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#Nigeria Kano seeks husbands for 1,000 widows, divorcees

• Divorcee Altine Abdullahi is among 1,000 women who have turned to the Kano state government to find them a spouse.            Photo: Los Angeles Times Divorcee Altine Abdullahi is among 1,000 women who have turned to the Kano state government to find them a spouse. Photo: Los Angeles Times

Kano State, where the number of divorcees is cause for concern, the government is acting as matchmaker to help ex-wives and widows find Mr. Right.

He should be tall. Kind, of course. And generous, especially when it comes to buying all those little trinkets that a woman desires.

“A little handsome,” but not too much, says Altine Abdullahi. “It’s a danger.”

In northern Nigeria, it is a truth almost universally acknowledged that a woman of a certain age, and in a certain situation in life, must be in want of a husband.

But if the woman in that certain situation is a divorcee or a widow, finding a husband isn’t easy, even without the shopping list of desirable qualities ticked off by Abdullahi (a divorcee).

That’s why 1,000 women have thrown their fates into the hands of the Kano state government, which will act as their matchmaker. The religious authority in the Muslim-dominated state, the Hisbah Board, has embarked on a massive husband hunt for divorcees and widows. The first 100 women, including Abdullahi, are to be wed in coming weeks.

“I’m getting married,” she says. “God willing!”

She has no idea who her husband will be. But, like the practical character in a Jane Austen novel, she’s no romantic.

“I know love is something, but …” she pauses wistfully. “Love doesn’t really last.”

Abdullahi, 44, preens like a fine, glossy bird, creaming her plump lips, powdering her face, fluttering her eyelashes girlishly. Her smiling face, with perfect white teeth, peers out from dozens of photographs stacked on her desk and decking the wall of her office, where she heads the organization Voice of Widows, Divorcees and Orphans Assn. of Nigeria. Her skin is clear, her eyes bright, her silver bangles jangle happily, yet she complains that she looks “tired.”

“Beautiful? You should have seen me when I was young. Then I was beautiful.”

The state-as-matchmaker plan came after Abdullahi made an emotional plea on Kano radio for husbands for desperate widows and divorcees.

In Nigeria, women of marriageable age who remain single are seen as suspect, their respectability questioned. Throughout many parts of the Muslim world, divorced and widowed women are forced to go home to their fathers or brothers and are viewed as a burden and failure. Or they live on the edges of society, shunned and forced into begging or prostitution to support their children.

Sometimes the brother of a dead man will marry the widow and support her and her children. But many divorced women find it difficult to remarry.

In Kano, the state capital, there’s a sense of crisis about the number of divorcees, although statistics aren’t available to back up widespread perceptions of an increase in failed marriages. The problem sharpened here after Kano state and 11 other predominantly Muslim states adopted sharia, or Islamic law, between 1999 and 2001, allowing men to divorce unilaterally simply by thrice stating “I divorce you,” an act that cannot be undone with a simple change of mind.

“With growing cases of divorce among couples, the state has reached an unenviable record in the country. In any social gathering and various fora, the most common discussion in the metropolis is the growing rate at which divorce is taking place,” said a February article in the Nigerian newspaper Leadership.

An everyday quarrel can easily escalate into divorce, says Abdullahi, whose divorce happened as quickly as a car crash, in a moment of heat, instantly regretted by both sides.

The row came after her husband took a third wife who was demanding more nights with him. When he conveyed the demand to Abdullahi (as second wife), she told him it was women’s business. He should send the third wife to her.

He refused. She insisted. He said, “Be careful.”

She insisted. He told her to leave. A few more sharp words and before anyone could stop it, the couple were divorced.

“I started crying. Even he started crying too. We cried together. He said, ‘Just go back to your room and forget about the divorce.’” But she couldn’t. Under sharia law, she says, she cannot go back to him unless she remarries and her husband either dies or her new marriage ends in divorce.

She left their four children with him, as is often the case. (“He treats them very well. So why should I worry myself about them?”) She has seen them once since, in 2005. She left, certain he’d miss her and her cooking, especially his favorite dish, spaghetti bolognese, made from a recipe she’d found in a magazine.

That was 12 years ago.

“I know he misses me.” Still, she says, 40 days can now pass without him entering her mind.

After the divorce, Abdullahi decided to put herself through law school, but being smart didn’t compensate for her lack of a secular education.

“I didn’t understand a word the lecturer said.”

In 2008, the state government’s religious Social Reorientation Program, A Daidaita Sahu, meaning “straighten your lines” in the local Hausa language, urged men to be tolerant of trivial marital problems. One reason for the state’s high divorce rate, the government found, was “the misapplication of power by men to divorce women.”

Many Kano men, who see obedience as an important wifely trait, don’t want to marry divorcees, Abdullahi contends.

“Nobody comes to us. They say we are not disciplined,” Abdullahi says. “We challenge that. They’re our men and if they don’t marry us, who will?”

The Hisbah Board is subjecting all marriage applicants, male and female, to medical and HIV tests, and requires each to fill out a form, providing details of their social “status,” education, likes and dislikes and an outline of what he or she expects in a spouse.

Husbands will pay a modest bride price, but no less than one gram of gold (which Abdullahi wants to go to the bride but usually goes to her family). The state will also pay all wedding expenses.

About 2,000 men have applied to be screened as potential husbands. For men, it looks like an affordable way to get hitched, with the bride price low, the trouble of haggling with the bride’s parents averted and the wedding paid for.

