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Underreported editors’ conference on agric business

Monday, 22 August 2016 / No Comments


By Martins Oloja   |   20 August 2016   |   4:46 am


Martins Oloja
It is indeed a paradox of journalism development that a weeklong conference organized by the aristocracy of the Nigerian mass media, the Guild of Editors (NGE) could be described as underreported. Unfortunately, that was what happened recently in Port Harcourt. How should we contextually report that events organized by supervisors of reporters (editors) of other people, other organizations’ events could not supervise the same reporters that covered or should have covered their event? Should we say the reporters who should not be supervised to cover an open event failed us? Or should be say this lamentation is a reflection of the state of the newsrooms that have un-enterprising and unskilled reporters at the moment? And, in the main, who should be blamed for the production and recruitment of young graduates of even Journalism and English language who cannot watch, listen and report on events, peoples and places these days? The answers to these few questions will blow in the wind for a long time until we come to ourselves, and begin to ask where the rains began to beat all of us. Yes, all of us that once upon a time attended good schools and were mentored too by excellent reporters and editors most of who were not graduates, anyway.

Let us move way from the book of lamentation on standards to the field where we almost failed the nation on an important theme of the just concluded All Nigerian Editor’s Conference (ANEC) in Port Harcourt. The theme of the conference: Economic Diversification: Agriculture As Option For a Prosperous Nigeria (3-7 August 2016) was timely and significant and most participants said so. What’s more, resource persons were the ones even Peter Drucker could be pleased with and tag as “knowledge workers” even in global context. You would agree with me that topics on agriculture would not be attractive to reporters in a milieu where only most political people, places and events make the news all the time. But the resource persons who are very educated commercial farmers in Nigeria (not from Zimbabwe, please) were the difference makers at the well-attended conference. But as usual, the politically exposed figures at the conference, notably the Governors of Rivers State, the State of Osun, the Minister of Information and Culture and representatives of the Governors of Plateau, Niger, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom and representative of the INEC Chairman, etc stole the show.

Most people must have watched and read the opening and closing ceremonies on television and some newspapers. Besides, the other story that must have caught the attention of most interested observers about Port Harcourt 2016 was confirmation of Mrs Funke Egbemode as President of the Nigerian Guild of Editors. But most Nigerians at such a time like this when oil and gas sector as the mainstay of our economy is a cause for concern, must have missed the significant gains of the conference, no thanks to our reporters who might have escaped after the opening ceremonies and returned for the closing ceremonies and the gala night at the Government House (as usual) where the deputy governor of Akwa ibom, a veteran journalist was inducted as a Fellow of the Guild.

This is the tragic denouement of the Port Harcourt 2016 where two of the best examples of Nigerian successful farmers demonstrated in their presentations how to create real value chains that can make the difference that the theme captured: “…agriculture as option for a prosperous Nigeria. There were three alternative social actors that reporters would have beamed their search light on in Port Harcourt: Ms Mosunmola Cynthia Umoru, Technical Adviser, (Youth & Gender), to Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, who also manages a thriving commercial farm in Ife near the great university of Ife. Ms Mosunmola, 37, very educated, hails from Edo state and she acquired hectres of plot of land in Osun state. Then the phenomenon we never knew from the so-called core North West (Kano) Malam Abubakar D. Abubakar, Managing Director, L & Z Farms in Kano. We the arrogant and the ignorant from the South always dismiss the core North as nothing more then PMB and his empty men watched as Malam Abubakar a retired banker told us his pedigree as a very successful dairy farmer based in Kano who pays a monthly wage bill of N67 million. The very successful commercial farmer told editors what we need to know about “practicality of agriculture, the upstream, midstream and downstream sectors of agriculture”.

The man who proved to us that he is wealthy from his dairy farming, said he is “uncowed” by current recession. To him the most significant stream remain “those at the bottom, itinerant farmers and not the “upstream sector’s mega farmers”. He noted that the most prominent in the media are “the midstream sector’s aggregators who buy off the products”. He added that the other significant ones are the downstream sector’s processors” that are in the market and it ends there. Malam Abubakar who said he had never been to part Harcourt “but my dairy products are here”, said “the challenge before policy makers is how to link the upstream sector of agriculture (mega farmers) to the downstream sector (processors) for all to benefit from the value chains”.

