Anam City

Anam City Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Anam City, Anam, Anam.

A page about the unique ancient Island city that is surrounded by three major landmark Rivers (River-Niger, River-Omambala and River-Ezu) God is a wonderful creator!

The tallest tree in Wales got damaged by a storm and was supposed to be cut down, instead chainsaw artist Simon O'Rourke...
04/03/2022

The tallest tree in Wales got damaged by a storm and was supposed to be cut down, instead chainsaw artist Simon O'Rourke found a better solution to symbolize the tree’s last attempt to reach the sky.

This is the wife of the Vice President of Ukraine she’s on the battle filed. True leaders lead by example.
26/02/2022

This is the wife of the Vice President of Ukraine she’s on the battle filed.

True leaders lead by example.

19/02/2022
YOUR SIZE DOESN'T DETERMINE YOUR PROGRESS RATHER YOUR SENSEGhana Card can now be used as e-passport in 44,000 airports a...
12/02/2022

YOUR SIZE DOESN'T DETERMINE YOUR PROGRESS RATHER YOUR SENSE

Ghana Card can now be used as e-passport in 44,000 airports across the world

Starting from Wednesday, February 9, Ghana’s National Identification Card, popularly known as the ‘Ghana Card’ will enable holders to travel across 97 borders and 44,000 airports in the world.

A press release from the Office of the Vice President said holders of the Ghana Card will, therefore, be permitted to embark on any flight to Ghana by simply showing the card.

This follows recognition of the Ghana Card as a global electronic passport, verified by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) compliant borders.

Three siblings from one family engaged as full-fledged officers of the US Army.From left to right: Lt Chioma Odocha, Lt ...
11/02/2022

Three siblings from one family engaged as full-fledged officers of the US Army.
From left to right: Lt Chioma Odocha, Lt Tochi Odocha and Capt Kelechi Odocha, all children of Dr and Mrs Harold Okay Odocha, originally from Mbaise, Imo State.

Dr Odocha is a Transplant Surgeon (Liver/Kidney) and former Chief of Transplants at Howard University, Washington, DC.

© Anthony Nwabueze

Ezenwanyi, Nne Charlie(nya bu nne anyi Eliza); anọgọ ọgwụ aro ịtọ na arọ ili na ocheeze Ingland na oboro komon wealth nd...
06/02/2022

Ezenwanyi,

Nne Charlie(nya bu nne anyi Eliza); anọgọ ọgwụ aro ịtọ na arọ ili na ocheeze Ingland na oboro komon wealth ndị ọzọ.

PLATINUM JUBILEE OF QUEEN ELIZABETH OF ENGLAND AND THE COMMON WEALTH OF NATIONS.

Today February 6th, 2022 marks the 70th anniversary of accession to the throne of H.M. Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

7decades is not an easy achievement, she acceded to the throne at the age of 25 following the death of her father, George VI.

Happy anniversary to Her Royal Majesty the Queen.

MOST people who drink alcohol drink it out of PEER PRESSURE. Because most alcoholic brands are NOT sweet or delicious.As...
04/02/2022

MOST people who drink alcohol drink it out of PEER PRESSURE. Because most alcoholic brands are NOT sweet or delicious.

As a child, I saw older adults enjoy alcohol and couldn't wait to become an adult and taste it.
After waiting all the years to taste bear, I tasted it and it was a HUGE DISAPPOINTMENT.

I thought I had tasted an expired one, so I tried another fresh bottle, and I spat everything out.
Imagine waiting all your life to taste something adults enjoy only to discover that you've waited in vain.... OR waited to taste s**t.

How do people spend their hard earned money to buy alcohol and drink something with such awful taste till they get drunk and temporarily lose their senses/sanity? Like, use your money to buy and drink something so tasteless or bitter till you drink your sanity away?

There is only one brand of alcoholic drinks that I believe is worth the hype: FRESH PALM WINE!

All others are just liquids introduced to the world by Satan and his agents.

