Saturday 16 April 2016

Nigeria's Lagos, towards a new Manhattan

Lagos, Nigeria's populous megacity, is transforming from the chaos of traffic congestion, rickety buses and pickpockets. Massive infrastructural development and efficient social services are changing the city's image.
An oft-told tale of Lagos's once-notorious traffic jams is that of a taxi passenger stuck in a snarl-up who left the vehicle, wandered into a roadside restaurant to eat, drank a beer, took a nap and returned to the vehicle that had not moved an inch. He reached his destination several hours later.
The plan to create a “new city” (Eko Atlantic) at the edge of Lagos is probably one of the most audacious.
 First-time visitors to Lagos about 10 years ago were warned, "This is Lagos." That meant that you should not expect help from anyone — but brace up for hard times ahead.
Fast-forward to 2016 and the traffic congestion, high crime rate, clogged gutters and roads filled with garbage could soon become just a bad dream. These days Lagosians still regale each other with anecdotes of the dystopian city even as positive changes can be seen in Africa's most populous city, with 21 million people. These days the greeting "Welcome to Lagos" portends better news.
Transformation foundation
The transformation of Lagos started during the tenure of Bola Tinubu, Lagos State governor from 1999 to 2007. Tinubu set forth a rescue operation that his successor, Babatunde Fashola, later continued.
There were political and economic benefits for such efforts. "Lagos is Nigeria's richest state, producing about $90 billion a year in goods and services, making its economy bigger than that of most African countries, including Ghana and Kenya," notes the Economist.
A fast-growing population (600,000 people added annually), without commensurate improvements in social services such as housing, water and transportation, had pushed Lagos to the cliff's edge.
"Manhattan" rises offshore
There have been impressive infrastructural developments, but the plan to create a "new city" at the edge of Lagos is probably the most audacious. Dubbed the "Manhattan of Africa," Eko Atlantic on Victoria Island consists of 10 million square meters of land reclaimed from the ocean and protected by an 8.5 km seawall.
Construction began in 2008, and it consists of seven districts along the oceanfront, including a business district that is expected to host major banks and insurance and oil companies, as well as the Nigerian stock exchange, once construction is fully completed.
Lagos's government reduced crime rates by providing logistical support to the police force run by the federal government. It installed closed-circuit television in most parts of the city and established skills acquisition programmes for the "area boys"—youths, mostly jobless, who extort money from drivers and passengers. It also set up mobile courts to summarily try cases.
Oshodi market, located about five miles from Murtala Mohammed International Airport, used to represent the good, the bad and the ugly of Lagos: thousands of people to-ing and fro-ing; a cacophony of voices at the highest decibels; rickety buses meandering through a sea of human beings; pickpockets on the prowl; people fighting at one end, others dancing to loud music at the other end.
Currently, most of what used to be Oshodi market has been demolished, to make way for a "world-class bus terminus," according to government officials.
"The place [Oshodi] was harbouring criminals and a number of untoward activities," said Steve Ayorinde, the current Lagos state commissioner for information and strategy, according to the Nigerian newspaper Vanguard.
Fashola himself regards Oshodi's transformation as a watershed moment. During his tenure, he often reminded Lagosians that, having transformed Oshodi, there was nothing they couldn't achieve.
Lagos is becoming a clean city. Thousands of workers can be seen late every night sweeping the roads and taking away the dirt. An efficient garbage collection service supports the cleaning efforts. More than one million tons of waste was deposited in public landfills in 2015, up from 71,000 tons in 2004. About 72% of Lagos residents currently use a government-regulated waste disposal service; in 2005 only 42% used such a service.
Nigerians are generally in disbelief regarding the new Lagos. "This is not the Lagos I used to know," says Sanusi Turay, who manages a private security firm in the city. The new Lagos is a bit of an anomaly, Turay explains, with a tinge of sarcasm. "But, honestly, we are very happy things are changing for the better."
Just before Tinubu took over as governor in 1999, the BBC reported that "the realities of Lagos may thwart Tinubu's ambitious plans; the city is collapsing as fast as it grows, disappearing under a mountain of rubbish." But after 15 years of painstaking efforts, that image of Lagos is slowly changing.
Fashola's strategy
After Tinubu exited, Fashola's strategy was focused on three fronts. First, he solicited citizens' support for a new vision of Lagos. The slogan Eko o ni baje (Lagos must not spoil) rallied Lagosians against the status quo. Second, he reformed the tax system, which resulted in an increase in tax revenues to $115 million per month in 2015, up from $3.2 million in 1999. Tax compliance increased to 80%, up from about 30% in 2005. Third, Fashola used the tax revenues to undertake ambitious transportation and sanitation projects, including the creation of a rail network, bus lanes and a waste collection system, as well as massive road rehabilitation.
Under the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) system, Lagos transportation "became faster, safer, predictable, relatively cheaper and more comfortable," reported Vanguard. The BRT itself created jobs for 2,500 people. Most of Lagos' notoriously old and dangerous commercial buses, called Molues, were replaced by swanky new ones that use designated bus lanes. With support of private operators, the government procured about 1,300 taxicabs to run in the city.
In addition, an ambitious multibillion-dollar light rail project that began in 2010 is set to be completed by December of this year. The project consists of seven lines, which, on completion, will further ease Lagos city traffic.
The journey is not finished
Nowadays Fashola's efforts have won bipartisan praise, a phenomenon rarely seen in Nigeria. Nobel laureate and social critic Wole Soyinka says, "Fashola diagnoses the problems and goes at it like a skilled mechanic."
"There is no finish line in this journey," says Fashola, whose term expired in 2015 and who now oversees Nigeria's federal ministries of energy, works and housing. Both he and his predecessor Tinubu set a high bar. The jury is still out on the current governor Akinwunmi Ambode, who took the reins in May 2015.
But for Lagos, the city of the late Afrobeat icon Fela Kuti and the city from which Africa's richest person, Aliko Dangote, manages his business empire, the mantra continues to be Eko o ni baje indeed.