The Kano man said in this time and age, agriculture should be weaned from “culture” to “business” and therefore should be developed to be respected as “agri-business” instead as “agri-culture”. He hinted that the country needs “the right policy to get there. He said for instance, that dairy farmers need protection that they don’t have at the moment’. He argued that from secondary schools, children should be made to know that farming as a vocation is not inferior and not synonymous with poverty. He said that at that stage and beyond, people and even the elite who want to be involved in agric business should be aware of various sources of capital in the money and capital markets “including venture capital, equity, term loans and overdraft”. The ‘northener’ who also noted that all the factors of production including land, capital and labour are here with us said “ what we need most from the officials in Abuja and state capitals are the right policies in place and the investors in agriculture will come”. Malam Abubakar disclosed that because of his success story and clean books he has kept, he had some dates with some direct foreign investors that have been disturbing him “about investing heavily in his farm ventures” on dairy products alone. Besides the policy thrust he advised the authorities to note that at the moment, investors pay so much on utility bills alone “as a major project cost”.

All told, the Malam who vaunted that he could take his ‘very large family’ on a holiday to any parts of the world as he does every year challenged science journalists to investigate, for instance, “milk products in the country’s market that can cause cancer. He noted that the safest milk is the one obtained directly from cows. The man who did not present any written paper told editors and participants that, “agriculture is possible and sexy and we can begin to start adding value when we get the authorities to put the right policies and incentives in place and we get citizens to believe in it as a big business and “when investors are ready to suffer losses and all that for the first 5 years” before the period of stabilization.

For Mosun who is doing a part-time post-graduate study at Stanford University, she would like journalists and indeed editors to note that “our wealth in Nigeria is not in oil but in soil of more than 18 million hectares…”. She would like the Nigerian Guild of Editors “to be the advocates of change we need in the agriculture sector”.

Besides, the graduate of a Nigerian university would like the Nigerian journalists to report, analyse and interpret agriculture stories beyond the ordinary farms to other derivations such as logistics operations ownerships to move agriculture products from farms to consumers and markets. She wants the news media to report the cooperative movements that can be part of the value chains. She wants the traditional and social media “to write useful articles that can educate young graduates about the dignity of labour and wealth that can emanate from commercial farming”. Mosun who said after travelling abroad and interacting with other scholars noted to the delight of cheering participants that “I am 37 as an investor. I am a professor really and the gang members I turn to for discussion abroad are barely 25 to 27 years.

The only difference is their conducive environment for agriculture practice and financing. I am a professor but in my environment I am not…”
The lady who has a pet name, “prettymissfarmer”, which is reflected in her email and website links, said she has been sleepless about crass ignorance of the enormous opportunities in the agriculture business in a country where N200 million could be made daily if consumers in Nigeria can each spend even N100 to N300 daily as an alternative too to the N6 billion we use to import certain items for consumption at the same time. She looked at the editors in the face and said, “I hope I can disturb your sleep editors, to think about the trouble and danger that food insecurity poses to us and the N6 billion on foods that can be procured from here…Please, think about the N6 billion alone and the by products of agriculture such as clothes, building and furniture materials such as lime-stones for cement and cottons for clothes that we can invest in…” She received a standing ovation.

So did Mrs Onimim Jacks, Rivers State Commissioner for Agriculture, a discussant and lawyer too who is known as a practicing commercial farmer. The woman who teams up with her husband for commercial farming in Rivers noted that “journalists should follow up on the state of “Central Bank of Nigeria’s agriculture development funds”. She added, ‘let’s cooperate and encourage ourselves about farming, market, transport, processing, export, teach and write about all the expose by Lady Mosun. Let’s give ourselves the right information about this…” Mr. Ray Ekpu, who chaired the first business session was excited that the pretty Mosun who spoke the language of agriculture business “is an excellent example of what our young people should be”. Earlier, former Governor of Delta State, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, exponent of “Delta Beyond Oil” suggested a viable association of agriculture journalists (AAG) to take the beat seriously.

These are just parts of the significant deliberations that opening and closing ceremonies always destroy in our conversations on serious issues of urgent national importance. Reporters, please wake up to report the state of Nigeria and its situation rooms.
Inside Stuff Grammar School:
Devoted Vs Devout Christian/Muslim.
Please note that when you write a profile of a deeply religious, reverent, sincere and devoted person, describe the person as a “devout”, not “devoted” person. A devoted person only demonstrates loyalty some dedication that can change. But in the realm of religion, please talk about a “devout” Christian or Muslim.

