Author: The Nation

  • Makinde approves dualisation of 8.3km Ojurin-Olorunda-Abaa road for N9.6bn

    Makinde approves dualisation of 8.3km Ojurin-Olorunda-Abaa road for N9.6bn

    Barely 72 hours to the end of his first term in office, Oyo Governor Seyi Makinde on Friday approved the dualisation of Akobo-Ojurin- Olorunda Abaa/Odogbo Barracks by N.O Idowu College.

    He said the project, which will be executed by Lagelu Local Government at N9.6 billion, will ameliorate the sufferings of motorists and pedestrians.

    The Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Local Government & Chieftaincy Matters, Joel Ajagbe, announced this in a statement.

    The Governor, about two months ago, assured his administration will award the project for the construction of the 8.3 kilometres road in Lagelu Local Government Area of Ibadan before the expiration of the first term of his administration.  

    Read Also: Makinde signs amended Oyo Chieftaincy laws

    Ajagbe explained that the award of the contract would be in tandem with governor Makinde’s commitment to continue working for the people of the state till the end of his first term in office.

    The administration had earlier completed the first phase of the project on the Basorun-Idi Ape-Akobo-Ojurin axis as well as the General Gas Flyover.

    Speaking further, Ajagbe said after completion, the project will provide a good and accessible road for the teeming populace.

  • Buhari launches resettlement cities in Borno, Kano, Nasarawa, Zamfara

    Buhari launches resettlement cities in Borno, Kano, Nasarawa, Zamfara

    President Muhammadu Buhari has launched the model of the Nigeria Humanitarian Hub and inaugurated smart resettlement cities and digital academy in Borno, Kano, Nasarawa and Zamfara States.

    He also flagged off the maiden edition of the Nigeria International Humanitarian Summit as part of measures to tackle humanitarian challenges across the country.

    The President performed the functions during the opening ceremony of the NIHS at the Presidential Villa while the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management, and Social Development, Sadiya Farouq, and heads of agencies under the ministry, concluded the summit at the weekend in Abuja.

    In his address at the opening ceremony, Buhari said: “This maiden edition with the theme, ‘Saving Lives, Alleviating Poverty and Maintaining Human Dignity in the Face of Rising Humanitarian Crises,’ resonates with the commitment and investment made by this administration in ensuring the protection of the dignity of Nigerians.

    Read Also: Children’s Day: Buhari tasks parents on cultural values

    “This summit is not only about celebrating the achievements recorded under the humanitarian sector since the establishment of the ministry, but to also unveil the proposed Nigeria Humanitarian Hub, commission the smart resettlement cities and the digital academy, all of which were initiated and executed under the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs”.

    He said the resettlement cities project was conceptualised under the economic sustainability plan of the Federal Government through the National Commission for Refugees, Migrant, and Internally Displaced Persons.

    Buhari explained that the cities were designed to enable the resettlement and reintegration of persons of concern in Nigeria and enhance their social and economic well-being while strengthening the host communities.

    The cities, according to the President, played a central role in supporting the commission in achieving its objective of providing durable solutions to persons of concern in Nigeria.

    He said: “The resettlement cities in four states at Kondugo, Borno State, Dawakin Tofa, Kano State, Keffi, Nasarawa State, and Gusau, Zamfara State, have been completed.

    “Each city consists of 50 units of two-bedroom blocks of flats and 20 units of studio apartments.

    “The resettlement cities are equipped with a resource centre for skill acquisition, a police station to ensure security, a clinic for primary healthcare provision, a large expanse of land for farming, and a market for facilitating trade and industry to promote economic growth in the local community.”

    The President explained that the Nigeria Humanitarian Hub when completed, will serve as the central coordinating centre for humanitarian activities in Nigeria.

    “The hub will accommodate all the stakeholders in the humanitarian sector under one central coordinating facility”.

