Category: SouthEast

  • Philanthropist constructs multi-million research centre, morgue in Imo

    Philanthropist constructs multi-million research centre, morgue in Imo

    For years, residents of Ezinihitte Mbaise Council Area in Imo State endured the burden of trekking long distances in search of medical treatment.

     Unfortunately, this lack of access to healthcare facilities has led to unnecessary suffering and preventable deaths due to untreated ailments, highlighting the urgent need for improved medical infrastructure in the region.

    As a beacon of hope emerges for the people of Ezinihitte Mbaise Council Area. Renowned philanthropist and entrepreneur, Dr. Summers Vitus Nwokie, has embarked on an ambitious project to construct a multimillion Naira medical research centre, state-of-the-art medical facility, and modern mortuary. 

    This groundbreaking initiative aims to revolutionize healthcare delivery in the state a d Southeast region, providing access to quality medical services and ending the era of unnecessary suffering.

    The ultramodern medical facility will boast cutting-edge equipment, specialized departments, and a team of highly skilled healthcare professionals. The medical research centre will focus on innovative solutions, tackling prevalent health issues, and improving healthcare outcomes. 

    The modern mortuary will provide dignified and hygienic facilities for the deceased, bringing comfort to grieving families.

    This monumental project is expected to provide comprehensive healthcare services to residents and neighboring communities,create employment opportunities for healthcare professionals and support staff, foster medical research and innovation, driving healthcare advancements and enhance the quality of life for the people of Ezinihitte Mbaise and beyond

    Dr Nwokie’s generosity and vision have brought new hope to the region, promising a brighter future for generations to come. As the construction progresses, the community eagerly anticipates the completion of this life-changing project, marking the beginning of a new era in healthcare excellence.

    Speaking to newsmen in Owerri,  while inspecting the ongoing project, Dr. Nwokie expressed deep commitment to improving the lives of his fellow citizens.

    He said the research centre is dedicated to advancing medical science and treatment options in Nigeria. 

    According to him, the facility will feature state-of-the-art diagnostic equipment, robotics technology, specialized wards for various medical disciplines. 

    He disclosed further that modern morgue will provide world-class mortuary services, addressing a long-standing gap in the region’s healthcare infrastructure. 

    Read Also: Imo to host NUJ delegates’ conference

    “This morgue which is 90 per cent ready also comes with a chapel for funeral mass aims to drastically cut down funeral expenses.

    He emphasized that if every wealthy Nigerian invested in healthcare, the need to seek medical treatment abroad would significantly decrease. 

    “This, in turn, would make quality medical care accessible to all, including the underprivileged, at an affordable cost.

     “This project is more than just a building; it’s a commitment to the people of Imo State and the surrounding states. I have always believed that access to quality healthcare is a fundamental right, and with this facility, we are taking a significant step towards ensuring that right for everyone in this region,” he said. 

  • Minding the mutating protest

    Minding the mutating protest

    By Tunde Akanni and Amira Obi-Okoye

    Most credible English Language Dictionaries provide at least 10 synonyms for the word protest – object, disagree, oppose, complain, disapprove, declare, insist, affirm, avow, declare, grouse, holler, belly-ache. One Thesaurus, in fact, offers 106 synonyms and antonyms of the word “protest”.  Yet writers don’t often consider any of them good substitute for “protest”, because over the decades, the word has assumed a much deeper, complex and lethal meaning.  

    Palpably so, perhaps. The past decade or thereabouts, protests have become a dominant instrument of people and issue management across the local and international arena. The famous six-letter English noun (which doubles as a verb) has not only assumed new meanings, it has also grown in power and influence. How powerful a word can be!

    Nigerians in particular now have an unprecedented appreciation of the phenomenon. When the raging protest was still in the offing with the commencement date announced, there were mixed feelings. Planners, including their lawyers, assured that it would be peaceful. The agitated government folks repeatedly alerted that hoodlums could take advantage of it. 

