Category: Niger Delta

  • Edo markets fire victims get grants

    Edo markets fire victims get grants

    Agency Reporter

    Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki has approved grant for victims of Oba and Ekiosa market fires.

    A statement on Thursday by Secretary to the State Government Osarodion Ogie said this would alleviate their plight

    He urged approved traders to approach any Trustfund Microfinance Bank to receive their grant.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Fire razes INEC card readers in Ondo

    “To alleviate the plight of victims of Oba Market and Ekiosa market fires, Governor Godwin Obaseki has approved distribution of grant to victims.

    “A verification process was undertaken to ascertain the number of victims and the degree of loss suffered by each trader. This verification held openly for about three months.

    “Please note that this is a livelihood support grant … It is free and the traders are not to pay back. Only traders who were screened and whose names are on the approved list should approach any Trustfund Microfinance Bank to receive their … grant.”

  • Pensioners hail Uzodimma

    Pensioners hail Uzodimma

    From Chris Njoku, Owerri 

    National Union of Pensioners (NUP) has praised Imo State Governor Hope Uzodimma for correcting the maladministration of past governments.

    Pensioners, led by National President Abel Afolayan, described the situation in ex-Governor Rochas Okorocha’s tenure as unfriendly.

    He said Okorocha owed pensioners over N56.4 billion.

    Afolayan urged Uzodimma to pay pensioners their outstanding arrears.

    Read Also: Uzodimma signs two development bills into law

    He said recent protest was not by his members.

    “We believe in dialogue and peaceful negotiation …” he said.

    Uzodimma said: “I met a cabal when I assumed office. The fraud was huge so we decided on verification to clean up the system.

    “The work slowed down because of COVID-19. We paid 900 pensioners, remaining 900… Soon we will have a clean nominal pension pay roll to ensure uninterrupted payment.”

  • Traders flee as youth protest turns violent

    Traders flee as youth protest turns violent

    From Sunny Nwankwo, Aba

    Shop owners at Opobo road junction and their counterparts on Aba-Ikot Ekpene Expressway in Abia State were forced to close business on Thursday as a peaceful protest turned violent.

    Youths of Umuokpo village in Obingwa Local Government were protesting the alleged murder of one of them, Onyekachi Nwaogu, by Robinson Abel of Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) in  Akwa Ibom State.

    It was gathered some boys began looting shops.

    Sources said the traders hurriedly shut their shops.

    Policemen and soldiers stopped them from entering the city centre with Nwaogu’s body in a wheelbarrow. They recovered the body from the youth.

    Read Also: Rivers, Cross River most violent states in N/Delta – Report

    NSCDC said it was investigating Nwaogu’s alleged murder.

    Commandant Samuel Fadeyi addressed reporters on Thursday at Abia State headquarters in Umuahia.

    He said the shooting occurred when miscreants accosted a Hilux van with two expatriate workers and tried to extort money from them.

    Otobong, a security protocol to the expatriates, came out of the vehicle to clear the road.

    He said: “As soon as the boys saw him, they turned violent …but the officer fired a warning shot to scare them.

    “Rather than clear from the road, the miscreants attacked him. It was during the scuffle his gun fired and hit the deceased.

    “When Nwaogu fell, Otobong carried him into the van and drove to a nearby hospital. But, unfortunately, the boy died.

    ‘’Youths then mobilised to the hospital, attacked Otobong and burnt the Hilux. It took the intervention of military personnel at a checkpoint to recover the gun and rescue Otobong.

    “He is critically ill  and doctors are battling to save his life.”

    Fadeyi condoled Akwa Ibom command, the bereaved family, government and people of Abia  at the unfortunate incident.

    Abia State Commandant Nnamdi Nwannukwu said the command intervened to ensure the matter did not escalate.

    The commandants appealed to parents to restrain their children and wards from indulging in criminal and illegal acts, promising to investigate the alleged murder and ensure justice.

