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Wednesday 8 November 2017

COUPLE CHARGED FOR POSTING NEIGHBOUR’S NUDE VIDEO ONLINE



This was the outcome of the advice by Directorate of Public Prosecution, DPP, who has now taken over the matter for prosecution.
In letter dated 3 November, 2017 to the Deputy Commissioner of Police at SCIID Panti, Yaba, signed by the Assistant Director of DPP, Mr. M.T. Adeoye, the directorate stated so.
The advice stated that going by the facts available in the duplicate case file, that it was obvious there were sufficient facts to establish prima facie case of sexual assault and sending of obscene pictures on social media by the suspects.
It further stated that the case file revealed that Obinna called the husband of the victim, one Kenneth Nwakaji to come and collect his N1.2m share of the profit they made on a business transaction they had together. But Kenneth was unable to go and had to send his wife who was the victim to go to the hotel and collect the money on his behalf.
It was learnt that when the wife went to the hotel in Egbeda area of Lagos, Obinna offered her a bottle of Guinness malt drink which she drank and immediately became unconscious. It was scooped that Obinna removed all her clothes in the hotel room and  sexually assaulted her. He recorded the video of the whole assault on his phone as a bargaining power to her husband to forget his own share of the profit.
When the victim – a mother of three kids regained her consciousness, she discovered that she was totally naked and was then shown the video of the assault. She could not raise alarm because she was scared of losing her marriage.
However, on 27 March 2017 she discovered that her nude pictures had gone viral in the neighbourhood and it was traced to Obinna’s wife, Chinyere.
The DPP informed the police that the duplicated file brought to their office was retained to enable the office to obtain the necessary information papers to file the matter at the High Court.
The couple who had four kids had remained in prison custody because their relations refused to bail them.

Thursday 2 November 2017

LEGITNG.COM LAUNCHES ONLINE PLATFORM TO PROVIDE 24-HOUR LEGAL SERVICES TO NIGERIANS




Access to legal knowledge and services in Nigeria is a big challenge for individuals,businesses and organisations.This is why we are excited at how technology can be used to solve this problem and Enyioma Madubuike and his team has set out to provide legal services and acess to Nigerians through Legitng.com

Legitng an online legal content and referral platform recently launched is committed to hacking access to legal knowledge and services in Nigeria. The online platform has gradually gained a reputation as a start-up registration and advisory platform providing on-boarding services to new Nigerian businesses and NGOs across several sectors of the Nigerian economy.
As part of its goal of easing access to top notch legal expertise, Legitng recently launched its online 24 hour legal consultation platforms where a team of Nigerian law experts are available to answer questions on Nigerian law within 24 hours for FREE.

Legitng is able to provide this service through a well cultivated network of on-call legal experts specializing in different aspects of Nigerian law available to provide information on request.
According to Enyioma Madubuike, Legitng team lead, this service is targeted particularly at startups and new Nigerian businesses who constantly struggle with accessing quality legal expertise needed in the early years of a company’s growth. Enyioma, who had before joining the team worked extensively in one of Nigeria’s most prestigious law firms explained that where the desired level of needed expertise is found, it is often priced above the reach of normal Nigerian startups.
Legitng is committed to ease of access to quality legal information and continues to experiment with models to provide legal information to those who really need it. It has also launched the #Asklegitng hashtag for its twitter page for the same purpose.

