Category: SouthEast

  • Lawyer, community petition police over death of three men

    A human rights lawyer based in Umuahia, the Abia State capital, Dr Anthony Agbazuere, and community leaders of Ntigha Okpuala in Ntigha community of Isiala Ngwa North council area of Abia State have petitioned the Inspector-General of Police Abubakar Idris over alleged murder of three young men in the community.

    Addressing newsmen in Umuahia over the incident, Agbazuere said that his attention was drawn to an ugly incident that happened in that community when one inspector and two sergeants stormed the place to kill the youths.

    Agbazuere said the three policemen arrived in the community while they were holding a meeting and shot the three men whose names he gave as Adimchi Obiocha, Joseph Nwokocha and Obinna.

    He said that the police men arrived  in a Mercedes Benz 190 car and opened fire on the three young men, killing them instantly and quickly took off, stressing that it was only when they got to the divisional police office at Ntigha that they identified the vehicle.

    The human rights lawyer said, “The traditional ruler and his council of chiefs came to me and alerted me over the incident which made me to petition the IGP Abubakar Idris, and he has responded”.

    “The IGP in his response directed the Abia State Commissioner of Police (CP) Anthony Ogbizi to investigate the matter; the three police men have been arrested and are right now at the state Criminal Investigating Department (CID) Umuahia”.

    “However information available to me shows that there are people behind the scene who are making frantic efforts to ensure that the three suspects should be released but we will ensure that such will not happen”.

    “What we don’t know is if the killing was politically motivated or not but we want to make sure that the directive of the IGP must be obeyed and for the suspects to be prosecuted before a competent court of jurisdiction”.

    “We also have information that they have taken their case to the Assistant Inspector of Police (AIG) zone 9 boosting that they will be released, but when I heard the boost I just sent the IGP’s letter to the AIG and that was the end of that move”.

    Agbazuere explained that what he and the community want is for the three police suspects to be taken to court for murder and called on the state police command to investigate and prosecute them as they are not supposed to kill those they are supposed to protect.

    In his response one of the chiefs, Omerenma Ubani said that they were in their community on the said day when they heard gunshots which led to the people running away for the fear of the unknown.

    Ubani said that the initial thinking of the people of the community was that herdsmen had invaded their place while some thought that kidnappers had arrived since one of their women was recently kidnapped in such incident.

    He said that when they came out that they saw three young men on the ground, “Our first reaction was to take them to the hospital in a bid to save their lives only for them to be confirmed dead”.

    Agbazuere later gave The Nation a copy of the IGP’s response which was written on the 9th of March 2018 and addressed to the Abia state CP asking him comment on the allegation and was signed by ACP Usman A.K. Umar, Principal Staff Officer to the IGP and was received by the CP’s office on 13th March 2018.

    When contacted the state Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) Geoffrey Ogbonna said that he is not aware of the incident but since the letter was written to the CP that newsmen should contact him.

     

  • How 3-month-old baby survived blocked intestine

    Little Emmanuel Sunday was born three months ago with a serious anomaly which threatened his life. All efforts by his poor parents to treat him were not successful. As they contemplated the next step to take, Caring Heart Foundation, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) launched a free medical clinic in their hometown Akaeze, Ivo Local Government Area of Ebonyi State.

    The couple decided to take him to the clinic where the doctors declared his condition critical and referred him to the Federal Teaching Hospital (FETH) Abakaliki for emergency attention. He was two months old at the time, and his health had deterioriated.

    A sponsor of the Caring Heart Foundation, Linus Okorie, a member of the House of Representatives representing Ohaozara, Onicha and Ivo Federal Constituency, on hearing of the boy’s condition, quickly mobilised an ambulance to rush him to the hospital.

    That timely intervention saved Little Emmanuel, according to doctors at the hospital. The boy was diagnosed with intussusception or blockage of the small intestine. This seriously affected blood supply to the affected areas. The condition was considered life-threatening and required urgent surgical intervention.

    The surgery was carried out on February 18, 2018 and reported successful to the collective relief and joy of his parents and the Caring Heart team.

    He was to be discharged on the 24rd of February, I was alerted to the fact that Emmanuel was to be discharged the next day being 24th.. But alas, that was not to be. Before the 24th,  Mr Okorie was jolted by the terrifying news that Emmanuel’s stitches suddenly broke and his entire guts or intestines spilled out of his bowels. This was a devastating blow and a huge shock to everyone.

