Category: Special Report

  • Corruption, security, health top talks as ministers settle down

    Minister of Interior Rauf Aregbesola on Thursday urged officers of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) to enhance internal security and embrace the spirit of transparency.

    Aregbesola spoke in Abuja during his familiarisation visit to the NIS headquarters.

    A statement issued by the spokesman of the NIS, Sunday James, reads: “On Thursday, 22nd August 2019, the Honourable Minister of Interior, Ogbeni Rauf Aribesola, made his maiden official visit to the Headquarters of the Nigeria Immigration Service where he charged the Service to enhance internal security, facilitate Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and imbibe the culture of transparency.

    “The Honourable Minister set out three main objectives for the Ministry of Interior under his watch based on the mandate given to him by President Muhammadu Buhari. These are Security, Economy and Transparency which he coded “SET”. Thus, he mandated agencies under him to improve security, economy and transparency in government business. He also expressed his commitment to making them “enhancers of internal security”.

    “He further disclosed that he was very impressed with the level of development he witnessed at the NIS. Some of these include the deployment of technology in the enhanced e-Passport, Technology Building, MIDAS and the Command Control Centre, where activities of NIS operatives at the borders are being coordinated. He thereby committed to supporting the NIS to achieve her mandate. According to him, he saw in the NIS ‘a Service that might be second to none in the sub-Sahara Africa in no distant time’.

    Read Also: Aregbesola tasks NSCDC on intelligence gathering

    “The Honourable Minister was earlier taken round facilities at the NIS Headquarters including the newly commissioned Migrant e-Registration Centre and the ongoing construction of Technology building after which he was briefed on the activities of the Service by the Comptroller General of Immigration Muhammad Babandede.

    “While briefing the honourable Minister, the CGI stated that NIS is an IT-driven agency that is committed to ensuring government business is done professionally.”

    Aregbesola, in a statement issued in Abuja by his Media Consultant, Mr Semiu Okanlawon, decried the internal insecurity bedevilling the country, the Minister said the Muhammadu Buhari government is open to more meaningful ideas that can help in the formulation of new policies in tackling all threats to internal security.

    He said: “We appeal to all of you with ideas. Nobody is a repository of ideas because nobody has the whole ideas on earth. We are appealing to you to share ideas, opinions, suggestions and strategies that can help us to remove, reduce and eliminate all the security threats facing our nation.

    “Besides the fact that the primary objective of every government is the security of lives and property as well as the welfare of the citizens, these can only be guaranteed if and when there are safety and security in the land.”

    Also, Minister of State for Health Olorunnimbe Mamora said the ministry would curb medical tourism and child mortality.

    Mamora also said the ministry would re-invigorate the structures on the ground and address the intra-profession rivalry among the health professionals in the country.

    Speaking to reporters during a reception held for him in Abuja, the minister stated that the new administration in the health ministry would continue from where the former minister stopped.

    He said: “Definitely, we have to do that (curb medical tourism) because we are complaining of not having enough foreign exchange and then the little we have; we are taking them for medical tourism.

    “We need to do things differently by way of reinvigorating the structures we have here. For example, there is what I call the minimum, which we need to put in place. We have good doctors, good health professionals.”

  • Science and Technology budget estimates ‘ready in two weeks’

    MINISTER of Science and Technology Dr Ogbonnaya Onu have urged staff of his ministry to ensure they make the budget estimates ready in the next two weeks.

    He said this would make for a hitch-free budget defence before the National Assembly and in line with the Presidential directives to return the budget to January-December fiscal year.

    He also said the new policy framework in the Ministry would be in line with the Presidential directives of diversifying the economy, grow the economy, and fight corruption and insecurity.

    Dr. Onu spoke yesterday in Abuja during a welcome address to staff of the ministry. Head press and public relations of the ministry AbdulGaniyu Aminu stated this in a statement.

    The statement reads: “The Minister of science and Technology Dr.Ognonnaya Onu says the 2020 budget of the Ministry would be ready by September in line with Presidential directives to return the budget to January-December fiscal year meeting.

    “Onu also said that the new policy framework in the Ministry would be in line with the Presidential directives of diversifying the economy, grow the economy, and fight corruption and insecurity.

    Read Also: Agba, Keyamo, Onu, Ehanire, Agba take oaths

    “In view of this, the Minister said his Ministry will endeavour to get its budget estimates ready so as to have a hitch free budget defence before the National Assembly.

    “He further stressed that the budget for the Ministry and Agencies should be ready before two weeks. “It is the most important priority for now” he added.

    “The function of the Ministry and its Agencies he added would be streamlined so as to avoid over-lap of duties

    “Onu also stressed that he will work harmoniously with the Minister of state in order to achieve a good result for the best interest of the country.

    “The Minister charged the management to brace up for more work and demanded for their support and cooperation to take the Ministry to greater height.

    “Dr.Onu commended the Permanent Secretary, Mr Bitrus Bako, Directors of the Ministry and DGS of the Agencies for handling the affairs of the Ministry.

    “Earlier, The Permanent Secretary Mr.Bitrus Bako said the inauguration of the cabinet is special for the Ministry because for a very long time the Ministry has not had a Minister of state.”

    Minister for Health Dr. Osagie Ehanire and Minister of State for Health Dr. Adeleke Olorunbe assumed office yesterday shortly after their inauguration by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Ehanire said the rivalry among health professionals would be tackled. The ministry, he said, will execute the health programme of the president, which, according to him, is to improve quality of health care in the country.

    He said he would do everything possible to expand the Universal Health Coverage in the country. The minister said: “Health care is a team event. It is not a solo event so everybody is important in the system. So we need to get that. Then of course there are some what I call irreducible minimum that we need to just address in our health institutions for example we will be looking at water supply. How can you have health institution when you cannot guarantee water supply on a regular and continual basis. We are looking at the issue of energy. The issue of stable power is important in any health institution.

    “You must also appreciate the fact that it is not all the time you just throw money at challenges. You must look at changing certain things and then we can still achieve result “Then of course we need to work with other agencies and ministries. Water supply is key. You see one of the things that we were thought in medical school is that common things occur commonly, you talk of cholera, you talk of diarrhoea Diseases, they usual come from poor water supply. So if we can get ministry of water supply to assist. So these are some of the issues.”

  • Malami: what Buhari told me about justice ministry

    MINISTER of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Abubakar Malami (SAN), on Wednesday told staff of the Ministry of Justice  that President Muhammadu Buhari confided in him that he was happy with the ministry’s achievement in his first term in office.

    Malami, who described his reappointment as his second home coming to the ministry, urged the staff to rededicate themselves to the service of fatherland, because there is more work to be done in this administration’s quest to grow the country.

    Malami spoke during a brief reception held in his honour by some senior staff of the Federal Ministry of Justice at the ministry’s conference room.

    He said: “The fact that I am, at the pleasure of the President, reconsidered for reappointment as the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) is, indeed, an endorsement of our collective contribution to the development of this nation.

    “Shortly after inauguration, Mr. President invited me exclusively and further reiterated that he was happy with what the Ministry of Justice has done and encouraged us to do more in driving the policies of this government. “

    Malami said he planned to unveil the ministry’s agenda today. He said the agenda would be tailored towards supporting the President’s agenda for the country’s development.

    He said praised the staff for the warm reception accorded him and urged them to accord him the type of support given him during his first appointment.

    Read Also: Malami: Harvest of controversies, achievements

    “Arising from that, we have a collective responsibility to work as a family. I do not claim perfection, but I believe in accessibility.

    “I will continue to make myself accessible to all and will be opened to meaningful contributions and suggestions that will advance the interest of the nation, our collective interest in the service of the nation and our collective welfare in the pursuit of the common goal, which is the development of the nation,” Malami said.

    While welcoming Malabi back to the ministry, Permanent Secretary and Solicitor General of the Federation (SGF), Dayo Apata said the staff were pleased to have him back to the ministry in his second coming.

    Apata assured Malami of the support and cooperation of the staff.

  • Promises of new dawn as ministers resume

    Ministers on Wednesday made promises of better times ahead. From communications to health, information and culture, finance, justice and others, ministers begged their officials and staff for cooperation to achieve the Next Level agenda.

    Minister of Communications Dr Isa Ali Pantami urged officials of the ministry to work with him to meet the target handed over to them by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The Permanent Secretary in the Ministry, Mr Musa Istifanus, announced that by October, the Ministry would adopt the use of electronic files in its businesses

    According to Dr Pantami, Buhari had set a target for the ministry to lift 50 million Nigerians out of poverty in the next few years by leveraging on the vast opportunities in the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) sector.

    The minister said all hands must be on deck to  explore the various opportunities and potentials in the ICT industry to address the challenges confronting the nation, stressing that government circular and policy directives that have been shelved by the ministry would be picked up for implementation.

    Dr Pantami, who spoke on assumption of duty at the Federal Secretariat, Abuja, said he would not tolerate any form of division within the ranks and file as well as senior officials of the ministry.

    The minister said: “Challenges facing Nigeria are well known to all of us. I do not need to itemize them. However, we know the role ICT can play to reduce these challenges significantly. I am therefore urging every one of you to sit up and work.

    “I agree with the Permanent Secretary on the directive given by Mr President that we must lift 50 million Nigerians out of poverty in the next few years. It is our duty to do so. And I believe we can achieve this target. There are lots of challenges in the ICT sector, and there are lots of opportunities as well. Therefore, we will do our best to live up to the expectations of the president.

    “The agencies under the Ministry of Communications will be motivated to deliver on their mandates. And individuals who perform their duties optimally will be recognised and rewarded. But if you fail to perform, we will perform our own responsibility by rewarding you appropriately”

     

    Labour and Employment

    Minister of Labour and Employment Senator Chris Ngige assured workers that the controversy over the implementation of the new national minimum wage would soon be laid to rest. He added that the government was committed to ensuring that workers begin to enjoy the new wage.

    Ngige also said he refused to register the united Labour Congress as a labour federation in his first coming to the ministry because they have not met the legal requirement of having 12 brand new labour unions.

    He told reporters at his residence shortly after being sworn in by the President: “I am coming in with experience. We have been there for three and half years. The President evaluated our efforts and felt that we should return there. That does not mean that we are going back there to sleep or go and be making merry.

    “We have so many outstanding issues to be addressed, some of them urgently too. As we speak, SSANU, NASU are on strike and the university system is not bubbling, but going comatose. So, we have to address that issue urgently.

    “We also have the issue of minimum wage consequential adjustment. My Permanent Secretary is handling it and they have made some progress. By tomorrow, we will get the hand over note from him and myself and the Minister of State will study it and know to key in.”