Wednesday 1 November 2017

HOW I BROKE 28-YEAR OAU RECORD’ – GRADUATING MEDICAL STUDENT WITH 12 DISTINCTIONS



Aarinola Olaiya who is set to become the first medical student to graduate with distinction in Surgery at the Obafemi Awolowo University since 1989 in this interview, she achieved the feat.
Read excerpts below;
What major factor inspired your academic performance in OAU?
I really cannot explain it. What I can say is that the grace of God has been at work from my first day in the university. Apart from that, I am a focused person. I always like to have a goal in mind and I make sure that I focus on that goal without giving room to distractions. I think this is what happened. Right from the day I was admitted into the university, I made sure that I remained focused in my studies.
As an undergraduate of Medicine, what was your daily routine like?
Every day, I would wake up, have my bath and attend lectures. I usually go to the classroom in the morning. Sometimes, I would attend a lecture at 8am till about 4pm. Then I would return to my hostel to have some rest and attend to other things or proceed on call. Sometimes I would stay on call till the following day. Basically my daily routine was like that.
Did you have time for leisure?
Of course, I had. But, weekends were very important to me. I spent most weekends studying. The higher I went in medical school, the more time I created to read my studies.
Didn’t you attend parties at weekends?
No. I never had time for parties. That wasn’t my idea of leisure. I just went out with my friends to eat and then, we would have fun during the day before returning to the hostel.
What kind of fun?
We went out to eateries to have lunch, take pictures and so on. We didn’t go to clubs or drink alcoholic beverages.
What kind of friends did you keep at school?
I had just a few friends in the university. They were all purpose-driven people who knew where they were heading to.
What kind of relationship did you have with your parents?
My parents have been very supportive from day one, especially my mum. She keeps me going all the time. My siblings have been very understanding, too. They accepted me the way I am and kept encouraging me all the while.
Do you have a boyfriend?
Yes. I have a boyfriend, but I never allowed him to come between me and my studies. He does not live in Ile-Ife. So he visits me in school sometimes. Most of the time, we communicate to each other via the telephone.
Why did you choose to study medicine?
I had always known that I would be a doctor. I actually got admission to study Botany in my first year at OAU. That was in 2010. But then, I knew that I wasn’t going to end up being a botanist. I knew I was going to be a doctor. So I sat another UTME and here I am today.
Did you plan to graduate with distinction?
I did not set out to graduate with distinction in the university. I just think that I tried to strive for perfection. Although it is good to have goals because they keep you going, who you are really matters a lot. Then there is the God factor. I still believe that the grace of God has a lot to do with my achievement.
How would you describe your experience in medical school?
Medical school is not for just anybody. If you have a daughter that wants to study medicine, you have to make her think seriously about her ambition. You have to ask her if she really wants to be a doctor. You have to count the costs before she goes ahead to study medicine.
Initially, I was excited about being in Medical school. In Part Two, I started reading big books. Then I started getting used to the language of Anatomy, Medical bio-chemistry and more. With time, I got used to it. To keep going, even as some people were being withdrawn from medical school, I just had to hold my head high. For someone like me that was getting many distinctions, keeping up with the success story was tough. But I didn’t expect that my efforts would result in such huge success. I only wanted to try my best and do everything possible in my power to get things done.
What are your plans for the future?
I don’t want to comment on my plan for the future, but I am working on it.

