Author: The Nation

  • UK records 1,325 COVID-19 deaths in one day

    UK records 1,325 COVID-19 deaths in one day

    •’Major incident’ declared by London Mayor Sadiq Khan
    •Mayor says virus spread ‘out of control’

     

    BRITAIN on Friday recorded 1,325 more COVID-19 fatalities, its highest since the pandemic began.

    The announcement came moments after London Mayor Sadiq Khan declared a ‘major incident’ in respect of COVID-19 in the UK capital, saying the spread of the virus was “out of control”.

    The death toll doubled within a week with infections reaching a record-high 68,053.

    Read Also: 30 minutes COVID-19 test kits for hospitals, says PTF

    Experts fear it may yet rise further because of spiraling cases leading to more hospitalisations. The figure is a 116.2 per cent jump on penultimate Friday, when 613 deaths were registered.

    Friday record cases, according to the London Mail were also a 27.7 per cent rise on the same time last week, when 53,285 were recorded.

    More than 50,000 infections have been registered every day for the last 11 days, meaning over half a million people have been diagnosed with the disease in less than a fortnight.

  • President Trump takes the US to the sewers

    President Trump takes the US to the sewers

    Undertow

     

    IT is not clear whether President Donald Trump recognizes that he is a tyrant, or that he lacks the depth and character needed to govern a large, complex and powerful nation like the United States. But perhaps he knows his inadequacies, and only uses his brashness, vulgarity and innate racism to disguise his failings. It may not be a thing of pride to the US that the electoral triumph enjoyed by former vice president Joe Biden was rather narrow and unedifying, but it is still significant that the country had finally mustered its strength and dug deep into its soul to rid themselves of Mr Trump, a politician whom underdeveloped countries, even with their inanities, would have found monstrous, comical and fictional.

    The only redeeming value of Mr Trump’s presidency was his economic scorecard, which despite all criticisms, bested predictions and global competition. However, that achievement was a product of his innate and controversial business practices that fostered growth but flew in the face of all known economic theories, and was destined, had he won a second term, to implode. Together with his racist worldview, Mr Trump rode on his economic record to give his contender in last November’s presidential poll, Senator Biden, a good run for his money. The US may have thrived in isolationism for a significant part of its history; its global fame has, however, rested on its internationalism. In four dizzying years, Mr Trump virtually demolished all the values the US stood for, attempted to reshape the country’s worldview, and considerably whittled down its well earned claim to global leadership.

    President-elect Biden is a level-headed leader and politician. Going forward, he will do his utmost to give the US the leadership it deserves, leadership that is not destitute of ennobling virtues and values. Unlike Nigerian leaders who took months to appoint cabinet ministers, especially cabinet that is a true reflection of the country’s variegated structure and nature, Mr Biden has virtually filled all the key positions that would drive his administration and reflect the views and identity of his changing nation. Americans must be grateful that the insurrection inspired by Mr Trump on Wednesday, which culminated in the brainless storming of the US Congress, did not succeed. But whether the new administration can in four years reverse and repair the damage done by Mr Trump is a different question altogether. Because of Mr Trump’s indiscretions, does the US still possess the moral voice and character to police the world? And can the world still trust America, especially seeing how Mr Trump undermined US values so effortlessly and corrupted or neutralized otherwise powerful voices in the country?

  • What is NPFL’s worth?

    What is NPFL’s worth?

    Ade Ojeikere

     

    THE people who run the domestic league think that corporate sponsorship is like buying a lottery ticket from any hawker on the streets before the draws are made. These league organisers feel that they can knock on sponsors’ door anytime they are ready, forgetting that cash from the corporate world are investors’ contributions to such companies’ fiscal outlays. No investor throws its money on any project without critical analysis on what is in such investments for them. The investor also needs to know how viable the new interests are in the open market.

    Budgets are done based on companies’ fiscal year, making it imperative on those who want to showcase their wares on such platforms should come with strong credentials aside from being credible business concerns. In the business world, things are planned. No firm would do business with any venture without a market plan for them to evaluate such a venture’s true financial strength. Every kobo spent is discussed before putting it in the annual budgets.