Even members of the Hisbah Board have recently taken extra wives “to set a good example,” board official Nabahani Usman said. (The board sees it as an act of charity and kindness to take in an extra wife.)

For many of the divorcees and widows, the attraction is the protection offered by the board, which will make sure any future divorce isn’t trivial.

Some critics of the marriage plan, such as writer Ayisha Osori, argue that its great flaw is in giving false hope of success in marriage to women when society’s views of wives remain problematic.

“Absolutely nothing has changed. The men have not changed, the state has not changed, and the realities of the women — right where society wants them to be — have also not changed,” Osori wrote in Leadership. “And so the cycle continues, with women in and out of the homes and beds of men who can discard them as quickly as it takes to say talaq,” she added, referring to the Islamic term for divorce.

Abdullahi met recently with Aminu Daurawa, head of the Hisbah Board, who promised to personally select the best available man for her.

He’d better find someone who appreciates a bold, charismatic woman.

Abdullahi’s outspoken ways have been controversial. In 2009 she planned a “million divorcee march” in the streets of Kano to protest the dire situation of many divorcees and widows. Tongues wagged over such a scandalous idea. Men — and women — condemned it.

She was summoned by the Hisbah Board, forced to cancel the protest and had to promise never to talk about it again. She was chastened but didn’t give up fighting.

“I’m a strong woman. I got my strength from my father.”

These days, Abdullahi looks anything but downtrodden. She adores fashion (which can be quite an expensive habit, even in Kano) and goes a little starry-eyed when listing the hoped-for qualities of her soon-to-be-found husband. She may not be romantic but can’t help dreaming big.

“I want a husband who will get me anything I want in my life. It’s not important to be rich. But I don’t want poor.”

And if he’s cruel, miserly, bad-tempered, violent or simply doesn’t suit, she will reject him.

“If he can take good care of me, fine, I’ll stick with him. But if not, I’ll find my own way.”

But can she? The Hisbah Board’s determination to save all but the most dire marriages may cut both ways. If she (or any of the women) doesn’t like the board’s version of Mr. Right, she may be stuck.

Source: The Nation

Deola Sagoe’s estranged husband set to remarry

BENEATH her happy-go-lucky façade, talented fashion designer, Deola Sagoe, is not exactly a happy woman at the moment.

Her former husband, Kofi is allegedly in a new romance with a new woman simply identified as Nike. And those who should know informed SC that marriage might be on the cards for the Ghanian-born young man. Since their marriage crashed three years ago, Deola has not been linked with any man, perhaps hoping that she would resolve her differences with her estranged  beau. Insiders, however, aver that their love affair is not likely to be rekindled. Kofi Sagoe has moved on with his life and is currently enjoying a new romance.

So bitter was the ex-couple’s separation that Kofi was brusquely booted out as Managing Director of Toyota Nigeria Limited owned by his father-in-law, Chief Ade Ojo. Kofi later moved out of their matrimonial home and filed for divorce. Few months later, he became the Country Managing Director of SUBARU Nigeria where Yinka Fisher is chairman.

 

Source- The Nation

Deep pockets, deeper ambitions by Sylvia Pennington

The DeepFlight Super Falcon submersible.

Undersea dreams

The DeepFlight Super Falcon submersible.

  • The DeepFlight Super Falcon submersible.
  • Tom Perkins pictured beside the DeepFlight Super Falcon submersible.
  • James Cameron emerges from the Deepsea Challenger submersible after his successful solo dive in the Mariana Trench, the deepest part of the ocean.
  • Filmmaker James Cameron emerging from the hatch of Deepsea Challenger during testing of the submersible in Jervis Bay, south of Sydney, Australia.
  • Sir Richard Branson and explorer Chris Welsh (L) attend a press conference in Newport Beach, California in 2011 to announce plans to take a solo piloted submarine to the deepest points in each of the wolrd's five oceans.
  • Late Swiss deep sea explorer and inventor Jacques Piccard posing on the deck of his pocket submarine F.A Forelon the Lake of Geneva near Cully on June 31, 1995.

While jet skies and motorbikes satisfy the average bloke’s need for petrol-powered thrills, the uber-rich are sinking to greater depths to get theirs.

The recreational submarine has become the boy-toy of choice for a swag of adventure-seeking Forbes rich list fellas including Sir Richard Branson, the Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich and the Silicon Valley mogul Tom Perkins.

Branson has turned his attention away from racing into space to exploring the mystery of what lies beneath. The Virgin founder plans to take his self-piloted mini-sub 20,000 leagues down, to the deepest part of each of the world’s five oceans, beginning with the Puerto Rico Trench in the Atlantic, later this year.

Hollywood royalty is in on the act as well. The Titanic director, James Cameron, first went below the waterline in 1997 in a former Russian military submersible to film his blockbuster. He returned to the watery depths in March this year to complete the first solo voyage to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, a 10-kilometre deep ditch off Guam in the western Pacific.

For some others, the sub is an add-on purchase; something to throw on the back of the super-yacht before setting sail on the high seas. On Abramovich’s $1 billion super-yacht Eclipse, the world’s largest at nearly 170 metres, the submarine jostles for room with two helicopter pads, two swimming pools and bunks for 20 guests.

Submersible prices start at about $US750,000 ($724,900) for entry-level craft and soon rise into seven figures for customised models; a snip compared with the nine- and ten-figure price tags of the big boats.

The editor-in-chief at Britain’s online charter service SuperYachts.com, Ben Roberts, said the inclusion of a private submersible could give luxury voyages a fillip.

