Author: The Nation

  • Why ex-Power Minister Nnaji had to go, by Jonathan

    Why ex-Power Minister Nnaji had to go, by Jonathan

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan spoke yesterday on why former Power Minister Barth Nnaji threw in the towel.

    Dr. Jonathan said in Onitsha, Anambra State: “Barth Nnaji has not committed any offence. He is a very competent and seasoned professional.”

    Addressing Anambra people during a town hall meeting at the Governor’s Lodge, Onitsha after inaugurating the Onitsha Inland River Port Complex and the Governor’s Lodge as well as some private sector companies, Dr Jonathan said he would replace Nnaji with another competent Igbo man.

    He said because some privatisation done in the past failed , he was careful not to engage in another exercise that would be a failed venture.

    Jonathan said Nnaji gave way because he had interests in the ongoing privatisation.

    In Abuja, the President is believed to have launched the search for a new Minister of Power.

    Some of those being speculated are a former Chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Agency, Dr. Ransome Owan; a former Special Adviser on Petroleum Resources, Prof. Emmanuel Edoga; a former Managing Director of the Power Holding Copany of Nigeria (PHCN), Mr. Joseph Makoju, an engineer; a former Special Adviser to the President on Power, Mr. Foluseke Shomolu, who is also an engineer.

    Also yesterday, a source in government said the Federal Government had shifted ground on the disengaged PHCN workers’ demand.

    The source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The reality is that Nnaji has left a big vacuum, which might be difficult to fill. The nation needs a man with the deep knowledge of the industry.

    “So, we need a new Minister who can hit the ground running from his or her first day in office.

    “The President has been receiving recommendations and some advice but one thing that is sure is that Nigeria is never in short of experts.

    “I think within a short time, the President will get the right peg to put in the right hole.”

    Responding to a question, the source said: “The President is being meticulous about the new choice because it is a technical area. This is not an appointment a government can rush to make.

    “He can choose from within or outside the cabinet. What is important is the ability to provide technical and leadership direction. You will recall that the late Chief Bola Ige, ex-Governor Olusegun Agagu and  Governor Liyel Imoke were at one time or the other in charge of power.

    “Although most people favour fresh hands from outside, a few others are recommending active ministers, such as Nyesom Wike (Minister of State for Education); Olusegun Aganga (Trade and Investment); Mike Onolememen (Works) and Dr. Akinwumi Ayodeji Adesina, for the job.

    “But from outside, some names being speculated are a former Chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Agency, Dr. Ransome Owan; a former Special Adviser on Petroleum Resources, Prof. Emmanuel Edoga; a former MD of PHCN, Joseph Makoju; a former Special Adviser to the President on Power, Foluseke Shomolu; and a hitherto UK based energy expert, Dr. David Ladipo, who was once part of a consortium called Azura Power Limited that managed some power projects in Benin Zone.

    “Some people have also asked the government to look inward for technical experts who had worked on NIPP and served with Nnaji in driving the reform in the power sector.

    “When Jonathan was the Vice-President, he interacted extensively with some of these technical experts. He knows who can execute the power sector reform.

    “The only challenge is that he needs to take a second look at some of the ministers whether he might want to redeploy any of them to that ministry. I remember that when Nnaji took over, a serving member of the cabinet stood up and said: “I was a member of a committee that decided to suspend Power Sector Reform for three years.”

    But a source in the Ministry of Power said: “I do not think that any member of Nnaji’s technical team will be able to make a big difference without bias. We are not looking in that direction.”

    There were signals that the President might not retain the Power portfolio in Enugu State.

    Another source in government said: “No law has made it compulsory that the Ministry of Power must go to Enugu State. It is the prerogative of the President to assign portfolios.

    “Even if you are in the cabinet, it is not guaranteed that you must permanently be in a ministry.

    “What is constitutionally required is that every state of the federation must have a ministerial slot. And the President has fulfilled this mandate.”

    Nnaji yesterday submitted his handover note to the government.

    He had spent the last 48 hours compiling the note, which a source described as “rich and voluminous”.

    “He took time to write details about his activities in office in the past 14 months.”

    There were indications last night that the Federal Government may have shifted ground on the disengaged PHCN workers’ demand.

    A member of the negotiating team, who spoke in confidence, said: “The government has made new offers or some concessions, it is left to the labour leaders to go and consult and give government feedback.

    “The negotiation on workers’ demand is a little bit intricate. With the privatisation, the workers have to disengage from PHCN. But they have a challenge on their exit package because they did not migrate to the Contributory Pension Scheme in 2004.