    “Accordingly, he was rushed back into the theater and operated on again. For days he was in excruciating pain and cried uncontrollably. Worst of all, he was unable to take anything including the mother’s breast milk. Those were days of extreme anguish and worry for all of us involved in his case,” said Okorie in a chat with our Reporter.

    Gradually, Emmanuel recovered and has been discharged. After a comprehensive assessment, the medics said he has fully recovered and was in good health.

    Coincidentally, the day he was discharged was the birthday of his benefactor, Linus Okorie who single-handedly footed the bills for his double surgery and sundry expenses.

    Speaking to The Nation after the discharge of her son, Emmanuel’s mother, Mary Sunday thanked God for saving her son from death. She further appreciated Mr Okorie for standing by them throughout the ordeal.

    Also, Mr Okorie in his own reaction said the discharge of Emmanuel is the best birthday gift for him.

    “Join us in rejoicing with Master Emmanuel Sunday and his entire family for the gift of life and health. I thank all of you, good people, for your prayers and goodwill for Emmanuel’s recovery over this past month. Permit that I particularly appreciate the Amurt Foundation (especially its Dr Agu), Caring Heart programme contact person, Onyekachi Ani, FETHA Medical team and Emmanuel’s mother who went through the entire trauma”.

    “Team caring heart would be full satisfied even if Master Emmanuel’s recovery ends up the only success of our programmed 10 month sojourn across our ten clans in the federal constituency. His life, which God allowed the privilege of contributing to is worth more than all the money in this world and every effort and commitment to the entire outreach programme,” Okorie added.

    “As we programme berths this Sunday March 18, 2018 at Ugwulangwu, Ohaozara Local Government Area, Mr Okorie appealed for participation and support of all stakeholders to make it another success.

    “We must encourage all those requiring medical attention within Ugwulangwu to come out enmass to avail the opportunity presented by the programme,” he said.

  • Mentally-ill mother back home, 32 years after

    Three decades of siblings agony ends as a psychiatric patient mother returns to their Anambra State home, reports NWANOSIKE ONU, with additional writing by OGOCHUKWU IKEJE

    It would have been agonising enough if she were gone for six months or one year. But Mrs Rose Anene left their Anambra State home 32 years ago when the oldest of her four sons, Chukwudi, was just six years. She left home after suffering a bout of depression and complaining that she was feeling odd and wanted to return to her maiden home. She hails from Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, but got married to Mr Augustine Anene from Umudioka Awka, Anambra State.

    For those 32 years her four young boys and their only sister suffered untold hardship. They had no motherly care and guidance, and grew up with the scar, shedding tears from time to time. They did not know their mother’s whereabouts, and could not say whether she was alive or dead. The trauma was devastating. Their upbringing fell to Mrs Felicia Okechukwu who was a co-wife to their mother at the time.

    When Mrs Anene told her husband that she could not understand how she was feeling and that she wanted to return to her parent’s home, Mr Anene took her to Aba, Abia State, thinking a change of scene would do the trick. It did not. She kept clamouring to go home. Eventually, her wish was granted but it was learnt that she soon left for an unknown destination. Mr Anene died about two years after the Aba trip.

    How Mrs Anene fared everyday since her disappearance remains a secret only time may reveal but it seems she ended up in Lagos State at some point from where she was moved in 2004 to a mental facility in Anambra and from there to the Home for the Mentally Challenged set up in 2014 by the Caring Family Enhancement Initiative (CAFÉ) run by wife of the state governor Mrs Ebelechukwu Obiano.

    Mrs Obiano facilitated Mrs Anene’s discovery and reintegration with her family, a development which brought back memories and tears in the Anene home. It was also the highpoint of the 2018 International Women’s Day celebrations held at the Home for Mentally Challenged, Nteje in Oyi Local Government Area, Anambra State.

    CAFÉ, a non-governmental organization (NGO), was established and managed in collaboration with the state Ministry of Social Welfare, Children and Women Affairs.   The local government chairman of Awka South Local Government Area, Leo Nwuba was moved to tears as Mrs Anene saw her children once again. He said he would make sure the woman was reintegrated into the system and also not suffer any form of stigmatisation.

