In what was described as marking an emotional milestone for both New Yorkers and the United States as a whole; and "a major milestone in the transformation of lower Manhattan into a thriving 24/7 neighbourhood" by the executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, owners both the building and the World Trade Center site, Mr Foye....
......the World Trade Center is again opening for business.
Reports has it that the building, which is the said to be the tallest building in the United States, was completed in eight-year construction, after years of political, financial and legal infighting that threatened to derail the project.
According to Foye, the One World Trade Center “sets new standards of design, construction, prestige and sustainability; the opening of this iconic building is a major milestone in the transformation of Lower Manhattan into a thriving 24/7 neighbourhood.”
With construction fences gone and boxes of office equipment in place, Conde Nast CEO Chuck Townsend planned to walk Monday into what Foye calls “the most secure office building in America.”
It was gathered that the building is already 60% leased, with another 7,400 sqare meters going to the advertising firm Kids Creative, the stadium operator Legends Hospitality, the BMB Group investment adviser, and Servcorp, a provider of executive offices. Information also raveled that the government’s General Services Administration signed up for 25,000 square meters, and the China Center, a trade and cultural facility, will cover 18,000 square meters.
The new World Trade Center reportedly cost $3.9bn (£2.4bn).
Tuesday, 4 November 2014
A New Generation Of Nigerian Consumers Drawing Retailers From All Over The World!
At the turn of the century well-off Nigerians struggled to shop in style. Most had to jostle in local markets to buy food or travel to the Uk, US or Middle East to replenish their wardrobes. Then in 2005 the Palms shopping mall opened its doors in Lagos's affluent Lekki peninsula in the commercial capital's south-east.
Since then its gleaming interior corridors have housed throngs of immaculately-heeled shoppers who peruse clothing stores such as Puma and Lacoste, stock up their larders in Shoprite, sip lattes on the terrace or head to the cineplex upstairs to watch the latest movie. Nowhere better captures the spirit of the country's exploding middle class.
The Palms was an investment by private equity company Actis's, one of the first to recognise the retail opportunity emerging on the back of Nigeria's demographic growth.
It has gone on to build two other malls. "The opportunity has been about the evolution of the consumer," says Michael Chu'di Ejekam, Actis's head of real estate in Nigeria. "The middle class has surged since the mid-2000s. As incomes rose, tastes changed, and consumers were able to demand a different shopping experience in a more formal retail environment."
In a June 2014 report Standard Bank found that Nigeria accounted for more than half of the total 7.6m middle-class households in 11 Sub-Saharan countries. Nigeria's middle class multiplied more than six-fold between 2000 and 2014, according to the study.
Today, by its reckoning, Africa's most populous nation is home to 4.1m middle-class households living on between $15 and $115 per day.
The growth of that demographic has not peaked: by 2030 Nigeria will be home to almost 12m middle-class households, the report estimates. Going by the National Bureau of Statistics' average of 5.7 people per household, this would account for over 68m people. "Nigeria's middle class is bigger than many countries in the world," summarises Yaw Nsarkoh, Unilever's Managing Director for Nigeria.
That means cash to splash. This year, Nigeria will account for 45% of the total $360 billion in household consumption expenditure across the 11 surveyed countries, which Standard Bank selected as a proxy for the continent. Unilever, one of the countless consumer goods businesses trying to leverage that opportunity, ranks Nigeria among its global priority markets. Others here include Procter & Gamble, the Dutch milk company FrieslandCampina, and alcohol titans Diageo and Heineken. Also present are food chains such as Johnny Rockets, makeup companies like MAC, and dozens of clothing brands and car dealerships.
Besides the sheer numbers, investors are getting excited about this West African country's appetite and style. "Everybody is talking about the size of Nigeria's population and the increasing income levels," says Bruce Layzell, KFC's General Manager for New African Markets. "Obviously this... provides a great consumer base. But what really excites me is that Nigerians are discerning in their tastes, have their fingers on international trends and expect the very best international markets have to offer."
