Sunday, June 14, 2020

EASIEST WAY TO MAKE MONEY ONLINE.

Making money online is real and simple.
The thing there is to identify the working platform at a giving time. 

Presently now WAZOBIA INVESTMENT is working every well and paying big. 

Making money with them is very simple. All you need is to invest your money with them and in 3 days you get back your money with additional 50% interest. 


Some think of making money without investing..... Big lie. 
Fear is the problem of many people and your biggest enemy to making money. 

One thing interesting about WAZOBIA INVESTMENT is that you don't need to reffer anyone before you get paid.
And it takes a short time to receive your money. It will be very hard for it to crash on you without you making big money. 
And again the platform is new it is not crashing now because of it's recommitment format.
The platform will last till November 2020, I predict with the careful analytical study I have done. 

If you are interested you can register with my link https://bit.ly/3cjP0a3 or CLICK HERE. It is very simple  to register. 

I am doing it... And I encourage you to take the bold step to making money online which is to invest. 
Allow your money to work for you.
Stop working for money. 


The minimum amount you can invest is 10,000 naira or 0.004 bitcoin.

I advice you to take the advantage now. 
My name is Eze Paul Chukwuebuka.
You can contact me on 07038634440
Call or whatsapp.

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Reality of making money with wazobia investment.

So many people, mostly students have been asking me through private mail on how to make money without blogging or selling. Fortunately, while discussing this trending question with my close pal on WhatsApp 10/05/2020, he immediately sent me a Nigerian own platform (wazobia) where anyone can really make money.

As an experienced blogger, I surf the net immediately to know how genuine this platform is and from what I saw, I’m convinced that it is real and genuine. Below is my payment alerts from this platform.




 
With just a 1000 Naira entry fee, you are on your way to earning some money through Wazobia.
It is simple and easy everyone can do it.
It is just to invest any amount you like (minimum of 10000) and in three days u will get the money back with 50% interest.
Someone will ask how possible?
It is working perfectly now.testedand trusted.
And you dont need to refer anyone before u recieve ur money.
I encourage you to participate as it doesnt take time for you to recover ur money.

But the problem there is that you must make two investments at once before you start receiving, but i assure you as someone who is into it you will get your money back with profit within one week.

I think, I will stop here because am not really good with arousing interest when you can read and see for yourself…. To register, use my link  Click here to register.
My name is Eze Paul Chukwuebuka

HOW WAZOBIA INVESTMENT WORKS👇 

✅ Register at Register
✅ Pay a one to time activation fee of 1,000 naira 
✅ Make your pledges, wait to be merged and make payment 
✅ Click on withdraw to receive your money after your investment is due for withdrawal 
✅ 10k Minimum payment In Naira 
✅ 1M Maximum payment in Naira 
✅ 0.004 Minimum payment In Bitcoin 
✅ 10% referral bonus for all payment of your downlines 
✅ Refer up to 10 Active Users and become a Guider.




Sunday, May 24, 2020

Easy methods of soap making


Basic Methods of Making Soap

There are four basic methods for making soap at home. Two of the most popular methods are the "melt and pour" and cold process. The hot process and rebatching are more advanced methods.
  1. Melt and pour: This easy processinvolves melting pre-made blocks of soap and adding your own fragrance.
  2. Cold process: The cold process is the most common method of making soap from scratch using oils and lye.
  3. Hot process: A variation of the cold process method, the hot processrequires cooking the soap is actually cooked in a slow cooker or oven.
  4. Rebatching: This method grinds up and re-blends batches of poorly made homemade soap.
Each method has pros, cons, and variations. Review the two most popular methods to select your method.

Melt and Pour Soap Making Method

Making soap with a melt and pour base is safe, easy, and convenient. The base has already gone through the saponification process, so you won't need to handle lye. First, purchase pre-made blocks of uncolored, unscented soap “base” from a craft store or soap supplier. The soap base is then melted in a microwave or a double boiler. When the soap is fully melted you can add fragrance, color, and additives. Pour the mixture into a mold and the soap is ready to use when it hardens.
Pros of Melt and Pour Method
  • Easy and inexpensive
  • Few ingredients needed
  • No lye needed
  • Great for beginners
Cons of Melt and Pour Method
  • A quality base is best
  • Ingredients not always natural
  • Usually contains extra glycerin
  • Limited creativity
To get started with melt and pour soap making, you'll need a few tools after you purchase a soap base.
  • A microwave or double boiler
  • A heat-resistant bowl for the microwave
  • Measuring spoons and whisks
  • Fragrance, color, or additives, as desired
  • A mold
The most popular soap bases are white or clear glycerin. For a more luxurious soap, try a base made with goat's milk, olive oil, or Shea butter. You'll cut the soap base up into chunks to help it melt faster. If you use a microwave to melt the chunks, put the base in a microwave-safe bowl and stir at 30-second intervals until the chunks are liquid and smooth. Or melt in a double boiler over low heat, stirring until liquid and smooth. Then, allow the base to cool to 120 degrees Fahrenheit, then stir in colorants, fragrances, and additives of your choice.
Finally, pour the mixture into your soap mold, wait a day until the soap is hardened and dry, remove from the mold, and your creation is ready to use.
There are a few tricks to know about when making melt and pour soap. The melted base will be thin, which means additives may sink to the bottom unless you wait until the base cools a bit before adding in. Melt and pour soap cools and hardens quickly so you'll have to learn to time it right when using additives. If the base is too hot, it can burn and become gloppy and tough to work into a mold.
Some additives work better than others in melt and pour soaps. Try sandalwood powder or dried calendula flower petals for best results. Many herbs tend to change color in the soap. Other additives include exfoliants, fruit seeds, and milk powders.

