Author: The Nation

  • Sanwo-Olu, others for CAN service

    Sanwo-Olu, others for CAN service

    Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Prelate of Motailatu Church, Cherubim and Seraphim, Elder Israel Akinadewo, and others, will attend 2023 Inter-denominational Divine Service (IDDS) of Lagos State chapter of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN).

    The event, ‘Peace be still’, will hold Saturday at LAWNA headquarters, Ketu, Lagos.

    It will feature thanksgiving, ministration and prayer for  poll.

    Lagos State CAN Chairman, Bishop Stephen Adegbite, told a news conference at Christ the Light Chapel, Alausa, Lagos.

    Adegbite said: “The event is for Christians and Muslims, because the important thing is the goal behind the prayer.

    “Since its inception 20 years ago, the event has been attended by governors.

    ‘’It is a session where, as a people, we present our supplication to God for His intervention. In this regard, the nation’s general election takes pre-eminence.

    “For Lagos to have continued to enjoy peace over the years can be attributed to IDDS prayers. We are extending the prayer to the nation.”

  • Winner of N2m lottery gets cheque

    Winner of N2m lottery gets cheque

    Oluseyi Lasisi yesterday got his N2 million cheque as the latest winner of one of the international lotteries on MegaMillions Naija Platform.

    Lasisi’s win came from the EuroJackpot draw on February 3. His single ticket matched four of the five primary numbers 1, 7, 17, 14, and 50, as well as two euro numbers 2, 10, Managing Director of MegaMillions Naija, Okwy Okeke, explained.

    According to Okeke, the system was automated and winners are decided when they get a set of numbers correct from a pool of numbers. Payment is made directly to the winner’s wallet.

    Mohammed Adekunle, who represented Lasisi, expressed his delight at his win, saying “N2 million is not small money with the situation of things now. I am happy that people are winning and the company is paying. I will start playing myself and I ask others to play too.”

    EuroJackpot is a transactional lottery from Europe launched in March 2012, and played in over 20 countries. Eurojackpot is drawn only on Tuesdays and Fridays, and its jackpot is currently N10.9 billion.

  • 20,000 killed in Turkey-Syria earthquake as hope of finding survivors fades

    20,000 killed in Turkey-Syria earthquake as hope of finding survivors fades

    •Joy as more people rescued three days after

    COLD, hunger and despair gripped hundreds of thousands of people left homeless by earthquakes in Turkey and Syria yesterday.

    But, hopes of finding more people alive faded yesterday amid the ruins of cities.

    The death toll from the quakes, which struck early on Monday morning, passed 20,000 across both countries.

    That surpasses the more than 17,000 people killed in 1999 when a similarly powerful quake hit Turkey’s more densely populated northwest.

    Hiwever, emergency workers in Turkey yesterday rescued a mother with her two children after they had spent about 78 hours under the earthquake rubble.

    Pictures shows how helpers carried the woman and the children on a stretcher and in slings to the ambulance amid applause from bystanders.

    They had been holding out under the rubble of their house in Kahramanmaras province.

    The rescuers embraced one another, and one of them told broadcaster CNN Türk that he was happy about the small success.

    They had worked for 15 hours to free the family, he said.

    The rescue workers were fighting against time the chances of finding survivors diminish with every hour that passes since the earthquake

    A Turkish official said the disaster posed “very serious difficulties” for the holding of an election scheduled for May 14 in which President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been expected to face the toughest challenge in his two decades in power.

    With anger simmering over the slow delivery of aid and delays in getting the rescue effort underway, it is bound to play into the vote should it still go ahead.

    However, the first United Nations convoy carrying aid to stricken Syrians crossed over the border from Turkey, three days since quake struck.

    In Syria’s Idlib province, Munira Mohammad, a mother-of-four who had fled Aleppo after the quake, said: “It is all children here, and we need heating and supplies, last night we couldn’t sleep because it was so cold. It is very bad.”

    Hundreds of thousands of people across both countries have been left homeless in the middle of winter. Many have camped out in makeshift shelters in supermarket car parks, mosques, roadsides or amid the ruins, often desperate for food, water and heat.

    At a gas station near the Turkish town of Kemalpasa, people picked through cardboard boxes of donated clothes. In the port city of Iskenderun, Reuters journalists saw people huddled round campfires on roadsides and in wrecked garages and warehouses.