    Nigeria’s elite class in football started in 1990, with no record of how much it has realised from inter and intra-club transfers. Nobody can tell any investor how much the league realises from merchandising, television rights, etc things are done by the hunch with each group choosing what appeals to its fancy. The resultant effect is that 30 years on, we cannot appropriately lay our hands to an authentic audited account of the league that would stand the tests of time. How can the league’s accounts be audited without telling the stakeholders what the body generated from intra and inter-club transfers. The interesting thing about these two components is that one is done in foreign currencies. So, governors, please ask your club chairmen where the cash over the years has been kept?

    With this setting, the organisers had no product to sell to investors beyond trying to use their friends in high places to broker a deal. Simply put, no arm of the league is functional, culminating in the easy exit of most of our continental representative, beaten by clubs from less prominent football nations as Nigeria. Since the league was always in abeyance, the home-based players couldn’t compete with their foreign-based counterparts whenever they are invited to fight for shirts in our national teams. They are used as training materials. Ironically, the few lucky ones that get to Europe return as kings to get shirts – just because of their change of residence.

    A few clubs in the past have sold to the European markets over 30 players each, yet such clubs aren’t solvent. For anyone including governors who are owners of these clubs to resolve this knotty issue, club chairmen should be axed and agents told to submit all transactions for proper audit by each club or state government. Some club chairmen, agents, scouts, some secretariat staff, and some board members are neck-deep in this inter-club menace which has pauperised the domestic clubs to date. The new CEO of the league should make these two elements more viable to the clubs by raising the alarm where he smells foul play.

    How can an academy say they own a professional player? The rules spell it out clearly that once a player has attained professional status, he cannot during such a period assume an amateur status. In the law book, it is stated that no academy can loan a player to a premier league team. If that is the case, why do academies turn up for claims for such a player whenever he gets a European club’s contract? This misnomer causes a huge capital flight from the domestic league. The first disadvantage of such illicit transfers is that these players can’t return to the country, since they would be stranded in the countries they were taken to by the shylock agent, who is usually on AWOL when such transfers go awry.

    It’s shameful that Governors only see the Nigerian league as a tool for popularity test and strengthening their political stronghold on soccer-loving citizens of the state. Do they need to be told to hands-off the clubs and encourage private corporations to invest in the league? How do governors fund clubs without returns like we have in Europe?  The governors must insist on seeing what they earned from inter and intra club transfers before committing fresh cash to the clubs.

    The clubs were told to ensure they have at least N400 million in their respective accounts before the commencement of this season. Yet, Heartland FC of Owerri players and officials are complaining about being owed wages running into years and the owners of the club paying deaf ears to these people’s plight. What these owners of clubs forget is that these players, coaches, and backroom staff earn a living for what they do with Heartland, for instance. Not paying them their wages monthly and other entitlements as at when due, not to talk about owing them running into years ruin their lives, especially with the prevalent economic recession and the imminent threat from the Coronavirus pandemic.

    These people have families to take care of. Have the state governors of these debtor clubs pondered how such people can educate their kids or how they meet with their families’ responsibilities? Do these governors expect these workers to steal for those who don’t have relations to loan them monies to at least feed their kids? Today, nobody can say how much our clubs are worth. Nobody dares ask how much players earn since many cannot remember when they were last paid.

    Nigeria’s poor showing at the cadet competitions with the U-17 level, Golden Eaglets, the U-20 cadre, Flying Eagles, etc in recent times speaks to the decadence in the domestic league which has failed to play its role – being the nursery for all our national teams. In saner climes, professional clubs have nurseries to discover, train, and expose new talents. Interestingly, these European clubs, for instance, have competitions in which their age-grade teams participate like their senior counterparts. In fact, these juniors play their matches on Fridays. Trophies are won and prize monies given to winners, whereas our winners at the senior level haven’t been paid their prize monies in the last few seasons.

    Winning the Premier League brings with it all sorts of concomitant financial rewards, but the immediate prize for the champions Liverpool was in the region of £150 million ($182m) about N77.8 billion. The total money from domestic (£5.136 billion) and oversees (£3.2 billion) three-year deal was around £8.36 billion, the total TV money is then spread equally into three seasons which is around £2.6 billion and that makes the yearly prize money fund for the Premier League teams.