    Mrs Anene’s only daughter, 42-year-old Mrs Ifeyinwa Uzozie got emotional when she saw her mother again, telling the crowd how difficult it was growing up without the presence of a mother.

    The first son of the woman, Chukwudi Anene who was only six years old when his mother left the house, said in tears that it was regrettable that their father was not alive to witness such a remarkable event

    He said the family would always be grateful to Mrs Ebelechukwu Obiano for being there for the helpless in the society, adding that the family had given up on their mother before now.

    During the celebration of the woman in Anambra on the International Women’s Day in the state, Chief Mrs Ebelechukwu Obiano discharged 12 inmates made up of eight women and four men at the mental home. The governor’s wife expressed delight that the Home was fast realising its objective with the recovery and discharge of more inmates.

    She said, “By treating and reuniting estranged member of a family, we stop the incidence of trauma and ambivalent relationship between them and restore the fabric of the family and by extension that of the larger society.

    “We feel highly elated at the landmark achievement of reuniting twelve of our inmates with their families, especially our dear sister-Rose, who is going back home after 35 years of estrangement due to ill-health.”

    “Since the inception of this 77-bed facility in September 2014, we have made tremendous progress treating and rehabilitating over 62 inmates who come from different states in Nigeria including Abia, Ebonyi, Edo, Oyo Anambra, etc.”

    She thanked her husband, the Governor, Chief Willie Obiano, for donating his monthly salary to support the inmates, and called on others to do same to ensure that the good work was sustained. Mrs Obiano further revealed that the NGO (CAFE) gives the inmates proper post recovery rehabilitation by making sure they were meaningfully engaged when they leave the home.

    She highlighted other projects of CAFÉ which had touched many lives positively across Anambra communities like the eleven houses built for indigent widows, twelve toilets to promote hygiene in rural markets, the training and empowerment of over 3200 women, as well as free cleft lip surgeries for 45 children.

    Speaking with the Nation, the Commissioner for Women’s Affairs Social Welfare and Children, Dr. Victoria Chikwelu, recounted the efforts and commitment of the wife of the Governor in setting up the home for mentally challenged which she noted had saved many lives.

    She disclosed that Mrs Anene was formerly identified as Yoruba in the home, because she spoke only Yoruba with the First Lady, until recently when she recovered and started speaking Igbo.

    She said that the recovery and remembrance of the husband’s village in Awka by Mrs. Anene happened to the amazement of the officials whom she led to meet her family.

    For Mrs Felicia Okechukwu, a co-wife of the woman, the problem started like a movie in Africa Magic.

    “At that time, she started complaining to the husband that she was feeling somehow, that she wanted to go to her place in the west”

    “The husband then took her to Aba where they stayed for some time and it was noticed that the demand to go to her place did not subside and the husband and three other family members took her to her place and we later heard she ran away from there,” Mrs Okechukwu said.

    Azubuike, Mrs Anene’s second son, told the Nation   that previous efforts to trace their mother when they grew up proved abortive as nobody knew her whereabouts.

    He thanked Obiano’s wife for wiping their tears by treating and reuniting them with their mother, while praying that God would continue to bless her.

    Not only that Obiano’s wife was instrumental to Mrs Anene’s healing, she equally presented her with a sewing machine, wrappers and a sum of money.

     

  • Abia wades into land dispute

    The Abia State government has weighed in on a land dispute between one of its communities Akirika Obie in Ukwa East Local Government Area, and another in Akwa Ibom State.

    Akirika Obie and neighbouring Ika have been locked in a border dispute to which the Okezie Ikpeazu administration pledged to find a lasting solution.

    The deputy governor of the state Ude Oko Chukwu, who is also the state’s boundary committee chairman, said this when he led a high powered security agencies in the state to Army Base at Akirika Obie community today to thinker on the best way to bring a lasting solution to the land dispute between the two communities.

    Oko Chukwu, thanking the community for showing maturity and being peaceful even in the face of constant provocation by the neighbouring community assured that no part of the state would be ceded to another state, adding that the state government would not seat back and watch destruction of properties of its citizens.

