Category: Niger Delta

  • Ekpotu on the march again

    Ekpotu on the march again

    Patrick Akpan Ekpotu, as deputy governor in Akwa Ibom State, was made a Fellow of the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE) at the International Conference Centre, Abuja. Ekpotu, a chemical/petrol-chemical engineer, was born on June 26, 1960, exemplifies a generation of Nigerian professionals in politics, who are capable of delivering quality.

    Ekpotu attended Regina Coeli College, Ikot Abasi for his secondary education, which he completed at Nsit People’s Grammar School, Afaha Offiong. He later studied Chemical/Petroleum Engineering at the Rivers State University of Science and Technology, (RSUST), Port Harcourt, from where he graduated in 1986.

    He taught at Baptist High School, Port Harcourt during his National Youths Service Corps, NYSC, year, 1987/1988, though his first stint at paid employment was as a clerk with the United Bank of Africa, UBA, Lagos shortly after his secondary education.

    He is a member of the Nigerian Society of Chemical Engineers; Nigerian Society of Petroleum Engineers; and the Nigerian Society of Engineers.

    His engineering management skills have been brought to bear on the engineering firms with which he has been involved. These include: Peagul Engineering Nigeria Limited; Island Agro-Industries Development Company Ltd. (IADC); Baks and Pee Int. Ltd; Baks &Pee Structures; and Island Communications Ltd.

    In 2003, he participated actively in the campaign to re-elect Obong Victor Attah as governor of Akwa Ibom State for a second term through his non-governmental organisation, the Civil Rule Advancement Works Organisation of Nigeria (CROWN). In 2004, Ekpotu was appointed Commissioner for Information, Culture and Ethical Re-Orientation, and in 2006, he became a commissioner representing the South -South in the National Assembly Service Commission, Abuja, until his selection as running-mate to Chief Godswill Akpabio for the Governorship ticket in 2007.

    Long before then, Ekpotu had shown signs of leadership especially by active involvement in student activism. He was the President of the National Association of Cross River State Students, NACRISS, RSUST Chapter, 1982 – 1983; Parliamentary Adviser to RSUST Students’ Union Government, 1983 – 1984; National Chairman, Nigeria Universities Engineering Students’ Association, (NUESA). He was also the National President, NACRISS, from 1983 to 1985; and, in 1984, he made history as the first non-indigenous President-elect of the Students Union at RSUST.

    In 1983, Ekpotu was the Leader, Youth Wing of the Unity Party of Nigeria, UPN, Cross River State Chapter, and served as Special Assistant to its governorship candidate in the 1983 general election, the late Brig. Gen. U. J. Esuene.

    In 2003, he served as member, Information Sub-Committee, Obasanjo/Atiku Presidential Campaign Committee. He also served as member, Rally/Mobilisation Sub-Committee, Obong Victor Attah/Chris Ekpenyong Campaign Committee, 2003, a committee which was headed by the incumbent governor, Godswill Akpabio.

    Ekpotu has published several articles and books and has also contributed to other publications. His works include: Design of an Integrated Cassava Plant; The Recovery of Peace and National Continuity; The Imperatives of True National Escape to Freedom;

    Rhythms in Courage: The Search for National Redemption; and Lifting the Peril: A Root Cause Resolution for the Niger Delta Crisis.

    Ekpotu has a store-house of awards- from both local and international scenes. He is a Paul Harris Fellow of the Rotary International; Fellow of the Institute of Certified Economists of Nigeria. He holds the traditional titles of Obong Ifiok of Ibibio land, Ukai Ibibio, Ibatai Ikpa Nnung Assang; Edep Nsit Ibom; Udu Onyi Urue Offong Oruko, Ufan Mkpat Enin, among others.

    Ekpotu is married to Mbosowo and they have three children. A devout Catholic, he now has his eyes on the governorship of Akwa Ibom State, which Governor Godswill Akpabio will vacate next May.

    Friends and associates of the Petrol-Chemical Engineer, who was Commissioner of Information, Culture and Ethical Orientation in the Obong Victor Attah administration, accompanied him to Wadata House, the national headquarters of the PDP in Abuja.

    The politician’s campaign outfit, the Ekpotu 2015 Movement, has the slogan: Let’s Turn the Page.

    A leader of the campaign movement, Otuekong Idongesit Udokpo, said Ekpotu served well from 2007 till 2011, during the first tenure of the Godwill Akpabio administration.

    He said the aspirant “is coming into the race with an enviable wealth of experience”.

    Udokpo added: “He (Ekpotu) also served as a Federal Commissioner (Southsouth) in the National Assembly Service Commission, Abuja. Don’t forget that Ekpotu and the incumbent governor were colleagues as commissioners under former Governor Obong Attah, before he became Akpabio’s deputy.

    “Having an experienced administrator who understands the dynamics of governance, especially the unique architecture of a fast developing state, such as Akwa Ibom, with its complexities, will be a blessing to us, the indigenes, who yearn for credible and people-oriented governance.”

  • My grouse about Bayelsa VIP pageant, by contestant

    My grouse about Bayelsa VIP pageant, by contestant

    Miss Bridget Nwachi travelled all the way from Ebonyi State University (EBSU), Abakiliki to Yenagoa, Bayelsa State to partake in the just concluded Miss VIP beauty pageant.

    A student of Applied Microbiology and Brewing, Nwachi, who hails from Afikpo North Local Government Area, was optimistic that she would clinch the crown.

    She wanted to make Ebonyi, the state she came to represent in the competition proud. But Nwachi was disappointed. The pageant, she said, lacked all the competitive trappings such events was supposed to have.

    In fact, there was no competition and the organisers could not live up to their promises. Nwachi couldn’t even make top ten in the event that was held at the Banquet Hall, Yenagoa.

    Nwachi, a former presenter on Radio Nigeria, Unity FM, after the event located the office of the Niger Delta Report in Yenagoa to narrate her ordeal. Narrating her experience in camp, Nwachi who described herself as a creative, enthusiastic and fun-loving model, said the pageant was a rip-off.