Compiled by Kingsley Ighobor 

No will to save under Jonathan - Okonjo-Iweala

The immediate past Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, on Thursday said lack of political will to save oil revenue under former President Goodluck Jonathan was responsible for the challenges facing the country presently.

She said as a result, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund must seek means to embed savings in national constitutions devoid of political manipulations.
Right on International Television,Okonjo-Iweala spoke on the topic: 'Inequality, growth and resilience' at George Washington University, United States of America.
She made some serious blunder to show her as a double faced person  "We saved $22bn because the political will to do it was there. And when the 2008/2009 crisis came, we were able to draw on those savings precisely to issue about five per cent of the Gross Domestic Product as fiscal stimulus to the economy, and we never had to come to the bank or the fund."

She added, "This time around, and this is the key now, you need not only to have the instrument but you also need the political will. In my second time as a finance minister, from 2011 to 2015, we had the instrument, we had the means, we had done it before, but zero political will.

"So, we were not able to save when we should have. That is why you find that Nigeria is now in the situation it is in, along with so many other countries."

On solving the problem of political will and manipulations, she said, "That is the question that I ask; what do we need to do to these countries to save over a period of long accelerated growth?

"We need to devise mechanisms not just that are good technically, but find a way to either embed them in the constitution or find a way to separate them from the political manipulation so that these countries can survive over time.

"To build resilience, African countries need tools and mechanisms, and it is doable and we need to interrogate ourselves why we have not done it."

Culled from The punch.com

Facebook Doubles Down on Its Messenger App

Facebook inc on Saturday said it is working with more than two dozen companies on a new initiative aimed at turning its Messenger app into a hub for shopping, news and entertainment.
At its annual F8 conference in San Francisco, Facebook showed developers how to build so-called chatbots in the app to field customer-service questions and help people order goods, without requiring a person at the other end of the conversation.
More than 25 companies are using chatbots in Messenger to start, including Walt Disney Co., eBay Inc., JetBlue Airways Corp. and News Corp’s The Wall Street Journal. No money is changing hands in the partnerships.
This marks the second-consecutive year Facebook has highlighted Messenger at F8. People already favour the private,one to one communication style of messaging apps to social networks, and the trend is expected to accelerate.
 Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg believes messaging apps will be central to the company in the next five years. “Messenger is going to be the next big platform for sharing privately,” he said during his keynote remarks at F8.

