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Wednesday, 12 December 2012
A call for a Safer and Healthy Work Environment
A call for a
Safer and Healthy Work Environment
By Yemi Olakitan
Health, safety and security in the
workplace are key issues that are often neglected in most organisations. The
result of which can be disastrous both to the employees and the employers in
terms of accidents, permanent disability or death. Occupational Safety and
health Association, an international association of safety professionals and
stakeholders recently had a conference in Lagos on the subject in order to draw
attention of the public to the importance of safety and health in the
workplace. According to conference consultant, Emmanuel Uwalaka, CEO of Elak
Multi Resources Nig. Ltd, the issue of safety, health and security of the work
environment is very important so that the problems of accidents, incalculable
injury, permanent disability or even death can be prevented. The Conference
which was titled: Health, Safety and security challenges of the modern workplace-
Way forward had participating members from Chevron, Zenith Bank, Shell, Access
Bank, Oando, Total, Nestle, Mobil and several other corporate entities in attendance.
It was a gathering of concerned Nigerians from the corporate community on the
issues of health and safety.
Speaking further, Uwalaka, said the aim
of the conference was to bring all employers and employees together to discuss the
challenges of health and safety at the work place. The conference also creates
a great platform for networking opportunities for conference participants,
safety professionals and members of the association to share ideas on how to
promote safety and health in the work environment in Nigeria. In his goodwill
message, Dr.Olubayode Awosika, Honourable Fellow of the Association welcome
participants to the conference, he said it is impossible to count the number of
accidents that occur in the work place everyday neither can one count the
numbers that are prevented through safety and healthy practice. He saluted
newly inducted members of the association starting from fellows to graduate
members, and also welcome the forthcoming new members as they join hands in
pursuing the goal of providing a safety conscious mindset and culture among the
employees and employers of this great country. According to him, the job of saving
lives and preventing injuries, death or permanent disability in the workplace
is not an individual task but a collective responsibility of all and sundry. ‘‘Occupational
safety and health in the workplace is a responsibility that must not be
abandoned to chance. Anybody can be a victim’’ He said.
Speakers at the event include Brian
Greenway, Nwachucku Abraham, Harris Ibekwe, Itua Otaigbe and Dr. Olugbenga
Bejide who presented different papers at the conference. The first lecture was
given by Abraham who spoke on the concepts of occupational safety, tracing its
history to the 18th century England when new machines were invented
for factories around the world. Many workers were facing accidents and dying in
large numbers all over Europe. This development gave rise to the need for
occupational safety which according to Abraham is still as relevant as it was
then in our industries. The theme of the conference: Health Safety and the
security challenges of the modern workplace is a pointer to the need to educate
and enlighten Nigerians on the need for safety in the work place since many
workers are still facing accidents that can be prevented if the necessary safety
steps were taking.
He said, laws that were enacted to protect
workers in their work place must be enforced in all departments of labour. The
employer must provide safety and healthy environment for the workers. The
employees must follow the health and safety rules. The rights and duties of
employees must be upheld in our workplace in order to ensure safety and prevent
loss of lives. The chairman of the conference, Felix O Ewulo, former Director General
of Ogun state Environmental Agency call on all stakeholders on the issue of
safety in the workplace to pay careful attention to rules governing safety and
health. He asked OSHA to continue to enlighten Nigerians through workshops,
training, and conferences on the need to be safe and alive at work. In another
paper presented by Mr. Abraham Nwachukwu tagged; Critical Review of the
Changing workplace, he talked about the workers and his environment, the
evolution of technology. According to him, the conditions in our workplace have
changed as compared to the pre-colonial and post colonial era. ‘’Our workplaces are not what they used to
be, it is both a responsibility of the worker, the employer, the
government and the employee to ensure
safety, prevent loss of lives and disability.’’ He stressed the need for helmets,
boots, gloves, first aid boxes, education and training in our workplace in
order to ensure safety. While speaking at the event, Brian Greenway, an
accomplished safety professional of over 40 years experience, said one injury
is far too many. He said it was important to set up training schools in
Nigeria. When asked why low skilled workers who are often victims of accidents
and injuries in factories are not present at the conference, Greenway said, OSHA
has found it effective to get the management on board on the issue of safety.