Thursday 19 October 2017

WHAT TO LEARN FROM THE FASTEST GROWING UNIVERSITY IN THE WORLD

The world’s fastest-rising university is neither in Europe nor in North America. It is in Asia; but neither in China nor in India. It is in Singapore; not the National University of Singapore but the Nangyang Technological University. Since 2003, when a new President (i.e., Vice-Chancellor) took over the leadership of the university, NTU has been climbing steadily in the ratings, especially from 2010 to 2011 and from 2017 to 2018, when it jumped 122 places in the world ranking, landing at 52 in the latest world ranking of universities by Times Higher Education.
Nigerian university authorities have a lot to learn from NTU’s rise, especially from the points of view of leadership and governance; adequate funding; setting goals and achieving them; and locating opportunities and seizing them.
NTU’s President from 2003 to 2011, Professor Su Guaning, radically changed the fortunes of the university. It is tempting to conclude that he was the Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore’s university system. Just as Lee eschewed populist policies in favour of long-term social and economic measures, Prof. Su eschewed the teaching structure he inherited and put his faith in research and long-term measures to make NTU a world-class university.
Right from the start, Su set his mind on raising NTU’s profile by getting it to be one of the world’s top universities. He began by surrounding himself with top senior people in his administration, including hiring two reputable Deputies. One of them was Prof. Bertil Andersson, who later became the university’s first Provost. He devolved specific powers to his Deputies.
For example, Andersson was charged with establishing a new faculty tenure system to ensure that only those who were potentially productive in their research got tenure. Andersson had wide international experience, including being a former University Rector in Sweden and Chair of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry. He drew on these experiences to change the focus of tenure from teaching to research, with all the implications of increases in citations to faculty publications and industrial outreach.
The government of Singapore worked hand in hand with Su, funding the university as needed and providing necessary facilities for improvement just as it continued to assist the rival National University of Singapore. According to Su, the rivalry between the two national universities was also an inspiration to him: “If you look around the world, the best universities usually have somebody competing with them on a similar level. If you take Stanford, you have Berkeley. Take Cambridge, you have Oxford. Take Harvard, you have MIT”. Incidentally, these are universities frequently in the top 10 in the world.
Su’s observation provides an oblique commentary on Nigerian universities, where the often myopic management often operates like an island unto itself. I often cringed whenever I heard Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko, introduced as the best state university in Nigeria. I did not know what to make of it when Lagos State University was also recently introduced as the best state university in Nigeria. I could only ask myself: Do the authorities in both universities ever talk to each other?
Another interesting aspect of Su’s leadership is the maintenance of a dual system of hiring young people, while also recognising age and experience as critical to the university’s stability and growth. Young faculty could eventually propagate the legacy of excellence, but older and more experienced faculty have to grow it first. Accordingly, he worked hard on increasing the retirement age by 10 years in order to provide further opportunities for tapping into the experience of senior faculty.
One of the important qualities of leadership is the ability to see far into the future and plan accordingly. That was what Su did with regard to China. NTU quickly took note of the significance of the rise of China and was ahead of the curve in launching training and degree programmes in Chinese, including a course on market-oriented economics for communist officials. The number of Chinese Master’s programmes was increased, leading to a large cohort of NTU alumni in China today. This raises an interesting question for Nigerian university authorities. How many of them go to other African countries to recruit students, like Ghana and South Africa do in Nigeria?
At the same time, NTU broadened its admission policy by increasing international students to about 20 per cent of its undergraduate intake. Its 10,000-strong postgraduate students are, however, mostly international students. It did not stop at that. It also internationalised faculty hiring in order to develop a melting pot of different but complementary perspectives. Although already within the system, Andersson was eventually appointed, after an international search, to succeed Su, thus guaranteeing continuity of the strong tradition of excellence they both jointly developed. Needless to say, Andersson is not native to Singapore.
Another factor in NTU’s favour is its relative autonomy and academic freedom. The university decides on who teaches what, how, where, and to whom. There are no outside regulatory bodies and no unions to disrupt the academic calendar. There were, of course, occasional intrusions of the government into some university decisions. For example in 2013, there was a debate over academic freedom in Singapore, when Associate Professor Cherian George of the Wee Kim Wee School of Communications was denied tenure for publicly criticising Singapore’s system of media control and its ruling party. Although his department recommended his tenure, it was rejected by government representatives on the university committee.
It is a lesson on the politics of criticising the government from within the university. In Singapore’s case, the government totally funds its universities and provides over 70 per cent tuition subsidy to Singaporean students. So long as government funding is involved, relative restrictions on academic freedom will persist, thus cutting back on university autonomy.
Last week, I endorsed the establishment of Centres of Excellence to be given the mandate of growing their institutions to world class status just as NTU did, and enjoined some private universities to join the race. However, given the tradition of disrespecting goals and deadlines in Nigerian universities, it is necessary to establish appropriate quality assurance measures. In the next contribution to this series, I focus on quality control, comparing the regulatory functions of the National Universities Commission with broader quality control measures adopted elsewhere.

