Author: The Nation

  • A warning for the Foreign Minister and people of South Africa

    I would appreciate them in helping us as well to address the belief our people have and the reality that there are many persons from Nigeria dealing in drugs in our country”- Dr. Grace Naledi Mandisa Pandor, South African Minister of International Relations.

    Is this the sort of thing that ought to be said by the South African Governmrnt when we are still in mourning and when we have not even buried our compatriots that were cruelly slain, bludgeoned to death and cut to pieces in the streets of South Africa?

    At a time when this irresponsible, insensitive, shameless, conflicted, self-hating, pitiful and mendacious creature that has been described as the Foreign Minister of South Africa should be apologising to the Nigerian people for the mindless savagery and barbarity of her blood-crazed compatriots, she is pointing accusing fingers at their victims and the objects of their collective hate and seeking to demonise them. What have we done to deserve this? First you kill us then you seek to justify it and demonise us!

    Does this she-devil of a Foreign Minister really believe that innocent Nigerian men, women and children should be butchered at will in the streets of South Africa by bloodthirsty and bestial mobs?

    Worse still does she think it is right and proper that this is done with the full endorsement and support of both the South African Government and police? Is that the way forward? Is that the way to build bridges in Africa and enhance peace and stability on the continent?

    Can such behaviour be justified or defended under any circumstances? What would she do or think if the Nigerian Government and people decided to reciprocate and mete the same treatment out to South Africans that reside in Nigeria and South African companies that are situated here?

    In any case how many of those that were butchered over the years were drug dealers? If it is true that as many Nigerians deal in drugs as she has suggested, why can’t the South African Government apprehend, arrest and prosecute them and send them to jail rather than demonise, misrepresent, target and kill innocent and defenceless Nigerians?

    This is a clear case of racial stereotyping and a squalid and shameful attempt to justify hate, racism, xenophobia, self-hate, black on black violence and mass murder. Permit me to educate the South African Foreign Minister and set the record straight.

    There are thousands of Nigerian professionals, academics, lecturers, intellectuals, businessmen, scientists, engineers and doctors in your country working hard, doing a great job and contributing massively to your development and economy.

    The fact that your people hate Nigerians and enjoy killing us has nothing to do with drugs, human-trafficking or drug-trafficking. It is because your people are hateful, ignorant, xenophobic, lazy, racist and envious of ours.

    And the few irresponsible Nigerians that go to South Africa and indulge in terrible and unforgivable crimes like drug and human trafficking and gang-related violence do so only because your people have a terrible weakness, an undue fascination and an insatiable appetite for hard drugs, alcohol, prostitutes, men and women of easy virtue and the dark, ugly and wild side of life.

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    It is therefore not surprising that South Africa has, for the better part of the last 25 years, been described as the “world’s capital for homicide” and the country with the “highest number of people that have been afflicted with HIV AIDS!”

    Rather than work hard, like their Nigerians counterparts, South Africans prefer to go to sleazy and cheap nightclubs, gamble on the gaming machines and poker tables, drink huge amounts of beer, take massive amounts of hard drugs and stay at home, watch television and sleep. They are not particularly good at anything except singing beautiful songs and killing other Africans.

    It is for this singular reason that their women love and respect Nigerian men and have nothing but contempt for their own. Generally-speaking Nigerian men are strong, productive, virile, focused, courageous, industrious, adventurous and hard-working with a touch of arrogance and they excel in all their ways. Sadly the average South African male does not possess these virtues.

    It does not stop there. For the better part of the last 50 years Nigeria has been the major military and economic power in Africa and we have used our wealth, power and influence wisely and expeditiously to the advantage of many countries on the continent.

    For example, had it not been for us the minority white Boers would still be ruling over the black South Africans and apartheid would still have been firmly in place.

    We nationalised British Petroleum and Barclays Bank because of them in the late 1970’s and thereby compelled the British to accept our demand of black majority rule in South Africa and Zimbabwe and to stop supporting apartheid and their white minority governments.

    We are far ahead of South Africa in terms of education and virtually every other sphere of human endeavour and we have opened up our country for them to come and invest in.