    In LaLiga, they distributed around €0.85 billion (£0.62 billion) a season among clubs (10 % went to La Liga 2 clubs). So the prize money pool for 2019-20 season was around €1 billion (£0.7 billion). The total money from both domestic and overseas three TV deals combined is around €2.65 billion (£1.8 billion). Which they divide into three parts making prize money pool for each of the three seasons under the TV deal period 2016-2019. Football is big business and we must act accordingly. Footballers have families and the pitch is their office – in local parlance, it’s called ‘work-chop’. Na from where man dey work, him go chop. So, we should’ve moved past clubs owing players and some teams playing at substandard stadiums.

    In Germany, all 64 teams who participated in their version of the FA Cup collected €140,000 for qualification from DFB pokal prize money. The German Bundesliga announced a massive TV rights deal for a 4-year period from 2017-18 season to 2020-21 season where Bundesliga will earn as much as €4.64 billion (£3.6bn) in domestic TV rights deal. We know Rome wasn’t built in a day but these countries and league highlighted have invested quality time with hard work to help them arrive at this stage.

    The English Premier League kicked off in 1992 and it is arguably the highest revenue-generating competition in the world. Ours starts in 1990 but still in diapers, 31 years after. Let’s not even start talking about our road network or how many teams have the capacity to travel consistently by air to league venues. Reducing the risk of accidents and robbers attack.

    It is from such games that the European countries pick their players across all age-grades unlike our where we throw open the camps for cadet players, yet we find ourselves struggling to get a first 11 since those we pick fail the MRI tests. If we had the professional teams here playing matches and having their junior teams in the competition, picking players for the Golden Eaglets, Flying Eagles, etc would have been a piece of cake.

    Soccer crazy nations measure the game’s growth by the number of home-grown players in their national teams. The authorities of the game, FIFA, recognise the importance of this point and have instituted several incentives to drive the game’s development globally. FIFA, in its wisdom, provided funds for less-developed nations to embrace the game and bridge the gap between them and others. The cash is to improve on the facilities for the game to thrive in the 211 affiliate countries.

     

  • FF and the restructuring debate (2)

    FF and the restructuring debate (2)

    Segun Ayobolu

     

    IT is not surprising that Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s political thought and praxis continue to feature prominently in any debate on the appropriate constitutional arrangement and political structure as well as socio-economic system for Nigeria and Mr. Femi Falana’s lecture also dwelt at some length on the sage’s political ideas. Awolowo thought deeply and rigorously as well as wrote extensively on these matters. Unlike many of the most vocal advocates of restructuring today, however, who claim to derive their inspiration and model from the great man’s ideas, Falana  demonstrates that Awo’s ideas were not as narrow, restricted, static and rigid as often portrayed even by those who were his close associates.

    Thus, Falana traces the dynamism of Awo’s political thought noting a shift in the sage’s preoccupation and emphasis from his description of Nigeria as “a mere geographical expression” in his book, ‘Path to Nigerian Freedom’ published in 1947, a book written in pursuit of the anti-colonial struggle for the political emancipation of Nigeria, to his views two decades later as expressed in ‘The Peoples Republic’ and ‘The Strategies and Tactics of the Peoples Republic of Nigeria’. As Falana put it, “At that stage of his remarkable political life, Awolowo was thinking of how to develop Nigeria and push the frontier of human progress in this part of the world. He was not on a mission to preside over any Oduduwa Republic or to lead the Yoruba alone to “develop at their own pace”, unmindful of the realities of the Nigerian political economy”.

    Falana continues, “Little surprise that 32 years after the publication of ‘Path to Nigerian Freedom’, Awolowo sought to be Nigerian President (not Aare of Oduduwa Republic!) His platform was the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN). The word ‘unity’ in the party’s name was instructive and deliberate. More significant is that the cardinal programmes of the UPN were free education, free healthcare, full employment and rural development”.

    Here, Falana must not be misread. Federalism remained a cardinal feature of Awolowo’s political and constitutional thought. Yet, the centre of gravity of the sage’s universe of ideas if I may put it that way had shifted from a preoccupation with federalism to developing Nigeria’s immense human capital potential for the liberation of the country from the grip of underdevelopment as well as her rapid modernization and transformation. Thus, restructuring was not part of the four cardinal programmes of the UPN in the Second Republic.

    Awolowo vigorously pursued his ambition to be President of Nigeria in the Second Republic under the 1979 constitution. The meticulous and thorough sage would never have done so without having studied the constitution carefully and concluding that, whatever its shortcomings, it could not hinder a visionary, competent and determined leader from achieving the task of rapidly transforming Nigeria and actualizing her potentials. And the 1999 constitution is essentially a mirror image of that of 1979 with only minuscule differences.