Friday 13 October 2017

NIGERIAN WRESTLING CHAMPION POWER UTI ARRESTED OVER WIFE'S DEATH

The police in Lagos have reportedly arrested Nigerian wrestling champion, Power Uti, over the controversial death of his wife, Toyin.

Toyin was said to have died in their Ilupeju, Lagos home on Monday morning with the wrestling champion discovering her body.

However, instead of taking her to the hospital, Power Uti was alleged to have gone to a church in search of spiritual help.

Police Public Relations Officer, Famous Cole, reportedly confirmed that Power Uti was arrested over the incident and detained at the Ilupeju Police station, adding that he would be transferred to the Criminal Investigative Department, Panti in Lagos on Thursday.

Toyin, 38, until her demise, was a mother of four children who are all under the age of nine. The two were married for 10 years.

Her body had been deposited at the Isolo General Hospital, while her four children are with the mother.

Wednesday 11 October 2017

IPHONE TOUCHSCREEN NOT WORKING – PROBLEM AND SOLUTION

iPhone touchscreen not working is a common problem. The touchscreen problem can occur in any model of the iPhone. However, solution to the problem is easy. If you have little DIY experience in assemble and disassemble (opening) any mobile phone then you can easily solver this touchscreen problem in its any version. All models of iPhone till now have a separate IC called “Touchscreen Controller” to handle the job. However, Part Number of the IC in different Models of iPhone is different but their location on the Logic Board and Function is same.
Here I explain step-by-step easy to understand process on how to solve iPhone touchscreen problem. The same solution applies to all models of iPhone including – Original iPhone, iPhone 6, iPhone 5S, iPhone 5C, iPhone 5, iPhone 4S, iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, iPhone 3G.

iPhone Touchscreen Not Working – Problem and Solution

  1. Using precision screwdriver, carefully remove all the screws from the housing of the iPhone and keep them at a safe place.
  2. Remove all the screws from inside and carefully disassemble all the inside parts until you reach the Logic Board of the iPhone. Remember the sequence of disassembly that will be helpful when you assemble back the iPhone.
  3. When you look at the Logic Board of the iPhone, you will see an IC similar to the image below. Remember, different models of the iPhone will have different part numbers on the Touchscreen Controller IC. For e.g., the Part Number of iPhone 4S Touchscreen Controller IC is – TI 343S0538.
  4. Dry solder could be one reason for the touchscreen problem. Using ESD-Safe Brush, apply good quality no-clean flux on all sides of this particular IC.
  5. Using Hot Air Blower, give hot air all around the IC. Make sure to give hot air from some height. If you give hot air from too close then the solder can melt. Our motive is to not to melt the solder but to remove all the oxides from the solder joints.
  6. Now using any good PCB cleaning chemical like IPA solution, clean the logic board with the help of ESD-Safe Brush.
  7. Assemble back the iPhone and check the touchscreen. It should work now.
  8. If the problem is not solved then you may have to replace the Touchscreen Controller IC (SMD).

COMPLETE LIST OF NOBEL PRIZE WINNERS 2017



Complete list of Nobel Prize Winners 2017

The 2017 Nobel Prize were announced recently in 6 different fields viz. Physiology or Medicine, Physics, Chemistry, Literature, Peace, and Economic Sciences. We have compiled all the winners under one complete table that will make you remember all the winners in a go.
Brief History of the Nobel Prize:-
On 27 November 1895, Alfred Nobel signed his last will and testament, giving the largest share of his fortune to a series of prizes in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature and Peace – the Nobel Prizes. The Nobel Prize distribution was first done on 1901. In 1968, Sveriges Riksbank (Sweden’s central bank) established The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.