    Today Nigeria is by far the biggest market for their expertise, products, goods and services and if that market were to ever be closed to them or their companies nationalised it would affect their economy enormously.

    The truth is that they benefit far more from and make far more money from us today than we benefit and make money from them.

    In a trade war they have far more to lose than we do because not that many Nigerian companies have invested heavily in and operate in South Africa whilst many South African companies have invested heavily in and operate in Nigeria.

    As a matter of fact some of those companies make more money from the Nigerian market and their Nigerian operations than they do in the whole of the rest of Africa put together. That is what we have offered and given them and yet they have offered and given us next to nothing in return. All we get from them are insults, violence and heartache!

    Historically and in every other way they are very much our juniors. Our people were educated at Oxford, Cambridge and the very best universities in the world since 1860. South African blacks never went to a real university until the 1990’s after apartheid fell.

    We have liberated and brought peace, justice and stability to many African countries and been a blessing to the Africa continent for many decades despite our present challenges.

    Whether it be Angola, Mozambique, Congo,  Zimbabwe, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Ethiopia, Eritea, Ghana, Namibia, Sierra Leonne, Liberia, Sao Tome and Principe, Sudan, Chad, Niger and so many others: we were there in full force with our money, our arms, our logistical support and in some cases our troops.

    We shed blood and our blood was shed for other African countries over the years yet all we get in return are insults.

    If you say Nigerians are drug pushers and human traffickers then I will say that South Africans are losers, racists, drop-outs, failures and genocidal maniacs.

    Worse still had the white Boers not built up South Africa it would still be a barren land and the black population would still be nothing but slaves that live in  filthy and squalid little townships.

    Despite all the razzmatazz and great public relations about being a happy and prosperous “rainbow nation” where everyone is so happy and is treated so well, the truth is that  South Africa remains a country with a black body and a white head.

    I say this because even though political control and leadership has been ceded to the blacks, 80% of the multi-national corporations, big business, industry, the private sector and the economy and 90% of the choicest land, the biggest farms and the best farmlands still remain in the hands of the white minority.

    Given this, is it any wonder that black South Africans are literally going mad and are so deeply frustrated and filled with hatred and bitterness?

    They have nothing and, unlike in the days of Oliver Tambo, Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki (all great and inspiring men of strength, courage, wisdom, conviction and profound wisdom) other than a handful of new political leaders who are essentially corrupt, weak, fearful, divided, conflicted and uninspiring token niggers and Uncle Toms (with the possible exception of a bright, courageous and rising young star by the name of Julius Malema), their prospects of ever amounting to anything over the next 100 years is very dim.

    The real power still resides in the hands of the minority white Boers and the prospects for a prosperous and bright future lies heavily in their favour at the expense of the majority blacks.

    If only the South Africans knew and remembered their history and considered ours they would be praying for Nigeria and thanking us every day rather than insulting and killing us.

    Without our support and the pressure we brought to bear, the great Nelson Mandela may never have been freed and the ANC and its armed wing would not have received the massive and robust funding and support that it did throughout the 1960’s, 1970’s and 1980’s.

    Together with the Cubans and the Libyans, Nigeria did more for the liberation of South Africa and South African majority rule than any other nation in the world.

    What the South Africans are doing to Nigerians today makes me regret the fact that we did so much for them in the past. They have repaid our good with evil and consequently evil will never leave their doorstep. They have shed  our blood for no just cause and the heavens will respond and avenge us. They have made us weep and shed tears for our compatriots and  they shall pay a heavy price!

    The South African Foreign Minister and those that share her racist and deplorable disposition and xenophobic views should consider these facts and the implications of her words and actions before she  ventures to open her fat, ugly and very undiplomatic  mouth to speak untruths and garbage about Nigeria and Nigerians again.

    Failing to do so may provoke a series of events and reprisals which would result in the final demystification and humiliation of the “rainbow nation” and the unending and everlasting disgrace of its people.

    Make no mistake about it, even a Nigeria in her weakened state and with all our challenges is still big and strong enough to bring South Africa to its knees.  And if the killing and mass murder of our people does not stop that is precisely what will happen. A word is enough for the wise.

