in this intimate and immersive production. Diana Nneka Atuona attended the Royal Court’s Peckham Writers Group as part of Theatre Local – the Royal Court’s project to take plays to alternative spaces, sponsored by Bloomberg. Liberian Girl was also performed as a staged presentation at the Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict, chaired by William Hague and Angelina Jolie, at the Excel Centre, late last year. After its run at the Royal Court Theatre, Liberian Girl will transfer to the CLF Art Café at the Bussey Building in Peckham for one week and the Bernie Grant Arts DANCE London Tales The International London Mime Festival In this fast-paced physical piece you are invited to reflect on who we were, what we have become and where we are going... Over 8 million people share our city – a blur of lives we’ll never know. We rush past each other on the street, queue together in the supermarket and sit side by side on the tube. We may never have exchanged a word before, but now we are all here, waiting to tell you our stories. Told by a diverse cast including; Anita-Joy Uwajeh, Gabriel Akamo and Tomide Omoyele. Each story, from the moving to the bizarre or comical is inextricably linked. 13th - 17th Jan 7.30pm. Tickets: £12 LOST Theatre, 208 Wandsworth Road, SW8 www.losttheatre.co.uk Join this lunchtime lecture which looks at a variety of powerful graphic images from the 1960s to the present – prints, posters, books and ephemera – by notable artists as well as anonymous activists. Centre in Tottenham. Liberian Girl is part of the Royal Court’s Jerwood New Playwrights programme, which aims to discover and support the next generation of world class playwrights, supported by the Jerwood Charitable Foundation. Until Jan 31. Matinee and evening performances, times vary. Tickets: £20 (Mondays all seats £10). This is an immersive, standing production. Age guidance 15+ Jerwood Theatre Upstairs, Sloane Square, SW1W www.royalcourttheatre.com THEATRE The Southbank Centre presents award-winning work from across the globe as part of the annual London International Mime Festival. Performances include; Stateless, Joli Vyann’s new show combining theatre, dance and circus to explore the subject of refugees, portraying the upheaval and the fates of people crossing borders, with acrobatics. 10th – 25th Jan Various venues. For performance times, venues and prices visit; www.mimelondon.com/ FILM Percy Julian: Forgotten Genius Percy Julian became one of the great scientists of the 20th cen- Cirque Berserk Combining contemporary “cirque” style skills with off-thescale thrilling stunt action, Cirque Berserk is a danger-filled spectacle that will amaze audiences of all ages. Presenting the world’s most dangerous circus act, the legendary Globe of Death, with 3 motorcyclists speeding at over 60mph inside a unique steel cage, and a troupe of over thirty jugglers, acrobats, aerialists, dancers, and musicians. 16th - 17th Jan. From £10. Hackney Empire, 291, Mare St, E8 www.hackneyempire.co.uk tury. The grandson of Alabama slaves, he fought through every possible barrier in a deeply segregated America to find freedom in the laboratory. He became a world-class scientist, a self-made millionaire, and a civil-rights pioneer. Jan 12 6;30pm Tickets £5 on the door. Under 16’s FREE PCS Headquarters, 160 Falcon Road, Clapham Junction, SW11 www.blackhistorystudies.com Holy Hustlers Founded in 1955 at a remote northern village in Botswana, the Eloyi Church is commanded by controversial prophets – streetwise, unemployed young men. Portraying the tension between holiness and hustling by showing how, in a time of crisis, city prophets assert themselves because they are both ‘holy’ and ‘hustlers’. Followed by a discussion with filmmaker Richard Werbner. 15th Jan, 7:00pm. FREE Email: cas@soas.ac.uk to book. Djam Lecture Theatre, Russell Square: College Buildings WC1H www.soas.ac.uk 7 A.M: A Documentary Directed by Jason Black (The Black Authority), 7 A.M. is the first in-depth documentary Juju! Ebola Task-Force Fundraiser Ft. Abdul Tee-Jay + More! 14th Jan, 1pm. FREE The Lydia & Manfred Gorvy Lecture Theatre, Victoria and Albert Museum, Cromwell Road, SW7 www.vam.ac.uk BUSINESS Africa-UK Connections in practice – New Approaches for 2015 focusing on black socioeconomics and why our lack of business ownership is at the root of our state of poverty and political alienation. Offering a critical insight into why entrepreneurship is the only thing that will solve our crisis the documentary features contributions from Dr Claud Anderson, Dr Umar Johnson, Shalamar Blakely, A’Leila Bundles, Morris Levine, Brett Pulley and Don Peebles. Jan 17th, 6:00pm Tickets £10.90. Pre-booking advised Platanos College, Clapham Road, London, SW9 www.blackhistorystudies.com ART Virginia Chihota, A Thorn in my Flesh (munzwa munyama yangu) Over recent years, artist Chihota has examined her life, including her experience of marriage and motherhood, and has transformed her Many of the things we do are changing because of the disruptive impact of the Internet, mobile phones and other kinds of Information and Communication Technology. This is particularly evident in the way UK-Africa relationships are changing. John Dada and Pamela McLean will discuss these changes through their ten-year collaboration between rural Nigeria and London, enabled by the Internet. 