Friday, July 31, 2015

Nigerian student Victor Olalusi, scores 5.0 GPA in Russia, first in the world

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The Federal Ministry of Education on Wednesday in Abuja honoured Dr Victor Olalusi who scored 5.0 Cumulative Grade Point Average (GPA) in the Faculty of Clinical Sciences, Russian National Research Medical University, Moscow (RNRMU) in 2013, arguably the first in the world.
Olalusi, who was the best graduating student in the whole Russian Federation in 2013, studied in RNRMU under the Russia-Nigeria Bilateral Education Agreement.
Olalusi previously had the best WAEC result in 2004, First Class  Architecture (FUTA) -2005. JAMB Best Science Student (JAMB score 322) – 2006. Cowbell Prize Award – 2006. Medicine First Merit list (OAU) – 2006. Highest OAU Post UME (score – 325)  – 2006.
Speaking at the event, Dr MacJohn Nwaobiala, the Permanent Secretary in the ministry said a lot of Nigerian students were brilliant but Olalusi was a genius.
He said Olalusi had become an ambassador not only to the ministry but to Nigeria and Russia.

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Exclusive Interview: Emmanuel Adegboye – Founder of Bus Stop


 Emmanuel Adegboye
The 2015 MITx Global Entrepreneurship Bootcamp is set to be held between 23 & 28 August 2015. The bootcamp will be held in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, and will host 5 startups hailing from Nigeria.
According to MITx, 50 candidates were selected from 24 countries at an acceptance rate of 0.08 per cent. Amongst the 5 is Emmanuel Adegboye’s startup, Bus Stop.

1. Tell us a bit about yourself and your background?
I have a background in Engineering Physics. From there I went on to get postgraduate degrees in Remote Sensing/GIS, and later Environmental Control and Management. I also hold a degree in Customer Relationship Management and a Project Management Certification.
My interests however span from computing to management and even to the social sciences. I am especially passionate about technology, how it can be deployed to solve problems on the African continent, and the policies that help create an enabling environment. I play an active role in the African geospatial industry and I currently serve in the capacity of Secretary for the Education, Technology Development and Outreach technical committee of the African Association of Remote Sensing of the Environment. I am also an active member of the Space Generation Advisory Council, the youth forum of the African Leadership Conference on Space Science and Technology, and the ISPRS students’ consortium.
I manage to combine all this with undergoing management training at Venture Garden Group. It is an intensive leadership succession programme intended to groom the next set of leaders for the group’s various entities. Considering the entrepreneurial nature of the organisation, my daily routine cuts across everything from business development and project management to systems development and learning about investor relations.
I am also part of several efforts at promoting entrepreneurship and social innovation in Nigeria including being Project Manager for TEDxIfe (a community of innovators and arguably the best-run independently organised TED event in Nigeria), Events Manager for Lagos Startup Week, Co-Director for the Lagos Chapter of Startup Grind (a community of entrepreneurs actively educating, inspiring, and connecting startup founders to partners) amongst others.

A mother's love

 
This is a true story of Mother’ s Sacrifice during the Japan Earthquake. After the Earthquake had subsided, when the rescuers reached the ruins of a young woman’s house, they saw her dead body through the cracks. But her pose was somehow strange that she knelt on her knees like a person was worshiping; her body was leaning forward, and her two hands were supporting by an object. The collapsed house had crashed her back and her head. With so many difficulties, the leader of the rescuer team put his hand through a narrow gap on the wall to reach the woman’s body. He was hoping that this woman could be still alive. However, the cold and stiff body told him that she had passed away for sure. He and the rest of the team left this house and were going to search the next collapsed building. For some reasons, the team leader was driven by a compelling force to go back to the ruin house of the dead woman. Again, he knelt down and used his had through the narrow cracks to search the little space under the dead body. Suddenly, he screamed with excitement,” A child! There is a child! “ The whole team worked together; carefully they removed the piles of ruined objects around the dead woman. There was a 3 months old little boy wrapped in a flowery blanket under his mother’ s dead body. Obviously, the woman had made an ultimate sacrifice for saving her son. When her house was falling, she used her body to make a cover to protect her son. The little boy was still sleeping peacefully when the team leader picked him up. The medical doctor came quickly to exam the little boy. After he opened the blanket, he saw a cell phone inside the blanket. There was a text message on the screen. It said ,” If you can survive, you must remember that I love you.” This cell phone was passing around from one hand to another. Every body that read the message wept. ” If you can survive, you must remember that I love you.” Such is the mother’ s love for her child!! Dont forget to click the share button..

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

TRUE HEROES OF NIGERIA ARE IN THE GRAVE!



Trailers have killed so many. I wonder who killed more people Boko haram or evitable road accidents especially by trailers and fallen containers.
Worse axis of evil prevails as surremptous murderers. Do we raise army to stop these?
1. Cults: 10 undergraduates die daily unnecessarily through cults in our Schools and universities. = 3,600 per year.
2. Roads: 2 persons die each day in each state & Abuja from Road accidents especially caused by trailers. i.e. 2 x 37 x 365 per yr = 27,010 per yr.
3. Fake drugs & Health: 5 persons die each day in each state and abuja from fake drugs and inefficient, inadequate health facilities. 67,525 per year.
4. Women in birth: average of 2 deaths per day in each state and Abuja reported of women in child birth. No one is speaking for underaged girls who suffer Vistula debilities as they try to give birth in rural areas.2x37x365 = 27,010 per year.
5. Death from avoidable poverty:
At least 5retirees and their children die daily from poverty , sickness, malnutrition etc. as various governments steal also their pension money to pay thugs for election etc. 5x37x365 = 67,525 per year.
6. Death of New born babies.
Average of 5new babies die at birth plus 5abortions daily in each state and Abuja. 135,050 per year.
(A grievous sign that womanhood is feeling the pangs of oppression in this land in silence.)
7. Malaria deaths.
At least 5 killed per day by malaria. And the cost of tratment is above the minimum wage which many states havent paid. i.e. 67,525 per year.
8. Robbery, kidnapping, rape, prejudicial killing and police accidential discharge.
3persons die daily from these in each state and Abuja i.e. 40,515 per year.
9. Pollution.
2 deaths at least in each day in each state and abuja. i.e. 27,010 per year.
With least statistics we have a total of 462,770 or approximately 500,000 (half a million) persons going into early grave unnoticed and not an issue in our State or Federal parliarment or Senate.
Lets make half a million coffins and arrange them at Eagle square so that our blind political leaders will hear. They are too numb to reality by virtue of greed and corruption.
I foresee a generation of youths who shall someday forsake this insanity. I see a younger generation that shall CHOOSE to make positive impact on everyone they meet and everywhere they go. youths who will be a solution provider and not a part of the problem to be solved. i see a new generation of youth who would be a role model worthy of emulation, who will do the right thing at all times regardless of who is doing the wrong thing. I see a generation of youth who will consciously build a great legacy starting now, today and everyday.

By Israel Aanu