     

    Interior

    Minister of Interior Rauf Aregbesola has promised “a realistic, reasonable and commendable leadership”.

    He spoke when he visited the ministry shortly after he was inaugurated and assigned portfolio alongside other ministers by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Aregbesola instructed Georgina Ehuriah, the Permanent Secretary of the ministry, who had been in charge since the dissolution of the last cabinet, to continue running the ministry until Monday when he would take over.

    “I will come to take over on Monday. I give the Permanent Secretary the grace to run the ministry till then. We will be ready by Monday to take on the huge assignment,” the former Osun State governor said.

    The Permanent Secretary welcomed the minister, adding that the ministry needed a focus person like him to lead it because of its strategic position in the security architecture of the country.

    She said the proper handing over ceremony would take place on Monday.

     

    Information and Culture

    Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed has urged the management and staff of the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture to double their efforts.

    Mohammed, who spoke at the inaugural meeting with the Permanent Secretary and directors of the ministry shortly after assumption of office shortly after the inauguration of the new cabinet by President Muhammadu Buhari, stressed the importance of hard work, saying that his reappointment was as a result of the confidence reposed in him by the president.

    He urged the management and senior staff of the ministries to work harder to justify the confidence of the President.

    Mohammed said he would continue to work very closely with the Permanent Secretary and the directors in order to implement the core mandate of the ministry.

    “There must be synergy between the Minister and the Permanent Secretary and I must say that I have enjoyed very cordial working relationship with my Permanent Secretary, and I am very glad that that relationship contributed in no small measure to the moderate success we achieved. We need your cooperation because we can’t do it alone,’’ he said.

    The Permanent Secretary, Deaconess Grace Isu-Gekpe, expressed delight at the reappointment of Alhaji Mohammed and pledged the readiness of the management and staff of the ministry to support and cooperate with the minister to enable him to achieve his mandate.

     

    Mines and Steel Development

    Minister of Mines and Steel Development Olamilekan Adegbite said that he intends to learn from his predecessor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi.

    He said he had followed the progress of Fayemi as a minister and believes that he did a lot in the sector.

    Adegbite spoke on Wednesday in Abuja when he interacted with members and staff of the ministry.

    He also said that he and his colleague would work hard to fulfil President Buhari’s promise of lifting 100 million Nigerians out of poverty in10years and believe that at least 35 per cent of the total number can be achieved in the remaining of years of the administration.

    The Minister of state, for Mines and Steel Development Dr. Uchechukwu Ogah, said they were determined to change the narrative of the ministry.

    He said: “For us here, we are determined to change the narrative of this ministry and we cannot do it alone, we want to have all the maximum support that you and give to us, we will work as a team with the Permanent Secretary to make sure this ministry becomes an enviable ministry.”

  • Agenda for new ministers

    Today, new ministers will take office amid huge challenges in every sector of the country’s life. SIMEON EBULU, RAYMOND MORDI, JOSEPH JIBUEZE, BOLA OLAJUWON, ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE, ADEYINKA ADEDIPE, DANIEL ESSIET and ROBERT EGBE set agenda for President Muhammadu Buhari and his men.

     

    ECONOMY

    After the inauguration of the Federal Executive Council (FEC), attention will focus on how the Federal Government will tackle the poor state of the nation’s economy.

    Challenges, such as unemployment, insecurity and growing social malaise, have been attributed to the failure of the government to engage the people in productive activities.

    Nigeria’s economy is largely monolithic, the reason being that there is complete dominance of crude oil as the major contributor to the nation’s purse or revenue. Sadly, only very few hands, in terms of the labour force are engaged in the sector. So why oil contributes hugely to government’s revenue profile (about 85 per cent), its contribution to the GDP is considered abysmally low at less than 10 per cent, which is why there have been agitations and promptings from the business community and the private sector that government should begin, in a much more focused and consistent basis, to shift emphasis to diversification so that there would be more sectors, other than oil that should contribute to the GDP.

    And this process of diversifying the economy is not a steep step to take, but sadly, the system has made it looked like it’s an uphill task.

    Before the advent of oil, Nigeria earned most of its foreign exchange from agro-based sources. We had and still have cocoa, palm oil, groundnut and other minerals that constituted the basis upon which the level of infrastructural development the country attained unto was achieved. Unfortunately, oil discovery changed the equation and turned Nigeria to nearly a one resource revenue earner country.

    This should not be and should not be allowed to continue. The task of diversifying the economic base of this nation away from its reliance on oil as sole revenue earner is what every incoming minister must address their mind, starting from today. There should be no excuse to continue to fritter the nation’s oil revenue, going forward on debt servicing, bloated recurrent expenditures, medical tourism, bogus politicking in the guise of democracy and the seemingly unending restiveness now challenging the nation’s security apparatus and infrastructure.

    The areas that should immediately arrest government’s attention right now, among others, are food security, job creation, electricity, roads and railways, provision of affordable healthcare, education and with particular reference to Lagos, a resolution of the Apapa Road gridlock. The continued existence of these challenges, among others, have held back and stalled the growth of the nation’s economy by several decades, and sadly, the authorities that be, both past and current have somewhat handled the issues as though they are insurmountable. Most policies are not followed through, the fisticuffs are too many. There appears to be no continuity, no government is prepared to inherit and absorb the policies of its predecessor, which is why abandoned projects are prevalent everywhere. The absence of the culture of building blocks is the reason Nigeria does not have a National Carrier today, no shipping line. It is also the reason why there are dysfunctional refineries. It is the same reason Ajaokuta Steel Company is grounded. Talk of the then vibrant Delta Steel Company and the Iwopin Paper Mill.

    Nigeria has over 13,000megawatts installed capacity of power generation plants, but most of that is sitting in situ because the recurring excuses of no gas to fire them remain unresolved. Nigeria is the only oil-producing nation in the world that imports refined petroleum products.

    All these anomalies must be corrected by those who will manage the economy.

     

    ANTI-CORRUPTION

    The fight against corruption is one of the key agenda of the Buhari administration. Some successes have been recorded, such as huge asset recoveries and return, and prosecution/conviction of high profile corruption suspects and politically exposed persons (PEPs).

    However, there is a need to strengthen the anti-graft agencies for effective prosecution.

    Most prosecutors carry a workload that, because of its excessive size or complexity, interferes with quality prosecution and attention to detail.

    It is not unusual to see prosecuting counsel shuttling from one court to another. In some instances, cases have been adjourned or stalled due to the absence of a prosecutor.

    Such a situation endangers the interests of justice in fairness, accuracy, the timely disposition of charges, or has a significant potential to lead to the breach of professional obligations.

    The incoming AGF must ensure that the workload of prosecutors does not cause inefficiency. Prosecutors should be encouraged to not accept additional matters until their workload is reduced, and should work to ensure the competent conclusion of existing cases.

    The AGF should regularly interface with prosecutors and review their cases.

    He should ensure there are clear lines of communication so that he can be notified when the workload exceeds the appropriate professional capacity of a prosecutor or prosecutor’s office.

    A reasonable workload for prosecutors will ensure they can operate within the day-to-day trial requirements of Section 396 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015.

    Rule of law advisor to the President, Office of the Vice President, Dr Fatima Waziri-Azi, believes there is a need for more prosecutors.

    “Appointment of more prosecutors would help minimise the caseload on individual prosecutors,” she said.

    Good cases can be lost due to weak prosecution. Judges cannot convict when a prosecutor is unable to prove cases beyond reasonable doubts.

    With some crime, such as money laundering, becoming more advanced and complicated, prosecutors need to be abreast of developments to be able to guide investigators on what to look out for.

    Poor knowledge of information technology is also a challenge. Some investigators are said to lack basic computer skills and cannot type their investigative reports.

    The AGF is expected to strengthen programs of training and continuing education for both new and experienced prosecutors, investigators and staff.

    In addition to knowledge of substantive legal doctrine and courtroom procedures, a prosecutor’s core training curriculum should address the overall mission of the criminal justice system.

    Expert say a core training curriculum should seek to address investigation, negotiation/plea bargaining, litigation skills; knowledge of the development, use, and testing of forensic evidence; available conviction and sentencing alternatives; civility, commitment to professionalism; exercises in the use of prosecutorial discretion; available technology and the ability to use it, etc.

    The AGF should ensure that specialised prosecutors receive training in their specialised areas, including for supervisors.

    Experts believe that funding remains a major criminal justice delivery challenge.

    The AGF should push for increased funding for the anti-corruption sector, either through advocacy for more budgetary allocation or through donor funding.

    For instance, it takes money to bring witnesses to a court or to transfer suspects from prison to court. In some instances, there are not enough vehicles.

    Due to paucity of funds, prosecutors from the Federal Ministry of Justice are often compelled to spend from their purse to mobilise witnesses to court and prosecute cases.

    Underscoring the need for effective investigation, Federal Justice Sector Reform Co-ordinating Committee (FJSRCC) Secretary, Felix Ota-Okojie, said the gap between investigation and prosecution that must be filled.

    According to a criminal justice expert, Omolola Quadri, there is the need for anti-graft agencies to be truly independent in their operations, in powers granted them through legislation, and in funding.

    According to her, investigating high profile corruption is not only time-consuming but capital intensive.

    Such cases, she said, require varied expertise in gathering evidence by persons skilled in criminology, finance, economy, technology, money laundering and forensics.

    One of the major challenges faced by investigators is the use of outdated methods. Other challenges include undue interference from superiors, lack of a reliable database and lack of incentives.

    Investigators also need better protection so that they are not victimised for sticking to principles or for refusing to call off an investigation they believe has merit.

    With their lives at risk, the AGF must ensure that comprehensive life insurance is provided for investigators.

    The AGF must ensure strict monitoring of how money budgeted for investigations is applied, even as there is the need for independent funding of investigations if possible.

    The AGF must ensure that the fight against corruption is not selective. It must be seen to be fair and not targeted at only opposition figures. The AGF must not abuse his power of nolle prosequi (the power to terminate criminal proceedings before judgment).

    Sincerity in the fight will address the issue of lack of cooperation by the public. Observers believe the fight against corruption is seen as that of the government alone. Due to the lack of trust and fear of victimisation, many are afraid to report acts of corruption.

    The AGF should create awareness on modes of confidential reporting and create or strengthen whistle-blowing mechanisms.

    The inter-agency rivalry has been identified as a major problem. There have been instances of sister agencies withholding crucial intelligence because they do not want to be outshined.

    Anti-graft agencies also tend to work at cross-purposes. An example was when the Department of State Service (DSS) operatives raided the homes of judges, without carrying the Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) along. The AGF must ensure that all anti-graft agencies are on the same page.