“Vessels with submarines on board often receive a lot of attention on the charter market and it’s understandable as to why.

“Super yachts offer an untold amount of luxurious freedom to their owners … but imagine having the ability to travel both across the sea and under it; exploring the abyss of an unknown world, like Jacques Cousteau with friends or guests, on the perfect personal cruise.”

For the octogenarian venture capitalist Perkins, a former Hewlett-Packard board member and one-time husband of the romantic novelist Danielle Steel, it’s this sense of liberty that keeps sending him down for more.

Perkins’s latest yacht, Dr No, has been retrofitted as a carrier for his DeepFlight Super Falcon submersible, which he has already tested off Mexico, the Virgin Islands and in the South Pacific. “I love scuba diving, however scuba does not allow you to cover the depth and range of the DeepFlight Super Falcon submersible,” he says.”The fact that [it] is flown like a plane gives you a marvellous freedom of accessing three-dimensional space that you cannot get otherwise.”

Designed to dive to between 100 metres and 300 metres, recreational submersibles offer a relaxed view of the depths.

Perkins says his sub has research as well as recreational functions – he plans to use it to study the behaviour of whales and other large ocean animals.

For those whose budget does not stretch to a personal submarine, a super yacht to store it on, or the four-person crew needed for launch and recovery, a San Francisco submersible designer provides the chance to get in the pilot’s seat for a fraction of the price.

Hawkes Ocean Technologies offers one, two and three-day underwater “flight schools” in locations including the Bahamas, Mexico, Jordan and Lake Tahoe on the California/Nevada border. The three-day course costs $US15,000.

“The owners we have sold submersibles to have been interested in piloting the sub themselves but they also train their boat crew or resort crew to pilot the sub so there are multiple pilots,” the Hawkes marketing chief, Karen Hawkes, says.

-The Sydney Morning Herald.

Frequent-flying females

Hotels need to do much more than put skirt-hangers in closets to woo the female traveller. 

Hotels need to do much more than put skirt-hangers in closets to woo the female traveller.

On your next business trip, take a good look around the airport lounge and in the aircraft’s business class cabin. Chances are you’ll find around one passenger in three is a woman.

Take the same snap poll at your hotel of choice and the numbers should take similar shape.

So why does it sometimes seem that airlines and hotels are ignoring a third of their market?

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According to Roy Morgan Research, 35 per cent of Australia’s estimated 2.1 million domestic business travellers – people who’ve made at least one business trip by air within Australia in the last 12 months – are women.

Women also represent 31 percent of Australia’s half-million international business travellers.

A Cornell University report claims that while female businesspeople expect to be treated equally to men, their travel needs are not the same.

“Given the dramatic increase in women business travelers, addressing the needs of this market segment has become increasingly critical for hotels” says Judi Brownell, from Cornell’s School of Hotel Administration.

“Women are developing a clear and consistent message about the need to feel safe, comfortable, empowered, and pampered.”

Brownell says hotels need to do much more than put skirt-hangers in closets to woo the female traveller.

Up in the air

There are some interesting trends in gearing travel towards the female flyer.

Virgin Australia was one of the first airlines in the world to install a ‘Ladies Only’ bathroom in the business class cabin of on its Boeing 777s.

“The Ladies Only bathroom provides additional space and lighting and is valuable when wanting to present a fresh face on arrival after a long haul flight” explains Alison Chalmer, Virgin Australia’s General Manager of Product.

And while a handful of airlines are moving towards unisex inflight amenity kits, Virgin’s female amenity kits for international business class include make-up wipes and a hairbrush.

Another smart touch is the inclusion of a mirror for each seat in Cathay Pacific‘s new business class.

“The mirror is a little touch we added during passenger testing” says Alex McGowan, Cathay Pacific’s Head of Product.

“Ladies said that it would be nice if they could do a little touch-up, and men said that it would be nice if the ladies weren’t doing their makeup in the bathrooms!”

Hotels are also starting to think about female business travellers as more than a person who ticks the ‘Ms’ box on the checkin form.

The Pan Pacific at San Francisco offers female guests a discreet security escort from the lobby to their room.

Wyndham and Loews hotels have set aside ‘networking tables’ in hotel restaurants for solo women who prefer to dine with others rather than sit alone.

And in typically glam style, W Hotels’ ‘Wonder Woman’ packages include three lip glosses, a signature fragrance, black mascara, a silk eye mask and free cocktail.

The bloke-free hotel floor

Some hotels are even opening women-only floors from which all men – not just guests but male porters and room service staff – are barred.

“Women-only floors can be a good idea in cities where women may feel vulnerable when travelling alone” suggests Suzi Dafnis, Community Director of the Australian Businesswomen’s Network.

“If that choice was available to me, I’d probably take it” Dafnis says. “I don’t know any woman that would say no to a room with high-powered hair dryers, a good quality cosmetic mirror and lighting, beautiful bath salts or healthier options on the menu.

“London, Vancouver, Singapore and New York – four cities that where hotels have this feature – don’t strike me as cities where it’d be out of a sense of safety that women would choose to stay in a women-only floor.”

Dafnis also suggests that “Australian standards are also such that safety wouldn’t be the main motivator.”

A business travel survey by the UK’s Barclaycard indicated that only 24 per cent of female business travellers wanted women-only floors, with improved gyms being a higher priority.

That can also include in-room fitness gear for women who’d rather not visit the hotel gym.