Cold Process Soap Making Method

The cold process method is a little more complicated and takes longer than melt and pour soap. It also involves using lye, which is a caustic substance. To make cold process soap, you'll heat your choice of oils in a soap pot until they reach approximately 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Then, you'll slowly add a lye-water mixture and blend the soap until it thickens to trace. After the mixture reaches trace, add fragrance, color, and additives, then pour it into a mold. The raw soap takes about 24 hours to harden and a few weeks to cure before it’s ready to use.
Pros of Cold Process Method
  • Made from scratch
  • Ingredients can be customized
  • Technique allows for greater creativity
Cons of Cold Process Method
  • More tools and clean up required
  • Need to safely work with lye
  • Technique requires 4 to 6 weeks for soap to cure
To get started making cold process soap, be prepared to need more equipment and clean-up time than you would with melt and pour soap. Work where there's a heat source and access to water. There are several tools you'll want to have on hand for this method of soap making, but begin with the basics:
  • Animal fats or vegetable oils
  • A pitcher of lye-water
  • A soap pot
  • Fragrance or essential oil, as desired
  • Natural or synthetic colorant, as desired
  • A mold to pour the raw soap into
  • Safety gear
You'll need to have a cool, dry place where the soap can cure. Since this method of soap making includes the saponification process, you're able to use fresh additives such as milk and fruit. Fresh additives can be included because the high pH environment of the saponification process preserves the ingredients and prevents the formation of bacteria or mold. The texture of cold process soap is also thicker, which means you can use heavier additives that won't sink to the bottom.

Take note that any vanilla ingredient might not be a reliable additive in cold process soap making because of the potential alcohol content, and it may turn your soap brown. Once you learn how to make cold process soap, take your talents to the next level and make homemade shampoo soap bars.