    The deputy governor while pleading with the community to continue to maintain peace and avoid taking laws into their hands stated that Governor of the state, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu was working assiduously to ensure that lasting peace returns to the community. This is as he added that the presence of security operatives in the community was to ensure that there won’t be wanton killing or invasion of the community by any group of persons in any disguise.

    Oko Chukwu also used the opportunity of the visit to assure them of the state government to extend its infrastructural development drive to the community.

    Sources from the area had alleged that their place has been severally been under attacked by its neighbouring community where they have lost human life and economic crops to the invaders and called for government’s urgent attention to nip the cause of the invasion of their community in the bud.

  • Enugu steps up urban growth

    For some obvious reasons, the suburbs and satellite communities often bear the heaviest brunt of internal migration as thousands from rural areas continue to swarm cities in search of better opportunities. Such migratory pattern inevitably swells the population of these locations and puts an increasing pressure on public utilities, making such places seem, more or less, like the fabled poor cousins of their more swanky urban neighbours. The influx to the outer fringes of cities is mostly driven by practical consideration than anything else. For the average home-seeker on a low income bracket, aesthetics is hardly ever a priority subject; what matters, apparently, is the knock-down property rates on offer.

    With crumbling tenements and overstretched facilities, suburban and satellite communities are usually not the poster images of cities that authorities crave. Yet, the reality is that the majority of cities’ population live in these areas. Also, their typically large population implies an inherently massive voting bloc which politicians can only ignore at their peril. This is a fairly familiar experience for most cities of which Enugu is not an exception.

    So why does giving such areas the necessary makeover they deserve always seems like a near impossible task in the light of these facts? The answers are merely conjectural. However, besides being a task that simply overwhelms, the sheer scale of the projects needed to create any tangible impact might make social interventions in these places barely noticeable.

    But sometimes, it’s simply a question of a failure to sufficiently muster the political will. To a large extent, the condition of slum settlements is often a bitter highlight of the chasm between rhetoric and action.

    The paradox of satellite communities – the notion that they are places politicians visit only during election campaigns – has lately experienced a paradigm shift in Enugu with some ambitious urban renewal projects launched across many such neighbourhoods by the state’s helmsman, Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi. The governor’s intervention offers a glimpse of the sort of incremental turnaround that would have occurred in blighted communities had they been over the past years given the kind of attention the Ugwuanyi administration has devoted to their upgrade.

    There are a number of such neighbourhoods in Enugu metropolis and they all bear visible vestiges of decades-old neglect: A prominent locale in this infamous club is Abakpa-Nike, an urban-sprawl-gone-awry in the Enugu East Local Government Area and home to an estimated five hundred thousand residents, roughly one-third of the capital’s entire population. This

    community over the years earned a reputation which was more or less a byword for squalid living condition and it’s not difficult to see why: overcrowded buildings, deplorable state of connecting roads and scant regard for physical planning rules.

    But thanks to the new resolve to give the requisite attention to areas long overlooked in past development plans, Abakpa-Nike is experiencing an unusual facelift. Potable water which residents once accessed only via commercial vendors now flows in parts of this sprawling community. This is in addition to the series of ongoing infrastructure upgrade meant to rehabilitate and open up link roads in Abakpa. The state government last year awarded

    contract for the construction of five roads in the area comprising Edward Nnaji street-Ogwuagor road; Amaetiti street-Ugboye Abakpa-Nike road, and Abakpa-Nike market road.

    This drive is unlike the tokenism which residents of fringe communities had lived with for decades. The current experience is rooted in deep planning, not the perfunctory gestures of the past that lacked conviction and were barely sustainable. The intervention, as conceived presently, comes with a clear social and economic development plan that incorporates the state government’s immediate, short and long term goals. For instance, the extension of pipe-borne water into parts of Abakpa-Nike arose out of the state’s water board’s expansion of its capacity from 4,000 cubic metres to 18,000 cubic metres. The goal is to achieve 40,000 cubic metres by year end and extend water supply to all parts of Abakpa and indeed every neighbourhood in Enugu metropolis and substantially cover other parts of the state.

    The renewed vigour is consistent with Ugwuanyi’s often-stated vision to implement an even spread of infrastructural projects to give rural residents a high self-esteem, banish feelings of alienation and create new cities to reduce the current pressure on the state capital.