©Nkechi Bianze

The Purpose and Price of Disruptive ChangeChukwuma Charles Soludo, CFRBeing the First Graduation Day Keynote Speech at t...
30/01/2022

The Purpose and Price of Disruptive Change

Chukwuma Charles Soludo, CFR

Being the First Graduation Day Keynote Speech at the SPPG Pioneer Class of 2021 (International Conference Centre, Abuja): January 29, 2022

0: PROTOCOL

Dear Friends, let me begin by appreciating one of Africa’s finest amazons and founder of the School of Politics, Policy and Governance (SPPG), my sister Dr. Mrs Obiageli Ezekwesili (Oby) for continuing to be a key change maker in Africa. Graduating the first class of the SPPG today is like planting many seeds in a wide field: some may end up as iroko trees, others as shrubs, but we hope that together, they will all bond into a visible and impactful forest. When I received Oby’s letter some five days ago, I concluded that given my punishing schedule at the moment, I would just come and make a few ex tempore remarks. But I decided last night to scribble a few talking points--- to avoid being misquoted. Therefore, if I appear incoherent, please forgive me.

The Graduation Theme is “Emergence of Unconventionals”. I understand that SPPG was founded to radically and deliberately transform the quality of political and public leadership in Nigeria and Africa, with a view to building a pipeline of value-based and disruptive thinking political class equipped with requisite knowledge and skills to solve complex problems of development in order to reposition Africa in the 21st Century. This is music to my ears and Africa is grateful to Oby.

In 1999, I co-authored a book entitled “Our Continent, Our Future: African Perspectives on Structural Adjustment”. In 2000, I was the long-term consultant in a pan African project that resulted in a book published by the World Bank entitled “Can Africa Claim the 21st Century?” In both books, we identified the centrality of disruptive leadership and a developmental state in Africa’s renaissance. A little over 20 years later, the SPPG has set out to walk the talk by working to deliberately orchestrate the emergence of leaders with knowledge and capabilities.

You can therefore understand why I am personally elated to be speaking at the first graduation ceremony of this cohort of emerging unconventional leaders. Congratulations to you all, and in a few seconds, I will be commiserating with you as well. You volunteered to be in this team, and my charge to you is to go out and make the difference: be the change you have offered to see. Africa is waiting for you. Africa is watching you. Do not let us down.

On leadership, Africa has had a chequered history. While some see only the dark spots, I actually see multi colours of the good, the bad and the ugly. While the bad and the ugly dominate, I always try to avoid what our other sister, Chimamanda Adichie called the “single story” of the African narrative. In some ways, part of our future is in our past. When I read about the plans, values, passion, and accomplishments of some of Africa’s liberation/independence leaders such as Julius Nyerere, Kwame Nkrumah, Nelson Mandela, Patrice Lumumba, Nnamdi Azikiwe, etc I have cause to smile as an African. Back home, I am inspired by the examples of Aminu Kano, M.I. Okpara, Obafemi Awolowo, Sir Ahmadu Bello, etc in our first republic. We can fill up hundreds of pages as eulogy to our gallant and patriotic past heroes and heroines, including those distinguished civil servants, captains of industry, journalists, civil society activists, musicians, etc who worked hard and some even paid the ultimate price to see Nigeria a better place. In our more recent history especially since 1999, we have seen occasional glitters of hope here and there but despair deepens. Around the continent, there is a mixture of bright and gloomy stories. “Africa Rising” was not just a fluke. The Dark Continent remains potentially the land of opportunities and could indeed be the global economic driver of the 22nd century. But the time to lay the foundation is now. The second scramble for Africa is raging, with the Chinese on the loose. Africa indeed needs new orchestra teams and new songs. It needs to run at the speed of a thousand kilometres an hour to seize back its future and shape its narrative. The graduates of SPPG have onerous and daunting tasks ahead of them. You have my commiserations!

With some 140 multidisciplinary topics covered in the past eight months, what can anyone tell you again in terms of knowledge. You have it, and also know where to find more if needed. With the hoes and machetes, the next is to get into the farm and ensure higher productivity. That farm is the field of politics, policy and governance. I am sure you carefully studied the nature of that farm in Nigeria and Africa, and I wish you good luck as you try to navigate through it to leave the society better than you met it.

