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Friday, 10 July 2020

NIGERIAN STUDENTS WILL NOT TAKE PART IN WASSCE THIS YEAR


Minister of Education – Mallam Adamu Adamu


The Federal Government has stopped Nigerian students from participating in the West African Senior School Certificate Examinations scheduled for between August 4 and September 5.

The Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, disclosed this to State House Correspondents at the end of a meeting of the Federal Executive Council presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari,
The Punch reports, that the Minister of State for Education, Emeka Nwajiuba, had during the press briefing by the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 on Monday announced that the 2020 WASSCE conducted by WAEC would hold between August 4 and September 5.

Prior to this, PTF had directed the reopening of schools for students in graduating classes of Primary 6, Junior Secondary School 3 and Senior Secondary School 3 to enable them to prepare for their final examinations. Adamu Adamu said on Wednesday said Nigerian schools will not reopen any time soon until it is safe to do so because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

He said:

    Our schools will only open when we believe it is safe for our children and that is when the situation is right, not when the incidence of the infection is going up in the country. I just want to make it clear. We will not open soon for examination or for any reason unless it is safe for our children, even WAEC. WAEC will not determine for us what to do. Schools will remain closed.

He added:

    I will also like to use this position to ask those states that have already announced (reopening), I appeal to them. I think it is not safe. I feel responsible for all children, not just those who are in Federal Government-controlled schools. Please let’s save

7-MAN GANG ARRESTED FOR MULTIPLE BANK ROBBERIES IN ONDO AND EKITI


Police operatives attached to the Special Tactical Squad have arrested a 7-man criminal gang that attacked and robbed three commercial banks in the South-West States of Ondo and Ekiti between 2019 and 2020, killed innocent citizens including six (6) policemen and carted away several millions of naira.

 

A statement by the spokesperson of the Nigerian Police Force, Frank Mba, says police investigations revealed that the dare-devil armed robbers identified as - Tunbosun Ojo 42years, Ismaila Ojo 25years, Victor Oyeyemi 36years, Dele Ariyo  44years, Shola Oladimeji 50years, Olubodun Folayemi 44years and Adeniyi John 42 years, carried out the robbery of a commercial bank in Ile-oluji, Ondo State on 7th February 2020 where four (4) policemen were killed.

 

Similarly, they were also involved in the robbery of a Microfinance Bank in Idanre, Ondo State in December, 2019 and a commercial bank at Oye Ekiti, Ekiti State where two policemen lost their lives.

 

Police say efforts are being intensified to arrest other members of the gang still at large and to recover other sophisticated weapons used in the operations.
 

The following were recovered from the suspects: One (1) AK49 rifle, One (1) AK47 rifle, two (2) pump action guns, five (5) locally made guns, nineteen (19) locally made short guns, one hundred and twenty-five (125) cartridges, one hundred and forty-five (145) AK47 ammunition, locally fabricated explosives and a Toyota Corolla vehicle with Reg. No. LSR 490 GC.

TUNDE BRAIMO PASSES ON


Barrister Taofeek Olatunde Braimoh is dead.Tunde was the lawmaker representing Kosofe constituency 2 in the Lagos State House of Assembly

He died early Friday, 10 July, 2020. He was aged 59, two months shy of his 60th birthday celebration, on September 30.

A close family source confirmed his death. Although the cause of his death is yet to be made official, The ELITES exclusively learnt that Braimoh died from COVID-19 complications in one of the isolation facilities of the Lagos State Government.

Ironically, Braimoh was reported to have paid a visit to the isolation center two weeks ago, to donate food stuffs and other items to the patients.

He fell ill shortly after. The lawmaker was later rushed to the isolation center when the illness took a turn for the worse. He died in the early hours of today.

Until his death, Braimoh was the chairman house committee on information, security and strategy in the Lagos state house of Assembly. He had also served in the Parliament as the chairman house committee on Judiciary, petitions and Lasiec, he was also a one time chairman of Kosofe local government area, now ikosi isheri local council.

He is survived by his wife, Yetunde and children.

Thursday, 9 July 2020

PROF.OSINBAJO PETITIONED IGP OVER FALSE ALLEGATION OF HIM TAKING N4B MAGU


Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo has petitioned the Inspector General of Police Muhammed Adamu, demanding for an investigation of "false" allegation of him allegedly taking N4b from the money allegedly stolen by suspended Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Ibrahim Magu.

