Wife of the President, Mrs Aisha Buhari was yesterday awarded the ‘Personality of the year award for 2017 by Vanguard Newspaper. Some officials from the news media company visited her and presented her with the award.
Category: Lifestyle
K1 Meets Osinbajo, Discusses State of The Nation
Blessing Okagbare Breaks 22-year-old Record
Blessing Okagbare-Ighoteghonor made a big comeback at the weekend with an impressive 22.04seconds run at the 2018 Wes Kittley Invitational in Texas.
Her feat has erased the 200m women African record held by Mary Onyali-Omagbemi since August 1996.
Okagbare-Ighoteghonor, who spent most of last season nursing an injury after going under the knife, became the undisputed Nigerian fastest woman having the 10.79seconds women 100m national record under her belt.
The athlete will remain in Texas to have a go at the 100m and it remains to be seen if she can also crack the African record held by Ivorian sprinter Murielle Ahoure since 2016.
“We’re extremely glad Okagbare is back to her best form. Certainly we will see what happens at the African championships in Asaba,” said former AFN president, Solomon Ogba yesterday.
Video: Why I Want To Be Ekiti Governor – Babafemi Ojudu
Linda Brown Who Ended US School Segregation Dies
Linda Brown, who was at the center of the 1950s court battle leading to the desegregation of US public schools, died Monday, the organisation that spearheaded the landmark legal effort said.
The US Supreme Court ruling on the Brown v. Board of Education case in 1954 was a key moment in the movement to end widespread discriminatory practices against black people in the United States, but discrimination, racism and racial tensions still plague the country more than 60 years later.
“Linda Brown, who was one of the young students at the heart of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case, passed away today at age 76,” said a statement from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People’s Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF).
Brown “is one of that special band of heroic young people who, along with her family, courageously fought to end the ultimate symbol of white supremacy — racial segregation in public schools,” the LDF’s president Sherrilyn Ifill said.
“She stands as an example of how ordinary schoolchildren took center stage in transforming this country,” she said.
“It was not easy for her or her family, but her sacrifice broke barriers and changed the meaning of equality in this country.”
While the NAACP said Brown was 76 at the time of her death, her age was elsewhere reported to have been 75.
The organization did not provide details on what caused her death.
In the early 1950s, Oliver Brown sought to enroll his daughter in an all-white school near the family’s home in Topeka, Kansas, but was told she had to go to an all-black school that was farther away.
Brown turned to the courts for justice in a case that was part of an anti-segregation push by the NAACP.
The Kansas case was combined with others from Delaware, South Carolina and Virginia as well as the capital, Washington, when they were appealed to the US Supreme Court, becoming the ground-breaking Brown v. Board of Education.
– ‘An incredible impact’ –
On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that segregation was unconstitutional.
But segregation was far from over despite the court ruling, and integration was bitterly opposed by some whites.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower deployed American soldiers when the Arkansas governor blocked African-American students from being integrated into an all-white high school in the state’s capital Little Rock in 1957.
Though segregation was illegal in schools after the Brown v. Board ruling, it nonetheless continued because of opposition from racists as well as due to the prevalence of separate black and white neighborhoods, which led to de facto segregation in local schools.
Busing students from their home neighborhoods to schools in other areas was begun to address the situation, but that move was still being contested more than 20 years after Brown v. Board.
Schools were not the only segregated areas in America: there were also separate restaurants, bathrooms and water fountains for blacks and whites in parts of the country — something protesters held sit-ins to oppose as part of the civil rights movement.
Even now, racial tensions continue to plague America — where black people have faced hundreds of years of discrimination and slavery — and African-Americans still make up a disproportionate percentage of the country’s incarcerated and poor.
Brown, who was just a girl when the court case unfolded, became a school teacher later in life, taught piano lessons and worked with the Brown Foundation, an organization that seeks to promote the legacy of the case, according to its website.
Kansas Governor Jeff Colyer paid tribute to her in a Twitter post on Monday.
“Linda Brown’s life reminds us that sometimes the most unlikely people can have an incredible impact and that by serving our community we can truly change the world,” Colyer wrote.
And the American Civil Liberties Union rights group hailed the impact of the court case.
“The Brown decision made America a beacon of hope to the rest of the world; it taught us that we could, through the rule of law, end a kind of oppression and race-based caste system,” the group said on Twitter.
“Today we honor Linda Brown and all the fights we have left to win.”