Friday, June 28, 2019

Civil engineering career

If you want to be hired as a graduate civil or structural engineer, there are three decisions employers expect you to make before you apply for one of their vacancies.
Decisions: Designs or site? | Industry? |
Modules? | Be inspired by civil engineers in jobs
If you are on a civil engineering or structural engineering degree course, you have an abundance of career choices available to you. If you don’t think civil engineering is for you, you are able to apply for a range of general engineering graduate schemes, join a closely related profession such as transport planning or go into such professions as investment banking and accountancy and financial management. However, according to HECSU data, the vast majority of civil engineering graduates find work within the construction industry.
When you are applying for civil or structural engineering jobs, you are likely to apply for a role or graduate scheme in a particular specialism or industry (see below for an outline of the main specialisms). Larger employers usually hire graduates into a specialist division or business, while smaller organisations often focus on one or two specialisms in total. Whichever sector you choose, however, the nature of the job will differ depending on the type of employer you work for. We outline some of the decisions you’ll have to make – and hopefully make them easier for you.
Oh, and if you are wondering how much you can earn as a civil engineer and who has the highest salaries, check out our salary round up.
Decision one: working on designs or on site?
Most civil and structural engineers work for either a consultancy or a contractor.
ADVERTISE HERE
Consultants are involved with a project from the outset and work closely with the client, often managing the project on their behalf. Civil and structural engineers at consultancies are responsible for designing structures. Once building begins they help to resolve any design-related difficulties but, apart from the occasional visit to the site, are largely office-based.
Contractors, meanwhile, actually build the project once the designs are finalised. They may contract out some work to specialist subcontractors, but they are responsible for the construction process and based on site. Civil and structural engineers at contractors manage teams and oversee the implementation of designs.
Starting out at a consultancy, you might assist with designs or gather data under the supervision of a team leader. Working for a contractor, you would start out by managing a small section of the project or ‘package’ on site. Recruiters will expect you to know the difference between consultancies and contractors and have considered reasons for applying to their type of organisation.
Use our infographic to work out whether a consultant or contractor is right for you.
There are also some graduate jobs with very specialist contractors. For example, in coastal and marine, there are companies specialising in dredging and reclamation, off-shore installations and specialist shipping.
In some industry sectors, including water and rail, you can work for client organisations (such as Network Rail, a water supply company or a local authority). Depending on the organisation, you might be in a design-based, maintenance-based or project management role.
Decision two: which industry?
The main industries or specialisms you could work in are:
Airports: Typical projects involve modifying existing airports, including the runways and taxiways (‘airside infrastructure’), maintenance and cargo facilities (‘airside support services’), and terminal buildings.
Bridges: Engineers need a strong understanding of structural engineering and the ability to work closely with highways, geotechnical, railway and environmental engineers. In addition to contractors and consultants, specialist structural organisations are involved in the superstructure design. Geotechnical engineers advise on the substructure and foundations. Specialist subcontractors and suppliers focus on areas such as bearings or post-tensioning. Typical clients include the Highways Agency, Network Rail and local authorities.
Buildings: Sustainability is often a key consideration. Civil engineers work with building services engineers and other specialists to ensure buildings are designed with climate change in mind and to meet ever-evolving regulations.
Coastal and marine: Projects focus on protecting coastal communities against rising sea levels and erosion using sea defences – both hard defences, constructed from concrete, for example, and soft defences, which involve man-made or reconstructed beaches. Engineers may also be involved in building and maintaining ports, offshore wind farms and structures to harness tidal energy.
Energy and power: Engineers design and build the infrastructure needed to create energy. Graduates could work on projects such as the designs for an offshore wind facility, the maintenance of an oil platform or the decommissioning of an old nuclear power plant.
Environmental: Engineers can become environmental consultants, a role in which they will ascertain and then reduce the impacts of a proposed project on the environment. They can specialise in specific areas, such as flood risk.
Geotechnical: In this specialist area, engineers are responsible for the foundations of structures. They assess field data about the ground, soil, rock and boreholes, and find ways to make sure that foundations or slopes are safe and stable. They could specialise in completing site investigations, designing foundations or overseeing the on-site construction work. Specialist postgraduate study is often advantageous.
Highways: This job involves overseeing temporary works and permanent works and finding ways to ease traffic congestion, lessen environmental impact and improve road safety.
Offshore: This sector is concerned with the safe and profitable development of hydrocarbon resources. Engineers undertake the design and installation of oil production platforms, sub-sea structures, pipelines, permanent and temporary anchorages, and assessments of seabed stability. This can involve conceptual and feasibility studies, site assessments, design of foundations and structures, installation supervision and operational management. Projects can be in isolated locations.
Rail: Engineers use their technical knowledge to design, build and maintain the railway system’s infrastructure, including tracks, earthworks and drainage, and telecoms and power. Cost is a particular consideration for engineers in this sector.
Tunnelling: This area chiefly calls on specialist structural and geotechnical knowledge but can also involve many elements of underground engineering – rock tunnels, shafts, caverns and stations, for example, may come under the remit of a tunnelling engineer. Engineers also take decisions on a project’s viability in terms of safety, location and cost, and ensure it has a limited impact on the environment and any buildings nearby.
Water and public health: The ultimate objective of these projects is to provide clean drinking water and treat wastewater. Engineers might be involved in implementing sustainable water drainage systems, creating energy-efficient treatment plants or improving infrastructure to prevent urban flooding.
How do you choose which civil engineering field is best for you? A lot will depend on your personal preferences: what modules and projects did you enjoy from your course? What did you enjoy or not enjoy from your internships?
But it’s worth noting that the number of graduate jobs in each field varies each year. As engineering employers only hire into areas where they have a pipeline of projects in place, you may well find more vacancies in areas where there is stable demand, no matter what happens with Brexit or the wider economy.These areas include UK-based projects in infrastructure (bridges, highways, rail and so on), the energy sectors, water and public health. However, it’s worth investigating how individual employers are performing in different specialisms and locations; even parts of the industry that are suffering overall may have a handful of firms that are growing and need engineers.
Decision three: which modules?
Your choice of degree modules and final-year projects can boost your chances of getting hired into a particular division, so if you are still studying give some thought to the specialism you’d like to work in. Ecology, thermals and acoustics are becoming increasingly important in the buildings sector, for example, so modules in those areas would be advantageous if you want to specialise in buildings.
‘We look very closely at the modules that candidates have completed,’ says Melissa Hopper, graduate recruitment manager at Mott MacDonald. ‘If your modules are closely aligned to the position, it does give you an advantage as it shows that you already have an interest in the area we are looking to recruit into. For some very specialised roles, we require candidates to have completed modules in related areas.’
Aman Gill, graduate recruitment adviser at Arup, agrees: ‘It gives us an insight into a candidate’s interests by seeing which options they have chosen through their degree. If their career interests now sit elsewhere, they should explain that in the application form.'
Need more inspiration? Examples of what graduate engineers do at different employers
‘I work on bridges, creating designs to see whether the bridge would be technically sustainable. We start by making sketches of what we think the design would look like and then create computer models to test it: for example, applying loads (eg of traffic and air pressure) to ensure that the bridge would remain standing. I’m also working on a feasibility study where we are given a brief by a client to devise and evaluate options that will meet that brief and provide recommendations. I always work in a team and am mostly office based but also do visit sites to conduct inspections.’
Joshua McGregor, graduate bridge engineer at Jacobs (consultancy)
‘I work in a team of four specialising in water asset management. My current project is for a water company, creating a strategy to enhance the management of their assets (eg pipe networks, water pumping stations and water treatments plants) to inform their investment decisions. For instance, we look at how assets behaved in the past to create statistical models to predict how they will behave in the future.’
Joel Thai, engineer in the water asset management team at AECOM (consultancy)
‘One of my projects on the graduate programme was working on the Northern line extension: I built the two shafts at Kennington and the station box at Nine Elms. I was responsible for the reinforcement package (part of the project) on the pile construction, ensuring quality so the structure’s integrity wasn’t compromised. I made sure that the workforce was working safely and the activities planned for the day were delivered, I also managed budgets and had technical responsibilities. I worked with the client, the local stakeholders and the community to make sure the construction process didn’t impact on them.’
Sarah Leggett, now a section engineer at Laing O’Rourke (contractor), on working in rail