    “The Pension Reform Act allowed only those who were going to retire between 2004 and 2007 to do so with the old Pension Scheme.

    “Under the Contributory Pension Scheme, the workers will save 7.5 per cent of their earnings and their employers will also contribute 7.5 per cent.

    “But the PHCN workers are insisting on getting 25 per cent pension as in the old pension scheme. They are making this demand outside the three-year window allowed by the Pension Reform Act.

    “The first committee that negotiated with them offered to pay them 25 per cent of their entitlements up to 2004 and 15 per cent from 2005 to date. They have rejected this offer.

    “Their rejection of the offer led to the latest negotiation which was concluded on Wednesday. The Federal Government has made a fresh offer or a middle course percentage which they have promised to look into.

    “We had a wonderful session with the labour leaders. The bottom line is that the Federal Government wants to be able to pay. The cost implication of the retirement benefits of these workers is huge.”

  • Ezekwesili heads new Africa Economic Initiative

    Ezekwesili heads new Africa Economic Initiative

    Building on her work in the last five years as World Bank Vice President for Africa, former Education Minister, Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili is teaming up with the billionaire George Soros to chart a new economic course for Africa, Empowered Newswire reports.

    In her new assignment, Ezekwesili said she will get the opportunity to advance economies in the continent to finally reach and positively touch the lives of the poor African majority, and set-up a world-class graduate school of public policy in Abuja.

    Speaking with Empowered Newswire, Ezekwesili disclosed that her partnership with the Open Society and its billionaire founder is strategic, providing the opportunity “to advance the centrality of sound policies for economic growth that delivers benefit to a larger number of African citizens especially because capable states do better in articulating and executing sound public policies.”

    The immediate past World Bank official added that “in this assignment, I want to bring in structural transformation , especially now that Africa must prioritize structural transformation through economic diversification.”

    A statement from the Open Society in Abuja on Tuesday, where Ezekwesili would be based in her new role also said “the Open Society Foundations has asked Obiageli Katryn Ezekwesili, a world-renowned expert on economic reforms and economic governance, to lead its new Africa Economic Policy Development Initiative. ”

    According to the statement, the initiative was created to build on the strong growth performance of Africa over the last decade and the emergent urgency for structural transformation of economies to expand benefits to the poor majority through policies that boost private sector jobs and incomes.

    Continuing the Open Society said, “operating from Abuja, Ezekwesili will advise the leaders and policymakers of the countries on their economic strategy and policy reforms that can help boost investment and create job growth in the Mano River region. The initiative over the next three years will expand to include other countries across Africa.”

    The initiative which is focusing on Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, countries fresh from conflicts in West Africa, will help develop leadership in public policy and economic reforms within governments, and will leverage African expertise in the Diaspora to strengthen state capacities in various sectors of economies in Africa, according to the Open Society.

    Commenting on the new role of the Nigerian former ministers of Education and Solid Minerals, President Alpha Conde of Guinea said “we very heartily welcome this initiative by the Open Society Foundation and are eager to seize the opportunity to receive the valuable policy advice and support from Oby Ezekwesili. We benefited from her rich experience and policy expertise when she was at the World Bank and helped us considerably in advancing our country’s economic reforms and development priorities.”

    In his own comments, Open Society founder, George Soros, observed that “I am delighted for Oby to join our team working on Africa.”

    George Soros, who is also the chairman of the Open Society Foundations added that “my foundations have long been committed to fostering economic development in post-conflict countries and nations transitioning to democracy.”

    Ezekwesili will take the title Senior Economic Advisor in the Open Society Foundations and in that capacity “will oversee the creation of a public policy advisory center in Abuja that will collaborate with Paul Collier, the professor of economics who focuses on developing countries, and others to provide economic policy solutions to pro-reform governments starting with Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone.”

    In addition to that the former World Bank VP for Africa will also help establish “a separate Africa-wide graduate school of public policy, based in Nigeria, that will collaborate with leading universities including the School of Public Policy at the Central European University.”

    Ezekwesili said the plan for the School should begin within a two-year timeline, “to begin to build towards the school.”

    Open Society President Christopher Stone also praised Ezekwesili saying “Oby has dedicated her career to the proposition that governments in Africa, as elsewhere, can achieve equitable growth when they are open, honest, and disciplined. She is the right person to lead this new initiative.”

    In her job at the World Bank, where she was VP in charge of Africa, Ezekwesili was responsible for operations in 48 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and supervised a lending portfolio of over US$40 billion.

