Friday, 11 November 2016

Some people thought I was impotent –Seyilaw

 
Seyilaw
Not just a few knew that comedian, Seyi Law and his wife, Ebere, went through emotional trauma sometime ago when they lost their child. But now, as his wife was delivered of a baby recently, the comedian is in cloud nine.
In a chat with Saturday Beats, the singer explained that even before he had the child that died, some people already tagged him impotent.
“The fact that we lost a child was very tough. Sometimes when you post something on the social media, people wonder why you bring your family issue to the social media. What they do not know is that you just want some words of encouragement. Sometimes you really cannot control the way bad news spreads. I have heard people say things like I cannot get a woman pregnant. When the news came out that I lost my child, it was more like a confirmation that I am a man. But by the special grace of God, I have another child now. What made that very painful was the fact that when we lost the baby, I did not know what to tell my wife and how to console her and that was a very difficult time for me. I needed to rely on the words of encouragement from people to stay strong for both myself and my wife,” he said.
The comedian told Saturday Beats that although it was a tough period for his family, he and his wife had to be strong for each other during their trying times.
“One of the things I did was to take a lot of vacation and I spent more time with my wife. We went to different places. We travelled out of the country and visited several interesting places. I gave my wife constant reassurance that she is the mother of my children. There was a Mother’s Day celebration where we took a trip to a resort and I told her that I was celebrating Mother’s Day with the mother of my children. This was to encourage her and the fact that she is also a strong person helped. I think she is even stronger than I am in the sense that you cannot get into a woman’s heart but a woman that goes through such pain and still goes into the kitchen to prepare food for her husband says a lot. You see her smiling and the love and affection she showed me gave me no other choice but to be strong. I think I am the emotional one between us. I also tried to keep the memory of the lost child away from her. I made sure we did not have the picture of the baby and I tried to also watch her at night to ensure that she was not crying because I knew that was when something like that could happen,” said Seyi Law.
The humour merchant said that he is the happiest man on earth as he is a proud father. He said that his happiness cannot be quantified.
“I am very excited that I am a proud father. I remember that one day in my church, they were doing a programme tagged, ‘Parenting in the 21st century’. When I was telling someone about it, I said that the programme was for parents like us. The excitement is so much and I am very happy about it. I am grateful to God and I cannot quantify my joy,” he said
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WOW! See How This Kaduna Student Built Oil Refinery

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The department of chemical engineering of the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, has made history . The students of the department built a refinery with a capacity to process one barrel of crude oil per day .
The refinery would be used mainly for the training of students The department of chemical engineering of the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, has built a refinery with a capacity to process one barrel of crude oil per day.
The department of chemical engineering of the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, has made history -The students of the department built a refinery with a capacity to process one barrel of crude oil per day .
The refinery would be used mainly for the training of students The department of chemical engineering of the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, has built a refinery with a capacity to process one barrel of crude oil per day.
However, the refinery would be used mainly for the training of the students, team leader of the project, Professor Ibrahim Ali Muhammad Dabo told Daily Trust. Dabo however stated that the department had the manpower to build a refinery that would be bigger than that of Kaduna if it had government support.
His words:
“The initial idea was to construct a 1,000 barrel-capacity refinery, but lack of funding limited us to this one, where we would now be refining one barrel per day.
“Only the controls were sourced from Hong Kong. No expatriate was hired from abroad. All those that were engaged in this project are Nigerians. “Therefore, this mini refinery is a product of Nigerian brains. If government can come in, we have the ability to do wonderful things, not only refinery.
“This is our training and it is what our department is meant for,” he said.  According to Dabo, the project which cost N20million had more than 80 per cent of the materials used for the construction sourced locally.
He further stated that the idea of the mini refinery was conceived about 15 years back, but work commenced fully in the year 2011.
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Nigeria records increased oil output ahead OPEC production cut talks



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                                  OPEC Headquarters
OPEC said Friday that it pumped oil at record levels last month even though the cartel aims to agree a production cut in less than three weeks in an effort to boost prices.
The Oorganisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed in September in Algiers to trim production but the accord still has to be finalised on November 30 in Vienna.
In its November monthly report, OPEC said that its 14 members pumped 33.64 million barrels a day (mb/d) in October, 236,000 barrels more than in September.
Saudi Arabia’s output fell 51,700 bpd to 10.5 mb/d but Iraq and Iran, the next biggest producers, registered increases, as did Libya and Nigeria, the report said.
Iran, Saudi Arabia’s arch foe, in particular is keen to keep the taps open following the lifting of international sanctions under last year’s landmark nuclear deal.
The OPEC report chimed broadly with figures released Thursday by the International Energy Agency, which put cartel output at 33.8 mb/d.
The IEA said this was “well in excess” of the 32.5 mb/d to 33.0 mb/d range agreed by OPEC in September.
“This means that OPEC must agree to significant cuts in Vienna to turn its Algiers commitment into reality,” the IEA added.
The September agreement lifted oil prices but they remain hovering at around $45 per barrel.
On Friday late morning Brent North Sea was trading at $45.44 in London, down $0.40 from Thursday. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was down $0.57 at $44.09 on the Nymex.
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Port Harcourt disco announces N2.2bn loss


The Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution Company said on Friday it lost N2.2bn in revenue to unpaid bills and electricity wastage by consumers.
The Managing Director of 4Power, owners of PHED, Mr. Matthew Edevbie, said that 90 per cent of meters in homes were by-passed which was partly responsible for the revenue loss.
He said, “In Port Harcourt for example, every 100 units of electricity that comes to our electricity network, we collect only 25 per cent equivalent of money.
“Even when we install meters in homes, about 90 per cent of the meters are usually by-passed.
“For every N1 billion worth of electricity PHED brings to this region, every month we get N450m and lose N550m.
“PHED’s supply of electricity to four states is in excess of N4bn every month, meaning that we lose N2.2bn worth of investment funds on monthly basis.”
Edevbie said that customers on its R2 platform paid N24.91 per unit which was a shortfall to the average tariff of N28.90 per unit allotted to Port Harcourt.
He said the development meant that DisCos subsidised electricity by N4 which also affected revenue.
He said that PHED was not in advantage position compared to Lagos DisCo which had 55 per cent domestic and 45 per cent industrial users.
He said, “This means that Lagos DisCo average-carriage amounts to lower subsidy.
“But in our four states of coverage, we have 85 per cent domestic users while 15 per cent are commercial users, meaning that we should go higher to compensate for the low tariff.”
Edevbie said that some customers should be blamed for high electricity bills charged to their homes as such customers allowed neighbours to tap electricity from their meters and wires.
He urged the residents to report cases of electricity theft and vandalism of facilities to PHED outlets.
PHED covers Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross River and Rivers.
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