    When asked why she could not make the top 10, she said: “It did not just happen. They gave us a task and I was not able to meet up the task. They asked us, the contestants, to sell tickets and raise N100,000 each.

    “I really believe the selection was just for the ticket money. The first top 10 was selected from the persons who sold the highest tickets. So, it was just the people that realised the highest amount of money that they really chose. That was how they chose the top 10.”

    She disclosed that persons who could not sell the tickets were compelled to look for the money and pay to the organisers. She insisted that the top positions were bought with money and that the crown was given to the highest bidder.

    “I met very nice ladies but some saw me as a threat to them because I got the highest vote on Facebook. They felt l had money to pay for the crown. Some thought l came with N450,000 or N500,000. So, they were just striving harder to meet up.

    “They asked me, I told them I only came with N20,000. But they never believed me because they felt it was all about money. I didn’t really believe in that.

    “I believe l came for competition and to do my best. I believe when you want to crown somebody, it should not be because of money. Let it be for the qualities you saw in that person.

    “I feel sad because l did everything that l was supposed to do, especially at the prejudgment day. I demonstrated that l possessed all the qualities required of a VIP Queen. The only thing l did not do was to buy the crown and that is my offence.

    “I ventured into modeling in 2010 when I registered with an agency in my state. It is called Sodofaces Agency. But they were not really that serious. I just had to leave.

    “I have worked with Green Blaze in my state. I have helped to organize shows like Face of Ebonyi, South-East Super models. Honestly, I have not being involved in any pageantry show.

    “This Miss VIP is just the first pageant show I have ever involved myself in because I needed to get the experience and I got it to fullest. I gave it my best.

    “I am optimistic of getting contracts from here. The next thing I am thinking is either Gulder Ultimate Search or Big Brother Africa. I don’t really like pageantry. I just needed to try this one to get the experience, so that if am asked to host my own, I will know the mistakes.

    “For the Miss VIP, some people were sentimental because of money. My role model is Genevieve Nnaji. We share the same life interest. If only you believe, you can achieve it. No matter the circumstance I find myself. I know I have some qualities that no one else will ever get.”

    Nwachi further called for proper regulation of pageantry shows to avoid using them as opportunities to deceive unsuspecting members of the public.

    But Pflamez Entertainment, the firm that organised the show, said Nwachi was complaining because she failed to win the crown. The Chief Executive Officer of the firm, Mr. Preye Okorowanta, who spoke to Niger Delta Report, said all the participants were aware of the conditions and acceded to them before the competition.

    He said: “I guess everyone has their own opinion. We made our process clear even before the event. We told them that their fan base would determine their positions in the competition.

    “The VIP thing is like a popularity thing. We couldn’t regulate it by just selling tickets at the gate of the venue. We decided that their chances would depend on the number of tickets they sold.

    “They did that. But probably at the long run, she didn’t make it. She started complaining against the whole process.”

  • NDDC’s good music for youths

    NDDC’s good music for youths

    it is my belief that when we develop and empower young people, we are bound to reduce crime and violence in the Niger Delta region. We also check kidnappings and vandalism of public infrastructure, especially oil installations, which are negatively affecting our economy today.” That succinctly summarises the position of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, as espoused by its Managing Director, Sir Bassey Dan-Abia, at the 1st Niger Delta Regional Youth Conference on Ethics and Value Re-Orientation, held at the Hotel Presidential, Port Harcourt.

    At that crucial conference, the NDDC articulated a 3-point agenda of capacity building, wealth creation and employment generation for the youths of the Niger Delta region. The action plan was the interventionist agencies’ affirmation that the youths of the region hold the key to the peaceful development of the future.

    According to the Managing Director, the 3-point agenda for youths was significantly focused on deepening youth development and empowerment through re-orientation; rehabilitation and re-integration, to enable them contribute positively to the growth of the region.

    Sir Dan-Abia said that the new action plan was a timely prescription to addressing the myriads of challenges faced by youths of the region with a view to creating a peaceful, secured and prosperous Niger Delta for all. “We are of the view that sustainable youth development and empowerment that will unlock the potentials of young people is a must do,” he said.

    The NDDC boss stated that the youth conference was aimed at deepening development in the region with emphasis on raising world-class youths with the requisite skill and inventiveness to meet contemporary challenges in the oil-rich region.

    He said that it was only through moral rejuvenation and ethical re-orientation that we could achieve sustainable youth development and empowerment, noting that the philosophy of the conference was hinged on the bed-rock of a deep concern and the need for total re-orientation of youths of the region.

    The Chairman of the NDDC Governing Board, Senator Bassey Ewa-Henshaw, spoke along the same line, noting that the commission was putting a lot of emphasis on taking care of the youths of the Niger Delta. He observed that the youth conference was part of the new thrust of the NDDC to enhance its service delivery.

    Senator Ewa-Henshaw assured the youths that the commission would partner with them for appropriate training and mentorship, stating that the commission was determined to transform the Niger Delta in line with the development agenda of the President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.

    The NDDC Director of Youths, Sports, Culture and Women Affairs, Prince W. Alazigha, said that the importance of youths in any society could not be over-emphasized, adding that they bear the brunt of most societal inadequacies. On account of this fact, he said that the NDDC had since inception mounted various skill acquisition programmes to train the youths of the Niger Delta.

    The views of the captains of the NDDC show that they understand that youths represent the collective dreams of a stable and prosperous society where commerce and industry thrive, and people develop their fullest potentials in peace and security.

    It is not surprising, therefore, that the  key aspect of NDDC youth development scheme appear to focus on enabling the youths to gain useful skills with which they could be gainfully employed. The fruits of this strategy are beginning to manifest as statistics made available by the commission indicate that a total of 5,765 youths across the Niger Delta Region have so far benefited from various skill programmes of the commission.

