Suya is a Northern Nigerian delight that has become a delicacy that is
consumed all over the country. It knows no ethnicity, no religion and no
tribe. This said, one thing you may have observed is that this street
food is usually prepared in the evening. Why not in the morning or
afternoon? Well, whoever, decided to kick off the preparation of Suya in
the evening must be a genius because the marketing strategy is working.
You find Nigerians buying Suya at this time. Accordingly, Jumia Travel,
the leading online travel agency shares 5 reasons why Suya is prepared
in the evening.
It more attractive in the evening
When
you returning from in the evening and you see the mallam or Aboki the
fire of the suya blazing in the very busy or hectic evening. There is no
way you will not be attracted or tempted to buy. Even when you didn’t
plan to buy, you will.
It is when Nigerians hang out and relax
It
is in the evening that most Nigerians hang out and relax. That is when
they are close from work. Some don’t go home straight away. They hang
out at your favorite hotel bar in Lagos with friends, and if there is a
Suya spot around, they buy. If you setup in the afternoon, very few
people will patronize you. You will be forced to move your suya business
to the evening.
It is very tasty at that time
Suya
is very tasty normally. But there is no way you can compare afternoon
suya with evening suya, they are not mates. The warm evening weather,
the stress of work and traffic all combine to make you savor the taste
of suya. It is very yummier!!!
Thursday, March 30
LEGAL PROTECTION FROM WORKPLACE SEXUAL HARRASSMENT
There is legal protection from workplace sexual harassment.
Workplace sexual harassment is commonly defined as unwelcome sexual
advances, requests for sexual favours, and other verbal or physical
conduct of a sexual nature when:
- Submission to such conduct is made either explicitly or implicitly, a term or condition of an individual’s employment, or
- Submission to or rejection of such conduct by an individual is used as a basis for employment decisions affecting such individual, or
- Such conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual’s work performance or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment.
NIGERIA IS IN FREE FALL AND FREE FOR ALL - PERRY BRIMAH
Let’s be candid, Buhari currently knows only one subject: fighting
Boko Haram. That’s all he appears to still be in good command of, and
that, we admit with reservations. With due respect, if today Secretary
to the Government SGF Babachir Lawal was to tell the president, “Sir,
good news, out of six we only lost half-a-dozen,” I do not think
president Buhari would have the patience to realize he just got played.
We must be real with ourselves here, it is our lives at stake. Indeed
Buhari has admitted to his weaknesses himself so why should we still be
in denial. “I have age and military background behind me,” Buhari said,
“Osinbajo has youth and intellectual capacity.” Age is not necessarily a
merit especially when it comes to governing a NIGERIA. And the
medically certified global functioning depreciations of age are rapidly
complicated and aggravated by the stress and toil of chronic ailment.
Old school military skills is what we have left and this important
problem is telling on the nation. Astute critic, or better put, adviser
Junaid Mohammed earlier this month said “the Buhari presidency is dead.”
Let’s just be kind and say it is weak.
FORBES - LIST OF 10 RICHEST MEN IN NIGERIA #7 WOULD SUPRISE YOU
Forbes, a website renowned for ranking of richest people in the world, has made available the list of richest people in Nigeria in 2017.
In the latest release, 9 Nigerians made the billionaires club cut with some, just few million dollars away from reaching the benchmark.
10. Oba Otudeke: Oba Otudeke is the Chairman and founder of the honey well group.
He is also the chairman of FBN Holdings Plc. His operations spread across oil and gas, flour minning, real estate, and marine transportation. Net Worth: $650 million.
9. Jim Oviah: Jim Oviah is the founder of Zenith Bank. He is the chairman and the largest shareholder with a stake of almost 10%.
8. Orji Uzor Kalu: The former governor of Abia State. He is the founder and chairman of Slok Holding. A conglomerate with interest in shipping, banking, oil, trading, manufacturing and the media. He became a real business man at the age of 19 after being expelled from a Nigerian University for allegedly spearheading a series of student riots. Net Worth: $1.1 billion.
PASTOR TRIES TO BRING HIS DEAD WIFE BACK TO LIFE
A 40-year-old Pastor, Robinson Githumba of Eagle Prophetic Church has failed in his attempt to pray his dead wife back to life.
Githumba and his followers stormed the Embu mortuary in Nairobi, Kenya yesterday praying in a bid to resurrect his wife, Polly Kagendo, 38, who died of Tuberculosis on Sunday.
The clergy man was said to have travelled from Rwika Village, Mbeere South sub-county with his followers.
On arrival at Gakwegori funeral at 8am, he asked the mortuary attendants to remove his wife’s body from the morgue and put it in an open place for prayers.
With bibles, they prayed enthusiastically, singing and shouting at the top of their voices expecting a miracle, Naironinews reports
.