Some Hilton and Marriott hotels let you borrow low-tech workout equipment such as mats and weights, while Westin’s dedicated Workout Rooms come with your choice of a treadmill or stationary bike plus extras such as dumb-bells, a yoga mat, Swiss ball, jump rope and even fitness DVDs.

Hong Kong’s Metropark hotel in Wanchai boasts a women-only ‘She’ floor where the rooms are decorated along female lines with ‘themes’ of flowers and ballet and Thann cosmetics.

But women-only floors have met with mixed results as well as mixed response.

In early 2011 Brisbane’s Portal Hotel decreed its fifth floor would be a ‘man-free zone’.

Each of the 11 rooms was stocked with fresh flowers and candles, female toiletries like a cleanser and face mask, hair straighteners and magazines such as Madison, Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar.

There was even a ”Pamper Bar’: think of a mini bar stocked with organic beauty products instead of booze!

While the concept appears to have been well received by guests, the doors to the female-only floor were thrown open to men (and the raft of women’s touches scrapped) when the Portal was rebranded as part of the boutique Diamant chain.

Copenhagen’s Bella Sky Hotel, a conference hotel in the city’s Orestad district, faced legal action last year when a court ruling by the Danish Gender Equality Board decreed that its women-only floor was discriminatory and therefore illegal.

“We have 814 other rooms, and there are 20 reserved for women. That means there are 794 rooms for everyone” said hotel chief Anders Dueland, who has flouted the ruling and continues to keep the ‘Bella Dona’ floor as a haven solely for female guests who value the scented rooms with flowers, and bathrooms fitted with “spacious showers, lots of mirrors and large hair-dryers”.

“In Denmark, there are running races reserved for women, there are bicycle races reserved for women, there are pools where the changing rooms are just for women or just for men” Dueland argues. “There are toilets just for women. Is that discrimination?”

How good are airlines and hotels at catering for women business travellers? And are women-only floors really discrimination or a better way to cater specifically for their needs?

David Flynn is a business travel expert and editor of Australian Business Traveller.

Twitter: @AusBT

Rihanna shows off her killer curves in a fringed bikini as she takes to a paddle board in Hawaii.

Rihanna raised the temperature on the beach in Hawaii this weekend by parading around in a fringed black two piece that showed off her fit figure to perfection.

She paired the itty bitty bikini with a cowboy hat, large hoop earrings and several bracelets this weekend.

The You Da One singer was even snapped carrying what appeared to be several cups of beer and was later spotted enjoying a round of drinks with her friends.

You da one: Rihanna showed off her incredibly toned figure in a black two piece on Friday in HawaiiYou da one: Rihanna showed off her incredibly toned figure in a black two piece on Friday in Hawaii

Rihanna soaked up the sun while walking around the shore to the delight of onlookers.

 She then climbed on a surf board and paddled around the waters of the Pacific Ocean while balancing a cup in one hand.
Surf's up: The singer grabbed a surf board and paddled around the Pacific OceanSurf’s up: The singer grabbed a surf board and paddled around the Pacific Ocean

Soaking up the Hawaiian sun: The singer paraded around the shore to the delight on onlookers
Soaking up the Hawaiian sun: The singer paraded around the shore to the delight on onlookers

Soaking up the Hawaiian sun: The singer paraded around the shore to the delight on onlookers

 

Drink time: Rihanna was spotted balancing a platter of what appeared to be cups of beer on her surf boardDrink time: Rihanna was spotted balancing a platter of what appeared to be cups of beer on her surf board

Join in the fun: The party of three seemed to be having a great time on their sunny breakJoin in the fun: The party of three seemed to be having a great time on their sunny break

The Barbadian beauty enjoyed a little down time in the Aloha State after travelling to the island of Oahu to promote her new movie Battleship, which is set to sail into theatres on May 18.

On Saturday she joined the cast and crew of the film in Pearl Harbor for a photo call.

Raising a glass: The singer and her friends indulged in a round of drinksRaising a glass: The singer and her friends enjoyed a round of drinks

What's in the cup? Rihanna grabbed one of the beverages and headed toward the shoreWhat’s in the cup? Rihanna grabbed one of the beverages and headed toward the shore

 

Leggy lady: The singer showed off her perfect pins throughout her day at the beach
Leggy lady: The singer showed off her perfect pins throughout her day at the beach

Leggy lady: The singer showed off her perfect pins throughout her day at the beach

Picture perfect: This snap looks like it is from a postcard to promote Hawaii as a getawayPicture perfect: This snap looks like it is from a postcard to promote Hawaii as a getaway

 

Riding the waves: Rihanna ditched the paddle and used her hands to move around the waterRiding the waves: Rihanna ditched the paddle and used her hands to move around the water

The singer was snapped posing with her co-stars Alexander Skarsgard, Taylor Kitsch and Brooklyn Decker, director Peter Berg and Lieutenant Colonel Greg Gadson, a U.S. Army veteran in front of the Battleship Missouri Memorial.

The Missouri was the last battleship built by the United States, and was the site of Japan’s surrender which ended World War II.

Enjoying her time in paradise: Rihanna could not stop smiling during her visit to the beachEnjoying her time in paradise: Rihanna could not stop smiling during her visit to the beach

 

Posed up: The singer appeared to be striking a pose for the camerasPosed up: The singer appeared to be striking a pose for the cameras

Slowly slowly: Rihanna was not shy of providing a rear view as she attempted water sports
Slowly slowly: Rihanna was not shy of providing a rear view as she attempted water sports

Slowly slowly: Rihanna was not shy of providing a rear view as she attempted water sports

 

Cracking up: The singer enjoyed a smile and a laugh with her friendsCracking up:  Rihanna enjoyed a smile and a laugh with her friends

Barbadian beauty: She socialised with fellow vacationers in the waterBarbadian beauty: She socialised with fellow vacationers in the water

As for the movie Battleship, it revolves around a huge battle between aliens and a fleet of U.S. Navy warships.

