Friday, 5 June 2026

The Problem with Africa

GOUGE MY EYE

In a story, an African man was given the opportunity to ask for
anything he wants. The condition was that, whatever he gets, his
brother would receive double. He thought about asking for a
house; but he did not like thought of his brother having two
houses. So he thought about asking for a million dollars to go to his
bank account; but again, he was unhappy with the thought of his
brother having two million dollars in his account. The man sat down
and thought hard, “What can I have and still be better than my
brother when he has double?”

 
So, he thought of having one of his eyes removed so that his
brother might have his two eyes gouged. This sounds like a very
unlikely story; however, this is the typical mentality that has set
Africans backward for ages and caused witchcraft to thrive in
Africa. An African wants to be better than his brother at all costs.
The African man is only careful to share his beer, not his books; to
spread his diseases, and not the cure; to transfer his problems, and
not the solution.


When an African man fails, he wishes his brother same fate so that
he won't be the only one who had tasted the bitterness of failure.
An African man is happy when evil besets his brother.
When most African men succeed, they want to enslave their
brothers; they try to make the class gap between them and their
brothers widen daily. An African man wants to outperform his
brother in every area and most African men do not want to let their
brothers have any chances of success because they want to be the
only ones succeeding.


When an African man gets to sit on a seat of authority, he wants to
keep it to himself and refuses to give anyone else a chance to sit. In
African schools, students who can afford textbooks do not let
other students borrow their textbooks because they want to stay
top of the class or they don't want to give another student the
opportunity to perform better than them. 

When one independently discovers the way to success, an African man who
refused to give directions would still do all he can to stand in the
way of that success. An African man is ready to spend money to
intimidate his brother and make him look like nothing.

 
Africa will become better; 

When we begin to share books to pass
knowledge, not just our drinks. When we begin to let others also
lead without our influence. When we begin to give the same quality
of food and clothing to both our children and our maids. When we
let our servants eat on the same table with us. When the boss lets
his lower staff get paid before him. Africa can become progressive
when we begin to look out for each other rather than stand in the
way of one another. When we can sincerely say, “let my brother get
it too, and if I can't get it, let me help him get it”.


Excerpt from the book
The Problem with Africa

Friday, 11 January 2019

JAMB: How to register for 2019 UTME 10/Jan/2019,

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) commenced sale of registration forms, for the 2019 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination, yesterday Thursday, January 10, 2019.
And sale of forms will last for six weeks.

There are few documents requirements and they include:

Personal e-mail address and mobile phone number
– Create your JAMB profile.
– JAMB ePIN registration payment
– Visit any accredited CBT centers with your personal details, the profile and evidence of payment.
– The CBT centers or JAMB State Office, supplies, at no extra cost, the prescribed reading text and the CD containing:
a) e-brochure showing guidelines on admission detailing list of tertiary institutions and available programmes of study.
b) Syllabus (e-syllabus) for the examination.
c) Step by step guide on completion of the application form.
d) A video messages from the Registrar of JAMB and a demo on how to use eight (8) keys for UTME examination without mouse. (For candidates with little familiarity with Computers).
vii. Each Candidate is to complete the online application form by supplying the required details such as name, e-mail address, L.G.A., academic qualification, etc.
viii. At the CBT centers, Candidate’s ten fingers biometric and image will be captured and uploaded.
ix. O/L and/or A/L grades are to be provided by candidates. Candidates who are awaiting result should supply the result online as soon as the results are available on JAMB’s portal.
x. Each Candidate is to collect his e-slip at the end of registration as evidence of registration.

There will be no offline registration, as all the accredited CBT centers have been empowered for real life online registration.
Note: No candidate should register at any centers other than the accredited CBT centers and JAMB State office. Any candidate who is registered outside approved centres, will be identified and disqualified.

Friday, 28 December 2018

Tips On How To Track Your Lost Mobile Phone And Get It Back

It could be frustrating when one loses a mobile phone either by misplacement or theft. This is because it’s always an uphill task to recover the phone. However, do you know that if you lose your MTN network SIM and your mobile phone, you can trace it back? A lot of people must have heard of the imel number but don’t know its usefulness. With imel number which has 15 digits, you can track your lost phone anywhere in the world.
How it works
First of all, get your mobile phone imel number/code by dialling *#06# from your Mobile phone and the unique 15 digits number will appear on your phone.