  • Onoh hits Atiku over 1999 double nomination gain

    Onoh hits Atiku over 1999 double nomination gain

    President-elect’s spokesman in the south east, Dr. Josef Onoh has criticised presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Atiku Abubakar, for misleading his party into seeking for the disqualification of the President-elect, Bola Tinubu and his Vice, Kashim Shettima, over alleged double nomination of Shettima for Borno Central Senatorial seat as well as Vice Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC).  

    Onoh said he was surprised that Atiku failed to advise the PDP but induced the opposition party into gullibility. 

    He wondered if Atiku was aware he was a beneficial of such Supreme Court judgment which enabled him become the Vice President in 1999 after he also contested for governorship of Adamawa State in the same PDP.

    The Supreme Court in its judgment of Friday, dismissed the PDP application, stating that case of Uche Nwosu of Imo state which the PDP relied on pursuant to its case against the 2023 APC presidential candidate and the vice, were not the same matter.

    Read Also: Fear of US visa ban rocks Atiku, Obi camps

    The Supreme Court held that whereas Nwosu was a candidate of two political parties in the 2019 elections, Shettima was only given nomination by one party. 

    It ruled it was even incongruous for the PDP to have sought for such plea when Atiku benefited from its judgment of wisdom in a similar case in 1999 that made him become vice President.

    The Supreme Court said: “The applicant herein was a beneficiary of this position in 1999 when it’s candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar ran for Gubernatorial elections in Adamawa state and was subsequently picked as associate of President Olusegun Obasanjo pursuant to section 142 of the constitution. In that case INEC intended to conduct bye election and this court said no. Alhaji Buni became Governor of Adamawa state on that account.”

    Vilifying Atiku for insatiability, Onoh said that the former Vice president should have been fair to the APC, being a beneficiary of the same judgment in 1999, recalling that the Supreme Court judgement benefited him when he ran for governorship of Adamawa state and Vice President at the same time.

    “I didn’t expect him (Atiku) to be unfair because deep down his heart he knows the truth and knows the Supreme Court was right. But today he is against it because he is not a beneficiary whereas in 1999 he was a beneficiary when the Supreme Court gave him a favourable judgment.

    “I’m surprised at the fact that Atiku failed to advise his party when he as a beneficiary of the same judgment knew full well that such judgment was what enabled him to be the Vice President of Nigeria. He has exhibited bad leadership quality by deceiving his party which has cost the party two million naira; and he allowed the party to move ahead with the suit. Perhaps it shows that the PDP is a short-sighted political party that is only interested in looting and bringing down Nigeria instead of development for the country.

    “The problem with Atiku is that Nigerians don’t want a made in Dubia President, so Nigerians chose a Nigerian President with the interest of Nigeria. Atiku should invest more time with family, surrounded by loving children and grandchildren; invest the money being paid to his legal team on other meaningful lasting legacies in Adamawa state, channel such funds on educational scholarships in his community.

    “These lawyers will only charge and milk him dry promising him light at the end of a tunnel they obviously know is a dead end. They have nothing to lose; they will collect your money and train their children to become lawyers who will return tomorrow to collect your children’s money who you train to become politicians.

    “Tinubu’s appointment with destiny has come to stay. He was born and destined to be President while you were born to be and end as a vice president. You have fulfilled your appointment with destiny hence let Tinubu fulfill his.

    “Nigerians in the February 25th presidential election chose a Nigerian, living in Nigeria to represent Nigeria and lead Nigerians as our president; hence your desperate pursuit for the unattainable is simply your personal fight with Nigerians. We don’t disturb you in Dubai so don’t disturb us in Nigeria. Kindly keep your Dubai while we keep our Nigeria,” Onoh counseled Atiku.

  • Kenyatta to Tinubu: it’s time to unite Nigeria

    Kenyatta to Tinubu: it’s time to unite Nigeria

    The incoming President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has been charged to build a prosperous nation for all Nigerians, irrespective of ethnic, religious and political tendencies.