    Authorities say some 6,500 buildings in Turkey collapsed and countless more were damaged in the quake zone where some 13 million people live.

    The confirmed death toll in Turkey rose to 16,170 yesterday, Erdogan said.

    In Syria, already devastated by nearly 12 years of civil war, more than 3,000 people have died, according to the government and a rescue service in the opposition-held northwest.

    In Turkey’s Maras, people camped inside a bank, taping a sheet in the window for privacy. Others had set up on the grass median of a main road, heating instant soup on fires and wrapping themselves in blankets.

    In Antakya, few petrol stations had fuel and kilometers-long queues stretched from those that did.

    In the devastated Syrian town of Jandaris, Ibrahim Khalil Menkaween walked in the rubble-strewn streets clutching a white body bag. He said he had lost seven members of his family including his wife and two of his brothers.

    “I’m holding this bag for when they bring out my brother, and my brother’s young son, and both of their wives, so we can pack them in bags,” he said. “The situation is very bad. And there is no aid.”

    Turkish officials say some 13.5 million people were affected in an area spanning roughly 450 kilometers (280 miles) from Adana in the west to Diyarbakir in the east.

    There were still some signs of hope. Turkish footage late on Wednesday showed a few more survivors being rescued, including Abdulalim Muaini, who was pulled from his collapsed home in Hatay, where he had remained since Monday next to his dead wife.

    Rescue workers dug out a 60-year-old woman named Meral Nakir from the rubble of an apartment block in Malatya, 77 hours after the first quake struck, state broadcaster TRT showed in live coverage.

    Barefoot and her faced bruised, Nakir was wrapped in a blanket and carried to a waiting ambulance.

    A two-year-old boy was picked out of the rubble by a Romanian and Polish rescue team in Hatay 79 hours after the quake, video released by Turkey’s Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH) yesterday showed. The boy, wearing a striped sweater, cried as he was gently lifted from the hole where he had been trapped.

    Many in Turkey have complained of a lack of equipment, expertise and support to rescue those trapped – sometimes even as they could hear cries for help.

    Further slowing the relief effort, the main road into Antakya was clogged with traffic as residents sought to leave the disaster zone and aid trucks headed in.

    After facing criticism over the initial response, Erdogan said on a visit to the area on Wednesday operations were now working normally and promised no one would be left homeless.

    The UN envoy to Syria, Geir Pedersen, said in Geneva “absolutely everything” was needed in terms of aid. Roads leading to the border crossing had been destroyed, causing delays, he said.

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has chaired emergency meetings on the earthquake but has not addressed the nation in a speech or news conference.

  • Census to hold in Sambisa Forest, says NPC chairman

    Census to hold in Sambisa Forest, says NPC chairman

    •Minister: head count meant for national development

    The Chairman of the National Population Commission (NPC), Nasir Isa Kwarra, has said this year’s national population and housing census will hold in troubled Sambisa Forest, despite the security challenges in the area.

    He said all structures, including those in the villages, had been captured and geo-coded.

    Kwarra spoke at the inauguration of the census publicity committee yesterday in Abuja.

    The NPC boss assured Nigerians that the commission would conduct a census that would have a reliable date for planning, adding that almost all materials needed had been secured.

    He said: “The overarching vision of the 2023 census is to produce, not only accurate, reliable and acceptable census data, but also an inclusive and user-friendly data that will be used by all segments of the society for development planning and critical programme interventions.

    “Therefore, as part of this commitment, the commission will deploy full digital technology in the conduct of the census and it will leave no stone unturned in ensuring that the result of the census is acceptable to Nigerians and the quality of the data to be generated meets international best standards.

    “I can assure you that your village has been covered. There is no place we have not visited. Our workers even went as far as Sambisa Forest where we have security challenges. So, I assure you that no one will be left out in the entire census process.

    “All structures have been captured and geo-coded. This aspiration has informed the methodology and quality of preparations for the census in the last few years. In all these, the need for advocacy, publicity and public enlightenment cannot be overemphasised.”

    In his remarks at the inauguration, Information and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed said Nigeria must conduct the forthcoming census to promote national planning and development.

    The minister recalled that it has been over 17 years since Nigeria last conducted a census as against the 10-year mandate.

    He said the country needs to conduct a census this year, despite many other activities going on across the country.