Another means to get your phone imel number is to check your phone pack menu or instruction paper. At times the manufacturers do include in the menu the phone imel. This same imel number might be in a sticker paper attached with the phone panel. You can as well check this by removing the phone battery and check the white sticker attached with the panel (the engine of your phone). However, most mobile phone sellers do write out the phone imel number in the receipt of your phone given to you.

Then put down this number in a secure place like a diary because this is the number which will help in tracing your mobile phone.

✒ Once your phone is stolen, all you need do is to e-mail the 15 digits IMEI number to cop@vsnl.net along with other details listed below.

✒ Name: (real name and not necessarily the name on your receipt)

✒ Address: (present address not necessarily where you bought the phone)

✒ Phone model: (model number of your phone…e.g. 3310, L6, 202, G471f, 302i,..)

✒ Make: (maker or product name of your phone e.g. Iphone, Nokia, Tecno, Sagem,….)

✒ Last used No.: (last number you called or that called you i.e your last received or dialled number)

✒ E-mail for communication: (Your working email to receive feedback)

✒ Missed date: (The date the phone was stolen or misplaced)

✒ IMEI No.: (Your copied imel number)
With all these details fully submitted, Your Mobile will be traced within next 24 hours via a complex system of General Packet Radio Services GPRS and internet.

Yola!! You will find where your hand set is being operated and the new user’s number will be sent to your email. And you can take it from there by informing the appropriate authority.

Wednesday, 16 November 2016

Kenya hosts world's first albino beauty pageant hosted by Kenya


So some weeks back, contestants in Nairobi aimed at fighting back against persecution in east Africa, where albino body parts are sold on black market.

With its evening gowns, celebrity judges and tears of joy, this beauty pageant in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, was like many others – except for one thing: all 20 contestants had albinism.

Titled Beauty Beyond Skin, the world’s first albino pageant was designed to celebrate people who lack pigment in their skin, hair and eyes, and to fight the widespread persecution of albinos in east Africa .
Ten women and 10 men modelled the latest fashions at the event as they competed for the title of Mr and Miss Albinism Kenya in front of a crowd of about 1,000 people. The contestants used the occasion to petition the government to better recognise and respect their condition. Some dressed up as army officers, waiters and police officers to highlight that albinos belong in every part of society.


But the event was also about fashion: some outfits were crafted from materials such as cement bags, balloons, paper bags, doormats, cotton wool and CDs, showcasing creativity and individual style.
Loyce Lihanda, who was crowned Miss Albinism Kenya, said: “For so long albinos have been treated as half-humans because they [are] different. In turn this has affected our self-esteem and the ability to utilise and explore our skills and talents.
“We come from a mentality that we cannot achieve what ‘normal’ people can because we are different. Yet time has proven that we can excel.”
In Kenya, albinism is a highly stigmatised condition. The biggest threat to people with the condition is the trade in albino body parts – used in traditional medicine and believed to bring good luck and financial and political gain – on the black market.
In neighbouring Tanzania, at least 75 children and adults with albinism have been killed since 2000, and more than 62 others have escaped with severe injuries after attacks by people seeking to supply witch doctors thought to pay up to $75,000 (£61,500) for a full set of body parts.

Last year more than 35 albinos were evacuated from towns near the Kenya-Tanzania border after an increase in ritual killings, allegedly linked to politicians hoping to be elected.
Isaac Mwaura, Kenya’s first and only albino MP, said Kenyans needed to change their attitude towards albinos, and pointed out that the celebration marked 10 years of campaigning by the Albinism Society of Kenya.
“A time is coming when we will have people with albinism serving in the army and police force. We already have some in the National Youth Service, and this is a milestone in achieving inclusion despite the difference in skin colour,” he said.
“We have come to say that people with disability are beautiful people. We can have the names ‘beautiful’, ‘handsome’ and ‘albinism’ in one society.”
Ruto said the government would work with albinos to ensure their safety. “The dream of every child is valid, and it does not matter [what] their skin colour [is],” he said.
Ruto said the government had earmarked various benefits for albinos, including a 100m Kenyan shillings (£807,500) drive for sunscreen, special sunglasses and tax breaks.
The Albinism Society of Kenya chair, Alex Munyere, said more needed to be done to dispel myths about the condition. He said intimidation and harassment had serious repercussions in the lives of many albinos, leading to trauma and, in extreme cases, suicide.
“People with albinism suffer a lot of stigma and grow up without parents,” Munyere said. “If we can appreciate them more, we can break the cycle of low self-esteem and help them achieve their dreams.”
Billed by organisers as the first pageant of its kind, young albino men and women competed for the title of Miss and Mr Albinism Kenya.

