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SAD : University Student Kills Himself After Losing ₦600,000 to Betting

 

 

A 300-level Computer Science student of Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University (IBBU), Lapai, Niger State, identified as Kelvin Danlami, has died following reported financial difficulties linked to gambling.

 

According to sources, the student allegedly used ₦600,000 meant for house rent to place bets, which resulted in heavy losses.

 

A fellow student confirmed the incident, describing it as a tragic development that has left the campus community in shock.

 

The Niger State Police Command, through its spokesperson SP Wasiu Abiodun, confirmed the death and said the student was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead. He added that police officers visited the scene, contacted the family, and have commenced an investigation to determine the circumstances surrounding the incident.

 

The General Secretary of the university’s Students’ Union Government (SUG), Aliyu Abubakar, also confirmed the incident, expressing deep sadness over the loss and describing it as a painful tragedy for the institution.

JUST IN : Missing Iya Oge of Lagos, Opral Benson, Located in Liberia

 

 

 

Opral Benson, the Iya Oge of Lagos who was earlier reported missing by her family, has been found in Liberia.

 

A family source confirmed the development on Tuesday evening, noting that the 90-year-old socialite may be dealing with age-related health issues. The source suggested she could be experiencing symptoms linked to old age.

 

Benson’s family had raised concern on Sunday after she was unaccounted for for more than 48 hours. In a public alert, they disclosed that she was last seen on January 13, 2026, and had failed to return home, prompting an urgent appeal for public assistance.

 

Despite efforts to contact the family using the phone number shared in the notice, calls and messages were unanswered at the time of reporting.

 

Born on February 7, 1935, Opral Benson is an American-Liberian–Nigerian entrepreneur, socialite, and educationist. She holds the revered traditional title of Iya Oge of Lagos and was married to the late Chief T.O.S. Benson until his death.

 

She has built a distinguished career spanning education, fashion, and corporate administration, including managing a fashion and beauty school in Lagos and serving as a director at Johnson’s Products Nigeria. In 2012, she was also appointed Honorary Consul of Liberia in Lagos, reflecting her strong ties to both countries.

Death of Ilorin Chief Imam: IEDPU, NILDS Sympathises With Emir, Governor, Others Over The Great Loss.

 

 

Raheem Ibrahim

The National President of Ilorin Emirate Descendants Progressive Union (IEDPU), Alhaji Abdulmumini Ayo Abdulmalik, has commiserated with the Emir of Ilorin and Chairman, Kwara State Council of Chiefs, Alhaji(Dr) Ibrahim Sulu-Gambari,CFR; His Excellency, the Executive Governor of Kwara State, Mallam AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq as well as others on the death of the Chief Imam of Ilorin, Shaykh (Dr) Muhammad Bashir Saliu, OON.

The Chief Imam died on Monday, 19th January, 2026 after a brief illness at the age of 76 and had since been buried according to the Muslim rites.

In a statement signed by Mallam Suleiman Shuaib Dagbo, the IEDPU National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Abdulmalik, who also sympathised with the family of the late cleric, described his demise as a great loss not only to Ilorin Emirate but also to the humanity at large.

Alhaji Abdulmalik, who noted that the late great cleric was a pride to the community, said that the late Chief Imam provided quality and fascinating spiritual leadership for the community for 43 years, saying that he would be remembered forever for adding glamour and grace to the office of the Chief Imam.

While condoling with his family, the President also sympathised with the Imam Imale of Ilorin, Shaykh Abdullahi AbulHameed, other members of the Ilorin Emirate and Kwara State Council of Ulama as well as the entire people of Ilorin Emirate on the demise of the outstanding cleric.

Alhaji Abdulmalik prayed to Allah to forgive the shortcomings of the Chief Imam and reward his good deeds with Aljanat Fridaous.

Similarly, the Director General, National Institute for Legislative and Democratic Studies (NILDS), Prof. Abubakar O. Sulaiman has expressed profound shock and sadness over the return of the Chief Imam of Ilorin, Shaykh Muhammad Bashir Solihu, OON, back to his creator

In a condolence statement issued by his media aide, Mohammad Abdulkadri. Prof Sulaiman said the late 12th Chief Imam of Ilorin, who until his death was a respected Chairman of the Kwara State Council of Ulamas bequeathed legacies of a committed devotee and service to Almighty Allah as well as humanity.

According to him, Imam Al- fulani who recently marked forty- three years of active service as Chief Imam of Ilorin embodied influential characters of an avowed preacher, servants of Allah, and an avid reciter of Al- Quran in a most thrilling golden voice that will continue to resonate and inspire generations of adherents of Islam.

The former minister of National planning deeply commiserate with His Royal Highness, Mai Martaba Sarkin Ilory, Dr. Ibrahim Sulu Gambari, CFR, Ilorin Emirate Descendants Progressive Union, (IEDPU), the Council of Ulamas, his families, as well as the entire Muslim Ummah over what he described as : “A Colossal loss to the entire Muslim Ummah”.

Recalling with heavy heart, Prof Sulaiman, said “I had personal relationship with the late erudite Islamic Scholar and benefited from his spiritual blessings at several gatherings and ceremonies during his life’s inspirational journey that was notably defined by spirituality which puts Ilorin on the national maps of respectability in matters concerning Islamic tenets and erudism”

He besieged Almighty Allah to forgive the highly referred Chief Imam of Ilorin and make Aljannat Fridaus his final abode just as he also prayed to God to grant his loved ones in this trying times the fortitude and rectitude to bear the irreparable loss.

Muhammad Ali visited Bob Marley on his deathbed — Bob’s final words to the champion changed everything.

