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Damaging Effects of Paternity Tests

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The only thing stopping a lot of men from checking the paternity of their children is the cost of the test. Somehow, DNA tests have become the order of the day. Some men look at their lovely children and wonder if they are their biological fathers. This is both hilarious and scary.

While in secondary school, I believed that DNA tests only existed in Biology textbook, notebook, exam question paper and exam script. I knew then that there was something called DNA and another one called RNA. But what they actually mean has never been my concern. My only interest then was to pass my Biology exams. But today, every Tom, Dick and Harry knows about the DNA test because the world is beginning to question the fidelity of wives.

It is quite funny that all of a sudden men decided to ensure that the children that bear their names are actually theirs biologically. It may be necessary if these men should go home and ask if they belong to their fathers. Maybe when they do this, they will understand the damaging effects of demanding for their children’s paternity tests.

Of course I know that none of the men dragging their children and wives to hospitals for this test will be courageous enough to ask of their own status.

I know some people will say that I stand against men checking their children’s paternity because I am a woman. No problem. Any woman that kicks against this has been tagged with several vile names. Both men and women waste no time to tell her that she is unfaithful to her husband and is, therefore, unsure of her children’s father. Hence, she fights against paternity tests to protect her crimes. Well, that still won’t change the fact that opting for that test, when it is not needed to sort out legal issues, is damaging.

Damaging Effects of Demanding for a Child’s Paternity Test

The effects of this act will be considered under its effect on the child, the wife and the man.

  • Effects on the Child

No child will want to hear that the man he calls “Father” is questioning whether he has the right to call him such a name. You can imagine the psychological trauma that child will pass through when he finds out that his father once questioned his paternity. It is untrue to say that the child won’t know because he will definitely understand later that the sample collected from him at a particular time in his life was because his father needed a piece to decide whether to provide for him or not. Believe me, a lot of people ignore their fathers these days because they, their fathers, once questioned their paternity. Men that made this mistake regret it at their old age, when they realise that it takes more than mere sperm donation to have a child. Unfortunately, the cycle is repeating, showing that the future will produce more adults that hate their fathers.

  • Effects on Wife

No woman takes joy in proving her innocence. The fact that their husbands suspect them of infidelity breaks them. For the rest of their lives, they will always talk about their husbands’ suspicion and accusations. It is inconsolable. So when women kick against their husbands asking for their children’s DNA testing, it may not be because they have something to hide but because of the reason behind it. It is an act of betrayal, and no one wants to be betrayed. And when a woman is betrayed, it is hard to say what she will do next.

  • Effects on Men

Sometimes I wonder what these men that spend their hard earned money on their children’s paternity test pass through. Do they have sleepless nights, wondering if the woman lying beside them cheated on them? Do they look at their children with fear that they may not be theirs? Or do they look at them with looting, hoping that the test will give them a reason to kick them out of their lives? These men obviously placed themselves at tight corners. No wonder we hear of the ones that kill their wives and children because a piece of paper told them so. Truth is, any man that looks at the lovely children in his home and wonder if they deserve him, actually doesn’t deserve those children. In fact, those children should be taken away from him even if DNA tests declare him as their biological father.

You know, the Igbo culture isn’t stupid to declare every child born in a man’s household as his. Obviously the forefathers must have seen the damaging effects of questioning a child’s paternity and, therefore, declared that every man must inherit a child born for him (including the ones born by his unmarried daughters). It is time we stop westernising family lives and think of how to bring back our culture because it is there to protect us.

But like I stated earlier, any man that still wants to conduct DNA testing for his children, should be courageous enough to question his own paternity. Let the golden rule apply here. If you would have been happy that your father questioned your paternity, then go ahead and question that of your children. Remember not to complain when the monster you created comes back to haunt you.

Adeyemi Ajao’s Base10 Partners Raises $250 million

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He is a king. Tuenti which he co-founded was sold for $100 million to  Telefonica. Workday acquired Identified which he co-founded. As Vice President of Tech & Strategy, he ran Workday predictive analytics and data science. His Base10 Partners just raised $250 million. Base10 Partners becomes the World’s largest black-led venture capital firm. Adeyemi Ajao is building a new world in the minority venture capital world.

The world’s largest Black-led venture capital firm, Base10 Partners, just got bigger, raising $250 million to invest in startups and back a handful of initiatives designed to diversify the mostly-White industry.

The San Francisco-based firm plans to announce its second fund Friday at nearly twice the size of its previous one. Base10 also pledged to immediately and permanently donate 1% of management fees and 1% of the firm’s future profits to organizations focused on increasing racial justice and representation in tech.

Adeyemi Ajao, co-founder and managing partner of Base10, said the equality movement sparked by the death of George Floyd demanded an urgent response. While the contribution is relatively modest, Ajao said he’s hoping if others join the effort, it could be significant over time. Base10 estimates the venture industry could collectively contribute more than $200 million annually toward the cause.

Andela Evolves

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Konga Should Sell to Jumia ” and “The Andela Problem” are two articles I am not happy that I made public. Specifically on the Andela one, an investor in the company wrote to me, and commended my ability to understand the business, from far. The Konga one was a meltdown as many on LinkedIn felt I was demoralizing people. Sure, within days I wrote the article, Konga sold itself. The premise of that piece was based on a press release from Konga.