The pastor insisted that his wife was not dead but only resting and would resurrect on the fourth day like the biblical Lazarus.
Githumba and his followers stormed the Embu mortuary in Nairobi, Kenya yesterday praying in a bid to resurrect his wife, Polly Kagendo, 38, who died of Tuberculosis on Sunday.
On arrival at Gakwegori funeral at 8am, he asked the mortuary attendants to remove his wife’s body from the morgue and put it in an open place for prayers.
With bibles, they prayed enthusiastically, singing and shouting at the top of their voices expecting a miracle, Naironinews reports
.
The pastor insisted that his wife was not dead but only resting and would resurrect on the fourth day like the biblical Lazarus.
FG TO GRANT INCENTIVES TO INVESTORS IN A BID TO RESUSTICATE THE ECONOMY
The Federal Government will grant incentives to encourage investment
in the priority sectors listed in the recently released Economic
Recovery and Growth Plan.
Minister of Budget and National Planning, Sen. Udoma Udo Udoma, said in a statement signed by his Media Adviser, James Akpandem.
Udoma gave the assurance in Abuja when he received the Japanese Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Sadanobu Kusaoke in his office.
He said the plan focused on achieving macroeconomic stability, transforming agriculture, driving sufficiency in energy, improving transportation infrastructure and growing industrialization with attention on small and medium scale enterprises.
According to him, implementation is paramount in the realization of the plan’s objectives, therefore attention will be on prioritizing the identified strategies and establishing a clear system of accountability.
He said attention would also be given to allocate resources to prioritized interventions, creating an enabling policy and regulatory environment and developing an effective monitoring and evaluation system to track progress.
The Plan, he explained, would be driven by some fundamental principles, including a focus on tackling constraints to growth.
He said it would also be driven by leveraging the power of the private sector and promoting national cohesion and social inclusion as well as allowing markets to function.
Minister of Budget and National Planning, Sen. Udoma Udo Udoma, said in a statement signed by his Media Adviser, James Akpandem.
Udoma gave the assurance in Abuja when he received the Japanese Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Sadanobu Kusaoke in his office.
He said the plan focused on achieving macroeconomic stability, transforming agriculture, driving sufficiency in energy, improving transportation infrastructure and growing industrialization with attention on small and medium scale enterprises.
According to him, implementation is paramount in the realization of the plan’s objectives, therefore attention will be on prioritizing the identified strategies and establishing a clear system of accountability.
He said attention would also be given to allocate resources to prioritized interventions, creating an enabling policy and regulatory environment and developing an effective monitoring and evaluation system to track progress.
The Plan, he explained, would be driven by some fundamental principles, including a focus on tackling constraints to growth.
He said it would also be driven by leveraging the power of the private sector and promoting national cohesion and social inclusion as well as allowing markets to function.
Nigerian Senators are ‘clowns, acting like bunch of errant school children’ – Buhari’s aide, Onnochie
Personal Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Social Media, Lauretta Onochie, has described the Nigerian senate as “clowns” who have turned itself into a chamber that works with blackmail.
Onnochie made the remark while reacting to the recent decision by the Senate not to screen nominees sent by the President until Ibrahim Magu is fired as the Acting Chairman of the EFCC.
WRONG MEDICATION KILLS MILLIONS OF PEOPLE ANUALLY - WHO
Medication errors kill and injure millions of people while an
estimated 42 billion dollars is lost annually, the World Health
Organisation (WHO) said, on Wednesday.
Director-General of WHO, Margaret Chan, at a new campaign, “ Global Patient Safety Challenge on Medication Safety,’’ said that medicines should fulfil their real purpose to help people and not harm them.
Chan said the campaign was seeking to reduce severe and avoidable medication-associated damage across the globe by half over the next five years.
“According to estimates, the global cost associated with medication errors has been estimated at 42 billion dollars annually or almost one per cent of total global health expenditure.
“In terms of impact on the health of people, for instance in the United States, medication errors cause at least one death every day and injure approximately 1.3 million people annually,” she said.
The WHO chief added: “We all expect to be helped, not harmed, when we take medication.
Director-General of WHO, Margaret Chan, at a new campaign, “ Global Patient Safety Challenge on Medication Safety,’’ said that medicines should fulfil their real purpose to help people and not harm them.
Chan said the campaign was seeking to reduce severe and avoidable medication-associated damage across the globe by half over the next five years.
“According to estimates, the global cost associated with medication errors has been estimated at 42 billion dollars annually or almost one per cent of total global health expenditure.
“In terms of impact on the health of people, for instance in the United States, medication errors cause at least one death every day and injure approximately 1.3 million people annually,” she said.
The WHO chief added: “We all expect to be helped, not harmed, when we take medication.
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