    Permit me to conclude this contribution with the following.

    Many years ago in the early to mid-1970’s, when apartheid was alive and well in South Africa and when I was a young student at Harrow, which remains undoubtedly the best private school in England, I broke the jaw of a blond, blue-eyed English-speaking white South African fellow student who said some very nasty things about black South Africans during a history class.

    During a heated debate about racial segregation and the South African Mixed Race Act which made it a criminal offence for blacks and whites to get married or have sexual relations, he got up and said, before the entire class, that “allowing those dirty black dogs to touch our beautiful and pure white women is sacrilage. It is against the laws of God! It is like getting a monkey to mate with a human being!”

    Finally he said “no sane white woman would ever want to have sex with a black African monkey and any of them that do should be sent to jail”.

    I reacted swiftly and without any hesitation. Without any warning or even words of anger, I left my desk, walked up to him and broke his jaw with one clean blow from my right fist. He never knew what hit him!

    I remember hearing and enjoying the way his jaw popped open and cracked. It was a strange noise and as he hit the floor his legs started to shake uncontrollably after which he lost consciousness.

    For one horrendous moment I thought I had killed him but thankfully eventually his eyes opened, he sat up and he was rushed to the hospital on a stretcher.

    He hailed from one of the biggest and richest white families in South Africa who were (and still are) in the diamond mining business and I almost got expelled from Harrow for my “wild and unruly” behaviour until I gave my reasons for hitting him to the school authorities.

    They  were shocked and equally appalled by what he had said, which they rightly regarded as a grave and reckless provocation, and they decided to let me off the hook.

    I was reprimanded and warned and I remember that the Headmaster wrote a formal letter about the incident my father who was livid with me for jeopordising my entire academic career because of a racial slight and slur.

    Papa said “you didn’t have to hit him and almost kill the poor boy: you could have just attempted to educate him in a civilised manner and at the worst insult him back!”

    Yet I had no regrets or remorse about my course of action or the choice that I made and to my eternal credit I never apologised for my action to the South African, the school authorities, my father or anyone else.

    The truth is that I was proud of what I did and I believed that defending the honor of my black South African colleagues was far more important than staying at Harrow. I was prepared to risk it all by physically assaulting the white boy and I did.

    My gamble paid off and the South African boy, as sober as ever, never insulted or spoke ill of blacks again in my prescence. As a matter of fact we ended up becoming friends in the following years and I will never forget what he told me just before we left Harrow in 1977. I remember the words because I wrote them down at the time and have meditated on them for years.

    He said “you don’t understand the Bantus” (meaning black South Africans).

    He went on to say “the day they get power in South Africa is the day that South Africa will begin to die. Since the 17th century we Boers built up everything there and they contributed nothing. We fought the Zulus and later the British and we built and developed that land with our flesh, sweat and blood. Giving a country like South Africa to them is like giving a monkey a loaded gun. They will use it to kill everyone around them and eventually they will kill themselves. They are not like you Nigerians: they have no history or class. They are unenlightened, ungrateful, primitive, uncouth and very backward and one day the rest of Africa will know them for what they are!”

    Judging from the words of the South African Foreign Minister and the xenophobic and racist diposition of the South African President, Government and people, it appears that that day has finally come.

  • Sultan to deliver lecture in Akure, meet religious leaders

    The Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar, will on Monday, September 9th, 2019, (tomorrow) in Akure, Ondo State, deliver this year’s Ulefunta Public Lecture. The Ulefunta Festival is the brainchild of the Akure monarch, the Deji of Akure Kingdom, Oba Aladetoyinbo Ogunlade Aladelusi, who began a process of bringing Akure’s culture into modern remembrance, one of which is the Ulefunta which is now celebrated to impart its lessons on the modern world.

    In a programme released by the organising committee of the ceremony headed by Prince Adebisi Adeniyi, the Sultan will also, during the visit, on Sunday, September 8, (today) hold an Inter-Religious Council meeting with all religious leaders in the state with the aim of getting them to keep peace and sustain Nigeria’s unity, in spite of the differences of religion. The Interdenominational meeting will take place at the St. David’s Cathedral Hall, Oke-Ijebu, Akure by 4pm.