Once you get the top management of a company on board, it will be easy to get
the lower cadre involved in safety management and accident prevention in the
work place. He called on the government of Nigeria, safety professionals to
push for safety and good working conditions in the country since many
accidents, death and disability are often unreported. He also emphasised the
need for education and training. As part of the conference, a drama
presentation was enacted which told the story of a CEO who unknowingly inhaled
a bottled chemical substance out of curiosity and instantly died. This chemical
was meant for the factory. The drama was staged to buttress the fact that
safety is not limited to factories alone but can occur even in executive
offices.Hoares Methodist Church Celebrates 21st Honey Service. By Yemi Olakitan
Hoares Methodist Church Celebrates 21st
Honey Service.
By Yemi Olakitan
The Methodist Church of Nigeria,
Diocese of Lagos Mainland, Hoares Memorial Methodist Cathedral, Yaba
Celebrates the 21st
anniversary of the Busy Bees Society as well as the 50th year
anniversary of the Church at the weekend.
The
honey service celebration of the society was held at the church cathedral,
Yaba, Lagos. Speaking at the service,
Reverend Raphael Opoko, Secretary of the Conference of Methodist Church in
Nigeria called on members of the Honey Bees Society to continue to do good and
ensure their private lives reflects the sweetness of honey. According to him, they must see to it that
their lives is a blessing to the widows, the motherless, the poor and the
nation as a whole. He called the members of the busy bees to emulate the Lord
Jesus in all their actions. He decried the condition of Nigeria’s education and
the fall in societal morality. Speaking further, the Reverend called on private
mission universities to lower their tuition fee, saying some of the schools are
charging very high tuition fee. ‘‘It is
the contributions, tithes and offerings of church members that built this universities
and yet many of these church members cannot afford to put their children in
these schools.’’ He said,
In a statement by, Cessy Ogunaike
President of the Society,
honey has association that go far beyond its use as food. In language and
literature, religion and folk beliefs, honey is a symbol of sweetness of any
kind. The book of Exodus describes the Promised Land as a place flowing with
milk and honey. In the new testament of the Bible, John the Baptist was said to
have lived in the wilderness on a diet consisting of locusts and wild honey. Honey
has been known for its healing properties for thousands of years and the
ancient Greeks used it for many healing people. Up to the Second World War,
honey was being used for its antibacterial properties in treating wounds.
The Honey Service committee member, Tunde
Oredipe, Olutola Ajaguna, Mosun Adewiunmi,
Tayo Sarumi, Funlola Jolaoso,
Salewa Soyinka, Sola Adenuga, Tunde Adenuga
Sade Fajemisin and other members of the society were
all present at the service
Thursday, 29 November 2012
With NFVCB, Nollywood takes centre stage in Edinburgh, Glasgow
With NFVCB, Nollywood
takes centre stage in Edinburgh, Glasgow
The
Nigerian film industry otherwise known as Nollywood, at home and in the
diaspora, has gone beyond finding a myriad ways just to entrench its importance
and visibility in the global motion picture entertainment arena.
It therefore deserves to be taken seriously
and not denigrated, as some film scholars would also advocate. Supporting this
view, Professor Onookome Okome of the School of English and Film Studies,
University of Alberta, Canada states: “In Nigeria, Nollywood is popular ... It
speaks aspects of social life that many live and debates social and cultural
anxieties the way no other media had done before.”
In
the same vein Jonathan Haynes, a professor of African Film, Video and
Literature, Long Island University, the United States, has been spearheading
the calls for the respect of Nollywood. He is often saying “What we need is to
get closer to what is happening and describe it with precision, and there
should be frames of reference to describe it.” Haynes, who has created a
bibliography on Nollywood up until 2010, would always make a case for the
studying and understanding of the Nigerian movie industry, in addition to
proposing a framework for the development of the industry.
Not
long ago, there was Scotland Film Festival at which Nigerians were hosted by
the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB). It was a conference devoted
to the Nigerian motion picture industry in Edinburgh, where the industry’s
importance was showcased to the foreign interests. NFVCB is the National
Regulatory Authority for the Nigerian motion picture industry.
The
foreign organisers were excited to receive Nigerians and were more excited that
Tunde Kelani's film, Maami, sponsored by the NFVCB, was being screened to the
audience. Kelani, Nigerian film maker, showcased Maami, his latest film, at the
Africa in Motion Scotland Film Festival in Edinburgh and Glasgow on October 30
and 31, 2012.