    Previously, she worked for the federal government of Nigeria as presidential advisor in charge of public procurement reforms; Chairperson and Implementer of the first ever, country-led Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative; Minister of Mineral Resources; key member and Governance task team leader of the widely acclaimed Presidential Economic Team; and Minister of Education. Ezekwesili has a long track record in the transparency, accountability, good governance, and anti-corruption movement worldwide having been one of the co-founders of Transparency International nearly two decades ago.

    Before her public policy service in Nigeria’s federal government, Ezekwesili served as director of the Harvard-Nigeria Economic Strategy Program in Boston and Abuja.

    A holder of a master’s in international law from the University of Lagos, and another master’s in public policy and administration from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, Ezekwesili is a chartered accountant.

  • Sharia Law: Endless violence against women

    Sharia Law: Endless violence against women

    It shook the world. International organisations were involved. Ambassadors of various countries discussed safety measures, Oprah Winfrey mobilised more than 1.2 million people to protest and Human Right Watch was under severe pressure to act.

    It was an exclusive story published by Daily Mirror on August 24, 2002 about the case of Amina Lawal, a 30-year-old woman from Kastina in Northern Nigeria who was sentenced to death by stoning on August 19 of the same year, by an Islamic court for adultery and conceiving a child out of wedlock. She was to be taken, buried to the neck in the earth and left to perish beneath a hail of rocks.

    The story was that of oppression by one gender upon another. Even though Ms Lawal’s case was overturned, the issue of stoning to death still exist in countries like Indonesia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Somalia.

    Professor Hauwa Ibrahim, the pro bono lawyer who handled Ms Lawal’s case ten years ago, confirmed that this form of violence and injustice never existed until 2000 when religious cleric feared for the effects of globalisation on their women. She said: “Globalisation through Nollywood, Hollywood and Bollywood was exposing women to nudity, so the Sharia Law was introduced to protect women which ended up destroying them and introducing a huge form of violence.”

    Furthermore, there are misconceptions surrounding the fact that stoning to death is supported by the Holy Book of Qur’an. This is untrue. The only part of the Qur’an that describes punishment for adultery or fornication is Qur’an 24:2 which states that: “The [unmarried] woman or [unmarried] man found guilty of sexual intercourse- lash each one of them with a hundred lashes, and do not be taken by pity for them in the religion of Allah and the Last Day. And let a group of the believers witness their punishment.”

    While the law provides that women are stoned to death, the father of Ms Lawal’s daughter was not prosecuted for lack of evidence. He was deemed innocent by the court without any DNA tests. However, the punishment for men in the Sharia Law is based on three proofs. One is confession, the second is pregnancy and the third is that four witnesses must see the sexual act before a man can be convicted. How possible is that?

    Professor Ibrahim confirmed that the law is in the book but the judges in Nigeria no longer pass judgement of stoning. One obvious reason is the international interest which Ms Lawal’s case attracted and the other is the notion that corruption has crept into the system. Judges in Northern Nigeria whose children get pregnant fly them abroad to avoid conviction and open disgrace. The Professor of Harvard University also said she is working with Nigerian lawyers and other countries especially in Pakistan, Palestine and Iraq to see that the law is abrogated.

    Ms Lawal who lived in a tiny room made with mud and a thatched roof in 2002 was arrested in her home. She could neither read nor write. She didn’t understand the law. Her first marriage was at the age of 14. She had five children after which she became divorced. Two years later, she had a daughter for another man who had promised to marry her but denied her in court.

    Her case is a typical example of religious violence existing in developing countries. Women worldwide face different forms of injustice. They are vulnerable to abuse, domestic violence and rape. In Northern Nigeria where Ms Lawal comes from, when a boy is born, friends and relatives exclaim congratulations! A son means insurance. He will inherit his father’s property; get a good job to help support the family. When a girl is born, the reaction is different. Some women weep when they find out their baby is a girl. Her place is in a man’s house and when she is between ages 12- 14 she is given out in marriage.

    Some of these women end up being used as machines to produce children. Professor Ibrahim recollected a case she handled in January. It was a case of a well known man [name withheld] in Nigeria who married his first wife and for several years she couldn’t produce children. “So, he had to marry a second wife. The second wife was more productive. In six years of marriage they had five male children. When he knew he had what he wanted, he started maltreating her and he decided to divorce her. We couldn’t get the settlement out of court but now the case is before a magistrate court.”

    In some countries, deliberate attempts are made to reduce the female population. United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) estimates that around 5,000 Indian women are killed in dowry-related incidents each year. The gender ratio across India has dropped to an unnatural low of 929 females to 1,000 males due to infanticides and sex related abortions. Also, the Chinese government claims that sex-selective abortion is one major explanation for the staggering number of Chinese girls who have simply vanished from the population in the last 20 years.