But let me suggest, for emphasis, that indeed Africa needs a new liberation movement. The first struggle was liberation from the colonial masters. The second will be liberation from rentier politics and politicians. For me, there is almost a sense of nostalgia, recalling the mission and accomplishments of our founding fathers, especially as we contemplate the world without oil in Nigeria. Much of the existing social order is founded on competition for, and distribution of, rents. Oil and the easy money that came with it destroyed the social fabric and the elite created new institutions and political structures to maximize their gains. As the noose tightened globally on other rentier/criminal enterprises such as drug trafficking or internet scamming, many of the barons flocked into politics as the next easy alternative.

Politics has become big business. Appointment or election into public office is seen largely as an opportunity to “eat” rather than a call to selfless service. There is an army of rich (big men) who have never worked or done any productive work in their life and believe that it is their right to expect something for nothing. The tiny less than one percent elite have a stranglehold on the public purse, sprinkling occasional crumbs to the citizens as ‘dividends of democracy’. The citizens themselves either out of helplessness or acquiescence join the party, expecting the politicians to dole out pittance out of public treasury as charity. The citizens actually clap for such phantom “charity”. Politicians who refuse to do so are deemed as “stingy” or “wicked”, and the circus goes on. With a rentier system, a culture of freebies emerged, and most people don’t expect to pay for anything, including taxes, electricity, water, petrol, etc. A classic feature of the political environment is that corruption has become part of the “culture”, with little incentive for honesty. Honesty is scorned as wickedness, foolishness or mere pretense, and those who dare to be different have a steep price to pay. So, who among you is ready to be honest and scorned by society?

Oil is on its way out, but dismantling the decades-old debilitating institutions and politics around it won’t be a tea party. Nigeria is now at a fiscal cliff with a crunching solvency challenge. Youth unemployment, insecurity, poverty, inflation, etc threaten the social fabric. Migrating to a post oil world of 4th Industrial revolution and sustainable prosperity will require massive disruptive transformations and restoration of a productive social contract.

Such disruptions will come at great costs, and could indeed be dangerous. It is not far to imagine what could befall serious disruptors. In Nigeria, we remember what happened to Murtala Muhammed, and the history books are replete with hundreds of examples of the inherent risks. At a personal level, undertaking the banking revolution in Nigeria came with 19 written threats to me and my family, including physical attacks. Disrupting the existing social order is dangerous. Beneficiaries of the current order are powerful enough to organize and viciously fight back to protect their privileges. On the contrary, the masses who are the ultimate beneficiaries are not organized enough to act as a bulwark against the special interests. As things stand currently, we are standing between the rock and the hard place. With the objective to retain power within the context of short electoral cycles, politicians are afraid to undertake the necessary disruptive changes to guarantee long term safety and prosperity for all. On the other hand, the existing trends are totally unsustainable and the system is living on borrowed times. Everyone is sleepwalking to the hard place, and praying that somehow a miracle will happen along the way.

So, who is ready to put his head on the line to lead such productive but dangerous disruptions? Are the SPPG graduates ready for the assignment? I assume that you can’t wait to get to work, to apply your knowledge for a new Nigeria. Am I right? You have my prayers! As I pray for your success, let me throw up a few random nuggets to chew on your way.

Dear friends, fixing politics requires talent and skills. But these won’t be enough. It won’t happen by lone wolves working in silos. It requires new developmental organizations – organizations/teams of believers, driven by defined ideology, purpose and character. Let’s be clear about one point: Nigeria does not lack well educated/skilled and widely travelled stock of human capital to drive her development. In the U.S alone, Nigeria ranks highest on education among ethnic minorities and as a percentage of its population, it has the most educated population of all ethnic groups. At home, we have over 100 universities churning out hundreds of graduates every year. All over the world, Nigerians excel as champions in their various fields. A key missing link is purpose driven cohesion and organization for transformation of the homeland. There are many disparate groups and organizations, including political parties which claim (at least on their statutes) to champion national development. Only a few, if any, can be identified by any soul in terms of a nationalist ideology, professed and practiced by its members. The liberation struggle for independent Africa was driven by a nationalist ideology to be anchored by a developmental state. There is a huge void today, and I am not sure how we can fix our politics without the requisite organizations for change.