    To further improve the lot of the youths, the NDDC recently announced plans to engage 450 Niger Delta youths as part of its youth empowerment programmes. The new initiative involves the selection of 50 young men and women from each of the nine states of the Niger Delta region to carry-out periodic environmental sanitary services, traffic decongestion and control, clearing of grasses and weeds on the sides of major roads, cleaning and opening up of blocked drainages, security surveillance on oil/gas facilities and installations (pipelines) and other related matters under a special scheme.

    The empowerment programme, meant to reduce unemployment in the region, has been aptly tagged as the Niger Delta Volunteer Scheme. Throwing more light on the programme, Barr.George Turnah, the Special Adviser to the NDDC MD on Youth, Sports, Culture and Women Affairs, said that the first phase would focus on engaging the skills of the youth in environmental sanitation, while the second phase would emphasize collaboration and cooperation between the commission and its development partners with a view to increasing the number of youths under the scheme.

    He said that the final phase of the scheme would ensure that the young people were given opportunities to be employed in highly skilled jobs to enable the programme contribute to the economy of the region in terms of wealth creation and employment generation.

    Turnah, noted that NDDC would continue to intervene in the provision of employment to the youths of the Niger Delta. “It is the hope of the NDDC that the volunteer scheme will provide multiple benefits for young people in the region where employment options are otherwise limited. The 450 Niger Delta youths participating in the scheme will earn a monthly stipend as a form of support to enable them give their best to community development in the region and in particular for their productivity.”

    As would be expected, the youths were very excited by the new programme. The Chairman, Niger Delta Youth Leaders Council, Mr. Ebis Orube, said the new initiative by NDDC to help the unemployed youths in the Niger Delta was a laudable programme that would go a long way in reducing social vices associated with youths as a result of idleness.

    He said: “I just hope it will accommodate as many youths as possible and at the same time become a sustainable programme. So, I advise that they involve those that are really in need of jobs in order for them to have a means of livelihood and not give out the opportunities based on political considerations.”

    Mr. Joseph Nwabuakwu, a youth leader from Aniocha North Local Government Area in Delta State, was one of the many others that hailed the programme. He said he was optimistic that a better Niger Delta was in the offing, noting that the current efforts of the NDDC to turn the tide for the region were encouraging. “We can hope for a greater future for the Niger Delta, because the NDDC is transforming this region and in no distant time we shall see a greater Niger Delta region. The inclusion of the young people in its development plans also means it is going to be sustainable,” Nwabuakwu said.

    He added: “We have not yet gotten to where we should be, but it doesn’t mean we are still curled up where we used to be. The tough situation we experience in the region can be conquered when all hands are on deck. It involves the coming together of government, major stakeholders and the youths as well. The youths will take the mantle some day. So, whatever issues or programmes we have should have their interest at heart.”

    For the former National President, Niger Delta Youth Movement (NDYM), Mr. Godspower Odenema, the programme was a welcome initiative as it had the potential of not only meaningfully engaging the Niger Delta’s jobless youths, but also giving impetus to the transformation agenda of the Federal Government.

    According to Odenema, “I am happy that the NDDC is making efforts to transform the Niger Delta into an economically prosperous, socially stable and politically peaceful region with this programme. The Niger Delta Volunteer service scheme will surely resolve many knotty problems inherent in the region.”

    The NDDC, he said, did very well by starting a programme that would take many youths off the streets. He further said that it would reduce the problem of youth restiveness in the region and promote stability and peace.

    Before the introduction of the Volunteer Service Scheme, the NDDC had intervened in several rural communities, where many less-privileged people were empowered through skill acquisition programmes. In some of these communities in Cross River State, the beneficiaries of the empowerment programmes were full of praises for the interventionist agency.

    One of the beneficiaries, Mrs. Christiana Eyamba, from Obanliku Local Government Area of the state, said the cassava grinding machine she received through the programme would boost her garri production. She said she had since longed for a grinding machine to enable her to process more cassava and produce garri in commercial quantity. “I needed it, because we plant plenty of cassava in our area; with this machine I can now employ people to help me to grind.

    Eyamba said that the skill acquisition programme and the starter packs given to them would go a long way in assisting the beneficiaries, because it would enable them to make more money and train their children in school. “We are going to produce garri in large quantity and we will sell to people from far and near; it will yield more money to us and the community,” she enthused.

    Another beneficiary, Mrs. Roseline Adie, from Ikom, said the programme which was organised by the NDDC with the aim of fighting poverty at the grassroots, was a good and progressive effort. She noted that the sewing machine she got from the commission would assist her to expand her business and take care of her family.

  • Couple gets twins after 15 years

    Couple gets twins after 15 years

    or over 15 years, Deaconess Peace Igunbor endured the agony of being called a barren woman. Her husband, Pastor Eghosa Igunbor, resisted several temptations and entreaties to get a second wife that would bear him children.

    Pastor Eghosa was almost referred to as an eunuch. He never thought a baby would still cry in their house.

    They were married in April 1998 and had looked forward to celebrating birth of their first child nine months later but nothing came.

    But recently, God blessed the couple with a twins boys after they underwent a fertility treatment popularly called IVF in a private clinic that combined scientific technology and prayers to assist couples overcome the stigma of remaining childless.

    Pastor Eghosa, in a chat with our reporter, said their problems were compounded when the wife had two miscarriages. He said their status as a childless couple was harrowing until they saw the face of God who blessed them with the baby boys.

    Eghosa stated that the problems made him to focus more on worshipping God and deepen his faith in God’s miracle as a member of the Church of God Mission where he was later ordained as a pastor and his wife, a deaconess.

    He said his faith in God was challenged as the devil created some challenging option of either going for other women or marrying another wife.

    His words: “But because of my position in the church and one who at one time of the other have cancelled others facing similar challenges, I held unto God believing that He will surely change my own story.”

    Deaconess Igunbor said it was a horrific period for her considering how the African society treats women who are childless.

    She said: “But I held unto God’s words in the bible which kept me busy in the church and did not have to sit down weeping in a corner or running all over the place in search of solutions.

    “However, seeing other pregnant women who carried their children to full term I often raise the question why I am not like them?”