This is something trendy clothing brands have recognised too. In many cases it was South African groups such as Mr Price that blazed a trail in Nigeria. Now a combination of the demographic draw and the removal in 2010 of a ban on importing finished textiles is luring more international stores. "This is the next wave of retail development," says Actis's Mr Ejekam. Labels including Tommy Hilfiger and Salvatore Ferragamo are sniffing out the market, he says.
Retail in Nigeria is a lucrative business for those who get it right. Kamal Mansour, franchise owner of stores including Hugo Boss and Mango, claims that the Mango store in the Palms mall is among the top ten globally for sales per square metre.
Retailers admit to major difficulties, ranging from unreliable power supply to poor infrastructure. "But if you wait for those [problems] to be solved, the cost of establishing a footprint here would be 100 times what it is today," says Robbert de Vreede, Unilever's Vice-President for brand-building in Nigeria.
Perhaps the biggest challenge is that demand is outstripping formal shopping space. "We are ready to do more stores, but there is no space in malls," Mr Mansour says. "The problem is the space, not the market."
To address this gap, Actis will develop at least three new malls in Nigeria in the "near-term", Mr Ejekam says. "Lagos alone has over 20m people, but there are only two major malls. The city could easily take 20 more malls."
Actis will soon compete with others such as Artee Group, a business house that owns the franchise for the Dutch supermarket Spar. Its first mall is under construction in the southern oil city of Port Harcourt.
As the middle class grows and new malls develop, the formal market will consolidate. "People's demands change when they move into the middle class," says Unilever's Mr Nsarkoh.
The Anglo-Dutch multinational still sells most of its products through informal channels. "I think the trade going forward will start to formalise, and at some point we will see a big representation of modern trade in Nigeria," he adds.
Both Actis and Artee Group say they expect a major evolution in Nigeria's retail market in the next three to five years.
"When we arrived there was no modern retail," says Prakash Keswani, one of the founders of Artee Group. "You would go to an open market, you'd struggle to park your car. You'd have hawkers following you. You would have to haggle. You wouldn't know what you are buying, you'd find fake products, and you'd have to spend half a day going from one shop to another. Nigerians deserve better than that; and they are now getting it."
Source: Eleanor Whitehead
Nigerian President Calls On International Community To Stop Stigmatization Against Nigerians Over Ebola Epidemic!
This call was made during a audience with the French Foreign Minister, Laurent Fabius and his German counterpart Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who called on him at the Presidential Villa recently.
The Ministers were in Nigeria to seek further co-operation with the Federal Government in the growing global effort to contain the current outbreak and continuing spread of the Ebola Virus Disease.
According to report, president Jonathan expressed the Federal Government's displeasure over the stigmatisation of Nigerians by some countries even after WHO just recently certified Nigeria Ebola-free. The president maintained that there was never any justifiable basis for the stigmatisation of Nigerians since Ebola was rapidly contained in the country and never attained epidemic level.
He further informed the envoys that Nigeria would remain fully vigilant to prevent the re-entry of the virus, as the Federal Government recognised that the country was still at risk as long as Ebola continued to ravage other West African countries or any other part of the world.
Jonathan assured that Nigeria would therefore co-operate fully with other concerned nations to stop the current outbreak of Ebola in West Africa as quickly as possible.
The envoys praised Nigeria's successful containment of the virus and expressed the desire of France, Germany and the European Union to collaborate more with Nigeria in helping other West African countries where the virus still remains active.
Thursday, 30 October 2014
Post Colonial Africa Gets First White President!
Post colonial Africa gets her first white president as Guy Scott, the vice president of Zambia made history when he ascended to become the first white head of state on the continent in 20 years and the first ever of a democratic state.
This came following Zambia's government announcement on Wednesday, of the demise of President Michael Sata, who passed on Tuesday at a London hospital.
Guy Scott, a white Zambian, was unexpectedly chosen as acting president, making him the first white head of state in an democratic Africa.
Sata nicknamed “King Cobra” because of his rather aggravating manner, died at age 77 at King Edward VII hospital, from yet to be declared ailment.