So, my first charge to my new friends and graduates is to profess their purpose in the political farmland and actively participate to actualize it. If you have not yet done so, when you go home today, write down your purpose (what do you want to achieve) in the public arena and paste same beside your reading table or anywhere for everyday reference. Then join a political party, a civil society organization, or organize alternative better platforms of leverage. You may better disrupt from inside than outside. Organization is power. The key is to participate in the process or stop complaining. For Nigeria, most people focus on politics in Abuja and we have for too long tried in vain to fix Nigeria from the obtuse centre. It is time to try fixing it and its politics from below--- from the subnational units. If you have something to offer, go and run for office. Win or lose, your participation will add something to the process. Then persevere, endure, and remain focused on delivering your purpose.

For starters, let me suggest that the Alumni of SPPG should form themselves into a New Nigeria Network for change. As SPPG expands, an African network would emerge. Over the next decade, I can see a network of thousands of Africans who share a common template for redeeming our heritage. A Pan African movement may eventually take the stage by storm. The SPPG graduates must literally inculcate and profess a messianic philosophy as the driving force behind their network. It is good to look up to a role model for continuous inspiration or let each SPPG member carry the badge of honour and integrity everywhere. Personally, I would like to hear graduates of SPPG keep reminding the society that “as a graduate of SPPG, there are things I can’t do”, or “as a graduate of SPPG, I always stand up for public interest and not for personal gains” or “I am prepared to pay any price or go to any length to make Africa great”. Just do something different; say something different.

As part of your participation, please deliberately mainstream volunteerism. Don’t waste your new skills or wait until you are in public office. Find or create opportunities to deploy them. Volunteer to teach one hour a week in a local school. You can never imagine the impact. Volunteer in community service: providing information and helping with environmental management, traffic control, public education on lifestyle changes, mentor children and youths, etc. Indeed, volunteer to serve in the village government or clan. Barack Obama failed his first election and went to offer community services, and from there attempted again, and again. Fixing politics requires illustrative personal examples. As Mother Teresa advised, if you can’t change a million lives, start with one. Won’t it be great and a new dawn if on daily basis, each member of the SPPG alumni posts what actions he/she took to be the change he/she desires? Imagine spin-off organizations around Africa with millions of members over time on the same vision and mission. Obviously, something will give!

Dear friends, I won’t end these remarks without reiterating the centrality of purpose in the bid to fix politics. Purpose is everything. If you have not read it, I sincerely recommend the book entitled “The Purpose Driven Life: What on Earth Am I Here For” by Rick Warren. Purpose is deeply personal. Everyone must have that personal deep reflection and answer that question: “what on earth am I here for”? For some, the answer is roundly selfish: to eat, drink, marry, build house(s), and accumulate and accumulate all the vanities of the world and then die. In the circumstance, political arena is nothing but a dining table. I know many people trained in some of the best universities in the world and widely travelled but who complain about being deployed to ministries considered “dry” in public service in comparison to the ones they considered as “juicy”. In this instance, it is not about knowledge and skills but purpose. For others, there must be a divine purpose why God in His infinite wisdom decided to make you an African, a Nigerian, etc. If the divine purpose is interpreted to mean that God sent you here to contribute in leaving His creation better than you met it, then you must be driven by a different meaning and impetus to life.

Every society that has prospered and endured has been led by men and women who have discovered a higher purpose beyond self. For such people, politics is a vocation for selfless service and not a job. Such people are driven by a single purpose--- to make a difference and leave legacies. Whenever and wherever competence is augmented with character and developmental ideology, the society wins. I recently re-read Lee Kuan Yew’s book “From Third World to First”, and can’t stop being inspired. The combination of competence and driven by higher purpose produced such a transformational leadership that orchestrated a miracle in development. In one of his last speeches before death, Lee Kuan Yew observed that he and his colleagues were prepared that even if they died trying to make Singapore great, they would have been happy to die for a worthy cause. The choice is personal. The choice is yours.