Rihanna is also enjoying a bit of down time after shooting a new video for her single Where Have You Been.

Familiar face? The star chatted to a young fanFamiliar face? The star chatted to a young fan

Full service: The singer got a little help with her refills even though she was barely on the shore Full service: The singer got a little help with her refills even though she was barely on the shore

Get stuck in: The performer indicated how she got her fabulous figure as she stayed active
Get stuck in: The performer indicated how she got her fabulous figure as she stayed active

Get stuck in: The performer indicated how she got her fabulous figure as she stayed active

The drink's on you: Rihanna pours a cup of water over her friend's headThe drink’s on you: Rihanna pours a cup of water over her friend’s head

Covered up: Rihanna covered her bikini bottoms in a pair of fringed denim shorts

Covered up: Rihanna covered her bikini bottoms in a pair of fringed denim shorts

Last week she released behind-the-scenes rehearsal footage from the shoot, showing her working up a sweat in a two minute clip.

The pop star has appeared in still pictures from the shoot costumed like a tribal queen in a long black wig with a headpiece and wooden bangles.

 

On the clock: The singer was joined by Battleship director Peter Berg, and cast members Brooklyn Decker, Gregory D. Gadson, Taylor Kitsch and Alexander Skarsgard for a promotional shoot at Pearl HarborOn the clock: The singer was joined by Battleship director Peter Berg, and cast members Brooklyn Decker, Gregory D. Gadson, Taylor Kitsch and Alexander Skarsgard for a promotional shoot at Pearl Harbor

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2136966/Rihanna-shows-killer-curves-fringed-bikini-takes-paddle-board-Hawaii.html#ixzz1tVA4bIkF

Can’t go a day without you! Kim Kardashian jets to New York and straight back into Kanye West’s arms just hours after dining with the President .

By Leah Simpson

She had the pleasure of dining with the President at one of the most prestigious events of the year last night, but Kim Kardashian may have had other things on her mind at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.

It seemed the reality television star could hardly wait to get back to her beau after making an appearance at the event with her mother and manager Kris Jenner.

Following a dramatic arrival in an emerald old-Hollywood style dress, the 31-year-old couldn’t wait to leave Washington D.C this morning to spend more time with her latest boyfriend Kanye West.

Together again: Kim Kardashian was back with Kanye West today as they held hands on a lunch date to Serafina in NYCTogether again: Kim Kardashian was back with Kanye West today as they held hands on a lunch date to Serafina in NYC

Kardashian was back to her old ways as far as her dress sense is concerned, today she was seen going for a lunch date with the rapper at pizza restaurant Serafina in New York City.

The star looked more dressed for night out than a lazy Sunday afternoon as she donned a one-shouldered black mini dress as she walked through the Big Apple holding hands with her man.

Kim teamed her frock – which revealed plenty of flesh in the back as the material rose up towards her derriere – with chunky gold bangles and thinly heeled shoes.

Dressed to impress: She wore a frock which drew attention to her behind while he struggled to keep his covered in low-slung jeansDressed to impress: She wore a frock which drew attention to her behind while he struggled to keep his covered in low-slung jeans

Different fashion memos: The couple held hands as they traipsed the street boasting completely different stylesDifferent fashion memos: The couple held hands as they traipsed the street boasting completely different styles

 

She was preened to perfection as she let her poker straight locks hang loose, meanwhile her date went for a more casual style.

West, 34, threw on a burnt orange jacket over a crisp white T-shirt, teaming the item with large boots and of course baggy jeans.

Once again the trousers were almost falling down past his behind, an impractical style the musician has been frequently flaunting lately.

Theatre fans: They later went to watch a showing of the musical Wicked Theatre fans: They later went to watch a showing of the musical Wicked

While keeping a firm grip on his lady with one hand he was forced to hold on to his clothing with the other in an effort to avoid any embarrassing slips.

They later went to watch a showing of the Broadway musical Wicked.

The night before Kardashian flew out to the US capital city for yesterday’s celebrity-studded event, he was seen hitching up his denims as he followed his new flame into his apartment.

They obviously can’t go a day without seeing each other as Kim headed to the annual bash which honours the best of political journalism, directly from her romantic night with the star.

Surprise: Kardashian tweeted about Jason Binn being on her flight from Washington D.CSurprise: Kardashian tweeted about Jason Binn being on her flight from Washington D.C

The night before: She was at the 98th Annual White House Correspondents' Association Dinner at the Washington HiltonThe night before: She was at the 98th Annual White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner at the Washington Hilton

On her way back to see him this morning the church-goer squeezed in a little worship time before  boarding her flight.

She wrote on her Twitter page: ‘Who knew they had a chapel in the airport! Church service before the flight!’

Once she had taken to her seat she shared with her followers that she had bumped into media Jason Binn, a leading publisher of luxury magazines.

She tweeted: ‘Look who’s on my flight @jasonbinn … I feel safe now!’