  • Bayelsa West: Ekeremor councillors back Dickson

    Bayelsa West: Ekeremor councillors back Dickson

    From Simon Utebor, Yenagoa

    Councillors of 12 wards in Ekeremor council of Bayelsa State have vowed to preserve the zoning on National Assembly seats between Sagbama and Ekeremor.

    Bayelsa West comprises Sagbama and Ekeremor councils, making up Sagbama/Ekeremor Federal Constituency.

    Deputy Leader of the House of Assembly, who represents Ekeremor Ward 6, Pimo Sylvester, said the agreement to share the Senate and House of Representatives seat between Sagbama and Ekeremor for eight years was beyond party.

    Read Also: Bayelsa West: Dickson clinches senatorial ticket

    Sylvester said: “We just had a meeting with former Governor Seriake Dickson on his senatorial ambition. There is a long standing agreement on zoning of National Assembly seats. The agreement was reached by the people, and it goes beyond parties. This unwritten power sharing arrangement is for eight years, and this is the time for Sagbama, not Ekeremor.

    “We are standing behind our former governor, who is from Sagbama, and we shall oppose any person coming from Ekeremor because it is unjust and unfair. We want Dickson to go to the Senate to speak for the Ijaw. We believe in him… .”

  • ‘Detained IPOB member getting treatment’

    ‘Detained IPOB member getting treatment’

    Our Reporter

    Enugu State Police Commissioner Ahmad Abdurrahman has said the detained member of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) is being treated to be fit for trial.

    Abdurrahman, in a statement on Thursday by the spokesman, Daniel Ndukwe, said allegations the suspect was chained and left to bleed to death was misleading.

    Read Also: What is IPOB strategy?

    He said four others had been charged to court and remanded in prison for conspiracy, treasonable felony and murder.

    Abdurrahman debunked allegations the police took money for the suspect’s bail, saying neither his grandfather nor his relatives were detained and freed after paying N55,000.

    He enjoined the people to remain law-abiding and guard against falsehood and baseless allegations.

  • ‘Ijaw communities worse hit by fuel price hike’

    ‘Ijaw communities worse hit by fuel price hike’

    From Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

    Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) Worldwide has decried the hike in prices of petroleum products, describing it as insensitive to the plight of Ijaw.

    President of IYC Peter Igbifa, in a statement on Thursday, said Ijaw communities were worse hit because of their peculiar geographical locations.

    Igbifa argued the decision to remove subsidies on fuel was done without ensuring facilities to ameliorate the negative effects of such action on vulnerable communities in Ijawland.

    According to him, the government should have waited till some modular refineries were completed, moribund refineries rehabilitated and floating petrol stations revived.

    Igbifa said prior to the hike, Ijaw communities were buying the product outside regulated prices because of unavailability of fuel stations in their areas.

    Read Also: SERAP to FG: hike in electricity tariff, fuel price unfair, unjust

    He lamented that prices of petroleum products had become outrageous with the latest increase in prices.

    He noted that with the hike, many might go into refining crude to make products available in coastal communities.

    “IYC rejects the increase of prices of petroleum products. It is ill-timed. Our coastal communities are the worse hit and we are asking the Federal Government to reconsider its position…

    “We believe that before full deregulation is implemented in the petroleum sector, the government must put some prerequisite facilities in place. Such facilities must include reviving all floating petrol stations, full rehabilitation and optimum operations of the moribund Warri and Port Harcourt refineries, and completion of other modular refineries in Niger Delta.

    “Anything outside ensuring that we have self-sufficiency in refining crude oil produced in this country amounts to putting the cart before the horse and we totally reject it.”

  • Ijaw communities worst hit by fuel price hike, says IYC

    Ijaw communities worst hit by fuel price hike, says IYC

    By Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

    The Ijaw Youths Council (IYC) Worldwide has decried the shocking increase in prices of petroleum products especially Petroleum Motor Spirit (PMS) by the Federal Government describing it as insensitive to the plight of Ijaw communities living in different parts of the country especially the Niger Delta region.

    The President of IYC, Peter Igbifa, in a statement he personally signed said Ijaw communities were the worst hit by the sudden jack up of prices in the petroleum sector because of their peculiar geographical locations.

