Tuesday, 19 January 2016

FG to leverage on the existing structures of the Nigerian Postal Service (NIPOST) for 'Change Begins With Me' Campaign


The Honourable Minister, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, announced the plan while receiving the Acting Post Master General of the Federation, Mr. Enoch Adeogun, in his office in Abuja on Monday, saying the outlets of NIPOST across the country remained veritable platforms for the 'Change Begins With Me' Campaign of the Federal Government.

"Very soon we are going to start our re-orientation campaign. This is a campaign in which we are going to tell Nigerians about the change we promised. The fact is that the change we promised will only happen if we all change the ways and manners we do things and this is why your tele-centres become useful to us. This is where your postal agencies and post offices become useful to us. We will apply to you to please allow us to brand some of your post offices and postal agencies so that the people who come to the post offices will see exactly what the change is all about.

"We are going to have very impressive outdoor images preaching change and, if for instance I have 3,000 locations in Nigeria where I can brand the Change Mantra, it means that everyday when people are going to the post offices or postal agencies, they will learn about the Change Mantra.

"I have also looked at how it is possible to use your 3,000 post outlets as information centres to disseminate government programmes and policies to our people and, in this respect, I would want the National Orientation Agency to work closely with NIPOST,'' he said.

Alhaji Mohammed therefore implored the NIPOST to explore technology to boost the safety and integrity of the documents and parcels entrusted in their care in order to inspire public confidence and place NIPOST on equal pedestal with the private courier service companies.

The Minister harped on the need to enforce the laws concerning the use of the services of NIPOST in the delivery of certain items that were exclusively reserved for it in order to boost its activities and make it possible for it to create more jobs.

He observed that though the advent of technology had posed a huge challenge to NIPOST services, it was incumbent on the organization to adapt and explore Information and Communication Technology to add value to its services as obtained in other parts of the world.

"We are not the only country where technology has come to enhance services. In Britain, the post office still remains one of the largest employers of labour today. So I don't know why this cannot happen in Nigeria,'' the Minister remarked.

Earlier, the Acting Post Master General had told the Minister that NIPOST, with over 3,000 outlets, had embraced technology to boost its activities through the establishment of tele-centres and the remodeling of some of its offices across the country.

He said in the last four years, NIPOST had remodeled about 300 post offices and had also entered into partnership with Galaxy Backbone to install 1,500 VSAT in the post offices.

Mr. Adeogun, however, noted that in spite of the reach and efficiency of communication through the telephone and the Internet, physical delivery of parcels at affordable cost, especially in reserved areas, was crucial to the economy.

He reminded the public that any parcel less than 500 grams was statutorily reserved for delivery by NIPOST and not through the private courier services.

Celebrities to boycott Oscars ceremony over race issue

Invoking the Rev. Martin Luther King's legacy on his birthday, two prominent African-Americans announced Monday that they will boycott this year's Academy Awards over a lack of diversity among nominees.

Filmmaker Spike Lee and actress Jada Pinkett Smith posted separate messages Monday saying they would not be attending the February 28 ceremony. The Oscars have drawn criticism after an all-white slate of major nominees was announced Thursday for the second year in a row.

"We cannot support it and [I] mean no disrespect ... But, how is it possible for the second consecutive year all 20 contenders under the acting category are white? And let's not even get into the other branches," Lee wrote on Instagram. "Forty white actors in two years and no flava at all. We can't act?! WTF!!"