Kwara State Government Proposes 14-Years Jail Term For Cultists

Kwara State government on Saturday said an executive bill pending in the state House of Assembly, had a 14-year jail term for convicted cultists when signed into law.
The Bill, a part of the efforts of the government to stamp out rising cases of cultism in the state, has a minimum of 10-year-jail term for a convicted cultist.
Of recent times clashes among rival cult groups in campuses and even in the state capital have led to loss of many lives.
Briefing on the outcome of the monthly State Executive Council, SEC, meeting, Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Kamaldeen Ajibade, said the Bill had passed second reading in the state assembly, noting that no effort would be spared to eradicate cultism which, he said, had reached embarrassing level in the state.
According to him, “In the Bill, the least of 10 years jail term and highest of 14 years have been prescribed for anyone found guilty of cultism in the state.”.
He explained that the bill contained among others, confiscation of buildings and property harbouring such convicted cultists by the state government.

Egypt creates Double Decker buses

Egypt’s vehicle manufacturer MCV will manufacture and export 60 double-decker buses to the United Kingdom, Minister of Trade and Industry Tarek Kabil announced on Saturday.
According to Kabil, the new line of vehicle manufacturing “shows trust in the Egyptian industry” from foreign markets.
MCV’s factories produce 8,000 to 10,000 double-decker buses annually, of which 5,000 to 8,000 are exported to a number of countries, including the Netherlands and Hong Kong.

Kabil’s comments came during a tour of industrial complexes in New Salahia and El-Obour cities, which also saw the minister launching a number of new factories in the area.
The new deal, which marks the first time for Egypt to export the buses London tourism is famous for, is a shift from Egypt’s prior dealings with public transportation manufacturing. In 2014, the Transport Authority announced that 600 buses would be supplied by the United Arab Emirates, with half of the fleet manufactured in the UAE and the other half in Egypt.

Unhealthy living is responsible for cancer—not your genes

Most cases of cancer may be associated with unhealthy lifestyles rather than our genes, experts have claimed. According to researchers, factors in the world around us— from diet to sunlight, cigarettes and disease— play a far bigger role in fuelling cancer than DNA. In fact, about 90 per cent of cases would be wiped up if these triggers could all be avoided, they said.

 While this may not seem surprising, scientists have long been divided over the issue. The controversy was stoked last year when researchers claimed that most cancer cases are caused by errors in DNA that are generated at random as the body ages and its cells divide. The study concluded that this meant most cases of the disease are down to ‘bad luck’, rather than living an unhealthy lifestyle. The latest study used some of the same data as the first piece of research—however it came to the opposite conclusion.
Writing in the journal, Nature, Dr. Yusuf Hannun, of Stony Brook University in the US, said that while luck plays a role, factors in the world around us are far more important. These include our diet, alcohol intake, whether we smoke, getting sunburn, some viruses, pollution and possibly other factors that have yet to be identified. In the study, he claimed that the genes we inherit from our parents actually only account for a very small number of cancer cases. He concluded: “These results are important for strategising cancer prevention, research and public health.’
Experts have praised the research, saying Dr. Hannun had built a ‘compelling case’ for his argument and that these results demonstrate that a large proportion of cancer is caused by environmental factors and are preventable if their underlying causes are identified. ‘If we could wave a magic wand and get rid of all possible external risk factors there would still be cancers. But there would be fewer of them.”

Belgian Minister Galant Resigns Over Airport Security Report


                                                              Jacqueline Galant

Belgian Minister of Mobility Jacqueline Galant offered her resignation because she had wrongly said she had no knowledge of a European report exposing flaws in Belgian government checks of security arrangements at the country’s airports.
Belgium’s King Philippe accepted Galant’s resignation, Prime Minister Charles Michel told reporters in Brussels on Friday. Michel, who said a replacement for Galant will be revealed at the right time, added that the Belgian government takes security to the heart and had already earmarked extra funds to make public transportation more secure before the March 22 terror attacks.