    I agree entirely with Falana that at the time that he sought to lead the country as elected President in 1979 and 1983, “Federalism was no more Awolowo’s preoccupation. His position was to the effect that if every Nigerian child in Maiduguri, Yenagoa or Ado-Ekiti had access to quality education, Nigeria would be on the part to reducing inequality. Similarly, if every woman and her children in Kuje, Badagry or Akampa had access to quality healthcare services, maternal and infant mortality would be ended and thereby tackling an aspect of poverty at that level. In his later years, Awolowo was more concerned about the social democratic development of Nigeria rather than limiting himself to the struggle for the phantom “true federalism”…So let the advocates of restructuring quote Awolowo not only on federalism; they should also quote him on his programme of social democracy as a basis of Nigeria’s sustainable development”.

    There are those who advocate the devolution of more powers, resources and responsibilities from the centre to the sub-national units, particularly the states, as the key and essential element of the demand for restructuring in Nigeria. At a recent lecture in Kaduna in honour of the first Premier of Northern Nigeria, the late Ahmadu Bello, for instance, the Ekiti State governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, who was the guest lecturer as well as governor Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State, in his prefatory remarks, both made the case for greater devolution of substantial powers, responsibilities and resources to the states. Calling for an equitable revenue allocation formula for Nigeria that will give more resources to states and local governments, Fayemi specifically canvassed a review of the revenue sharing formula to 43 per cent for states, 35 percent to the federal and 23 percent to the local governments.

    But bringing a sharp ideological and class focus to the debate, Falana argues that “With respect, it is submitted that the adoption of the equitable allocation formula suggested by Governor Fayemi can never solve the crisis of poverty in the land. For instance, the 2020 budget of Nigeria, a country of 206 million people is $30 billion whereas the budget of Brazil, a nation of 208 million people is $650 billion. Instead of rushing to Abuja every month to share poverty by distributing the dwindling revenue from the sale of crude oil in the Federation Account, the people of Nigeria should be mobilized to create wealth. Apart from demanding a new revenue allocation formula, the fiscal and monetary policies of the nation ought to be challenged as its exclusive control by the federal government as well as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank has continued to undermine the national economy”.

    All too often, the restructuring debate is pursued as if it is a matter that should be addressed and effected only at the federal level thus ignoring the excessive concentration of powers in the person of state governors at the sub-national units of governance, the emasculation and crippling of local governments, state legislatures and even the judiciary by all powerful state executives. To devolve more powers, responsibilities and resources to the states without addressing this problem can only worsen the flaws and dysfunctions of federal practice in Nigeria. Hence Falana submits that “…the power devolution to the states from the centre without the democratization of the said powers will not promote the development of the country. In other words, restructuring without the equitable redistribution of the commonwealth will not engender unity as unity is not an abstract phenomenon”.

    In any case, are state governors doing as much as they can under the extant constitution to strengthen the sub-national units of government and deepen federal practice in Nigeria? Falana does not think so. In his words, “Advocates of restructuring should not only put pressure on Buhari to lead the process of restructuring. They should also push the state governors to take advantage of legal openings to deepen Nigerian federalism as Lagos State has done. Some Supreme Court decisions from which all states now benefit were as a result of cases pursued by the Lagos State government against the federal government. In other jurisdictions, court pronouncements have also helped to recast the structure and mechanisms of federations”.

    Nowhere does Mr. Femi Falana suggest that he is averse to the adoption of a new constitution if that is the will of the majority of the Nigerian people. But is the extant 1999 constitution utterly worthless and of no enduring value whatever? Falana clearly does not think so and he makes his case unequivocally. According to him, “Doubtless, there is a lot of critique to be made of the 1999 constitution. But it is strange when critics dismiss the whole document as “useless” because it does not give expression to “the will of the people”. The nucleus of the 1999 Constitution was taken from the 1979 Constitution. It is pertinent to ask: Is the Chapter 11 of the 1999 constitution not in the interest of the people? Should that chapter also be dismissed along with the problematic clauses in the constitution?”