    UNICEF in a press statement on violation of women rights in developing countries said “A combination of extreme poverty and deep biases against women create a remorseless cycle of discrimination that keeps girls in developing countries from living up to their full potential. It also leaves them vulnerable to severe physical and emotional abuse.”

    Injustice against women is a devastating reality. UNICEF continued: “It results in millions of individual tragedies, which add up to lost potential for countries. Studies show there is a direct link between a country’s attitude towards women and its progress socially and economically. The status of women is central to the health of a society.”

    Professor Ibrahim recollected that Ms Lawal’s case officially ended in 2003. By 2004, she was remarried and again faced maltreatment from her husband. He beat her up and when she was six months pregnant, he divorced her.

    Ms Lawal, alone again with a child kicking inside of her struggled through life until she had the baby who she named Miriam. In 2010, she remarried again but this time Mrs Ibrahim says; “I can’t tell if she is happily married or not.”

    While the Human Right Watch and Amnesty International claim they have grip of violence against women around the world, Senior Researcher on gender in Open University Oxford, Dr. Tina Wallace said nobody has the true data of how much domestic violence, religious violence or discrimination women endure. She said: “I don’t think anybody has that kind of data. Who are these women going to tell? Who knows what goes on behind closed doors? I don’t think there is a significant difference between religious and domestic violence against women because a lot of domestic violence are based on religious understanding of men being superior to women and women owing men allegiance. You can’t separate religion from domestic violence.”

    Dr Wallace, whose research is mainly on women in Africa, added that: “These are really difficult issues that go to the heart of marriages, their culture and the way they have been brought up. Even here in the UK, it is a very difficult subject to tackle; we have loads of homes with domestic violence a lot of which is not known.”

    However, Sarah Haynes, grassroots campaigns officer, Women for Women International; said they work extensively with women to address violence when it is reported. She said: “We are helping women deal with the trauma in African continent especially in Congo, Rwanda, South Sudan and Nigeria where gender crisis is ongoing. These women are sponsored for one year to equip them with the skills to contribute to the society without bearing hangovers from their past hurt.”

    Head of Centre for Gender and Violence Research Bristol University, Professor Marianne Hester says gender injustice has increased in various dimensions. She said this increase has a link to decreasing services in the most countries.

    In her view, the injustice melted on women especially in developing countries would tremendously reduce “if men begin to address their violent behaviour and also there should be a measure to call for equalising of gender.”

    Researcher and director of Tilda Goldberg Centre for Social Work and Social Care, University of Bedfordshire, Dr Sarah Galvani said: “It is totally unacceptable to abuse women in any way because it perpetuates the subjugation of women and convey messages to young and old that women are not men’s equals and deserve to be treated as lesser beings.”

    To reduce or eradicate this form of injustice, she said: “a start would be to introduce and enforce laws that suitably punish those that abuse women. More so, services and support for women in need of protection should be intensified.”

    Mrs Oby Okonkwo, Nigerian gender activist and a lawyer for about 30 years said progress has been made through organisations like International Federation of Women Lawyer (FIDA) and Women’s Rights Advancement and Protection Alternative (WRAPA) in Northern areas to educate them of their rights as women.

    She however lamented that most “women are scared of speaking out as a result of the stigma they could face after bringing their problem to public eye.”

    As for Ms Lawal, who represents the voiceless, poor, powerless uneducated woman, 10 years on, she is still struggling to endure life.

    Professor Ibrahim who also escaped marriage at the age of 12 but ‘accidentally’ became educated said “Education is the tool that can help break the pattern of gender injustice and bring lasting change for women in developing countries.”

    UNICEF 2011 report says, nine million girls than boys miss out of school every year.

    Chinonye is currently studying for an MA in International Journalism at Cardiff University, U.K

  • TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY

    TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY

    Exhausted and thirsty from participating in the daily hustle for a living in the congested city of Lagos, Tolu, a motor-parts dealer begins his three hour journey home from Alaba International market.

    In a bid to beat the traditional traffic-jam, he hurries to the bus stop. Sitting on a curb he waits in vain for the frantic call for passengers heading to Alagbado by a half dressed conductor. Each second added to his thirty minute wait at the bus stop heightens his growing head ache.

    With a defeated spirit, Tolu decides to quench his raging hunger by purchasing a wrap of sausage roll from a hawker. He peels away the nylon wrap with the intention of devouring his make-shift meal. Suddenly he spots the life-less form of a house-fly lodged in his snack.