At
the event, Kelani delivered an incisive and interactive paper on the use of
indigenous language in his movies, tracing it to his studies in the film school
in the United Kingdom (UK).
He
said he was influenced by his fellow students from Russia, Japan and other
countries, who already were doing films in their languages and subtitling them.
He, therefore, experimented on it and was then convinced to also do his films
in the Yoruba language.
The second factor that influenced his choice
of the genre was the fact that the people who sent him to learn the act of film
making could not understand why he had to make his film in English before
subtitling it to them in Yoruba. So, as a mark of respect and the need to
uphold the culture of his people, he decided to make his films in his native
Yoruba language.
Kelani
disclosed that even in Nigeria, and with the available record from the NFVCB,
the number of indigenous films has increased, especially with the Hausa, Yoruba
and Edo films. That for him is a major development and growth. He commended the
NFVCB for honouring him, and noted that the event was the first time that he
was really being well honoured by Nigeria and outside the country.
Kelani
is a highly acclaimed filmmaker and a driving force behind the hugely popular
and prolific Nollywood home video sector. Working variously as director,
producer, cinematographer, editor, writer and actor, Kelani has been making
films in Nigeria for more than 20 years.
Okome,
who delivered a paper on “The perception of Nollywood in Europe”, commended the
NFVCB for attending the festival, and appreciated Ms Patricia Bala, Ag.
Director-General (DG) of the Board. According to him, a lot of European
students are now doing postgraduate studies in Nollywood, and the Board must,
as a matter of urgency, create a platform to assist the students since the
Board is a repository of information about Nollywood.
He
disclosed that the foreign students would be sent to Nigeria to do their
research on the industry which would eventually benefit the Board in particular
and the country in general. Topics such as “The Influence of Nollywood,
distribution and content” and “The Perception of Nollywood as an industry” were
areas of interest from which different issues were discussed during the 9-day
event.
It
would be recalled that NFVCB was involved in the inauguration of the Nollywood
Studies Centre (NSC) by Emeka Mba, former DG of the Board. First of its kind in
Africa, and indeed the world, the initiative has been designed to digitize and
archive Nollywood (and other African) films as well as literature. It was meant
to facilitate access for scholars seeking to research the film industry.
Monday, 5 November 2012
Nigeria's One Party System by Yemi Olakitan
Pic: Nigeria's Past Heads of State
Verily, verily, i say unto you except Nigeria is united it shall by no means enter into his true prosperity and greatness which God has prepared for his people. It is a shame that till now, Nigerians have not realized that we are practicing a one party system although we have several political parties. We claim that this is a multi party democracy. Look at the scenario that we find ourselves, since the military relinquished power to former president Olusegun Obasanjo who ruled the nation for eight years; two terms in office, the PDP has occupied the nation's number one office consistently. President Olusegun Obasano handed over to the late former President Umaru Musa Yar Ardua who died in office and left power for his Vice President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. All these presidents were PDP candidates, the ruling party. You see, the ruling party does not have a strong opposition. We have a number of political parties who have refused to merge and cannot put together a strong opposition.
Without a strong opposition party, the government in power will not be on its toes. The government in power cannot be challenged and when it is not adequately challenged it cannot be held accountable. It affects the nature of our politics. We are not playing a politics of ideas and issues but of ethnicity and parochial interests which gives birth to Boko Haram and make the nation unable to tackle corruption in high places.
We need to rise up to the challenge. Our political parties must come together to form a strong opposition to the ruling party, not because the ruling party is bad but because it need to be put on its toes, so that it can serve the people of Nigeria to its fullest capacity, and so that it can realize its full potentials. Otherwise, let it get out of the way so that another party can take its place. if it has better agenda, better ideology and a better way of serving the Nigerian people. When are we going to have a more vibrant democracy in Nigeria? How long are we going to continue with the one party system. We can not even enjoy steady electricity supply. unemployment is on top of the roof. Our political parties should stand up. It is better to have two strong and able political parties than several that are not strong enough in terms of resources and ideas that can hold our only party, PDP accountable. A WORD IS A ENOUGH FOR THE WISE
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