Elizabeth Ajetunmobi is a human resource consultant, educator, family life practitioner, life coach, author and CEO of Aymie Staffing Solutions, a staffing and placement agency based in Lagos. An alumnus of University of Nottingham, United Kingdom, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife and Park Royal and Lagos Finishing School, her training and experience spans several fields including Education, Family Life, Child Abuse and Human Resources. Recently celebrating outstanding nannies at the annual Nanny Recognition Week, she spoke on the motivation behind this, putting structures in place and why it is essential for working mothers to get help.

What was the inspiration behind starting your business?
I worked as a classroom teacher for close to 10 years and when I was working there, I had cause to interact with a lot of domestic staff, nannies, drivers and so on. When you see some of them, you will be happy because the child is obviously being well taken care of and you will see others and wonder why the child was left alone with the caregiver. This used to bother me a lot and I started wondering what I could do about this. The parents are at work and if the caregivers don’t know better, how can they take care of the children left in their care? I saw a gap here and this got me thinking on the need to give orientation and training to domestic staff to enable them work effectively and take care of children left in their care and also to put the correct structures in place.

You celebrated nannies at the Nanny Recognition Week; this is quite uncommon in this industry, what was the purpose?
This week is celebrated all over the world and falls between September 22-28 and the reason for celebrating nannies isn’t far- fetched. Nannies are doing an amazing job, they are rendering essential services and everyone needs a nanny or help with childcare. Shouldn’t we appreciate them and let them know they’re doing a fantastic job and celebrate them? We just want to thank them for everything they do as they are truly amazing people.

Venturing into this business must not have come cheap; how did you get the funds to start out?
It wasn’t cheap and I started with personal funds. We all know running a business in Nigeria isn’t easy and comes with a lot of challenges but we thank God that we are making headway despite all odds.

Entrepreneurs usually list staffing as a major challenge and you’re in a field where you are heavily involved with providing staffing; how are you solving this?
I must confess, when I first started, I used to wonder if I was doing the right thing. However, my passion and desire to foster change prevented me from giving up and I’m thankful for that. Dealing with humans isn’t easy because they are dynamic. Our dealings with people over the years have given us a huge advantage so we are able to predict people’s next moves. There is almost nothing new to us and we follow our laid-down standards and procedures and this helps us when dealing with humans generally. We usually tell our clients that the same way they write job descriptions for the corporate world, you should write it for your domestic staff. Employers don’t write it and if the staff doesn’t remind you or knows what to do, you get home and begin to shout. As simple as this may sound, writing down what they should do daily would help the both of you work well together.

When you say structures, what do you mean exactly?
When someone comes into your home, the person is new and doesn’t know how you do things, so writing things out really help. They know what to do at each time of the day before you get back. Structures simply mean things you put in place that help your staff do their work easier. If you want them to do things your way, it’s better you state it clearly. Also, my book, The Domestic Staff Guide To Effective Work helps you achieve this easily.

You’re a published author as you said, what inspired you to write a book?
The book is for employers and employees because we realised that for things to change, we have to do things differently. If you have noticed, most people just employ any random person and feel they’re doing them a favour by giving them food and allowing them live in their homes. We need to change this mindset. The staff is rendering a service and you have to respect them, you’re not doing them a favour. With this book, the employers list out what needs to be done, policies on giving children medication, receiving visitors and so on. It also lists advice for employers on things like childproofing, putting structures in place and so on.

This business requires a high level of trust, how do you gain client’s trust and sustain it?
It’s been amazing so far and one of the things that have helped us is that we don’t compromise on any of our policies. There have been times that, before sending a house-help over to a client, something was discovered during medical testing, we wouldn’t hide that information from the client. We have HMO plans with some hospitals and when we discover that a staff has a medical issue, the staff goes to the hospital and gets treated on us because even if they don’t get hired by that client, we don’t want them to go into the community and infect others. Our clients know we don’t compromise. When we go to verify someone or their guarantors and we aren’t sure we can vouch for them, we don’t continue with the person. We use biometric testing on all our staff.

When a person comes to us, we do an initial assessment/interview and we learn where you are from. They fill a form and submit a C.V and provide their guarantor’s contact and their last employer’s contact details as well and we verify all these. We then run an interview session and send the videos to the clients from where they decide if they want the person to come for a physical interview. If the client is satisfied, we then proceed with deeper checks and medicals and if all is well, the client states when they should resume. While they are at the job, we run periodic checks and hold monthly re-training exercises where they learn new skills.