Contestants pose on stage during a pageant hosted by the Albinism Society of Kenya.

Don't forget to Comment here and remember to Click Share/Like buttons for the benefit of others.

Monday, 14 November 2016

Innjoo Pro 4G LTE Specifications, Features And Price

It seems InnJoo don't want Tecno and Infinix to bench them in the production of the blow one's mind devices. Innjoo Pro is the latest flabbergast device from Innjoo and the device is already available for sale in Saudi Arabia. Obviously Innjo attention might be a little bit shifted from Nigeria, because most of their LTE they secretly launched are yet to available in Nigeria market.


The InnJoo Pro 4G Android Smartphone features a 2.5D diamond cut glass that perfectly meets its 8.6mm thin edges at the corner. The design has a small bezel to glass ratio that accentuates its sleek, metal body design. The sandblasting finish at the back gives it a gorgeous shimmer for a premium visual appeal.

Innjoo Pro runs Android 5.1 Lollipop out of the box, a 6 inches Phablet with fingerprint, massive 3GB of ram and 32GB internal memory. Not just that, but it also comes with 2.5D diamond cutlass glass.

Innjoo Pro's touch sensor is far beyond user-friendly, it's intelligent. It needs only 0.35 seconds to recognize your fingerprint, in all directions, and the passing rate is higher than 99%. You can also overlap one or more fingerprints on top of another, to unlock the phone with any of your fingertips, simple and effective.




It comes with 4000mAh Polymer Li-ion battery of high-capacity is packed into the 8.6mm slim body. It supports two-day long normal usage. Save your mind of running out of battery, and immerse yourself in reading, watching, gaming and surfing.




Below are the highlights of its specification


Technology

2G: GSM 900/1800.

3G: WCDMA 2100.

4G: FDD 1800.


SIM Type: Dual SIM (Micro SIM, dual standby).

OS: Android 5.1 lollipop.


Design

Dimensions: 160.2 * 82.4 * 8.6 mm.

Weight: 193g.


Display: 6-inch, 1280 * 720 pixels HD, IPS Capacitive touchscreen.

Build: Metal (Aluminum) design.

Colours: Grey, Gold & Rose Gold.


Hardware

Processor Name/Technology: Mediatek MT6735P.

Processor Speed: 1.0 GHz.

Number of Processor Cores: Quad-core.

Graphic Processor: Mali-T720 MP1.

RAM: 3 GB.

Internal Storage: 32 GB.

External Storage: microSD, up to 128 GB.

Sensors: Accelerometer, Light, Proximity, Gravity, Fingerprint Sensor.


Camera

Rear: 13 MP, Autofocus.

Video recording: Yes.

Front-facing: 8MP.


Multimedia

Music Support: OGG, AAC, AMR, MP2, MP3, M4A, MKA,.

Loudspeaker: Yes.

Audio Technology: LRC lyrics synchronising, Photo Album, Stereo speaker.

Video Support: AVI, MKV(XVID/px/H.264), MOV, TS, M2TS, RM/RMVB, FLV, 3GP, MPEG, DAT, MP4(support to 1080P:1920×1080).

FM Radio: Yes.


Connectivity

Bluetooth: v4.0.

Bluetooth Profiles: –

WiFi: Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, hotspot.

GPS: Yes, A-GPS.

USB: micro USB v2.0.

USB OTG: No.

NFC: No.

3.5mm audio jack: Yes.


Battery

Battery: Li-Polymer 4,000 mAh.

Charging: Fast Charge – Yes.


Miscellaneous

Extra Features: Office software, Skype.

Launch Date: October 24, 2016.

Availability: October 24, 2016.

Launching price: 555.00SAR


I wonder why InnJoo mobile is dodging the Nigeria Market. What do you think is the reason? Let heard your opinion, by making use of the comment box.

Saturday, 12 November 2016

Reasonable cheap 4G LTE Smartphones to Buy During Jumia/Konga Black Friday.