 

 

Miami, Florida. Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. May 9, 1981. 4:47 pm. Muhammad Ali walked slowly down the hospital corridor, more slowly than he usually moved. At 39, the greatest boxer of all time was beginning to feel that something was wrong with his body. A tremor in his hands, a slowness in his movements, something he couldn’t fight with his fists

 

But today wasn’t about Ali’s fight. Today was about saying goodbye to a friend. Bob Marley was dying in room 318. Ali had received the call two days ago. Rita Marley’s voice, calm, breaking: “Muhammad, if you want to see Bob, you need to come now. The doctors say days, maybe hours.”

 

Ali had canceled everything. He flew to Miami immediately because Bob Marley wasn’t just another musician to Ali. Bob was a brother in the struggle. The door to room 318 was partially open. Ali knocked softly. Rita appeared. Her eyes were red from crying.

 

—Muhammad. Uh, thanks for coming.

 

Ali hugged her gently.

 

“How is he?”

 

“Awake, weak. He’s been asking for you.”

 

Ali entered the room. Bob Marley lay on the bed, his body reduced to barely 80 pounds. The dreadlocks that had been his crown now looked thin against the pillow. His skin had taken on a grayish pallor. But when Bob saw Ali, his eyes lit up. A smile crossed his face

 

—Champ— Bob whispered. —You came.

 

Ali walked over to the bed and sat in the chair beside it. She gently took Bob’s hand.

 

—Of course I came, brother. Do you think I’d miss saying goodbye to the man who taught me about true courage?

 

Bob’s smile grew slightly.

 

—I didn’t teach you anything. You are Muhammad Ali. The greatest.

 

“The greatest boxer, perhaps,” Ali said. “But you, you were the greatest warrior. You fought with music, you fought with words, you fought with your whole spirit, and you never backed down.”

 

Bob’s breathing was labored. Every word required effort.

 

—Neither did you, champ. You gave up everything. Your title, your freedom, your best years, because you wouldn’t fight in Vietnam. Because you stood up for what you believed in.

 

Ali nodded.

 

It took me three and a half years. They took away my belt, they took away my license, they took away my ability to earn money, but I couldn’t fight in a war I didn’t believe in. I couldn’t kill people who never called me the N-word

 

“I know,” Bob said. “That’s why you changed my life.”

 

Ali looked surprised.

 

“I changed your life, brother. You’re the one who changed the world. Your music reached billions. You took reggae to every country. You united people across every divide.”

 

Bob shook his head weakly.

 

“But I learned courage from you. 1967. I was 22. I saw you refuse to go to Vietnam. I saw them take your title away. I saw the whole world turn against you. And you stood there and said, ‘I have no quarrel with those Viet Cong.’ You were willing to go to prison for your beliefs.” Bob paused, gathering his strength. “That taught me something, champ. It taught me that true courage isn’t fighting when the crowd is behind you. It’s standing alone when everyone thinks you’re wrong. That’s what I tried to do with my music. Stand up for something even when it cost me.”

 

Ali felt tears welling up in his eyes.

 

—Bob, you did more than defend. You changed hearts. You made people think. You made them feel. That’s bigger than anything I did in a ring.

 

“No,” Bob said firmly, with more strength than he’d had in days. “What you did in that ring changed everything. You weren’t just boxing. You were showing Black people that we didn’t have to accept what the world said about us. You were beautiful. You were proud. You were unapologetically yourself. That gave the rest of us permission to be ourselves, too.”

 

Ali squeezed Bob’s hand gently.

 

—We were fighting the same fight, only in different arenas.

 

“The same fight,” Bob agreed. “Freedom, dignity, the right to be who we are without apologizing.”

 

 

They sat in silence for a moment. Outside the window, Miami continued its noise. Cars, people, life moving on, while in this room time seemed suspended. Bob spoke again, his voice calmer now.

 

—Champ, can I tell you something?

 

—Anything, brother.

 

—I’m not afraid to die. I’ve made my peace with Jah. I’ve done what I came here to do, but I’m afraid of what I’m leaving behind

 

Ali leaned closer.

 

—What do you mean?

 

—I’m afraid people will remember the music but forget the message. I’m afraid they’ll dance to *One Love* but not live it. I’m afraid they’ll make me a legend and miss the point. —Bob’s eyes locked onto Ali’s—. Do you understand this? They made you a legend, too. Muhammad Ali, the greatest. But how many people remember why you were great? Not the boxing, the stance you took, the price you paid

 

Ali felt the weight of Bob’s words.

 

—You’re right. People remember the fights, the provocations, the spectacle, but they forget that I went to prison for my beliefs. They forget that I lost years I can never get back.

 

“Exactly,” Bob said. “So I need to ask you something, champ. When I’m gone, when they turn me into posters and T-shirts and nostalgia, will you tell them? Will you remind people what this was really about?”

 

Ali felt his throat close up.

 

—Tell them what, Bob?

 

Bob’s voice became urgent despite his weakness

 

“Tell them it cost something. Tell them courage always costs something. Tell them I didn’t die for the music. I died because I didn’t stop. I didn’t slow down. I didn’t compromise the message for my health. Tell them that’s what real commitment looks like.” Bob paused, breathing heavily. “Tell them about 1976. About the assassination attempt. About seven gunmen breaking into my house two days before the Smile Jamaica concert. About bullets hitting me, hitting Rita, hitting my manager. About how we still did that concert 48 hours later, performed for 80,000 people with bullets still in my body.”

 

Ali had heard the story, but never directly from Bob.

 

—Why did you do it? Why risk your life for a concert?

 

“Because the message was bigger than my life,” Bob said simply. “Because if I let fear stop me, then violence wins. Division wins, hate wins. I had to show that love is stronger than bullets, that music is more powerful than guns.” Bob looked intently at Ali. “Just like you showed the world that principles are more powerful than punishment. You could have gone to Vietnam. You could have kept your title, your money, your fame. But you chose principles over comfort. That’s what changed my life, champ. That’s what I tried to live by.”

 

Ali dried his eyes.

 

—Bob, you handled it better than I did. You never stopped, even when I was killing you.