    Eventually, the truth of the fears manifested with several properties vandalized and looted in addition to lives lost. Indeed, such is the magnitude of the losses that some initial promoters of the protest now want it halted. But it is merely easier said. 

    Yet the protest, in our own reckoning as experts, was avoidable in the first place.  What else was left for the media to register on the consciousness of government functionaries? Not even in this age of buoying media abundance with increasing actualities can anyone accuse the media of under-reportage of visible signals.  So much more offered by informed comments and analyses could not have been more timeous either.  

    Interestingly, one of the promoters of the protest, Omoyele Sowore, barely parroted an old claim of the nation’s socio-economic situation which ironically has even accentuated over decades.  Years back, foremost leader of Yoruba politics, Obafemi Awolowo, was reported to have said: “We have won the civil war. Yes, indeed. But to win the war for peace, we must recognize the real enemies…As far as I can understand, the aggressors against peace and stability in Nigeria are abject poverty, hunger, disease, squalor and ignorance”  These have combined to now compel some fire-brigade interventions with no feasible sustainability promise.  Its Nigeria’s hard and painful share of the mutating historic phenomenon.

    About a decade ago, this famous word took the Arab world by storm. Now famously referred to as the Arab Spring, it was a wave of pro-democracy protest that began in 2010 with Mohamed Bouazizi’s self-immolation in Tunisia, sparking the Jasmine Revolution. Similar movement sprang up in the Middle East and North Africa with significant uprisings in Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria. The protests which were chaotic to say the least, highlighted the people’s desire for political freedom. But it snowballed into a protracted unintended instability and economic hardships.

    Just this July 2024, “protest” rode virulently in the manner of a hurricane through Bangladesh and the United Kingdom. In Bangladesh where it finally tragically culminated in a military take-over, demonstrators trooped out against discontent over government job quotas reserved exclusively for families of veterans from the 1971 independence war, and turned into demands for Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s resignation.

    The government returned with fire, felling no fewer than 250 lives. The military, led by General Waker-Uz-Zaman, announced Hasina’s resignation and set up an Interim Government to address the demands of the protesters.

    Though with fewer deaths, the UK protests are not any less unnerving.  Since 2011 there have been pockets of protests across the country but last week it became disturbingly violent. The immediate explanation of the mob was the alleged police complicity resulting from the shooting of a Briton, Mark Duggan allegedly by an immigrant. The shooter turned out to be a British with Rwandan mother but it did not matter. The protests highlighted system issues with British society and strained community-police relations.

    Few months earlier, in Kenya, protests were ignited by opposition to the Finance Bill 2024. It was tagged “#RejectFinanceBill2024”. It quickly snowballed into a cross-divisional and multi-dimensional flame of riots against the leadership of President William Ruto. The President was forced to dissolve his cabinet but the crises have not fully abated.

    Now, “protest” has landed in Nigeria, after weeks of hovering in the cloud as deadly thunderstorms do, leaving its trademark – devastations, trails of blood, deaths and empty canisters beclouded with police tear gas.

    Even the most virulent leader shivers at the threat of a protest, because when it starts no one knows what will follow and how it will end. Although protest as an activity or action is as old as humanity, its encroachment into the international political arena deserves a more critical look. 

    All of the examples of escalated protests that we just referred to except that of Nigeria (Arab Springs, Kenya protests, the “coup” in Bangladesh and the Britain) have diplomatic or international undertones. That is the reason the Tinubu Administration in Nigeria should not take the current wave of “#Endbadgovernance” with kid’s gloves especially with brazen flaunting of Russian flag in Kano, Kaduna and some other parts of northern Nigeria. 

    But public discontents can always be nipped in the bud by listening leaders. They need to make better and more sincere and effective use of the knowledge of the concept of multi-track diplomacy. The concept (or theory if you like) has grown in acceptance among scholars as a conflict resolution tool. Put simply, it says that a menu of nine factors, when properly blended and applied proactively would bring about peace in the international arena. These are: Government (executive, legislature an judiciary); Professional conflict resolution (especially by non-state actors); Business (how economic activities could address disparity and poverty); Private citizens (individuals and groups); Research, training and education; Peace activism; Religion; Funding and the Media (and public relations).