We all are already in the mood of Black Friday, a few days to go and the excitement level keeps increasing. November 25th 2016 is the final day where you get to take part in the biggest shopping experience. Jumia and Konga promise that it'll be an amazing shopping experience for all.

By now, you should have concluded and get prepared for the list of items you need or want to buy on Black Friday, but remember that Nigeria is now moving out of 3G gradually for 4G service and to enjoy super blazing internet speed, it will be better for you to take advantage of these great deals.

For those who wish to upgrade their smartphone from 3G to 4G, here are the lists of affordable 4G smartphone you can buy on Black Friday. Hopefully, there will be price slash in the prices listed below, up to 50% depending on the device.


Note that the 4G smartphone listed below are exclusive to what is available on Jumia platform. 

Tecno Camon C9

· SIM Type: Dual Micro SIM

· 4G LTE: Yes



OS: Android 6.0 Marshmallow with HiOs V1.0

· Display: 5.5 inches ISP Display

· Build: Full Aluminium Unibody

· Colors: Gold, Sandstone and Black.

· Processor Type: 1.3 GHz, 64-bit Octa-core MediaTek MT6753 chipset

· Graphics Processor: Mali-T720

· RAM: 2GB

· Internal Storage: 16GB

· External Storage: Yes, up to 128GB Memory Card.

· Back Camera: 13.0 MP with LED Flash

· Front Camera: 13.0 MP with LED Flash, 83 degree wide viewing angle, ISP picture noise detecting Technology

· Battery: 3000mAh

· Security: Irish scanner that unlocks your phone by scanning your eyeball.

  Price: N60,999


Infinix Hot S

·  SIM Type: Dual Micro SIM

·  4GLTE: Yes

·  OS: Android 6.0 Marshmallow with XOS

·  Display: 5.2 inches Full HD Display with 424 ppi

·  Build: Full Aluminium Body




·  Colors: Gold, Black, Blue, Ash and Pink

·  Processor Type: 1.3 GHz, 64-bit Octa-core MediaTek MT6753 chipset

·  Graphics Processor: Mali-T720

·  RAM: 2GB / 3GB

·  Internal Storage: 16GB / 32GB

·  External Storage: Yes.

·  Back Camera: 13.0 MP with Dual LED Flash

·  Front Camera: 8.0 MP with LED Flash, 120 degree wide viewing angle

·  Battery: 3000mAh

·  Security: Fingerprint scanner

   Price: N52,999


Tecno Camon C5:

·  SIM Type: Dual SIM: Mini / Micro SIM

·  4G Network: YES



·  OS: Android 5.0 (Lollipop)

·  Display: 5-inch Touch Display, 720 x 1280 pixels (294 ppi)

·  Build: Metal edges with leather back

·  Colors: White and Black

·  Processor Type: 1.3 GHz Quad-core MediaTek chipset

·  Graphics Processor: N/A

·  RAM: 1GB

·  Internal Storage: 8GB

·  External Storage: Yes

·  Back Camera: 8MP

·  Front Camera: 2MP

·  Battery: 2500mAh

Price: N57,908

Infinix Note 3 LTE

· SIM Type: Dual SIM

· OS: Android 6.0 Marshmallow with XOS




· Display: 6.0 IPS Full HD, Touch screen

· Build: Metal

· Colors: Champagne Gold

· Weight: 135 grams

· Processor Type: Mediatek Octa-core 1.3GHz MT6753

· Graphics Processor: ARM Mali-T720 MP3 450 MHz

· RAM: 2GB

· Internal Storage: 16GB

· External Storage: Yes, up to 128GB

· Back Camera: 13 megapixel autofocus camera with dual LED flash

· Front Camera: 5 megapixel camera with LED flash

· Battery: 4500mAh

· Security: Fingerprint Reader

 Price: N62,000


Tecno Boom J8

· 3G: HSDPA 900 / 2100

· 4G: LTE 800 / 1800 / 2,600

· SIM Type: Dual SIM (Micro SIM, dual standby)