Monday, June 10, 2019

CV talk

Monday- Let's talk about your CV;
Before, I start, I would want to tell us this. The era of copying someone elses CV and editing names and qualifications is over. There's nothing wrong in paying a professional to help with your curriculum vitae, just make sure, you aid the creation. Make sure everything written on it came from you. Don't copy other persons CV word for word.
Your ability and theirs aren't the same.
Now, there are common mistakes we make with CVs and believe me, this things might be the reason why you've not been getting call backs after forwarding them to your supposed employer.
One is, after creating your CV. Make sure, the 'document name' has your name on it. Something like "OKEKE SEDIAT ADERONKE" And not "My CV" check the name of your document and change it.
When you send your CV through mails, the document name shows. If you have your full name on it, it would be easier for your intended employer to locate while printing.
Secondly, If you are out to look for a job, create an email address that bears your name. I understand some of us are using emails we opened a long time ago but then, you can still make a change. A HR personnel that looks at your email name and sees "Itzpreetygirl@
gmail.com' won't take you serious.
Another thing, the heading of your CV should start with your name, written boldly on it. Followed by your address, phone number {make sure it's a functional phone number. If you have more than one phone number, do include it} and then your email address.
Personal informations about you should be the first thing that embraces the eye anytime anyone clicks on your CV.
Some of us include pictures to our CV. To what end? When you are not a graphic designer? Including pictures won't make it look professional.
Do Not include unnecessary hobbies and references. Whatever hobbies you plan to add to your CV, make sure it goes in line with your career.
There is no need including your class of degree in your CV. When I mean class of degree, I mean you putting down something like.
"Bsc, philosophy (second class upper)
The above information isint necessary.
"Bsc, philosophy" is enough info. If they need a particular class of degree they will specify.
Some of us just write down our qualifications without work experience. I can tell you that 80% of employer's are not looking for who to train. They need you to be experienced.
Do not under estimate the power of little beginnings. Those experiences you think ain't worth it might actually be the one to land you your dream job.
Make sure while listing your experiences, you include your portfolio for each job.
Explain at least, three essential job role.
Avoid the use of ambiguous words.
Things to pay attention to;
•CV layouts.
•Typographical errors
•Font and font size- Use new time Roman. The double spacing should be 1.5 preferably. Font size should be 12.
•Personalize each page.
The arrangement of your CV can be done in the order below;
•FULL NAME.
•PERSONAL DETAILS-
-Gender
-state
-DOB
-Marital status
-Nationality
•CONTACT
-email
-Phone Number
-Address
•CAREER OBJECTIVES
•PERSONAL ATTRIBUTES
•EDUCATION
Starting from the most recent with dates.
•EMOLOYMENT HISTORY.
Starting from the most recent with dates.
•OTHER CERTIFICATION
•LEADERSHIP EXPERIENCE
•AWARDS AND ACHIEVEMENT
•INTERESTS
•SKILLS.
•SPOKEN LANGUAGES
•REFEREES
Good Morning and Have a Beautiful Week Ahead!!!
PS; there are lots of job openings online. Send in at least 5 applications daily.
PSS: check your email and messages regularly.
Do share the post please! Someone might need this.

Saturday, June 1, 2019

Ifenabo ifeanyi

Ifenabo ifeanyi

Ifenabo ifeanyi was born on the 21st of February 1990 in the family of six(3 boys 3 girls).
He is a native of Ebe, in udi local government of Enugu state.
He has a bachelor's degree in building.
He is a dealer of all kinds of aluminum roofing sheet. You can meet him for a satisfactory aluminum and building construction works.

More of his photos.