Magnitude 7.4 earthquake hit Japan

It is a "race against time" for rescuers searching for scores of victims trapped under rubble as Japan reels from its second major earthquake in two days, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said.
At least 25 people have been confirmed dead and more than 1,000 injured after the 7.3-magnitude earthquake hit southwestern Japan in the early hours of Saturday morning.
The number of casualties is expected to rise as rescue workers dig through collapsed buildings, mud and debris.
The epicentre of the quake was near the city of Kumamoto on the southern island of Kyushu, the same region hit by a 6.2 tremor which killed nine people barely a day earlier.
Rescue efforts have been hindered by damage to the region's transport network, with one tunnel caved in, a highway bridge damaged, roads blocked by landslips and train and air services halted.
The number of military personnel sent to the area has been increased to 20,000.

"Nothing is more important than human life and it's a race against time," said Mr Abe.
"Daytime today is the big test," he added.

Czech Republic changes name to Czechia

The Czech Republic has finally picked a short form English name for the country - Czechia.
Politicians say the name will make it easier for companies, sportsmen and others to label products and clothing.
The debate has raged since the republic split with partner Slovakia in 1993, spelling the end of Czechoslovakia.
But on Saturday, the president, prime minister, heads of parliament, foreign and defence ministers agreed on Czechia.
 Up until now, many people wanting to promote the country have written "Czech" across sports jerseys or product, but critics of that point out the word is an adjective so cannot be used as a one-word proper noun.
 Once it is approved officially at a cabinet meeting the foreign ministry can lodge it with the UN.

US Military Academy Considers Allowing Hijab


An elite US military school is considering an unprecedented request from a new student who wants to wear a traditional Muslim head scarf.
The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina, said an incoming freshman who has been accepted for this year's term has asked to be allowed to wear a head covering.
 A spokeswoman for the 174-year-old public military college, Kim Keelor, said it is the first time as far as she is aware that such a request has been made.

"The college is reviewing the request at this time," said a statement from the Citadel.
"We do not currently have anyone that has a special religious accommodation for uniforms."
Ms Keelor added the school, which admitted its first woman student in 1995, has had a number of other Muslim students.

How To Deal With Jealous Individuals

Everybody gets jealous sometimes, and that's a normal part of life. But when someone takes their jealous feelings too far, you can end up the target of insults, accusations, and even ridiculous rumors and lies. It can be daunting,especially when more than one person is attacking you. Just remember it's what you have, not who you are, that causes them to act that way. Keep your head up high, and read on to learn how to deal with jealous people:
Instructions

1)Understand Why They're Jealous
It's impossible to pinpoint the specific trait that they're jealous about, so don't worry about what it is. Instead, understand that their jealousy isn't motivated by you, and it has nothing to do with how good of a person you are. Jealousy is motivated by the desire to possess something that you have - money, an item, or a skill - and knowing that they can't easily have it. It has nothing to do with who you are, rather, what you have, and jealous people will convince themselves that they deserve it more than you; that's what makes you their target.
The irony is, if the jealous individual would focus their energy on what it is they want instead of blaming the victim for having it, they'd probably be able to achieve whatever it is they desire.
2)Ignore Them
Yes, it's easier said than done, but if you don't feed in to the jealous vitriol, they'll have nothing to fuel the fire. And while someone who is determined to perpetuate their jealousy will find other things to pick at, if you don't respond, you don't validate their feelings. Nothing sucks more for a jealous person than never getting through to their intended victim. Success is the best way to defeat jealousy, not answering the accusations - than giving the jealous person more to feed on.
 3)Offer Them Your Help
Seems a little crazy, but it can - and sometimes does - work. Often times, jealous people liken those they target to being "super human," and think that this is what gives them the object or skill that they covet. If you approach jealous people with a helping hand, they may not only take you up on your offer, but drop the jealous act and befriend you. Of course, sometimes jealous people take this as a jab, so don't be surprised if you get a public response ridiculing you for reaching out, and a private response asking for your assistance.
4)Go Invisible
Sometimes, the only way to escape a jealous person's grasp is to disappear from their sight entirely. This can be difficult if you work together or attend the same school, but it's much easier to pull off online. If you can, change your username and drop the personal details from your website or profile, go private, or leave the sites that you both frequent entirely. While you shouldn't be forced to give up a website you love just because a jealous person can't stop bullying you, sometimes it's the only way to avoid being their target without causing even more trouble for yourself and other members.

Written by Clarita