But if perchance, you choose, as I believe you have elected, to join the crusade for a better Africa, and knowing the missiles that will come your way as you strive to do good and be different, let me encourage you with the great words by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1910: “It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat”.

Dear friends, let me end with this simple prayer for you. May God of Africa grant you the wisdom to discover the divine purpose for your life, the wisdom to know what is right, and very importantly, the courage to do it.

God bless you!

God bless Nigeria!!

Inukwa?Nigerian Nurse Loses Her Licence For Shouting ‘Jesus’ While Baby She Was Caring For Had Heart AttackNigerian-born...
24/01/2022

Inukwa?

Nigerian Nurse Loses Her Licence For Shouting ‘Jesus’ While Baby She Was Caring For Had Heart Attack

Nigerian-born nurse Omolayo Abayomi has had her licence withdrawn by the UK Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) because she threw her hands up in the air and begged Jesus for help as a baby she was supposed to be taking care of suffered a heart attack.

In an unfortunate case, Ms Abayomi, 51, appeared to panic when the child who suffered from a chronic lung disease, turned blue and stopped breathing in his cot at home.

Apparently taken aback by the trauma of it all, she called for divine intervention more than 20 times before the boy’s mother told her to shut up.

A disciplinary hearing was told that Ms Abayomi was constantly saying Jesus help him and waving her arms around. It was revealed that she provided wholly inadequate care by leaving the frantic mother to resuscitate her lifeless son, while the father dialled 999.

Ms Abayomi was subsequently found guilty of a string of charges by the NMC at a hearing in central London. During the hearing, Sydney Topping, representing Ms Abayomi, insisted his client’s behaviour had represented no more than a bad day at the office and urged the panel to let her off with a caution but his pleas was rejected.

Mr Topping said, “Once in a while you have a bad day at the office. I would suggest that day, the registrant had a bad day at the office. It was no worse than that. She has bounced back since then.”

During the hearing, it was revealed that the child, referred to a Patient A and his twin sister were born three months premature at Homerton University Hospital in Hackney, east London, and as a result suffered from a number of serious illnesses and so required round-the-clock care.

Joanna Dirmikis, for the NMC, said Ms Abayomi had been employed by private nursing firm, Pediatric Nursing Link, to look after the infant, who required 22 hours of nursing care every day. She added that the parents were woken by a knock on their bedroom door at 5am to find their son lying lifeless after suffering respiratory cardiac arrest.

Paramedics rushed the boy to Whipps Cross Hospital in Leytonstone, east London, before he was taken to Great Ormond Street Hospital on the same day for further treatment. Giving evidence, the tearful mother of the boy, said Ms Abayomi had effectively abandoned her during the incident.

She added, “The nurse was constantly saying Jesus help him and waving her arms around. She said it more than 20 times. I felt I had to do everything as at that point she was doing nothing to help my son.

“She never offered to take the lead at any point and at no point did she suggest calling 999. I can’t change what’s happened to my son, I know I did the best for him but the nurse just completely abandoned her duty.

“If I can save just one other person from having to go through what we have been through, then that’s what I want to do.” The panel heard Patient A, now aged five, made a full recovery from the incident but is still totally dependent on others for his care.

Ms Abayomi claimed the mother had pushed her away and refused to let her help and denied calling out for Jesus, panicking and failing to provide care or basic life support. She further denied failing to properly hand over the case to paramedics and making inaccurate and false notes about the incident.

She was cleared of specific charges that she suctioned the child’s tracheostomy tube or that she failed to record observations taken but was found guilty of misconduct and ruled unfit to continue working without restrictions. Striking Ms Abayomi off, panel chair, John Williams, said: “This was a failure to accept responsibility for her role in the events by the registrant.

“She has shown a lack of empathy with the parents of the child and there has been no admission or apology and therefore no insight. This failure is incompatible with her continuing to be a registered nurse.”