Before Legal Education Council Ruins Open University

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By Martins Oloja   |   13 August 2016   |   4:27 am


National Open University of Nigeria

It will be in public interest if the office of the President can direct today an Inter-ministerial Council comprising the Ministers of Justice & Education (to be supported by the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, (SGF), office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) and Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution to resolve the needless conflict between the Nigerian Council for Legal Education (CLE) and the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) over admission into the Nigerian Law School.
I will presently underline why the suggested inter-ministerial council is of urgent national importance. And because we live in a country where every writer is suspected for writing on any topics, let me state clearly that I am neither a student nor a graduate of the National Open University of Nigeria. I am just sad and angry now about the parlous state of education that does not receive due attention of our leaders at all levels. And so I am fully persuaded that unless governments at all levels pay more attention to education quality through proper funding and massive development of infrastructure to global standards, we will not get out of the crisis that has threatened to make us a failed state.
That is why it is unconscionable that before our very eyes in the 21st century, when globalization forces including innovative technologies daily shape the way managers and leaders run business and governance, some stone-hearted people in Nigerian Council for Legal Education have decreed that Law graduates through Open and Distance Learning education platform should not be allowed into their own peculiar Law school. This is vexatious and the many knowledgeable and influential opinion leaders in the country who know that education is fast getting out of the conventional classrooms should call the Council for Legal Education to order.

Early in the week, news broke that NOUN had suspended admission into Law programme over exclusion from Law school.
The Vice-Chancellor of the University (NOUN) Professor Abdallah Uba Adamu confirmed the suspension while on a congratulatory visit to the new Executive Secretary of the national Universities Commission (NUC) Professor Abubakar Abdul Rasheed. There is some unfortunate curiosity about his suspension. According to the story line, Adamu who was accompanied by members of the University’s Governing Council said the suspension of admission into the (Law) programme was sequel to the advice by the NUC that students should be be stopped from undertaking the course pending the resolution of the inability of its graduates to go to Law School like their counterparts from other conventional universities. There is ‘double wahala’ for Law in Nigeria: Accreditation begins with the NUC and ends with CLE. In this instance, the NUC accreditation is nothing if the CLE can cancel it pronto.
The grave implications of this development are far reaching. In the first place, the stance of the Nigerian Council for Legal Education (CLE) on the status of Law programme of the institution is capable of eroding confidence in all the courses of the institution. Unless, government that set up NOUN rises up to call CLE to order, it (CLE) will be seen as a heroic body that cares about standard and best practices. It may be suspected that, the National Youth service Corps (NYSC) that has been reluctant in admitting graduates of NOUN into its service scheme must have taken some inspiration from the almighty Legal Education Council. But it is not the case, in this connection. The Legal Education Council members too need innovative thinking at this juncture, lest they give Nigeria a bad name. In other words, if the Council is not reminded that we are in the 21st century, they will destroy legal education that requires dynamism from graduates from different platforms.
The NOUN set up by a law, is a Federal Open and Distance Learning (ODL) institution, the first of its kind in West Africa. It is Nigeria’s largest tertiary institution in terms of student numbers. It was originally established on July 22, 1983 as a springboard for open and distance learning in Nigeria. The Buhari’s military government suspended it on April 25, 1984 without any solid reason. The Obasanjo’s government thought of its benefits and revived it legally in 2001. To his credit, President Obasanjo appointed a qualified Professor of Open and Distance Learning (ODL) to coordinate it. Professor Olugbemiro Jegede was Coordinator until 2003 when he was appointed Vice Chancellor.
Prior to his special assignment in Nigeria, Professor Jegede had served in various capacities in different parts of the world including being the Staff in charge of the M.Ed programme by ODL at the Curtin University of Technology Science and Mathematics Education Centre, Perth, Australia; founding Director, Centre for Research in Distance & Adult Learning, The Open University of Hong Kong; Foundation Head, Research & Evaluation Unit Distance Education Centre, The University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia.