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    The lecture, which is the second edition of the annual lecture series, will hold tomorrow at the Main Auditorium of the Federal University of Technology, Akure by 10:00am. Entitled, “Our diversity a divine gift and blessing untapped : wrong path trodden and way to peace,” the Sultan will use the opportunity to proffer the way forward for Nigeria and Nigerians at a period of its historical development when divisive narratives are gaining currency more than ever before in the polity. It will also, among other things, discuss the way to peace and a united Nigeria.

    The lecture, which will be chaired by the renowned entrepreneur, Chief Michael Ade Ojo, will also have the governor of Ondo State, Mr. Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, as the Special Guest of Honour and will be attended by prominent traditional rulers, religious leaders, opinion leaders, community leaders, youths and students. According to the release, the Sultan, who is the guest of Oba Aladelusi, is expected to arrive Akure, the state capital, today.

  • Ayade debunks claims of alleged land grabbing by APC

    CROSS River State governor, Prof. Ben Ayade, has debunked claims by the opposition All Progressives Congress in the state that the government was engaging in any land grabbing exercise.

    The leading opposition party in a recent statement signed by the Publicity Secretary of the state chapter of the APC, Bassey Ita, had said, “We wish to bring to public knowledge that the recent quit order issued by the Governor, Senator Ben Ayade, on the Cross River Property and Investment Company [CROSPIL] along the Bishop Moynagh Avenue, State Housing Estate, Calabar for a proposed vocation centre is nothing but a renewed bid to illegally grab the said land for his private use.”

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    The Special Adviser Media and Publicity to the Governor, Mr. Christian Ita, debunked the APC claims, saying that the state government is establishing a Fabrication Academy to train middle-level manpower requirement of the oil industry and so identified buildings in the CROSPIL estate which the government wants to complete and use same for hostels to accommodate students of the proposed Fabrication Academy.

    “It is not the entire CROSPIL, there are some uncompleted buildings in the CROSPIL premises which the government wants to complete and use for the hostel for the academy,” Ita said.

    “This idea of quitting the company from its location for a phantom vocation centre against the overriding public interest is in our consideration another gross abuse of office by the governor. Nothing can be so tyrannical and draconian than this, especially as it is done through the usual executive tardiness and fiat of this administration.”

  • Abiodun gives free land to 2,000 farmers 

    Governor Dapo Abiodun has flagged off the Ogun State Anchor Borrowers’ Scheme, signalling the commencement of an agricultural revolution in the state.

    Speaking at the June 12 Cultural Centre, Abeokuta, the state capital, venue of the launch, Abiodun said that his government plans to turn the state into an agricultural hub, capable of feeding itself and other states in the country.

    He said the Anchor Borrowers’ Scheme was another avenue to boost the nation’s self-sufficiency in food production, which is line with the federal government’s agenda on food security to save foreign exchange spent annually on importation of food items that could be produced locally.

    The governor also said that the scheme would help in creating employment opportunities for farmers, women and the youths in the state.

    Already, about 2000 beneficiaries have been selected and would be given certificates of acceptance and leasehold, according to the governor.

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    He expressed surprise that despite the success of the scheme in other states, Ogun State did not take full advantage of funds availability in the scheme to help farmers improve their production.

    According to the governor, the scheme was a tripartite agreement between the state as facilitator, Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, as financier and the beneficiaries, even as he called on the recipients to be committed and responsible in their repayment plan.

    Abiodun assured that beneficiaries of the scheme would be given one hectare of land free.

    “We will also provide clearing, seedlings, fertilizers, extension services and we will pay upkeep allowances until the first harvest,” he added.

  • South Africa: Youth stage peaceful protest in Kano

    Some youths in Kano on Saturday staged a peaceful protest against the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians living in South Africa.

    The youth, who marched from Zoo Road to Audu Bako Secretariat along the State Road, carried placards with various inscriptions condemning the action on Nigerians.

    They asked the South African government to bring an end to the attacks and vowed that they would not fold their arms while Nigerians were being attacked and killed.