Practically, what it said it was going to pivot made no sense for a company that had around $100 million of investors money. It would have made sense if Konga had raised about $20 million. So, I simply said: if that was the only thing available in the playbook, sell because you have no future!

In the Andela piece, I wrote, “The business cannot scale outside the blue, because the revenue is the developer, and you cannot mass produce them. There is a space constraint on how many you can have in the offices. Sure – you have more offices, but that also increases cost. For the very fact that these workers remain with Andela, and not leaving, it will quickly run into carry-capacity.”

But today, Andela is going completely remote which means its carry-capacity problem is eliminated. For that, I will write that Andela has completely evolved. Now, all it needs is to find demand for its services.

Software talent outsourcing company, Andela, has  said that it has shut down all its offices and now operates remotely. The remote work idea has been on the pipeline for the company for a long time, but COVID-19 hastened its implementation.

Andela spokesperson said working remotely will help the company to fine-tune the talents in its disposal and serve its customers better.

“The reason behind this decision was that we found that our physical offices at times constrained our ability to connect talent with opportunities. By going fully remote, it opens our access to talent with diverse experiences and skill sets to support our current and future customers.”

Andela CEO Jeremy Johnson said last month the plan is materializing as the company had tested the effectiveness and ascertained that the remote work model will serve it better.

“We’ve now proven that we can operate fully remote by delivering excellent work to our customers over the past couple of months. We will continue to ensure that our engineers have the infrastructure needed to operate at a world-class level,” he said on Medium in May.

Of course, as you might have noticed, I do not write analytical articles anymore. I try to make people happy by celebrating fundraise, happy-hours, etc. Those insightful articles that look at business models are gone from the public. I do not want people to lose confidence in themselves.

Congratulations Andela.

Andela Goes Completely Remote

Andela Goes Completely Remote

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Software talent outsourcing company, Andela, has  said that it has shut down all its offices and now operates remotely. The remote work idea has been on the pipeline for the company for a long time, but COVID-19 hastened its implementation.

Andela spokesperson said working remotely will help the company to fine-tune the talents in its disposal and serve its customers better.

“The reason behind this decision was that we found that our physical offices at times constrained our ability to connect talent with opportunities. By going fully remote, it opens our access to talent with diverse experiences and skill sets to support our current and future customers.”

Andela CEO Jeremy Johnson said last month the plan is materializing as the company had tested the effectiveness and ascertained that the remote work model will serve it better.

“We’ve now proven that we can operate fully remote by delivering excellent work to our customers over the past couple of months. We will continue to ensure that our engineers have the infrastructure needed to operate at a world-class level,” he said on Medium in May.

Andela said its offices around the world will be affected by the work from home model. The offices in New York, San Francisco and Austin, Texas are all included in the plan.

“The U.S. is also affected. We are closing all our physical U.S. offices and those teams are already fully remote. Andela successfully moved to all-remote when COVID-19 resulted in lockdowns in all our operating cities,” a spokesperson told TechNext.

The company said it’s selling off all physical assets and equipment as it pushes to embrace the new normal. This includes assets in Lagos, Kampala, Kigali, Nairobi, Cairo and Accra.

African Development Bank Ranks 4th on Global Transparency Index

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AfDB president Akinwumi Adesina
Akinwumi Adesina

Publish What You Fund (PWYF) has ranked African Development Bank (AfDB), fourth out of 47 global development institutions on its Aid Transparency Index.

AfDB was ranked by the index using the “very good” indicator of performance. The African financial institution was ranked alongside the World Bank and Asian development bank in transparency excellence.

“We congratulate the African Development Bank-Sovereign portfolio on achieving 4th place in the 2020 Aid Transparency Index. As large quantities of aid are being reallocated to deal with the COVID-19 emergency, the transparency of international aid is more important than ever,” said Gary Foster, the CEO of Publish What You Fund.

The Index uses several criteria which range from finance and budgets, basic information data, to organizational planning and performance. For the year 2019, the African Development Bank scored 95.5 out of 100 on transparency, which is a significant improvement from the 2018 score.

Acting Senior Vice President for AfDB, Swazi Tshabalala said the result tells of the institution’s transparency at a time it is being questioned.

“I am absolutely delighted with this achievement. It crowns this institution’s commitment to transparency at a time when it has never been so important. With such large volumes of funding now being assigned to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, it is crucial for our citizens to know how much, where and when African development Bank is investing in Africa’s development,” he said.

Weeks ago, the development bank came under serious allegations of inconsistency and carrying out activities void of transparency. The president, Akinwunmi Adesina came under investigation, putting the bank in spotlight, especially as the COVID-19 pandemic has triggered the aid function of the development bank.

The African Development Bank has been giving out millions of dollars in aid to African countries to mitigate the effects of the pandemic. However, the activities of the bank have been under scrutiny following the allegation of corruption made by the United States.

The web-based platform, MapAfrica, that maps all of the Bank’s investments across the African continent, illustrated the institution’s commitment to transparency. Though the allegations were not based on the financial functions of the AfDB, it is believed that the PWYF report is enough testimony to discredit the allegations.

Publish What You Fund has produced the index yearly since 2011, with the collaboration of other aid organizations.

“It is promising to see an increase in the quantity, quality and timeliness of aid data now being shared by a broad cross section of the world’s major aid agencies. As we work together to fill the gaps in the aid data landscape, we look forward to exploring how we can best meet the demand for data and data engagement,” Foster said about the credibility of PWYF.