 

“And that’s my regret,” Bob said quietly. “I should have stopped. I should have rested. I should have spent more time with my children, with Rita, with my mother. I thought the mission was more important than my life. But now, dying at 36, I realize the mission needed me to live. I could have done more if I had taken better care of myself.”

 

Ali felt something break inside him. Bob was telling him something important, something Ali needed to hear.

 

—Bob, are you telling me to slow down, to take care of myself?

 

Bob nodded weakly.

 

“Champ, I can sense something’s wrong with you. I see it in your movements. You’re fighting something.”

 

Ali’s hands trembled slightly. He’d been noticing it for months. The trembling, the slowness. He hadn’t told anyone yet.

 

—I don’t know what it is, but yes, something is wrong.

 

“Then learn from my mistake,” Bob said urgently. “Don’t sacrifice your life for your legacy. Take care of yourself. Rest. Allow yourself to be human. The world needs Muhammad Ali alive more than it needs another fight, another show, another performance.” Bob’s breathing became more labored. “Promise me, champ. Promise me you’ll take care of yourself. Promise me you’ll live because your children need you. Your wife needs you. The world needs you. And you can’t help anyone if you’re dead.”

 

Ali felt tears running down his face.

 

—I promise, Bob. I promise.

 

Bob smiled. Then he said something that would echo in Ali’s mind for the rest of his life.

 

—You taught me how to stand up. Now I’m teaching you how to rest. Both are courage, champ. Both matter.

 

Those words hung in the air between them. Two warriors. Two men who had given everything for their beliefs. One dying too young. One fighting to live longer. Bob’s voice grew even calmer.

 

—Muhammad, I need you to know something else.

 

—What, brother?

 

—Meeting you changed how I saw myself. You were a Black man who refused to be anything but proud, refused to be silent, refused to back down. You made me believe I could do the same with music. You made me believe one person standing up for the truth could change the world. —Bob paused— So everything I did, every song I wrote, every stage I stood on, that was partly because I saw you stand in that courtroom in 1967 and refuse to go to war. You inspired millions, champ, including me. And I just needed you to know that before I went

 

Ali completely collapsed. This man, this warrior, this voice of a generation was using his last breaths to thank Ali for the inspiration.

 

—Bob, I don’t know what to say.

 

—Don’t say anything. Just remember that when they ask you about Muhammad Ali, tell them about the cost. Tell them about the years you lost. Tell them it was worth it because you stayed true to yourself. And when they ask you about Bob Marley, tell them the same thing. Tell them I paid the price for the message and I would do it again.

 

Ali held Bob’s hand tighter.

 

—I’ll tell him, brother. I promise I’ll tell him.

 

They sat together for another hour, talking less, simply being present. Two champions who had fought different fights but bore the same scars. Finally, Bob grew too tired to stay awake. Ali got up to leave.

 

—Champ—Bob whispered, his eyes closed. —One more thing.

 

—Yes, Bob.

 

—It floats like a butterfly, stings like a bee, but also rests like a human. Promise?

 

Ali smiled through his tears.

 

—I promise.

 

Bob Marley died two days later, on May 11, 1981, at 11:45 a.m. He was 36 years old. Ali attended the memorial service in New York. He was asked to speak

 

“Bob Marley taught me something in our last conversation that I’ll carry with me for the rest of my life,” Ali told the crowd. “He taught me that courage has two forms: standing up when everyone tells you to sit down and resting when everyone tells you to act. Bob stood up his whole life. He stood up for justice, unity, love. And he paid the ultimate price. He worked himself to death for his message. That’s heroic. That’s dedication. But it’s also a warning. Don’t sacrifice your life for your legacy. Don’t give everything until there’s nothing left. Bob told me, ‘Take care of yourself. Rest. Live. Because the world needs you alive.’”

 

Ali paused, his voice breaking.

 

—Bob Marley changed my life twice. Once in 1967 when he saw me refuse to go to Vietnam and learned that courage means being alone. And once in 1981 when he was dying and taught me that courage also means knowing when to rest. Both lessons saved me. One gave me purpose. The other could buy me years.

 

For the next 15 years, as Muhammad Ali battled Parkinson’s disease, he often thought of that hospital room, of Bob’s trembling hand in his, of Bob’s final wisdom. Ali slowed down, stopped accepting every fight, every appearance, every demand. He rested. He spent time with his family. He took care of himself. And he outlived Bob by 35 years.

 

In 2016, when Muhammad Ali died at the age of 74, his daughter Laila spoke at his funeral.

 

“My father often spoke of Bob Marley, of their last conversation, of how Bob, as he was dying, told my father to live, to rest, to take care of himself. My father said that Bob gave him permission to be human, to stop performing and start living. That gift gave us decades more with him. He gave the world decades more of his wisdom, his presence, his love.” Laila continued, “Two warriors, two champions, two men who stood up when the world told them to bow. But in the end, Bob taught my father that the greatest fight isn’t always the one in the ring or on the stage. Sometimes the greatest fight is staying alive for the people who love you.”

 

Today at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, there’s a small exhibit about Ali’s friendship with Bob Marley. It includes a photo of them together from 1978. Two icons, two fighters, two men who changed the world. Below the photo is a quote from Ali’s last interview about Bob.

 

Bob Marley told me, “You taught me how to stand up. Now I’m teaching you how to rest. Both are courage.” Those words saved my life. I stood up for justice, but I also rested for my family. Both mattered. Bob died at 36 because he never stopped. I lived to 74 because he taught me that it’s okay to stop. That’s the gift he gave me, and I’m grateful every day.

 

Legacy isn’t just music or fights. Legacy is the wisdom passed down between warriors. The understanding that courage takes many forms. The knowledge that standing up for something is important, but living for someone is essential. Bob Marley stood until he was killed. Muhammad Ali learned to rest before he was killed. Both were heroes. Both were champions. But only one lived long enough to tell the tale.

