Gist, Entertainment, News, Sports, Event, Lifestyle and All you can bring to the table
Sunday, 23 July 2023
Saturday, 22 July 2023
Wednesday, 21 June 2023
UK Visa policy not targeted at the family of Nigerian foreign students.
The British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Richard Montgomery, has said his country’s decision banning international students from bringing family members starting in 2024 is to control the inflow of migrants and avoid overburdening the country’s housing infrastructure.
Many
more students are trying to bring their dependents with the, but it is not
always possible to find the housing and services to meet all the needs of all our
existing student population. We will have to manage our migration in and out of
the UK.
On
May 23, the UK Home Office said international students, including Nigerians,
would no longer be able to bring family members with them starting January
2024.
Mrs. Onoja Joy, an outstanding traffic warden in Kogi state capital, Lokoja
Mrs. Onoja Joy, an outstanding traffic warden in Kogi state capital, Lokoja. She was the Center of attention in Lokoja city, KOGI STATE. She is indeed the face of Dedication. so humble and generous as well. Mrs Onoja has bagged a lot of awards for her humanity and dedication towards her job.
FG of Nigeria Approves 114% Salary Increase For Tinubu, Shettima, Govs, Others - Daily Trust
The Revenue
Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) has approved a 114 per
cent increase in the salaries of elected politicians, including the President,
vice president, governors, lawmakers as well as judicial and public office
holders.
RMAFC
is saddled with the responsibility of determining the remuneration appropriate
for political officeholders including the President, Vice President, Governors,
Deputy Governors, Ministers, Commissioners, Special Advisers, Legislators and
the holders of the offices as mentioned in Sections 84 and 124 of this
Constitution.
The
commission urged the 36 states’ Houses of Assembly to hasten efforts on
amendment of relevant laws to give room for upward review of remuneration
packages for political, judicial and public officers.
According to NAN, the RMAFC Chairman, Muhammadu Shehu, represented by a federal commissioner, Rakiya Tanko-Ayuba, made the call at the presentation of reports of the reviewed remuneration package to Kebbi State governor, Dr Nasir Idris, on Tuesday in Birnin Kebbi.
The unbelievable story of Alison Botha
Alison Botha was kidnapped close to her home in Port Elizabeth, South Africa after a night out with friends on December 18, 1994.
Her attacker forced 27 year old Alison into her own car with a knife, picked up his friend on the way and took her to a deserted area and brutally raped her. Rapping her did not satisfy these men and they decided to kill her. At first, they tried to suffocate her but she survived. The men, identified as Frans du Toit and Theuns Kruger, then stabbed her 37 times in the abdomen but she again survived. They men thought she had died but then Alison's leg twitched.
When they realised that she is still alive, they proceded to slit her throat 16 times. At this point, they were convinced that she is dead or Alison played dead. When the men left her and with determination to live, she managed to crawl to a nearby road side with each movement strained as she has lost so much blood, her organs spilling from her abdomen and head spinning. She then collapsed.
Alison said that she realised that her life was too valuable to let go of and that gave her the courage to survive. Two hours later she was in the hospital after being found by passers-by.
Alison went ahead to make full recovery but still had physical and emotional scars. She is now a motivational speaker and has written a book about her ordeal. Her attackers were arrested and jailed for life.
Saturday, 31 July 2021
Former Senate President, Bukola Saraki Arrested by EFCC
The Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Saturday 31st July 2021 in Abuja confirmed the arrest
and detention of the former Senate President, Bukola Saraki.
The spokesperson of the commission, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, told the News Agency of Nigeria that
Saraki was invited for questioning over allegations of corruption and money
laundering.
He said that the former Senate president was currently in the custody of
the commission for continuation of interrogation.
The invitation
and detention of Saraki for interrogation was happening days after a former
Nasarawa State governor, Tanko al-Makura; and his wife, Mairo, were invited and
interrogated.
The commission had invited al-Makura and the wife over alleged breach of
public trust and misappropriation of billions of naira by his administration.
(NAN)
Wednesday, 12 February 2020
Friday, 27 December 2019
Tributes paid to RCCG Pastor and two children who drowned at resort

Sunday, 19 May 2019
Sunday, 20 January 2019
Thursday, 8 March 2018
Wednesday, 13 December 2017
The Ignoramus Rotimi Amaechi with Facts to Prove it – Reno Omokri

Monday, 18 September 2017
Saturday, 9 September 2017
Femi Adesina: What has happened to us as a people?
What happened to grace? Where did decency disappear to? Are words not to be seasoned with salt again? What has happened to us as a people? The more rotten, the better, it seems. The fouler and odoriferous the cesspit, the more attractive, followed by applause. That seems to be the philosophy of some people today, and it doesn't matter who they are. High or low. But we cannot continue that way, if we want to be acceptable to God, and to our fellow human beings. National development does not come by a sudden flight. You work at it.