    Former President of Kenya Uhuru Kenyatta gave the admonition on Saturday in his keynote address at the Inauguration lecture organised by the Presidential Transition Council (PTC) in Abuja.

    Speaking on the theme: “Deepening democracy for integration and development”, Kenyatta summed up the leadership crisis in Africa to negative ethnicism, religious intolerance and economic greed.

    Kenyatta, who noted that while elections may divide the people, leadership must bring them together. 

    He encouraged Tinubu to surround himself with voices that challenge his own and reach out to those who may feel aggrieved to build a stronger nation together. 

    Read Also: Tinubu urged to evolve path to Nigeria’s revival

    In closing his over 45-minute long presentation, Kenyatta said: “The contest is now over and the hard work of building a prosperous and unified Nigeria now begins.

    “Upon assuming the office of President, you would be wise to transcend from the tactical politics of an election and assume your role as Nigeria’s vision bearer. This will demand a complete overhaul of the adversarial mindset that we as politicians are conditioned to embrace during the electoral process. 

    “As President, you must learn very quickly to lead those who do not love you and those who love you with equal passion and commitment because you are now the father of all.

    “Your Excellency, when countries are in election mode, the people and its leaders are more divided than ever, and boxed into their various sectarian and partisan interests. However, when you are the head of state, and you take command of the country’s armed forces, you become the embodiment of the sum total of the many different ethnic groups, religions that make up your country, and you become the symbol of unity. Indeed, you become the face of Nigeria. 

    “I encourage you, to surround yourself with the voices of those who will counterbalance the hardliners that feel entitled to a piece of your office, you will lose nothing and gain everything by reaching out across the political, ethnic and religious lines.”

    He added: “To those who may feel aggrieved by your victory in one way or another, please allow them to exhale and be part of your vision for a greater Nigeria.

    “It is my hope and my prayer that the lessons from across the continent will give you the resolve to walk the difficult path overcoming those three enemies. 

    “I started by mentioning the three enemies of nationhood negative ethnicity, religious discrimination and corruption. As your fellow African, I look forward to a Nigeria that emerges from this transition, ready to flex and fight for its rightful place on the global stage with both hands at the ready”, he said.

  • Dreaded ex-militant leader mobilises against anti-inauguration forces

    Dreaded ex-militant leader mobilises against anti-inauguration forces

    A dreaded former militant commander in the Niger Delta popularly called General Amagbein Boro is mobilising thousands of youths to occupy Abuja against forces threatening to disrupt the inauguration of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Monday. 

    Amagbein, who is the Founder of the famous youth group, the Niger Delta Amagbein Movement (NDAM), kicked against some treasonable statements emanating from persons he described as the enemies of the country saying they were capable of causing chaos in the polity.

    He bemoaned the effrontery of a few aggrieved and self-centered coupists sponsoring a grand design to thwart the presidential inauguration, which he said had been exposed by the Department of State Security (DSS).

    Read Also: Inauguration: We’ll support law enforcement agencies to beef up security- OPC

    Amagbein said his group comprising thousands of youths would occupy Abuja in support of Tinubu to stop unscrupulous elements’ plot  to undermine the security architecture of the country.

    He said any attempt by anybody no matter how highly placed to disrupt the inauguration would be crushed with  a greater resistance from the creeks of the Niger Delta.

    He said: “It is unfortunate that few aggrieved enemies of the state would muster effrontery to challenge our collective resolve. They will be greeted with our greater will.

    “I am calling on all patriots of the Niger Delta to occupy the streets of Abuja chanting songs of victory, stand gallantly strong and defend the mandate of the President-elect, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu against any perceived enemy of democracy.

    “I encourage youths that as they occupy Abuja, they must not deter in their course to support security agencies in protecting Tinubu’s mandate and supporting the military to defend the sovereignty of the country under the watch of the present administration.

