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Stakeholders Urge Parental Vigilance over Excessive Online Games 

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Some experts and parents have said that excessive online video games and social media could make children addicted, withdrawn and affect their social interactions.

In separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), concerned stakeholders said too much screentime and online gaming could also cause medical issues like eye problems and depression and called for parental vigilance.

According to them, children need to be monitored and sensitised on the effect of excessive online gaming habits to prevent them from exhibiting antisocial and erratic behaviours.

Mr Yemi Odutola, Head of Communication at Women Technology Empowerment Centre (W.TEC), said that video games and social media were products of technology which has kept both children and youths intensely engaged for many years.

Odutola, however, said that spending too much time on video games and social media could make a child addicted, withdrawn and affect his or her interaction with other people.

Odutola said that about 70-80 per cent of children now have access to phones and the internet which, according to him, enables them to visit any site of their choice.

He said that most children know how to access the internet better than their parents and guardians.

According to research, significant changes occur in the brain while a child is engaged in playing video games, particularly violent video games.

“When children are playing erratic video games, there is less activity in the brain that involves emotions, attention and inhibition of impulses,” he said.

Odutola said that another effect of too much screentime and online gaming was that it could create medical issues such as eye problems and depression among others.

The communication officer urged parents to monitor and limit the amount of time their children spent in playing online games.

He said that awareness was also key, noting that parents, teachers and counselors had a role to play in sensitising children on the side effects of excessive online gaming.

Using China as a case study, Odutola said that the country had found a way to monitor and limit the time children spend on social media.

“I will not discourage its usage by children entirely but tight supervision and time allocation is necessary as the platforms also have immense gains, ” he said.

Similarly, Mr Jide Awe, an Information Technology Expert and Chief Executive Officer of Jidaw Systems Ltd, said that too much online gaming was detrimental to the health and reasoning of a child.

Awe said that asides the erratic behaviour a child could exhibit from excessive playing of online video games, they tend to lose touch with reality and might not carry out their real life activities as well as they should.

“It leads to errors of judgement in the real world and makes them more antisocial. This has a very negative effect on the building of social skills, which are critical life skills that are very much needed for their interaction, growth and success in the real world.

“This is particularly important as dependence on machines grow, so will the need for everyone to have social skills.

“There has to be greater public awareness on the dangers of excessive online gaming and social media usage by the relevant agencies and advocacy bodies as well as organisations in the education sector,” Awe said.

He added that child online protection measures should include monitoring and control in education and in homes by teachers and parents.

Also, Mr Ayooluwa Shoga, a parent, also noted that it was important to monitor and supervise the kind of online games children play.

He said: “As parents, we need to monitor the content children are exposed to, particularly with adult-rated movies and games, investigate parental controls on devices, and prioritise interactive screen time such as computers.

“We need to encourage a balance between screentime and other activities by placing limitations around screens where needed; for example, no screen use near bedtime and no devices in bedrooms,” Shoga said.

Another parent, Mrs Bunmi Farotimi said that the rate at which children excessively play video games was alarming.

She noted that parents need to be very vigilant and monitor the kind of video games their children play as well as the cartoons they watch on the television.

Farotimi noted that currently, a lot of vices have been embedded into some of the games and cartoons children watch.

“For instance, a child that constantly watches a video game and cartoon where he or she is encouraged to shoot, stab or strangle an opponent to win.

”Children are very inquisitive, at some point he or she might want to try it out,” she said.(NAN)

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Domestic Chores Not for Females Alone- Residents

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 Some residents of Karu Local Government Area of Nasarawa State have advised both men and women to support each other in handling household chores.

In separate on Friday, the residents said that doing household chores does not diminish masculinity, but rather strengthens marital bonds.

They maintained that house chores should be seen as shared responsibilities and not solely reserved duties for women.

Mr Abubakar Ibrahim, a Karu-based realtor, said that couples should appreciate each other’s efforts and offer corrections with the right approach.

According to Ibrahim, helping one’s wife by doing some chores is not wrong, saying that any person could help out to ensure the home front is okay.

“My wife understands that Mondays to Fridays are my office days and she does most of the domestic duties, than on Saturdays and Sundays, nothing is wrong for me to assist her to enable her rest.

“For me, it’s a nice experience doing such works because it offer me the opportunity to understand the way things are and this helps us better in managing our home,’’ he said.

Ibrahim also said that there was nothing wrong for men to go to the markets to buy foodstuffs and other domestic needs, saying that doing so enable them get first hand idea on the changes in prices.

“When you have the idea of costs of items, it will make both the wife and husband to be more open to each other in terms of handling household bills,” he said.

Similarly, Mr Sherifudeen Adaviruku, a fashion designer in Karu corroborated Ibrahim’s view, saying that some men even cook well, as well as do better in house cleaning and childcare.

“As a young boy, my mother told me that chores have nothing to do with gender.

“She asked me, as a young man, assuming you are going for the mandatory one year National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) programme and you don’t know how to do things yourself, who will do it for you?