  • Delta Rotary Club walks for polio eradication

    Delta Rotary Club walks for polio eradication

    The Zone 10 of Rotary Club in Delta State last weekend staged a Peace Walk as part of its ‘Kick-Out Polio’ campaign in Warri and other towns in the zone.

    The walk, which started at the Angle Park, went from Ogunu road, through the Airport Road to Peggy Hotel in the Oil City. It was led by the Assistant Governor, Zone 10, Mr Oak Ebere and President of Warri Rotary Club, Rotarian Bawo Oteri and dozens of other members of the club.

    Speaking with Niger Delta Report on the significance of the exercise, Oteri said Nigeria and two other countries – Afghanistan and Pakistan – are the only three countries in the world where there is still polio.

    “In Nigeria, about 99 per cent success has been recorded in the fight to eradicate polio. The significance of the Peace Walk is to create more awareness about polio and to encourage people to fight it until total eradication is achieved.

    “We also want to use the opportunity to charge stakeholders in the health sector, parents and everybody to lay more emphasis on polio eradication. It doesn’t take much to eradicate, just a simple and dedicated adherence to immunisation procedure is all that is required,” Oteri added.

    He said the exercise comprised members of the club in Warri, Effurun GRA, Ubeji, Ekpan and Orerokpe, which makes up the Zone 10 of District 9140.

    Speaking in the same vein, the Assistant Governor, Zone 10, Mr Oak Ebere, revealed that the exercise happened simultaneously in all the zones in the District 9140, comprising 11 states in the Southsouth and Southeast zones.

    “We are telling people of the effect of polio on children but if they are immunised with vaccines at the appropriate time, they will not be affected. That is the message. So, parents should ensure that their children are immunised to safeguard their future from polio.”

  • ‘Zoning has no anchor in Akwa Ibom’

    ‘Zoning has no anchor in Akwa Ibom’

    MmekAbasi Akpabio, a member of Umana Umana 2015 Media Team, speaks with Kazeem Ibrahym. He says there has never been zoning of governorship in Akwa Ibom State.

    Zoning,  Umana Umana and other aspirants from Uyo Senatorial District

    There has never been zoning in Akwa Ibom State in the real sense of the word. By this I mean in a way that can guarantee justice for all the constituent groups and even partisan groups in the state to the point of seriously addressing the issue of alleged, perceived or potential marginalisation. When we say zoning, on what basis are we calling for zoning? Is it on the basis of ethnic groups or sentorial district? How will zoning serve the cause of our unity? If it is going to be about ethnic groups, are all the groups equal in size and population? If on the basis of senatorial district, are all or each of our  senatorial districts homogeneous so that when one district,  like  Eket, has it (governorship), that sufices for all the interest groups that live there and ultimately eliminate all agitations and cries of marginalisation? I honestly do not think so. And two, the seeming hype about zoning is nothing but a desperate strategy orchestrated by a few aspirants and their supporters who really don’t have any serious thing to present to the electorate for consideration and possible endorsement. All that these people have on their CVs, is “it is our turn”. By not having something on their CV, I don’t mean educational qualification alone. What I am referring to is a total package of what an aspirant to a very high executive leadership should possess. Such endowments like unimpeachable integrity, unassailable intellect, humanness, connection with the people, patriotism, verbal prudence, personal comportment and discipline, and above all, the fear of God. Check well and you will notice that either all or most of these attributes are lacking amongst those howling zoning day and night. And as to whether zoning can threaten Umana’s bid, I can say that will never be because right from the very first building block of his political structure, he went for a pan-Akwa Ibom,  issue-based  foundation rather than a clannish strategy. And only Akwa Ibom people can hire anybody to serve them through the mechanism of that office. That is why in spite of all the empty noise about zoning, Umana’s camp is swelling by the dawn of  every day. Zoning could only have threatened Umana’s or any other person’s ambition if it was founded on truth. Instead this one  is built on falsehood without any historical, national constitutional, pragmatical or even expediential anchor.

    Compelling determinants

    On  account of the intensity of sponsored vociferous noise, ( some clear, some distorted) in the media, the respected former governor  (Obong Victor Attah) was only hinting that the noise will not be ignored but rather will be seriously examined to see if zoning as these proponents are demanding can really guarantee both immediate and strategic justice to our people. And you and I know that zoning can not guarantee balanced justice for all in Akwa Ibom State.  As you have rightly recollected his speech, you also got him emphasizing on “other compelling determinants” which are what the vast majority of our people are actually yearning for.

    Factors that will  influence PDP

    delegates

    Those evergreen factors in any political contest will remain an attraction to our distinguished delegates. For instance, the personality of the aspirants which encompasses issues ranging from their physical, intellectual cum mental fitness through their programmes for the people, to their specific track records in public service and to their relationship with the political class, a factor that will actually fetch the votes  during the general elections for the desired legitimacy. Our delegates will look for that man or woman who will hit the ground running, someone who already knows the system well and the system knows him. As you and I know, there is so much to be done. So many big and tough decisions to be taken just to better the conditions of our people and our state. So, our delegates will need someone who is more or less a master mariner for the envisaged voyage. The coming journey is not for just any rookie and our delegates are itching to defy every inducement to make that clear statement. And above all, as history has shown, our people being blue blood republicans have never failed to punish any politician who at any point in time uses our resources in an insensitive manner to suffocate us with more than excessive campaigns  just to show that you are in charge of our treasury. At least the 1993 Tofa debacle is still fresh in our minds. Not that the government at that time was bad but the campaigns mounted for the then NRC’s presidential candidate, Alhaji Bashir Tofa  by the state government at the time was perceived as bogus, suffocating, provocative, insensitive and wasteful. And our deeply discerning people responded with a resounding “No vote” just to punish our then governor, in spite of his fatherly disposition and immense popularity at the time. Governor Akpabio and his agents by seeking to label every leaf and tree in Akwa Ibom with Udom Emmanuel is treading a familiar ignoble path and will surely not escape the wrath of our delegates during the primaries.

