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IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENT▪The Imo State University Teaching Hospital Orlu. ▪ Rehabilitated And Equipped By Governor...
11/09/2022

IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENT

▪The Imo State University Teaching Hospital Orlu.
▪ Rehabilitated And Equipped By Governor Hope Uzodimma

IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENTThe New Imo State House of Assembly complex rebuilt by Gov Hope Uzodimma. ▪Ready For Commi...
11/09/2022

IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENT

The New Imo State House of Assembly complex rebuilt by Gov Hope Uzodimma.
▪Ready For Commissioning

IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENTIMO STATE GOVERNMENT IS FOCUSING ON DEVELOPMENT•••• As President Mohammadu Buhari Visits I...
10/09/2022

IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENT

IMO STATE GOVERNMENT IS FOCUSING ON DEVELOPMENT

•••• As President Mohammadu Buhari Visits Imo State Again To Commission Projects.

By Prince Eze Ugochukwu

Here in Nigeria and all over the world, there are extreme pressures on dwindling resources accompanied by large-scale service delivery needs.

The abilities of governments to provide for her citizens and tackle governance challenges, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, is limited. Yet Governor Hope Uzodimma is tackling the challenges head-on despite obvious difficulties.

High on the priority of the administration of His Excellency Governor Hope Uzodimma is how to tackle decades of infrastructural decay and arrest the contrived insecurity in Imo State which has impeded growth.

As the previous period of upsurge in insecurity settles down, the Uzodimma administration is focusing on the recovery, reconstruction and rehabilitation of state assets coupled with civil service reforms in order to enhance service delivery for the benefit of the people. The positive results are there to be seen.

The coming to Imo State once again by President Buhari is not a jamboree. Rather to showcase increased service delivery and boost the shared prosperity programs and policies of the present administration.

More important than ever, the visit of Mr. President, will once again highlight the ability of the Imo State government under Governor Hope Uzodimma to effectively provide public goods, by addressing deficiencies and failures inherited from previous administrations.

For the first time in recent years, an effective and efficient administration has berthed in Imo State whose developmental projects will eventually culminate into an improved economy and
better standard of living among the citizens. The signs are emerging already and very visible.

The Governor Hope Uzodimma administration is methodically formulating and implementing policies which are promoting stability in the state. Once again, investors like Shell Petroluem are returning while national associations and organisations are now choosing Imo as destination for conference's and seminars.

All the developments being witnessed in Imo State stems from the maturity, strength, courage and ability of the Governor to accommodate public opinion in decision making, and implement such policies that meets the people's demand including good road networks, access to healthcare service delivery, improved agriculture for food production and adequate security for visitors and residents.

The formulation and implementation of friendly policies is attracting the attention of people both far and near, and that is why the President of Nigeria is coming again and
this is why Imo people are rolling out their drums to welcome the number one citizen of Nigeria.

Once again, welcome Mr. President.

Eze Ugochukwu is the Special Adviser to Imo State Governor on Public Enlightenment.

IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENT▪IMO STANDS UP - A LEGACY OF PROJECTS •••••Outpourings of love on Governor Hope Uzodimma a...
10/09/2022

IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENT

▪IMO STANDS UP - A LEGACY OF PROJECTS

•••••Outpourings of love on Governor Hope Uzodimma as President Buhari visits Imo State (yet again) to commission projects.

By Prince Eze Ugochukwu

WHAT THE PEOPLE ARE SAYING

•••••"Governor Uzodimma is steering Imo State through a historic developmental transition
Uzodimma's moral courage is an inspiration to many. He is carrying the dreams of millions of Imo people both at home and abroad. He is painstakingly justifying the responsibilities and duties incumbent upon his office as Governor. - Uzoma Emecheta.

•••••"Governor Uzodimma is a model of responsible behavior in governance...He has systematically and quietly navigated pitfalls while rebuilding dead and decayed infrastructures. Kudos to him. He is a silent achiever. -Ndubueze Mmirikwe

•••••"Governor Uzodimma is someone who understands how to close the infrastructure gap in order to ignite economic growth.
Imo State, under his watch, has witnessed a drive for infrastructural excellence and such intervention is attracting investors and tourists to the state once again. More and more national events like conferences, and seminars are holding in Imo State these days” ~Ahanonu Chikere Eugene

•••••"Uzodimma's projects are unprecedented in the recent history of Imo State. His projects are detailed, well delivered and beautiful to behold. He is courageous. - Onyebuchi Nwokonkwo.

••••• "I love the new Assembly complex. A welcome development, they should make sure there is good cooling system. Cooling system is also important considering the number of workers that will be there. Goodluck to the Governor.
- Jennifer Okoroma.

••••• "The pictures and videos I saw of the projects are good. Thats a giant stride. He must as well put measures in place for its maintenance. More powers to his elbow. - Precious Ekewuba.

•••••"I see the situation not from a political perspective but from a human one. I live here in Imo State. To be honest, tears came to my eyes when I saw the Orlu road. Tears of joy. -William Eziaku.