    Spokesman for the protesters and Chairman of Joint Action Campaign Against Xenophobic Attack, Khalid Sanusi, urged the federal government to take urgent steps to check the ugly trend.

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    Sanusi said the youths would continue to show their anger to such attacks and picket companies owned by South Africa in Nigeria, until measures were taken to end the attacks.

    He attributed the high rate of unemployment in South Africa as the major reason behind the xenophobic attacks, and advised the South African government to tackle the issue.

    “It must create job opportunities to the teeming number of unemployed youths in their country,” he said, stressing, however, that there was no justification for attacking others simply because of the failure of South African leaders.

    NAN reports that diplomatic relations between Nigeria and South Africa has gone sour as a result of series of xenophobic attack by South Africans on some Nigerian citizens.

  • Useni bags ‘Grand Merit’ award

    The gubernatorial candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party in Plateau State in the last general election, Gen Jeremiah Useni (retd), has received a grand merit award from The Shippers’ Association, Jos.

    The award was handed to him at the just concluded Annual General Meeting of the Association held in Jos.

    A statement prepared by the Publicity Secretary of TSA, Dr.  I.J. Nubuya, explained that the Merit Award was for Useni’s contributions to the development of The Shippers’ Association (TSA) Jos.

    “It is also in appreciation of his invaluable support and contributions as Grand Patron of TSA, Jos toward the sustainability of the association.”

    The Shippers’ Associations generally are voluntary and non-profit transportation cooperatives which arrange for the domestic or international shipment of members’ cargo.

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    TSA Jos is affiliated to the Nigerian Shippers’ Council, which regulates cargo transportation at Nigerian ports through the control of tariff, rates, charges and other economic services.

    Useni was a onetime Nigeria’s Minister of Transport, as well as Minister of the Federal Capital Territory.

    He was represented by Hon. James Stephen Pam.

    While reacting to the award, Useni, who thanked the association for honouring him, appealed for “honesty and improvement in haulage services from the nation’s ports to the hinterlands.”

    It is the expectation of the Shippers’ Association that the Grand Meritorious Award will spur General JT Useni as the Grand Patron to do more for the TSA, Jos.

  • ‘MALLPAi will continue to empower the less-privileged’

    Wife of Kebbi State governor, Hajia Aisha Atiku Bagudu, has said that the empowerment of the less-privileged in society and enrolment of children in schools will continue to be her priority in the state.

    Bagudu, who is the founder of  MALLPAi Foundation, stated this when she reached out to various Fulani groups at their RUGA settlement in the last couple of weeks.

    Bagudu, who flagged-off vaccination of animals against various animal diseases in the state, personally supervised the vaccination of cows in the Fulani settlement, stressing that one of the ways of improving the lives of the Fulani is by ensuring the good health of their animals.

    She also distributed mosquito nets, food items and other household materials to the people and presented tricycles, clutches and other visual aids to the disabled.

    Founded in 2009, the Mass Literacy for the Less Privileged and Almajiri Initiative (MALLPAi) was founded to render humanitarian services in almost all sectors of life such as health, education, agriculture and social life.

    In the area of health, the foundation has purchased drugs and hospital equipment worth millions of naira for maternity and health clinics in both rural and urban areas in the state.

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    MALLPAi also distributed free drugs to the Fulani settlements where about forty communities benefited.

    It has also helped in expanding many schools in almost all parts of the state. It assisted Tsamiya Schools with skills acquisition equipment, as well as helping to employ teachers to teach vocational skills. It has also extended the gesture to Islamiya Schools and public schools, providing them equipment on how to make cosmetics soap and chalk.

    In the area of agriculture, it has assisted youths in the state, particularly students in public schools and Almajiri with farm inputs, including hectares of land.

    The foundation has rehabilitated over forty (40) Fulani settlements in the state, constructing structures for clinics, schools, open wells and roads.

  • Red Cross tackles emerging health challenges in 8 LGAs in Katsina

    The Nigerian Red Cross Society has revived its healthcare activities, particularly in the eight frontline local government areas affected by banditry attacks and other forms of insecurity.