 

If you’re reading this and you’re consumed by a cause, a career, a mission, listen to Bob Marley’s last words to Muhammad Ali. You can’t help anyone if you’re dead. Take care of yourself. Rest. Live. Stand up for what matters, but also rest for those who matter. Both are courageous. Both are necessary. Bob Marley taught Muhammad Ali that lesson with his last breath. And, Ali lived an extra 35 years because he listened.

JUST IN: Chimamanda Adichie loses 21-month-old son

 

 

Renowned author, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and her husband, Dr Ivara Esege, have lost one of their twin sons, Nkanu Nnamdi.

According to a statement issued on Thursday by Omawumi Ogbe, on behalf of the family, the 21-month-old baby passed away on Wednesday, January 7, 2026, after a brief illness.

The statement said the family is devastated by the loss, and requested that their privacy be respected during this difficult time.

The statement reads, “We’re deeply saddened to confirm the passing of one of Ms Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Dr Ivara Esege’s twin boys, Nkanu Nnamdi, who passed on Wednesday, 7th of January 2026, after a brief illness. He was 21 months old.

“The family is devastated by this profound loss, and we request that their privacy be respected during this incredibly difficult time.

“We ask for your grace and prayers as they mourn in private.

“No further statements will be made, and we thank the public and the media for respecting their need for seclusion during this period of immense grief.”

How Anthony Chiejina of Dangote Group became only Nigerian to win Global Influence 100 for the fifth consecutive time

Satisfied with his pivotal roles, PRovoke Media, has named Group Chief Branding and Communications, Dangote Group, Anthony Chiejina, as the only Nigerian to win Global Influence 100 for the fifth consecutive time.

 

 

 

Have weighed how he successfully made Dangote Group to swim out from challenges, the PRovoke Media again picked him as a winner.

 

 

 

 

 

According to the group, it was in recognition of how he demonstrated strategic clarity, cultural intelligence and the ability to guide organisations through complexity.

 

 

 

“Final selections are made by the publication’s senior editorial team through proprietary research and external nominations, assessed against organisational seniority and global reach, influence over agency partnerships and budgets, and contribution to thought leadership and industry direction. The list also prioritises gender balance, racial diversity and geographic representation,” said the media team.

 

 

 

By this criteria in place, the Group Chief Branding and Communications, Dangote Group, Anthony Chiejina, only Nigerian to win Global Influence 100 for the fifth consecutive time.

 

 

 

 

 

His name appeared in the prestigious 2025 Influence 100, that is reaffirming his standing as one of the most consequential communications leaders in the world and the only Nigerian on this year’s list.

 

The recognition marks Chiejina’s fifth consecutive appearance on the global ranking, having previously been listed in 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024, a rare distinction that underscores both consistency and sustained global relevance. His continued presence places him among an elite group of in-house communicators whose judgement, influence and strategic insight shape corporate reputation at the highest level.

 

 

 

Published annually by PRovoke Media and now in its 13th year, the Influence 100 identifies the most impactful senior communications, corporate affairs and marketing executives worldwide. The 2025 list reflects a rapidly changing global environment in which communications has evolved from a support function into a core pillar of leadership, governance and trust building amid geopolitical uncertainty, technological disruption and heightened public scrutiny.

 

 

 

 

 

According to the publication, Chiejina’s inclusion reflects his central role in shaping the reputation of Dangote Group, Africa’s largest industrial conglomerate. For over 15 years, he has overseen corporate communications across the group’s diverse portfolio, spanning cement, agriculture, energy, manufacturing and consumer goods. His stewardship has been instrumental in positioning Dangote as the continent’s most admired indigenous company and a symbol of African industrial ambition.

 

 

 

“As group head of corporate communications, he oversees external and internal reputation across multiple sectors spanning cement, agriculture, energy and consumer goods, and has helped steer the brand’s continued recognition as the most admired indigenous company on the continent,” it said.

 

 

 

Under his leadership, the group’s communications function has navigated complex regulatory environments, major industrial expansions and heightened global attention, particularly as Dangote deepens its footprint across Africa and advances sustainability and energy security initiatives.

 

 

 

Before joining Dangote Group, Chiejina held senior roles at Zenith Bank, Oceanic Bank, Seven Up Bottling Company, the African Economic Digest (AED) and African Concord, experiences that have given him deep insight into Nigeria’s political economy, financial markets and media landscape. That breadth of experience continues to inform Dangote Group’s engagement with stakeholders at home and abroad.

His sustained recognition on the Influence 100 highlights not only personal professional excellence, but also the growing visibility of African corporate leadership in global reputation management. As communications becomes increasingly central to how organisations lead and earn trust, Chiejina’s presence on the list reinforces Nigeria’s place in the global conversation shaping the future of the profession.

 

 

 

The 2025 Influence 100 includes 28 new entrants, alongside several high profile re entries by senior communications leaders who have since taken on expanded global roles. These include Michael Stewart, who moved from PwC to Unilever; Michael Gonda, from McDonald’s to Nike; and Sandy Rodriguez, also from McDonald’s to Eli Lilly.

 

 

 

This year’s list reflects a powerful cross section of communications leadership from some of the world’s most influential organisations, including Walmart, Apple, Shell, Microsoft, Nvidia, Nissan, Coca Cola, Google, Lufthansa, MTN, Emirates, Ford, Marriott, Tencent and Reliance Industries among others.

 

 

 

In total, 20 countries are represented, highlighting the global reach and strategic importance of senior in house communications leadership. Gender representation remains strong, with 58 women and 42 men featured, sustaining a female majority for the second consecutive year.

 

 

 

The 2025 Influence 100 is also the most highly educated cohort to date, with all honourees holding at least a first degree and 56 per cent possessing advanced qualifications, up sharply from previous years.