There have been several horror stories of domestic staff harming their employers or the children, do you think this affects the level of trust reposed in you?
Yes and that is why we don’t compromise on our processes. Humans lie a lot and that is why we strive to verify everything they tell us. When we go to their communities, people have to be able to identify that you have been living there for X number of years, know your parents and your guarantors as well. We also take their BVN numbers and do biometric capturing just to be sure of whom they really are. Yes, we hear such stories but I’m confident it cannot happen here because of the structures we have put in place.

Have you had any bad experience with a staff or client?
We’ve never had any negative experience so far from our domestic staff. We also try to manage our clients as well because we have realised that it’s not only the staff that need re-orientation. Some clients feel because they are wealthy, they cannot be corrected. Some have tried to hit their staff and we told them it was totally unacceptable. It is stated in the contract they signed and if they refuse to listen, we remove the domestic staff. When you are hitting the person and the person hits you back or stabs you, what do you then do? Also, we also plead with them not to owe salaries. If someone has worked for you, please pay them. We’ve never had any case of sexual abuse and I think this is largely due to the structures we’ve put in place.

If you weren’t doing this, what would have been doing?
Running a school. I believe children are the future and if they’re raised in a loving environment and taught properly, the world would be a better place. If children were raised well, we wouldn’t be hearing some of the things we hear and this is still something I might still do.

You wear many hats, how do you make them all work and remain grounded?
I’m not a super woman, I ask for help when I need it and I have a domestic staff. I don’t think working mothers can do without a domestic staff; it’s essential you get help. Women need help doing things and I advise you get it.

What would you say are the major challenges in running this business?
Changing mindset is a major issue especially as most people don’t put proper structures in place. We also want to change the mindset of the domestic staff, who feel they are “ordinary helps.” I always let them know this is untrue as they are rendering service and value and deserved to be paid. I tell them no job is more or less important than the other. Also, we need government’s assistance in regulating this industry. Just as doctors need licenses to practice, domestic staff should have licenses and when they do wrong, their licenses would be seized. I want the government to pay more attention to this industry.

Looking back, do you wish to have done anything differently?
I’m totally satisfied with the progress we have made. This is the first time we are celebrating nannies in such a huge way and everyone is so happy. There are no regrets for me.

What last words do you want to leave with women that have been inspired by you?
Don’t try to do everything yourself. Getting help doesn’t mean you’re weak. Put structures in place for your staff and your children to make them responsible. If you leave everything for your help, you’re not helping your kids in any way. Most times, parents leave domestic work for girls but that shouldn’t be so; this is why men are the way they are today. Put structures in place for them right from when they’re young, you’ll be helping them and yourself. As parents, we are responsible for how the society is turning out and we need to begin to take this more seriously…

By: Tobi Awodipe for Guardian

The Duke of Sussex Prince Harry just proved that he is a doting son after he decided to open a health center after the name of his late mother Princess Diana. The 35-year-old arrived in South Africa with his wife Meghan Markle and their 4-month-old son Archie for the first day of their official 10-day tour.

According to the outlet, the Duke will also make the special visit on Friday to reopen it after it was named in her honor following a revamp. “This is all about wanting to fulfill his mother’s legacy,” a source close to the palace told the outlet, reported by Fox News.

“This tour will see the Duke and Duchess go back to basics, using their profile in the right way to highlight causes they are both passionate about.” “In a particularly significant and poignant journey, the Duke of Sussex will have the opportunity to return to Angola to see first-hand the legacy of his mother the late Diana,

Princess of Wales, whose visit to Huambo in 1997 helped raise awareness of the threat posed by land mines to communities and livelihoods,” added Harry’s private secretary Samantha Cohen.

This past Saturday, media mogul Oprah Winfrey surprised attendees at the 17th annual Maya Angelou Women Who Lead Luncheon with a major donation that will help minority students in the North Carolina area attend college. 

The event, which was held in Charlotte, North Carolina and put on by the United Negro College Fund (UNCF), honored women who are making a positive difference in the community and who are helping to keep the late Maya Angelou’s legacy alive. 

When Winfrey, who served as the keynote speaker for the luncheon, found out that UNCF had raised $1.15 million at the event for local deserving students to attend college, she announced that she would match the donation and help bring the total amount raised to $2.3 million. 