· OS: Android 5.1 Lollipop with HiOS UI

· Display: 5.5-inch, 720 x 1280 pixels (320 PPI), IPS Capacitive touchscreen

· Build: Plastic with metal trimmings

· Colors: Super White, Space grey and Champagne Gold

· Processor Type: 64-bit Quad-core 1.3 GHz Cortex-A53

· Processor Name: Mediatek MT6735

· Graphics Processor: Mali-T720

· RAM: 2 GB

· Internal Storage: 16 GB

· External Storage: MicroSD, up to 128 GB

· Back Camera: 13MP

· Front Camera: 5MP

· Sensors: Accelerometer, Light, Proximity

· Battery: Non-removable Li-Ion 3,000 mAh

· Charging: Fast Charge – 15 min for 8 hours of phone calls

· Free Headset

  Price: N56,000

Gionee M5

· Screen Size: 5.5 inches (~72.2% screen-to-body ratio)

· 4G Network: Yes




· Screen Type: AMOLED capacitive touchscreen with 16M colors

· Weight: 214g

· Screen Resolution: 720 x 1280 pixels (~267 ppi pixel density)

· RAM: 2GB / 3GB

· Internal Storage: 16GB / 32GB

· External Storage: Yes , Up to 64GB

· Back Camera: 13 MP, 4128 x 3096 pixels, autofocus, LED flash

Features Geo-tagging, touch focus, face/smile detection, panorama

· Front Camera: 5MP

· Processor: Quad-core 1.3 GHz MediaTek

· Battery: 6020mAh

Price: 74,999 

Tecno Phantom 6


· SIM Type: Dual SIM

· Network :  2G/3G/4G LTE




· OS: Android 6.0 Marshmallow with HiOs

· Display: 5.5 AMOLED Touchscreen

· Dimension: 151.5 x 75.5 x 6.15mm

· Build: Nano-Molded body with Aluminium Alloy Framework that is 6.15mm slim

· Colors: Champagne Gold

· Weight : N/A

· Processor Type: 2.0GhZ Octa-core MediaTek Chipset

· RAM: 3GB

· Internal Storage: 32GB

· External Storage: Yes, up to 128GB

· Back Camera: 13MP AF + 5MP SONY IMX 258 Dual Back Camera with LED

· Camera Features: 8% more HDR , 10% Less Noise, Ture tone flash, 180 degree wide viewing, Super Zoom, New Panorama, Night Pro

· Front Camera: 8MP with Front flash

· Battery: 2700mAh (Non-removable)

· USB TYPE-C: Yes, with Light speed charge

· Security: Iris scanner 2.0

Price: 90,550 


Are you ready for the biggest of nline sale of the year? Remember that this year Jumia Black Friday will begin even earlier. 12 days of heavy discounts, starts from 14th to 25th November 2016, so if you’re looking to take advantage of these great deals, make some time for the Jumia 2016 Black Friday sale! Fastest fingers first, as you know, the deals will be limited. 

Don’t want to miss out 2016 Jumia Black Friday? Register your email and get a reminder on the D-day, by visiting the Jumia special created page forJumia Black Friday 2016, at www.jumia.com.ng/black...

To receive pop notification as soon as the best deals available. Download the Jumia app via your Android, Blackberry, Apple and Windows phone.


Don’t want to miss out 2016 Konga Yakata Black Friday? Register your email and get a reminder on the D-day, by visiting the Konga special created page for Konga Black Friday Yakata 2016, at www.konga.com/black...

To receive pop notification as soon as the best deals available. Download the latest Konga app via your android, Apple or Blackberry devices.


The deals are expected to go fast, on a first come, first serve basis, so customers are encouraged to download the Jumia app and subscribe to the Jumia newsletter for real time notifications on the featured sales.


If you know any other affordable 4G LTE Smartphone, you can list them via comment box below, for the benefits of others. Stay glued for more updates about Black Friday Deals... Peace

How to Root and Change Imei of Infinix HotNote X551

The Infinix HoteNote is one of the latest and hottest Android phone in town, an upgrade of Infinix Hot, and it’s a 5.5 inches″ device. It loaded with the lovely Android Kitkat 4.4.2 but it can be upgraded to the latest Android 5.0. The Infinix NoteHot has a 16MB ROM, a 1GB RAM and supports SD card up to 32GB. It’s a quad-core processor phone. It has a 8MP rear camera with LED flash and a 2MP front-facing camera. Sporting a massive 4000mAh battery. At this moment, Infinix HotNote is sold on Jumia for only 23,500. Buy Now




I'm pretty sure that smart guys like me are still rocking with urge gigabytes through the help of Infinix HotNote Imei tweaking. 


The below tutorial will help the Infinix HotNote users to Root and change the Imei of their phone easily in other to flex with Glo Bis on it and the rooting will make you enjoying your phone to the fullest.