Can't get enough of each other: Kim enjoyed dinner with West on Friday before her big appearance in front of the President Can’t get enough of each other: Kim enjoyed dinner with West on Friday before her big appearance in front of the President

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2137034/Kim-Kardashian-jets-New-York-straight-Kanye-Wests-arms-just-hours-dining-President.html#ixzz1tV87fERQ

Unmasking Adenuga

This is an explosive blow by blow account written in free flowing style by two adventurous journalists and profilers. It rips across big business and the inherent risks, intrigues, love and sadness, death, and escape from the jaws of death, disappointments and finally the big catch – the telecommunications giant -Globacom that thrusts Michael Adenuga into the league of global business, as told by Mike Awoyinfa and Dimgba Igwe. Nduka Nwosu reports

Mike Adenuga’s story remains a writer’s delight any day. Add Africa’s richest man – by Forbes magazine’s estimates – Aliko Dangote to it, and your pay day is made in the art of profiling. More importantly, they are prodigious subjects for reporters in search of redemption. Why? Because a writer once described journalists as writers who fell by the wayside. Put in simple language, they are chroniclers in a hurry.

But every once in a while, a journalist emerges as a writer, wins a double crown and reclaims his or her birth right. This perhaps defines the present incarnation of Mike Awoyinfa and Dimgba Igwe, both parading till date five titles including two business best sellers: 50 Nigeria’s Corporate Strategists: Top CEO’s Share Their Experiences in Managing Companies in Nigeria and Nigeria’s Marketing Memoirs: 50 Case Studies, and now Mike Adenuga, Africa’s Business Guru.

The Nigerian scene is replete with such writers. Tony Momoh in the 80s penned his Simple Strokes, a reporter’s notebook based on a holiday in Britain, Naiwo Osahon’s novel Sex is a Nigger’s Game and Ben Okri, who worked as a reporter in Uche Chukwumerije’s Afriscope when the hope of a university education was not forthcoming, are a few examples.

In The Famished Road, Okri’s world like Adenuga’s, sets the pace for the journey to the unknown, the unauthorised biography Awoyinfa and Igwe set sail to chronicle. “In the beginning there was a river. The river became a road and the road branched out to the whole world… a dream can be the highest point of life”.

This dream in biographical sketches became real right from the day Awoyinfa and Igwe tendered their resignation in the National Concord rather than be deployed to the editorial board. Before that, however, they had brought to the bookstands the best sellers that built their Taj Mahal, which according to Awoyinfa was supervised by Igwe from joint resources.

Critics may argue that the twins of two worlds – the multicultural art of writing and reporting may have opted for the material dollar at this time, gripped by the buccaneering spirit. No, they were only worthy evangelists in the fine art of writing – good ambassadors of a genial, vanishing culture.

The preface sets the stage: “In this gripping book, Mike Adenuga: Africa’s Business Guru, money, power, politics, high-wire intrigues, betrayals and bloody escapes from the jaws of death, blend into an explosive alchemy as award winning journalists, Mike Awoyinfa and Dimgba Igwe, unmask the mystery of the enigmatic African billionaire, Dr Mike Adenuga, Jr., the first man in the world to single-handedly float a mass consumer telecommunications company, Globacom.

“This riveting book is a product of five years of investigative efforts by two of Africa’s most tenacious writers. The story of Mike Adenuga is an inspiring and an unorthodox entrepreneurial manual drawn from the long-concealed secrets of Africa’s most elusive personality and certainly one of the richest black men in the world”

In the opening chapter, what initially looked like an assassination attempt, a stunning, blood-chilling rehash of an armed robbery attack unfolds: “Around him, there was blood, blood, everywhere. Blood oozing from the ruptured arteries of his fleshy body. Precious blood wasting on the floor, like a vandalised oil pipe ruptured by some rampaging fuel thieves. And amidst the splatter and blotches of blood on the floor lay Mike Adenuga groaning. He had just been shot. Shot point-blank in the sanctity of his home, his castle… An argument had ensued between them, with the rebel robber saying adamantly: “Let’s finish the job. We have to finish this job. We must kill him. We must kill him.”

In one fatal moment of unprovoked madness, he pulled the trigger and bang! Shot point blank. It’s lights out for Adenuga!

Beyond this mild beat, Awoyinfa and Igwe present the image of addicts of the gutsy adventure story of crime and criminals, where action rips along in a series of explosions, what another writer described as a blood and cyclone adventure saga full of action, where menace mingles with violence and horror with mystery stashed on mystery, death on brutal death.

On a humorous note, however, they are glad the man survived the bullets of the black angels of the night to give themselves a self appointed assignment. They continue: “If he had died at that point in December 1982, perhaps the story would have ended there. If he had died, we wouldn’t be embarking on this long, arduous, literary epic, a journey to unmask this enigmatic, shy, evasive and reclusive business colossus, who shares some character traits with the Russian tycoon Roman Abramovich. Abramovich, the Russian Oligarch who had quietly amassed immense wealth and was living his life unobtrusively, until he bought a top football team in the English Premiership called Chelsea. Then the Pandora box of global media glare exposed him to all the troubles it contains.”

Traumatised by Obasanjo

Like a fellow writer Brian Moore whom the lucid and celebrated Graham Greene extolled the way he brought his subtle sensibilities into several varieties of genre fiction, in Awoyinfa and Igwe’s new book, what they excitedly described as their Opus Magnus, “Stale old forces embrace fresh new spirits.” Example: “Okay, I would show you that I am playing God and kuku destroy you once and for all” to which the frightened and weather beaten Adenuga replies President Obasanjo, with his knees crawling on the floors of Aso Rock, his palms stretched full length in the charged, steamy atmosphere: “Sir, I am your son. Please don’t be angry with me.” Obasanjo: “I shouldn’t be angry? Why shouldn’t I be angry? See you now. You would come and prostrate and when you leave here, tomorrow, you would go and be publishing your adverts, abusing me. No be so (Is that not true)?”

