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2016 admission: JAMB say no candidate must emanate from any other source…

 
ON AUGUST 23, 2016
NEWS
Lagos – The Registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, has assured that the 2016 admissions into the country’s tertiary institutions will be smooth and that no candidate must emanate from any other source outside the list prepared and recommended by the institution. This is contained in a statement issued by JAMB on Tuesday. Oloyede spoke at the opening of the first technical committee meeting on the 2016 admissions to first choice institutions, which opened at the Bayero University, Kano, on Monday. He said that the only difference between 2016 admission process and what had been the practice was the policy that there should be no written Post-UTME test. The registrar said that all other processes would be the way they have always been. “It is more pleasant to me that in the almost four decades of JAMB, this is the first time that the technical meeting will hold in Kano. “Every year the board convenes meeting for placement of suitably qualified candidates into tertiary institutions, taking into consideration vacancies available. “It also considers guidelines approved for each institution by their respective proprietors. “The meeting also looks at the preference expressed for the institutions and courses by the candidates,’’ Oloyede said. He said that the senate’s of each institution have the prerogative of admitting candidates to their respective schools subject only to national policies. The policies guidelines stipulated by the proprietors of the institutions must adhere to the 60:40 science/art ratios for conventional universities and 80:20 science/art ratios for non-conventional universities. He added that the guidelines also include 70:30 technology/non-technology ratios for national diploma awarding institutions, among others. “The institutions must adhere strictly to subject combinations of various courses as specified by the respective Senates and included in the 2016 UTME brochure. “Institutions are expected to adhere to the 2016 admissions quota as prescribed by the regulatory bodies like the National Universities Commission, National Board for Technical Education and the National Commission for Colleges of Education. “For federal universities, the criteria stipulated by the Federal Executive Council, concerning merit, catchment and educationally less developed states, should be complied with.’’ Oloyede further said that in the discharge of this national assignment, it was important that stakeholders act with focus on what was beneficial to the largest number of Nigerians. “We must avoid adding to the burden of our people who rightly yearn for higher education as a veritable means of active participation in public life. “While urging us to work hard and exhibit commitment, synergy and cooperation between the board and the institutions, I assure you all that the hands of fellowship, which my predecessors have extended to the institutions, would be strengthened for the advancement of national goals. “My immediate past predecessor, Prof. ‘Dibu Ojerinde, in particular and others in general, have lifted the board to an enviable standard of international repute and we cannot afford to do less. “The task of JAMB is coordination and not substitution of the traditional responsibilities of the Senates of tertiary institutions. “Consequently, no candidate must emanate from any other source (JAMB inclusive) outside the list prepared and recommended by the institutions,’’ Oloyede added. He, however, said that JAMB had the right to reject candidates for non-compliance with extant rules and regulations but would not be allowed to substitute or originate any names without the prior concurrence of the institutions. The registrar tasked institutions to ensure that the admissions exercise was concluded before or by the approved deadline of Nov. 30.

Ashanti King, Nobel Laureate Soyinka Optimistic About Africa’s Future

 

The Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II has expressed optimism in Africa’s ability to overcome obstacles and achieve better democratic outcomes and economic transformation. 

