Category: Niger delta

  • Building collapse: Anambra Physical Planning staff risk sack

    Building collapse: Anambra Physical Planning staff risk sack

    Emma Elekwa, Onitsha

     

    ANAMBRA State Physical Planning Board (ANSPPB) has warned staff against comprising standard in the course of their assignments.

    Executive  Chairman of the Board, Barr. Chike Maduekwe, gave the warning during the demolition of a building that partially collapsed recently in Obuofia, Umuota Village, Obosi in Idemili North Council Area of the state.

    He said any staff of the organisation found guilty of financial inducement would be dismissed.

    “Anywhere you see our staff demanding bribe from you, call me or come to the office and report. Any staff we find compromising quality of work we are doing will be sacked,” he warned.

    Read Also: Four die, four injured in Anambra fatal crash

    Maduekwe explained that the demolition exercise was to forestall further calamity and ensure no other persons occupied the remaining section of the building.

    He said, “Two weeks ago, there was a partial collapse of the building that killed a couple. Miraculously, their six children survived without a scratch.

    “When a building is structurally compromised, the first thing is to secure lives of people around, especially those looking for where to squat by bringing the building down completely to avert further calamity.”

  • Agbaso leads 4,000 PDP defectors to Uzodimma

    Agbaso leads 4,000 PDP defectors to Uzodimma

    Chris Njoku, Owerri

     

    FORMER governorship candidate of the All Progressives  Grand Alliance(APGA) in Imo State,  Chief Martins Agbaso, on Friday led 4,000 members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from Owerri zone to Governor Hope Uzodimma.

    The event which took place at the Government House, Owerri, saw  top stalwarts of the PDP denouncing  their membership of the party  before the governor.

    Agbaso, while presenting the defectors to the governor also assured that more will soon join the fray of defectors to the APC, just as he informed that a mega reception by the people of Owerri zone to welcome and congratulate Governor Uzodimma as the new governor of the state was in the pipeline.

    “Politics is not a business for a single person. Once we were treated like lepers but today we can see the light at the end of the tunnel with  the coming of  Governor Uzodimma. He has no business in impressing me but what he has done since he assumed duty as governor is commendable.

    “What he will do in Imo State  will shock people. This is a man I know is a power house.  Ndi Owerri will  follow him.   We will keep fishing for good men in Owerri to support him,” Agbaso said.

    A  former PDP chieftain,  Harry Njoku,  thanked the governor for giving him and his supporters the opportunity to join the APC.

    Read Also: Uzodinma gets kudos for transport initiative

    “I have come to thank you for everything you have done in my life. We have pledged to join hands with you to move our dear state forward to recover the state from decay.

    Earlier,  the APC state Chairman,  Marcillius Nlemigbo,  told the audience that journey to bring people from other political parties had started with the opposition now interested in the achievements of Governor Uzodimma. “APC is not just a political party, it is now a movement in Imo  State. ”

    Governor Uzodimma while thanking his visitors expressed happiness that all the big names in politics from Owerri zone are now returning to the APC, maintaining  that it is time to bring back the state from its lost glory.

    He said:  “I’m happy to see such the calibre of people returning to our party, APC. These are the best no doubt from Owerri, with your collective efforts, we shall rescue Imo and bring it back to where it used to be.”

  • Ex-agitator faults Wike on Rivers unemployment rate

    Ex-agitator faults Wike on Rivers unemployment rate

     Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

     

    A FORMER agitator and founder of the Network for the Defence of Democracy and Good Governance (NDDGG), High Chief Soboma Jackrich, has faulted the position of Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike on the state’s unemployment rate, as released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

    The Federal Government’s agency, in its recent publication, categorised Rivers as top three states with the highest unemployment rate in Nigeria.

    But Wike described the NBS report as fake and political, insisting that his government had provided about 100,000 jobs.

    Read Also: Wike lied against Amaechi, says ex-APC spokesman

    Reacting to the development, Jackrich said: “The only jobs Rivers citizens have benefited under him are menial jobs of daily pay for our youths; task force jobs, which have turned our youths to louts; and all state-owned enterprises, which were hitherto functional before now, are grounded and not revived and no new investments in place that would create employment for Rivers people.