    The AGF must ensure that investigators who achieve great feats are commended and adequately rewarded or promoted to boost morale.

    Investigators must also be well paid to reduce the temptation of being swayed by money. The AGF must tackle corruption within anti-graft agencies. Every effort must be made to weed out corrupt elements.

    Justice sector watchers say the war against corruption would be more successful if anti-graft agencies were truly independent, accountable and well-funded, and backed by political will. The AGF has a critical role to play in making it happen.

     

    TRANSPORTATION

    President Buhari has just this one term to berth a sustainable national transportation masterplan and the minister of transportation is in the best position to achieve that. One of the assignments still on the to-do tray of former Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi is the berthing of a national Transportation Policy.

    Not a few experts and stakeholders wanted the new minister to prioritise it.

    For 59 years, Nigeria has continued to totter as a country, with no policy direction to guide a sector that is said to the catalyst of the nation’s economy. The result, the transportation sector has been left in the hands of quacks with the sector contributing a paltry four per cent to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), its highest, in 2016.

    Amaechi had once demonstrated the will to get this done. He once told reporters, that the Federal Government is “developing a national transportation master plan to diversify the economy and improve non-oil sector revenue.

    If properly positioned, the transport sector, he reasoned, could contribute more than it presently does to GDP.

    He listed the problems of the transport sector to include bad roads, total or near absence of public sector transportation, inadequate bus fleet and trucks, the proliferation of non-approved public transportation modes such as motorcycles and tricycles, irregular and inadequate trains and aeroplanes services and congested seaports.

    In addition to these, are human problems such as the dearth of suitably trained transport managers and planners, capital restructuring bottlenecks, serious issues of institutional reforms and ineffective traffic regulation.

    “The Buhari administration as a first step, he assured, will pursue the enactment of legislation that will open up the sector to new investment in its determination to fully exploit the potentials of the transport sector.

    A transportation consultant for over four decades Dr Adegboyega Banjo said, Amaechi’s position is hardly new. He challenged the incoming minister to prioritise the masterplan.

    “Nigeria,” he said, “has been tinkering with a transportation master plan since 1974. The saddening part is that, while we keep on talking about developing a masterplan after 59 years of independence, some countries that were nowhere when we started the talks, 45 years ago, have copied what we discussed then, and have implemented them.”

    Like a national economic rolling plan, experts said the nation ought to have begun the implementation of a transportation master plan long before now, adding that the absence of the policy had been responsible for the uncoordinated growth of the transportation sector where much of the potentials have remained stunted while the gains have been cornered by a few.

    Banjo and other stakeholders believed with its 200 million population, badly needed a masterplan and a policy to guide transportation planning. Such a policy would guide the national and sub-national government’s plans and interventions in the sector.

    The new minister, stakeholders argued, should merely update those policy documents gathering dust in the ministry’s archives to be in sync with present global transportation realities and implement.

    They argued the policy should guide government’s spending on transportation systems, arguing that such would promote the intermodal linkages badly needed to address congestion on the road mode and allow the maximisation of other modes in which the nation and its federating states have a comparative advantage.

     

    The new challenge

    According to transportation experts, a transportation masterplan that would address the nation’s status as the biggest economy on the African continent is primal, especially now that the government is thinking of developing other critical sectors and moving away from oil as the mainstay of the economy.

    In a changing global economy where travel demands and meeting passenger needs are becoming increasingly complex, new avenues must be developed if the sector must meet the need and remain relevant.

    Chief Executive of the Lagos State Vehicle Inspection Service (VIS) Hafiz Toriola said an integrated master plan that includes all modes of transportation, especially land, water and air, must be pursued strenuously if the nation is to be taken seriously.

    He also canvassed for the full involvement of all the 36 states of the federation in designing individual templates of a masterplan that suits their environment, while the federal government set the rules of integration and facilitates and coordinates inter-state involvement.

    For Mr Michael Olatunji, a logistics expert, said transportation master plan is what the country badly needs, and urged the Buhari administration to take the bull by the horn and implement it.

    SPORTS DEVELOPMENT

    The return of the National Sports Commission (NSC) should be a top priority for the incoming minister. Nigeria has accomplished a lot of success under the NSC arrangement and it will be a welcome development to see the country return to a system that has brought so much verve into the sector.

    The bill to return the NSC is already with the National Assembly and when passed can lead to a resurgence in the sports sector. With this in mind, the minister should work closely with the National Assembly to ensure the bill is passed into law so that technocrats and not bureaucrats are put in charge of sports development in the country.

    The technocrats, on the other hand, should draw up policies that will ensure that the grassroots (including the schools) become the catalyst for sports development in the country. Sports should be introduced to pupils in school so that they can imbibe the rudiment at an early age and become adept in their various sports before they are now introduced to the states who will now nurture them for competitions.

    By the time they do well at the states level, they will be invited to the national level where they will undergo further training and are prepared for international competitions. Those who excel at this level are wooed by top corporate organisations who give them mouth-watering sponsorship that would help them develop further.

    Provision and maintenance of facilities is also a key component of sports so the minister must ensure that facilities are available for the athletes to train. It is a fact that talents abound in the country but they need top-class facilities to develop their skill. The government and the state and federal levels should endeavour to build these facilities and ensure that they are maintained and not allowed to rot like it is presently obtained.

    Also, there should be competitions for the athletes to take part at all levels so that they can be monitored and brought into the national limelight. Competitions like the Principal Cup and many others in different sports should be instituted and enduring. The more competitions there are, the better for the athletes and by extension the country.

    There should also be a system that will ensure that funds are readily available to drive different programmes in the sector. The days of going cap-in-hand to the government should be brought to an end. Sponsors should be encouraged to come into sports by giving them tax rebates. It is appalling to see sports federations suffer because there is no avenue to source for funds and carry out their programmes. The government, in turn, will only give financial support when necessary.

    Talking about grants, the national athletes who meet certain criteria should be given grants to train for international competitions. The era of the fire-brigade approach should come to an end under the new dispensation. Athletes should train ahead for programmes as it will help boost their chances of winning a medal for the country but they can only achieve this if funds are made available on time.

    The emphasis on football should also be minimised. While football is the king of sports in this clime, it can only win a medal at multi-sports event, so there is the need for the minster to avoid the pitfall of becoming a Minister of football at the expense of other sports that are also begging for attention. All sports are medal prospect at the international competition if given the right attention.

    After appointing technocrats the new man should give them free hands to operate but must establish a monitoring system that will ensure that they (the technocrats) do their jobs within the rules of the NSC.

    FOREIGN AFFAIRS

    On gaining independence in 1960, Nigeria emphasized a commitment to improving the lives of its people and harnessing the resources vital to the economy of the country and her neighbours.

    Nigeria then became one of the founding members of the Organisation for African Unity (OAU), which later became the African Union (AU). The OAU was concerned about the political stability of African countries.

    Nigeria thereafter backed the African National Congress (ANC) by taking a tough line about the South African government and their military actions in southern Africa.

    When civil war broke out in Angola after the country gained independence from Portugal in 1975, Nigeria mobilised its diplomatic influence in support of the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA). The support helped tip the balance in their favour, which led to OAU’s recognition of the MPLA over the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola.

    Nigeria and the OAU had tremendous influence in West Africa nations and Africa as a whole – through the influence became antagonistic to Nigeria, especially in some French-and Portuguese -speaking countries.

    But still, Nigeria kept on pursuing its African centric and focused policy by additionally promoting regional cooperative efforts in West Africa, functioning as the major financier of Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and championing the establishment of ECOMOG, others economic and military organisations at a great human, financial and diplomatic cost.

    Nigeria played a central role in the ECOWAS efforts to end the civil war in Liberia and contributed the bulk of the ECOWAS peacekeeping forces sent there in 1990. Nigeria also has provided the bulk of troops for ECOMOG forces in Sierra Leone.

    But the question is: must this ‘Father Christmas’ policy continue? Since the international system is fluid, it is believed national interests must take the centre in international relations. Therefore, there must not be permanent friends but permanent interests.

    Many foreign analysts have stressed the need for the Federal Government to jettison the utopian policy of the big brother of Africa. Others have also argued the need for Nigeria to get something tangible for putting so much into freeing the continent from colonialism with little in return for such efforts. Many of such concerned experts mentioned Nigeria’s contributions to freeing Southern African countries from colonialism. Ironically, scores of Nigerians have been killed in xenophobic attacks in South Africa without Nigeria taking drastic action, except condemnation of such killings by the Chairman, Nigerian Diaspora Commission Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa as well as her subtle diplomacy. As of the last count, about 127 Nigerians had been murdered in that country in the past few years.

    On June 13, the Deputy Director-General of the Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria, Mrs Elizabeth Ndubuisi-Chukwu, was killed in her hotel room in South Africa.

    Just a few days ago, a former minister Dubem Onyia, said Nigeria has no Foreign Policy.

    However, the coming on board of the immediate past Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, as a ministerial nominee made analysts believe that he might return to his erstwhile office.

    Onyeama, as the nation’s chief diplomat for over three years, was able to push many Nigerian representatives into various world organisations, including the United Nations Human Rights Council, Governing Body of the International Labour Organisation, the UN Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations, and the UN World Tourism Organisation.

    But still, diplomatic arena watchers argued that Onyeama’s tenure did not impact on the international profile of the nation going by the continued xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in many parts of the world. The minister, others argued, performed impressively on the international scene during his tenure.

    Many of the 110 Nigerian missions and embassies abroad are still a national embarrassment despite promises of reforms and rationalisation. They are still groaning under financial difficulties.

    Some of them have reportedly not paid salaries for months and owe huge debts. As part of its cost-saving measures, the Federal Government ordered the closure of three of Nigeria’s foreign missions and down-sized one. The closed missions were in Sri Lanka, the Czech Republic and the Republic of Serbia. The one in Ukraine was downsized.

    Nigerian embassies and consulates do not render their duties to Nigerians abroad. To procure a common passport when one is in dire need is a problem.

    The country’s missions do not follow up on the cases affecting Nigerians abroad and many compatriots are languishing in jails without legal representation. A British court’s ruling affirming that Nigeria owes and should pay a foreign firm $9 billion (about N3.2 trillion) is currently generating concerns.

     

     AGRICULTURE

    Nigeria’s food security depends on producing cereal crops, as well as increasing its production of fruits, vegetables and livestock to meet the demands of a growing population with rising incomes. Stakeholders expect the new Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development to take measures to create a productive, competitive, diversified and sustainable agricultural sector.

    While agriculture’s share in Nigeria’s economy has risen gradually in the last eight years, enough has not been done to boost overall contribution to the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP). Agriculture still contributes about 30 per cent to the GDP but provides a direct livelihood to two-thirds of its population.