BY SAHARAREPORTERS, NEW YORK
AUG 20, 2016
The Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II has expressed optimism in Africa’s ability to overcome obstacles and achieve better democratic outcomes and economic transformation. 
Speaking to an audience that included members of both Houses of the British Parliament, the diplomatic community, university lecturers, former Ghanaian President, John Agyekum Kufuor, and numerous Ghanaians at the Palace of Westminster in London last week, the traditional ruler declared that democratic change of governments through “constitutional means of which election is the means and not the end has created a big space for peace and security of nations.”
The Asantehene spoke at the launch of two books, May Their Shadows Never ShrinkWole Soyinka and the Oxford Professorship of Poetry, co-edited by Ivor Agyeman-Duah, a Ghanaian author, and Lucy Newlyn, a professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford, and All the Good Things Around Us: An Anthology of African Short Stories edited by Agyeman-Duah. Ayebia Clarke Publishing, based in Oxfordshire, published both books. Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka was the guest of honor at the event.
The Asantehene spoke on the topic, “Africa’s Democratic Path and the Search for Economic Transformation.” He stated that the 16 presidential and parliamentary elections in Africa that have taken place this year alone represented an encouraging step toward the consolidation of peace.
He cited optimistic developmental data from African think tanks, which he said have come of age as evidenced in their input leading to policy enrichment, outreach programs and sensitization. He also noted that the emergence of reforms in telecommunication and associated multi-media were safeguarding electoral processes. According to him, African players had created a knowledge-based economy that did not exist in many parts of Africa two decades ago. 
He urged adjustment in thinking and a strategy of less dependence on multi-donor budget support and financing of electoral reforms and institutions, stating that such dependence did not represent permanent solutions. 
The Asantehene stated that Africa’s journey to development was on course, but remarked that the challenges could be daunting, citing the dangerous situation in South Sudan. The Asantehene also drew attention to appalling conduct by politicians and their surrogates, whether in Kenya where some members of Parliament had to be arrested for inciting ethnic hate or Ghana where radio presenters threatened the Lady Chief Justice and some members of the judiciary with murder.
In his presentation, Lord Paul Boateng, a man of Ghanaian descent who is a member of the House of Lords, praised the Asantehene’s style of traditional leadership, noting the modern outlook and the traditional ruler’s focus on education and agriculture. The lawmaker declared that education and agriculture had served Africa well in the past, but regretted Africa’s agriculture was suffering from all fronts.
Augustus Casely-Hayford, a leading figure in British cultural circles and the well-known BBC TV presenter of Lost Kingdoms of Africa who launched the books, looked into the ancient empires of Africa, their state formation apparatus and in particular their creative minds in the case of Asante. He described All the Good Things Around Us as a volume “of stories from some of our most eloquent and able voices. These are the imaginations to capture this moment of critical cultural shift and existential questioning.”  He praised the editor for bringing the voices from across the continent together.
Diane Abbott, shadow Secretary of Health and Member of Parliament for North Hackney and Stoke Newington who chaired the event, spoke about cultural knowledge and understanding, especially literature which leads to identity confidence and better economic diagnosis. She stated that her background as a Jamaican-British person of color has always kindled her interest in issues to do with the arts, identity and politics especially of dispossession, which confront Africa and the developing world.
In his speech, Soyinka stated that all was not lost in Africa, notwithstanding challenges of nation-building and economic difficulties that often lead to violence. He said the current violence in the oil-producing Niger Delta region of Nigeria and the blowing up of oil installations by militants was an example of economic frustration and a feeling of inequality by people who suffer most from the effect of extractive economies.
He disclosed that an international observer group, in which he would be involved, had had preliminary discussions with President Buhari and the leadership of the militants. He added that there would be further consultation with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, some members of the British Parliament, and the Asantehene would be pursued as an international mediation effort to help bring peace to the afflicted region.
The Nobel laureate, who spoke on the topic “Governance and the Literary Arts,” remarked that Africa’s literature is determined by economic choices and consumption patterns. Soyinka told the audience that Anglophone Africa inherited tribalism from the British. He observed that social frustrations were increasingly becoming reflective in literary productions in Nigeria and parts of Africa, adding that African writers were moving away from the romanticism of the past towards confrontation with realities. He described All the Good Things Around Us as a serious work of literature.
In his remarks, one of the editors, Agyeman-Duah, described the Asantehene and Soyinka as Keeper of Heritage and our Cultural Antiphonist respectively. He also described Diane Abbott as one “who still peddles her canoe on a long journey of almost 30 years since that historic election of her parliamentary career.” He added that literature’s “navigation towards retrogression as sources of creativity whether in Nuruddin Farah’s Somali or the moral fragments of Maiduguri could only be shifted to happier centers with better economic choices.”
His editorship of All the Good Things Around Us also contains three of his short stories—one of which, “Dead Leaves on the Beautiful River,” is set in Harlem, New York after the victory of Barack Obama as the first black president of the United States; the second story, “The Son,” has its setting in Ibadan, Nigeria, and the third, “The Codicil,” in Kumasi, Ghana. 
The other influential and award-winning contributors of the 400 page book of 28 stories from major countries on the continent and with a prologue by the Booker Prize-winning author, Ben Okri, include Ama Ata Aidoo, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Sefi Atta, Ogochukwu Promise, Tope Folarin, Chika Unigwe, Tsitsi Dangarembga, Monica Arac de Nyeko, Ellen-Banka Aaku, Taiye Selasi, Faustin Kagame, Yvonne Owuor, Yaba Badoe, Benjamin Sehene, Shadreck Chikoti, and Bridget Pitt.