    “The emergence of Asiwaju as President-elect is the collective resolve of the Niger Delta to further the course for restructuring and resource control.

    “I am, therefore, optimistic that the Tinubu’s administration would look into the issues of the modular refinery and creation of opportunities for the region, a long awaited dream, that I have been fighting for”.

    Amagbein said he had issued his last warnings to treasonable elements saying any action by the enemies of the state against the country before or after the inauguration “will be greeted with drums of native songs and sounds of metals as no price is too much to pay for the sovereignty of this country”.

  • Ibrahim Chatta breaks silence on AMVCA snub

    Ibrahim Chatta breaks silence on AMVCA snub

    Actor Ibrahim Chatta has finally broken his silence on being snubbed at the 9th edition of AMVCA.

    In an interview with an Ibadan radio station, Ibrahim Chatta spoke on how AMVCA didn’t invite him to the award ceremony.

    He said he wasn’t bothered by the lack of acknowledgment, admitting there are lots of actors better than him.

    Read Also: Ibrahim Chatta, Kemi Korede others star in Okan Soso

    He however lamented he was not invited to the ceremony while his younger colleagues were there. 

    He said:“I always thought my work wasn’t good enough but I see my younger colleagues who score an invite to the event.

    “I don’t want any award to limit me cause I am aiming for the Oscars. If I am focusing on not being nominated at AMVCA, I can lose focus”.

  • Children’s day: Seven basic needs of a child

    Children’s day: Seven basic needs of a child

    May 27 is traditionally the Children’s day in Nigeria. China celebrates Children’s Day on June 1 while Japan celebrates on May 5 and Britain celebrates on August 20.

    Though it is not a general public holiday in Nigeria, the day is set aside to honor the younger generation, meaning primary and secondary children are given a day off from school. In addition to the festivities and celebrations of Children’s Day, this date also serves to recognize that all minors and children have the right to health, education, and protection.

    Read Also: Children’s Day: Buhari tasks parents on cultural values

    Here are seven basic needs of a child:

    Security

    Kids must feel safe and sound with their basic survival needs met: shelter, food, clothing, medical care, and protection from harm.

    Stability

    Stability comes from family and community. Ideally, a family remains together in a stable household, but when that’s not possible, it’s important to disrupt the child’s life as little as possible. Kids and families should be a part of larger units to give them a sense of belonging, tradition, and cultural continuity.

    Consistency

    No “good cop, bad cop.” Parents should synchronize their parenting and make sure important values stay consistent.

    Emotional support

    Parents’ words and actions should encourage kids’ trust, respect, self-esteem, and, ultimately, independence.

    Love

    Saying and showing you love your kids can overcome almost any parenting “mistakes” you might make. Even when your kids have disobeyed, angered, frustrated, and rebelled against you, show them you love them and that you’ll always love them.

    Education

    Make sure your kids get the best possible education for their future. This includes school, of course, but it also includes the invaluable life lessons you provide during the time you spend together.

    Positive role models

    Parents are their kids’ first and most important role models. Instill your values and teach children empathy by being the kind of person you want them to become.

  • May 29: Group offers live streaming of inauguration activities

    May 29: Group offers live streaming of inauguration activities

    A group, “Asiwaju Project Beyond 2023” has announced plans to live stream inauguration of President-Elect, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu on May 29.

    A statement by the National Director, Media and Publicity of the group, Com. Adeboye Adebayo, said the event would hold at Millennium Park, Abuja for visitors guests, participants and well wishers of Tinubu.

    Adebayo, who doubles as the Chairman of the Media subcommittee of the event, noted the intention of Asiwaju “Project Beyond 2023” is to provide comfort for guests, visitors, participants and well wishers who may not have opportunity to be at the Eagle square.