    Stakeholders expect the Minister of Agriculture to present a proposal for a productive, competitive, diversified and sustainable agricultural sector that will increase Nigeria’s production of fruits, vegetables and livestock to meet the demands of a growing population with rising incomes.

    They expect the new minister to present a comprehensive proposal for a progressive overhaul of the sector.

    The Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) in May this year,  unveiled a new five-year strategic programming cycle, to assist the Federal Government to develop the agriculture sector and ensure efficient management of the country’s natural resources.

    The Country Programming Framework for Nigeria (CPF) 2018-2022, outlines five priority areas to assist in the implementation of the nation’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP). It also spells out a set of medium-term support objectives and results as approved by the FAO Regional Office for Africa (RAF).

    Under the CPF 2018 – 2022, FAO will bring together innovative, international best practices and global standards with national and international expertise during the five years. The priority areas include: Strengthening national food and nutrition security through enhanced nutrition-sensitive and climate-smart food systems; supporting appropriate and operationally effective agricultural policy and regulatory frameworks; supporting Nigeria’s Economic Diversification Agenda and the promotion of decent employment for youth and women in the agriculture value chains; improving the management of natural resources and ecosystems; and enhancing disaster risk reduction, resilience building and emergency management towards strengthening the Humanitarian-Development Nexus.

    Stakeholders observed that supporting farmers to diversify to higher-value commodities will be a significant factor for higher agricultural growth.

    The President, Federation of Agricultural Commodities Association of Nigeria (FACAN), Dr Victor Iyama, believes the considerable potential exists for expanding agro-processing and building competitive value chains for local and export markets.

    While diversification initiatives should be left to farmers and entrepreneurs, he thought the Government can partner with the private sector to liberalise constraints to marketing, transport, export and processing.

    Agro exporters said the port infrastructure is impeding trade and causing high transport and logistics, especially for those transporting produce through Apapa ports.

    NIGER DELTA AFFAIRS

    THE Niger Delta mirrors the malaise in the Nigerian economy. Like the larger society, the region is plagued by youth unemployment, environmental degradation and lack of infrastructure. Successive governments in the past failed as far as management of the oil industry is concerned, by failing to use the resources that God gave the region – oil – for the benefit of the people.

    The major challenge facing the incoming Minister of Niger Delta Affairs is providing credible leadership. The Niger Delta is the region that lays the golden egg because oil has been the life-blood of the Nigerian economy. But earnings from oil have not been invested for the benefit of the people of the Niger Delta and the country in general. Crude oil is a nonrenewable resource, it would not last forever. So, the challenge for the ministry is to gradually prepare the region for a world without oil.

    The problems of the Niger Delta, such as youth restiveness, unemployment, environmental degradation and lack of infrastructure, could be attributed to a lack of credible leadership. Observers say the lack of stable policies in the country over the years has also adversely affected the Niger Delta. Successive governments have come up with laudable policies, but they were not implemented to yield dividends for the region and the economy at large.

    For instance, there have been many attempts and many plans made in the past to improve the lives of the people of the Niger Delta. Sadly, each ended with very little to show for the time and resources spent; as they continue to gather dust on the shelves. One of such is the Niger Delta Master Plan. Like previous attempts, the stakeholders were not carried along in the formulation of the Master Plan. So, it is difficult to secure their buy-in in its implementation. Unfortunately, it was designed to offer stakeholders at all levels (individual, group and community) the opportunity to participate fully in the planning and decision-making process.

    One project that has turned a sour point and an albatross to the ministry is the East-West Road which has remained under construction since 2006. It was first handled by the Ministry of Works, until 2009, when it was handed over to the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs. Over N300 billion has been spent on the project so far, but it is yet to be completed. This road is a task that must be done.

    JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS

    Whoever President Buhari appoints as Attorney-General and Minister of Justice in this second term will have his work cut out in several areas, especially justice administration and respect for human rights.

    This is because, as former AGF Abubakar Malami (SAN) would have found out to his chagrin, almost every act, inaction, comment or silence of the President is examined from a legal prism.

    Thus, the quality of the legal advice the government receives is critical in ensuring that its acts do not run foul of the law.

    Malami came under the spotlight for much of the President’s first term following several acts which, according to critics, questioned the government’s commitment to justice, human rights and the rule of law, including obedience to court orders.

    Whatever gains the justice sector made under him, his stewardship was, dogged by the Federal Government’s failure to comply with several court orders.

    An example was the July 5, 2017, Federal High Court judgment ordering the government to publish the names of looters.

    Another is the judgment ordering the administration to compel the regimes of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, and former President Goodluck Jonathan to account for how much of the late Gen Sani Abacha loot was recovered and how it was spent.

    Other high profile incidents include refusal to obey judgments ordering the release of the leader of the Islamic Movement of Nigeria, Sheikh Ibraheem El-Zakzaky; his wife, Zeenat; and a former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki.

    The case of El-Zakzaky and Zeenat, who were recently permitted to travel abroad for medical care, led to violence and deaths following clashes between law enforcement agencies and IMN members protesting the government’s failure to comply with a 2016 order granting their leader bail. It will be good for things to change in this era.

  • Unions prepare for ‘mother of all strikes’

    Universities across the country are on a five-day recess following an industrial strike, which started yesterday, report Okodili Ndidi, Owerri; Bolaji Ogundele, Warri; Kolade Adeyemi, Kano; Bassey Anthony, Uyo; Rasaq Ibrahim, Ado Ekiti; Rosemary Nwisi, Port Harcourt and Sampson Unamka.

    SSANU President demands N30 billion

    Senior Staff Union (SSANU) National President Samson Ugwoke has accused the Federal Government of complicating the implementation of its agreement with the union and the Non-Academic Staff Union (SANU). He said the government’s failure to agree to their demand for the payment of N30 billion would lead to what he described as ‘mother of all strikes’.

    Speaking on Monday at the University of Lagos (UNILAG) where he coordinated the implementation of the two unions’ five-day warning strike, Ugwoke said the earned allowances the government was owing would not have accrued if the agreed time table was followed.

    Ugwoke, who is also the chairman, Joint Action Committee (JAC) of the two unions, also said the Committee set up by the government was yet to meet eight months after.

    He said: “We are demanding N30 billion now as part of our old earned allowance. This is part of our earned allowance from 2009 to 2018. Bring N30 billion and pay our members in NASU and SSANU, when they bring it, we will pipe down. The other one is the renegotiation. The agreement says the one of 2009 should be renegotiated every three years. In other words, if the government had complied with that section of the agreement, it implies that the agreement would have been renegotiated three times from 2009 till date. It is over 10 years now, it ought to have been negotiated or reviewed but we are still in one. They have set up a committee good and fine but the committee has not called for a meeting and we are in the 8th month of the year which is august, so are you considering that as a serious committee?

    “On the 7th of this month, we came up with resolutions and up till now those resolutions none of them had been addressed, by then we had already given a 14-day ultimatum; we were expecting that at least some letters referring to aspect of some of these actions must have come to us, in other words, nothing has come to us. It means that the government has not taken any action and that is why we are giving only five days warning strike Monday through Friday. We would come back and reappraise the situation and know whether there should be a need for the mother of all strikes. It will result in an indefinite strike.”

    On some members of the union who were sacked, Ugwoke said the government had the power to recall them.

    “It is a government that is complicating the matter; it is straight forward. If the government wants to recall our people, a circular will come up, the same circular that disengaged them from the school is the same circular that can come and reengage them again and then pay them their arrears of 2013, 2014 and 2015 when they were disengaged, you pay them their arrears of the salaries, those due for promotion within 2014 and now they should also be given opportunity for their promotion. The government can do this, it is simple,” Ugwoke said.

    Ugwoke told NAN in an interview that members of the unions had been fully mobilised to ensure total compliance to the five-day warning strike.

    “We are fully ready for the strike, and there is no going back on that. The strike is going to be total from Monday, Aug. 19, to Friday, Aug. 23.

    “We had given the Federal Government a 14-day ultimatum to meet our demands, but it elapsed with nothing coming forth from the side of government.

    “From Monday, therefore, we shall embark on this warning strike, and if nothing meaningful comes out of it, we will strategise to embark on an indefinite, comprehensive and total nationwide strike,’’ the unionist warned.

    According to him, our members are still open to further negotiations with the government before the end of the warning strike.

    Ugwoke, also the President of the JAC, appealed to education stakeholders to prevail on the Federal Government to meet JAC’s demands.

    “We have got judgment over the staff school issue in our favour. This judgment was got since Dec. 6, 2016, but up until now, none of our members who were affected has been reinstated. This is not going to continue,’’ he said.

    NASU Chairman, UNILAG chapter, Comrade Ajibade Kehinde, told The Nation the strike was to draw the attention of the Federal Government to some unresolved issues.

    “If nothing is done, our national body will call an emergency meeting and review the warning strike and take decisive action,” said Kehinde.

    FUTO SSANU joins strike

    The Joint Action Committee (JAC) of the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU) and the Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU) of the Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO) yesterday commenced a five-day warning strike to press home their demand of  N30 billion as Earned Allowances.

    The FUTO branch Chairman of SSANU and JAC, Franklin Matthews, said the strike “is expected to be total and comprehensive involving the school bursary, drivers, cleaners as well as security operatives of the school who are members of the union”.

    The NASU branch chairman, Samuel Iwuala, said a task force has been set up to ensure strict compliance.

    Partial success in DELSU, FUPRE

    The strike was partially observed at the Federal University of Petroleum Resources, Effurun (FUPRE), as some members of the unions were at work yesterday.

    A member of one of the unions, who spoke to The Nation in Warri yesterday, under anonymous conditions, said: “All non-academic staff of Nigerian universities are meant to be on strike now, but as you can see, we are still in the office.”

    On the reason for the non-compliance by the institution, he said: “Our university is a special one and a lot of political considerations are factored into how things are done here”.

    The Secretary of Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), FUPRE chapter, Comrade Dan Ijeh, said: “The effect is not that felt here because we don’t have NASU. Instead of NASU, we have NUPENG and National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT), you remember this is not a regular university. However, the SSANU has joined the strike.”

    At the Delta State University (DELSU), Abraka, the fact that students are on vacation weakened the effect of the strike.

    Attempts to get to speak to the DELSU chapter chairman of SSANU, Comrade Monday Izu, was unsuccessful.

    AAU, UNIBEN in total support

    Members of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) and the Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU) in the Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma and the University of Benin joined in the nationwide warning strike.

    At the University of Benin, the monitoring team of labour unions made sure offices were not closed.