Ifenabo ifeanyi
Ifenabo ifeanyi
Ifenabo ifeanyi


Friday, May 17, 2019

Loom money

It's called LOOM
There are 4 stages, stage one: pink circle
Stage 2 : blue circle!
Stage 3: orange circle
Stage 4: red spot.
Its a wheel containing different colours and stages there are four colours.
Pink, blue, orange, red.
Once you join you have a slot in the pink and the person you pay to is the one currently in the red spot.
When the wheel is full the person leaves the spot and the circle is broken into two so you advance to the next colour which is blue and your names are rearrange same process till you get to the Red spot.
And then people coming in will now pay to you.
Practically it's a turn by turn thing, the more people come into the group, the faster u get to the next level and closer to the red spot and get paid.
for a fast moving one now contact me...
2k for 16k in hours.
not a site
not a scam.

if u want to join LOOM i advice you to do it now that it is hot...
2k for 16k
it must crash one-day.
but it's paying very fast now as people are trooping.
if interested lemme put u in a fast train so that u can cashout within 24hours without referal.
ask me how here>>https://api.whatsapp.com/send?phone=2347038634440

Thursday, April 4, 2019

How to Connect to the Internet Through Your Satellite Decoder.

How to Connect to the Internet Through Your Satellite Decoder.

Over the years connecting to the internet has been very expensive. The ISP and other network have been making billions out of us in the country with high charges of service rendered. This has been so mostly in developing country like ours, which has made it difficult to have access to the internet. Despite of competition in the industry the charges are still high.
Thanks to technology and research in it field mostly in Nigeria that has try to make access to the net available to everyone irrespective of their income level.
From research it has been discovered that you can actually connect to the internet through your normal satellite decoder. E.g DSTV, My TV, Hi TV decoder are all good source of connector to the internet. And the good news is that, you don’t have to worry about paying for the internet charges so long as you pay for your normal satellite subscription, you are covered.

You need the following hardware to make it work.
Hardware Needed
1. A Decoder ( GoTV, My Tv, DSTV )


2. A splitter.




3. Rj Cable 45



4. Linksys Cable Modem.



5. Coaxial Cable.




6. Switch or Hub.





Direction of Configuration

STEP ONE
Connect your coaxial cable (that comes) from your Satellite dish to your Splitter. Your Splitter should be the type that has one “IN” port and two “OUT” port. The function of the Splitter is to split the signal from the Satellite Dish into two. One for your Cable TV, and other for internet access.

STEP TWO
Connect the other coaxial cable from the first “OUT” port of the Splitter to the normal “IN” port of your decoder for the satellite TV signal. Then connect another coaxial cable from the decoder to your TV.

STEP THREE
Now connect another coaxial cable from the second “OUT” port of your splitter to your Cable modem ( Linksys cable modem). Note: It must be a Linksys Cable Modem if you don’t want to pay extra charges for your access to the net. With Linksys Cable Modem you only pay for your normal Satellite TV subscription.

STEP FOUR
This is where you will make use of RJ 45 Ethernet Cable . Connect the RJ 45 Ethernet cable from the Linksys Cable modem to your Switch or Hub. Which implies that you want to connect two or more computer system. Then connect your computers with Ethernet RJ 45 cable to the switch. But if its only one computer system just connects it direct to the cable modem with the Ethernet cable (no need of Switch or Hub). And of course if the cable modem is the wireless type, you can connect your system through Wi Fi provided your computer has it.

STEP FIVE
System configuration…
1. Start up your desktop computer or Laptop depending on the type you are using.
2. Click on the Start menu.
3. A dialogue box will appear with a lot of option to click, locate Control Panel and click on it.
4. Locate Network Connection and click on it.
5. Now locate Create a new network and click on it.
6. This will take you to another environment, locate Connect to Internet Radio and click on it. After that, click on the Next button and this should lead you to another area then click
Finish.
At this your system is now configured to surf the net with an amazing speed. Just imagine using the same signal that transmit video signal, you can really imagine the speed of internet access. Happy surfing.

Functions of some the Hardware used
DECODER: This opens the gateway of the signal used because you pay for it through your normal monthly TV subscription.
SPLITTER: This shares the signal that flows from the Satellite dish between your Decoder and Cable modem.
LINKSYS CABLE MODEM: This covert the signal to data signal for the internet access.
COAXIAL CABLES: This is the normal cable for satellite connection. It helps the signal to flow from one point to another.
SWITCH: Is a networking device that bridging, i.e. creating connection of multiple computers to act as a segment.
RJ 45 ETHERNET CABLE: It stands for Register Jack 45. It includes four twisted pairs in a single cable.

If you are in Lagos, you can get all this hardware from Computer Village or at any computer store that sells networking accessories.

Written by
Eze Paul Chukwuebuka

Monday, January 28, 2019

State allawee for serving corpers.

STATE ALLAWEE FOR SERVING CORPERS.