•••••""Uzodimma is doing things right. I’m not afraid to say it, not at my age. I’m already retired, I live in the village, I take care of my farm. The situation in Imo is now calming down. It will take time, but that’s what is happening, I’m convinced of it, peace is coming"
-Elder Ignatius Agbakwuru.

Trade between Africa and the Caribbean could increase by $1bn in five years, says an ITC report presented at the AfriCar...
10/09/2022

Trade between Africa and the Caribbean could increase by $1bn in five years, says an ITC report presented at the AfriCarribean Trade and Investment Forum ( ) in Barbados.

Policymakers admit that historical ties between Africa and the Caribbean have been neglected in the commercial sphere, but a major forum in Barbados charted a new path for economic relations.

 ’s   has been tightening its grip on multiple   sectors following in the footsteps of other African armies.Assembly of ...
10/09/2022

’s has been tightening its grip on multiple sectors following in the footsteps of other African armies.

Assembly of buses and bullet-proof , as well as construction are among the business areas where the National Enterprise Corporation (NEC), the commercial arm of the Ugandan army, is undertaking projects.

Only recently did the Ugandan military body, which is more than three decades old, aspire to emulate the business involvement of the likes of the Egyptian army.

🔵 Musinguzi Blanshe reports: https://lnkd.in/de_wvADe.

The NEC, owned by the Ugandan army military, is making huge losses but still expanding its business activities to a great extent.

10/09/2022
Guinea Conakry 🇬🇳 , Colonel Mamadi DOUMBOUYA honours Grand P with Diplomatic Passport for promoting the country "This mo...
10/09/2022

Guinea Conakry 🇬🇳 , Colonel Mamadi DOUMBOUYA honours Grand P with Diplomatic Passport for promoting the country

"This morning I received my diplomatic passport from the hands of the Head of State.

This diplomatic passport is part of the promotion of culture and Guinea as a destination.

Thank you to the Head of State Colonel Mamadi Doumbouya, to the people of Guinea for all the support from the beginning. And let the adventure begin 🇬🇳❤️

Presidency of the Republic of Guinea"Grand P Wrote via his verified page.

Buried for 50 years: Britain’s shameful role in the Biafran war | Frederick ForsythIt is a good thing to be proud of one...
10/09/2022

Buried for 50 years: Britain’s shameful role in the Biafran war | Frederick Forsyth

It is a good thing to be proud of one’s country, and I am – most of the time. But it would be impossible to scan the centuries of Britain’s history without coming across a few incidents that evoke not pride but shame. Among those I would list are the creation by British officialdom in South Africa of the concentration camp, to persecute the families of Boers. Add to that the Amritsar massacre of 1919 and the Hola camps set up and run during the struggle against Mau Mau.

The northern and western regions were swept by a pogrom in which thousands of Igbo were slaughtered
But there is one truly disgusting policy practised by our officialdom during the lifetime of anyone over 50, and one word will suffice: Biafra.

This referred to the civil war in Nigeria that ended 50 years ago this month. It stemmed from the decision of the people of the eastern region of that already riot-racked country to strike for independence as the Republic of Biafra. As I learned when I got there as a BBC correspondent, the Biafrans, mostly of the Igbo people, had their reasons.

The federal government in Lagos was a brutal military dictatorship that came to power in 1966 in a bloodbath. During and following that coup, the northern and western regions were swept by a pogrom in which thousands of resident Igbo were slaughtered. The federal government lifted not a finger to help. It was led by an affable British-educated colonel, Yakubu Gowon. But he was a puppet. The true rulers were a group of northern Nigerian colonels. The crisis deepened, and in early 1967 eastern Nigeria, harbouring about 1.8 million refugees, sought restitution. A British-organised conference was held in Ghana and a concordat agreed. But Gowon, returning home, was flatly contradicted by the colonels, who tore up his terms and reneged on the lot. In April the Eastern Region formally seceded and on 7 July, the federal government declared war.

Biafra was led by the Eastern Region’s Oxford-educated former military governor, “Emeka” Ojukwu. London, ignoring all evidence that it was Lagos that reneged on the deal, denounced the secession, made no attempt to mediate and declared total support for Nigeria.

I arrived in the Biafra capital of Enugu on the third day of the war. In London I had been copiously briefed by Gerald Watrous, head of the BBC’s West Africa Service. What I did not know was that he was the obedient servant of the government’s Commonwealth Relations Office (CRO), which believed every word of its high commissioner in Lagos, David Hunt. It took two days in Enugu to realise that everything I had been told was utter garbage.

I had been briefed that the brilliant Nigerian army would suppress the rebellion in two weeks, four at the most. Fortunately the deputy high commissioner in Enugu, Jim Parker, told me what was really happening. It became clear that the rubbish believed by the CRO and the BBC stemmed from our high commissioner in Lagos. A racist and a snob, Hunt expected Africans to leap to attention when he entered the room – which Gowon did. At their single prewar meeting Ojukwu did not. Hunt loathed him at once.