    Clearly, Abuja did not make up its mind to meet with the leaders of the relevant segments of the society in good time, just that it made huge shows of the meetings.  Were the meetings also sufficiently frank, not merely cosmetic? Were there implemetable plans to step down the messages duly suffused with sincerity and completely bereft of political arrogance? How mindful were such engagements mindful of the peculiarities of the various regions with varying bents of insecurity?  No one, for instance, could have imagined the brazen and wanton destructions of private and public properties carried out in Kano including attacks on facilities that serve the common man daily like traffic lights. What worse level can we further descend into?

    The truth: Peace is always negotiable when the right steps are taken at the right time.

    Tunde Akanni, PhD and Amira Obi-Okoye, a doctoral student, are Media and Conflict scholars based at the Faculty of Communication and Media Studies, FCMS, LASU

  • Tinubu, Mbah flag off 2024 women’s August meeting in Enugu

    Tinubu, Mbah flag off 2024 women’s August meeting in Enugu

    The wife of the President, Senator Remi Tinubu, and the wife of the governor of Enugu State, Mrs. Nkechinyere Mbah, have flagged off the 2024 Annual August Meeting in Enugu State, calling for synergy and action against all forms of abuse.

     Senator Tinubu and Mrs. Mbah commended the August Meeting initiative as a veritable platform to rally women for community development, noting that it is a reminder that individual contributions and selfless service were crucial to the nation’s progress.

     Flagging off the state’s 2024 edition of the meeting themed ‘Eliminating Abuse to Foster a Healthy Society,’ the wife of the president, who was represented by the wife of the Vice President, Hajiya Nana Shettima, said, “This annual tradition provides a vital platform for our mothers, daughters, and sisters to gather and address pressing societal issues, mobilizing women in community building, political participation and community development.

    Read Also: FG warns contractors over delay on Enugu-Onitsha road project

     “This year’s theme is a clarion call to action. Abuse in all its forms is a scourge that we must eradicate. Every individual has the right to safety, free from physical, domestic, sexual, psychological, emotional, financial, and material discrimination, among others.

    “Let us also remember that abuse starts and ends with us, either as victims or as perpetrators. I, therefore, urge us all to rise to the challenge of eliminating abuse and fostering a healthy society for all of us. We must speak up and speak out against abuse.”

     She urged Nigerians to learn to dialogue responsibly and work together to foster a sense of empathy, and compassion towards one another, restating her resolve to better the lives of Nigerian women through her pet project, the Renewed Hope Initiative.

    “In education, we have provided scholarships to our children and youth across the country, with some having opportunities to study abroad. In agriculture, we have supported our women farmers with fertilizers and farming implements,” she stated

    “Very soon, we will be starting the Renewed Hope Women Economic Empowerment for 1000 petty traders in each state of the federation and the FCT. Our women will be supported with ₦50,000 each to recapitalize and support their businesses. Under our social investment programme, there is a scheme that provides for assorted food items, moving from one state to another,” Senator Oluremi Tinubu stated.

    In her remarks, the wife of the Enugu State governor, Mrs. Nkechinyere Mbah, while thanking the president’s wife for accepting to flag off the 2024 edition of August Meeting in the state, which she described as “an important and culturally symbolic month for women in Igboland”, added that Enugu women were “hugely inspired by the First Lady’s Renewed Hope Initiative, as it has stirred the spirit of self-reliance in women through its numerous empowerment programmes.”

    She said that the August Meeting was underpinned by the knowledge that governments alone could not possibly provide the entire needs of communities; hence, the need to bridge the needed gap and complement governments’ efforts.

    She also said that this philosophy inspired her pet project, Custos Care Foundation, through which she is making efforts to better the lives of Enugu women.