    “We will continue to direct our policies and projects towards these locations because that is

    where most of our people reside,” the governor said at the flag-off of a road rehabilitation project at Ngenevu, a high-density suburb straddling the foot of hills across which lies an abandoned coal mine.

    This declaration is as much driven by belief in the public good as it is by the knowledge that an improved living condition is an incentive for payment of taxes. Such conviction is at the heart of the N5m-project-for-every-community initiative, a grassroots development programme conceived by the Ugwuanyi administration to ensure government presence in the 450 autonomous communities in the state.

    “This is a special development that has never happened in Enugu State,” the chairman of the Enugu State Traditional Rulers Council, HRH Igwe Lawrence Agubuzu, had said of the programme that gives community leaders and residents the latitude to select a project to be sited in their communities and fund same with the money released by the state.

    As urban renewal projects extend to more communities like Iva Valley and Ugwuaji that had long lived with similarly bitter tales, cynicism which was once the default mode for residents is gradually giving way to optimism and a rekindling of a new social consciousness.

    This has, not surprisingly, bred a robust engagement between the government and the people whom the governor never fails to acknowledge as the “true heroes of democracy” So it is in some sense an implicit affirmation of the social contract and an understanding that governments should be obligated to always act in the people’s interest. Such mindset feeds the democratic culture. And it’s just as well that has, along with an unrelenting commitment to an inclusive ideal, surely taken firm roots in Enugu State. There could indeed be no better response to cynicism than good governance a point sufficiently proven by Governor Ugwuanyi.

     

    • Ani, a former editor of ThisDay, The Saturday Newspaper, and later Saturday Telegraph, sent this piece from Enugu
  • Groans in Enyimba City

    Groans in Enyimba City

    A midnight fire has razed a clothing market in Aba, Abia State, leaving traders in tears and deepening the country’s textile woes.

    The shop owners could only weep as a four-hour inferno reduced their shops to rubble in Aba, Abia State’s commercial hub. But it was not just the traders that were rattled by the midnight fire; it also deepened the woes of a country whose textile industry is comatose.

    For decades now since the collapse of the local textile industry, Nigerians have largely relied on imports to clothe themselves. Local textile dealers, many selling fabrics made in Aba, ensured that Nigerians were not completely at the mercy of foreigners. With the fire at the famous Kent Textile cluster market in Aba South Local Government Area of Abia State, this is a gloomy time for the country.

    The traders have been counting their losses after their goods worth millions of naira went up in smoke.

    The fire raged for over four hours, it was gathered, though its cause was not immediately known. Sources, however, said they suspected the fire started from a tailor’s pressing room.

    Investigation revealed that three brothers, Emenike, Ndubuisi and Emenike Okorie who also deal in textile materials were mostly affected by the fire. Not even a single pin could be salvaged from their shops.

    A source who gave his name as Precious said personnel of the Abia State Fire Service tried all they could to stop fire from spreading to other shops and adjoining buildings, but such was the intensity of the inferno that the officials could not achieve much. Some shop owners could not   salvage anything from their shops.

    One of the three brothers, Emenike while speaking with newsmen, said that he and two of his brothers lost goods worth millions of naira. He said that they were devastated when they arrived at the scene to see that their goods and shops were completely razed by the fire.

    He said, “The loss incurred is unquantifiable; mine runs into millions of naira. So you can imagine how much my other brothers may have lost to the fire.”

    While appealing to the state government and public-spirited individuals to come to their aid, Emenike stated, “It is a huge loss too much to bear for us. Who among three of us is going to support the other? I just pray that God will touch the heart of the governor or well-meaning individuals to come to our aides. The country is hard at this time and there is nothing as heartbreaking as one being hit with this kind of economic loss when the economic recession is biting hard on Nigerians.”

    An official of the Abia State Fire Service, who pleaded not to be mentioned after efforts to speak with the leader of the service in Aba failed, said that the damage was too much.

    The source said that investigation was on to ascertain the cause of the inferno, but warned residents to always turn off their electrical appliances when not in use and to unplug them when leaving their homes, offices and shops as power surge could also cause a fire.

    He also used the opportunity to warn people against keeping or storing inflammable materials like fuel in their shops as they could also enhance the intensity of fire during outbreaks.