    Free and transparent primaries     We need to send very credible leaders and statesmen of our great party to  lead the electoral teams from the national headquarters to conduct the primaries in the states. If it means our game-changing National Chairman going to beg a Gen. Babangida, a Senator David Mark or other people in that category  to lead the teams, he should please not spare the effort. Very credible people with discernible stakes in the country and who have names and track records to live for should lead and constitute the electoral teams.  People who have the character to spurn a N3b bribe because they have seen enough of God’s blessings that they only live each day seeking to please him alone. You don’t send a man or woman who perhaps has never seen the four walls of a government house before in his or her entire life and, therefore ,salivating for the opportunity to enter a government house and collect whatever is tossed his or her way to betray the party. The exercise should not be seen as an opportunity for money making by upstarts.  The security services should be under strict and clear instructions to maintain neutrality. And the conduct of the primaries at least at the governorship level should be beamed live on television for all within and outside Nigeria to see. That way, every aspirant and delegate will not have only answered his father’s name but will be seen to have done so. This is the kind of intra-party electoral procedure that will sure guarantee a post- nomination cohesion for any political party any day.

    However, that is only an interim procedure. A more enduring strategy will be for the PDP to adopt a policy of non-interference by incumbent governors, particularly those about to round off their second terms. All over the world, political parties field their incumbents who are statutorily eligible for elections. But the egregious situation is when a governor who has less than a year to end his full tenure now turns around to hold the party that had been so magnanimous to him to ransom by seeking to impose a successor. If the governor is eligible and he is actually recontesting, it makes sense for him to seek to position himself by seeking to have some leverage with the party. The PDP has to make a policy that reins in its outgoing governors and dissuade them from this decidedly objectionable path.

    This desire for imposition of successors by outgoing incumbents mostly at the state level has remained, perhaps,  the single most intractable problem of the party almost since inception. Yet the perennial ironic twist is that the very outgoing governor who is championing imposition today almost always returns either four or eight years later to complain against his successor’s attempt to also perpetrate the same evil of imposition. That way, the abberration mutates into a vicious cycle that always returns to haunt our party.

    Other parties beating PDP

    Show me one party that has the capacity of the PDP; none. In spread, in membership quality, in patriotic programmes, in ability to unite Nigerians, in structural strength and integrity, amongst other indices, our party is head and shoulders above others. So, for us in Akwa Ibom, especially within the Umana Okon Umana support base, we know no other party than PDP, which is our only home.

    Elders versus Akpabio

    These illustrous patriarchs who by the grace of God have seen it all are only discharging a sacred mandate that they owe us the younger generation and to posterity by standing up against a budding dictatorship. They are seeking to preserve the soul of Akwa Ibom by standing against an attempt by one man to enthone a pseudo dynasty in the state because these elders know that once you allow it to happen once, forget it. Whoever finds himself as a governor from then on will always seek to impose a successor. So, it is something that must not be allowed to happen. Assuming he, Akpabio from Essien Udim, is allowed to impose an Udom Emmanuel today from Onna, a different place from his today, what guarantee do we have that some others who will  come after Akpabio will not attempt to impose their children, brothers, sisters, etc? This is how seeds of degeneration and strife are sown in societies.

    The mood in the state

    Like a typical election approach, the mood is that of frenetic urgency with a mixed grill of tension, anxiety and excitement, especially within the political class. They are those of us who like we in Umana’s camp are so confident on account of the positive uniqueness of our candidate. Our man, Umana, represents the dream candidate, second to none. One compelling choice in an excellent field of politics and administration. A rare embodiment of the excelling marriage of experience, capacity and character. So for us, who are displaying this unique product for Akwa Ibom people to buy, we are doing so with relish and excitement being aware that God has given us and the rest of Akwa Ibom people this historic privilege to present the very best in our arsenal for the top job.

    Advice for Akpabio

    To many of us who come from Akwa Ibom State, there are at least three issues that he (Akpabio) has to come clean with in order to clear some doubts about his politics. Number one on the list is the Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala revelation or allegation that Akpabio has not spent up to one per cent of the consolidated financial accruals to the state on the all-important infrastructural sector. And the Honourable Minister had asked in apparent exasperation in the face of an obvious disappointment: “ Where is the money?” The second issue is that we are yet to know why he spent so much on his so-called Town Hall meetings just some months ago but refused to use those fractured and embarrassing fora to tell us about our trillions in  the last eight years and how he has been spending them in the face of massive crushing poverty in the land.  And the third is, what is the deal between him and Udom that he insists only Udom can succeed him no matter how resentful the people may be towards that idea? So, if I were Akpabio, I will urgently seek a reversal of roles and apologise to Akwa Ibom people on, at least, these three issues in order to guarantee my  smooth passage into the people’s hearts as their beloved and, most importantly, the pantheon of Akwa Ibom posterity. This is the path to statesmanship and ultimate canonisation.

  • Civil Defence trains private guards in Bayelsa

    Civil Defence trains private guards in Bayelsa

    Association of Private Guard Companies (APGC) in Bayelsa State is deep-neck in a profitable romance with the state command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC). The relationship has yielded its first fruit – the training and passing out of 102 private guards.

    The guards from different private guard companies were trained to confront different security challenges in their various duty posts.

    Commandant, NSCDC, Mr. Desmond Agu, said the security challenges facing the country should not be tackled alone by the  conventional security outfits.

    “These challenges cannot be tackled unilaterally by any security agency. It requires a synergy between different stakeholders and individuals. The importance of private guard companies cannot be ruled out”, he said.

    Agu who was represented at the event by his Second in Command, Deputy Commandant, Miebi Godwin, observed that the lager percentage of the trained personnel would be deployed in sensitive areas.

    The Deputy Commandant in charge of PVC, Mr. Ufondu Hyascient, said the private guards were sent to the corps for training by more than 27 companies. He reiterated that the training had prepared the beneficiaries to face the challenges facing the state and the nation.