The sing-song in the country today is restructuring of the polity. We want more states. We want a return to regional structure. We want a revision of the revenue allocation formula. We want six vice presidents, one from each geo-political zone. We want those zones to be the federating units, rather than the states. And so on, and so forth.
In fact, so loud is the cacophony of voices over restructuring that if you ask 100 people what they mean, they give you 100 different explanations. But as a country, I believe we will get there someday. And soon.
However, is political restructuring the most urgent thing Nigeria needs now? I don't think so. For me, what is more urgent is the restructuring of the Nigerian mind. A mind that sees the country as one, that believes that we have a future and a hope, that believes that we are one people under God. But what we see now is ruinous for any country. It is hemlock, bound to poison the entire polity, and send it to a premature perdition.
On Tuesday, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) announced that we had exited from economic recession. It was cheery news for majority of Nigerians, save for those in the gall of bitterness. They spat in the sky, and collected the spittle with their faces. Who gave Nigeria the permission to exit recession? Who gave her the audacity of hope? How can the economy attempt to rebound, when it should sink deeper and deeper into the miry clay? They were in the doldrums, unhappy because good news came for the country. In their befuddled minds, Nigeria must never see a silver lining in the sky. The ravening clouds must ever remain victorious, must forever possess the sky, simply because of primordial reasons. The party in power is not my own, so why should Nigeria make progress under it? The President in office was not the one I voted for, so why should he succeed? He does not speak my language, he is not of my religion or ethnic stock, so why must Nigeria prosper under him? They, therefore, throw all sorts of tantrums, like a child whose lollipop is taken away, and attempt to rubbish the news on exit from recession. And those same people would canvass for a restructuring of the polity. Big mistake. Wrong priority. They need to have their minds restructured first, so that they have goodwill towards their own country, and towards all men. Left to them, they wish that when NBS releases results for the next quarter, Nigeria should have gone back into recession. Filthy dreamers! Awful imaginations! They need a restructuring of their minds, and quickly, too.
Some people spend their lifetime expecting thunderstorms and hurricanes, so they never enjoy showers of blessing. Their addled minds expect negative news, so they never enjoy good tidings. They are the type that swallow poison, and then begin to hope that it will kill the person next door. Restructuring, restructuring, that is what such minds need.
Chase after him. If you catch up with him, kill him. If he outruns you, poison his footsteps. That is the chant in most parts of the country today. Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks. Hate has become their natural language. When they speak hateful words, they speak their native language, their mother tongue. Don't mind the elevated offices they occupy now, or which they have occupied in the past. They are in the throes, in the paroxysms of bitterness. Only a restructuring of the mind can save them. My dear senior friend, Ikemba Obosima, from Imo State, has good counsel for them, in a text message he sent to one of them recently, which he copied me:"Pain will follow him who speaks or acts with evil thoughts, as does the wheel of the foot of him who draws the cart. He is greater man who conquers self than he who kills a thousand men in war...Love will purify the heart of him who is beloved as truly as it purifies the heart of he who loves." But will they listen? If they have not danced too far, and have not become like the dog fated to get lost, which refuses to hear the whistle of the hunter. Let them return home, to sanity.
The National Bureau of Statistics announced our descent into recession. They embraced the news, almost with sickening glee. Now, the same agency has announced exit, and they begin to question its impartiality. What kind of people are they? They want to hear only bad news? May their minds be restructured, lest bad news dog their footsteps. Malediction? Am I cursing anybody? Not at all. Just a warning, and a call to new attitude, new thoughts, new conduct. The things we expect have a way of coming upon us. Ask the biblical Job. "What I feared has come upon me. What I dreaded has happened to me."(Job 3:25).
One of the characteristics of a hateful mind is that it conjures a lot of mischief, and purveys same as truth. And the gullible laps it up. During the health challenge of our dear President, a thing common to any mortal, big or small, of high or low estate, they filled the land with evil tidings. Oh, he is on life support machine. No, he is dead and long buried. He will never return to that office, I swear. And then, God did what He knows how to do best. He showed the Deus ex machina, His Invisible Hands. Now, the reputation of those people is hanging on life support. If only men would restructure their minds!
President Buhari says exit from recession is cheery news, but until the life of the average Nigerian is positively touched by the economy, he doesn't consider the job done. Very good. Even the NBS, which brought the good news, says the economy is still fragile, and the good work must continue, so that we don't slide back. That is exactly what this government would do. That is the motive behind the ERGP (Economic Reconstruction and Growth Plan). So, let nobody be filled with diabolic thoughts. Government does not feel it is there yet. Action stations! All hands on deck.
A final word for haters, wailers, purveyors of fake news, or whatever you choose to call them. Evil minds wax worse and worse. A hater would envy others unnecessarily. He would conjure evil thoughts that would poison his system. He would manifest all sorts of negative tendencies that turn him into a proper child of the Devil. And at the end of it all, his master welcomes him home with open arms. "Abandon hope all ye who enter here." (Dante's Inferno). And there will be plenty weeping, and gnashing of teeth.








