Friday, 27 June 2014

6 people Dies In Early Morning Auto Crash

A ghastly motor accident occurred Friday morning on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Ogun State, western Nigeria, killing six people instantly and injuring at least four others.
The ghastly motor accident occurred around Kara Village, off OPIC Plaza, near Channels Television at about 8:15am.
Eyewitness said a tanker had broken down along the expressway road inward Ibafo without any caution sign placed before it to warn other motorists that it was stationary, adding thata driver of another truck approaching the broken down vehicle only discovered it was stationary after getting very close.
In the process of trying to avert an accident, the driver of the truck was said to have swerved to the other side and rammed into another vehicle while other oncoming vehicles also rammed into others, causing a multiple accident that resulted in the death of six people on the spot.
The accident led to traffic gridlock on the busy highway.
Spokesperson, National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, Ibrahim Farinloye toldP.M.NEWS that the accident occurred around 8:15 a.m.
He said the six dead bodies have been taken away from the accident scene and deposited at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, LUTH.
According to him, four people were injured and have been rushed to the hospital for treatment after officers of the Federal Road Safety Commission, FRSC, administered first aid treatment on them.
Large number of sympathisers were seen at the scene of the accident, while others wailed on seeing the dead bodies on the ground with blood all over the place.
source:PM news

Amazing fact about the brain

The brain has a capacity that is 500 times more than the Encyclopedia Britannica.
ASUP Strike: Polytechnic lecturers hold crucial NEC meeting

Union says its next NEC meeting would decide its next line of action.
The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics, ASUP, President, Chibuzor Asumogba, has stressed that the union was still on its nine-month old strike.
Mr. Asumogba spoke during the opening ceremony of the 77th National Executive Council meeting of the union holding at the Yaba College of Technology, Yabatech, in Lagos.
Mr. Asumogba said the NEC meeting was to discuss various issues affecting the union, not limited to the on-going strike. He added that the union would decide its next line of action concerning the strike after the meeting.
He also said that it was unfortunate that the Federal Government was not giving the polytechnic sector the deserved attention.
“We are still on strike; the NEC meeting will decide our next line of action,” he said.
The ASUP strike has been on since September 2013.
The Chairman, Governing Council of Yabatech, Ebenezer Babatope, however, appealed to ASUP to suspend its strike in the interest of the students.
Mr. Babatope who was represented by Shehu Agara, a member of the council, said, “Over the past nine months the sector has been paralysed as a result of strike by your union members; our students have been the most affected. The good news is that ASUP and the Federal Government have been negotiating to resolve the lingering crisis. I am certain that the negotiation will soon reach an amicable solution. It is my hope, however, that at the end of your deliberations, you will come out with workable solutions to some of the problems and challenges facing the system.”
He said the events of the recent past in the polytechnic sector had made it imperative for various stakeholders to continue to promote teaching and learning on campuses.
“It is indeed gratifying to note that ASUP, as a vital stakeholder in the sector, has been working assiduously with others to ensure growth and development of the polytechnic sector. Since the constitution of the governing council for the Federal polytechnics, the committee of council chairmen under my leadership has positioned itself to partner and give guidance and directive to the polytechnics. We will promote the standard of teaching and learning on campuses, improve the quality of staff and students and ensure the prevalence of orderliness and peace in our campuses,” he said.
Mr. Babatope assured the union of the support of the committee of council chairmen, in partnership with the Minister of Education and the Executive Secretary of the National Board for Technical Education.
“We will protect the integrity of the polytechnic sector and uphold the vision of the government to provide quality education and enduring standard. Our priorities at all times will be to confront the teething problems confronting us as a sector in partnership with the various stakeholders in the sector,” Mr. Babatope said.
The Rector, Yabatech, Margaret Ladipo, urged the union to temper their decisions with considerations of the students.
“As you go into this NEC, I urge you to take decisions for our children, who, over the past nine months, have lost a useful time span in their lives that can never be regained. I am optimistic that very soon we will all go back to our respective duties. ASUP is without doubt pivotal to the development of the polytechnic sector in Nigeria. As a responsive and responsible union, you play vital roles in promoting and ensuring virile industrial peace and harmony in the polytechnic system,” she said.
The union’s demands include the release of the white paper on Visitation Panel to Federal Polytechnics and implementation of the NEED Assessments of Nigerian Polytechnics.
ASUP also wants an improvement in the state of government-owned polytechnics, monotechnics and colleges of technology.
The union wants a full implementation of the Consolidated Tertiary Institution Salary Structure (CONTISS 15) and a stop to alleged discrimination against holders of Higher National Diploma.
The Federal Government, among other things, has offered to pay N40 billion to polytechnic and colleges of education lecturers as CONTISS 15 arrears in installments.
The government offered to pay the first installment in March and the second in September, but the unions turned it down, insisting on full payment at once. When the unions eventually agreed, the government said an agency of government, the Salaries and Wages Commission, opposed the payment of the arrears.
(NAN)
SOURCE; Primum times

Saturday, 24 May 2014

Safety of our pride (bring back our girls) poem by Akindele Bode






Safety of our pride (bring back our girls)
Where is our dream?
Where is our future?                                                             
Where are those that will be the future solution?
The ones that will be the future mothers
The ones that will raise the mighty men

They have been abducted
Oh! They have been kidnapped
There kidnap washes away our hopes
There kidnap makes the future bleak.

O ye wicked abductors!
Ye wicked bloodsuckers!
Thee without a heart of conscience
Thee who kill without just course
Bring us back our girls
We need them alive
Bring us back our future.

Authorities, play your part
Ensure the safety of our future
Ensure the safety of our pride
O ye authority!
Do the best you can do.
Our lives are precious to us
Do not play politics with our lives
Apprehend the evil perpetrators
So that our confidence in you can once be strengthened
Do the best you can do
So that the people can look up to you and smile.
So you can rest in the afterlife.
                                                            Written by Bode Akindele.
                                                searchbode@yahoo.com         BBM ID: 7C7EF30A
A poem written by Akindele olabode (owner of the blog) to serve as contribution to call for the freedom of our girls who were abducted by the terrorist group. i  hope this serve as a wake up call to the artist, writers and publishers all over the world as we use our talents and writings to ensure the freedom of our girls.