Again in Africa’s Business Guru, bedraggled characters turn what should have been a sweet farewell into a bitter retreat. Another example: “Their discussion progressed on a cordial note until IBB brought up the issue of restoring Adenuga’s licence. Obasanjo pointedly accused IBB of hiding behind Adenuga to play in the telecoms market without the courtesy of disclosing his vested interests to him. Babangida refuted this charge, declaring he was not in partnership with Adenuga.

“Obasanjo said there was a full security report on the matter, but Babangida dismissed (the) so called security report as fiction concocted by his EFCC boys. The discussion soon degenerated into acrimony. Presidential Villa insiders said that an enraged Obasanjo bullied and practically chased IBB out. Obasanjo was shouting, ‘Get out, just go!’ to a retreating IBB.”

The book reveals how generous the businessman was to Obasanjo donating a multi-million library to Obasanjo’s Bell University, yet the man bluntly refused to grant his licence. At the launch of the Obasanjo Library, this is the account of story behind the library’s launch: “Adenuga had gone to Abeokuta with Dr. Yemi Ogunbuyi for the occasion and the duo had decided to go to greet Baba first. But they were intercepted by a man in a white Kaftan robe who turned out to be Obasanjo’s cousin. The cousin politely said Baba wanted to know how much Adenuga was going to donate. Incidentally, Adenuga had raised this question with Ogunbiyi on their way coming. ‘How much do you think I should donate to this thing?’

‘I don’t really know may be N100 million,’ Ogunbiyi suggested.
‘That’s exactly how much I have in mind,’ declared Adenuga.
“Now the question from Obasanjo’s emissary was curious and unusual, he thought, but nevertheless, he had no choice but to inform the man that he planned to donate N100 million, thinking the man would be very impressed. Wrong. Obasanjo’s cousin brought out a piece of paper and handed it to Adenuga. ‘Sorry sir, but Baba says you can’t donate less than that amount,’ the man had written.

“Inside the piece of paper was the sum of N250 million scribbled in Obasanjo’s handwriting with a red pen. ‘No problem,’ Adenuga told the emissary, wondering if others were subjected to the same experience, but also knowing he dared not ask anybody, lest he be betrayed. He later showed Ogunbiyi the piece of paper. ‘I’ll give anything he wants,’ he told Ogunbiyi. ‘I’m afraid of that man o. N250 million is about the price of an oil well,’ Adenuga added.”

Homeboy and The American Dream

A rose is still a rose, sang Aretha Franklin in her sweet epiphanous ballad. Roses dominate the prose of Awoyinfa and Igwe as they present themselves as the good ambassadors of a genial cause. In a breezy shakedown cruise spanning 682 pages, their poignant narrative opens with another familiar note: “This book started as a journey, actually in Springfield Illinois while on an international visitors programme – a long tortuous journey to unravel the mystique of a great Nigerian, an African business leader we have come to know, study and admire for his courage, tenacity and indomitable spirit of enterprise, outsized dreams and vision, leadership, can-do spirit, competitive and winner-takes-it all mentality, his legendary generosity and for so many other things you will come to discover in this book. But as they say, there is also perhaps, the dark side of the moon.”

Writing the Mike Adenuga story for Awoyinfa and Igwe was like finding a Byzantine treasure trove, and this deserves to be chronicled in prairie, prosaic, language. The investigative skills came to play as the elusive businessman extraordinaire became his famous self – the Scarlet Pimpernel with the magical powers of appearance and disappearance, one moment he is here, as the master wordsmith and Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka would put it, the next moment he melts into mystery land.
The duo treat the book the way a hunter treats a wild beast with a reporter’s superego, the type of game that awakens a lion from the den to make his kill for the day.

Awoyinfa and Igwe must have absorbed a popular saying among the people of Western Samoa, that from the direction of the wind, you can tell a story from the beginning. And so Adenuga himself sets the stage for the great voyage: “Essentially running a business is similar to leading a military operation or orchestrating a political campaign, or performing as a great athlete. The fundamental principles are the same. The over-riding objective is to out-manoeuvre the opposing forces; to outsmart the other party; to outperform the competition; to outwit the other guy-to achieve. This may sound harsh. But that’s the way it is.”

The young Adenuga, we are told, sold once goat feed courtesy of his entrepreneurial mother who early in life pushed her children to hawk primarily to acquire street wisdom and that explains how excited Adenuga was to announce to Mrs. Oyin Adenuga: ‘Mama, we have found oil,’ when his upstream exploration company struck one. In the American dream, it is clear Adenuga admired his university slogan, Ride with Pride at the North Western Oklahoma State University, Alva, and transformed it into ‘Glo with Pride’, when he launched the mobile network – Glo.

The American sojourn, wrote the chroniclers, transformed Adenuga into a cab driver. “It was as a cabbie that Mike Adenuga met the assassinated Nigerian journalist, Dele Giwa, who was also a cab driver in New York. Life as a black cab driver in New York was as risky as it is today. You could easily get killed. But they did it because they needed to survive. And they made good money. They were not regular taxi drivers who had their taxis painted yellow and black. They were gypsies. You found them around the Bronx, Brooklyn and Staten Island, whereas the official yellow cabs were found mainly in Manhattan.”