More Prayers for Our Country, Nigeria

 

Ayo Oyoze Baje

 

Quote:

 

Every time we believe we have seen

the worst from our country,

the shameless, opportunistic power grabbers

take us back to a new low

– Nigeria Democratic Liberty Forum, NDLF New York (June, 2010)

 

 

Back in December 2019 yours truly was compelled by the prevailing terrifying socio-economic circumstances and the insecurity challenge to call for prayers for our country,Nigeria through an opinion essay entitled; “Prayer for My Country,Nigeria”. That was some six years ago.

But are we any better off as a country as at January,2026? That is the million-naira question.

 

 

Sad to note and bitter as it might sound, the truth is that we, as citizens are collectively worse off as at this day. It is not about denegrading our nation. Not all! It is about facing the Truth and admitting that: “Only the truth will set us free”.

In fact, going by the Human Development Index, HDI, as well as our rankings on both the Global Hunger Index,GHI and the Global Terrorism Index,GTI there is cause for serious concern.

 

 

For intabce, in 2025 Nigeria ranked low (164) on the Human Development Index (HDI) 2025 , with significant contrasts to the United Kingdom in GDP per capita, in terms of: life expectancy. literacy rates and infant mortality. Similarly, in the 2025 Global Hunger Index, Nigeria ranked 115th out of 123 countries with sufficient data to calculate 2025 GHI scores. With a score of 32.8 in the 2025 Global Hunger Index, Nigeria had a level of hunger that is considered “serious”!This GHI Score is based on the values of four component indicators:

Speecifixally,19.9%

of the population is undernourished,

33.8% of children under five are stunted, 11.6%

of children under five are wasted, while10.5%

of children die before their fifth birthday. And

Nigeria is placed sixth in the globe among terrorised countries by the 2025 Global Terrorism Index (GTI), with a score of 7.658.

 

 

Painful, as it would feel there are emperical evidences on ground to justify these scary rankings, what with the recent intervention of the United State’s military that sent missiles to bomb the hideouts of the IS-linked Lakurawa terrorists in both Sokoto and Kwara states? Or, are we not feeling the deep pinch of the hunger in the land? Of course,we are.Yet, the obscene and nauseating focus of not a few of our political leaders is how to hang on to power come 2027, amplified of course, by several questionable defections by the helmsmen from one political party to another.

 

 

So, one keeps asking concerned citizens to pray for Nigeria. But some others who one has spoken with, respond by telling me that it is not a necessity. Yet, it is Perhaps the most compelling Scripture for praying for a nation is 2 Chronicles 7:13-14, which says, “When I shut up the heavens so that there is no rain, or command locusts to devour the land or send a plague among my people, 14 if my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face, I will answer their prayers”.

 

 

So, as reflected in my prayers in 2019, one begins with immense gratitude to you. We are indeed, grateful for all these great potentialities, even though many of us take them for granted.

 

 

Our dearly beloved Father, let me admit the bitter truth, that we have failed you in several ways by not appreciating what you have given us for free. Worse still, we have been misusing them in more ways than one. With profound reminiscences, during my strange spiritual encounter with You back in October 2002 you described Nigeria to my humble self as “an irritating sore by your side”! And when I asked what it was all about, you took me round this same country to pin-point sundry crimes and criminalities that trigger your angst. Was it bestiality, sodomy or homo-sexualism? What about ritual murders, involving innocent children, importing arms and ammunition and worshipping lesser gods? What about the crop of power-poaching politicians who have sold their souls to the devil and view money and material acquisition as the be-all and end-all to life? These are just some of the ways we have irked you.

 

 

Let your Spirit begin with the people’s mindset, to understand that in a democracy political power truly belongs to them. They should not sell their votes in exchange for peanuts and enthrone their very enemies as their leaders. They should ask that their votes count as freely cast at the polls. They should know their rights and responsibilities and stand firm in asking for good governance. They should not view those voted into power as ‘they’ and as people to be feared or worshipped but politicians to be accountable to them. Indeed, they should be servant-leaders as former President, Umar Yar’Ar dua rightly highlighted.

 

 

Touch our leaders’ hearts never to forget that power belongs to you and that they are but the chosen channels to deploy that power in the service of the people, instead of satisfying their whims and caprices. Let them value the sanctity of human life. Let them not erroneously believe that they could intimidate, torture, maim and kill fellow human beings, to satiate their ego and go Scot-free. They should understand that might is not right in a democracy, as we are not instinct-driven animals hounding for survival in a jungle!

 

 

Let them earn whatever they want not by using the Machiavellian tactics that only the end justifies the means. Instead, let them remember what you asked Cain in the Biblical time and that the voice of the blood of their voiceless victims cries unto you on daily basis. They should remember that you will ask them to account for the innocent souls they have killed, openly or done in secrecy on the Judgment Day, as no human action and antics is hidden from you.

Let our current leaders inculcate in us a sense of history, and that of allegiance to the country called Nigeria. Let the people understand the sacrifices made by our founding fathers and mothers too.

..

 

Let not our politicians become intoxicated by transient power once they mount the pedestal of power, at the local, state or federal level. Let them not forget the people or begin to play God because of the dire consequences of their evil deeds. Let them have a sense of history and remember how Adolf Hitler, Paul Pot, Kertusodiro Suharto, Saddam Hussein, Idi Dada Amin, Nero, Haiti’s Jean Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier, Ethiopia’s Mengistu Haile Mariam all ended with disgrace and death!

 

 

Let them respect the constitutional provisions, the separation of power and the rule of law they swore to uphold. Let them be reminded always of the inspiring words of our first National Anthem:

“Though tribe and tongue may differ,

In brotherhood we stand,

Nigerians all, are proud to serve

Our sovereign Motherland.

Our flag shall be a symbol

That truth and justice reign.”

 

 

And above all let them imbibe in our youth the fear of You!