My brief was to report the all-conquering march of the Nigerian army. It did not happen. Naively, I filed this. When my report was broadcast our high commissioner complained to the CRO in London, who passed it on to the BBC – which accused me of pro-rebel bias and recalled me to London. Six months later, in February 1968, fed up with the slavishness of the BBC to Whitehall, I walked out and flew back to west Africa. Ojukwu roared with laughter and allowed me to stay. My condition was that, having rejected British propaganda, I would not publish his either. He agreed.

Harold Wilson
‘Weapons and ammunition poured in quietly as Whitehall and the Harold Wilson government lied and denied it all.’ Photograph: Wood/Getty Images
But things had changed. British covert interference had become huge. Weapons and ammunition poured in quietly as Whitehall and the Harold Wilson government lied and denied it all. Much enlarged, with fresh weapons and secret advisory teams, the Nigerian army inched across Biafra as the defenders tried to fight back with a few bullets a day. Soviet Ilyushin bombers ranged overhead, dropping 1,000lb bombs on straw villages. But the transformation came in July.

Missionaries had noticed mothers emerging from the deep bush carrying children reduced to living skeletons yet with bloated bellies. Catholic priests recognised the symptoms – kwashiorkor or acute protein deficiency.

That same July the Daily Express cameraman David Cairns ran off a score of rolls of film and took them to London. Back then, the British public had never seen such heartrending images of starved and dying children. When the pictures hit the newsstands the story exploded. There were headlines, questions in the House of Commons, demonstrations, marches.

As the resident guide for foreign news teams I became somewhat overwhelmed. But at last the full secret involvement of the British government started to be exposed and the lies revealed. Wilson came under attack. The story swept Europe then the US.

Donations flooded in. The money could buy food – but how to get it there? Around year’s end the extraordinary Joint Church Aid was born.

The World Council of Churches helped to buy some clapped-out freighter aircraft and gained permission from Portugal to use the offshore island São Tomé as a base. Scandinavian pilots and crew, mostly airline pilots, offered to fly without pay. Joint Church Aid was quickly nicknamed Jesus Christ Airlines. And thus came into being the world’s only illegal mercy air bridge.

On a visit to London in spring 1969 I learned the efforts the British establishment will take to cover up its tracks. Every reporter, peer or parliamentarian who had visited Biafra and reported on what he had seen was smeared as a stooge of Biafra – even the utterly honourable John Hunt, leader of the Everest expedition.

Throughout 1969 the relief planes flew through the night, dodging Nigerian MiG fighters, to deliver their life-giving cargoes of reinforced milk powder to a jungle airstrip. From there trucks took the sacks to the missions, the nuns boiled up the nutriments and kept thousands of children alive.

Karl Jaggi, head of the Red Cross, estimated that up to a million children died, but that at least half a million were saved. As for me, sometimes in the wee small hours I see the stick-like children with the dull eyes and lolling heads, and hear their wails of hunger and the low moans as they died.

What is truly shameful is that this was not done by savages but aided and assisted at every stage by Oxbridge-educated British mandarins. Why? Did they love the corruption-riven, dictator-prone Nigeria? No. From start to finish, it was to cover up that the UK’s assessment of the Nigerian situation was an enormous judgmental screw-up. And, worse: with neutrality and diplomacy from London it could all have been avoided.

Biafra is little discussed in the UK these days – a conflict overshadowed geopolitically by the Vietnam war, which raged at the same time. Yet the sheer nastiness of the British establishment during those three years remains a source of deep shame that we should never forget.

Frederick Forsyth is a former war correspondent and an author

A million children starved to death. I’m haunted by the images I saw there – and by the complicity of the Wilson government, says author Frederick Forsyth

Fallen from grace, abandoned by his courtiers, Marshal   Sese Seko, the “founding president” of  , died in Rabat, in a f...
10/09/2022

Fallen from grace, abandoned by his courtiers, Marshal Sese Seko, the “founding president” of , died in Rabat, in a foreign land, “following a long and painful illness”, as people used to say.

Megalomania, extravagant spending, collaboration with the ... After the death of the former president of Zaire, Philippe Gaillard retraces his career for us, with implacable lucidity: https://lnkd.in/ddPpFwRR.

Megalomania, extravagant spending, collaboration with the CIA… After the death of the former president of Zaire, Philippe Gaillard retraces his career for us.

*IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENT*Undergraduate Admissions for 2022/2023 Academic Session is ongoing now at KINGSLEY OZUMB...
09/09/2022

*IMO STATE PUBLIC ENLIGHTENMENT*

Undergraduate Admissions for 2022/2023 Academic Session is ongoing now at KINGSLEY OZUMBA MBADIWE UNIVERSITY (KOMU), IDEATO, IMO STATE.

To apply and for more information, kindly click here 👇

https://komu.edu.ng/admissions/instructions

Welcome to KOMU, the 2nd Imo State owned University and currently not affected by ASUU Strike!

 : To further put the records straight on what His Excellency, Senator Hope Uzodinma, Governor of Imo State,   said at t...
08/09/2022

: To further put the records straight on what His Excellency, Senator Hope Uzodinma, Governor of Imo State, said at the birthday ceremony of Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu on the 3rd of September, Arise Television will air his full speech at the event today, Thursday September 8th by 7.30pm.

Please Tune in.

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