    He continues: “As I said earlier, the 1979 constitution was a product of a vigorous debate, the Great Debate of 1977/78. One of the enduring products of that process was the Chapter 11 of the 1979 Constitution which has been replicated in the 1999 Constitution. It was the concession the majority of the report of the committee, headed by Chief Rotimi Willimas, SAN, made to the radical views of the two historians who were members – Bala Usman and Segun Osoba. It is the chapter entitled the “Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy”.

    Noting that Chief Awolowo lauded the adoption of the fundamental objectives and made a strong case for their justiciability, Falana explains that “The chapter is the people’s content of the constitution. Enshrined in the chapter are basic elements of socio-economic justice in the areas of education, health, environment, social protection, mass transit, mass housing etc. They remain the national goals. It is noteworthy that some Nigerians including scholars crafted these social, economic and political goals four decades before the United Nations came up with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) which look more like a copy of the chapter of the Nigerian constitution. If the provisions had been implemented, Nigeria could have been greater than some of the countries that some of our elite point to as models of development.”

     

    • To be concluded next week

     

  • Biden blames Trump for violence at Capitol that’s shaken US

    Biden blames Trump for violence at Capitol that’s shaken US

    Our Reporter

     

    President-elect Joe Biden has denounced the rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol as “domestic terrorists” and he blamed President Donald Trump for the violence that has shaken the nation’s capital and beyond.

    The riot by Trump supporters who breached the security of Congress on Wednesday was “not dissent, was not disorder, was not protest. It was chaos.”

    Those who massed on Capitol Hill intending to disrupt a joint session of Congress that was certifying Biden’s election victory over Trump “weren’t protesters. Don’t dare call them protesters. They were a riotous mob — insurrectionists, domestic terrorists. It’s that basic,” Biden said Thursday.

    In solemn tones, Biden said the actions Trump has taken to subvert the nation’s democratic institutions throughout his presidency led directly to the mayhem in Washington.

    “In the past four years, we’ve had a president who’s made his contempt for our democracy, our Constitution, the rule of law clear in everything he has done,” Biden said.

    “He unleashed an all-out assault on our institutions of our democracy from the outset. And yesterday was the culmination of that unrelenting attack.”

    The mob of hundreds of Trump backers broke into the Capitol and roamed the halls looking for lawmakers, who were forced to halt their deliberations and seek safety. The violent protesters were egged on by Trump himself, who has falsely contended that he lost the election due to voter fraud.

    Read Also: Biden’s last hurdle

    Trump’s claims were repeatedly dismissed in the courts, including the Supreme Court, and by state election officials from both parties, and even by some in his own administration.

    But the president went to greater and greater lengths to try to subvert the election, culminating this week in efforts by some Republican members of Congress to object to the certification of the results and the violence at the Capitol.

    After the disruption, Congress returned to work late Wednesday and affirmed Biden’s victory early Thursday.

    Biden ticked off a list of Trump’s assaults on American norms, including his attacks on the press and the intelligence community and his pressure on state and federal officials and judges to submit to his efforts to overturn the election.

  • Hundreds in Congress demand president’s removal

    Hundreds in Congress demand president’s removal

    Our Reporter

     

    More than 200 members of Congress are demanding Donald Trump be removed from office immediately following the deadly pro-Trump riots at the US capitol on Wednesday.

    The lawmakers, almost all Democrats, have either supported impeaching the president for a second time or have called on Trump’s cabinet to remove him under the 25th amendment, NBC News reported.

    Only one Republican, Illinois representative Adam Kinzinger, has joined his colleagues on the other side of the aisle in definitively rejecting Mr Trump as president.

    The calls come amid rising anger at the violent riots in the Capitol, which has left at least four people dead, including one police officer.

    Images being shared on social media also sparked fears some rioters planned on taking hostages after at least two were caught on camera holding large plastic zip-ties often used to handcuff people.

    Read Also: U.S. congresswoman, others boost EndSARS movement

    The violent assault on the US Capitol by Trump’s supporters and his long refusal to accept the results of the 2020 election are said to likely jeopardise his political future and taint prospects for his top lieutenants and family members.

    The Republican president has dangled the possibility of running for president in 2024, and political operatives had expected him to exert influence over the Republican Party for years to come.

    But his behavior on Wednesday – goading supporters to march on the Capitol to pressure lawmakers to overturn Joe Biden’s win in the election, and then failing quickly to call on them to stand down after violence ensued – has sickened people who work and used to work for him and, they said, changed the equation for his post-presidential relevance.