Thank you, Father for listening to my prayers

From Indigenous Apprenticeship to Formalized Professional Practice: The Igbo Business System and Omniversity Imperial College’s Competency-Based Evaluation Framework

 

 

Professor Tokunbo Akeredolu-Ale PhD

 

 

The Igbo apprenticeship system stands as one of Africa’s most coherent indigenous models of professional formation, enterprise succession, and competency validation. Its logic is not academic credentialism but verified capability, ethical conduct, economic relevance, and social trust.

 

Apprenticeship within the Igbo system is governed by clearly understood norms: learning occurs through immersion, assessment is continuous and observational, recognition is earned through demonstrable mastery, and progression culminates in formal settlement that confers independent professional standing. These principles align directly, not symbolically but structurally, with the professional practice education, evaluation, and qualification architecture of Omniversity Imperial College.

 

Omniversity Imperial College Lagos Nigeria is positioned deliberately as a professional practice education, executive development, and competency validation institution. Its institutional logic mirrors the Igbo apprenticeship philosophy by operating exclusively within Accreditation of Prior Experiential Learning, Competency Based Education, Structured Recognition, and ISO aligned governance frameworks. Just as the Igbo system does not rely on classroom examinations to determine readiness, Omniversity does not operate within Nigeria’s statutory university degree framework and does not award NUC regulated academic degrees. Its awards are explicitly professional, practice based, competency validated, and industry aligned, reflecting the same distinction the Igbo system has always maintained between learning and formal academic schooling.

 

In the Igbo apprenticeship model, the master practitioner functions as both mentor and assessor, continuously evaluating the apprentice’s technical competence, judgment, reliability, and ethical comportment.

 

Omniversity Imperial College institutionalizes this role through qualified assessors, professional panels, and evidence based evaluation processes. Assessment is grounded in portfolios, documented experience, applied projects, interviews, and competency mapping rather than abstract theory. This approach formalizes what has historically been informal but rigorous in Igbo commercial culture: the validation of real capability through sustained performance under supervision.

 

The settlement phase of the Igbo apprenticeship is the system’s ultimate validation mechanism. It represents recognition that the apprentice has achieved professional independence and is worthy of trust within the commercial ecosystem.

 

Omniversity’s *practice qualifications* perform an equivalent function within modern professional governance structures.

 

The *Bachelor of Practice* recognizes foundational competence and readiness for workforce participation.

 

The *Master of Practice* validates advanced applied mastery and leadership capability.

 

The *Doctor of Practice* confirms terminal professional authority grounded in industry impact and governance competence.

 

Each award is explicitly non academic, legally distinct from university degrees, and transparently positioned as a professional recognition of demonstrated capability.

 

This mirrors the Igbo principle that recognition follows proof, not aspiration.

 

The *Professor of Practice* designation at Omniversity further reflects indigenous recognition traditions.

 

In Igbo society, elders and master traders who have demonstrated sustained excellence, mentorship, and community impact are accorded elevated status and authority.

 

The *Professor of Practice* title similarly recognizes distinguished professionals with verifiable industry leadership and societal contribution. It is not an academic professorial rank and is not governed by statutory university rules. Instead, it aligns with global Professor of Practice norms that emphasize lived expertise, governance maturity, and professional legacy.

Regulatory clarity is a central strength of Omniversity Imperial College Lagos Nigeria’s framework and resonates with the Igbo system’s respect for defined roles and boundaries.

 

Under Nigerian law, universities are statutory degree awarding bodies, while professional institutes operate under corporate and professional governance.

 

Omniversity functions lawfully as a professional education provider, a practice qualification awarding institution, and a competency assessment body. It does not require NUC accreditation because it does not claim degree awarding university status. This clear separation mirrors the Igbo distinction between traditional trade mastery and formal Western education, each respected but not conflated.

Professional governance affiliations with bodies such as NITAD and CILRM further reinforce institutional legitimacy without misrepresenting academic authority. These affiliations support ethical standards, leadership development, and professional practice validation while explicitly not conferring academic accreditation. This governance model is consistent with the Igbo apprenticeship tradition, where legitimacy derives from peer recognition, guild like accountability, and reputation rather than state certification.

 

Omniversity’s integrated professional pathway reflects the structured progression embedded in the Igbo apprenticeship system. Advancement is sequential, competency driven, and evidence based. No level is honorary or automatic. Each stage demands verifiable performance, ethical alignment, and industry relevance. Certificates and transcripts carry explicit legends clarifying their professional, non academic nature, ensuring transparency for employers, partners, and regulators. This mirrors the Igbo emphasis on clear social signaling, where one’s status is understood through demonstrated role and function within the community.

 

Honorary distinctions at Omniversity Imperial College further parallel traditional Igbo recognition practices. In Igbo society, exceptional contributors to commerce, leadership, education, and community development are publicly honored based on merit, impact, and character. Omniversity’s honorary framework follows the same logic, awarding recognition strictly on demonstrated societal, educational, business, organizational, and leadership impact. These conferments are not earned through coursework and do not substitute for professional practice qualifications, reinforcing the integrity of both earned and honorary recognition.

 

In synthesizing indigenous African practice with globally intelligible professional frameworks, Omniversity Imperial College does not imitate tradition but formalizes it. The Igbo apprenticeship system provides historical proof that competency based, practice driven education produces resilient professionals and sustainable economic ecosystems. Omniversity Imperial College translates this proven logic into a structured, legally compliant, and internationally legible model of professional evaluation and recognition. In doing so, it affirms that Africa’s indigenous knowledge systems are not inferior precursors to modern education but foundational architectures upon which credible contemporary professional institutions can be built.