    Read Also: Inauguration: We’ll support law enforcement agencies to beef up security- OPC 

    He said: “The event, ‘Abuja Inauguration Concert and Live View Centre’ with the theme ”Celebrating Uncommon Political Milestone in Nigeria” will kick start by 10:00am on Monday, 29th May, 2023 at the Millennium Park beside Transcorp Hilton Hotels, Abuja featuring Comedians, Artists, Musicians, Foods, Drinks and Screens to view the inauguration proceedings live. There will be an exclusive tents for the VIPs and very comfortable tents for us, the general public. 

    The “Asiwaju Project Beyond 2023” displayed such unique capacity during the APC National Convention & Presidential Primaries where the Project solely called the delegates on phone to encourage them to attend the event in Abuja, provides logistics for their movement in Abuja and accommodation for some of who needed it. 

  • Keeping security conversations open, honest

    Keeping security conversations open, honest

    • By Rafiu Ajakaye

    “In God we trust, all others we investigate”, my uncle – a retired military officer — quipped in the language of crime fighters as he narrated to me on Tuesday the incidents that led to the death of a relative around Isanlu Isin, the capital town of Isin local government of Kwara State. The deceased, husband to a second cousin, had run into a scene of abduction in the area. He had seen a victim of the abduction lying face down on the road on the order of masked gunmen. The fellow himself was not the target of the abduction; he also had run into the scene and was ordered to lie face down while they carried out their operations unhindered. It had just happened when our brother in-law got there. As he sought to give the tension-stricken man the courage to get up, two of the abductors reappeared at the scene. They had forgot their mobile phones at the scene. The deceased manned up and unmasked one of the gunmen. He instantly recognised him as a man, indeed a son of the soil, living a few metres away from the country home of a top political actor in Isanlu Isin. They fired at our in-law and he died in spite of his initial efforts to outmanoeuvre them — but not before the valiant had killed one of them whom he had unmasked in his shock at his level of betrayal of community ties! 

    Read Also: ‘How security operatives killed my gateman chasing IPOB/ESN members’

    There was a claim that the plot was to abduct and extort the politician who was burying his mother in Isanlu Isin. But his brother was taken instead alongside some other community folks — some of whom have since regained freedom. There had been varying narratives on the incident across WhatsApp platforms, especially those dominated by Kwara southerners. 

    That unfortunate incident again led to heated debates and finger-pointing on the crisis of security in the region. In all of the debates, scanty attention was given to ‘ _in God we trust, all others we investigate_ ’. Attention was focused largely on the strangers who have dominated much of Kwara South, especially the Igbomina axis. The suspicion is that these crimes are perpetrated in the main by non-indigenes. But the account of the man that our in-law saved confirmed that the abductors were indeed persons from Isanlu Isin and some adjoining Igbomina communities. This is where the problem is: our penchant, or instinct, to always suspect strangers living among us. When a crime is committed, everyone except the victim is a suspect and due diligence must be done to get to the roots of the matter. That way, innocent persons are not punished and criminals are unable to hide under the cover of collective suspicion of the strangers living among us. Evil-doers among the strangers are also not able to get away with crimes as everyone is sincere enough to submit to proper probe of any incidents. 

    Suspicion breeds hostility and tension, which then snowball into a cycle of violence and deny us the benefits of diversity and good neighbourliness. Suspicion and blanket profiling of the ‘usual suspects’ allow real criminals to create alibi for themselves. The Isanlu-Isin scenario is a nationwide phenomenon, as had been reported in different media reports, and we should adjust our national conversation to sincerely accommodate the possibilities that the most dreaded crimes in our communities could well be perpetrated by our own kith and kin who are desperate for things of the world. This does not necessarily exonerate the strangers who commit crimes.

    While our government’s most important responsibility is to protect lives and properties, citizens must realise that anti-crime measures succeed only where the people, the citizens, consciously decide to be part of the solution, and not just a blame party. We should be vigilant and hold ourselves to account in our own corners. Everyone should be part of the solution. Our communities need to adopt the broken window theory to support government’s efforts to combat crime by ‘policing’ ourselves in the most civil way possible. 