How to Root Infinix HotNote X551

1. First of all, you need to allowed third party installations in your device, if you want this app to install on your device. You can enable this option on your device setting. Go to Setting => Security => and there you can tick the “Unknown sources” box.

2. Run and install KingRoot app on your device. Though its written in half Chinese Language but don’t worry, I will help you to learn a bit of Chinese language.

3. After successful installation, start the app and wait for KingRoot to fully analyze your device.


4. After a few seconds you will see the main window, the Chinese language

5. Click on the Big Green Circle on your device that says Root and wait for a few minutes (Your phone must be connected to the internet).




6. After a few minutes, you should see a tick mark in a green circle and the blue horizontal bar below the green circle, which means that your device has been successfully rooted! with the help of KingRoot.

The KingUser app will be installed for SuperUser access.


7. Download Root Checker from Play Store to verify your root privileges. After downloading, simply Install Root Checker, run it and you should get a success message after then.


Good Luck and don't forget to drop your comment, if the method work for your phone.

MTN Season Of Surprises - Get Free Airtime, SMS Bonus and Data Offer By Dial Simple Code

No dulling guys, it’s MTN Season of Surprises! MTN is currently surprising customers with what they termed #SeasonOfSurprises




You could get free airtime to enjoy long conversations every day, browse with unbelievable free data, attend live MTN events with free tickets, get shopping vouchers when you transfer cash with Mobile Money, and much more. It is the MTN’s way of saying THANK YOU for their continued patronage of MTN services.

The Surprise package depends on luck. It means, what Eniobanke got might be different from what Mr. Nubian's will get.

How It Work

Simply dial *142# on your MTN line and you’ll be surprised with the awoof you’ll see there. Am friend dialed the code on his MTN line and what he got is to pay N5000 and get N24500 + 1666MB of free data, valid for 30 days.



Yours may be different from others when you dial the code, but you might be amazed by getting 2GB of data + 30Mins for just N200! Yeah that while it is call season of surprise.

Dial the code and tell us what you get via the comments box below.

How To Transfer MTN Data From One MTN Sim To Another


This simple tutorial will show you how to transferMegabytes from one Mtn line to another just like the way Airtel users normally transfer their own.


How Can I Transfer Megabytes To Another MTN line?

Make sure you have enough Megabytes on your MTN line if not you will get an error message.

Dial *131#  then choose ‘Register Data Service’. by click on Answer then Press 1, Once you choose that, a text will be sent to you that you have successfully registered on Mtn services and your default pin is ‘0000’. Just follow the instruction their and change your pin.Click on Data ShareAdd BeneficiaryEnter Beneficiaries NumberEnter the amount of Megabytes you want to transfer.

That’s it.  [√]

NOTE: Should in case you get an invalid pin in the process of doing this, try it again as it may be a temporary network problem.

Hope this information helps?
If it works for you, don't forget to Comment here and remember to Click Share/Like buttons for the benefit of others.

Friday, 11 November 2016

MMM operators blast federal government...

Members of the Mavrodi Mondial Moneybox (MMM) in Nigeria, have criticized the House of Representatives  them for ‘witch hunting’. A member identified as Tonye Ibim, said: 

There are people that now have more than a million in their accounts in few months via the scheme and have not scammed or been scammed by anybody.”


The House of Representatives had directed the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, arrest promoters of MMM


Promoters of the Mavrodi Mondial Moneybox, popularly known as ‘MMM’, have criticized the House of Representatives for ‘witch hunting’ them.

This is after the lower house of legislature on Wednesday, November 9 agreed that the scheme meant trouble for Nigerians and should therefore be stopped.

The lawmakers directed the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, to immediately go after the promoters of MMM in Nigeria.

The lawmakers observed that the current economic recession in the country gave popularity to the scheme which offers 30 per cent return on investment for any money put into the scheme within 30 days.

The investment scheme has a Russian origin and “involves directing clients to make money available for an anonymous person with a promise of 30 per cent return within one month.”

The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) had revealed plans to shut down the scheme in Nigeria, insisting it is fraudulent.


A branch manager of a new generation bank in Nigeria, speaking anonymously to Daily Post said: “All these people that are against MMM are not ready to take risks or they have been victims of networking schemes and online businesses that didn’t pay them well.