    The offices that were already opened were shut down. Some of the university employees were seen at various places in the institution.

    Only one gate at the main campus of the university in Ugbowo was open for vehicles to go in. This caused heavy vehicular traffic that stretched into the Benin–Lagos road.

    At UNIBEN Ekenwan campus, the situation was the same as many offices were locked. The Chairman of the UNIBEN chapter of NASU, Comrade Anthony Igbinosa, said he was satisfied with the compliance level.

    “So far, so good, it has been successful. We expected our members to comply and they did. If you go round the campus, you will see that everywhere is sealed up and this will continue till Friday 23rd of August 2019, until we get directives from the national. So far, if we have a hundred, I would rate it ninety-nine per cent,” he said.

    Some students complained of lack of water in their hostels because there was no one on duty to pump the water.

    Academic activities were on in AAU but the concerned labour leaders ensured their members stayed away from work.

    BUK students allay fear

    The Bayero University, Kano arm of the NASU yesterday joined the one-week warning strike. The SSANU, Bayero University, Kano branch also joined its non-teaching staff union counterparts.

    The Chairman of SSANU, BUK branch, Comrade Haruna Aliyu, said the strike followed a directive given by the JAC of the two non-teaching staff unions.

    “The strike is total and comprehensive as all our members are directed to comply, even the health centre is not spared,” said the Chairman.

    Students were, however, told not to panic. According to a statement by the Public Relations Officer of the Students’ Union Government, Mahraz Muhammad, said: “We wish to let BUK Students know that it is just a warning strike and as such there would not be a total shut down of the system.

    “During this one week of warning strike, power and water supply will be given to various halls of residence as usual while academic activities will continue at our various faculties. BUK students are therefore enjoined to disregard any speculation telling them to go home.”

    The statement added: “Members of the union, heads of various halls of residence and security personnel will be fully on ground to ensure students are okay. If there is any new development, it will be communicated to everyone by the union. Let us, therefore, stay calm as we hope for the best.”

    Many stranded as UNIUYO shelves admission screening

    Many admission seekers into the University of Uyo, Akwa Ibom State were stranded yesterday as the university failed to conduct the admission screening.

    The development followed the strike embarked upon by the Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities (NASU), which has crippled academic and administrative activities in federal universities nationwide.

    Our correspondent, who was at the main and town campuses of the university, saw hundreds of candidates waiting hopelessly at various faculties of the institution yesterday.

    UNIUYO chapter chairman of NASU, Comrade Ime Edigheyong Edet, explained that the warning strike became necessary following the Federal Government’s refusal to pay arrears of Earned Allowances since 2013.

    He listed the cumulative debt arising from these earned allowances to include overtime, travel allowances and other entitlements, saying “the refusal of the Federal Government to listen to the voices of reason has forced NASU at the national level to call members out on this warning strike”.

    UI records 95 per cent compliance, says SSANU chair

    The Chairman, Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), University of Ibadan, Mr Wale Akinremi, has said there was 95 per cent compliance on the five days warning strike directive by its national body.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Akinremi made this disclosure in Ibadan on Monday while speaking on the resolve of SSANU and Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU) determination to get government attention on their three points demand.

    “The non-teaching staff in the federal universities in Nigeria are on strike because of the failure of the government to listen to our plea and our position on the welfare of staff as well as the development of the universities.

    “Specifically, we have three issues that we are dragging; one is on our agreement with the government since 2009 on the monetary aspect, but the government has not been attending to our request.

    “Secondly, on the issue of the university staff school teachers, they were erroneously sacked by the government; we protested at that time, the government took us to court and we got a judgement in favour of the teachers but till date, the government has yet to implement the judgement.

    “These teachers are languishing in penury; the pupils don’t know what becomes of their future. The staff schools have produced ministers, senators and professors among others. The onus is on us to make sure that our institutions thrive.

    “Thirdly, in that agreement, it is stated that we should be meeting every three years to review the position to know how far we have gone or if we are not moving at all and what we can do to move forward.

    “It is not all about money, the whole world should know that we are not only asking for money”.

    Also, Mr Malachy Etim, the NASU chairman UI, said all members of NASU are eager to comply because their welfare needs to be improved upon.

    “If there is any lecture going on, it is the work of the lecturers as teaching is not our responsibility. We have locked some classrooms but some lecturers have the key, so they can open them.

    “But offices are under lock. We are telling the federal government that failure to call us to a roundtable, we will declare an indefinite strike and close down all the universities,” he said.

    NAN reports that the University of Ibadan gate was heavily guarded by security agents both by the men of the Nigerian Police Force and that of the Department of State Services.

    NAN also reports that there was no vehicular movement into the campus as the gate was partially barricaded with mats spread across the road by the unions on strike.

    No strike in RSU

    The chairman, Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities (NASU), Rivers State University (RSU), Port Harcourt, Barry Jonah, yesterday said his members will not be part of the strike.

    He spoke when he featured on a radio programme.

    Jonah said his Institution did not receive the circular from the national office, informing them to join the strike.

    Activities in the institution were not disrupted yesterday, although they had just concluded semester examinations last week.

    The chapter leader said: “Our union is not part of the nationwide strike. We did not receive any formal letter to that effect from our national secretariat, Abuja, so we held a congress and our members decided not to be part of the strike.”

    Need for industrial harmony

    A former Minister of Education, Prof. Chinwe Obaji, and the Second Deputy National President, National Parent-Teacher Association of Nigeria (NAPTAN), Chief Adeolu Ogunbanjo, have called for a lasting industrial harmony in universities.

    They made the call as the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU) and the Non-Academic Staff Unions (NASU) began a nationwide warning strike on Monday.

    Obaji said universities, together with the Federal Government and the general public, must seek ways to ensure production of quality graduates to boost the country’s economy.

    “I think this infighting between labour unions and the Federal Government must be reviewed now to give room for serious work in re-engineering and repositioning academic activities in our ivory towers,” he said.

    According to her, it is high time the `embarrassing’ quality of graduates churned out annually by universities should bother education stakeholders.

    “We should stop all these back and forth issues and concern ourselves more with how to produce quality graduates that will one day be leaders of this country.

    “Quality education remains the key driver of any country’s economy, and this can only work if we come together as a people and find a way of achieving this, rather than this strike all the time.

    “Perhaps it should worry us the more that it was discovered recently that some persons who ought to be mobilised for the NYSC were allegedly unable to read the English alphabets,” she said.

    Obaji told NAN that Nigerians must task themselves on quality service delivery in their various capacities.

    Ogunbanjo said strikes in the university system had become too many, urging urgent interventions to save the system from collapse.

    According to him, the Federal Government should adequately tackle issues relating to strikes in the education sector.

    He said strikes had impacted negatively on the entire university system, noting that students were at the receiving end.

    “The moment it tries to seek a way out to reach a common ground with one labour union in the system, it is only natural that the other one will feel cheated, and so tries to make its demands.

    “So, if the government feels that only a certain labour union in the system deserves something, it should come out and defend its action, and if not, it should tell them as it is, once and for all.

    “Should there be the need for a negotiation, it should be done with parties concerned, with all commitment and sincerity of purpose,’’ the NAPTAN boss said.

  • U.S. Agency: Nigeria a key African market

    The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation is a new, modernised agency that will support investments in developing countries to drive economic growth, support stability, and improve livelihoods. In this briefing to launch the programme, Overseas Private Investment Corporation Acting President and Chief Executive Officer David Bohigian give insight into the initiative. Excerpts:

     

    What does this initiative mean?

     

    This agency is going to advance U.S. investment in emerging economies around the world, with a continued strong focus in Africa.

    It’ll build on the U.S. commitment to Africa that’s been expressed for almost 50 years through the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, where OPIC has worked to mobilize private investment in projects that have built everything from hospitals and power plants to schools, affordable housing, healthcare, and financial services, to really help develop the critical infrastructure and societal needs in Africa.

    What we’re seeing is that when the U.S. government invests alongside the private sector, it can mobilise significant capital and it’s an important factor for other investors to be willing to come in and develop infrastructure and develop other needs for countries there.

    We’re invested throughout the continent right now in private equity, as well as political risk insurance and project finance across just about every sector of business and investment. And it’s the kind of projects that private capital wouldn’t do on their own.

    Today, the Overseas Private Investment Corporation has over $5 billion invested in Africa, which catalyses billions of dollars more, and that kind of investment really promotes stability, prosperity, connectivity, and trade. And why we’re here today to talk about the launch in less than two months of the Development Finance Corporation. It really is one of the biggest changes in U.S. foreign policy this century, and it’s giving the United States significantly more resources to invest in development. Today I mentioned we’ve got about $5 billion in Africa that’s catalyzing billions of dollars more; we expect that to significantly increase with Development Finance Corporation.

    So I’m going to give you a little bit of background on the Development Finance Corporation. About a year ago, in early October last year, Congress passed and the president signed the Better Utilization of Investments Leading to Development—or the BUILD—Act, which had broad bipartisan support, and we’ve been working to implement that since then. It really does show the U.S. commitment to development finance, and working in emerging markets is good for those societies as well as American businesses and taxpayers, and that the capital needed is catalysed by development finance. We’ve been doing this at OPIC since 1971, and one of the key factors in the Development Finance Corporation is the successful history we’ve had of helping countries create prosperity.

    Going forward, we’re going to be working with colleagues from USAID even more closely. One of the key pieces of legislation was the Development Credit Authority; some of the people who do loan guarantees in a private sector focus at USAID will be joining Development Finance Corporation.

    Second, we’ll be having an investment cap of $60 billion, which should help catalyse hundreds of billions more, and that’s more than double our current capacity. For the first time, the Development Finance Corporation will be making equity investments, which will be particularly useful in private equity funds throughout the continent. We’ll also have technical assistance and feasibility studies to be able to be more proactive in identifying and developing opportunities for development. We’ll also be focused more on economically empowering women, where today we’ve already mobilized more than $1 billion, and Senior Advisor Ivanka Trump and I traveled to Ethiopia earlier this year to talk about the Africa piece of the 2X initiative. We’re also working on our Connect Africa initiative, which takes into account the needs and infrastructure and telecommunications and technology, as well as value chains throughout Africa to make Africa more connected with the world.

    We think this model for development finance really is the future of finance, and we’ve got a long history of investing in Africa that we intend to build on. I visited Africa several times, Worku visited Africa more times than I can count, and we’ve seen everything from a Cameroonian eye hospital that’s helping cure people of cataracts and blindness, then we go to Togo where OPIC helped triple the amount of power in Togo.

    How will the United States International Development Finance Corporation benefit Nigeria, in particular, and Africa, in general?