    “It was a dereliction of duty as commander-in-chief and I think he will be mortally wounded from a political career going forward,” one former White House official who worked for Mr Trump said on Thursday. “He has blood on his hands from yesterday. A woman died.”

  • AfricaHacks holds 2020 Global Hackathon

    AfricaHacks holds 2020 Global Hackathon

    By Olabisi Salau

    The 2020 AfricaHacks Global Hackathon which held recently, played host to different tech and business enthusiasts from over 17 countries in Africa, brainstorming and creating innovative solutions for Agriculture, Healthcare, Citizen safety, Web Monetization and other SDG goals.

    The week-long event, which was held virtually, began on Dec. 5, ended on Dec. 12. Young African entrepreneurs had the opportunity to idealate a business concept into a most viable product at the Hackathon.

    AfricaHacks Co-founder and Vice-president Christine Dikogue, in her opening remarks, welcomed all participants, charging them to always remain innovative with their ideas.

    Similarly, the AfricaHacks organizing team; Hilary Marsha and Tony Ogunmade, while taking participants through the hackathon’s expectations, urged participants to utilize their skills, talents, and time effectively.

    Dr. Andrew Nevin, Chief Economist of PWC West Africa, in his keynote address, said that “the challenge in Africa will be solved by young people” and highlighted recent examples like AfricaHacks where youth across Africa has taken a stand to create and innovate for a sustainable economy.

    Read Also: Uniport student wins NCDMB Essay competition

    He further affirmed that technology and innovation are needed to solve challenges in society across different sectors.

    The competition also witnessed a series of workshops and keynote addresses from the four corners of the world, including Odunayo Eweniyi of PiggyVest, Sultan Odunayo. Eweniyi of PiggyVest, during her session, noted how she has been in tech for seven years; she took the participants through rudiments of how to scale a business.

    The week-long event climaxed at the grand finale of the competition, where formed teams were able to pitch their innovative projects in front of judges like Jahira Martins of MongoDB, Madeleine Diagne of DMX and more.

    Dr. Adeola Olubamiji of Desktop Metal closed the ceremony with a powerful quote “A dream is what you fight for at night when everyone is sleeping!”. AfricaHacks delivered on its mission to provide opportunities and resources to African youth in the field of tech companies and entrepreneurship.

    Presenting the awards to Aldabra.ai, TheEagles, Agric4Good, and other winners, Uchi Uchibeke, AfricaHacks founder, stressed the need for all participating teams to join the AfricaHacks Startup sandbox program in the AfricaHacks Innovation Lab Platform.

    GetBridge won the $1,000 starting grant at the AfricaHacks Startup Pitch.

  • Bola Are, Woli Arole to thrill viewers at virtual concert

    Bola Are, Woli Arole to thrill viewers at virtual concert

    By Alao Abiodun

    On Sunday, January 10, Bola Are, Woli Arole and host of other gospel music artistes will take turns to thrill millions of viewers across Nigeria and the globe at a virtual concert.

    According to the organisers, the concert was borne out of the need to bring to the forefront the amazing works of Bola Are, who has been described as a ‘legendary Gospel artist’ with 92 albums and counting in her music catalogue.

    Read Also: 2Baba thrills 50,000 fans at e-concert during lockdown

    The concert organised by Woli Arole and his team, noted that her career is indeed worthy of celebration.

    Specifically, Evangelist Bola Are’s relationship with Woli Arole over the years can be described as ‘mother and son’ relationship.

    The virtual concert would be aired live on Woli Arole’s YouTube channel.

    TestimonyJaga, Dare justified are also expected to perform at the concert.

  • Indigenous marine pilots demand payments in dollar

    Indigenous marine pilots demand payments in dollar

     Muyiwa Lucas

     

    A GROUP of local marine pilots in the Warri Pilotage District, Delta State, Escravos Ship Pilots Nigeria Limited (ESPNL), has said it can no longer  receive its payments in the country’s currency. The group is demanding to be paid in the United States dollar.

    The group has also lamented the illegal encroachment of navigable Escravos channel by fishermen and other persons claiming such activities constitute safety hazards for navigation.

