Wednesday 7 November 2018

Check Out Bimbo Oshin And Daughter Lovely Pictures

One of the foremost female acts in the Nigerian movie industry, Bimbo Oshin-Ibironke is definitely having the blast moment other marital life.

She is seen in a recent trending pictures on social media, where she posed with her beautiful daughter. Bimbo has every reason to be happy; she has a happy home and a blossoming career.
She is a role model to the up and coming stars in her industry and the young ladies in the society. Not only that, she has also proven that there is indeed nothing wrong with Nollywood when it comes to marriage but individuals involved. As many never thought her marriage with the formerly U.S based top movie/music promoter, Ola Ibironke could last.

But today they are happy in marriage, they are each other's best friend. 

Fayemi Appoints Fact Finding Committee For EKSUTH

YesIn a bid to reposition the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital, (EKSUTH), Ado-Ekiti, as a leading tertiary health care institution, Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, has approved the establishment of a Fact Finding Committee to look into the activities of the institution from 2013 to date.

According to the press release made available to journalists by Fayemi's Press Secretary Olayinka Oyebode, the Committee, as approved by the Governor, has Chief (Mrs) Ebun Adejuyigbe as Chairman while Mr. j.A Obaparusi is the Secretary. Other members are Professor Denied Agboola, Prof. Simi Odeyinka, Prof. Ayo Omotoso, Dr. Walter Yemi Olatunbosun, Mr. ayoola Owolabi and Engr. Tunde Alabi

The Fact Finding Committee is empowered to carry out the following tasks:

. Look into the leadership quality of the Hospital in terms of the roles of the Governing Board, the Chief Medical Director and other principal Officers;

· Look into the financial management of the Hospital including statutory Allocations and Internally Generated Revenue over the recommended period and determine whether it was in compliance with appropriate regulation.

· Investigate the application of funds, particularly special grants, loans meant for specific projects in order to determine the status of such projects and their relevance for further funding.

·   Examine the processes and structures of the mechanism for the discipline of staff and students/interns in the Hospital in order to ascertain compliance with due process and rule of law.

The committee is expected to turn in its report and recommendations within four weeks.