 

*Professor Tokunbo Akeredolu-Ale* _PhD_ President Chairman BOT GC Omniversity Imperial College Missouri USA and Lagos Nigeria

www.omvic.us

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+2347068431124

2026: A YEAR OF RENEWED EXPECTATIONS

 

Senator Sunday Steve Karimi 

My Dear People of Kogi West Senatorial Zone, I send you greetings for the new year 2026. As a district in Kogi State, the previous year threw up peculiar challenges for us. Most worrying was the security unsettledness which upset the historical calm and serenity for which our district is reputed. Vagrants infiltrated our communities, abducted some of our loved ones and in instances, took some away before their time. May the souls of the departed rest in peace.

 

As your elected representative in the upper chambers of the federal legislature, permit me to assure you that this new year holds positive promise for our people on many fronts. Of common concern to us all is the condition of the Abaji-Lokoja; the Kabba-Isanlu-Egbe and the Kabba-Iyara-Omuo Ekiti roads which are at the core of day-to-day movement and socioeconomic activities for our people. We are unrelenting in our engagements with the federal government and I can assure you that there will be noticeable improvements in the new year. Please take this to the bank.

 

The disturbing security situation is equally receiving necessary attention. We have all seen an abatement in insecurity across the country in recent days. The *Forest Guards,* an amalgam of trained local hunters and vigilantes put in place by the administration of President Bola Tinubu, GCFR, are being deployed to various states to support ongoing security management efforts. Terrorist activities are calming in the aftermath of Nigeria’s collaboration with the United States of America, (USA), to hit the strongholds of evil in parts of the country.

 

The Nigerian military has also revved up synchronised air and land clearances of cells and camps of bandits across the country. Kogi State and Kogi West will not be left out of this gradual security sweep. Gradually and assuredly, we shall be able to sleep with our eyes closed in times to come.

 

Mr President has shown faith in Kogi West in the area of appointments and recognitions for our people since the inception of his administration. The appointments of Prof Joash Ojo Amupitan, SAN, as the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC), and Prof Gbenga Solomon Ibileye as Vice-Chancellor of the Federal University Lokoja, (FUL), in recent weeks, is evidence of President Tinubu’s continuing confidence in the quality of human capital available to Nigeria from Kogi West.

 

Political activities will be on the ascendancy in the new year with the formal release of the 2027 electoral calendar by INEC. It behoves us in our district, to rally support for President Bola Tinubu, GCFR, whose *Renewed Hope Agenda* continues to impact the country in positive ways. We stand to benefit more with the continuity of a leader who has done as much for us as President within his initial two and half years in office. He will indeed do more.

 

I conclude by admonishing our people to keep hope alive and glowing. Better days beckon.

 

I thank you for your attention and wish you a most eventful and prosperous 2026.

 

 

*Senator Sunday Steve Karimi*

*Senator Representing Kogi West Senatorial Zone*

*Chairman, Senate Committee on Services*

To be your best in 2026

 

 

By Ayo Oyoze Baje

 

 

Quote:

 

“Success is no accident. It is hard work, perseverance, learning, studying, sacrifice, and most of all, love of what you are learning to do.”

 

– Pele

 

 

My dear committed readers, faithful fans and fellow citizens of our country called Nigeria, you are most welcome to the new year, 2026 Being a pre-election year heightened by the peurial penchance of the political desperados to hang on to power at all costs;apprehensions are truly high. The sordid scenario is worsened by the tax masters who are out there to squeeze whatever is left of the pauperized populace daily struggling under the survival mode

in a harsh and inclement business environment With all of these and of course,

the on going battle against insecurity being fought in collaboration with the US military through airstrikes we, as a people are gradually gravitating towards the Darwian law of the jungle, exacerbating the survival of the fittest.

 

 

The bitter truth therefore, is that we should be prepared for eventualities, as events unfold But the million naira question remains-how are we going to navigate the thorny and twisted paths to fashion. our ways to survive the hard times?

 

 

According to Charles Darwin’s ‘Origin of Species,’ it is not the most intellectual of the species that survives; it is not the strongest that survives; but the species that survives is the one that is best able to adapt and adjust to the changing environment in which it finds itself.” What that means is that we should be

willing, ready and capable of adapting to the environmental dynamics as they come.

 

 

But first and foremost we should be grateful to our Almighty Creator that we are part and parcel of 2026.. Are we not truly lucky? Yes,we are. So, big congratulations to you that you are still

alive, hale and hearty at this challenging moment in time. We must admit that it is not by our power, wisdom or might but by the sheer grace of God. Yet, the critical questions remain: How do we make the best of this new year? How do we bring out the best in us and succeed against all odds? The answers are not far-fetched.

 

 

Talking about odds, we must first and foremost swallow our base, primordial sentiments of both ethnicity and religion and admit that the harsh economic realities on ground could all have been prevented, with selfless leadership in place. But here we are currently battling with a debatable “Renewed Hope”.

 

 

Is it that of insecurity, with Nigeria ranked sixth on the Global Terrorism Index,GTI,

characterized by the wanton wasting of precious human lives as evidenced by the spate of blood-letting in Zamfara,Sokoto, Plateau and Benue states? Or, is it the high inflation rate, including that of food, fuel, school fees, rent and sundry consumables? These were worsened of course,by the sudden removal of the fuel subsidy by Mister President back in May 2023, without adequate plan for meaningful palliatives to ameliorate the suffering of over 133 million multi-dimensionally poor citizens? No matter how concerned he is about our suffering by the increase in the salaries of federal government workers, it does not make adequate impact by throwing money at self-cteated problems. Rather, you come up with sustainable policies to create an enabling environment for businesses to thrive. That might perhaps, explain why not a few multi-national manufacturing companies have exited the country and the well woven web of the ‘Japa Syndrome’ has become an alternative to some concerned citizens. One can go on and on.

 

 

But for those of us who still strongly believe in the great potentials inherent in the vast and varied resources that God has graciously blessed Nigeria with, how do we bring out the best in us? The answers are deep down there inside each and everyone of us, like the precious pearls of gold and diamond buried within the earth.