    “This accounts for the senseless wave of crime among our youths, owing partly to the treacherous ‘use and dump’ politics we play in Rivers State.”

  • Ugwuanyi inducted into ESUT’s peace institute

    Ugwuanyi inducted into ESUT’s peace institute

    Our Reporter

     

    ENUGU State Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi has been inducted as the first Fellow of the Institute of Peace, Conflict and Development Studies (IPCDS) of the State University of Science and Technology (ESUT), Enugu.

    Speaking during the induction, the Director of IPCDS, Prof. Felix Asogwa, said the governor was a unanimous choice of the institute based “on account of Your Excellency’s sterling qualities and achievements in Enugu State, since 2015, especially in the area of peace-building”.

    Asogwa said the induction was the first of its kind since the inception of the institute.

    Read Also: Gov Ugwuanyi welcomes Ibom Air to Enugu

    The director noted that Ugwuanyi’s administration “has been the most friendly and peaceful administration ever in Enugu State”.

    Ugwuanyi, who delightfully accepted the fellowship award, pledged his support to the goals of the institute.

    The governor promised to live up to the highest ideals expected of him as a fellow of the body.

  • Ayade lists conditions for  reinstating 2,500 delisted workers

    Ayade lists conditions for reinstating 2,500 delisted workers

     Nsa Gill, Calabar

     

    CROSS River State Governor Ben Ayade has given the over 2,500 workers delisted from the state payroll the conditions they must meet to be reabsorb.

    The governor addressed the affected workers yesterday at the U. J. Eusene Stadium in Calabar, the state capital.

    He directed them to report for verification and regularisation.

    Ayade said the affected workers were hired without his knowledge, adding that “the state Civil Service Commission did the employment without recourse to me”.

    Read Also: Eze hails Ayade’s industrialisation moves

    The governor listed some of the conditions the delisted workers need to meet to include the verification before reabsorption as fresh workers and without demands for any arrears.

    Asking the affected workers to put themselves in his shoes, he queried: “If you were the governor of the state and you suddenly discovered an additional 2,500 workers on your payroll that you did not authorise, that you did not know about, that nobody consulted you about, what will you do?”

    Ayade noted that if he was vindictive, he would have since sacked officials who smuggled the names of the delisted workers into the state’s payroll.

    “I am doing so on compassionate ground and not because the state is buoyant enough to accommodate you,” he told the affected workers.

     

  • Imo schools to resume October 5

    Imo schools to resume October 5

    Our Reporter

     

    IMO State Government has given approval for the resumption of schools on Monday.

    The resumption is, however, subject to the adherence to the recommendations by the committee responsible for ensuring that COVID-19 safety protocols headed by the Deputy Governor, Prof. Placid Njoku.

    The decision to reopen the schools was reached at the State Executive Council meeting on Wednesday, which was presided over by Governor Hope Uzodimma.

    Commissioner for Information and Strategy Declan Emelumba, who briefed reporters,  also said the council gave approval for the school system to be fully automated and digitalised to capture pupils and students enrollment; teachers, pupils and students personal data; payment of school fees; examination details and other relevant information concerning schools.

    The reason for automation, the commissioner said, is to make it easy for government, parents, teachers, students, pupils and the public to access information on schools as well as data of anyone who passed through such schools.

    Emelumba said that the Commissioner for Education will head the automation process.

    Read Also: IPOB’s sit-at-home flops in Imo

    He, however, informed, regrettably, that the State Executive Council had received information that the planned warning strike by doctors is politically-motivated and an intention to blackmail the government.

    The Kano State Government also yesterday released a time-table for re-opening of public and private schools for the third term academic year.

    Commissioner for Education Muhammad Sanusi-Kiru released the time-table at a news conference yesterday in Kano.

    Sanusi-Kiru revealed that the schools would be re-opened in phases and that exit class students in public and private schools would resume between Oct. 11 and Oct. 12.

    He said that primary I and II pupils would attend classes on Mondays and Tuesdays and primary 3, 4 and 5 would attend classes on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays.

     

     

  • Natural disasters imminent without policy on wetland- IYC

    Natural disasters imminent without policy on wetland- IYC

    By Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) Worldwide has warned of impending natural disasters in the country following the lack of interest by the Federal Government in conserving wetland resources.