“I believe in the power of education,” The Charlotte Observer reports Winfrey telling the audience. “There is nothing better than to open the door for someone.”

In 2007, Winfrey opened her leadership academy for young girls in South Africa and told the crowd that three of her girls had graduated from Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte. She continued by recalling a conversation she had with the late Angelou where she told her that she believed her academy in South Africa would be her greatest legacy. 

“You have no idea what your legacy is going to be because your legacy will be every life you touch,” Winfrey said Angelou told her. 

Winfrey then challenged the crowd to think about their own legacy by understanding that “your legacy is how you treat everybody.”

Next year, Winfrey will return to Charlotte to campaign for healthier living as part of her “Oprah’s 2020 Vision: Your Life in Focus” tour. The wellness event is scheduled to hit the Spectrum Center in Charlotte on January 18, 2020. 

 

The movie, titled, “Fashion Week” will be adapted from a 130-page graphic novel French writer and director Joann Sfarhas written but is yet to published, the producers said on Thursday.

Kim was threatened with a gun, tied up and gagged in the bathroom of a luxury residence in Paris, where she was staying during fashion week in October 2016.

Despite the arrests of mostly well-known French career gangsters, only one piece of jewellery has been recovered. One of the team of five robbers who forced their way into Kardashian’s apartment dropped a diamond-encrusted cross worth 30,000 euros while they were fleeing the scene.

Sfar is one of France’s best known comic and graphic novel authors.

He said that as the graphic novel, the movie would be about “a group of old school crooks who eye up the jewellery of an influential celebrity and find themselves swept up in the whirlwind of the fashion world.”

Sfar admitted it was “liberally based on the raid on Kim Kardashian”.

 

 

Credit: Bella Naija

Hollywood actress, Kerry Washington has shown her impressive Igbo writing skills as she congratulated Genevieve Nnaji over her Oscar selection.

Taking to twitter, Washington wrote:

This is glorious!!!!!!!!!!!!! Also…Anyi nwere ike i ga rie nri ehihie n’oge n’adighi anya?” (We can have lunch soon)

kerry washington

@kerrywashington

This is glorious!!!!!!!!!!!!! Also… 😊 Anyi nwere ike i ga rie nri ehihie n’oge n’adighi anya? https://twitter.com/genevievennaji1/status/1179688581708894208 

Genevieve Nnaji MFR

@GenevieveNnaji1

The Nigerian Oscar Selection Committee has chosen #LionHeartthemovie to represent Nigeria for the 2020 Academy Award for Best International Film! We are grateful for this recognition and proud to carry the torch. Thank you all for the love and support thus far. ❤️🇳🇬

View image on Twitter
3,210 people are talking about this

Replying to her tweet, Genevieve wrote:

Nwunye anyi daalu. Ka eme ya ngwa ngwa maka anyị nwere okwu. Love you sis” (We should have the lunch soonest because we need to have a discussion).

Genevieve Nnaji MFR

@GenevieveNnaji1

Nwunye anyi daalu🙌🏾🔥😍. Ka eme ya ngwa ngwa maka anyị nwere okwu. Love you sis. ❤️ https://twitter.com/kerrywashington/status/1179832930459193344 

kerry washington

@kerrywashington

This is glorious!!!!!!!!!!!!! Also… 😊 Anyi nwere ike i ga rie nri ehihie n’oge n’adighi anya? https://twitter.com/genevievennaji1/status/1179688581708894208 

1,418 people are talking about this

Kerry Washington  is married to Nnamdi Asomugha, a Nigerian-American actor and NFL Player.

 

Credit: fabwoman.ng

Says “I believe women are more disadvantaged when it gets to career growth”

In 2017, Nigeria ranked 122th out of 144 countries in the Global Gender Gap report. Women are more adversely affected by economic and educational challenges compared to the average Nigerian. Despite the progress over the past few decades, gender equality in employment remains an elusive goal in Nigeria. Women still face disadvantage and discrimination in all areas of socioeconomic life. Yewande Jinadu is trying to bridge that Gap and solve the problem through her Careerlife Nigeria platform, an initiative aimed at reducing unemployment by providing people with the right career related information and coaching.