    Well, clearly Nigeria is a key market throughout Africa, and we believe that OPIC has already been able to help expand finance in small and medium-sized enterprises through a $200 million financing to Union Bank of Nigeria. What’s happening through that facility is we’re expanding on lending to women-owned, women-supporting, small and medium-sized enterprises. We’re helping to upgrade UBN’s digital banking projects and technologies, and really helping to support an entrepreneurial class that will help catalyse additional investment into Nigeria. So we think that the Development Finance Corporation can build upon that example in Nigeria and beyond.

    Which sectors of the economy will be funded by the new agency?

    Well, OPIC and the U.S. Development Finance Corporation are invested across just about every industry in Africa and in emerging markets around the world. That can include energy, as we’ve worked through our Power Africa program. It can include affordable housing, where I’ve visited housing in Ghana that’s helping the middle class afford housing there. As I mentioned earlier, healthcare; we’re also in education, and our Connect Africa initiative puts a major focus on infrastructure. It also puts a major focus on technology, as well as connectivity for telecom, and also logistics and value-added manufacturing. So across all those sectors, OPIC has invested and we expect more from the Development Finance Corporation in the years ahead.

    In Chad in particular, I’m proud of the fact that we invested in off-grid solar recently, this year; not only will that provide energy to the people of Chad, but it also promotes women’s economic growth.

    As you know, the United States doesn’t operate in a vacuum; it doesn’t operate in Africa in a vacuum, and in fact, the largest investor, in the broad sense of the word, on this continent now appears to be China, through its Belt and Road Initiative and the Shanghai Coordination Council efforts. I am sure that your programmes and your new format had China in their sights in some way, and I’d like you to discuss that. How do you see these programmes and their future fitting in with the Chinese efforts in this region?

    The Development Finance Corporation, as well as OPIC, are born out of the same impulses that created the Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe after World War II, and so the United States has been doing development finance for generations, and what’s important when we think about the choices that these leaders need to make about developing their societies are five factors. The five factors when countries are considering finance, first mean that these nations need to protect and respect their own sovereignty; that’s crucial. Second is that the local workers are getting the benefits of the jobs in these economies, to provide for their families and their societies. Next, that these projects are respecting the environment, to protect the natural beauty and the resources of these countries. Fourth, it’s crucially important that these procurement processes are transparent and have anti-corruption measures in place. And last, it’s important to make sure these projects are built to last. So I think it’s important for leaders who are considering infrastructure or value-added manufacturing, telecommunications, or other sectors of the economy, to make sure that those five factors are weighed when they’re making the decisions.

    It’s also something that people forget when they’re looking at development finance; what the United States model is, and the western model, is trying to catalyse private investment. So when you look at the flows of FDI from the United States, there’s almost $60 billion of FDI stock, which is far more than any other country in the world, from the U.S. alone. And so you need to look at the private sector and what they’re doing that’s being catalysed by the U.S. government, not only the government money that’s going into Africa. And we think that catalysing private sector is the way to build stable societies.

    To what extent will the Development Finance Corporation consider environmental issues, particularly, perhaps, climate change, in deciding whether to invest and deciding whether to catalyse private investment in those projects?

    Right, well, clearly, respecting the environment is a key pillar of how the U.S. invests, and OPIC as well as the Development Finance Corporation take that into account through our environmental policies. We’ve been investing across full-spectrum energy through Power Africa throughout the continent for years now, and have an enviable environmental record. In Kenya in particular, we’re helping to finance a hundred-megawatt wind farm, Kipeto, which is going to provide up to 460 gigawatts of electricity to the grid.

    As I mentioned earlier, off-grid solar in Chad has been a focus of ours. In addition, we’re financing wind and solar across the continent and around the world, and whether it is in the energy sector or beyond, when it’s major infrastructure, there’s no one who has higher standards than the United States on maintaining the environment in Africa and throughout the world.

    What is OPIC’s total planned financing for projects in Kenya in the short-term, and which projects are these?

    So on Kenya, I just mentioned the Kipeto wind project. Beyond that, our current portfolio is about $700 million through 16 different projects in Kenya. One of those that we’re proud of is Twiga Foods -is a fresh produce distributor in Kenya that’s expanding regionally. We’re helping to provide additional trucks and cold storage units, and it really is empowering small and medium-sized businesses there.

    We’re also doing deals that are affordable housing, that are in education, that are value-added manufacturing, and in affordable vehicles. You can find all of our Kenya projects if you go to the website for OPIC or to the app store, where we have OPIC projects—is that the app?—OPIC Portfolio, and you can click into Kenya or any other country in the world to find details on every project. Again, going to the transparency point, where every country, every citizen can find out where the U.S. is helping to create development outcomes that are positive for Kenya and beyond.

    What is your message to African-focused private equity fund managers, and what would be the impact of the new DFC on Africa’s private equity industry? And how will the DFC approach the private equity different from OPIC? And then just last, what will be your criteria for evaluating funds managed, and will there need to be some kind of link to American businesses in terms of the investments?

    Alright, well, thank you for that. One of the most exciting parts of the BUILD Act is the change in being able to invest equity in private equity funds. OPIC has a more than 30-year track record of investing in private equity funds, and over 100 funds, but we always had a debt product that was different from other limited partners.

    Today, throughout the world we’re invested in approximately 40 funds with almost a $4 billion portfolio. We’ve been creating portfolio companies to help across every industry, including education, infrastructure, energy, and beyond, and we expect that the Development Finance Corporation will be able to do much more of that. We expect that the private equity industry will continue to catalyse additional capital, to help build the small and medium-sized businesses that should be the core of Africa’s entrepreneurial future.

    I’m proud of the fact that last year we launched a venture capital initiative to be able to work with earlier stage businesses, so that’s been an expanded mandate for our private equity business, to help more growth businesses. But as we move to Development Finance Corporation, the ability to invest equity in private equity funds we think could significantly increase our ability to work with fund managers. And the way we evaluate fund managers is first and foremost, how they can help create stable societies and other development goals. We’ve got a track record of more than 40 years of returning money to the U.S. taxpayer, so we are looking for financial returns; we are looking to catalyse additional capital, but primarily we’re looking to ensure that development happens through the private equity funds in which we invest, and I believe having an equity product for the first time will help unlock billions of dollars of additional capital for Africa in the decades ahead.

    What are some specific actions that you will take to eliminate barriers to trade and investment for the especially risky and poor countries in SADC besides Botswana, South Africa, and Angola?

    Well, thank you for that. You know, what the Overseas Private Investment Corporation has done over the last 50 years is to ensure that countries are more prosperous, and the BUILD Act is working to ensure that we focus, under the Development Finance Corporation, even more of our efforts in countries that have less than $4,000 per capita GDP. So that’s going to lead us into more investments into sub-Saharan Africa, as well as Africa as a whole, to be able to ensure that we’re helping people there get electricity, help them get affordable housing, help them get education and beyond. And I think ensuring that we’re focused more on where we can help people become self-sufficient and prosperous is going to be a key tenet of the Development Finance Corporation. We will also continue to operate in higher-income countries, but I think the development focus will be stronger than ever.

    In Zimbabwe in particular, we’ve worked with financing to help fund mortgages for homes there, as well as working with the International Rescue Committee to provide services to refugees for healthcare and social assistance in Zimbabwe. And those are just two of the examples of how we’re trying to focus on the people who need it most throughout Africa. And we’ll continue to look at countries that we believe are ready for private sector investment and ensure that those governments that are expecting private sector investment are protecting their own sovereignty, making sure that local workers get the benefit of the deal, ensuring that people are respecting the environment, making sure that tax dollars from local populations are actually going to the projects and not going offshore in inappropriate ways, and that the projects are built to last. So we think that our model and our track record are the right way to create prosperity in Africa in the 21st century.

     

    What kind of difference will this cooperation make or bring compared to previous investments, particularly in the case of Ethiopia?

    So the Development Finance Corporation, in October of this year, will help build on the Overseas Private Investment Corporation’s almost 50-year track record. What will be different about the Development Finance Corporation is first, we’re going to have a $60 billion mandate, which, importantly, will help draw in private sector capital that should account for hundreds of billions of dollars of investment in Africa. It’s important to make sure that we’re comparing the money that we’re catalysing – hundreds of billions of dollars – as opposed to just the money that the U.S. taxpayers are helping to catalyse with.

    Also important is, as we transform to the Development Finance Corporation, our colleagues from USAID’s Development Credit Authority will help us create strong linkages with missions from USAID and in embassies throughout Africa and throughout the world, as we’re able to expand the product offerings and really take a whole-of-government approach, working with the entire U.S. government with all the tools that we have for finance and trade.

    Next, we’ll have the ability to do technical assistance and feasibility studies, to be able to be proactive in identifying and addressing development needs that otherwise we might not have been able to help with. We’ll continue to empower women, we’ll continue our Connect Africa initiative to focus on infrastructure, technology, and value chains. But I think what you’ll see is an increased focus on Africa and the development needs there.

    Explain to me why this is in my interest, and especially given the direction in Washington these days to cut back on foreign assistance. How do you convince me that this is a good project, a good investment?

    I want to contrast foreign assistance from what the Development Finance Corporation does, which is a development finance investment. The Overseas Private Investment Corporation, for more than 40 years, has returned money to taxpayers in Iowa, Missouri, Maryland, Alaska, and beyond, by ensuring that the money that we invest is returned from the projects which we invest in. So when we go to a private equity fund, we are investing in that private equity fund. The expectation is that we’re going to have development outcomes as well as financial returns. We think that economics is a key pillar of foreign policy, that creating opportunities for societies is in the long-term interest of the United States and of the world. More prosperous nations are better partners for us, from a political standpoint as well as an economic standpoint. Trade and investment go hand-in-hand.

    So the American taxpayer knows that we’re helping to create power and schools and housing that’s going to help create a prosperous middle class that will be a better trading partner for us, a better political partner for us, all while we are actually returning money to the taxpayer. So I think it’s an important distinction to draw between foreign assistance, which is a key component of U.S. foreign policy, but what we do here at the Development Finance Corporation is invest to catalyse private sector partners that prove that we’re going to be able to have a return on capital for the U.S. taxpayer, at the same time meeting the development needs of the world.

    How will the DFC make sure corruption doesn’t come in and cut out the real beneficiaries from the projects?

    U.S. companies have a long track record of operating under a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and we take that very seriously. We believe it’s the gold standard in ensuring that our companies and the projects in which they’re involved have anti-corruption measures in place. What’s also important, as we look to work with overseas partners, is that their procurement processes or their public-private partnerships are truly transparent. There are some development finance projects in the world right now that have not upheld those standards, and we think that’s to the long-term detriment of the people in the countries who are helping to pay for these projects. So we believe that the U.S. corporations have a long history of ensuring the highest possible standards of transparency and anti-corruption.