    The council said already natural violence caused by floods had become recurrent decimals because the government failed to take deliberate steps to preserve natural defences in the wetland.

    The IYC, in a statement by its President, Peter Igbifa, to mark the 60th Independence of Nigeria, said it was unfortunate the country still condoned some dangerous environmental activities like gas flaring, depleting the ecosystem, and eroding wetland assets.

    “Could it be that the Federal Government is not interested in wetland preservation because the country’s wetland is situated in the Niger Delta, which is rated as the third largest wetland in the world?

    “The government should know that preserving Niger Delta wetland is for the overall interest of the country because wetland protects a country from natural disasters and lack of its preservation is the reason we have started experiencing strange flood disasters,” he said.

    Igbifa, in the statement in Port Harcourt, Rivers on Thursday, recalled in 1971, the country participated in an international treaty on wetland conservation held at Ramsar in Iran and agreed to protect wetland assets in the Niger Delta region.

    He, however, said years after the agreement, successive administrations had failed to make and implement deliberate policy on wetland protection saying that the Niger Delta has the third biggest wetland in the world.

    He said: “I will bring your attention to the Nigeria’s participation in the international treaty on wetland conservation in 1971. All these countries that have wetland gathered in Iran in a place called Ramsa, the biggest wetland in Southeast Asia. They signed a treaty for wetland conservation in the whole world.

    “Niger Delta is the only prominent wetland here in Africa. It is also the third-largest wetland in the world.

    “The biggest wetland, the Amazon wetland in Brazil is recently impacted by climate change. You can see the wildfire eating up the entire ecosystem and wildlife in the Amazon.

    “Wetland conservation should be a priority of every national government. Now Brazil has lost the ecosystem, arable land, wildlife, and the economy which the wetland provides.

    “According to global statistics, wetland contributes $1bn in terms of foreign direct investment globally and they feed close to one billion of the whole population.

    “So, we should not be joking with wetland. Aside from oil and gas, the wetland is an economic asset. In terms of geography and economic issues, wetland provides shoreline protection against ocean encroachment and high tidal waves.

    “The reason why Nigeria is not consumed by the flood like other countries is because of the wetland we have in the Niger Delta.

    “The mangrove trees constitute national windbreakers against storms. That is why we can’t have hurricane, tornado and natural violence that happens in other countries”.

    Igbifa said the Niger Delta wetland had been further abused by the devastating practice of gas flaring adding that the region had over 150 flaring sites.

    He said all the carbon emissions from flared gas had depleted the ozone layer leading to the perennial flooding in the region especially in Bayelsa State.

    Igbifa said: “The oil and gas fossil fuel activities have further aggravated the problems in the wetland assets and the ecosystem.

    READ ALSO: Ijaw youths knock IOCs over ‘neglect of host communities’

    “Niger Delta has close to 150 flaring sites and these sites carry out carbon emission into the atmosphere which in turn mixes up with those greenhouse gasses which impact the climate an depletes the ozone layer. This is causes perennial flooding.

    “In Bayelsa a few years ago the flooding was there for a long period and it impacted on the economy of the people. In 1994, Nigeria entered a signatory in Japan, with other countries, which flared gasses to reduce flaring from 94% to 0.4%”.

    He said most of the countries agreed and carried out the treaty but that only Nigeria remained adamant and still flared gas in emission level of 94 percent.

    Igbifa lamented that though the Parish Agreement was reached and endorsed by over 196 including Nigeria to end gas flaring by 2030, there had been no commitment by the country to meet the target.

    He called for a wetland conservation summit in the Niger Delta that would involve all stakeholders to chart a clear roadmap in preserving environmental assets.

    The IYC boss further called on the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to immediately commence the payments of contractors, with verifiable evidence of project execution.

    He regretted that the commission was owing to many contractors that had done their job saying the development had deepened poverty and unemployment in the region.

    The IYC boss appealed to Ijaw youths to remain resolute, calm, and peaceful as his administration would engage the government on all environmental and other issues affecting the region.

  • We must meet Edo people’s expectations, says Obaseki

    We must meet Edo people’s expectations, says Obaseki

    Bisi Olaniyi, Southsouth Bureau Chief

    Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki has said the expectations of the people have become all-time high, following his victory in the September 19 poll.