    Enraged by this discovery, he demands a refund from the ‘Oni sausage’ (sausage seller) but is met with a stumbling wall. ‘Oni sausage’ vehemently refuses to proffer a refund rather she posits “Once nylon don tear, notin (nothing) wey person fit do. The money don go be dat!”.

    Confused, angry and defeated, he tosses the sausage roll into the bush and walks away without saying a word. After all, Terms and Conditions Apply!

    The above cuts the picture of the level of awareness of the average Nigerian on his rights as a consumer. In a global economy bound by legal laws, a firm grasps of the terms of agreement upon which goods and services are exchanged or bought cannot be over-emphasized.

    However, what has come to be a common source of grievance between the buying population and the goods or service providing company is the act of creating extreme non-liability claims made by these companies as well as consciously or unconsciously withholding the details of these ‘terms and conditions’ from the consumer before the transaction is made.

    One of these clauses can be found in the rule book of an airline company which serves as a national carrier. It states “All claims for compensation for Damage to Baggage must be accompanied by an itemized list identifying each affected item by description, manufacturer and age, together with proof of purchase or ownership for all such items. Proof of purchase will not be required in relation to any item which costs less than US$5 (or local currency equivalent), or is more than five (5) years old and has a claims value of less than US$50 (or local currency equivalent). Depreciation will be deducted from claims, where we consider appropriate.”

    Another typical case study is cited when Miss Fortune of Fabricare dry-cleaning service states that if while dry-cleaning, a cloth gets damaged, they do what they can to mend the dress. “If the tear is beyond repair, we beg the customer to accept the cloth like that. If the person is a Christian, he will forgive and let it go. It is only in extreme cases that we pay a small percentage of the amount the person is asking because many times these our customers tell lies about the cost of the dress. They will say they bought a N4,000 suit for N18,000 so that they will cheat us out of some extra cash”.

    The refund or money-back system seems to have lost its meaning on the average Nigerian business man. Most of the people who conduct business on the streets of Lagos claim that once a legal tender, in this case – money, has been exchanged, there is virtually no hope of the buyer getting his or her money refunded. This condition stands even when the purchaser of the product is dissatisfied with the quality of service meted out.

    Mr. Samson Olajide, a photographer, says “Normally, when I take a person’s picture, I will do my best to let it come out well. After I finish washing the picture and I give it to the customer and the customer did (does) not want to collect it because it is not fine, there is nothing I can do. I can never return the money because I have done my best”.

    This manner of conducting business does not seem to be restricted to the small-scale business man as many of the multi-national companies fall into this category. In light of this situation, Barr. Amobi Agbara, a Lawyer who runs an activist group called The Consumer Rights Project says, “There’s something called Caveat emptor which simply means ‘buyer-beware’ which ideally should be made public before the transaction is carried out. However, there are some exclusion clauses (terms and conditions) which we consider unconscionable (unacceptable to the senses). These exclusion clauses tend to limit the liability of a supplier of a goods or service and are therefore detrimental to the user. If these clauses are not brought to the knowledge of a buyer before the transaction is made, the supplier cannot rely on it to disclaim liability. In such cases, the law will treat these exclusion clauses as unconscionable”. he states.

    Invariably, this means that if the ‘terms and conditions’ are not conspicuously revealed to the buyer before a purchase is made and any form of damage occurs, the buyer has the right to demand money back and sue the company if his demands are rejected.

    Even with the tide turned in their favour, some consumers still refuse to take the bull by the horn and stake their claim citing the unreliable judicial system as an excuse. Fatima, a 28 year-old nurse posits “It is not easy to say you want to carry a big company to court. They (the big company) can hire good lawyers who will defend them no matter what but people like us who are still looking for money to pay school fees, who will you run to for help and where will you see money to hire a good lawyer?”.

    In response Barr. Agabara says “In Nigeria we do not have a legislative body per say that can enforce these legislations but we have snippets that tend to protect the rights of consumers like the National Agency of Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and the Standard Organization of Nigeria (SON). We do not yet have a compendium of legislation that relates to consumers except only recently that the Consumers Protection Council (CPC) was formed to protect the rights of consumers”.

    Some blue-chip companies who are at the risk of facing legal squabbles are finally taking up the task of alerting the public to these exclusion clauses. A representative of the Nigerian Bottling Company had this to say, “We regularly announce the ‘terms and conditions apply clause’ in most of our adverts especially when we are running a promo because we are tired of being dragged to court over issues that could easily have been avoided.

    “There are people out there who are just looking for an excuse to make huge sums of money whether they deserve it or not and so we try to do our part by letting people know that that these terms exist. If you still chose to do business with us then nobody can put the blame on us”, he stated.