    Igbifa argued that the decision of the Federal Government to remove all subsidies on fuel was done without putting in place prerequisite facilities to ameliorate negative consequences of such action on vulnerable communities in Ijaw land.

    He said the government should have waited till the completion of some of the modular refinery projects, rehabilitation of moribund federal government-owned refineries and reviving of floating petrol stations in some waterways in the Niger Delta region before implementing such decision.

    Igbifa regretted that some floating petrol stations built by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to facilitate access to fuel in coastal Ijaw communities had been abandoned by the NNPC.

    He said prior to the recent increase in fuel, residents in Ijaw communities were buying the product very costly outside the regulated prices because of unavailability of authorised fuel stations in their areas.

    Read Also: Protests in Oyo, Lagos, Osun, Ogun, others over fuel price, electricity tariff hike

    He said the price of petroleum products in such areas had become outrageous with the latest move by the federal government.

    Igbifa lamented that the hitherto costly marine transport had quadrupled following the increase in fuel adding that most resident in Ijaw communities could no longer visit their capital cities to transact their businesses.

    Besides the IYC President said the development would seriously affect the government’s war against illegal refineries and their implications on the eco system.

    He argued that with the increase, many people were likely to go into the business of crude refining of crude oil to make petroleum products available to persons in the coastal communities.

    Igbifa called on the federal government to allow the completion and operations of ongoing modular refinery projects before totally removing subsidy on fuel.

    He also urged the Minister of State for Petroleum, Chief Timipre Sylva, to revive the existing NNPC floating fuel stations and set more of such stations on the waterways of Ijaw communities to give Ijaw people access to fuel.

    He said: “The umbrella body of all Ijaw youths, the IYC, totally rejects this increase of petroleum products. It is ill-timed. Our coastal communities are indeed the worst hit by this increase and we are asking the Federal Government to reconsider its position on this matter.

    “We believe that before full deregulation is implemented in the petroleum sector, the Federal Government must put some prerequisite facilities in place. Such facilities must include reviving all floating petrol stations, which have been abandoned along some waterways in the Niger Delta.

    “The Federal Government must also ensure the full rehabilitation and optimum operations of the moribund Warri and Port Harcourt refineries as well as the completion of other modular refineries in the Niger Delta. Anything outside ensuring that we have self-sufficiency in refining crude oil produced in this country amounts to putting the cart before the horse and we totally reject it.

    “We call on President Muhammadu Buhari to withdraw this decision because of the hardship it has already inflicted on our people. We also call on our own brother and Minister of State for Petroleum, Chief Timipre Sylva, to prevail on Mr. President to meet the prerequisite conditions before total deregulation.

    “We want to state that the current development if allowed to persist will hamper the war against oil theft and illegal refining of petroleum products affecting our ecosystem. This is because the unavailability of petroleum products because of its cost will compel more people to go into the business of illegal refining of the products, which is seen as cheaper than the regulated product.”

  • Lawyer to Ohanaeze: shun secession threats for Igbo president

    Lawyer to Ohanaeze: shun secession threats for Igbo president

    Emma Elekwa, Onitsha

     

     

    Chieftains of Ohanaeze Ndigbo have been warned against threatening other zones in their quest for a president of Igbo extraction.

    A lawyer, Prince Uche Okeke spoke on Tuesday at Nkpor in Idemili North Local Government of Anambra State.

    He was reacting to secession threats by certain chieftains of Ohanaeze and other stakeholders.

    Okeke said Ndigbo should employ dialogue, stressing that threats of secession was capable of scuttling the Igbo project.

    He said: “As much as I strongly advocate for a president of Igbo extraction in 2023, threats that Ndigbo will break away if not elected president, already coming from notable Igbo stakeholders, could boomerang and endanger the agenda.

    “Ohanaeze chieftains or anybody who made secession statements should employ dialogue to make other zones and political parties adopt an Igbo person as a presidential candidate.”

    Read Also: Ohaneze backs IPOB on call for referendum

    The lawyer listed the merits of zoning as cost reduction, opportunity to harness human resources from different zones, and promotion of development at different parts of the country.