Professor Wole Soyinka at the book signing event in London
Former Ghanaian President John Agyekum Kufuor, Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II and Prof. Wole
Wole Soyinka and the Ashante of Ghana, Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II
Prof. Wole Soyinka speaking

Dogged By Ill Health, Marital Feuds, Emeka Offor’s Crisis Deepens

 
The ongoing business crisis facing Emeka Offor, one of Nigeria’s most controversial contractors in recent decades, is far deeper than SaharaReporters revealed last week, a fresh investigation has revealed. Mr. Offor’s financial downfall has led to the closure of his offices in Abuja, his companies’ failure to pay staff salaries for more than a year, and long drawn fights with numerous suppliers and creditors.

BY SAHARA REPORTERS, NEW YORK
AUG 18, 2016
The ongoing business crisis facing Emeka Offor, one of Nigeria’s most controversial contractors in recent decades, is far deeper than SaharaReporters revealed last week, a fresh investigation has revealed. Mr. Offor’s financial downfall has led to the closure of his offices in Abuja, his companies’ failure to pay staff salaries for more than a year, and long drawn fights with numerous suppliers and creditors. Last week, SaharaReporters had disclosed that the controversial government contractor, who was once frequently described in the media as a major financier of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), had fallen on hard times since Muhammadu Buhari became president on May 29, 2015, following his defeat of former President Goodluck Jonathan of the PDP in last year’s presidential election.
Sources within Mr. Offor’s family and erstwhile corporate circles disclosed that the hamstrung businessman, who hails from Oraifite in Anambra State, is experiencing serious health challenges and an unprecedented family crisis.
One of Mr. Offor’s cousins told our investigator that the embattled businessman’s eyesight has been deteriorating progressively in recent years, leaving him a step away from blindness. A former corporate aide who had traveled with the businessman in the past revealed that Mr. Offor also has a heart problem as well as a problem with diabetes. “It is possible that it is the diabetes which led to the other complications, including his failing sight,” a medical expert told our correspondent.
Mr. Offor’s home front is probably more in disarray than his health. Last January, his first wife, Nkiru Offor, whom he married in December 1982, as well as her children stormed Mr. Offor’s village of Irefi in Oraifite, Ekwusigo Local Government Area of Anambra State, and created mayhem in the near-bankrupt businessman’s palatial country home. Along with her children, Mrs. Nkiru Offor, who resides on Osborne Road in Ikoyi, Lagos, arrived at her husband’s home in Oraifite and chased away all the domestic staff, changed all the door locks, smashed most of the expensive drinks in the house and destroyed all the pictures Mr. Offor took with his third wife, Adaora, a dropout from the Law Department at the Enugu Campus of the University of Nigeria at Nsukka (UNN). The businessman’s wedding to the former law student was celebrated at Oraifite on January 3, 2014, at a lavish ceremony where thousands of iPads were handed out as gifts to hundreds of guests.
“Nkiru came with her children to take physical control of the Oraifite residence because they are afraid that our brother [Mr. Offor] will hand it over to the third wife,” said a close relative of the businessman. He added: “You see, Nkiru had just survived a mild stroke in Lagos. She told some of us that she believes the stroke was a spiritual attack from Sir Emeka Offor and Adaora [Mr. Offor’s third wife] in an attempt to kill her. She also complained that our brother [Mr. Offor] hates her children.”
The source revealed that Chuka, Mr. Offor’s thirty-something year old first son with his first wife, continues to reside in London where he loiters daily because he has no job. The source declared that Mr. Offor had refused all entreaties to employ the young man in one of his companies. “Sir E. [a fond name for Mr. Offor] said Chuka should not work in his companies, claiming his son is not a graduate. And when Nkiru now bought a Range Rover for Chuka, a big fight took place between her and Sir E.”