“It was for this early training that made me to learn how to cook and do other things, which for is a stabilizing factor in my marital life today,’’ he said.

Adaviruku, blamed issues that sometimes result to domestic violence on not sharing domestic responsibilities between couples.

“At times, the woman might be over-burdened and cannot do some of the works timeously, insensitive husbands will cash in on the little delay to make trouble and sometimes they end in avoidable clash,’’ he said.

He advised parents to help inculcate this habit in their children, especially the boys.

Adaviruku regretted that hiring house helps by most families has caused children not learning basic chores.

He emphasised that wives are not slaves; but helper that require the support of their husbands and children at all times.

“Anything you can do to reduce her stress, do it. If it means hiring a maid to help with household chores, that’s perfectly fine.

“Helping out does not reduce your masculinity, it rather strengthens the bond”, he said.

Mr Idoko Solomon, a banker, said that household chores should be seen as complimentary role for men and women.

According to Solomon, a man should know how to do the house chores even before getting married. Your wife is your helpmate, not your servant.

“If I am at home, I will not just sit around relaxing or watching television, while my wife does all the chores. I was not raised that way,’’ he said.

Mrs. Joan Okechukwu, a trader, noted that doing house chores goes beyond love.

“Some men love their wives but don’t believe in helping with housework. It has to do with upbringing,” she said.

“The reason why some feel it reduces male masculinity is because of the norms in some societies in the past which today helped fueling crisis in the home front.

“It used to be woman’s traditional role for centuries now, but these days, due to education and enlightenment everyone should contribute in household works for more peaceful environment,” she added. (NAN)

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UTME: JAMB To Hold Additional Mop-up Exam for Absent Candidates

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Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) says it will conduct additional mop-up examinations for candidates who missed the 2025 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

JAMB Registrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, stated this on Wednesday in Abuja at a meeting with key stakeholders to address the challenges encountered during the 2025 UTME.

Oloyede said that the board would accommodate the estimated 5.

6 per cent of candidates who missed the examination by organising a special mop-up exercise.

He said that the board had extended the opportunity to all the affected candidates, regardless of the reasons for their absence.

“Normally, we hold one mop-up nationwide for those with one issue or the other.

“But this time, we are creating a new mop-up. Even those who missed the earlier examination due to absence, we will extend this opportunity to them.

“It is not that we are doing something extraordinary; in class, you make up an examination when students miss it for one reason or the other; we just don’t allow abuse of that.

“So we will allow all the candidates who missed the main examination for any reason to take part in this mop-up,” he said.

Oloyede criticised some public commentators who misunderstood and misrepresented the role of UTME, while clarifying that UTME was a placement test and not an achievement test.

According to him, the purpose of the examination is to rank candidates for available spaces in institutions and not to measure intelligence or overall academic potential.

The registrar further stated that high UTME score was not the sole determinant of admission, adding that combined performance, including post-UTME scores and school assessments, could significantly affect a candidate’s ranking.

While acknowledging the emotional strain experienced while announcing the UTME results, he noted that this was not indicative of an institutional weakness.

He expressed JAMB’s commitment to resolving issues affecting the examination process, even as he rejected comments suggesting that the administrative failure was due to incompetence or ethnic bias.

“I want to say this clearly, particularly because I accepted responsibility, not because I do not know how to do the work.

“I say it for the fourth time that no conspiracy theory is relevant to this case.

“Something happened; like people who have been doing something well for years and something just went wrong. That I should now throw them under the bus? No,” he said.

Oloyede, who frowned at those exploiting difficulties to promote ethnic or conspiracy-driven narratives, urged stakeholders to stop ethnic profiling in the education sector.

According to him, many of the criticisms of JAMB’s operations are rooted in ignorance.

The registrar, however, commended his team’s efforts, while also appreciating the resilience shown by candidates, many of whom, he said, had continued their exams, notwithstanding the various challenges. (NAN)

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32-year-old in Court For Allegedly Robbing Man of N4.5m iPhones

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The police in Lagos on Friday arraigned a 32-year-old businessman, Wilfred Ochie, who allegedly robbed a man of two iPhones worth N4.5 million with  gun.

Ochie, who resides at 3, Eleda Avenue, Iba, Lagos State, appeared before an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court on a two-count charge of conspiracy and robbery.

The defendant, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges.

According to the prosecutor, ASP Adegoke Ademigbuji, the defendant committed the offences on April 16 at Iba.

The prosecutor said that the defendant ordered two iPhone 16 Promax from the complainant, Mr Samuel Olotu, on jiji.com, on payment-on-delivery term.

The prosecutor said that when a rider went to deliver the phones, he was robbed at gunpoint.

Ademigbuji said that the defendant was tracked with the number he used to call the complainant.

The alleged offences contravene Sections 297 and 411 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

The Chief Magistrate, Mrs O. O. Kushanu, granted the defendant bail in the some of  N400,000 with two sureties in like sum.

Kushanu adjourned the case until June 19 for mention. (NAN)

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