Here is the complete list of Winners of Nobel Prize 2017:-

S. No.
Field
Description
Winner
1.
Physiology or Medicine
For the discoveries of molecular mechanisms controlling the circadian rhythm
Jeffrey C. Hall (USA), Michael Rosbash (USA) and Michael W. Young (USA)
2.
Physics
For decisive contributions to the LIGO detector and the observation of gravitational waves
Rainer Weiss (Germany), Barry C. Barish (USA) and Kip S. Thorne (USA)
3.
Chemistry
For developing cryo-electron microscopy for the high-resolution structure determination of biomolecules in solution
Jacques Dubochet (Switzerland), Joachim Frank (Germany) and Richard Henderson (Scotland)
4.
Literature
In novels of great emotional force, has uncovered the abyss beneath our illusory sense of connection with the world
Kazuo Ishiguro (Japan)
5.
Peace
For its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons
International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) (founded in Australia)
6.
Economic Sciences
For contributions to behavioural economics
Richard H. Thaler (USA)

Here are some Static and Interesting Facts about the Nobel Prize:-

The Nobel Prize in Physics:-
  1. The Nobel Prize in Physics is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Stockholm, Sweden.
  2. 111 Nobel Prizes in Physics have been awarded between 1901-2017.
  3. 2 women have been awarded the Physics Prize so far.
  4. 25 years was the age of the youngest Physics Laureate ever, Lawrence Bragg, when he was awarded the 1915 Physics Prize together with his father.
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry:-
  1. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Stockholm, Sweden.
  2. 109 Nobel Prizes in Chemistry have been awarded between 1901 and 2017.
  3. 4 women have been awarded the Chemistry Prize so far.
  4. 1 person, Frederick Sanger, has been awarded the Chemistry Prize twice, in 1958 and in 1980.
  5. 35 years was the age of the youngest Chemistry Laureate ever, Frédéric Joliot, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1935.
  6. 85 years was the age of the oldest Chemistry Laureate, John B. Fenn, when he was awarded the Chemistry Prize in 2002.
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine:-
  1. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine is awarded by the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
  2. 108 Nobel Prizes in Physiology or Medicine have been awarded between 1901 and 2017.
  3. 12 women have been awarded the Medicine Prize so far.
  4. 32 years was the age of the youngest Medicine Laureate ever, Frederick G. Banting, who was awarded the 1923 Medicine Prize for the discovery of insulin.
  5. 87 years was the age of the oldest Medicine Laureate ever, Peyton Rous, when he was awarded the Medicine Prize in 1966 for his discovery of tumour-inducing viruses.
The Nobel Prize in Literature:-
  1. The Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded by the Swedish Academy, Stockholm, Sweden.
  2. 110 Nobel Prizes in Literature have been awarded 1901-2017.
  3. 14 women have been awarded the Literature Prize so far.
  4. 41 years was the age of the youngest Literature Laureate ever, Rudyard Kipling, best known for The Jungle Book.
  5. 88 years was the age of the oldest Literature Laureate ever, Doris Lessing, when she was awarded the Prize in 2007.
The Nobel Peace Prize:-
  1. The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded by a committee of five persons who are chosen by the Norwegian Storting (Parliament of Norway).
  2. 98 Nobel Peace Prizes have been awarded 1901-2017.
  3. 16 women have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize so far.
  4. 1 Peace Prize Laureate, Le Duc Tho, has declined the Nobel Peace Prize.
  5. Malala Yousafzai (17) is the youngest to win Nobel Peace Prize in 2014.
The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel:-
  1. The Prize in Economic Sciences is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Stockholm, Sweden.
  2. 49 Prizes in Economic Sciences have been awarded since 1969.
  3. 1 woman have been awarded the Prize in Economic Sciences so far, Elinor Ostrom, in 2009.
  4. 51 years was the age of the youngest Laureate in Economic Sciences ever, Kenneth J. Arrow, who was awarded in 1972.
  5. 90 years was Leonid Hurwicz when he was awarded the Prize – the oldest Laureate in Economic Sciences ever.