Professor Jegede, who is a chair Professor in both Science Education and Open and Distance Learning, obtained his B.Sc.Ed and M.Ed degrees at Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria. He got his Ph.D at the University College of Wales, Cardiff, UK.
It is understood too that today in Nigeria, the NOUN has the best Learning Portal to the extent that students most times get their results on the spot after examination.
What is more, we are not an Island on this score. The Open University, United Kingdom proclaims itself as “the world’s leading provider of flexible, high-quality online degrees…” According to the operators of the largest university in U.K, distance learning or e-learning serves students across the globe with highly respected degree qualifications, and the triple accredited MBA. They have 200, 000 students in 440 courses. The Open University set up in 1969 is regularly rated as one of the best in the UK for student satisfaction in the National Student Survey. Their 440 courses include Medicine & Health, Environmental Studies, Computer Science, Engineering & Technology, Arts, Design & Architecture, Law Applied Sciences & Professions, Agriculture & Forestry. So, what is extraordinary about Law through ODL in Nigeria that the almighty CLE have been adamant about? Lest we forget, how did Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Chief Gani Fawehinmi, Chief Afe Babalola all great lawyers obtain their Law degrees without the internet then? How did they study Law through correspondence in England?
Do the unduly conservative big men know that there are thousands of graduates and graduate students from the University of Liverpool, (UK) online programmes in Nigeria? Do they know that the online programme of the Liverpool’s is more rigorous and expensive than the regular programme? The University of Liverpool is a member of the UK’s research-led Russel Group and is in the top 1 per cent of universities worldwide. Its 100 online programmes backed by worldwide accreditation (such as AACSB for management degrees, and BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT, for information technology degrees) – offer a highly collaborative and engaging experience for ambitious professionals, building their global knowledge, network and skills for increased professional impact.
The Liverpool University founded in 1881 and authorized in 1903 by Royal Charter to award degrees is today at the forefront of global online higher education, offering s suite of fully online graduate degree programmes delivered by Laureate Online Education under the auspices of LAUREATE International Universities. More than 10,000 people from over 160 countries are studying online and more than 8,000 have graduated from this Liverpool University online model since they began. For the information of those who do not understand what we are saying here, even almost all the Ivy League Universities in the U.S have migrated to the ODL programe one way or the other. In 2014, there was a heated argument about how to join the ODL bandwagon in the prestigious Harvard University’s MBA programme.
The debate was between two of their best Professors at the Harvard Business School, Professor Michael Porter, who did the canonical works, Competitive Strategy and Competitive Advantage and Professor Clayton Christensen, author of the highly reviewed The Innovator’s Dilemma and The Innovator’s Solution. Their dilemma was how should Harvard Business School handle both the threat and the opportunity of online disruption? Porter had argued for evolution, not revolution. Porter believes that he school should modernize around the edges while it preøserves the core. But Christensen who argues for revolution, maintains that it is inevitable and the school should disrupt itself before its competitors do. In the end, Harvard, though conscious of its MBA as a profit centre accepted the Porter-like strategy.

It has built a programme called HBX, conceived as a $1,500 “pre MBA online course to prepare students to speak the language of business”. According to the model, the beauty of the online approach is that it makes money without cannibalizing key profit centres such as MBA and executive education programmes, which bring in a quarter of a billion dollars per year.
What this shows is that Nigerian university administrators and their professors should develop learning models that will make the working class and millions of education-hungry Nigerians to obtain even higher degrees in Nigerian universities instead of resorting to Liverpool, Harvard and The Open University of UK. If the Council for Legal Education is allowed to prevent accreditation for Law programme, how do we have confidence in other programmes of the NOUN and other universities offering distance learning programmes in Nigeria?. No, doubt, there are serious challenges but it is the responsibility of the federal government to deal with them. The starting point of redemption song for the NOUN is for the President to set up an Inter-ministerial body, which should include relevant professional bodies to remove this reproach that the Legal Education Council has slammed on the National Open University of Nigeria that can be well funded and developed to be one of the best ODL institutions in the world.
Inside Stuff Grammar School
Using “Relegated to the Background” and “Night Vigil”.
This school has observed that some users misuse the phrase “relegated to the background” and “night vigil”. Note that it is wrong to add “to the background” to the word “relegated”. Examples: (1) The central role of the sponsor of the event was “relegated to the background”. The correct sentence is: (1) The central role of the sponsor of the event was relegated. The phrase, “to the background” in the sentence is unnecessary (redundant). The place of the phrase is inherent in the original meaning of relegation. So it is for the word “vigil”. It is wrong to say or write that: (1) I will be going for a “night vigil” in my church tomorrow. Note that “vigil” already connotes “night”. Vigil means ‘purposeful watch maintained especially at night, to guard, observe, pray, etc’. (2) The eve of certain major festivals, formerly observed as a night spent in prayer (old RC Church, Church of England). You are going for a “vigil” in your office or church, not “night vigil”.