    This followed the improved security situation in the state occasioned by the dialogue currently going on between Katsina State government and the bandits.

    Secretary of the Katsina State Branch of the NCRS, Bala Abdullahi Hussein, told newsmen at a workshop on a refresher training for selected health volunteers and field workers, that the programme was designed to equip the trainees and ensure that they go back to translate the knowledge they acquire to volunteers and other field workers on how to identify related health challenges and forward same for field reports.

    He further disclosed that the workshop is also expected to review Year 1 reports and the lessons learnt, as well as identify strengths, weaknesses and opportunities of the operations of NCRS and to prepare master trainers to conduct refresher training with changes on data collection tool and so on.

    He said, ”The Year 1 project under review will focuse on indemnified issues on such health challenges including measles, yellow fever, cholera, tetanus and so on.

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    ”The NCRS has been complementing the state governments, NGOs and development partners, by assisting in identifying and reporting emerging health issues, as the government cannot be 100% available to address all health issues.”

    He further expressed satisfaction with the performance of the volunteers deployed in the affected local government areas, such as Safana, Jibia, Batsari, Kankara and Dan Musa.

    ”They risked their lives in the face of growing insecurity to look out for these diseases and reported back to us,” he said.

    Also speaking at the workshop, a health expert and field coordinator with CDC-AFNET, Samuel Baddung, said the volunteers do not have medical training but were given training to identify and report observed health challenges in their areas.

  • ‘Lack of fund increasing malnutrition in Niger’

    The ongoing fight against malnutrition in Niger State is currently being hampered by lack of funds to combat the scourge, the state Nutrition Officer, Hajiya Amina Isah, has disclosed.

    Speaking at a two-day health and nutrition budget meeting for officials of nutrition line MDAs from Kaduna, Nasarawa and Niger states, Isah lamented that cash backing has been a serious problem facing funds releases in the state.

    According to her, ministries, departments and agencies in Niger State always get funds approval on paper but there are usually no cash backing.

    “After getting budget approval, we write memos, get approval, but to get the cash is a very serious issue. This is the area I will really like to see improvement. That is why we are here in this meeting with people that matter, such as the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Finance and Accountant-General.

    “We are equally here with members of the Niger House of Assembly, Deputy Speaker, chairmen of House Committees on Finance, Health and Appropriation to garner their support,” Isah disclosed.

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    Isah further bemoaned the huge number of malnourished children in the state, disclosing that a reasonable number of children under five years in the state were acutely malnourished.

    “We are currently implementing Community Infant and Young Child Feeding programme in eight local government areas, as part of intervention to prevent malnutrition among children under five years.

    “We are equally implementing Community Management of Acute Malnutrition in one council to provide access to curative services and save affected children from dying of acute malnutrition.

    “We will be able to treat affected children and carry out effective preventive intervention only if needed funds are made available.”

    The Permanent Secretary of the state’s Ministry of Finance, Mr. Mohammed Sadauki, promised to ensure timely cash backing of approved funds for nutrition intervention.

    The meeting was organised by Civil Society Scaling-Up Nutrition in Nigeria (CS-SUNN), Alive and Thrive (FHI 360) and Save the Children International (SCI) to push for improved nutrition funding.

  • IGR: Group seeks Obiano intervention over traders’ extortion

    CIVIL Liberties Organisation (CLO), South East Zone, has written the Anambra State governor, Chief Willie Obiano, over alleged double taxation, extortion and daylight brigandage in the guise of pursuing internally generated revenue for the state.

    The traders had lamented excessive expenses incurred on their goods within Onitsha while conveying them from Sapele where they were sourced.

    Zonal chairman of the group, Comrade Aloysius Attah, in the letter, cited the plight of traders at the Uba Planks and Joints Ltd, UPJA, (Ogbo Osisi) and the Amalgamated Timber Dealers Association, ATDA, at the Bridge Head axis of Onitsha who recently sent a distress message to Obiano over multiple levies.

    The group noted that some of the affected traders revealed that they were forced to pay the sum of N9, 000 per vehicle to one revenue agent identified as Jekwu before such truck load of timber was allowed to pass through the down bridge and proceed for offloading inside the market.