22/01/2022

MISSING PERSON:

A girl by name Chioma Eneanya a native of Anam in Anambra State who resides in Amawbia, Awka has been reported missing.

She is a presently schooling in Agulu.

If found, please contact: +234 805 538 6460

Or you can reach For The Love Of Anambra on Facebook.

Thank you.

Gọọmenti willi mali maka ndị agboro nine noo na Anambra; mana Soludo aga-ama kwa va?
21/01/2022

Gọọmenti willi mali maka ndị agboro nine noo na Anambra; mana Soludo aga-ama kwa va?

16/01/2022

AFRICA'S RICHEST PERSONS (2021/2022)

1. Aliko Dangote 🇳🇬 ($13.9 billion)

2. Johann Rupert 🇿🇦 ($10.5 billion)

3. Nicky Oppenheimer 🇿🇦 ($8.7 billion)

4. Nassef Sawiris 🇪🇬 ($8.4 billion)

5. Mike Adenuga 🇳🇬 ($6.7 billion)

6. Issad Rebrab 🇩🇿 ($4.8 billion)

7. Abdulsamad Rabiu 🇳🇬 ($4.5 billion)

8. Strive Masiyiwa 🇿🇼 ($3.6 billion)

9. Naguib Sawiris 🇪🇬 ($3.1 billion)

10. Patrice Motsepe 🇿🇦, Koos Bekker 🇿🇦 ($2.8 billion each)

12. Mohamed Mansour 🇪🇬 ($2.5 billion)

13. Aziz Akhannouch 🇲🇦 ($2 billion)

14. Michiel Le Roux 🇿🇦 ($1.8 billion)

15. Mohammed Dewji 🇹🇿 ($1.6 billion)

16. Youssef Mansour 🇪🇬 ($1.5 billion)

17. Yasseen Mansour 🇪🇬 ($1.1 billion)

18. Folorunsho Alakija 🇳🇬 ($1 billion).

I told a curious and teachable young Ìgbò woman that she can possibly name her child “Nkwọ” — (a very beautiful and deep...
06/01/2022

I told a curious and teachable young Ìgbò woman that she can possibly name her child “Nkwọ” — (a very beautiful and deeply powerful name) — if she and her husband are really conscious and awakened Ìgbò minds and not the regular Ụga Àzì people floating about without seeing what's under their feet.

I informed her that a professor who's educated in the world's best universities named his child “Nkwọ” in the 1970s and that the child still bears the name, standing out till today.

“What do you think made such a highly educated man name his child such?” I aroused her mind.

She got worried and asked, “But many Ìgbò people will say it's outmoded, they may jeer at my child when the name is mentioned.”

“Forget them! Forget the Ụga Àzì people. You're the one to laugh at their imposed ignorance and unfortunate blindness engineered through Christianity over the years”, I encouraged her.

“Won't they say I am naming my child the name of a market day?”

“So, do you think NKWỌ is just a market day's name? Do you think EKE is just a market day's name?”, I screamed to intensify the weight of the topic. “So, you think a very informed Ìgbò man who's a professor would name his child NKWỌ just because the child was born on Nkwọ market day?”

She was transfixed, speechless. By the time we were done, she pondered harder the depth of her own Ìgbò world which she is a total stranger to. “Church quietly supervised that possibility”, I answered her.

------------------------

Dear young Ìgbò women,

You've really had enough of novel readings, romance news, fashion articles and buzzes, Kardashians, etc. You've read 100s of American and British novels and have mastered English language writing and speaking. But, you have hardly paid attention to books on Ìgbò history, culture and cosmology. And you haven't spent a month in your village asking questions to know who you are. Doesn't it ever worry you that you don't know much about the Ìgbò world to teach your children apart from Nickelodeon, Jim jam, etc. Yes, we haven't advanced mentally to amass the mental will and urgency to go into producing our own cartoons that will bear our contents and delivered in our language. But it doesn't stop other means such as educating yourself to be able to educate your children, at least, to keep them conscious from their little stages.