Understanding the 10 Nigerians who broke Nigeria’s walls

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By Martins Oloja   |   06 August 2016   |   4:30 am


Martins Oloja

It is quite inscrutable, why more and more trees have been falling so frequently on trees in our wonderful country, where forces of darkness apparently conspire daily to demonize our 17-year – old democracy and its concomitant governance culture. That is why the inconclusive issue of higher education that has been dominant on this page will still not feature this week. In our setting, when trees fall on trees, we remove the topmost first until the last one.
It is, therefore, still incredible how the current session of the National Assembly will, for instance, control the damage that reported impurities in their system have inflicted on their already battered image. The Senate that has been smarting from the scandal of its leadership appearing in the dock of the Code of Conduct Tribunal over alleged undeclared assets and forgery of its Rules has been smeared too by the ubiquitous budget padding scandal. Constituency projects breaking stories that should elicit benefits to the constituents in a democracy have seriously blighted Speaker Dogara and his men.
And the ‘gunmen’ inside Nigeria’s governing party are generally believed to be artfully devising some strategy to deal ruthlessly with the principal suspects who allegedly ‘stole’ the leadership show the other day. It is sad that the biggest casualty is the stillborn 2016 budget that the legendary Fela Anikulapo Kuti would have des000cribed as a dead body that curiously got involved in an accident. Now, confusion has broken bones in Abuja and there is “double wahala for the dead body and the owner of dead body”.

If the 2016 budget can’t perform, the angry and loquacious Hon. Abdulmumin Jibrin and his colleagues will have to be blamed for the monumental impurities in the document . Senator Bukola Saraki and Speaker Yakubu Dogara now in the eye of the storm, should note that their leadership of Nigeria’s legislature has been massively tainted. They need some soul searching about the violated chambers as it is unclear now how democracy can survive in the country without a credible legislature.
The 10 Nigerians to fix Nigeria’s broken walls: The context and the lost history…
My experience with this article as it appeared on this page last week has reinforced clarion calls on the authorities to reintroduce History now in the school curriculum. There were many responses to the article, which showed clearly that most of our young readers apparently lack some depth about concepts and critical national issues. Many of our young graduates do not understand contextual analysis of restructuring that now dominates media space. Sadly, they don’t know anything about 56 years of Nigeria’s independence and 50 years after the “soldiers of fortune” hit Nigeria’s politics.
A story is told of how a young graduate from Ikenne in Ogun State who has never heard about the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, is, however, aware of a young footballer Obafemi Martins. It is just gratifying to note that all the elders that responded to the article had a clear understanding of the import of the message, which should have borne an alternative title, 10 Nigerians to ask if Nigeria fails…That is the context and the history missed. I wonder why most young people could not decode a message that it is just too late to expect the 10 prominent Nigerians to fix the walls they actually broke. That is why I would like to revisit the foundations of the special 10 Nigerians to show how and when they had served their fatherland how the land has lost some virtue from their service. Let’s navigate how:
Major General Muhamadu Buhari (73) – Governor of Northeastern State, 1975-1976; Governor, Borno State, 1976; Minister Petroleum & Natural Resources, 1976-1978; Nigeria’s Head of State 1983-1985; President 2015-to date
General Olusegun Matthew Obasanjo (79) Minister Works & Housing, 1974-1975; Chief of Staff Supreme Headquarters, 1975-1976; Head of State 1976-1979; President 1999- 2007.
Lt. General Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma (77) Chief of Army Staff 1979 -1980; Minister of Defence (1999-2003). He is a successful investor with substantial investments in Maritime, oil & Gas and Telecommunications, etc.
General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (74) Chief of Army Staff 1984-1985; Head of State 1985-1993; he is a member of the PDP that ruled Nigeria from 1999-2015. His business interests are not so documented.
Lt. General Aliyu Mohammed Gusau (73) – Director General, National Security Organization 1985-1986; Chief of Army Staff, 1993; National Security Adviser (NSA) 1999-2006; 2010; Defence Minister, 2014-2015…