    Purchasers of goods and services are therefore encouraged to protect themselves by enquiring about and thoroughly reading through the ‘terms and conditions’ binding whatever product they purchase, in order to avoid a legal dispute.

  • Lift ban on rice, importers urge govt

    THE Federal Government has been urged to lift the ban on rice import through land borders in the interest of the masses.

    Spokesman of rice importers Mr Gbolahan Adetona described rice as one of the nation’s staples. He urged President Goodluck Jonathan to allow the group import the commodity through land borders this year.

    Adetona said the landing cost of rice through the seaports was expensive compared to what obtains in neighbouring countries.

    Another member of the group, Mrs Nosirat Odubela, said importers pay 20 per cent Customs duty and a 20 per cent levy, in compliance with government’s directive.

    The importers refuted claims that they were shortchanging the government by evading duty, saying they were ready to pay.

    “It is bad for those that have government’s ears to tag us that are doing legitimate business through the approved land borders and paying the necessary duty to Customs as smugglers. We are not smugglers, but importers and rice merchants.

    “We prefer to import through the neighbouring ports because we cannot compete with the local importers that use billions of naira to import the commodity.

    “Those who engage in smuggling are still in business.They have their routes and know how they convey their rice to the market,” Odubela said.

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that rice import through land borders has stopped and smuggling has reduced because of Customs surveillance.

    Some importers in Seme said the price of rice went up during the yuletide because of the importers’ interest.

  • ‘Protect waterways against illegal fishing’

    The Federal Government has been advised to protect the territorial waters and develop naval capability to deal with hazardous waste dumping and piracy.

    A member of the Fisheries Society of Nigeria (FISON) Mr Seyi Adetula gave the advice during an interview with The Nation in Lagos.

    He said the country should work with foreign partners to develop the capacity that could help it in tackling the crisis caused by piracy and illegal fishing.

    He said the dumping of toxic waste in the maritime domain and the increasing crimes in the coastline require commitment of the Federal Government to provide capability and cooperation with foreign partners to build its maritime capability.

    Adetula pointed out that security experts around the Horn of Africa have developed theories over increasing piracy.

    He noted that Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand had set the stage for cooperation between states, in information exchange and mobilisation of resources.

  • Mansions begging for occupants

    Mansions begging for occupants

    •Landlords overprice properties in Abuja

    It is widely believed that the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) lacks enough accommodation for its teeming population. But, surprisingly, Nduka Chiejina discovers that the city has many overpriced estates that are begging for tenants.

     

    The Abuja landscape is dotted with state-of-the-art buildings that are unoccupied. These buildings are found mainly in Maitama, Asokoro, Katampe Extension and Wuse Two.

    The history of unoccupied buildings dates back to the military era when some wealthy Nigerians and foreigners with connections to influential government figures acquired plots of land, developed and stayed in them. But, when they lost power and influence, they moved out of Abuja or tried to sell the property.

    It is being alleged that most completed but unoccupied buildings belong to some people who illegally acquired huge wealth and cannot defend the sources. They include politicians and senior government officials accused of looting the treasury, who resorted to either buying property with their loots or simply acquiring new plots and developing them.

    Many of such houses have remained unoccupied because the owners have placed them in the market at exorbitant rates and out of the reach of honest citizens with genuine interest to stay in such houses.

    The Abuja city, referred to as the Federal Capital City (FCC) in the masterplan, has become a veritable ground for money launderers and suspected treasury looters and their desire to maintain a very high taste, in the absence of legitimate income, has left them with the option of demanding very high rents on their property.

    Since most people cannot afford the tastefully finished houses, they are left largely unoccupied.

    At the popular Area 11 junction, there is a massive estate, which people allege belongs to a former Head of State. The estate though has some tenants, many of the flats have remained unoccupied because of the high rent.

    In Wuse Zone One, a large complex of apartments belonging to a famous business mogul from the Northwest, has been in the hands of squatters for almost 10 years and there appears to be nothing the businessman can do to change the situation. In fact, the squatters have partitioned the flats and are sub-letting portions of their flats to other ‘tenants.

    In recent times, the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) had warned that it would levy ground rents on unoccupied buildings to force the owners to put the buildings up for rent, instead of having unoccupied buildings dotting the landscape, with their attendant risks; they could be flash points or hideouts for criminals.

    Investigations showed that except where the landlord has a human face, it is virtually impossible to get a room and parlour for less than N450,000 per annum; and the more the number of rooms, the higher the price. There is no three-bedroom flat in the FCC that goes for less than N1.2 million per annum. Some landlords, agents and estate managers and valuers have cultivated the habit of demanding two years’ rent from prospective tenants.