Please note this current list of NYSC Allowance for the different states In Nigeria might increase or decrease as time goes on.
Below is a list of state Allawee in Nigeria for serving corpers.
1. Akwa Ibom State Pays N10,000.
2. Lagos state Pays N15,000 and some times N10,000 to corpers in ministry and N5000 to those in LGA.
3. Sokoto State pays N4,000 and N9,000 to those in state hospital.
4. Enugu State Pays N3,800 (verified)
5. Oyo State Pays N3,800.
6. Osun State Pays N5,000.
7. Kano State Pays N4,000.
8. Borno State Pays N1,000.
9. Niger State Pays N6,000 (stopped).
10. Yobe State Pays N2,500.
11. Bayelsa Pays N3,000.
12. Ekiti state Pays N5,000.
13. Ebonyi state Pays N10,000 from September 2018
14. Ogun State Pays N5,000.
15. Delta States Pays N5,000.
16. Bauchi State Pays N1,250.
17. Cross River State Pays N5000 (New).
18. Zamfara State Pays N3,000.
19. Abia State Pays N5,000.
20. Imo State Pays N2,000.
21. Taraba state Pays N10,000 at the capital. Reports reaching us from a corper there suggests that Taraba has stopped paying corp nemebers.
22. Kaduna State Pays 3000.
23. Jigawa State Pays 10,000.
24. Kano State Pays 10,000.
25. Nassarawa State Pays 3,000.
26. Porthacourt has not yet paid corpers for the past 5 years.

Sunday, January 20, 2019

Interesting interview with ex-governor Sullivan chime.

Ekweremadu begged me in 2015’