We are also moved into Adenuga’s world of business, his arrest and flight into exile where his business empire flourishes, his family life and his divorce from his first wife Fola who still speaks passionately of the golden years of bejeweled diamonds and jet set lifestyle, her devastation by the court that gave the husband custody of her children including the child in the womb. Fola, we are told, is restored as a member of the Adenuga family by her children and the matter of divorce is left behind without necessarily returning to the house.

Big Bosoms and Backsides

At Devcom Merchant Bank, the writers unveil Adenuga’s second wife to be, Titi Adewale who came for a job and transfixed the boss into another world with her God-given curves. “Chief Orji Uzor Kalu is one of Adenuga’s friends of the early years. They were into merchandising, arms deals, crude oil selling and government contractors. They were the Babangida boys. Kalu remembers that in those days he and Adenuga used to have slang for a woman endowed with heavy breasts and big buttocks. The slang was ‘Burkina Faso’. ‘Burkina’ (for the big breasts) and ‘Faso’ (for the big buttocks).

“In an unequal world we live, a woman could have Burkina and not necessarily have Faso. But Adenuga prefers his women to have the full complements of Burkina and Faso in their figure. As for Miss Adewale, she was a fully endowed lady. And once Adenuga set his eyes on her, he never removed them. Like her name, Titi titillated Adenuga in no small measure.”

This is Adenuga unveiled. The story is told in beautiful prose that will make banner headlines and best sellers.

In summary, the billionaire philanthropist is summrised in the epilogue as he leaves his legacy to young businessmen in the making, on the Path to Guru: 50 Entrepreneurship Lessons, what the writers call “some nuggets of the business philosophies and timeless principles that have worked for Mike Adenuga not only as captured in this book but also espoused by Adenuga’s personal credo.”
The 50th and last credo reads: “Like all mavericks, the strength and secret of the Guru is the ability to think out of the box, the ability to act in unconventional ways that have brought about paradigm shifts. Unconventional ideas provide the keys to innovation, to differentiation. It is the magic sesame that opens the door leading to the path to the Guru.”

From Concord to Corporate Biographers

In spite of the fact that Brian Moore was described as a writer who lacked an appreciative audience with minimal black ink support from paying customers, “he had profoundly marked his time with over 20 novels, swimming the current like an arch-angel flying through the heavens.” Unlike the lucid Moore, Awoyinfa and Igwe with less than a dozen of similar efforts, are already celebrants, swimming the current like arch-angels as well, and the secret according to Igwe, whom Awoyinfa generously and respectfully defers to, the image making skills of their outfit – Corporate Biographers, is that “Mike has his head on the clouds and I have my feet on the ground.”
You would have imagined that having distinguished themselves as grandmasters in casting screaming headlines for the tabloid right from the Weekend Concord to The Sun, the inseparable twins of the pen would have embraced the art of sleaze journalism with” lurid voyeurism”, Far from it; they warn in the opening invocation in Africa’s Business Guru: “This story of Adenuga, we are told, is not a hagiography. If it is, then we have failed as journalists whose role is to present the good and the bad sides of our subject. As you will discover in this book, we delved too deeply into Mike Adenuga’s life to ferret out his strength(s) and weaknesses, his positives and negatives, including some of the things he might not normally like to be published. We didn’t set out to hurt him, but just to do our job, the way journalism is done all over the world.”

So the question is: how did this seasonal monsoon rain of profiling drench Awoyinfa and Igwe such that their ship refused to slip its mooring in the newsroom? And as the saying goes, how did their muse pour inky rain on their pens? The simple answer is that Awoyinfa and Igwe belong to the genre of ambitious journalism.
They maximised their input as creative writers when they joined forces with businessman and lover of journalism Orji Uzor Kalu to float The Sun newspapers, a successful tabloid and if you like a re-incarnation of the Weekend Concord, which till date recorded the highest print run ever in print journalism with 500,000 copies at a time weekend titles were hardly a good sale except perhaps the Sunday Times in the then Daily Times Group.

Recalling those early beginnings, Awoyinfa had been posted to the north as a staff writer and Dele Giwa impressed with his style of reporting, created a Reporter’s Notebook for him as a weekly column after his brilliant script on an illiterate reporter who worked for a Hausa title under the New Nigerian Newspaper Group. “I was not keen on reporting,” Awoyinfa recalls, “I was more impressed with creative writing and after leaving the Mass Communication Department with a degree, I had my idea of what I wanted to be, a columnist working under Giwa.”

‘Awoyinfa in Britain’ was another scintillating column that appeared in the Sunday Concord for three months as a Harry Britton Fellow and as assistant editor. Awoyinfa was attached to the Sunday Sun in Newcastle in the United Kingdom, and while there he developed a deep passion for tabloid journalism and according to him, “My confidence level grew. I was creating headlines and like Nigerian soldiers who returned from Burma after the Second World War, to discover things were no longer at ease, I was no longer content being an assistant editor. I wanted to edit a title.”
Igwe, on the other hand, was fast forwarded into his dream profession after a diploma programme at the Nigerian Institute of Journalism. He was freelancing for Sunday Concord and no one had seen him. Then the break: a story on the ordeals of school children who left home early to be at school on time, was given a human angle touch. Then destiny brought him to Sunday Concord on a day everyone screamed Eureka: “We have found him.”

Igwe confessed he admired Awoyinfa’s writings from a distance. When they eventually met, a strange chemistry struck and after two decades plus, the corporate biographers and profilers are still waxing strong.

Culled from Thisaday.

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