    Chairman, APGC, Col. D.T. Brown (retd.) said it was the first time he would experience the passing out parade of guards trained by NSCDC. He said judging from their march pass, the guards had done very well.

    He heaped praises on the commandant and persons working with him. Describing Agu as a smart and intelligent man, he said the corps had developed beyond people’s expectation under his supervision.

    The owner of Pehek Security Services Ltd, Mr. Gesiye Ekade, was excited at the training. He said the training would help the company serve its clients better.

  • N20b Banana Farm tears Ogoni community apart

    N20b Banana Farm tears Ogoni community apart

    The youths, women and elders of Ueken, an Ogoni community in Tai Local Government Area of Rivers State are fuming over alleged diversion of funds paid for acquisition of their land for the N20bn banana plantation project. PRECIOUS DIKEWOHA, who visited the community, reports that the aggrieved landowners are threatening showdown with the traditional ruler and members of the council of chiefs over their role in the deal

    There was hardly a smiling face in Ueken community when Niger Delta Report visited the sleepy Ogoni town last Wednesday. The people were seething with anger and pain over the perceived act of betrayal by their leaders. The state government in August 2012 acquired their land for the Precious Banana Plantation project. The compensation money was reportedly paid to some elite and leaders of the community who, according to the people, diverted it into their own pockets. This has led to incessant protests and agitation among the youths of the community who have continued to disturb the operation of the Precious Banana Plantation Limited.

    “What we are saying is who is to be compensated is it the chiefs or the landlords? Who represented them on the agreement that led to the alleged payment of the first compensation to their community? How much was paid and if the government actually paid something to the chiefs, where is the people’s share as landlords of the acquired land? These are questions that Ueken community needs urgent answers from their leaders,” a leader of the community said.

    The people feel that some elite used their position to shortchange them.

    One protester told our reporter: “When the people were eager to hear a positive result from such representation, they saw nothing. The worst thing is that since then these elite have refused to fight for our rights, instead they are busy praising government and blocking every effort for the community to express their plight.”

    Chief Lucky Agbe, an aggrieved member of the Council of Chiefs, was overjoyed when he saw our reporter. He welcomed him and invited all the youths, women and elders who to meet with him to express their feelings. A town crier invited them to the village square where our reporter was properly briefed on the matter.

    The Chairman, Community Development Committee (CDC), Mr. Anthony Nubani, said the news was everywhere that government had compensated the community.

    “Everywhere you go, the people will tell you that government gave Ueken community billions of naira, but nobody in this community has collected kobo as compensation. We want to tell the world that our land was confiscated and till now we have not received anything. Government may claim to have given people money but we have not seen any money, we are the landlords,” he said.

    Nubani said it was wrong for the government to give money to a handful of chiefs to pay landlord, lamenting that the government acquired their land without due consultation, negotiation and a concrete agreement as to due process of acquisition of land in Nigeria.

    “The government connived with the Chiefs and Royal Highness of our community and grabbed our lands; they believed that lands in Ogoni belong to the chiefs and not the people.  But as far as I am concern land in Ogoni and other parts of Nigeria belong to the people and the people are members of specific families. The chief can be a member of a particular family and community but the chief cannot own the whole land in a community.

    “It is a fallacy for the chiefs, the paramount ruler of Ueken community to purportedly claim that land in Ogoni belongs to the chiefs. So on that basis we stand on our right. We have not signed any document with anybody either government or otherwise that our land should be sold or has been sold.”

    Nubani posited that the constitution and Land Use Act do not abolish the right of the indigenous people who own their land, adding: “It does not claim all the land of the indigenous people, the constitution did not state that either local government, state or Federal Government should not negotiate with people in any particular area where they have interest in the acquisition of land.”

    He said the people were prepared to confront the government and military over the land. He appealed to the international community and the National Human Rights Commission to wade into the perceived injustice being meted on the people. He said several letters to the Rivers State governor, the Rivers State House of Assembly and several petitions to the Inspector General of Police and the Commissioner of Agriculture have failed to give them justice.

    “What we heard was that the people whom government claimed to have given money went and tipped them and for whatever reason the investigation was stalled. We wrote a letter to the EFCC and they told us that we should go to the police whereas the police have failed in their bid to investigate the matter.

    “The National Human Rights Commission wrote to the EFCC acknowledging them of their role to investigate this case of fraud. All the documents in the course of this case are ready. Every ancestry rites of the Tai people came from Ueken. We remain the custodian of Tai culture and tradition and if Tai people will come out and lay false claim about Ueken people that all lands in Ogoni belongs to the government and the chiefs and not to the people, then it is an abomination and on that note we stand and continue to press forward that our rights and all payments due to Ueken people must be given to us.”

    Nevertheless, Nubani assured that the people would continue to be law-abiding and peaceful in their determination to get justice. He said when they protested and stopped work at the farm, there was no harm done to the workers, the plantation and any other person.  He said they merely remained there until the Caretaker Committee Chairman, Tai local government Hon. Mbaakponee Okpe came in with the, State Security Service (SSS) and Commander Internal Task Force and other security agents to address them

    “The chairman promised us that by the next day we will be having a meeting of all those involved in this deal at the Presidential Hotel and he has promised to ensure that justice is done to us. It is on this note we suspended the protest. After the meeting with the chairman if nothing is done  we will enter the farm and  clear the banana, we are waiting for Rivers State government to bring whatever arms available to destroy us. We are ready. On this Ueken land, we will die.”

    Agbe, who is at the forefront of this agitation, said he was attacked by members of the Council of Chiefs for backing his people.

    “First and foremost, I was the person that took this matter to court. I am a member of the council of chiefs. When I heard about this matter that the military are coming to survey our land, I mentioned it in the council. I did not receive any fruitful answer from the council and I kept asking but I didn’t get any answer from them.

    “We called on the paramount chief of this community to hold a stakeholders meeting and discuss what we’ve heard about the land. The answer we got was that he cannot hold such meeting for security reasons.  Until today, I do not know what he calls ‘security reasons’ when the citizens of Ueken community want to discuss issues that affect them and we cannot sit amicably and resolve it.”