 

Jackson Ude, a former director of strategy and communications under President Goodluck Jonathan administration had alleged that Magu embezzled over N39 billion and gave Prof. Osinbajo N4 billion for soft landing. He also claimed that the Vice President is being investigated over his "involvement in the scandal".

 

Backing the Vice President media aide Laolu Akande's claim of the report being “false and baseless fabrications", Osinbajo's lawyer Taiwo Osipitan averred that Ude's tweet was aimed at making the vice president appear like a “dishonest and disloyal public officer and consequently unfit for the position of the vice president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria which he is occupying."

 

The statement partly read;

 

    “On the 8th of July 2020, Mr Ude wrote and published on his website www.pointblanknews.com materials/stories which are criminally defamatory of our client. We have the instructions of our client that the said publications are injuriously false in every respect."

 

The Vice President who called for an investigation, also asked the police to initiate criminal proceedings against Mr Ude and his platform to restrain them from future ‘false publications’ if found guilty.

Wednesday, 8 July 2020

LAGOS JSS3 & SSS3 STUDENTS TO RESUME IN AUGUST


 
 The Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, in a televised press briefing on Friday, has announced that schools will reopen for students in JSS 3 and SSS 3 from August 3. The Punch reports.

He said,

    Tertiary institutions will remain closed. We continue to support online teaching during this period. However, students in the transitional classes who have mandatory public examinations ahead of them will be permitted to resume for revision classes and examinations. The commencement date for this opening will be from August 3, 2020. All education establishments are to follow established public health guidelines and protocol for re-opening the schools for these categories of students.

He went on to add:

    SSS three and TEC three students are to start; for JSS3 we will wait for another one week or two before resumption. This permitted opening will be for only day schooling. No boarding activities are permitted during this time. School Authorities are expected to spend the period between now and the day of re-opening to put in place infrastructure, protocols, and essential items required to comply with all hygiene, safety, and physical distancing requirements.

The governor also mentioned that Primary Six pupils will be graded by their already recorded continuous assessment to pass over to secondary schools.

covid-19: US NEW IMMIGRATION GUIDELINES FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS


According to US government,in order for international students in the United States of America to remain in the country for fall 2020 (mid-August) semester, they must take in-person classes at their schools. Students who remain in the country but take entirely online courses may face “immigration consequences including, but not limited to, the initiation of removal proceedings”, the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has said.

“There will still be accommodations to provide flexibility to schools and nonimmigrant students, but as many institutions across the country reopen, there is a concordant need to resume the carefully balanced protections implemented by federal regulations”.

This applies to holders of F-1 and M-1 nonimmigrant visas, which allows nonimmigrant students to pursue academic and vocational coursework, respectively. This is really huge news because international students actually make up a significant percentage (1 million students, according to NPR) of the student population in the US, not to talk about the fact that international students pay the extra fees like the SEVIS.

During the 2018-19 session, international students alone, according to NPR, contributed $41 billion and supported 458,290 jobs.

This new regulation is one of the multiple actions the Trump administration has taken to restrict immigration in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

This means:

        International students on non-immigrant F-1 and M-1 visas cannot remain in the U.S. or legally enter the U.S. if their studies are entirely online.

        Students whose schools are online-only should “[transfer] to a school with in-person instruction to remain in lawful status.”

        Students at schools offering a mixture of in-person and online learning will be permitted to take some online courses and remain in the country, though the school must certify “that the student is not taking an entirely online course load this semester.”

        Students who remain in the U.S. while taking only online courses may face “immigration consequences” including “the initiation of removal proceedings.

        It also means that international students with health and safety concerns will still have to take at least some in-person classes in order to maintain visa status if their college is offering hybrid instruction.

        The rule will also apply to students whose course loads change mid-semester, with ICE noting that students who change course selections or are required to switch to online-only learning must notify the agency within 10 days.

        It will unnecessarily force thousands to travel to many locations around the world. Some returing to locations with poor data connection which will distrupt learning.

While the US is working on deporting international students because courses are moving online, Canada confirmed international students who couldn’t make it to Canada due to COVID-19 will still get a Post Graduate Work Permit even if courses are completed online.