Yewande is a certified HR Professional and an Employability coach. She is passionate about People Development, Employability, Career Coaching and Human Resources. Through personal coaching, published articles and speaking engagements, she has helped hundreds of young professionals become more employable and gain employment. To further address the issue, She recently launched the Employability Fitness Program, an initiative aimed at helping young graduates (0-3 years’ experience) overcome interview Phobia and the barriers in Recruitment process through mentoring. It has had measurable impact in the lives of over 100 participants in few months.

She shares her inspiring story with me in this interview.

Childhood Influence

Let me start with the No part. I didn’t always know or plan or prepare for what I currently do right from when I was a child. I grew up with parents who were exposed and always supported their children in whatever they wanted to do. I grew up as a Mathematician and Analytical person. I was wired to think Maths was my only Super Power. It was later in life I realized, I had other superpowers.

YES because I grew up with a deflated self-esteem. Over time, I became better and began to appreciate and love myself more. This always made me want to give back to others. I remember starting Y-Trust Foundation immediately after NYSC with no job going for outreaches in secondary school and talking to students about the menace of low self-esteem. I was VERY passionate about giving back and helping people.

My ‘eureka’ moment was when I realized that I didn’t need to ‘have it all’ to make an impact. All I needed to do was start small and never stop fueling my passion.

Inspiration behind CareerLife Nigeria

CareerLife Nigeria was inspired by my personal struggle to get a job after NYSC. I did an internship in the HR department while in 400level and I was privileged to sit in a few interviews so I had learned a lot. After NYSC, I felt that exposure would make it easier for me to succeed with multiple offers but I struggled. I hated interviews because I always messed up. I knew I had a LOT to offer but felt so bad because I was always portraying the opposite. I overcame it after a while and moved from Chemical Engineering to HR.

This made me participate in numerous interviews and I saw other graduates struggle with making it past the rigorous recruitment process we have set just to get talents.

I realized it would take me a long time to be able to wield the power to change the face of recruitment in Nigeria so I decided to take baby steps.

I’ve always been interested in people’s Career Development. I had SO much information through the experience and exposure I got and the few people that have interacted with me in a short while always came back to thank me for the amount of impact I’ve had in their lives. I decided that rather than help just a few people, I would put the information out there for thousands of other people through writing and coaching.

My blog contains a LOT of information that would help the average young graduate who may not be able to afford Employability Training. The mission is to help young graduates and professionals attain measurable career growth, I’m fulfilling that mission daily through various platforms.


Employability fitness coaching

The Employability Fitness Program(EFP) was birthed to solve the personal issues people have with un-employment. The first edition was launched in July with a live mock interview with HR Professionals and Subject Matter Experts. Here, participants had the opportunity to get interviewed by professionals and given direct feedback that addresses their personal deficiency during interviews.

We want to help people overcome interview phobia (a problem a LOT of graduates have but is currently not being addressed). After the live mock session, it follows with a 3 months post-coaching which is aimed at handholding them till they finally get an offer. In the post-coaching group, we have HR professionals who have volunteered their time to coach and mentor the young graduates. We have weekly knowledge sharing session on topics the participants chose themselves.

We also post exclusive job openings that are seen through high-level referrals and we prepare participants for prospective interviews on the group. The group is FREE and open to fresh and young graduates.

Testimonies

Recently a lot of testimonies have come from the point of appreciating us for providing support when they needed it.Currently, we have recorded 11 testimonies from the coaching group when it started mid-July.

Others have recorded more interview invites because they have access to information that allows them review their CV’s themselves. Jobseekers now have the necessary support they need to thrive. A lot of graduates who have lost hope in getting a job now see the light at the end of the tunnel because of the support. We have 17 HR Professionals who have volunteered their time to support jobseekers 24/7 for the period of 3months.

The Monthly Twitter Mentoring Session has had impact in the lives of graduates as people reach out to us thanking us for saving them and help open their eyes from problems they have had.

 If I had the opportunity to speak with the President on lack Employment

I’ll tell him to provide a favourable economy for businesses to thrive, for startups to grow, for young entrepreneurs to thrive, for jobs to be created and for graduates to be trained. I believe that THERE ARE JOBS. The educational system hasn’t just prepared the graduates well enough to be able to occupy them. I would advise the government to boost our educational system by including Employability in their course curriculum and employ professional career coaches in each university to help prepare them for the world ahead. CareerLife Nigeria and other organizations are working hard to build that gap but we can’t do it alone without help from the government.