"Dr. King said, 'There comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular, but he must take it because conscience tells him it's right,' " continued Lee, the outspoken director of such racially charged films as "Do the Right Thing" and "Malcolm X."
Lee said the " 'real' battle" over racism in Hollywood is not with the Academy Awards but in "the executive offices of the Hollywood studios and TV and cable networks," where gatekeepers decide which projects get made and which don't.
    "People, the truth is we ain't in those rooms, and until minorities are, the Oscar nominees will remain lilly white," he wrote.
    In a video posted to Facebook, Pinkett Smith said she would not even watch the Oscars on TV this year. Her husband, Will Smith, had been considered an Oscar contender for his role in "Concussion" but was not nominated.
    "Today is Martin Luther King's birthday, and I can't help but ask the question: Is it time that people of color recognize how much power, influence, that we have amassed, that we no longer need to ask to be invited anywhere?" she said.
    "Begging for acknowledgement, or even asking, diminishes dignity and diminishes power. And we are a dignified people, and we are powerful," she said. "So let's let the Academy do them, with all grace and love. And let's do us, differently."
    #OscarsSoWhite trended on social media last week after a number of black Oscar hopefuls, including "Beasts of No Nation's" Idris Elba; "Creed" star Michael B. Jordan; that movie's writer-director, Ryan Coogler; and the cast of N.W.A biopic "Straight Outta Compton" were overlooked by academy voters.
    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences has faced years of criticism that its 7,000-plus members who vote on the Oscars are mostly older, male, white and out of touch with today's moviegoers.
    Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs, who is black, said over the weekend that she was "disappointed" by the Oscar nominations.
    "But this is not to take away the greatness" of the nominated films, she told Deadline. "This has been a great year in film, it really has, across the board. You are never going to know what is going to appear on the sheet of paper until you see it."
    Still, Isaacs acknowledged that the academy's efforts at boosting diversity among its membership and throughout Hollywood were moving too slowly. "We have got to speed it up," she said.
    A longtime critic of the academy, Lee received an honorary Oscar at a banquet in Hollywood in November, where he said, "This industry is so far behind sports, it's ridiculous. It's easier to be president of the United States as a black person than be head of a (movie) studio. Honest."
    Next month's 88th Academy Awards will be hosted by black actor-comedian Chris Rock, who has largely remained quiet about the #OscarsSoWhite controversy. Friday on Twitter, however, Rock referred to the show as "the white BET Awards."

    With CNN

    Man stabs friend to death with Civil War sword during mobile home brawl


    MONROE COUNTY SHERIFF

    Stanley Pace reportedly stabbed to death his friend with a replica Civil War sword.

    Authorities have arrested an Alabama man accused of fatally stabbing another man with a replica Civil War sword after a fight at a mobile home in Mississippi.

    Monroe County Sheriff Cecil Cantrell said, that 47-year-old Stanley Pace of Pale City, Alabama, chased 43-year-old Ronnie Max Duke of Amory down a street before stabbing him approximately 20 times with the sword late Friday night

    Cantrell said investigators arrested Pace on a murder charge Sunday after Duke was reported missing. Monroe County Coroner Alan Gurley said Duke’s body was recovered Monday afternoon.

    Cantrell said Pace had hidden Duke’s body beside the road before moving it to a garbage dump.

    Pace was being held at the Monroe County jail pending his arraignment. It was not known whether he had a lawyer.



    With Daily News

    'Doga' world record set in Hong Kong


    Even though, this isn't the Year of the Dog, but a new world record for the biggest dog-yoga class was set in Hong Kong on Sunday. And 270 dog-and-owner pairs participated. It's called "doga" and led by doga-teacher, Suzette Ackerman.

    For over half an hour, the participants massaged, twisted, and stretched their furry friends in a series of poses. "Doga" is hailed as a great way to bond and relax with your pets, especially amid big-city pressures. Owners said they were honored to be part of a new world record attempt and want to continue their "doga" disciplines. 
    As for the dogs, it's a great opportunity to hang out with other members of the species. The record-breaking attempt has yet to be confirmed by Guinness World Records, but organizers are confident they have satisfied the requirements. The previous record was set in San Diego about a year ago with 265 dog-and-owner pairs. All proceeds from the Hong Kong event are going to the Hong Kong Guide Dog Association.

    With CCTV News

    21-year-old freezes to death after going to concert with friends

                                  KANA KANE VIA FACEBOOK

    A young woman who went to Milwaukee for a concert froze to death after leaving her friends and walking out into the subzero cold.

    Elizabeth Luebke, a 21-year-old from Oshkosh, was seen on surveillance cameras collapsing in the snow around 4:30 a.m. near the house she left after an argument Saturday night.

    Dressed only in shorts, stockings and a tank top, Luebke succumbed to the night’s frigid temperature, which were still hovering around six degrees below zero when she was found by a passerby at 9 a.m.

    Wind chills dropped down to nearly minus 30.

    Friends at the small party thought she had been picked up, and didn’t suspect that Luebke was fighting for her life in the snow nearby.

    The man whose home she left told Fox 6 that the concert-goer had been drunk before storming out when she got mad at a friend.

    Luebke’s mother, who drove to Milwaukee to file a missing person’s report for her daughter, said that she was hospitalized with five times the blood alcohol limit to legally drive last October.

    In December the young woman posted on social media that she had quit drinking and stayed sober for a month.

    Police in Milwaukee urged residents to stick together in groups while venturing into possibly dangerous conditions.

    "I know you kids feel invincible, but this weather is ruthless. Please, all of you, don't underestimate this cold,'  Luebke's friend Julie Schmidt posted on Facebook.


    With News Wire Services