    Agbe said when troops were moving into their farms, the people cried out.  He said the soldiers moved into the farms, beat up and drove out the landowners, a development that compelled him to file a case in the Federal High Court, on behalf of the people. He said he addressed the human rights conferences in Lagos and in Benin. The case was struck out because the court lacked jurisdiction to hear it.

    “Based on that we called on the Commissioner of Agriculture, but there was no fruitful reply.  We have about 30 to 40 cases in court to prove that there has never been anytime where the chiefs of this community sought the opinion of the masses because of their selfish interest.

    “They suspended me from the Council of Chiefs, accusing me of leaking out their secrets to the people. I told them to consider the poor. As you can see, many of us are not working. We are peasant farmers of about 3,000 in population. The land remaining for our population is not up to one-third of the land acquired for the banana plantation. It is the very place they surveyed that our people farmed last year. Even when the Managing Director of the banana plantation drove in to see the surveyed farm, he saw that our women were cultivating the farm. He was surprised because he was told that the site for the plantation was a forest where nobody has ever entered for cultivation.

    “Now we are appealing  for the matter to be addressed because it is getting out of hand. This year we are supposed to go there for farming but they said nobody should be found close to the farm if not they will kill us. But we are all going there to farm in between their banana stands, we will plant our crops and when it is time for harvest, we will also harvest our crops,” he vowed.

    Comrade Saturday Ntaadua, Vice Chairman of Ueken Youth, who led the recent protest, said, “What we are hearing is that they gave the money to some people in the community, but those that received the money  did not send any kobo to us. The money has not been paid to the rightful owners of the farmland. We will continue to protest until those who ate our money return it to us.”

    Comrade Joseph Nsua said the few elites took the advantage of the poor citizens of the community who are not enlightened to oppress them. “If you take the statistics of this community you will see that few of them are educated while majority are not. It is like what caused the industrial revolution in Europe, the peasant farmers land where confiscated and at the end of the day they were told you must work for the company or you leave and that led to revolution.”

    The National Coordinator of Ogoni Solidarity Forum (OSF), Mr. Celestine Akpobari, advised the state government to pay the aggrieved landowners. He said over 30,000 landowners have already lost their land. He regretted that the state government paid some traditional rulers for the land instead of the real owners.

    A Non-Governmental Organisation, Social Action, also urged the government to compensate the landlords and not the chiefs. The group’s Head of Communications, Vivian Bellonwu said: “The state government should explain how a commercial venture undertaken by a foreign investor had satisfied the interest of the people under the Land Use Act to warrant the alleged seizure of land without compensation. The Federal Government should enforce the Environmental Impact Assessment law of 1992 with regard to the proposed commercial banana plantation in Ogoniland.”

    Meanwhile, at the Presidential Hotel, Port Harcourt where Hon. Mbaakponee Okpe arranged for a peaceful meeting between the accused and the complainant, he told the Niger Delta Report that he would not discuss anything with the press concerning the lingering crisis of the Precious Banana Plantation. He also accused the people of Ueken community of complicating issues and making things difficult for him by inviting the press to the venue of the meeting.

    Chief Deede Fred, the head of Ueken community, who is accused of conniving with other chiefs in Ogoni land to divert the compensation money, commended our reporter for the effort he made to get his side of the story.  He promised to call back, but never did.

    When the reporter called him again his phone was unanswered. A text message sent to him with details of why he was making the call was un-replied. Two days later, the reporter called back, he picked the calls, but as soon as he identified himself as a journalist, Deede hung up.

    Commissioner for Agriculture Mr. Emma Chinda described the protesters as jokers. He explained that the government would always follow the normal procedure in land acquisition.

    He said the Amaechi administration did not seize land from members of the community, adding: “We do not owe anybody, and we did not seize any land from any landlord or community. This government has always put the people first before anything, the idea of banana plantation was not to intimidate anybody but for the economic development of Rivers people.”

  • Akwa Ibom communities beg Akpabio over Fulani herdsmen

    Akwa Ibom communities beg Akpabio over Fulani herdsmen

    Some communities near Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital,  have appealed to Governor Godswill Akpabio, the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon Samuel Ikon and the Commissioner of Police, Mr Gabriel Achong, to save them from Fulami herdsmen.

    They accused the herdsmen of destroying their farms.

    The communities also called on the House of Assembly to pass a law prohibiting Fulani herdsmen or any other person in the state from causing destruction to any other person’s legitimate business.

    The communities’ spokesman, Mr Andy Bassey Eyo, said the people of Ikot Abasi Idem, Ikot Eto and Ikot Ekwere are tired of suffering in silence from the activities of Fulani herdsmen.

    He said when confronted, the herdsmen usually tell them that the cows belong to ‘big politicians’ and ‘big people in government’, that they were only employees.

    Eyo said the contractor given the job to provide electricity in their communities abandoned it.

    He added that it is regrettable that Ikot Abasi Idem, which shares boundary with Shelter Afrique Extension, an estate where the high and mighty, has no access road. He appealed to Akpabio to rectify the situation.

  • Summit Hills: Calabar’s new hearbeat

    Summit Hills: Calabar’s new hearbeat

    It was conceptualised to draw much needed traffic into Calabar to boost the ailing Tinapa Resort as well every other areas of tourism in Cross River State. It was a vision of the governor, Senator Liyel Imoke, to build an economic engine in the area of the state’s advantage.

    However, beyond this, the Summit Hills Project, a 367 hectare real estate development in the state capital with kilometers of well-constructed roads, an international convention center, a 105-room specialist hospital, an 18-hole international golf course with clubhouse and a residential estate shows promises of the emergence of a new city within the city. Also there would be a monorail which would link the all these up with Tinapa.

    According to Mr Nzan Ogbe, the Client Representative of the Summit Hills Development Project, all of these would be ready by April next year and tested before the end of the present administration.