Challenges

Majorly Funds to run these programs and initiatives. SO far, I’ve received support and accolades but funds are required to make more impact. Because it’s not a registered company YET. Most funds are gotten from personal purse and few friends who are passionate about the same thing.

On giving up

YES! Numerous Times! I can’t count the times I’ve felt like quitting. What I do with CareerLife Nigeria and other initiatives is a personal CSR and a future social enterprise. I have a full time job that can be demanding. I also have to juggle with wifely and motherly responsibilities too.

I practically spend my personal funds to run some initiatives. For the Employability Fitness Program (EFP), after the publicity was out, I wanted to cancel it or postpone it. I didn’t have the funds to do major things and I didn’t know how to ask people. I felt people would naturally support but only very few supported financially.

A lot of times I help people get good jobs with a good pay but personally I have a lot of unmet needs in my career. Having to sacrifice my time and juggle a lot of things hasn’t been easy but PASSION keeps me going.

Whenever I want to give up and I see the problems waiting to be solved, I remind myself that the more I delay this, the more people that need this initiative remain jobless and depressed. Whenever people reach out to me to thank me for helping them when they have lost hope, I get motivated

My self-worth is no longer how much is in my bank account but how much impact I’m able to make in the lives of others. I feel fulfilled when I see others happy in their career and I know that with time, it will get better for me.

Being a Woman of Rubies

I’m a woman of ruby because I’m selfless. All I do is think of how I can help young graduates with their career struggles.

My purpose in life is centered on giving back to others. I genuinely find JOY (not happiness) in helping people.

 

I love to mentor people, I love to coach people, I love to see people succeed in their career. My mission is to change the face of recruitment in Nigeria and then, in the world.

 

Unemployment in Nigeria

A lot needs to be done. Unemployment is VERY HIGH. But in the midst of lack, a lot of experienced hands are changing jobs and fresh graduates are getting new ones.

To young women who are finding it hard to get a job

 

I believe women are more disadvantaged when it gets to career growth, unlike men. Things like Pregnancy, Child Birth and Marriage sometimes slows us down so we need to work even much harder than men to thrive.

My advice for women (especially young and fresh graduates) is to believe in themselves and not feel they are not good enough for a job just because they don’t have the wealth of experience.

I know it can be difficult to get the first job and find their feet in the labor market but they should go with an open mind and ensure they communicate their values clearly. Don’t take little experiences for granted because that may be your UNIQUE SELLING POINT (USP).

Package your CV well and put in the effort(Read www.CareerLife.com.ng to get more insight). Most times, laziness to read and follow instructions hinders chances. Make an effort to write a good cover letter for each job you apply for. Put in the effort to get a job through unconventional means like networking with stakeholders on LinkedIn. Leverage on LinkedIn to sell yourself.

Don’t allow any employer demand money or sex from you to give you a job. Use your soft skills and transferrable skills to get a job. While waiting, learn a trade. Be open to starting from the bottom (unpaid internship). Above all, pray to God and Never Give Up.

Aduragbemi Akintepede is a nineteen year old undergraduate of Law at Olabisi Onabanjo University. She started writing at the early age of nine and published her first book, a play at the age of fourteen. She has also authored “New Cheese,” a memoir and “Late Last Year,” a short story.

Aduragbemi has a passion for writing, campaigning for women and child rights, acting, teaching and humanitarianism.

One Good Turn” which is her first published book is currently on Ogun State Ministry of Education Science and Technology’s Approved List of Textbooks for use in Junior Secondary Class Two, Literature-in-English text for 2019/2020 academic session in schools across the state.

She shares her “Ruby Girl” story in this interview.

 

MEET ME

Aduragbemi Akintepede is a nineteen year old law student, author of three books, the second child of a family of five.

HOBBIES

I love dancing, reading, writing or thinking about my characters when I’m not writing, teaching and acting. I love art and nature also.

 

INSPIRATION

While growing up in primary school, my dad used to have lots of books hanging around the house and some on shelves. My dad was a civil servant and my mom is a teacher, so, I had access to books early. I read “Eze Goes to school, Mayor of Casterbridge, Things Fall Apart and books by Wole Soyinka which I didn’t understand but always kept reading. They informed my early writing and I started writing my version of stories as they came to me, in drama, firstly on the plain back of A4 papers not in use anymore at home, then, later I progressed to notebooks when I was admitted into secondary school.