    The ESPNL, in a letter to the Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), said it piloted vessels safely from Escravos Bar to the four ports under the Delta Pilot District- Warri, Koko, Sapele and Burutu ports, adding that a monthly Reconciliation Committee with the NPA on harbour’s Master Declaration and pilot sheets be set to determine their dues for payment.

    The letter, signed by the Managing Director of the Escravos Ship Pilots Limited, Mr Johnbull Demebi, said that the group can longer continue to receive its payment in naira when their services and transactions are dollar denominated.

    Demebi also said if the dangerous trends of not having buoys along the Escravos Channel could lead to stoppage of shipping in the district.

    Part of the letter reads: ‘‘The second aspect of our appeal relates to the dangerous impediments currently hindering the smooth operations in and around the Escravos Break Water .

    “At present, there are no Buoy anywhere around the place and this is dangerous to our assignment as it is a navigational mark that aids our operations by showing or giving advance notice to pilots of reefs and/or other hazards along the navigable channels.

    “Without a buoy out job is made more hazardous and we have to rely on our experience at all times which is not infallible as the existence of a buoy along the channel.

    “Another challenge has to do with the current shallow nature of the channel, the channel has become so shallow that only a very urgent dredging of same can guarantee the prevention of avoidable incidents of vessels running aground in the channel.

    ‘‘We ply this route all the time and we have on different occasions expressed our difficult experience in navigation caused by the shallowness of this area of the channel and shall continue to do so by officially bringing this complaint to your knowledge in the belief that urgent steps will be taken to open up the channel and avert any imminent disaster from occurring.

    ‘‘Thirdly, we wish to report the incessant and illegal encroachment of the Navigable Channel by fishermen and other persons who do not have any lawful authority or licence to make use of the Federal Navigable Water Way.

    ‘‘Their activities constitute serious hardship to us while piloting vessels vessels to and fro the Warri  Pilotage District.

    ‘‘Their activities range from illegal depositing of empty drums, fishing nets and all sorts of junks along the channel while claiming a right to fish in the waterway.’’

    Demebi suggested the constitution of a joint investigation Visitation Team comprising of NPA, Law enforcement agents member of the Escravos Ship Pilots Nigeria Limited, ESPNL to visit the affected area of the channel for an on spot assessment of the negative action of the encroachers.

  • Labour threatens to shut CAC

    Labour threatens to shut CAC

    Frank Ikpefan

     

    THE Amalgamated Union of Public Corporations, Civil Service Technical and Recreational Services Employees (AUPCTRE) has vowed to shutdown the headquarters of the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) from January 21, 2021 following the expiration of a 21-day ultimatum issued to the management of the commission.

    AUPCTRE, which is an affiliate of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), in a strike notice dated December 18, 2020 and addressed to the Registrar-General of CAC frowned at the chief executive for his alleged anti-workers policies in the commission.

    The union, in the notice signed by its General Secretary Comrade Musa Ekpo, listed some of the grievances of the workers to include lack of career progression, poor welfare and injustice against the staff.

    Others include denial of earned 2019 promotion arrears, stoppage of all staff loans, among others.

    Chairman of AUPTCTRE, Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Chapter, Comrade Aliyu Maradu, said the union had written letters to both the Board Chairman and Registrar-General to address the situation, but no attention was paid to address the pains of the workers.

    He said: “Arising from the above and in discharging our responsibility based on responsive and responsible Trade Union, guided by the principles of collective bargaining, due process, public service rules and strict adherence to the union and constitution of Nigeria, the union is hereby giving the management of CAC a  21-day ultimatum starting from Monday 21 December 2020 to address all the issues raised above, in order to douse already tensed industrial relations atmosphere and possibly avert a looming industrial crisis in CAC.”

    Read Also: ‘Labour Party will miss Salam’

    The Branch Chairman of AUPTCTRE in CAC Comrade Ibrahim Makirfi said: “The issue we have with the Registrar-General of the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) has to do with the promotion of staff of the commission.

    “When he came he asked for the support of the union to ensure the goal and mandate of the commission is achieved and the union gave him 100 percent support but as you know there is no motivational factor for workers like promotion, so before he came onboard the management as at then were planning promotion exams but he told us he wants to  suspends the process and reform the system.

    “We believed him and a committee was put in place including union members and several vacancies where discovered but the Registrar- General unilaterally limited the vacancies and even denied many staff written promotion exams.”