     

    • Transcript courtesy: Department of State’s Media Hub

     

  • Furore in Ogun College of Health Technology over accreditation, maladministration

    Issues bordering on accreditation of programmes run by the Ogun State College of Health Technology (OSCOHTECH), Ilese, Ijebu Ode, have pitted the academic staff union and students against the management of the college reports KUNLE AKINRINADE

    All is not well at the Ogun State College of Health Technology (OSCOHTECH) between the academic staff members, students and management of the college which became a monotechnic in 2006 during the tenure of its immediate past provost, Dr Tunji Dawodu.

    The college, which was established in 1976 to train health inspectors and hygiene officials in order to ensure clean and healthy environment safe for all to live, has lately been infected by alleged indiscretions that have fouled its landscape amid fruitless efforts by the authorities to deodorise instead of disinfecting it.

    Top on the crisis rocking the institution is non-accreditation of programmes which has pitted major stakeholders, including academic staff under the aegies of ASUP, against the management. ASUP has since penned petitions to the state government and House of Assembly, urging them to rescue the college from the dwindling in fortune the non-accreditation of programmes has caused the college lately.

    Can of worms

    Unlike his predecessor, the current provost of the college, Dr Abiodun Oladunjoye’s administration, according to a petition filed by the ASUP of OSCOHTECH, is gravitating towards abysmal failure that may be difficult to redeem if he is not checked on time. The conscious transition of the college from a certificate awarding institution to a National Diploma (ND) and Higher National Diploma (HND) had boosted its enrolment since 2006. But that may soon become a thing of the past as virtually all of its courses for ND and HND programmes are currently not accredited by the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), following the indifference of the college authorities to warnings and notices from both NBTE and professional regulatory agencies requesting renewal of accreditation according to the law.

    Currently, programmes run by the college have been delisted from NBTE’s accreditation list, meaning that the present batch of its students who are participating in the mandatory National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) programme might be the last unless something urgent is done to restore its accreditation. The college’s accreditation by the Health Records Officers Registration Board of Nigeria has since expired too, same with the Pharmacists Council of Nigeria.

    The de-accredited programmes are 11 in number as shown on NBTE’s official website where their accreditation status are published.- HND Public Health Nursing accredited in 2010 expired on October 1, 2012; HND Community Health which got accreditation in 2013 has expired since October 1, 2015; HND Dental Technology accredited in 2013 expired on October 1, 2015; HND Dental Therapy accredited in 2013 expired on October 1, 2015 and HND Environmental Health Technology which was accredited in 2013 lost its accreditation on October 1, 2015.

    Others: HND Health Information Management, which got accredited in 2013 expired on October 1, 2015; ND Community Health accredited in 2011 expired on October 1, 2013; ND Dental Technology expired on October 1, 2013; ND Dental Therapy expired on October 1, 2013; ND Environmental Health Technology expired on October 1, 2013 and ND Health Information Management expired on October 1, 2013. All of them have not been accredited many years after they were de-accredited.

    To remind OSCOTECH authorities of the need to secure fresh accreditation for the affected programmes, NBTE wrote a letter to Dr Oladunjoye asking him to ensure proper accreditation of its programmes in line with laid down regulations. The management of the college was to provide a sum of N2.6 million to renew accreditation for the 11 programmes. The NBTE expressly stated that the amount should be paid through Remmita, the official electronic payment platform, into the coffers of Federal Government.

    The letter dated December 8, 2017 and signed on behalf of the Board’s Executive Secretary by the Acting Director of Monotechnic Programmes, Ms Helen Oduntan reads: ”Following the expiration of the accreditation granted to the programmes in your college, I am directed to inform you that the Board has approved the accreditation visit to your college for the following programmes: HND Public Health Nursing, HND Community Health, ND Dental Technology, HND Dental Therapy, HND Environmental Health Technology, HND Health Information Management, ND Community Health, ND Dental Technology, ND Dental Therapy, ND Health Information Management.

    “You are therefore requested to remit to the Board the sum of N2,620,600 (two million six hundred and twenty million, six hundred naira only), being total amount only for the visitation.” Nothing was however done to comply with the NBTE’s request as the programmes remain de-accredited.

    Worried by the failure of the management to renew accreditation for its major programmes amidst other decrepit infrastructure, the leadership of the college’s Academic Staff Union of Polytechnic (ASUP) wrote a letter dated April 24, 2018, to the former Governor of the state, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, asking the governor to, among other requests, rein in the provost and other management staff, but to no avail.

    The letter was signed by the then ASUP chairman, Comrade Abiodun Abiodun and General Secretary, Comrade Babatunde Yussuf. The unionists however lamented that no action had been taken with regard to their petition (s) to the appropriate authorities in the state.

    Like the NBTE, other regulatory and professional examination bodies have either threatened to delist the college or bar its students from writing their examinations in the light of the lack of seriousness exhibited by the management of the school towards renewing accreditation of its relevant programmes.

    One of such is the Dental Therapists Registration Board of Nigeria (DTRBN) which warned that students running dental programmes in the college would not be allowed to enroll for its 2019 professional examination.

    The decision of the board was communicated to the college via a letter signed by its Registrar, Mrs. M.O. Ojo. DTRBN in the letter with reference number DTRBN/162/ 317/ Vol III/19 and dated June 27, 2019 entitled “Non-compliance to statutory regulations” said the Board noted with dismay the disregard for re-accreditation of dental programmes run by the college despite its several correspondences on the issue.

    The copy of the letter sighted by our correspondent reads: “The Dental Therapists Registration Board of Nigeria has observed with dismay the flagrant disregard of your college to its statutory responsibilities on the training of dental therapists and dental technicians.

    “This is to reiterate that your college has consistently refused to comply with the directives of the Board on the accreditation of your two (2) dental programmes under the regulations of the Board in spite of several letters written to your college on the matter.

    “This is to inform you that the management of the Board has decided not to collect the Year 2019 examination forms of your students, and know that your students will not be enrolled for the examination.”

    However, following the inauguration of the new administration in the state, the aggrieved academic staff unionists followed up on their petition to the state House of Assembly. It was learnt that the Education Committee of the state House of Assembly had engaged the furious leadership of ASUP on July 23, while the embattled provost had also appeared before the committee on July 30, during which he was subjected to questioning over the allegations made against him.

    ”I can confirm to you that the aggrieved academic staff members and unionists appeared before the Education Committee of Ogun State House of Assembly on July 27,while the embattled provost was summoned by the committee to defend himself on the weighty allegations on July 30,” a source said.

    It was learnt that in order to douse the tension, Dr Oladunjoye’s loyalists in the college staged a solidarity rally on July 31, asking the academic staff members to leave him alone.

    Luxury amid bleeding facilities

    At a press briefing held on August 4 in Abeokuta, top academic staff members led by Comrade Abiodun again lamented the lethargy on the part of the college’s management with regard to renewal of accreditation of programmes amid alleged maladministration.

    Comrade Abiodun called on Governor Dapo Abiodun, and Ogun State house of Assembly to urgently save the institution from going into extinction due to the alleged incapability and financial recklessness of the provost. He blamed the provost for failing to take necessary steps despite several correspondences by the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE).

    He said: “In a letter to the provost in December 2017, NBTE urged the management of our college to expedite action on the renewal of accreditation of programmes it lost a few years back. Yet, the management has not deemed it fit to do so. “We heard the management said it lacked the funds for the accreditation exercise and that the state government has not released funds for it.” The distraught ASUP leader noted that curiously, while the college bleeds from loss of accreditation of its programmes and decaying infrastructure, the management allegedly sought approval for the purchase of multi-million naira posh automobiles for the provost and others to luxuriate.

    “Perhaps to give veneer to the controversial purchase, the approval for the first batch of the purchase was sought by the management vide a letter forwarded to the state’s Ministry of Education dated January 4, 2019 and addressed to the Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, and it got approval for the purchase of a Toyota Camry car and Hummer bus for the official itinerary of the provost for a princely sum of N13 million. The purchase was granted by the ministry few weeks later. “Again, the management sought and got approval from the same ministry on March 6, 2019 for the purchase of a Toyota corolla 2019 model and Toyota Camry car 2009 model vide a letter signed by a director in the ministry.”

    The vehicles, which cost over N21 million, were for the official use of the Provost and Registrar of the college. Isn’t it an irony that the management that could not source the sum of N3 million for renewal of accreditation had the courage to seek approval for the purchase of luxury vehicles for the use of top management staff, especially the Provost who already has good vehicles as official cars? “Like we noted in our petition to relevant authorities including the state ministry of Education, Science and Technology as well as Ogun State House of Assembly, that the indiscretions of management of the college led by Dr Oladunjoye could destroy the education sector, and by extension the health sector in Ogun State. “Oladunjoye spent N13 million to procure second hand (not the approved tokunbo) hummer bus and a 2004 model Toyota Camry (Orobo) for Mr Ogunbanjo an unconfirmed staff in the library which is valued at N1.1 million.

    Mr. Provost should show purchase receipt that tallies with the N13 million received for these vehicles.” In similar vein, “Oladunjoye got approvals to purchase a 2019 Toyota Corolla but ended up buying a cheaper Toyota Camry 2017 model. It should be noted that as at 16th March 2019 that the approval for the Toyota Corolla 2019 & Toyota Camry 2009 was given by Ministry of Education, there was no commissioner in place, as she had resigned to contest election. “It was the Permanent Secretary that approved the N21.990 million for the cars. Did the PS have such wide powers?” Copies of the approval for the purchase of the vehicles by the state Ministry of Education, Science and Technology sighted by our correspondent were dated January 4 and March 6, 2019. Abiodun added: “The management has also been collecting the sum of N10,000 as convocation fess from graduating students, yet no convocation has been held since 2014 when the Provost was appointed.

    “Also, the major road in the college purportedly built with over N20 million collapsed a few months later, just after a downpour. “We want the state government to rein in the management of the college before things fall apart completely in the institution.” Abiodun, who was joined by two former ASUP chairmen, Adeoye Kuku and Abiola Ojure, lamented the illegal award of an access road contract in the college, which he claimed collapsed a few months after the road was built..

    “The Provost claimed he resurfaced the only access road in the college with granite; less than a kilometre of road for N25 million, which was washed off by flood in just eight months,” he said.

    Students react

    A cross section of students of the college expressed their disappointment with the accreditation crisis and maladministration rocking the college, with many of them blaming the festering imbroglio on the management of the college. A student of Dental Technology department, who craved anonymity, said he was shocked that the programme had no accreditation from both NBTE and DTRBN.