General Abdusalami Alhaji Abubakar (74) Chief of Defence Staff 1977-1998; Head of State 1998-1999 – Handed over to President Obasanjo on May 29, 1999.
Alhaji Aliyu Shehu Shagari (91) Minister, Economic Development, Rehabilitation & Reconstruction (1970-1971), Minister of Finance (1971-1975); President of Nigeria 1979-1983; Buhari’s men overthrew his government and General Buhari sacked his democratic government.
Dr. Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan (58) Governor of Bayelsa State 2005-2007; Vice President 2007-2010; President 2010-2015. His business interests are not on record. Alhaji Atiku Abubakar (69) Deputy Director, Nigerian Customs Service till 1989. Governor-elect 1998 and drafted to be Vice President 1999- 2007. He has business interests in Maritime mid-stream sector of the oil industry (Shipping) from NICOTES to INTELS…He is generally believed to be very wealthy.
Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu (64) an accountant, worked for American companies- Arthur Anderson, Deloitte. Haskins & Sells, GTE Services; Worked with Mobil Nigeria; Governor of Lagos State 1999-2007; He is a National Leader of the governing Party, All Progressives Congress (APC), His business interests are not so recorded but associated with media platforms, oil &gas and energy, etc, He is the most influential political figure in South West and generally believed to have invested in many political office holders and leaders even in the North. He is recognized as one of the political figures that paved the way for the emergence of President Buhari in 2015.
Between Abayomi Oluwole & the Pen-robbers in Abuja.
You should be wondering what Abayomi Oluwole has got to do with the few state actors who daily give this country a bad name as one of the most fantastically corrupt countries in the world today. Hold your breath, Citizen Abayomi is not one of the infamous ‘budget padders’ and hardworking looters of our treasury in Abuja and the 36 state capitals. Nor does he work for any of them. The 40-year-old man is not a prominent Nigerian but he is very significant. Pastor Rick Warren in his classic, The Purpose Driven Life identifies two classes of people in life: the prominent and the significant. He says some people are prominent through the media but they may not be significant. And there are some others that may not be prominent at all but quite significant even in the eye of the people.
The American cleric says God who is not interested in prominent people, is daily looking for significant people who will remake the world…Abayomi is one of such significant Nigerians at such a time like this. This is my story: On Saturday July 30, 2016, I travelled to Abuja through the Lagos domestic airport (MM2) commissioned by Bi-Courtney Aviation Services in 2008. And in a rush to make the First Nation airline’s 11:30am flight to Abuja, I left my frontier office handbag, which contained money, two cheque books, my international passports, (old and new), two iPhone 5 handsets, a Toyota car particulars, etc. on the floor of the departure hall. I did not remember the handbag until we were told to prepare for landing at the Abuja airport. Even when I called Mr Remi Ladigbolu, Bi-Courtney’s Communications Manager at the airport, I was quite disturbed, especially about my passport. Remi told me to list the items in the bag for an inquiry at the security posts of the airport.

I was composing an SMS to him (Remi) when a call from an operative of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), who later identified herself as Hajia interrupted my composition. She asked, “Are you Martins Oloja? She queried if I flew through the MM2 that day and I interrupted her with the content of the SMS her call had disrupted. She told me that a good Nigerian who found my handbag had deposited it at the FAAN’s airport security administration’s post. She asked me to collect the bag at the security post whenever I returned. I did not tell her any details about the content. I returned to MM2 on Tuesday and behold every item in the bag was intact. I asked for the identity of the good Nigerian who found the bag. I was sad when told the person was not on duty. I then left a call-card and requested that the person should please, call me whenever he returned.
I was pleasantly surprised when I received Abayomi’s call while I was paying for some books at the Glendora Bookshop, about 30 metres away from the security screening post. I told him to meet me there and I saw a lanky man who looks like a 25 year old, but says he is actually 40. I followed him to his office where I discovered that he works as a cleaner for a private cleaning company, SPAKLEEN that Bi-Courtney had hired to take care of airport, MM2. I met some of the managers in the office who were quite pleased that I called in, to appreciate them. The story of citizen. Abayomi, who hails from Egbe Yagba West Local Government of Kogi State, shows again that we are not all thieves and ‘padders’. When the David Cameron’s of this world would proclaim that Nigeria is a fantastically corrupt country, they should note that only very few public officers give us this bad name, after all. I am very proud to associate myself with a significant Nigerian, Abayomi, who is a sharp contrast to the prominent execu-thieves and legislooters in Abuja and 36 state capitals. It is 40 cheerful garlands to Abayomi who reinforces my belief again in my dear country: That there are fantastically good Nigerians too!
Inside Stuff Grammar School:
Mediocrity Vs Mediocre again.
This school has discovered that despite the post here in the beginning, many users still confuse the use of “mediocrity” with “mediocre”. Please, note again that “mediocrity” is used as an Abstract Noun and Common Noun respectively. So, if you want to refer to a person who puts up a mediocre performance, the person is described too as a “mediocrity” (common noun), not “a mediocre”. In the same vein, the performance itself is mediocrity (abstract noun). So, use “mediocre” only as an adjective, a qualifier.
Examples: There are too many mediocrities (not mediocres) in this company. 2. The trouble with the company is mediocre performance.
*Sorry for the devil in the printing detail last week, when “Grammar” was spelt as “Grammer”. We are so sorry.