The son of a Scottish adventurer, Guy Scott has been vice president of Zambia since 2011.
Hours after taking his place in history, Scott was continuing to joke about the unlikely sight of a white man leading a post-colonial African nation. “There are truckloads of guys following me on motorbikes. It’s very strange,” he reportedly told the Daily telegraph. “Everyone is getting used to calling me ‘Your Excellency’, and I’m getting used to it.”
....who died at the age of 77 on Tuesday night. Sata, who during a rare public appearance in September, he spoke at the opening of parliament and reassured colleagues that the rumors were misplaced. “I haven’t died yet,” he had said.
U.S Ebola Nurse Breaks Quarantine!
U.S Nurse: Kaci Hickox |
"I remain appalled by these home quarantine policies that have been forced upon me even though I am in perfectly good health," Hickox reportedly told a News source.
"I am not going to sit around and be bullied around by politicians and be forced to stay in my home when I am not a risk to the American public," she said.
Officials said she had a temperature - which she denies, she was however released from Newark on Monday and flown back to Maine to be monitored at her boyfriend's house in Fort Kent.
'I am frustrated by this fact, and I have been told that it is the Attorney General’s intention to file legal action against me.
'And if this does occur, I will challenge the legal actions.'
'We have been in negotiations all day with the state of Maine and tried to resolve this amicably, but they are not allowing me to leave my house and interact with the public even though I am completely healthy and symptom free,' Hickox reportedly told the Press Herald.
Kaci Hickox, in quarantine |
Shaking the hand of a British reporter at the scene, she said 'You could hug me. You could shake my hand. I would not give you Ebola,'.
Maine Health Commissioner Mary Mayhew reportedly said at a news conference... "When it is made clear by an individual in this risk category that they do not intend to voluntarily stay at home for the remaining 21 days, we will immediately seek a court order to ensure that they do not make contact with the public,".
Hickox criticized state guidelines that would require her to stay isolated at home for 21 days, saying she was "appalled" at restrictions she deemed unconstitutional and not based on science.
Kaci Hickox, who has been reportedly visiting the countries most affected by the Ebola Epidemic - Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia - to show US support, as well as Ghana, where the United Nations Mission for Ebola Emergency Response is based, claims that many other aid workers have entered the country and continue to do so without having to go through what she had.
Picture Credit: Mailonline.com
Malala Donates $50,000 To Gaza Schools!
According to her, "Innocent Palestinian children have suffered terribly and for too long," she said.
Malala was awarded the prize for “her courageous and dangerous fight for girls’ right to education.”
Yazidi Women Enslavement, And Chibok Kidnap, Could there Just Be A Growing Slave Black Market?
16 Yazidi women who escaped this brutality were successfully tracked down by the Human Rights Watch, shared their stories via phone interview, of multiple rapes and forced religious conversions, with some of the victims just children – militants just picked up “those they desired, sometimes with force.”
They revealed that it was a common practice for IS to separate its captives into categories, depending on their age and sex.
The issue of kidnap, rape and horrifying public executions has become a trade mark for militants.
It will be recalled that in May, shortly after the kidnap of school girls from Chibok village, Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau in a video released, said “I abducted a girl at a Western education school and you are disturbed. I said Western education should end. Western education should end. Girls, you should go and get married,” he said.
“I will repeat this: Western education should fold up. I abducted your girls. I will sell them in the market,”
“I will marry off a woman at the age of 12. I will marry off a girl at the age of nine,” Shekau said, claiming his group was holding the girls as “slaves”.
A magazine reportedly published by ISIS recently, claimed that enslaving infidel women is justified by Islamic law. "We will … enslave your women, by the permission of Allah, the Exalted. A claim allegedly rejected by the vast majority of Muslims.
With a vast majority of Muslims allegedly rejecting claims that enslaving so called infidel women and girls on the verge of attained at least a minimum education for their future survival, is justified by Islamic law...
...is the world slowly being confronted with a much bigger challenge?
could these militant groups be deeply involve in a booming black market slave trade?
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