    “The conduct of the 2023 population and housing census is a top priority for the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari. It is borne out of the desire to bequeath an endearing legacy of evidence-based planning for sustainable development,” Mohammed said.

    “Our population remains the most important equation in our national development. The people are both the agents and beneficiaries of development process, hence development must start and end with meeting the aspirations of the people for improved living standards.

    “The conduct of the 2023 population and housing census is, therefore, to complement the giant strides of government by laying a sustainable basis for a planned and prosperous Nigeria,” he said.

  • Fed Govt shuts down varsities for polls

    Fed Govt shuts down varsities for polls

    The Federal Government, through the National Universities Commission (NUC), has ordered the closure of universities across the country to enable students to participate in this year’s general election.

    The NUC, in a letter addressed to vice chancellors of all universities and dDirectors of inter-university centres, said the directive was issued by Education Minister Adamu Adamu.

    The letter reads: “As vice chancellors of all universities and Director/Chief Executive of Inter-University Centres are quite aware that the 2023 general election has been scheduled to hold on Saturday, February 25, 2023, for the Presidential and National Assembly, and Saturday, March 11, 2023, for governorship and State Assembly.

    “In view of the foregoing and the concerns expressed on the security of workers, students and properties of our respective institutions, the Minister of Education, Mallam Adama Adamu, has, following extensive consultations with the relevant security agencies, directed that all universities and inter-university centres be shut down and academic activities be suspended between February 22 and March 14, 2023.

    “Consequently, vice chancellors and chief executives of inter-university centres are, by this circular, requested to shut down their respective institutions from Wednesday, February 22, 2023 to Tuesday, March 14, 2023.

    “Please, accept the renewed assurances of the Executive Secretary’s highest regard for your understanding and unwavering cooperation.”

  • Tinubu eulogises Fayemi on 58th birthday

    Tinubu eulogises Fayemi on 58th birthday

    •APC flag bearer congratulates new NLC President Ajaero

    The presidential candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has said the immediate past governor of Ekiti State, Dr. John Kayode Fayemi (JKF), remains invaluable in the struggle to renew the hope of Nigerians for a better, stronger, prosperous and progressive nation.

    In a congratulatory message to the former Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) on his 58th birthday, Asiwaju Tinubu hailed the former Minister of Solid Minerals Development for all he has done for the country, including his leading role in the restoration and entrenchment of democracy and good governance in the land.

    In a statement yesterday in Abuja by his media aide, Tunde Rahman, the APC flag bearer said: “Today, I join family, friends and numerous associates of the former governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, in congratulating him on attaining 58.

    “I must commend Dr. Fayemi for his useful contributions to this country and all he has been to us and our progressive front – author, thinker, pro-democracy activist, strategist, astute politician and, of course, two-term governor of Ekiti State – with an excellent record of accomplishments.

    “Together, we fought for the return of democracy to the country and its sustenance and institutionalisation.

    “As Adviser, Foreign Affairs in our Presidential Campaign Council, JKF remains invaluable in our struggle to renew the hope of our people in a better, stronger, prosperous and progressive Nigeria.

    “Together, we must work to ensure the complete emancipation of our people from poverty and underdevelopment.

    “So, today, I commend the former governor for being a friend, brother and consistent ally on our progressive front.”

    Also, Asiwaju Tinubu has congratulated the newly elected Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President Joe Ajaero.

    In a congratulatory message by Rahman, Asiwaju Tinibu also praised the immediate-past NLC President Ayuba Wabba for his years of service and leading Nigerian workers conscientiously.

    “I congratulate the new NLC President, Comrade Joe Ajaero, for his election, particularly for having the confidence of his colleagues who unanimously elected him unopposed.

    “Being elected by your colleagues is a measure of confidence and trust in your demonstrable ability to lead the NLC to a new era of progress, cooperation and value creation for Nigerian workers and the entire people of our blessed country.

    “I charge the new Labour leader to use his position to mobilise the entire workforce for better national productivity and increased economic output that will quicken our quest for shared prosperity while fighting for social and economic justice and upholding the rights of workers,” the statement said.

  • Over 1,241 pre-election cases weighing us down, INEC Chairman tells NBA

    Over 1,241 pre-election cases weighing us down, INEC Chairman tells NBA

    •‘23,333 varsity workers for election duties, insurance cover for all’

    Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu, has said pre-election cases pending in various courts are inserting pressure on the commission, even though they did not conduct any of the elections.