Mr. Offor’s troubled relationship with his first wife has been exacerbated by the fact that their first daughter has two children out of wedlock for a young man who hails from Ondo State. Several family sources disclosed that Mr. Offor’s first daughter has been living with the father of her children for several years. “The young man wants to marry Sir. E’s daughter, but Sir E. refused to accept him as a son-in-law, insisting that he is above his daughter marrying a man who is not from a very wealthy home.”
But some of Mr. Offor’s relatives said they found the embattled businessman’s aristocratic airs quite laughable. “Was he [Mr. Offor] not a truck driver with a construction company before he made money during the time of Abacha?” one female relative wondered. She added, “Did he pass even one subject when he took his West African School Certificate examination at Abbot Boys Secondary School in Ihiala [Anambra State]?”
Another family member told our correspondent that Mrs. Nkiru Offor, the first wife, is about the only person Mr. Offor fears. Said the source: “When our father died in February and our eldest brother traveled to the village, he slept in a hotel because he could not gain access his house in Oraifite.” The source said Mr. Offor left quietly when he was told what his first wife had done with the locks, including locks of the residence he built overnight for his third wife toward the end of 2013. “Nkiru knows all his dark secrets, so he is careful not to provoke her easily,” said the relative.  
Most family members appear to support Mr. Offor’s first wife, despite accusations against her by her husband that she is obsessed with fetish practices. “Even if she is into occult things, we know he [Mr. Offor] introduced her to those practices,” a female member asserted. “So why is he now complaining?” she queried. 
SaharaReporters learned that Mr. Offor’s father was the only person who attempted to stop Mrs. Nkiru Offor the day she and her children were smashing and slashing things at his country residence. One family member alleged that Mr. Offor’s feeble father, who had suffered a stroke a few years earlier, got pushed down in the melee. “He [Mr. Offor’s father] soon slipped into a coma in a hospital and died one and a half months later,” said the source.  
Some of the family members who spoke to our correspondents made no secret of gloating over Mr. Offor’s financial and other crises. They accused him of bluntlyrefusing to offer financial assistance to most of his siblings and other relatives when he wallowed in immense wealth.
“We strongly believe he belongs to a secret cult to which he swore never to assist family members, including those in desperate need,” one of them stated. 
The relatives disclosed that only two members of Mr. Offor’s extended family benefited from his wealth. “The first person was our father who died since February but has yet to be buried because Sir E. is looking for big cash to spend during the burial so he can create the impression that he is still very loaded,” said one relative.  
The source said the second member of the family to have benefited from Mr. Offor’s now dwindled wealth “is Onyebuchi whom he put into the Anambra State House of Assembly as a legislator last year, despite protests from voters and stakeholders in our constituency who said the election was not free and fair.” 
Two relatives told SaharaReporters that Mr. Offor was close to his late father, but detested his mother because she often questioned his excesses. One family source said the controversial businessman had on several occasions sent his father on trips abroad, but never allowed his mother,who hails from Esanland in Edo State, to travel even to Lagos. Mr. Offor’s deceased father was a police officer, and was once demoted from inspector to sergeant because of a successful petition of bribery against him by Ignatius Nwabueze, the late leader of the Rosicrucian Order in Ihiala Local Government Area of Anambra State. 
Bismarck Rewane, one of Nigeria's most respected economists and the chief executive of Financial Derivatives Consulting, has argued that, with the emergence of Mr. Buhari as president, many Nigerian millionaires, especially those enriched by fraudulent government contracts, would soon become ex-millionaires. 
Mr. Offor, who has been pushing close friends like former Senate president Ken Nnamani to join the ruling All Progressives Congress in a move to ingratiate himself with President Buhari, may be one of the most dramatic examples of financial catastrophe striking erstwhile profiteers from corrupt contracts. Mr. Offor’s combination of financial woes, marital troubles and crash from political relevance, appear to make Mr. Rewane’s statement very prophetic.