Osinbajo Receives Reports From NEC Sub-Committees
Vice President Professor Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, presided over a Safe Schools projects Committee of the National Economic Council, NEC, set up last week by the Council to address issues around safety in public schools around the country. The committee, composed of six state governors, held its first meeting yesterday at the Presidential Villa
The Vice President Professor Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, also received the report of the National Economic Council Technical Sub-Committee on the Herdsmen/Farmers clashes in parts of the country. The Sub-Committee which consists State Governors is chaired by the Ebonyi State Governor David Nweze Umahi
Picture Credit: Novo Lilian Isioro
How Russians Broke News of MMM’s Sergei Mavrodi’s Death …Dug into His Dirty Past
The Moscow Times has dug up the News behind the hypes, from the archives, on MMM’s Sergei Mavrodi, the notorious scammer that many Nigerians will not forget in a hurry:
One of Russia’s most famous crooks, Sergei Mavrodi, died of a heart attack on Sunday at the age of 62. A symbol of the “Wild 90s” which followed the Soviet Union’s collapse, Mavrodi persuaded millions of Russians to put their savings into his MMM pyramid scheme — convinced at least in part by MMM’s memorable television ads featuring everyman Lyonya Golubkov that became the first post-Soviet meme.
After trying his hand at being a State Duma deputy, in 1996 he ran for president. In 2003, he was arrested and sentenced to 4 ½ years in prison for fraud.
The article below was originally published on Aug. 6, 1994. It was written by Steve Liesman.
It was like a scene from The Wizard of Oz. When the curtain was pulled and the wizard revealed, Sergei Mavrodi, head of the MMM empire, turned out to be less than a daunting sight.
Not very tall and a little pudgy in the jowls, the reclusive man at the controls of Russia’s largest financial scandal surfaced this week as a shrewd moneymaker who likes butterflies and red foreign cars, but lived a lifestyle that seems a pale shadow of the image of high-flying biznesmeni.
While he ran a scheme that raked in billions of rubles and recently was rated the sixth wealthiest man in Russia, Mavrodi lived spartanly in a single room of his spacious but shabby apartment on the Moscow River. Boxes of dried insects, butterflies and a dead bat mounted under glass hung on the walls.
The only overt signs of his wealth were several foreign cars parked in his apartment complex’s driveway and a $60,000 satellite dish that a reporter from the daily Segodnya newspaper spied in his apartment.
After six months of inaction, the government formally arrested Mavrodi on Friday for hiding from tax officials and for “failing to submit to the order of authorities to open the door,” according to a spokesman with the tax police.
Authorities opened a criminal case against Mavrodi on Thursday for concealing billions of rubles of profits from tax officials in a company called Invest-Consulting. The arrest, following a dramatic raid on his apartment Thursday by armed Interior Ministry troops and tax police, brought to a climax the MMM debacle in which millions of Russians invested in a pyramid scheme.
While the arrest was unusual, the crash of the scheme and the allegations of impropriety were not. Mavrodi has repeatedly started up and then walked away from successful ventures, all the while being dogged by charges of tax violations.
“He was quite a professional businessman who always moved into the most profitable niche of the market,” said Maxim Selivanov, the general director of Steepler, a large computer dealer. But he said Mavrodi was never interested in any particular business, only in the process of making money.
“You can make money nicely, but he makes it crudely,” said Selivanov. “I wouldn’t do business with them.”
Alexei Blinkov, who works in a photo shop on the ground floor of Mavrodi’s apartment in the Frunzenskaya area, said Mavrodi had started a computer sales cooperative in the late 1980s.
Government’s Approach To Nigeria’s Challenges Not Convincing – KSM Nigeria
Worried by increasing insecurity and despondency in the nation, the Catholic Knights of the order of St. Mulumba Nigeria have called on government to move swiftly to arrest the current state of affairs and reassure all Nigerians not only in words but in deeds that it caters for all.
President Buhari Receives Martin Luther King’s Jnr Family
President Muhammadu Buhari, SSAP Hon Abike Dabiri Erewa, Dr Mrs Naomi Barbara King, Mr. Baba Onabanjo, Amb Erika Bennett and other members of African-American Human Activist Late Martin Luther Jnr during the conferment of The First Black History Month National Black Excellence and Exceptional African Leadership Award 2018 at the Council Chambers in Abuja.
Photo Credit: Sunday Aghaeze
President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday at the State House received Martin Luther King Jnr’s family. He was also conferred with the 1st Black History Month National Black Excellence and Exceptional African Leadership Award 2018.