    In the satellite towns, because the demand far outstrips the supply, many owners and agents have resorted to demanding one-and -a-half or two years’ upfront payment from new tenants.

    Another reason for the preponderance of unoccupied buildings in Abuja is the greed of registered and unregistered estate agents/valuers and developers. The tradition in the city is for estate agents and valuers to inflate the prices of properties in their care, most times without the knowledge of the owners.

    The districts that have the most number of unoccupied buildings are Maitama and Asokoro. There, the owners are former government officials and some rich Nigerians and individuals of questionable character. The owners have been known to hand the buildings over to estate agents at a reasonable rate, but the greed of the agents have resulted to the buildings remaining in the market for years and, eventually, falling to ruins because the agents refuse to give them out at the rate the owners have instructed them.

    It is difficult to see the owners of many houses in Abuja as agents in charge will not arrange a meeting between them and potential tenants.

    These developments have led to a glut of houses in the FCC and many Nigerians are only waiting for the day something would happen to force a burst in the real estate market in Abuja, thus bringing down the prices of houses.

    The wait may be long, but the fact remains that many buildings in Abuja City are wasting away while many Nigerians with genuine need for shelter are either forced to cough out large sums of money as rents, or they shelter in the satellite towns all of which are over crowded and lack basic amenities and infrastructure compared to the FCC.

    The indomitable spirit of Nigerians can also be seen at play where some of these unoccupied houses have been taken over by illegal squatters who neither pay rent nor attempt to carry out repairs on the buildings when the need arises.

    It is being envisaged that Abuja development may result in a property rate crash, the type that happened in the United States that reverberated as the global economic crunch.

    However, the effect of it, if indeed it happens in Nigeria would be different, because most of the property owners are looters who are privately funded.

    The effect of such a development would weigh more on the owners who will lose substantial part of their investment, rather than a national economic collapse, which resulted in the the in the early 2000s,

    Gwarimpa district was noted for the high number of squatters occupying the government buildings, but when most of buildings changed hands many of the squatters were ejected from the FHA and now Gwarimpa has lost the tag of ‘squatters’ settlement.

    The unoccupied building syndrome is not restricted to residential properties alone, many commercial buildings equally litter the city with vacant shopping and office spaces being more in number than those in business.

  • Group recommends measures to boost petroleum sector

    A group, National Society of Chemical Engineers (NSChE), has urged the Federal Government to divest majority shareholding in the three existing refineries in the country in order to restore them to full capacity.

    Its National President, Dr. John Erinne, who spoke at a press conference in Lagos, said competent private investors with strong technical and financial capabilities as well as track record in petroleum refining be allowed to revive the Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna refineries.

    He said the government should also implement the proposed 350,000 barrels per day Lekki refinery to ensure adequate refining capacity that would meet the growing demand for petroleum products in the country, even as he advised that the proposed refineries for Bayelsa and Kogi should be explored subsequently.

    He said: “Nigeria indeed has the potentials of becoming a regional petroleum refining hub in West Africa and a net exporter of petroleum products in the next seven years with consistent commitment to these remedial measures.

    “The Pipelines and Product Marketing Company (PPMC), the Strategic Business Unit (SBU) of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) responsible for the network of pipelines and infrastructure for supply of crude oil to the refineries and distribution of petroleum products nationwide, should be separated from NNPC and transformed into a new holding company which should act commercially and should be mandated to concession various aspects of the operations to competent private sector operators under clearly defined terms.”

    On the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), Erinne called on the legislature and executive to without further delay; enact it, even as he objected to the proposal for the retention of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, which he says will run parallel with the new Petroleum Technical Bureau (PTB).

    Erinne proposed a National Petroleum Directorate to accommodate both bodies and maintained that the creation of two regulatory bodies in the oil and gas Industry would be a wasteful duplication and would lead to confusion.

  • Poly floats radio station

    Poly floats radio station

    The much-awaited radio station built by the management of the Federal Polytechnic, Auchi has been officially inaugurated. According to the management, the station was meant to enhance effective flow of information dissemination within and outside the campus.

    The station with the Frequency Modulation 94.1FM was inaugurated by the Rector of the polytechnic, Dr Philipa Idogho, last week with top officials of the institution in attendance. She charged the workers of the radio station to be committed, advising them not to throw ethics of journalism into a daylight shame.