    A belief that we will be safe only when we chase away ‘strangers’ or adopt some hostile policies towards them may be a costly fallacy, given the trend of global migration and our fast-changing demographies. Human migration will remain constant and dynamic till the end of time. Just like our forefathers will be shocked to see the current ethno-religious composition of some communities, we are also unlikely to recognise much of where we live today in the next five decades as different factors push people in different directions. That is the harsh reality of our world, as rightly predicted by Shamit Saggar who said: “This century is likely to see more movement across the globe by more people than at any other time in human history. To put it in another way, more of us would be encountering more people different in many ways from ourselves than any of our ancestors….We already know that increasingly, the first great battle for the twenty-first century humankind will be to live sustainably with our planet. It is becoming clear that the second great struggle will be to live with each other graciously’. If nothing else speaks to this reality, the japa syndrome among Nigerians should.

  • Children’s Day: Buhari tasks parents on cultural values

    Children’s Day: Buhari tasks parents on cultural values

    President Muhammadu Buhari has emphasized the need for parents and society to preserve the core cultural values and identities that have always guided what is acceptable ways and character.

    In his Children’s Day message, Buhari urged parents and children to hold onto the ancient truths of integrity, honesty, knowledge and hard work in spite of the changing times, saying these landmarks remain the pillars of destiny. 

    According to a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr Femi Adesina, the President charged Nigerians not to lose faith in the ability of government to always protect and safeguard citizens, including children, noting that his administration had focused on the welfare of children and in the circumstance of those that have targets of violence by terrorists, government has been working to retrieve.

    Read Also: Buhari assents to NDIC, Arbitration, Conciliation Bills, three others

    “On this special day, we are immensely grateful to God for another opportunity to celebrate our children, on May 27th, 2023. Every Children’s Day reminds us of the future, and the necessary sacrifices and building blocks by parents, guardians, teachers, leaders, and Government to secure our greatest assets on earth, the YOUNGER ONES.

    “As a father and grandfather, I share in the joy that children bring into our lives, and the fulfillment of seeing them grow. And I also feel the pain of loss, anxiety, and frustration that comes with uncertain times, like the disruptions to families due to insecurity, which we have worked hard to contain in the last eight years.

    “We must not lose hope, and our faith should be rekindled in the ability of Government to safeguard the future of our lives and children. In eight years, we have focused on children, negotiating and fighting for the release of many that were taken captive, and painstakingly building intelligence on the whereabouts of others. Some have been released; more will come, by God’s grace, as the next administration continues on the same noble path,’’ he assured. 

    He admonished parents to treat their children with dignity, while staying focused on discipline. 

    “Every child is special and should be specially treated with dignity. 

    “At the twilight of this administration, we are thankful for all the support we have received from parents, government officials, development partners, professionals, and religious leaders in realizing some of our targets, like the school feeding programme, resuscitation of the primary health care system, and protecting our schools by the security agencies. 

    “As we are aware, raising healthy and promising children is a collective responsibility. In Nigeria, like in most of Africa, the community has a stake in the upbringing of the child. Truly, it takes a village to raise a child and as the world continues to become smaller with new technology, and the borders on culture and cultural values are steadily getting blurred, we must retain our identity and values. Our core values of integrity, honesty, hard work, and love for learning should not be negotiated. Our children should know, and stay with the ancient landmarks of what is true, and right at home, and abroad,’’ he added.

    The President noted that efforts should be geared towards putting building blocks that will sustain unity, peace and prosperity for the sake of the children.

    “At over eighty years of age, and served the country all my working life, I still believe our children hold the keys to a brighter future for Nigeria, with these three undeniable and unchangeable truths; fear of God is supreme, love for knowledge is elevating and hard work will always pay off.

    “Happy Children’s Day, and God bless our children,’’ he said, felicitating with parents, children and guardians.