Tuesday, July 31, 2012

President Jonathan and 'The Dame' to Lead 70-man Delegation to Trinidad & Tobago and Jamaica

Hello country people, Mr. President, Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan will be off to Trinidad & Tobago and Jamaica with 70 (SEVENTY!!!)-member delegation next week for the Emancipation celebrations in the regions. The President has been kind enough to invite some wellwishers and VIP guests to accompany him and wife, the 1st Lady on the trips. In my fake Benin or is it Ibo accent, Nigeria doh!!!

Peep the Government’s press release below


PRESIDENT JONATHAN TO VISIT TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, JAMAICA -President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan will depart Abuja tomorrow to attend Trinidad and Tobago Emancipation Day and Jamaica’s Independence Anniversary Celebration. President Jonathan, accompanied by First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, will review the Kambule Street Procession, the major event marking the Trinidad and Tobago Emancipation Day on Wednesday, August 1, with the Prime Minister of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, Hon. Kamla Persad-Bissessar.

He will present a Goodwill Message to the Procession, pay a courtesy call on Prof. George Maxwell Richards, President of Trinidad and Tobago and his wife, Dr. Jean Ramjohn Richards, and meet with members of the Nigerian community resident in Trinidad and Tobago.

President Jonathan and Dame Patience Jonathan will attend the Emancipation Day Cultural Programme at the Lidj Yasu Omowale Emancipation Village, and be hosted to a State Banquet by the President of Trinidad and Tobago.

The President’s Official visit to Jamaica will commence on Thursday, August 2, with a Special Commemorative Session of Parliament in his honour, after which he will be hosted by the Jamaican Prime Minister, Portia Simpson-Miller.

Other activities of President Jonathan in Jamaica will include participation in a Mello Go Round at the National Stadium, a bilateral meeting in the Prime Minister’s office, a meeting with the Nigerian Community and a luncheon hosted by the Governor-General of Jamaica, Patrick Allen.

President Jonathan is expected back in Abuja on Saturday, August 4, 2012.

Trinidad and Tobago’s Emancipation Day is celebrated to mark the end of slavery for Africans in the
British Caribbean on August 1, 1838, and has been observed as a national holiday in Trinidad and Tobago since 1985, while Jamaica attained independence from Great Britain in 1962.

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