10th Jan, 10:30 am - 3:30 pm. From £7. Impact Hub Westminster 80 Haymarket SW1Y http://westminster.impacthub.net MUSIC With Sticks and Things at Upstairs At The Ritzy Rebecca Katsaris and Dave De Rose return to present the fourth instalment of With Sticks And Things in Brixton – an evening of world music and dancing. 10th Jan, 8pm. From £5.00 Upstairs at the Ritzy, Brixton Oval, Coldharbour Lane, Brixton, SW2 www.picturehouses.co.uk Afro Palace, Volta 45, Yaaba, Abdul Tee-Jay, Rokoto, DJ BlondeZilla and Kalinka all perform and spin their brands of African-influenced sounds in order to raise money to go towards fighting the Ebola crisis. 17th Jan, 8pm. Advance Tickets £6.00 Upstairs at the Ritzy, Brixton Oval, Coldharbour Lane, Brixton, SW2 www.picturehouses.co.uk Orlando Julius And The Heliocentrics Nigerian music legend, saxophonist, songwriter and master of the simple, stomping riff, few artists have been more crucial to the invention, development and popularisation of Afro-pop than Orlando. The Heliocentrics straddle hip-hop, funk, modern creative jazz, and world music. Their collaborative sound is a meaty, high-energy gumbo that is compulsively danceable. 22nd Jan, 7.30pm Advance tickets £15.00 229 Great Portland Street, W1W www.229thevenue.com The Afro American Project thoughts into a body of prints and drawings of striking symbolic resonance, rife with allusions to everyday life, and religious and folkloric symbolism. 9th Jan - 7th Feb. 11:00am - 6:00pm FREE Tiwani Contemporary, 16 Little Portland Street, W1W. www.tiwani.co.uk Fiesta-style concert of upbeat rhythms led by master percussionist Wilmer Sifontes and his Afro-American project. The band explores Venezuela’s rich legacy of African and African-Caribbean roots music. 9th Jan, 5:30pm. FREE The Clore Ballroom at Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, SE1 www.southbankcentre.co.uk BUSINESS DIRECTORY SMALL ADS Promote your Business , i RECRUITMENT NOTICES FAMILY NIGERIAN WATCH 9 - 22 Jan 2015 H HOME GARDEN It costs less than you think LEISURE PETS PROPERTY BUSINESS VEHICLES Email Sales@nigerianwatch.com 15 SPORT WATCH FRANCE HAILS ENYEAMA Call 0208 588 9640 From just £10* per issue Fax 0203 292 1738 Traders, tutors, service providers and professionals – promote your business to 300,000 readers every fortnight for an entire year from only £10 (+ VAT where applicable) per issue. 6 month, 8 week, 4 week packages and single issue offers also available. Call now for details Post Nigerian Watch Sales Chartwell House 292 Hale Lane Edgware HA8 8NP *12 month booking 12 words PROPERTY LEGAL Buy to Let OR Buy to Sell The choice is YOURS! We offer properties that offer the best returns and deliver something extra to the investor. 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SUPER Eagles captain Vincent Enyeama has been voted the best goalkeeper in the French premier league Ligue One during the course of 2014 by prestigious French newspaper L’Equipe. By far the best African goalkeeper anywhere in the world, Enyeama has had a brilliant spell in France with his club Lille and last season kept 21 clean sheets during the season for the club. He has now been voted as the league’s best goalkeeper during the course of 2014 despite Lille’s stuttering start to the 2014/15 season that sees it languishing in 13th place in the 20-team table. Enyeama has played in every minute of Lille’s 56 league matches since he returned from his loan spell at Israeli club Maccabi Tel Aviv in 2013. This is the second successive year that Enyeama has been selected as Ligue One’s most outstanding goalkeeping talent by L’Equipe. Akwa Ibom-born Enyeama, 32, has already been shortlisted for the 2014 African Footballer of the Year award which is set to be announced next Thursday in Lagos. Other players shortlisted for the award include incumbent holder Yaya Touré and Borrussia Dortmund and Gabonese international PierreEmerick Aubameyang. Former Super Eagles goalkeeper Ike Shorunmu said he is not surprised by Enyeama’s emergence as the best goal tender in France. Now the Super Eagles team coach, Shorunmu said he recognised Enyeama's potential a long time ago. “From the first day I saw Vincent I knew he was a star. Having worked with him, I can say for a fact that he’s the best in Africa and one of the best in the world.” SPORTWATCH RETURNS IN FULL NEXT ISSUE DATING BOOKS fuelling the delta fires Based on the real life situation in Nigeria's Niger Delta, fuelling the delta fires is an expose and action adventure novel revealing why there is turmoil in the world's sixth largest crude oil exporter. availaBle now at: amazon.co.uk, chapters.indigo.com, waterstones.com, authorhouse.co.uk, barnesandnoble.com whsmiths.co.uk, borders.com For those in nigeria Ring Peter Agbor of walahi.com on (234)805 361 0533 Paperback £9.30 Hardback £13.60 E-book £2.60 Europe's No.1 Supplier for West African Food & Drinks Products Wishing all our customers a Happy New Year P FORERFECT RICEJOLLOF OTH AND ER NIGE CUS RIAN I NE CK STOISH F AD HE COD AND TUSK STOCKFISH Over a 1000 more products at Great wholesale prices for the West African Community, in store... 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