    Dr Idogho praised the effort of the Dean of School of Information and Communication Technology (ICT), Mr Francis Chete, and head of Mass Communication department, Mr Abraham Obaze, for ensuring that the interests of school are propagated.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the radio station has a clear signal that reaches some northern states such as Kebbi and Kogi. Other areas include Benin, Asaba, Akoko, Ekpeshi, Igarra, Okpella, and Okene. A caller from Kogi, Cynthia Ijeoma, confirmed the clear signal of the station, praising the management of the institution for the job well done.

     

  • MALPRACTICES FLAW JAMB AGAIN

    MALPRACTICES FLAW JAMB AGAIN

    The endless cup of coffee, burning of midnight oil, munching of kola nut came to an end last week saturday as millions of thousand admission seekers took to 2,338 centres in nigeria with 7,000 security agents to write the joint admission and matriculation examination (jamb). The examination which is conducted every year did not miss out of action, as one or more centres had a tail or more to tell by the students. The entire exercise was beligerent upon the attitude of the students, what they think of jamb. But in this years case, the story was not that different. Not at all. This is because all the drama of malpractices, affray, running from security agents constituted all the integral part of the examination that makes it tick every year. I mean tick because without these antecedents, what we have in jamb would be a “play with no plot.” Besides, the drama and action takes place within the plot of a novel. So this year’s ‘plot’ was not that bad at all, because it was a subtle plot with chronological sequence of action from start to finish. So the build up to the action began with the new policy of writing one entrance examination with six choices of universities to choose from, which is billed to probably start next year. Being that this could probably be the “last jamb” to be written, by admission seekers, the “players of the game” took the initiative a bit higher from the normal playing field.

    The “players of the game” had the questions to the examination even before the examination started. Interesting it seem. Have you heard of”special centers ” The possession o questions before examination was the case under the just concluded jamb examination, One of the owners of a special centre who does not want his name in print, in Benin revealed that the questions are always made available to them by some staff of the examination body. “they supply us with questions before the examination because of the money involved,” In this case, students who enroll in these special centers are made to pay huge amount of money ranging from 20,000 and above depending on the location, His words “our candidates pay huge sums in other to pass jamb examination, and depending on where they are writing the examination too. “Besides, since we are the ones that supply the answers to the questions during the examination all they need to do is to have their money ready before the examination.” He concluded. But imagine a parent paying a sum of 20,000 Naira for just enrolling jamb? Then I guess, such parent will pay more in other for their children to be offered admission. What a situation we have at hand.

    The malpractices were not carried out at special centre only, It was a broad base thing, wide spread and cutting across borders too. As such some students benefited from the malpractice immensely. One of the beneficiary of the fraud, kenneth revealed that they had to pay the invigilator in charge of his hall 2,000 naira in other for them to gain access to materials. His words “when it was 45 minutes to the end, the lady began to collect 2,000 from student who have the desire to use whatever materials he/she has. He further revealed that the after the payment, the lady simply left them to their world. “she just stayed back and watch us do our thing.” This indeed was a pathetic showing from the invigilator. When I asked him how they felt after they had cheated? His response was rather berserk. “it was nothing at all, infact we needed it since it was the only way for us to pass this jamb.” Thus the plot of the story continued to develop into a new and interesting dimension.

     

    Subsequently, the act of cheating was not reduced to manual only. The electronic aspect played a great part too. The advancement in technology further revealed its complacency, through the use of GSM, besides, according to jamb instructions, electronic devices are not “allowed into the examination hall.” In this case, that instruction was defiled by some candidates by going into the hall with their cell phones. According to Hillary, their idea of using their cell phone during the examination was reduced by the security agents swarming their halls with ease. “they the whole idea of cheating difficult for us.” But as time passed by, they began to use their cell phones because at that time, the security agents where either tired of walking up and down or they went to a cool place to seek rest. “at that time, my cell phone was filled up with messages from my friend who has all the answers to the questions. “so I began to erase the ones I have shaded before that were not correct before the correct ones came.” “Besides our invigilator was very lenient with us in my centre.” But while some succeeded in their mission, there were some who had misfortune. They hit a road block in their attempt to use their cell phone in their centres. Sammy who wrote in Sapele revealed that his cell phone was taken from him because of the beeping. “my cell phone sold me out to the security agent because of constant beeping of the messages. I could not react to the messages on time.” Investigation at some centres revealed that the number of cell phones that were seized were much, according to a student who does not want his name in print. “I saw a lot of phones in the hands of police during the examination.” Thus, it was a tale of different strokes for different folks at the centre.

    The drama was further strengthened by the bus drivers who took the opportunity offered by the examination to increase transportation fare. A reek of exploitation they were not ashamed of. But in all, the examination was one, with different players, playing the ‘game’ out of court.