    The governor promised that he and other officials of his administration would have no choice than to meet the people’s expectaions.

    He announced the dissolution of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) campaign council for the last governorship election, praising its members for their dedication to duty, which he said accounted for the election victory.

    Also, at a meeting on Monday with members of Edo State Campaign Council of his party at the Government House in Benin, the state capital, thanked them for doing a great job.

    He said: “We have so much to do between now and the day of inauguration (November 12, 2020). The country and the world are watching Edo. They want to see how we will manage our victory and what we will do with it. The expectations of Edo people are at an all-time high and we have no choice but to deliver.

    Read Also: No plans to return to APC now – Obaseki

    “What I can promise the people is that I will provide the leadership and I will be fair, objective and transparent in dealing with issues.”

    The governor described members of the state’s PDP campaign council as miracle workers.

    “You are all miracle workers as far this election is concerned. If you sit back and reflect on our journey so far, the time, resources and the victory that was finally achieved, you will agree with me that all those who contributed to the achievements are all miracle workers.

    “I joined the PDP less than 100 days ago, put together this team and everyone went to work and got the result, because we were all committed to our job. We moved round the 192 wards across Edo State and I am not surprised at the result we have achieved.

    “This meeting was organised first to thank you all for your efforts and to formally dissolve the campaign council now that we have got victory in the just-concluded governorship election in Edo State. I also urge you to try and document what happened, because we have made history,” he said.

     

  • Abia a flood-prone state, says NEMA

    Abia a flood-prone state, says NEMA

    Sunny Nwankwo, Umuahia

     

    THE National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has warned that some communities in Abia State may be flooded before the end of the year.

    The agency’s team leader for Imo and Abia states, Mr. Umar Abdulaziz, stated this on Monday  in Umuahia, the Abia State capital.

    Abdulaziz, who expressed worries over the impending flood in the state, advised the government to take drastic measures to avert a disaster.

    The NEMA team leader, who spoke with Governor Okezie Ikpeazu during an advocacy visit, urged the governor to put machineries in place to mitigate the effects of flooding in the state.

    He listed Umunneochi Local Government Area as the most probable flood risk zone in 2020, saying other probable areas include Osisioma-Ngwa, Isiala-Ngwa North and Ukwa West local government areas.

    Read Also: Flood cuts off Lokoja residents

    The NEMA official also listed Ukwa-East, Umuahia-North, Umuahia-South and Obingwa local government areas as among flood-prone belts.

    He said: “We are here on a specific mission to deliver the early warning message, as directed by the NEMA Director General, AVM Muhammad Muhammad, for your government to take swift action against impending flooding.”

    Ikpeazu told the NEMA delegation that his administration was committed to protecting the lives of the residents.

    The governor, who was represented by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Mr. Chris Ezem, said some communities in Abia had been vulnerable to flood.

    The governor assured the Federal Government agency that his administration would brace up to the challenge.

    “As a government, we will continue to do our best for our citizens, but the situation here calls for external assistance. So, we call on you to always come to our aid whenever you are needed,” he said.

     

  • ‘Conditional cash transfer will reduce poverty’

    ‘Conditional cash transfer will reduce poverty’

    Okungbowa Aiwerie, Asaba

     

    DELTA State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa has said the Federal Government’s Conditional Cash Transfer Programme in the state will complement his administration’s efforts at fighting poverty.

    Okowa spoke on Monday at the kick-off ceremony for the Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) Scheme of the National Social Investment Programme (NSIP) at Aniocha North Local Government Area’s secretariatin Issele-Uku.

    The governor said Delta residents were delighted that the Household Uplifting Programme (HUP), as it is also known, was formally taking off to focus on the poor and vulnerable households in the state.

    Represented by the Commissioner for Economic Planning, Dr. Barry Pere-Gbe, the governor hailed the Federal Government for the gesture.

    Read Also: Okowa bags NARD merit award 

    He noted that it would help to address extreme poverty, social exclusion and vulnerability.

    According to the governor, the Conditional Cash Transfer programme aims to address these economic challenges through the transfer of monetary benefits of N5,000 monthly to the poor and vulnerable households to enable them meet some of their basic needs.

    “The formal launching of this laudable programme is indeed a great pleasure for me and a source of joy for us in Delta State.