Saturday, February 01, 2020
NECO, DSS Collaborate to tackle examination malpractices
JAMB SHUTS 38 CBT CENTRES, PARADES SUSPECTSED FRAUDSTERS AS COURT CONVICTS 4 TO 3 YEARS IN PRISON
ASUP disgruntled over unpaid salaries, sack of 200 Abia Poly staff and IPPIS Implementation delay
The academic staff union of Polytechnics, ASUP has described as barbaric the action of the Abia state government for disengaging two hundred staff, despite owing them between thirteen and seventeen months salaries
Wednesday, January 29, 2020
BENUE STRANGE SICKNESS: Igede Youths raise alarm, could it be coronavirus or lassa fever
Group blast transperancy international, Nigeria over corruption perception index
Monday, January 27, 2020
KOBE BRYANT: Didier Drogba, Others Pay Tribute
Sunday, January 26, 2020
TRAGEDY: NBA star Kobe Bryant tragically dies in California helicopter crash aged 41
Kobe Bryant has died in a helicopter crash in California aged 41. The NBA legend was travelling with four people in his private helicopter when it crashed in Calabasas, 40 miles north-west of Los Angeles, on Sunday morning, according to multiple reports.
Five people are reported to have died in the accident. Vanessa Bryant, his wife, was not thought to be onboard. They have four children together – Gianna, Natalia and Bianca and six-month-old Capri.
Los Angeles County Fire could not confirm who was on board or who the helicopter belonged to. Bryant has long been known to travel around California by his personal helicopter.
“We received a call just before 10am this morning of an aircraft down in the Malibu area, right off of Las Vergenes, essentially Calabasas,” fire captain Tony Imbrenda told reporters at the scene. “Some folks were out here mountain biking this morning, they saw an aircraft in distress, they went down into the hillside. This was a helicopter, it’s been confirmed it was an S-76 Sikorsky helicopter and unfortunately there were no survivors.”
The cause of the crash is being investigated, officials confirmed.
Bryant is considered one of greatest basketball players of all time. He became a legend at Los Angeles Lakers, spending his entire 20-year career with the team, becoming a five-time NBA champion and twice being named finals MVP.
In 2018 he won an Oscar for best short animated film for Dear Basketball, a five-minute film based on a love letter to basketball which Bryant wrote in 2015.
UNICEF AND INTERNATIONAL DAY OF EDUCATION: Nigerian Pupils challenge Northern Governors on out-of-school children
A cross-section of pupils in Nigerian public schools in the 19 Northern states have expressed dissatisfaction with their governors over what they said is the near nonchalant attitude towards reducing the worrisome number of out-of-school children in the region.
The school children brought together by the United Nations Children’s Fund, UNICEF, used self-created pictures to describe several factors that have continued to militate against educational development especially in Northern Nigeria.
It was not a fine arts class, but an exercise put together by the UNICEF under the Girls Education Programme, GEP 3, to mark the 2020 International Day of Education.
Thousands of children have been out of school in Nigeria’s North-East and 12-year old Primary 6 pupil, Hawawu Hussain, filled with emotions, passionately presents her worries in a drawing.
The passion for girls education exhibited by 10-year old Tearth Glovaru, a Nigerian born Indian, caught the attention of everybody at the exercise.
Tearth, an only child is unhappy why girls should remain at home to hawk and do house chores, while boys are allowed to attend school.
Tearth shared his desires with UNICEF on how India and Nigeria can help save the girl from the forces militating against her education.
Away from Tearth, a pupil from the Yakassai Model Primary School in Kano Municipal, 12-year old Muhammed Salisu in Primary 6, did not hide his feelings about the dirty
environment around him and how it breeds mosquitoes which cause Malaria that makes children sick and unable to attend school.Climate change and its devastation is disturbing to 12-year old Primary 6 pupil, Mhadija Yakub, who told AIT she is worried that girls like her are unable to attend school and get the best of life due to the negative effect of using firewood to cook
.As UNICEF continues to create more visibility on the importance of education in Nigeria, it seeks increased commitment from government, religious, and traditional rulers in making sure there is continuity of initiatives aimed at keeping children in school, to complete at least basic education