“It’s not like they doubt MMM, they are just naïve about how the whole thing works. It’s magical, you know.

“Even the banks are furious because they can’t just believe that any deposit scheme can promise a 30% interest rate after 30 days, but I am a banker and I am not in doubt.

“Even some bankers are enjoying from MMM; the unemployed also are not left out. To an average Nigerian, the benefits of MMM is not far-fetched.

Another member, identified as Tonye Ibim, said: “There are people that now have more than a million in their accounts in few months via the scheme and have not scammed or been scammed by anybody.

“I only can’t understand why members of the National Assembly, the House of Representatives are witch hunting the scheme.

“The government should be happy now that people are surviving- not begging and living in penury.


“They have refused to pass a bill that will bring about employment and revive the bad economy, yet they have the time to debate on a scheme that is saving us in this bad economic recession. Do you know how many people would have taken to crime due to lack of jobs in the country if not for MMM?”

Meanwhile, Nigerian has cried out on how the scheme has been of help to their house hold. 

Monday, 7 November 2016

The dignity of an honest job By Pius Adesanmi


After completing my doctoral comprehensives and having my dissertation proposal accepted and approved by my committee in 1999, I decided I needed a break from Vancouver. I needed to go somewhere to recharge my batteries and, if possible, write the first draft of my dissertation. "

That needed break came in the form of a research fellowship offer from the Institut Francais d’Afrique du Sud in Johannesburg. The French Institute of South Africa offered me a six-month research stay in Johannesburg, complete with speaking and networking opportunities at Wits.

My friend, Bayo Emm, and I were sharing the same flat in Vancouver. Bayo and few friends drove me to the airport. Six months later, Bayo was at the Vancouver airport to welcome me back. Then, a day after my arrival from Johannesburg, I needed to send money urgently to Nigeria to help out a distant relative who was an undergraduate.

Across the road from our apartment, there was a Money Mart outlet we used for Western Union transactions. Bayo and I strolled there. As soon as they saw me walk in, the ladies behind the counter grinned warmly. One of them exclaimed: “hey mister, long time no see! Did you travel or something?” I confirmed that, indeed, I had been “away in Africa” for six months. We did more small talk and I completed my transaction.

Bayo hadn’t said a word. As we strolled back to our apartment, he was morose and thoughtful.

Ol’boy, wetin dey worry you? I finally asked him.

Pius, those girls missed you. They actually noticed that you weren’t around.

Which girls?

The Western Union girls.

Why won’t they notice? We are regular customers. We have used that Money Mart almost weekly now in the last two years.

Yes, Pius, that is the problem. You and I go there almost once a week. The money you go there to send home, is it to buy land, build a house, or start a business back home?

No, Bayo, it’s just the usual runs to help family, relatives, and friends.

Well, Pius, that is why those girls in Western Union got me thinking about our lives here. If you send money to help people out in Nigeria to the point that Western Union notices your absence, wahala wa o. Pius, when Western Union begins to tell us that “o ma t’ojo meta”, when Western Union begins to tell you long time no see, and what turned you to a valued family member of Western Union is not money you are spending on yourself, it is time to start thinking. It is time to start putting some of that money we are sending into projects back home. Don’t just be subsidizing people back home. After a few years, our culture will make the same people ask: after all the years abroad, what has he done for himself?

Bayo’s opinion affected me deeply. For the first time, I realized that I had made weekly trips to Western Union without a break for nearly two years and none of those trips had been for myself. I thought about how I was scrapping together the crumbs I was sending home from Vancouver…

…life in Canada, in Vancouver precisely, had taught me a few rude and crude lessons about the dignity of labour and of all jobs. I was coming from Nigeria and from a sociology in which the first day of your University admission automatically separates you from certain spheres of life and certain socialities. Nigeria tells you that once you have anything to do with a University, certain jobs are beneath you, certain situations are beneath you and the people who do such jobs are inferior to you. The social apartheid between those who have been to the University and those have not been in Nigeria is the worst there is in Africa.

I had arrived in Vancouver as a fully-funded PhD student. I had a doctoral Fellowship. I also had a teaching assistantship. I had a first and second degree, obviously, from Ilorin and Ibadan. And I already had minimal recognition as a writer. I was a big man of some sorts in Nigeria.

My first pay check was a rude shock! I ran to financial services at UBC to complain that there had been an error with my pay. They laughed and explained all the deductions to me. After all the deductions, I still had to contend with rent and bills and feeding.