'Ekweremadu begged me in 2015'
Sullivan Chime, former Enugu State Governor
“He decided to join another political party; I didn’t have issues with him, he probably saw what I saw in 2015 way back and he left.”
Chidi Nnadi and Magnus Eze
Former governor of Enugu State Mr Sullivan Chime is not easily given to granting interviews to journalists because of certain reservations he held. The posture has led to many interpretations of his person in the media. But when Chime who was a two-term governor of Enugu State on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) decides to talk, he talks straight and shoots from all cylinders.
READ ALSO: As Osinbajo presents book on Chime’s tenure
This was the situation early this week at his M9 Enugu residence when he fielded questions from a select group of journalists as a prelude to the presentation of his book, ‘Honour to Serve: Enugu State in Sullivan Years,’ holding today.
Chime, now a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), speaks on his eight years of his stewardship in Enugu, relationship with his predecessor and benefactor, Dr. Chimaroke Nnamani, as well as his successor, Chief Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi.
What is this your book all about?
The book is all about my experiences in government from inception to handing over; when we came in, we made a promise which we articulated in the form of what we called a four-point agenda. We tried to deliver on those promises; so you’ll find in the book even the way it’s arranged – it starts with the promises; then sector by sector, those things were analysed; how much of those promises we were able to keep, the systems that we were able to evolve, the challenges that we had in government, the few things that we were able to achieve and how they impacted on the people. In our place, once you leave office and you don’t let people know all you’ve done; they will forget, tomorrow somebody will come and tell you, this wasn’t there; I was the one that did it. In the main, I think it’s a way of giving account to my employer; the people of Enugu State. On the 29th of May 2015 that I handed over, there was a detailed sort of compendium of the things we did, the challenges and where we found ourselves – a kind of handover note. We handed over department by department and, of course, to the governor himself. But those were not my employers; he took over from me, this is actually an opportunity to give account fully to my employers. It’s not possible to cover all we did in eight years in the book. It’s a kind of summary of all that we did.
You were a practicing lawyer; can we know your life before you joined politics?
It’s actually in the book. I was called to bar in July 1981; 37 years ago. I was into private legal practice until sometime in 1999 when my friend and schoolmate, Chimaroke Nnamani drafted me to join his government. That was how I left legal practice.
So, you’re a member of the Ebeano political family?
Why are you talking like that; don’t bring government down to that level. We were members of the PDP; so Ebeano was entirely a personal thing, you can call yourself anything. Today, I hear of Gburugburu Movement; anybody is entitled to call himself anything. When I was in government, we had PDP; we belonged to one party.
But it didn’t take long for you to fall out with the man who brought you into politics, Chimaroke Nnamani. Why?
I didn’t fall out with him. He decided to join another political party; I didn’t have issues with him, he probably saw what I saw in 2015 way back and he left. He went to the senate on the platform of the PDP, but by 2011 he felt that he had become powerful enough to float a party, maybe to replicate what Orji Uzor Kalu did when he took over Imo and Abia States with his People’s Progressive Alliance (PPA). Unfortunately, it didn’t work out for him. I don’t have any issue with him. As a matter of fact, you will be shocked that I dedicated this book to him. Forget about the stories you hear outside; you wanted us to be talking ‘Ebeano, Ebeano’. No. Let’s concentrate and talk about more serious things. He brought me into politics; I wouldn’t have had the opportunity I had if he didn’t bring me into politics.
What would you say was your greatest challenge in your eight years as governor?
Before we came in, security in Enugu was nothing to write home about; people left Enugu; they were so scared and Enugu being home to all as capital of old Anambra State; East Central State, Eastern Nigeria and even Southern Nigeria at a time; the home to all the Igbo became unsafe.
So, it was a major challenge that we had then. My experience as Attorney General helped me to at least know what the issues were. We were able to handle it very well; moving from that low and very disturbing situation, we became the best, not one of the best. We became the state with the least crime rate in the country.
When the issue of succession came; the current governor, Chief Ugwuanyi was not your preferred candidate, was he?
Who told you? I had no candidate; I allowed the people to make their choice and they came up with him. I made the people of Enugu North a promise that whoever they chose, I will support. Whatever exercise that they went through that threw him up was not the issue; we supported him.
But he is your godson because he said that you’re his leader in and out of office?
He was never my godson as you have alluded to here, but if he wants to be, it’s up to him. I can’t be anything to anybody. Anywhere he wants to see me, I am there. I don’t have issues with him. If he has issues and he comes to me, I will be readily available to give him that advice.
The APC governorship candidate now; Senator Ayogu Eze was in the race for the PDP ticket in 2015 and you didn’t support him then. Will you support him this time around?
I told you that my personal view did not matter in the whole thing. Enugu North people took their decision, in keeping with my promise; we supported their choice.
It had nothing to do with my relationship with Ayogu Eze; he’s my very good friend; nothing to do with whether he was competent or not. As my party’s candidate today; I must say that he is a very credible one for that matter. I don’t have anything against him.
But do you think he can win the election next year?
Why are we in the whole thing; it’s their business to convince the people to vote for them. It’s their business to tell the people why they prefer Ayogu Eze to the person that is there. If the people are happy with what they are witnessing now; they will return the man that’s there. Like in 2011; all manners of people; people who were not even in our party campaigned and prayed for us; people who had nothing to do with partisan politics, they campaigned for us. They did all these without expecting us to give them money at all. If you listened to the radio programme; some people called in lamenting that there was no constitutional provision for me to do third term. When we were campaigning in 2015, people were saying they wished there was provision for me to do a third term. So, it’s not a question of whether you like him or not; if he’s done well, people will vote for him for second tenure and nobody can stop him.
When President Buhari ran in 2015, you were one of the people that conspired and allotted some miserable five per cent figures to him. What would happen this time around?
I take exception to your choice of words. God saw us through and we returned President Goodluck Jonathan in our state, but nationally, he lost. These things happening; I don’t think they mean anything. In 2011, my predecessor campaigned against me. He had a governorship candidate; Dan Shere was his candidate, but he actually withdrew from the race on the eve of the election. We spoke; he came to me and said he wasn’t running.
If you’ve done well; what you’ve done will speak for you; they will campaign for you; you don’t spend money on people. People will happily be campaigning for you; you don’t need to give them money, wherever you go, you will find them coming to show you support. They will come on their own, singing your praises; praying for you. On the day of election in 2011, people who were not in the PDP fought on my behalf. Human beings are very easy to satisfy. If you do well, they will appreciate you; they will show appreciation.