 

BIGGEST FEAR

Not making impact.

 

CHANGE

I don’t think I’ll like to change anything. Both my flaws and strengths contribute to who I am today. I’ll just have to keep leveraging on them more to become a better version of myself.

 

ON MY FIRST BOOK BEING CURRENTLY IN OGUN STATE SECONDARY SCHOOL

Truly it is a golden opportunity and a great honour especially because of my age. I have always been passionate about the reading culture, mostly for teenagers because I feel it is declining in my generation and it is important to start with the little ones.

I intend to put this opportunity to great use by having a book drive in secondary schools firstly in Ogun state where it is a recommended literature text, then, extending it to other states too. I intend to partner with brands mentioned in the play such as Bigi Drinks, Mentos Sweet and Nestlé as well as foundations owned by youths to have book reading sessions, talks, acting out of scenes from the book and also donating books to schools in indigent areas where students cannot afford to buy notebooks not to talk of literature texts.

 

TO GO BACK IN TIME OR TIME TRAVEL TWO YEARS TO THE FUTURE

I’ll prefer travelling to the future.

 

BEST QUOTE 

“Work on yourself, by yourself and for yourself.

WHAT KEEPS ME UP AT NIGHT

Writing or thinking about how to move a step further to my dreams.

 

IF GIVEN THE CHANCE TO BECOME THE PRESIDENT OF NIGERIA FOR A DAY 

I’ll address the educational sector in Nigeria at all levels.

 

WHAT PROMPTED ME TO WRITE MY SECOND BOOK, A MEMOIR, THIS EARLY

After undergoing my cheese moving experience as regards my academics, I got “Who Moved My Cheese?” by Dr. Spencer Johnson from a friend. It prompted me to put my experience down and relay it to others to shine a light to their path by sharing the story of the mountain I climbed.

JUGGLING ACADEMICS, WRITING ,PUBLISHING BOOKS AND ACTING TOGETHER

Honestly, combining everything together has not been easy but I love it when I do not allow anything limit me from going for whatever I want and also the courage to always do it afraid. So, while following my passion, I always remind myself that I must excel in all those areas.

MY BRAND IN THE NEXT 5 YEARS

I see myself being fulfilled to a great extent, my desire to impact and impart younger generations being actualized and my name being known across the globe for iconic deeds.

 

MY ADVICE TO GIRLS FIVE YEARS YOUNGER THAN ME

I will advice them from one of my personal quotes from my second book, “New Cheese” which goes thus:

“Work on self discovery and dare to be a new, better and positive version of you than you were yesterday.”

Nigerian born Salwa Eid Naser has made history by running the third fastest time in the world to win the 400m World title for Bahrain.

In what has been described as the biggest upset of the 2019 World Championships in Doha, Salwa Eid Nase defeated the race favourite Shaunae Miller-Uibo with her 48.14 seconds record to win the race.

Miller-Uibo took silver with a time of 48.37sec — the sixth fastest of all time — whilst Olympic bronze medallist Shericka Jackson of Jamaica was third (49.47).

Salwa sealed her spot in history behind East Germany’s world record holder Marita Koch and Jarmila Kratochvilova of former Czechoslovakia who got their spot in the race over 30 years ago.

 

“I’m the first one to win a global medal for Bahrain -? it is really rewarding and I’m so happy,” she said.

“I still can’t believe the time. The time is so crazy, crossing the line and seeing the time I went completely crazy.

“Yes I was training so hard but I never expected to run this fast.”

 

On defeating Bahamas’ Shaunae Miller-Uibo to win the title, Salwa said;

“I think she (Shaunae) is an amazing athlete,” she said. “I don’t think I would have done that alone of course.

“She’d been there to push me and is very competitive. I love her energy and already said thank you to her because without her I don’t think I would have gone so fast.

“So I’m happy this race happened.”

 

 

Credit: LIB

Over five years after the abduction of 219 schoolgirls and the burning of the school, the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, is still under lock and key as pupils now receive lessons at a primary school nearby.

Boko Haram insurgents had on April 14, 2014 stormed the school dormitory and forcefully abducted over 200 girls, but 57 of the girls escaped and found their way back home. The Federal Government subsequently negotiated with the abductors and freed over 100 girls, leaving 112 others in captivity for the past 1,998 days.