If you call this another year, then you must begin to spend little money and time on books on Ìgbò history, culture and cosmology. It's not enough to read few posts on Facebook and feel informed. Get into the books and get more details. Don't get books from me because I sell some of them. Get from other sources and learn enough to teach your children as well as raise them accordingly. The amount of money you spend on beautifying yourself is 10 times bigger than what you can spend on these lifetime-useful materials I am talking about. Try it this 2022 and help save a sinking race from your own nuclear family end.

Ndeewo!

One of the outstanding Nigerian proverbs says " it takes a whole village to raise a child". Ever wonder , why the effort...
02/01/2022

One of the outstanding Nigerian proverbs says " it takes a whole village to raise a child". Ever wonder , why the efforts? Why does it have to take a whole village? What happens when there's no collective effort from the entire village ? As under developed as the African village are , yet the priceless understanding of " if we don't raise them rightly , then we better prepare for a hunting , most uncomfortable , regrettable and painful future . A future where the rising generation careless of their aged parents and neighbors in the VILLAGE or COMMUNITY. A future where the rising generation gives attention to aesthetic beauty of technology , over human interaction face to face , easily walks over the ones who need care and love , who needs motivation and peace of mind ... Pays more attention to the number of "likes" and internet trends , fads and fashions .

May we not take lightly our communal responsibility in reminding the child of where they are coming from and what responsibility that rests on their golden shoulders , may we see every child as ours no matter the amount of ill upbringing we feel they might have experienced . The society today is a product of yesterday's family and communal collective influence and education . LETS SAVE THE FUTURE . DON'T BE A BYSTANDER.

By: Ekene Ani Oshinigwe

AFRICA’S 25 MOST LIVEABLE CITIES1. Port Luis, Mauritius 🇲🇺 2. Durban, South Africa 🇿🇦 3. CapeTown, South Africa 🇿🇦 4. Jo...
29/12/2021

AFRICA’S 25 MOST LIVEABLE CITIES

1. Port Luis, Mauritius 🇲🇺
2. Durban, South Africa 🇿🇦
3. CapeTown, South Africa 🇿🇦
4. Johannesburg, South Africa 🇿🇦
5. Victoria, Seychelles 🇸🇨
6. Tunis, Tunisia 🇹🇳
7. Rabat, Morocco 🇲🇦
8. Casablanca, Morocco 🇲🇦
9. Windhoek, Namibia 🇳🇦
10. Gaborone, Botswana 🇧🇼
11. Lusaka, Zambia 🇿🇲
12. Darkar, Senegal 🇸🇳
13. Accra, Ghana 🇬🇭
14. Libreville, Gabon 🇬🇦
15. Kampala, Uganda 🇺🇬
16. Cairo, Egypt 🇪🇬
17. Banjul, Gambia 🇬🇲
18. Blantyre, Malawi 🇲🇼
19. Cotonou, Benin 🇧🇯
20. Maputo, Mozambique 🇲🇿
21. Algiers, Algeria 🇩🇿
22. Nairobi, Kenya 🇰🇪
23. Djibouti City, Djibouti 🇩🇯
24. Kigali, Rwanda 🇷🇼
25. Yaoundé, Cameroon 🇨🇲

LIVING CONDITIONS WERE ANALYSED BASED ON THESE 10 CATEGORIES.

• Political and Social Environment (Political stability,Crime,law Enforcement)

• Economic Environment (Currency Exchange Regulations,Banking Services)

• Socio-Cultural Environment (Media Availability and censorship,limitations on personal freedom)

• Medical And Health Considerations (medical supplies and services, infectious diseases,sewage,waste disposal, air pollution)

• Schools And Education ( standards and availability of international schools)

• Public Services And Transportation (electricity,water,public transportation,traffic congestion)

• Recreation (Restaurants,theatres,cinemas,sports and leisure)

• Consumer Goods (availability of food\daily consumption items,Cars)

• Housing (rental housing,household appliances,furniture,maintenance services)

• Natural Environment (Climate,record of Natural disasters)

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Anam
Anam
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