  • Army gives cash to fallen soldiers’ widows in Enugu

    Army gives cash to fallen soldiers’ widows in Enugu

    About 95 widows of soldiers who died in the line of duty  in Abakpa and Awkunanaw Army Barracks, Enugu, Enugu State have been given N200,000 by the Army. General Officer Commanding (GOC), 82 Division, Nigerian Army, Major  General Adamu Baba Abubakar presented the women with the cash  at the Division’s auditorium in Enugu, on behalf of the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Tukur Yusuf Buratai.

    Gen Abubakar urged the beneficiaries to make judicious use of the money.

    He also thanked the state governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi for supporting the widows and the Division.

    A statement by Deputy Director Army Public Relations, 82 Division, Col Sagir Musa said the cash disbursed to the widows was in fulfilment of a January 15, 2018 Armed Forces Remembrance promise made to the widows of the fallen heroes by Governor Ugwuanyi. The governor pledged to give N19,000,000 to assist them in picking up their lives after the departure of their breadwinners.

    Presenting the cheque on behalf of the Governor Ugwuanyi, the Special Adviser to the Governor on security, retired Brigadier General Eze commended the army for their efforts in partnering with other security agencies in the state to ensure that there was peace in the state.

    Eze used the opportunity to reinstate the resolve of the state government to continue in its support to the army and other security agencies in any way it can.

    Some of the beneficiaries thanked Governor Ugwuanyi, the 82 Division Commander and Chief of Army Staff for the cash gifts and promised to use them judiciously. Some other beneficiaries said that they were going to invest the money they got in their already established businesses.

     

  • Transporter builds road in Enugu

    Transporter builds road in Enugu

    With only N1,200, the chief executive of the Peace Mass Transport (PMT), Chief Sam Onyishi  floated the transport business which has today turned him into a billionaire. That money was his family’s share of the compensation paid his Amukwa community by the University of Nigeria, Nsukka in 1985 for their farmland, which is part of the university.

    That money paid by the university has not only changed the story of his life but has benefitted the university community and his Amukwa community. Onyishi built a 2km road for the use of the community and the university.

    The road was recently commissioned by the Enugu state governor, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi amidst pomp nd pageantry.

    Elated Onyishi told the governor and his entourage during the occasion: “That money was paid to our village for our cash crops because we are the owners of this place and the University had to pay us for the cash crop. The money was handed over to me by my mother.

    “So, we are here today because of the University of Nigeria; we are here today because my mother trusted me; we are here today because God said ‘my son, with this, you will make exploits.’

    “Since 1985 that I started business with N1200 which was given to me by the University, I have never taken a loan.

    “Over the years, we have been maintaining the road, which led to the naming of the road after myself, by Nsukka Local Government. Since then, this road has been in my heart.

    However, by the special grace of God, we are here today to witness the commissioning of the fully constructed about 2 kilometre road, with twin drains, spanning from Enugu Road, through Orba Road to the South gate the University of Nigeria, Nsukka.

    “This road is aimed at opening up access between our community and the University, we want the University staff to live in our community, we want the students to live in our community, we want the University community to do their shopping along our street so that our village

    will feel the impact of the University more than it has ever done before,” he said.

    Highly impressed Governor Ugwuanyi responded thus :  “We are here to commission this road constructed by my brother and chairman, Chief Executive, Peace Mass Transit, Chief Dr. Sam Maduka Onyishi.

    “The project is intended to cement the relationship between the host community and the landlord, the University community and enhance transportation and other social economic activities in the area.

    “The road, which is to be henceforth known as Samuel Maduka Onyishi Road comes as a welcome complement to our government’s urbanisation initiative in Nsukka area.

    “You will of course recall that at the inception of this administration we made our intention to equip and urbanize Nsukka, the University town, founded over half a century ago, to compete with other Universities in attracting technology and knowledge-based businesses and other industry support ventures, bearing in mind that Nsukka is the second largest town and city in Enugu State.

    “In a special way, therefore, we commend Chief Sam Onyishi for adding value to this project, to the vision and benevolence of constructing this road, we urge all well-meaning Enugu citizens to key into the rural and urban development scheme of the State government by carrying out similar projects in their respective localities and various areas of operation.