    “Zoning may not be written in the constitution, but there is what is called convention – when something is practised over the years, it could be accepted as a law.

    “Going by all comers, some sections of the society will be at a disadvantage. Zoning makes development go round. Every zone has enough human resources that can handle the affairs of the various states,” he added.

  • Ebonyi shuts 100-year-old mission hospital

    Ebonyi shuts 100-year-old mission hospital

    Ogochukwu Anioke, Abakaliki

     

    Ebonyi State has shut and taken over Presbyterian Joint Hospital in Uburu at Ohaozara Local Government.

    The action followed a petition by the community on the expiration of the hospital’s 100-year lease. It was established in 1912.

    Residents had alleged misappropriation of funds, high medical charges, use of obsolete equipment for treatment and lack of qualified doctors. It urged the government to take over the management.

    Commissioner for Health Daniel Umezurike, on Tuesday, said the government revoked the hospital’s right of occupancy in the people’s interest.

    He said: “Uburu people donated the land to the Church of Scotland Mission in 1912, not to the Presbyterian Church of Nigeria. When the Church of Scotland was leaving, the Presbyterian Church of Nigeria took over probably because most of the workers were members of the church, especially then Governor of Old Eastern Region, the late Dr. Akanu Ibiam. But ownership was never transferred to them.

    “The hospital was offering qualitative services until the ‘90s when the Church of Scotland stopped sending expatriates from Netherlands, then the clinical services and management became completely indigenous …

    The commissioner noted that the lease expired in 2011, having lasted 100 years. He added the community waited till it expired before the agitation to quit started.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Ebonyi Resident doctors down tools

    Dr. Umezuruike said the church or any other body linked with the ownership failed to apply for a renewal.

    According to him, the State Executive Council, on July 14, and following the Land Use Act (Cap L.5 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004), revoked the right of occupancy.

    He added that the House of Assembly affirmed the revocation, and ownership reverted to the state.

    The hospital would be designated Ebonyi State University Community General Hospital, and serve as community medicine rural practice area of the University Teaching Hospital in Uburu.

    Umezuruike said the hospital would remain shut for two weeks, and the state would, among other things, take inventory, staff auditing and verification and renovation.

  • Delta retirees protest unpaid benefits

    Delta retirees protest unpaid benefits

     Okungbowa Aiwerie, Asaba

     

     

    Local government and primary school retirees in Delta State on Tueday marched on the streets of Asaba to protest their unpaid benefits.

    Over 1,000 protesters, clad in black, marched on the House of Assembly, which was on recess.

    They marched to the Government House but security operatives stopped them.

    Undeterred, they danced, drummed and sang songs to register their discontent.

    They rejected emissaries, including Head of Service Reginald Bayoko and Senior Special Assistant (Religion Matters) Silvanus Okorote and Chairman of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Goodluck Ofobruku.

    NLC chair said he was unaware local government retirees were yet to get their benefits.

    He was booed by protesters, who displayed placards: ‘Pay us our gratuity from 2014 till date’; ‘Our Pension Mata: No Retreat, No Surrender’; ‘EFCC Probe all PFA’s’; ‘Let us Reap the Fruit of Our 35 years Labour’, among others.

    Their spokesperson, Chief Helen Egie, said retirees had suffered hardship and humiliation since retirement.

    She added that meetings with the government yielded no result, hence the protest.

    Read Also: Man reportedly electrocuted in Delta

    Egie lamented that 35 teachers died due to lack of care, adding that a backlog of accrued rights in December was N48,369,331,624.00, of which N8,137,909,068 is for council retirees and N40,231,422,556.00 for primary school retirees.

    She said records from Bureau of Local Government Pension showed unremitted deductions from staff contribution amounted to N5.9 billion.

    Egie said with the monthly allocation of N300,000 by the government, it would take over 18 years to offset the N40 billion backlog.

    They appealed for an raise in the monthly allocation from N300 million to N2 billion until the backlog was paid.

    Bayoko sued for patience, saying the government was concerned about their plight.