A member of the Kibaku Area Development Association in Abuja, Dr. Manasseh Allen, on Wednesday, October 2nd bemoaned the failure of the Federal Government to rescue the remaining 112 girls in Boko Haram captivity, almost 2,000 days after the insurgents stormed their dormitories and forcefully took them away.

Allen noted that the government had not offered any form of succour to the parents of the missing girls or the community as a whole. He also alleged that over 21 Chibok parents had died as a result of trauma.

He said, “Aside the presence of a military brigade in Chibok, which has been doing its best to protect the people, the government has not done anything either directly for the parents or the people. The school has neither been completed nor put into operation. It is part of the primary school that the pupils are now using. They go there in the afternoon after the primary school pupils had closed.

“If the government was serious about changing the lives of the people, the school would have been completed as a way of countering extremism.  The Federal Government should have been able to build the school to international standard, furnish it in such a way as to send a strong signal to the terrorists that they cannot cow us.”

Allen said the government could not negotiate the release of the remaining 112 girls, stressing that the release of the first batch of 100 girls was achieved through negotiation by the Department of State Services. He added, “None of the girls was rescued through military operations. We know that even if not all, most of them are still alive. If the government is serious about securing their release, it can get them alive.

“We still believe that most of the girls are alive and they want to come home. Those that were married by the insurgents are running away from the bush and coming back to civilisation. We are confident that those that were forcefully taken away will look for a way to return to their loved ones.”

The Chibok indigene said many people had fled their communities in the Chibok  Local Government Areas, following the spate of attacks by the insurgents. “I have lost count of the attacks, but they (Boko Haram) have attacked Gatamarwa more than five times, Flemagalama more than five times, and other communities. The attacks are so many that we don’t bother counting. As a result of this, many people have abandoned their farmlands and this has affected food production in the area,” Allen said.

 

 

Credit: LIB

Why didn’t we all think of this?! According to Good Morning America (GMA), Eve Humphrey, a Florida Ph.D. student decided to have a maternity shoot to celebrate the birth of her new — dissertation.

That’s right! After 6 years of labor and delivery, Humphrey finally pushed out her dissertation and anyone who has ever completed a thesis or dissertation can attest to the fact that it’s that serious!

Humphrey would regularly refer to her dissertation as her baby. After 6 years in graduate school working through her doctorate program, she had all the symptoms of pregnancy. Lots of work, no sleep, weight gain from stress eating and back pain from being hunched over her computer all day. And if it acts like a baby and requires attention like a baby, its a baby, even if it is a dissertation. 

Once she completed her program and turned in the culmination of 6 years of hard work towards her Ph.D. in Biology, she wanted to do something to commemorate the moment. 

“I’m not super celebratory, but I wanted to do something that was fun,” Humphrey told GMA. “Science can be very straightforward and I wanted to do something to commemorate what I did and take a moment to be proud of myself.”

That’s when she decided to do a maternity shoot with her newborn baby, “Stress Response and Coloration as Mediators of Behavioral and Physiological Variation.” The Florida State University student called up her friend Korie Mitchell and the two made doctoral magic happen. The pictures showed Humphrey posing with her paper next to its milestones, in a highchair and with a beautiful picturesque background as she gazes down lovingly. It was typical maternity shoot wonder. 

Humphrey posted the pictures to Facebook with a caption that said, “Six years ago, I started on a journey and I didn’t know how hard it would be to finish. I gained weight, I experienced back pain, I cried a lot … was I pregnant? I had many restless nights and sacrificed time with family and friends to birth this crazy little baby of mine called a dissertation. So I would like to introduce you all to my creation, 6 years of pushing and it gave me a new name. Hi, I’m Dr. Eve Humphrey, PhD.”

Before she knew it, the post had been shared over 10,000 times. Humphrey said she was taken aback when the post went viral. 

“I was like, ‘What the heck? My husband told me it had a ton of ‘likes’ and then it started being shared by people I didn’t know,” she said. Humphrey said she understands how a lot of people can relate or find humor in it. “I guess I get it, though, because that’s something I would crack up at and share.”

Since the completion of her Ph.D and her new title as Doctor of Biology, Humphrey works at Syracuse University doing disciplined-based education research. She will be returning to Florida State in December to walk the stage at her graduation.

Congratulations Dr. Humphrey!