    Besides  his frequent interventions in the community development, the business mogul, has also put smile on the faces of scores of less privileged families from Nsukka land, as huge number of its sons and daughters are fully engaged in his numerous establishments across Nigeria, particularly the oil and transport sectors of his business conglomerate.

    However, there is no gainsaying the fact, that Onyishi, has over the past 20 years, revolutionalised  the Nigerian road transport system, as his  company, Peace Mass Transit, ferries over 30,000 passengers daily across their destinations nationwide with no fewer than 3,000 buses in its fleet The PMT, which is a household name in Nigeria’s transport industry,

    has over 4,000 total employees as at September  2017, a breakdown of this shows that the company has a total of 3,000 drivers and about 1,000 workers who are on the field at the bus terminals.

  • Abia flags off free primary school feeding

    The Abia State government has flagged off a free school feeding programme for all primary school pupils in the state. The lunch programme was initially launched in the state in 2016 to cover primary 1 to 3 pupils, making Abia the first state in the federation to do so before now extending it to cover primary 4 to 6.

    Flagging off the programme for primary 4 to 6 at Ubakala Central School in Umuahia South Local Government Area, Dr Ikpeazu commended the federal government for looking the way of vulnerable pupils and creating a platform to feed primary school pupils from 1 to 3.

    He said that his government is desirous of ensuring that pupils focus their attention on learning, pointing out that there is a relationship between well fed pupils and the capacity to learn while hungry pupils find it difficult to concentrate.

    According to him, it is imperative to mainstream school feeding as a policy of his government, pointing out that the government opened up warehouses in the 3 senatorial zones where food items can be donated for the programme.

    He thanked the wife of the governor Mrs Nkechi Ikpeazu and her team for sustaining the programme, noting that the programme has moved school enrolment from 100,000 to over 300,000.

    The governor called on well-meaning Abians to donate towards the programme.

    The wife of the Governor, Deaconess Ikpeazu whose office is coordinating the programme expressed happiness with the development recorded and thanked all those who have supported the programme so far.

    Earlier, the Programme Coordinator of the Abia Schools free meal programme, Elder Emeka Ahuruonye who disclosed that the programme is designed to reduce hunger and enhance academic performance revealed that Abia is the only state where all pupils in primary schools are served free lunch and lauded the tireless effort of Deaconess Ikpeazu towards the success of the programme.

    Also the focal person of the Abia Social Re-investment Programme, Mr Chinenye Nwogu made public that the state expends the sum of N176 m monthly in feeding over 300,000 primary school pupils, adding that the programme has impacted positively on the vulnerable in society.

     

  • Nigeria, Africa’s growth blueprint, by Obi

    Nigeria, Africa’s growth blueprint, by Obi

    Former Governor of Anambra State Peter Obi has revealed how Nigeria and Africa could grow. Speaking to newsmen in London holding high-level discussions at the British House of Commons, he said the country and continent need huge investment in education and skill acquisition, as well  as meaningful support for Small and Medium-scale Enterprises (SMEs).

    “Nigeria must focus on investing in education and skill acquisition in order to turn round its economy, and drastically reduce the levels of youth unemployment,” Obi, who revolutionised the education sector in Anambra during his days as governor, said.

    He maintained that Nigeria must see education and skill acquisition as an investment, as this would help to diversify and grow the country’s economy.

    Obi noted that from the discussions it was evident that there are large opportunities in Africa, “but to achieve these, Africa requires huge investment in education and skill acquisition, as well as hugely supporting SMEs – which will help build a prosperous future for herself.”

    The former Governor, who since leaving office in 2014, has devoted enormous resources towards the promotion of education around the continent, added that “for Africa to transit from exporter of raw commodities to a manufacturer of finished goods, and become a significant member of the global technological world her people must be educated.”

    Chaired by Chi Onwurah MP (Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Africa), the discussions were attended by captains of industry and other British MPs and peers, among them Lord Chidgey, Co-Chair from the House of Lords of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Africa. Also in attendance were Lord Marland, Chairman of the Common Wealth Enterprise and Investment Council; Baroness Lynda Chalker of Wallasey; Emma Wade-Smith, Regional Trade Commissioner for Africa, who presented the keynote address; and David Luke, Co-ordinator of the African Trade Policy and the UN Economic Commission for Africa, who was also a guest speaker.