Atiku vs Buhari (2) -Opeyemi Agbaje

In the first part of this column, I characterized the 2015 election of Muhammadu Buhari as a historical error not supported by his antecedents in policy, administration, economic management, democratic norms and human rights or national ethos, but could only be understood or permitted against the context of then Goodluck Jonathan’s administrations weakness and naivety.
I also described the Atiku Abubakar candidacy as complicated on account of his branding (particularly by former President Olusegun Obasanjo) as corrupt and his perception as a typical Nigerian politician.
There are two dimensions of the matter that I reserved for this second part-beyond the “irresponsibility” inherent in asking Buhari to continue his destruction of the Nigerian economy and polity beyond 2019, are there any benefits associated with an Atiku presidency on its own merits? And secondly, what of the ostensible alternatives to Buhari and Atiku? Could Nigerians vote for these others on offer?
It seems to me, and I think most objective observers of Nigerian politics that Alhaji Atiku AbubakarTinubu is the only viable alternative to Buhari in the 2019 presidential election. There are four major strengths of the Atiku candidacy and potentially presidency, to the Nigerian nation in contradiction to his opppnent-unlike Buhari, Atiku has played the role of united and consensus builder since his entry into Nigerian politics on the platform of his mentor, late General Shehu Musa Yar'adua's Peoples Front (PF) which later became People's Democratic Movement (PDM).
PF/PDM sought allies all over Nigeria and acquired the character of a pan-Nigerian movement with strong membership and support in the South-West, South-East, South- South, North-Central all across the Northern states. No one could credibly accuse Atiku of playing an ethnic, religion (not to mention sactarian!) or regional card in his political practice since the early 1990s when he came into national reckoning as a presidential candidate of the defunct Social Democratic Party (SDP) of the Babangida transition.
It was Atiku by stepping down for the late M.K.O Abiola who made Abiola's presidential candidacy of the SDP possible and in effect his victory in the aborted June 13 1993 elections. He has since then commented his image as a national and cosmopolitan politician with friends and allies all over the country.
Atiku is also very competent in policy, economy and administration. He is a well-known and successful businessman and employer who understands markets and economic management, as he proved as Vice President under Obasanjo. It was not co-incidence that the arrow-heads of the economic team of that era (Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Oby Ezekwesili, Nasir El-Rufai, Chukwuma Soludo, Fola Adeola, Nuhu Ribadu etc.) were either recruited by or gravitated towards Abubakar who also facilitated the mostly successful privatisation and liberalisation agenda of the Obasanjo government.A
s a student of economic policy in Nigeria, I have observed that Atiku is one of the few politicians of that generation who can identify with free enterprise, investment, deregulation and liberalisation, and markets as core elements of economic policy and management.
Atiku has also become the only national contestant for the presidency who has anchored his aspiration on a firm undertaking to restructure Nigeria’s constitution along the lines of federalism. He has clearly thought through the issue and understands why federalism is imperative for economic growth, national unity and cohesion, and sustainable development in Nigeria.
Another benefit of an Atiku candidacy or presidency is that it offers a much-need transitional figure who can be a bridge across Nigeria’s generational, regional, religious and ethnic divides. You can easily picture Nigerians of all ages, sexes, religions, regions and ethnic groups around Atiku, unlike his main opponent who has not been able to transcend his provincial and sectarian inclinations. As much as we need a transition of national leadership to a younger, more educated, less ethnically-focused and more urbane generation, Atiku strikes one as a figure who can bridge that transition and hopefully help identify and nurture that future leadership class. It does not hurt that Atiku Abubakar has the material resources and network of relationships to mount a strong, determined and effective challenge to the APC’s looming political hegemony!
As I wrote in the previous part, he has already transformed a race that may have been written-off in favour of Buhari into a balanced and competitive contest. The point of all these is that there is some substantive merit in an AtikuAbubakar Presidency beyond “anyone but Buhari!”
Finally we must consider the case for considering the so-called alternatives-Omoyele Sowore, Fela Durotoye, Donald Duke, Oby Ezekwesili, Eunice Atuejide, Kingsley Muoghalu et al. I have thought long and hard on this issue…and I would have to conclude that there is no reasonable pathway to the presidency for any candidate other than Atiku or Buhari. None other has the platform, network, resources or organisation to mount a credible challenge against Buhari. In effect their strategic positioning would amount to a de facto undermining of the Atiku candidacy as well as implicit support for Buhari!
In any event, many of the alternatives either bear some moral responsibility for the Buhari error of 2015, or lack the moral credibility to attack the PDP, which they either served happily under or benefitted tremendously from! In some notorious cases, both disqualifications apply!
-Opeyemi Agbaje

2019: US Institute Of Peace Denies Predicting Victory For Buhari

The United States Institute of Peace has denied predicting victory for President Muhammadu Buhari in the coming 2019 general elections.

In what it described as an error on the path of Nigerian newspapers, the Institute in a statement on its website on Tuesday captioned: “Correcting a Media Error: USIP Makes No Prediction on Nigerian Election”, stressed that the report by many Nigerian media that the Institute’s 20-page report on risk to a peaceful election in Nigeria, predicted victory for Buhari was not true.

USIP said the said reports were erroneous adding that the Institute was non-partisan and its only interest in elections was that of preventing violence not on the outcome.

“A few Nigerian newspapers reported erroneously this week that the U.S. Institute of Peace has made a prediction about the possible outcome of Nigeria’s 2019 presidential election.

“USIP never makes predictions about election outcomes and has not done so in this case. The Institute’s work on elections is confined to helping nations avoid electoral violence.

“The erroneous news accounts misrepresent USIP’s recent 20-page report on the risks to a peaceful 2019 election in Nigeria.“This study is based on interviews across the country with more than 200 Nigerian respondents—election administrators, political party representatives, security officials, civil society and youth groups, the media, traditional and religious leaders, prominent community figures, business people, academics and others.“The USIP report noted that, in the interviews, “some respondents” discussed their own views of Nigerian public perceptions about an election outcome.“A Nigerian news account mis-reported this passage as a USIP prediction of the outcome, and other Nigerian news organizations repeated the error.

As USIP is a strictly nonpartisan institution, its work on elections focuses entirely on preventing violence. For more information on USIP’s work on peaceful elections and in Nigeria.

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