Can we know the magic that will work for Buhari in the 2019 election, particularly in the South East?
There is no magic; it is a question of convincing our people; letting our people know the difference between the people lying to them and the people telling them the truth. I was reading the other day in the paper where Governor Dave Umahi said that the South East felt much better under Buhari than the PDP. Is he not PDP? You must tell yourself the truth. You’re from Imo; what did the PDP do for you? Let us forget this talk, talk, what did PDP do for Imo people? We’re not talking about APC and Okorocha’s government because APC just came into existence in 2014. We are talking about the Federal Government here not state government. Can you drive from here to your place in an hour plus? That used to be the case; as a practicing lawyer going to Owerri, I will leave here in the morning and be in Owerri before 9:00am to do my case. Maximum; an hour 10 minutes, Enugu to Owerri; can you do it now? After 16 years and we are here lying to ourselves? I hear you cannot drive straight on this Enugu-Port Harcourt express road to Port Harcourt now; you must go through some villages. The road is now impassable and we are talking about PDP. Look at Enugu-Onitsha express road.
But we are now under APC?
No. You see, APC inherited a lot of nonsense and you don’t expect them to clear it in one day. Look at Enugu-Onitsha road; can you drive from here to even the 9th Mile? Why lying to ourselves. Going
to Onitsha used to be less than one hour.
I can tell you as a practicing lawyer, I was crisscrossing the entire Igbo land going for cases; you can’t try it now. No lawyer can leave his home except you leave at 3:00am or 4:00am; you can’t leave your house now or your chambers in the morning and be able to make it; maybe in Umuahia.
If you had not defected to the APC, would you have held the same view you are holding now?
Yes. We complained. There was nothing we didn’t do; almost all our meetings with the PDP Federal Government were about all these basic roads. Yar’Adua, when he was President, promised to dualise the 9th Mile to Makurdi, he made that promise. May God bless that man, if he had survived; he would have done that road because the man was a man of his words, unfortunately what happened, happened and all the promises disappeared. The International Airport built here was approved by him, but for him there wouldn’t be any international airport here. We had to use the word ‘Biafran president’ here for five years; what happened? We are here clamouring for Igbo president, we should be interested in what we get. You should be interested about what you get as a people not about appointments. We had all the appointments under PDP; I mean all the appointments so, what happened at the end? It is not about holding any office; it is not about holding any appointment; it is about the benefits from the government. Let our places be developed. Jonathan was approving that some of the rail lines be adjusted to what they call standard gauge and all that; did he talk about Enugu-Port Harcourt; that old line. He left it that way; a person from this region; a person from the Eastern Region. So, we don’t like ourselves. Tell me one major road that he did under PDP after five years in office, he wasn’t able to do anything? Let us be more serious.
Why couldn’t you go to the senate when you attempted doing so?
I didn’t attempt going to the senate, there was no such aspiration. In 2013, when we were holding a town hall meeting in Nike Lake Hotel, one journalist asked that since I was leaving office, which zone will succeed me as governor. When Chimaroke Nnamani became governor, it wasn’t zoned to Nkanu, he won against somebody from the West, even in his re-election bid. When I contested, it was free for everybody, people from the North, from the East, from the West, the same thing during my re-election. Then I said fate had made it that the East had done their two terms, myself in second term at the time, I said it will only be fair that we take it to the North to reduce tensions and I promised to work towards it. That was how it happened. We zoned it to the North, not that there was any agreement; it was common sense to reduce problems. I was the leader and I took that decision.
So the people of Enugu never sat down at any time to agree on zoning of positions?
Which people? I was the leader and I took a decision, which was very easy to sell. Everybody that heard it supported that decision. Incidentally, I didn’t know my senator was actually warming up to be governor and when he heard that pronouncement, everywhere; every paper was full of attacks from him, attacking me, saying when did they reach such decision? Of course, I ignored him. In 2015, he wanted to go back to the senate and wanted a situation where I will be asked to either allow him to be governor or choose the governor and allow him to go back to the senate. I called his bluff. I had a good understanding with the president, with the then National Chairman of the party, Adamu Mu’azu, so he hadn’t access to those people and he became frustrated and he ganged up with members of the National Assembly to cause trouble in Enugu State. They had few friends with members of the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party. That was when PDP was really having problem. You take decision in the state and one clown at the NWC will change it; cause confusion. It wasn’t easy for him. So, that was when that idea came up that I was going to the senate, but I didn’t buy any form; I didn’t do any of that. They floated that just to bring him back
to his senses. So, he came to me and he pleaded and I gave it up, I told him it was not a do-or-die affair, but for him to go to the senate he must abandon his colleagues and immediately he did it, all the people he had planned with to cause trouble, that was how he was able to go back, so I never aspired to go to the senate. What am I doing with it?
Was it true that Ekweremadu made you leave PDP because you were afraid of his towering image in the party?
Next year we will know how towering his image is. What towering image? I am not aware of any towering image, he has always been a senator, comparing himself with the governor was ridiculous, he is a senator.
Are you saying you would have stopped Ekweremadu if you wanted to?
Precisely! If he hadn’t come to beg, that would have been the end of his (whatever ambition) completely. He can say anything now, but if he succeeds next year, then we look forward to 2023.
What is your reaction to the Igbo leaders’ recent endorsement of the PDP presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar?
You heard what Chekwas Okorie said, that his party has already adopted Buhari? It’s a bit irresponsible for anybody to say that Ndigbo have adopted any candidate. That is people fooling themselves. The only way you can know who was adopted is in 2019. Let them campaign and not adopting, endorsing. We are not used to such expression. Let them tell us what they didn’t do and why they didn’t do it; why we have to believe they will do it this time around. That is what you should be asking any PDP person. For 16 years, you had opportunity to implement all these promises; for 16 years we supported you, what happened? Why didn’t you do all these things, why should we now believe you? Buhari, APC, they’ve never enjoyed your support, now they are seeking for your support; they have done quite a lot, I’m not their spokesperson, but I know they’ve done quite a lot, people tell me about improvement on electricity, I see some of those roads we talked about being developed now. So, we have seen hope, light at the end of the tunnel. So, he is now coming to give you commitment that he will actualise all those projects and we are going to support him. It is not about any Igbo man holding any office oh. We’ve held president; it didn’t work, will Vice President give you anything? All the states in East had opportunity of being Senate President. So, we are just interested in positions, it won’t continue that way, we should be interested in what we get as a people not positions. We should not be deceived.
What is your opinion on Igbo presidency?
If you want to be President of Nigeria as an Igbo man, Nigerians will make you president not Ndigbo. So, work hard.

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