I did the math and discovered to my horror that after all the taxes and deductions and the bills, I was lucky to be left with even $20 of spare change every month.

And there was all that crowd in Nigeria waiting…

Waiting for Western Union to start to make deliveries from Canada…

It was at this point that other members of the Nigerian graduate student community, who had arrived years before me, had gone through the same eye-openers and were waiting for the Canadian system to introduce herself to me, stepped in with a dire verdict:

Pius, na so this system be o. There is no big man here. If you won’t say that you are too big, I will talk to my supervisor where I work. There is vacancy for one more cleaner. There is vacancy for one more dish washer. There is vacancy for one more delivery boy. The cleaning job involves toilets o.

Jeez! Cleaner? Cleaning toilets? A whole Pius Adesanmi? With my first class degree from Ilorin? With my masters with distinction from Ibadan? Haba! And with my doctoral fellowship at UBC? I cursed and abused the Nigerians who were telling me such nonsense.

A few weeks later, I put one leg on top of another leg and went back to the same Nigerians: em, bros, please, is that cleaning job still available?

My first job was in a basement in the science faculty. It was a huge basement where the University kept thousands of live rats for science experiments. The rats were kept in cages and their cages were filled with bedding made of ground and dried and crushed corn cobs. This is where they shit and piss. It was our job to change the soiled bedding and wash the cages twice a day for the environment of the rats must always be airy and dry and fresh. The industrial washing machines we fed the cages to were like stuff you found in a bottling company. They emitted heat worse than hell.

I spent two years of my life in that hell hole in order to be able to afford just an extra hundred or two hundred dollars to send home. At the other end of the telephone line, when you called to announce how much you had sent, it wasn’t uncommon to hear, “Uncle, just hundred dollars?”. I would hang up in anger, cursing and yelling.

Just hundred dollars? That one extra job wasn’t enough. That is how Bayo and I juggled jobs, cleaning, working in a bakery…

For my first floor cleaning job, they asked if I had previous cleaning experience. Previous cleaning experience? I had to phone one of my Professors in Ibadan. Prof, there is an emergency here o. I am looking for work and I gave them your email. Please, if you receive an email asking if I had cleaning experience, please say that I was a part time cleaner in Ibadan o.

Ha, Payooosi, cleaner bi ti bo ooo?

Prof, e fi yen nle sir. Just confirm my experience as a cleaner in Ibadan!

I got that second cleaning job. I cleaned rat piss and shit in the morning and cleaned floors and toilets in between.

On a trip home, I discovered that many of the recipients of the proceeds of my cleaning jobs were able to afford things I couldn’t dream of in Canada.

Yet, there was no time I really needed to do any of that. I started out with a University Graduate Fellowship and by my second year, I had won the Killam Doctoral Fellowship, the most prestigious doctoral fellowship in Canada. My scholarships would have been enough for me if I didn’t have to carry communal and community load under cultural obligations back home. But I am grateful for that humbling experience. For that practical lesson in life that Canadian culture and Western culture taught me that every job has dignity if it is honest and there is nobody above any job.

Undergraduates in Canada and the United States juggle three or four menial jobs just to survive. Sometimes, in Nigeria, I see oyinbo undergraduate students doing study abroad in our Universities.

And some of our foolish boys will be running after the Canadian and the American kids with marriage proposals. And I would tell such foolish boys: you think she can sponsor you to America or Canada abi? Kontinuu. Do you have any idea how many menial jobs – cleaning in Walmart and McDondald’s – she combined to be able to save up and come here? These are jobs you will consider beneath you as an undergraduate in Nigeria.

Can you take a part time job as a cleaner in Chicken Republic to supplement whatever your parents and Uncles are giving you for your undergraduate studies? Well, that is what your oyinbo undergraduate peers do in Canada and America. I agree it is easier for them because nobody looks down on them: every job has dignity.

Today, the Governor of Lagos State is having trouble convincing graduates to believe in the dignity of certain kinds of honest jobs. Do not blame those kids. Blame the society which raised them to believe that they must start out in life as Dangote otherwise they are failures. Blame the society which trained them to look down on certain kinds of jobs as graduates.

Warning: pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of  this blog

Pius Adesanmi, a professor of English, is Director of the Institute of African Studies, Carleton University, Canada

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