    Addressing a delegation of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), led by its President, Yakubu Maikyau (SAN), at the commission’s headquarters in Abuja, Yakubu said as at February 6, the commission had been joined in about 1,241 pre-election cases.

    The INEC chairman said over 300 pre-election cases arising from party primaries for the 2023 general election are currently pending at the Court of Appeal, while about 145 others are pending at the Supreme Court.

    Yakubu has also said the commission would extend insurance cover to all those that will be involved in election duty, besides ensuring tight security for everyone.

    He said about 23,258 university workers are expected to participate in the general election as Collation and Returning Officers.

    He said: “The parties conducted their primaries and submitted a list of their candidates to the commission. Cases were filed at the Federal High Court by aggrieved persons and they joined the commission in such cases, even though we did not conduct those elections.

    “When they join the commission, we have to either engage the services of our in-house lawyers to handle the cases or contract them to outside lawyers. We will appreciate the support of the NBA in handling some of these cases.

    “We look forward to possible suggestions from you on how to handle these cases expeditiously. INEC is committed to the conduct of a free, fair, credible and verifiable election where citizens will have access to election results.

    “Our loyalty is not to anybody but to the Nigerian people. I want to assure you that the will of the Nigerian people will count.”

    Maikyau assured INEC of NBA’s support to deliver a credible general election and promised to support the commission in exercising its independence.

    He said: “Free and fair elections can only be achieved if the people are allowed to make their own choices of leaders and have confidence in the electoral body saddled with the responsibility of conducting the elections.

    “With the good work you have done in the commission, you have earned the confidence of Nigerians as an umpire properly positioned to deliver a free, fair and credible election.

    “If the process of the election has any question mark, or the person saddled with the responsibility cannot be trusted, it would mar the outcome of the exercise.

    “The NBA is solidly behind you. We will not allow anything that will derail your assignment or threaten your independence. If there is anything or anyone that threatens your independence, call on us and we will be there to assist you.”

  • 27 governors working for Tinubu’s victory, says Namdas

    27 governors working for Tinubu’s victory, says Namdas

    A House of Representatives member from Adamawa State and Secretary of Logistics Committee of Presidential Campaign Council of All Progressives Congress (APC), Abdulrazak Namdas, has said 27 governors will ensure victory for the APC presidential candidate, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    Namdas, who is representing the Toungo/Jada/Ganye/Mayo-Belwa Federal Constituency in the National Assembly, said the 27 governors, who are in various parties, would galvanise votes for the APC in their states in the February 27 presidential election.

    Namdas spoke during his constituency’s grand campaign rally which he organised in Jada, the hometown of the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku  .

    The rally was meant to drum support for Asiwaju Tinubu and all other candidates of the party ahead of the forthcoming general election.

    Namdas urged the electorate to vote for the state APC governorship candidate, Senator Aishatu Binani, and Adamu Ismail Numan as the senator representing Adamawa South.

    “Asiwaju Tinubu as President can’t work efficiently if the people refuse now to vote for APC from top to bottom,” Namdas said.

    He added: “The truth is that we have already won this election, by the special grace of God. We have told them earlier. We already has 22 states. We also have five governors on another platform, which we believe strongly are coming to vote for us. That means we have about 27 states.”

    The rally in Jada was attended by thousands of APC supporters across the four local government areas in the constituency that Namdas represents in the National Assembly.

    The lawmaker said he was sure that the constituency will, on February 25, vote for Asiwaju Tinubu, while the son of the soil, Atiku Abubakar, will lose.

  • Obasanjo faults appointment of ex-IGs as PSC chairmen 

    Obasanjo faults appointment of ex-IGs as PSC chairmen 

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has frowned at the appointment of former Inspectors General of Police (IGPs) as chairmen of the Police Service Commission (PSC).

    President Muhammadu Buhari appointed former IGP Musiliu Smith as Chairman of the PSC in 2018, but Smith resigned in 2022 and retired Justice Clara Ogunbiyi took over as Acting Chairman.

    In January 2023, President Buhari appointed another retired IG, Mr. Solomon Arase, as substantive chairman of the PSC.

    Obasanjo expressed his misgivings at the public presentation of a book, titled: Policing the Nigeria Police, authored by Chief Simon Okeke, a former chairman of the PSC.