    The flagship however would be the 5, 000 capacity conference center. Roofing of one of three blocks at the Calabar International Convention Centre (CICC), a major step towards achieving a fully-insulated building, had recently been concluded.

    According to John Ameh, Deputy Project Manager of the CICC, the choice of roofing sheets was influenced by factors such as sustainability, efficiency, value for money and easy maintenance of the facility. The insulated sheets used are specially designed to prevent sound and heat transfer, reduce radiation, and resist humidity and water. Expressing confidence in the building contractors, Mr. Ameh stated that Bouygues Construction is committed to delivering a world-class facility that will be the envy of the whole of Africa.

    Mr Ola Salami, Senior Project Manager at Courtney Michael Partnership, further emphasised the importance of the building’s sound-proof design which would ensure events in adjoining rooms can be held simultaneously without any sound interference. He explained that the finishing will include installation of acoustic walls and that every mechanical component of the building will be acoustic, including the suspended ceiling and ventilation ducts.

    According to Ogbe, who is also the Special Adviser, Governor’s Office, the entire Summit Hills Project is a child of necessity.

    He explained, “To put it in context, the Summit Hills is a child of necessity. We came in as an administration in 2007 and struggled quite a bit with trying to crack the Tinapa debacle because some of the things that should have been in place were not in place at the time for no fault of the state government but the legislation to back the Tinapa development had not been obtained as well as a few other challenges. So we chased that for a while and at the end of it, we noticed that even after we got legislation there was inertia. Because after one year and a half, people who had shown interest in coming to be stakeholders and run business had of lost interest so what we needed to do was create a steady flow of traffic because that is the only challenge that Tinapa has as you can see the infrastructure is in place.

    “We observed that during December when we have the 32 day festival, Tinapa works because a lot of people that come use the parks, shop at the malls and so on. So it was working. It was down to numbers. So we thought of how we could ensure that we ensured traffic into Tinapa and ultimately into coming into the state all year round. We noticed that meetings, conferences and exhibitions had become a niche area where Cross River seemed to be attracting a lot of those. So the concept of the conference centre came up and as we searched for a location for where it should be, of course it had to be close to Tinapa, the governor pin pointed the particular location and we realised there was a lot of land around there.

    “So you have the conference centre and we felt that decision makers for where a conference would hold usually like to take time off to play golf. So we thought a golf course would be a good idea. We had a golf course in Calabar already but it is an old one and had some challenges with erosion. So the concept of the golf course came on stream. We also decided to move the city closer to Tinapa. So we partnered with UACN Property Development Company (UPDC) to come in and build accommodation. They came and did their assessment and saw there was need for it. With entrants of companies there is demand for accommodation. So to fill that gap, they have come in to fill that gap and it also fell as general plan.

    “There has always been a plan for the hospital anyway and so the hospital was also introduced. So you have a cluster here where could literally be termed to have built a city. It is almost self-sustaining in the sense that it has all that it needs and then it has the shopping and leisure right across the lake in the Tinapa side.

    “The monorail is yet another aspect or component of the development. The previous administration had procured tracks for a monorail project which was to run from Tinapa to the airport, a 12 km project. But for two reasons, one, because Tinapa did not kick off as planned it did not make sense to invest in a monorail and secondly, we could not afford it at the time. So because it had been ordered already, what the governor decided to do was to create a linkage between Tinapa and the conference centre.”

    The train will convey passengers over a kilometre across a lake between the CICC and Tinapa.

    Reginald Longdon, Project Manager of the Summit Hills project, said the centre would be linked that way so that visitors would not need to do a drive around to access Tinapa. The monorail, he said would also be a novelty which would attract more people to the facilities.

    “The monorail would be a special appeal, a novelty which on its own would draw people. It would multiply footprints into Tinapa,” Longdon said.

    According to the Commissioner for Special Projects, Mr Bassey Oqua, this modern transport system will be powered by electricity generated by an independent supply, to ensure sustainability. In addition, the power plant will serve Summit Hills.

    “By connecting Tinapa to the CICC, the monorail will make it convenient for delegates and organisers staying at the Tinapa Lakeside Hotel to attend conferences at the CICC, in style and with ease. And, during their free time, delegates can visit the shopping mall or water park at Tinapa Resort for a much-needed break. For very large conferences, the monorail will serve as a quick connection between the CICC and breakout meeting rooms across the lake at Tinapa,” he said.

    On the level of completion of the various components of the Summit Hills, Ogbe said: “For the monorail we are at 70 per cent completion because the tracks have been ordered and ready and should be completed by early next year. The conference centre is also about 70 per cent completed. Everything needed or it has been ordered. It is just to fix them. Completion has been scheduled for end of February next year. Of course they would do some testing, so I would say till March.

    “The golf course is about 85 per cent complete. The golf club house we started a bit late but that also would be finished by March. For the hospital we started much later. It is about 60 per cent. They are bungalows not storey buildings. The rest of it is really for the equipment to arrive and then be installed.

    “The golf estate is privately driven. We don’t have control over that. What they have done is start with some units, get response from the market and then ramp up. The golf course would be playable in January. The club house ready in March. So, the full golf course would be March. Same for conference centre. Same for the monorail. The hospital would be April. As I said the golf estate would be on demand. As people buy, they build.”

    He said they expected traffic of 1.7 million annually for the conference centre.

    “We would get a couple of months of testing before handing over to the next administration to ensure everything is working. We wish we could have finished earlier, but these are very big and intricate projects and they took a lot of planning and time to conceptualise and design. We tried to pick the very best of contractors. The buildings the quality is top class. We are building something all Nigerians would be proud of. We don’t have a purpose built conference facility in Nigeria. This would be the first and we hope it attract a lot more. As it is already we have some bookings. We have not even started full scale marketing. Tourism is one of the most impactful way of reaching everyone in the economy. Imagine a 2000 person conference; it would be a huge catalyst for growth. The Capetown Convention Centre changed the economy there significantly to the point where they get 20 million visitors per annum. We here are just targeting one per cent of our population which is about 1.7 million,” Ogbe said.