 

 

As yours truly has kept highlighting one year after another, this moment of the new year is that for sober reflection. Each of us is like an artist with an open canvas right before him. The pictures we paint on it, with the different colours and strokes would largely depend on the individual’s experiences. Whatever our ambition and projection for the year might be, they would be influenced and informed by what we see, hear, smell, eat as well as the people and places we have encountered over the years. And of course, the concrete actions we have taken to drive our dreams to the sunlight of reality.

 

 

The hard fact is that we have under utilized the huge potentials God has endowed us with. Put simply, each and everyone of us can do much better than we have been doing. According to experts on psychology, as revealed by Norman Vincent Pearl,

none of us has used more than 25% of the enormous powers God has deposited within us.

 

 

That brings into focus Bryan Adams inspirational note that:”Your potential is unlimited.Aspire to a higher place.Believe in your abilities, in your tasks, in your judgement”. But do we really know all the timeless treasures and golden goodies lying within us? No, we do not. And even the ones we are able to identify, we do not believe in them, with some of us underrating what they can do for us. So, where do we begin from?

 

 

Where else but from God, our all-wise, all-powerful, and all-gracious creator? He alone knows the all-important reasons for creating each and everyone of us and what sterling attributes He has abundantly deposited in each of us. Whatever religion we practise, it is therefore, significant for us to go to our maker with praises and supplication for all He has done for us and ask Him to reveal what He has blessed us with. It is important also to: “Know thyself and to thyself be true” as the wise ones have rightly admonished.

 

 

Going further, it is easy for us to know what these attributes are by answering the pertinent questions. What good things do I love to do, and do them so effortlessly that they bring me inner joy, satisfaction and fulfillment? What are my skills, talents, and hobbies?What do others find difficult to actualize but I find it as easy as dotting the ‘I”s and crossing the ‘T”s? What do other people quickly identify me with, once my name is mentioned? Whatever it is, never look down on them because that is the key to open your doors of Divine Destiny.

 

 

It could be to draw, to paint, to design clothes, shoes and bags. It could be to farm, to repair broken down gadgets, or to build houses. It could be to crack other people’s ribs, as a jester or comedian. That is your calling. Never look down on your God-given gifts. For instance, ace comedian, Ali Baba once trekked all the way from Ikorodu to Victoria Island, VI, Lagos in search of a white-collar job which he did not get. But once he identified his ability to make others laugh and honed it, his life trajectory changed for good! Now, people take flights from across the globe to seek for his service.That is it.

 

 

The next step to take is to work on your talents. It all starts with your mindset. Control it. Your subconscious mind is a fertile field. Sow life-giving seeds in it. Develop a Positive Mental Attitude, PMA. Do away with all negative thoughts. It takes absolute belief or faith in God and the abilities He has given you. It takes character, confidence, courage, commitment and self discipline. It takes hard work, humility, and honesty of purpose. It takes perseverance, learning and sacrifice, as the late Brazilian soccer genius and legend, Pele rightly mentioned, and as highlighted in the introductory quote.

 

 

Interestingly, all these sterling qualities the world has seen exhibited year after year, by unarguably one of the most consistent footballers the world has ever been blessed with, who is none other than Cristiano Ronaldo. He keeps shattering most soccer records, by not only bagging the most international goals ever scored by an individual, as well as achieving feats across different leagues but by being an embodiment of practice, passion, perseverance and persistence,while the world waits for him to reach the fantastic feat of reaching the remarkable 1,000 goals.

 

 

All these bring to the fore, Benjamin Franklin’s beautiful admonition, that: “Without continual growth and progress, such words as improvement, achievement and success have no meaning”. That shows us the significance of the power of creativity. It simply means the ability to bring out new, unique and valuable perspectives to either existing products and conditions, or coming up with new ones. We all need this attribute at this trying time of economic hardship. As ace music producer, Kenny Ogungbe wisely stated, when you are holding up a partly filled cup of water you view it as either half-filled or half-drained. The choice is yours.

 

 

To underscore this point, Charles Darwin, brought the idea of the ‘Origin of Species’ with the ‘ Evolution Theory’ to the public sphere back in 1859. He explained that through the law of natural selection, as it favours only those who can easily adapt to changes. To do so we have to deploy our sense of creative ingenuity. And that is what the inventors of electric cars have done to gradually phase out fossil fuel-powered vehicles. In a similar scenario, solar- powered panels have come to gradually take over other sources of electric power supply. To survive the excruciating economic situation in the country, several Nigerians should refuse to give up against all odds.

 

 

As Ray Kroc, the man who bought over the Mc Donald’s franchise aptly stated:”Persistence pays”. We are all familiar with the inspiring story of the American, Abraham Lincoln who failed in business twice,lost in politics several times and suffered personal tragedies but eventually clinched the much elusive post of the president of the United States as he was elected in 1860. What about the scientists who came up with the first cloned mammal, Dolly the sheep in 1996? Did you know how many times they tried before succeeding? 277 times! What would have happened if they had given up at the 276th trial? The answer is yours.

 

 

My dear brother, sister, friend and fan, if Mercy Johnson did not give up hope as a pure water seller in Lagos; if Victor Osimhen saw the sun smiling behind the dark clouds as a street hawker in Lagos, if Patoranking did not lose focus as a rat-killer seller and Funke Akindele was not discouraged by the Nollywood movie makers, who wrongly described her as lacking the attributes of a blockbuster movie artist, why should you?

 

 

But wait awhile. What was the common aptitude amongst the five of them? They believed in their abilities, in their dreams, in their tasks and in their judgement, as Bryan Adams wisely stated. So should you.

 

 

But remember, that whatever idea you plan to work on, you cannot do it alone. As Sam Walton rightly noted: ” Individuals do not win, but teams do”

 

 

Welcome to 2026, the year of limitless opportunities and possibilities. Keep going forward, against all odds.