    The ex-President said: “When you make a retired police officer the head of the Police Service Commission, it is like asking a thief to catch a thief.”

    He said civilians should be appointed as chairmen and retired police officers appointed as members of the PSC to ensure effective and efficient service delivery.

    Obasanjo noted that the author believed that Nigeria, a federation, should not have unitary police establishment, as people had argued that state police would be abused by governors.

    “I won’t say yes or no. But can they not be abused by the Federal Government?

    “For a federation, it is contrary to the ideal of the country. This is because the unitary policing system is not close enough to the community where the police are supposed to be.

    “The author argued whether the name should truly be the Nigeria Police Force or a police service. I believe the police should be a police service, not a Police Force,” he said.

    Obasanjo said the author brought up a strong argument in support of state police as well as the training and retraining of police officers, which he agreed with.

    The ex-President also noted that the author argued strongly against the authorised and unauthorised deployment of police personnel to private guard duties, leading to having many police officers in the security service of few individuals.

    Of 380,000 police personnel at a time, 180,000 were on private duties carrying out duties corruptively, the author wrote.

    Publisher of the book and frontline journalist, Mr. Ray Ekpu, recalled that the PSC was first created by the Independence Constitution of 1960.

    He said it remained strong until the appointment of IGs was transferred to the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.

    “Under the military, the PSC was chaired by the various Chiefs of Staffs until it was abolished by Decree 5 of February 6, 1989, backdated to August 27, 1985.

    “For the period that there was no PSC, the IGPs worked under the supervision of either the Heads of State or Chiefs of Staff, Supreme Headquarters.

    “During that period, it was the IGPs that handled the recruitment, appointment and discipline of police officers,” he said.

    Ekpu said the lacuna contributed to the current conflicts between the IGPs and the PSC as the former found it difficult to surrender the powers they formerly enjoyed to an oversight agency, the PSC.

  • NSA: Naira scarcity harming military operations

    NSA: Naira scarcity harming military operations

    The economic crisis caused by the scarcity of the redesigned naira notes is affecting some aspects of military operations, National Security Adviser (NSA), Maj. Gen. Babagana Mongunu, said yesterday.

    According to Gen. Mongunu, some soldiers serve in areas without access to digital transactions.

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) policy, the NSA  explained, had thrown them into financial difficulties.

    Gen. Mongunu spoke when he appeared before the House of Representatives ad-hoc committee on the CBN fiscal policy.

    He urged the lawmakers to find a practicable solution to the biting cash crunch, the NSA stated that his office was also working on measures to assist the House in tackling the problem.

    He was represented by Rear Admiral Abubakar Mustapha, a Director in charge of the secretariat that conducts general security appraisal of a committee with a special focus on elections and other security situations exigencies in his office.

    The committee, headed by the Majority Leader, Alhassan Ado-Doguwa, had invited the Minister of Finance, Zainab Ahmed; the Managing Director, Nigerian Security, Minting and Printing Company, Ahmed Halilu; and the Chairman, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Mahmoud Yakubu and the Director of Currency Operations in the CBN to appear before it on Thursday, but the invitees took excuses for their absence.

    Ado-Doguwa explained that the committee’s mission was to find out the military’s level of preparedness for the effects of the policy.

    He said: “This committee believes that the policy would have in one way or the other certain implications to the security apparatus or security architecture of the country, especially when we are facing elections.

    Responding, the NSA said the policy was affecting soldiers who are deployed in areas where they do not have access to “digital means of paying for their daily subsistence.

    “It is important that this committee sits down and articulates better ways of actually addressing these issues,” Gen. Mongunu said.

    After the NSA’s remarks, the committee got into a closed-door session, as it said most of the information was sensitive.

    Earlier, Ado Doguwa said the CBN policy was unpopular and had subjected Nigerian to untold hardships, adding that it was a threat to the general elections.

    Doguwa said other invitees would appear before the committee today and warned them against dishonouring the invitation.

    Briefing reporters after the closed-door session, Doguwa said that the Committee would be compelled to deploy  legislative instrumentality in compelling the appearance of any invitee who failed to honour its invite.

    He added that it might also summon CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele again.

    “Perhaps, we will call the governor once again to address this Committee based on other points and facts we have extracted from the NSA, Ado Doguwa said.