    He said: “Of all the problems facing the college, what is so shocking to hear is that my course is not accredited by the NBTE and DTRBN, which iare the professional regulatory agencies for the programme. “What that means is that we have been short-changed by the authorities of the college and our future looks bleak in the face of non-accreditation of the programme.

    The management cannot afford to shy away from its responsibilities, because it would amount to jeopardizing our future for no clear reasons other than negligence on their part.” Another student in the Environmental Health Technology department, who also spoke in confidence, said the management had been unfeeling to the plight of the students arising from the failure to renew accreditation for programmes in the school.

    “The management should pursue vigorously re-accreditation of the programme and restore the confidence of students, as many of us have been demoralized by the news of de-accreditation of programmes in this college,” he said. A student union leader, who asked not to be named, told The Nation that non-accreditation of programmes in the college was a disservice to the students. He said that students of the college would soon embark on protests to force the management to expedite action on renewing the accreditation of affected programmes.

    He said: “We are also worried that the management of this great college, led by the Provost, had been silent on the lack of statutory accreditation of programmes in the last six years or thereabout. What this means is that we might not get jobs when we graduate from the college, and it is nothing but wickedness. “The student union as a body will soon embark on rallies and protests to compel the provost and his management team to do the needful.” Contacted, the Public Relations Officer (PRO) of the college, Mr Ayodele Alaga, initially queried the motives behind the request for his reaction to the allegations on August 1. Although, he promised to revert to our reporter, he did not respond to the enquiries in spite of a reminder sent to him on August 4.

    The enquiries the reporter sent to the mobile telephone of the provost of the college on August 8 also received no response. When our correspondent again contacted Dr Oladunjoye on his mobile telephone on Wednesday August 14, he said he was in a meeting and promised to revert to the reporter. He, however, had not done so at press time.

  • How Nigeria can curb population explosion

    Nigeria’s population, according to experts, is growing at a scary rate. Ugandan journalist Shifa Mwesigye, in this report for The Nation, examines the way out of this challenge.

    He has 21 children. Mustafa blames it on the lack of knowledge of family planning and its benefits. He says he would have had fewer if he knew what he now knows. His oldest child is 33 years and the youngest is nine.

    “I did not plan to have many. It just happened that my wives and I had them. Every year, my wives would each give birth. The knowledge of family planning came late when I had 18 children,” Mustafa says. He has two wives, Mastula and Amina. “By this time, I wanted to stop but I did not know what to do.”

    Mustafa’s story is a reflection of current studies and statistics; it mirrors the lives of many families in the poorest communities of Africa. Yet, Nigeria is special as it is already the most populous African nation and on the seventh rank in the world. If its population of 200 million people continues to grow at the current rate of 3.2 per cent each year, the country will have the third-largest population worldwide with 411 million people by 2050.

    “Although Nigeria has the largest economy in Africa, population growth is outpacing the economic growth and increasing the poverty risk for many Nigerians!” explains Professor Robert Zinser, CEO of the Rotarian Action Group for Population and Development (RFPD). “More than half of the population already lives below the poverty line, while women and children continue to die from preventable causes”

    In 2012, the government pledged to increase the contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) from 15 to 36 per cent by 2020 by buying contraceptives and providing them to women who need them. Today, the country has managed to increase the CPR to17 per cent, but there is still much work to be done.

    Family planning is the conscious effort of couples using contraceptives to limit or space the number of children they want to have. Using modern contraceptives also helps reduce maternal and infant deaths. According to Nigeria’s Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) 2018, out of 100,000 women giving birth 576 dies, and out of 1000 children being born 67 do not survive. In international comparison, this Maternal Mortality (MMR) and Infant Mortality Ratios are very high.

    Provision of modern contraceptive methods is one of the main components of sustainable development and poverty alleviation. When couples have fewer children, they spend less income on immediate survival needs of food, housing and clothing, leaving some savings for education or investment capital. Education and investment create productivity, make industries grow and raise employment. When people work, the government can tax their incomes and generate capital to invest in important sectors such as education, infrastructure, health and food production. This contributes to long-term productivity and raises the living standards of the people.

    So what is stopping Nigeria from achieving its desired family planning goals? And how can the country prevent more and more families from falling into a poverty trap without any chance of escape?

    Nigeria’s Demographic and Health Survey states that one of the many ways Nigeria can avert this situation is by increasing the knowledge and use of modern family planning methods among women of reproductive age. It estimates that meeting women’s need for modern contraceptives can prevent about one-third of all maternal deaths.

    However, out of the 45 million women of childbearing age in Nigeria, only 7.6 million are using a modern family planning method. According to Nigeria’s National Family Planning Communication Campaign, the country wants to generate an additional 7.3 million new users of modern Family Planning methods in Nigeria.

    The country has increased awareness of family planning to 85 per cent for women and 95 per cent for men. Yet, Nigeria still grapples with the sad reality of little in-depth knowledge, low demand and uptake of family planning products and services.

    And here is where the problem comes from.

    Many women who expressed a desire to delay their next pregnancy by at least two years were not using a modern method of contraception because they lack access to contraceptives.

    Many hospitals are not able to fulfil the needs for family planning products and services. And even worse: Primary Health Centres, which are the health institutions closest to the people, are often desperately lacking in trained staff for family planning services. Health centres are also hit with frequent stock-outs of contraceptive commodities and, where they are available, many centres still lack the equipment to administer the contraceptives like implants and Intrauterine devices.

    The second problem affecting uptake has its roots in myths and misconceptions of contraceptives, fear of side effects as well as widespread opposition to the use of contraceptives by women due to socio-cultural, religion and spousal objections.

    Another, very important reason is a lack of education: About 47 per cent of women in Nigeria don’t have any form of education. Yet, going to school long enough allows girls to delay childbearing but also empowers them to make decisions about their bodies and future lives. Their low status leaves women at the mercy of their husbands to make their healthcare decisions.

    “Changing this situation takes more than the provision of family planning services. It requires helping people understand the personal benefits in health, wealth, and family harmony of limiting and spacing births,” says William Ryerson in his paper Unmet Need – Lack of Access or Lack of Cultural and Informational Support. “It also involves role modelling family planning use and overcoming the fear that contraceptives are dangerous or that planning one’s family is unacceptable. It requires getting husbands and wives to talk to each other about the use of family planning – a key step in the process to begin using contraceptives.”

    What Nigeria can do

    In 2012, the government pledged to provide US$ 8,3 million annually for the procurement of reproductive health commodities, which includes contraceptives. They also agreed to enlist the support of development partners like UNFPA, WHO, The Gates Foundation, and Rotary International to provide contraceptives, including oral pills, implants, injectables, IUDs and male condoms.

    A robust national multimedia Family Planning and demand creating communication campaign were designed by Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Health focusing on increasing the knowledge and uptake of modern FP methods. Using targeted media, the campaign will help to dispel myths and misconceptions about family planning that are stopping women from starting or continuously and consistently using contraceptives. With financial support from the Rotarian Action Group for Population and Development (RFPD), the US-based NGO “Population Media Center” will use targeted serialised dramas to dispel cultural barriers as well as myths and misconceptions. This will be complemented by community dialogues with support from traditional and religious leaders as well as engage men to support their partners in making decisions on desired family size.

    The country is working towards increasing and improving its service delivery points from 31 to 89 per cent to take contraceptives closer to women who need them and make them available at any time and every day. This will further be supported by improving the transport of contraceptives from national government stores to the state stores and further down to the nearest health centres in villages.

    The Nigerian government’s efforts are supported by RFPD’s ongoing nationwide family planning campaign. This campaign builds on a model that was piloted in two northern states of Kaduna and Kano that saw a 60 per cent reduction in maternal deaths and a 15 per cent reduction in infant deaths in participating hospitals. A digital tool developed by RFPD for improving maternal and child health will now include family planning in 4000 health centres overall 36 Nigerian states and the federal capital. The tool is used to closely monitor the quality of hospital facilities and structures and the quality of care provided by the medical personal. Participating hospitals can draw lessons from this analysis to improve the quality of care to mothers and babies. “Further training and education of medical staff and administrative officers will help to improve the quality of care provided”, explains Dolapo Lufadeju, RFPD’s National Coordinator in Nigeria. “This increased competency on the side of health staff will allow the established system to be fully run and be administered by local partners when the project ends.”

  • Ban on forex for food imports: Give space for adjustment

    PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari’s directive to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to stop official funding for food imports has further reinforced the earlier decision of the apex bank to restrict foreign exchange allocation to importers of milk.

    The directive, which is expected to take immediate effect, is bound to have some implications for manufacturers and ancillary businesses in the short term. Since the order is directly from the Presidency, it is a matter of conjecture what the CBN will do with processes that are ongoing, or that have been concluded and awaiting implementation, and others that have bilateral and multilateral encumbrances.

    Since trade facilitations are governed by agreements and binding on all consenting parties, any breach that might arise in contravention of the spirit and the letter of the rules would be frowned at by the injured parties, irrespective of the source and the nature of the directive.

    Not minding the long-term benefits of the Presidential directive, implementation of the order wholesale, will have serious dent on businesses in the short-to-medium term. It must be understood that some imported items classified as foods, serve as feedstock, or raw materials for some industries.

    There will be serious implications for employees and employment generation in the short and the long-run, if necessary steps are not taken to defer the implementation of the directive and erect timelines on its implementation.

    Read Also: Investments in infrastructure paying off – Buhari

    Self-sufficiency in local production of food for Nigerians in whatever guise should be a welcome development. Buhari has never hidden his desire to ensure food security for Nigerians. It is that fervour that informed his unbridled support for the CBN in its various intervention programmes, including the Anchor Borrowers Scheme that has resulted in the increased production of primary food crops, including rice. The initiative is being lengthened to include other food crops.

    As it stands, if the President’s directive is followed through without any consideration to other interests, the CBN, may be inadvertently drawn to avoidable legal issues, since to-be affected businesses will contest abridgement of agreements that they may have concluded with the apex bank and other government agencies.

    Beyond Nigeria’s shores, other foreign firms and businesses will raise dust and accuse the nation and her government agencies of breaching bilateral and other institutional agreements they may have signed prior to the announcement.

    Therefore what may be required, going forward, is for the relevant authorities to space out the implementation of the decision and give all interest parties, time to adjust to the impending changes.

    Attempting to adopt a fixated and an unbending approach to implementing this decision will do more harm than good. A little shift and flexibility to allow for negotiation and adjustment, giving all parties more time to allow for the necessary and required adjustment, that will result in a win-win situation for all.