Schools like Harvard and Princeton have shared that students will take only online classes in the coming fall session. What this means for the millions of students who will be affected by the move, we’ll have to wait and see. But, no doubt, several lives will be affected by this.

BENIN ROYAL MUSEUM: NIGERIA'S STOLEN ARTS ON ITS WAY BACK HOME


You mention the Benin Kingdom anywhere and its legendary art will somehow find its way into the conversation. Yet, somehow, not a lot of this art can be found in one place in the kingdom itself.

But that problem’s on its way to being solved.

In 2018, Nigeria announced plans for a new Benin Royal Museum that would permanently display historic art from the region, including the bronze sculptures plundered from the Benin palace by British troops in 1897 that have since found their way into European public collections.

Speaking on the importance of the museum, the governor of Edo State, Godwin Obaseki said:

     When you look at museums all over the world, there is one recurring thing. When you go to any African section of any museum in the world, in America, or elsewhere, you are likely to see a piece of artwork from the Benin Kingdom. What this tells you is that Edo State has the best representation of African arts globally. This singular opportunity we have can help us to foster and develop the creativity which has been part of us. That is the driving factor, and we believe that we can have such museums here at home of the same standard and quality so that people outside the world will not only come to see these things here but also appreciate the setting where these things were created several decades ago.

The fact that the looted artwork of the Benin Kingdom will soon have a home in Benin has been a source of excitement for a lot of people since the news broke.

Gregory Akenzua (Enogie of Evbobanosa) of the Benin royal family said,

     I am happy that we are making progress in the effort to give our people the opportunity to once more access our heritage that was looted.

Yet, things aren’t that simple.

Most notable is that the looted art will only be loaned to the museum, not returned. (You should also read this article by Tunde Phillips on Nigeria’s stolen art. And you should also sign this petition by Richard Akuson calling for the British Museum to return Nigeria’s stolen art.)

In 2018, a group named the Benin Dialogue Group (BDG), which comprises of European museums like the British Museum, Berlin’s Ethnology Museum, Vienna’s Weltmuseum and the National Museum of World Cultures in Leide, struck a deal that would allow “some of the most iconic pieces” to be contributed on a rotating basis to the Benin Royal Museum, according to The Art Newspaper.

A spokesman for the British Museum said:

    The key agenda item (at the October 2018 meeting) was how partners can work together to establish a museum in Benin City with a rotation of Benin works of art from a consortium of European museums. The museums in attendance have all agreed to lend artifacts to the Benin Royal Museum on a rotating basis, to provide advice as requested on building and exhibition design, and to cooperate with the Nigerian partners in developing training, funding, and a legal framework for the display in a new planned museum.

While this agreement represents a breakthrough for the BDG, which was formed in 2007 to address restitution claims what it simply means according to CNN is that the British will be returning the looted artwork of Benin City to Benin on loan instead of just giving the artwork back to the rightful owners.

Then there’s the fact that renowned British-Ghanaian architect David Adjaye has been contracted to design the museum.

Adjaye has already shared his vision for the museum with the Benin Dialogue Group, and has in a statement shared that Benin’s lost treasures are a subject close to the heart of the architect, stressing that the his experience and interest in Benin’s cultural heritage, both personally and professionally, demonstrates his commitment to supporting the group’s efforts “to ensure this history will have its place in Nigeria’s present and future,” the decision to have a Ghanaian architect design a Benin Royal Museum rankles.

A Nigerian architect, Yakubu Paul, in an article on Living Spaces, shared his displeasure at this fact:

    The irony is, as Benin fights Europe’s plans to “loan” back these artefacts that were stolen as against a total return, an imported Museum design to house these artefacts is a sell-out statement of our identity, a joke to our claim and places Benin at the mercy of Europe for its individuality.

While it’s easily explainable why the authorities would want a big name like David Adjaye to design such a historic project, it’s also easy to see why Nigerians would want to see someone home grown, instead. Someone with personal ties to the Benin soil, who will have some stake in it.

Still, we cannot wait to see how this story ends, and are looking forward to seeing the museum stand and Nigeria’s stolen art returned and displayed on Nigerian soil.

Photo Credit: n.moroti