    “For instance, just a few months ago, we launched the Mama Care Initiative, which enrolled 1,701 expectant mothers into a one-year insurance scheme. This is in addition to the 100 expectant mothers, who were previously enrolled. This initiative was launched as a boost to the government’s effort to eradicate maternal and infant mortality in Enugu State.

    “Our August Meeting is also replete with similar leave-no-one-behind projects. It is such projects that have made the August Meeting a formidable socio-cultural and economic creation that has endured for ages,” Mrs. Mbah concluded.

  • Imo LG elections: Ex IMC member urges Uzodimma to recognise loyalists

    Imo LG elections: Ex IMC member urges Uzodimma to recognise loyalists

    A Former Interim Management Committee (IMC) member and Supervisor Chairman for Works and Transport in Oguta Local Government Area of Imo State, Hon. Uche Chukwudi, has made a passionate appeal to Governor  Hope Uzodimma to recognize and reward former IMC members who stood by him during challenging times.

     Addressing newsmen in Owerri,  Chukwudi disclosed that some of the members suffered intimidation and assassination while working to propagate the governor’s policies across the 27 council areas.

     “We suffered rejection, dejection, risks, intimidations, assassinations, kidnappings, and loss of properties while working to propagate the governor’s policies in the 27 councils. We deserve special recognition and compensation for our sacrifices,” Chukwudi stated.

    Read Also: FNPP lauds Uzodimma for fostering Southeast-Southwest pact

     He emphasized that it was unfair for individuals who did not support the governor during his judiciary trials to now seek party tickets and undermine those who were loyal.

     “Governor Uzodimma should remember his true loyalists and separate the ‘chaff from the wheat,’” Chukwudi urged.

     Noting that many former IMC members are contesting in the September 21 council election, Chukwudi stressed the need for special consideration as the party and governor’s core loyalists.

     “We should not be subjected to intimidation and opposition within the APC. Our loyalty and sacrifices should be acknowledged and rewarded.”

  • Why Daisy Danjuma donated hostels for girls to UNIBEN, by VC

    Why Daisy Danjuma donated hostels for girls to UNIBEN, by VC

    The Vice-Chancellor of the University of Benin (UNIBEN), Prof. Lilian Salami, has disclosed that a former representative of Edo South Senatorial District, Senator Daisy Danjuma, donated hostels for girls to the Federal Government-owned university, in view of her passion for the girl-child education and development.

    Salami, the tenth substantive Vice-Chancellor and the second female helmsman of UNIBEN, after the late Prof. Grace Alele-Williams, spoke at Ugbowo main campus of the higher institution on Benin-Lagos Expressway, while inaugurating the second hostel, and laying the foundation of the third hostel, to mark Senator Danjuma’s 72nd birthday.

    The first hostel, which was donated by Senator Danjuma’s husband, Gen. Theophilus Danjuma (rtd.), was inaugurated by Edo State Governor, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, on April 29, 2023, while the second and third hostels were free will donations by Senator Danjuma, with UNIBEN’s Vice-Chancellor expressing gratitude to her for the continuing benevolence to the higher institution.

    Salami said: “I call her Sisi Daisy. Some of us call her Sister, because I am accustomed to the secondary school’s days, when people are your seniors, you must respect them, and call them either Sisi or Senior. She is a wonderful woman.

    “The boys are asking, and I am sure that Gen. Danjuma will also do something very soon, and give boys’ hostel, but for now, we have girls’ hostels, because Sisi Daisy believes in the girl child and the development of the girl child, and she is always standing for the girl child.

    “Anytime you call on her to defend the girl child, she is willing to give, and always willing to be there. I am thanking her immensely that we appreciate all that she is doing for UNIBEN, and indeed for humanity.

    “By visiting the hospital named after Sisi Daisy’s late mother at the Government Reservation Area (GRA) in Benin City, for women who go there, everything is free. She is doing a lot to project humanity. May Almighty God continue to be with her, protect her, and continue to give her all her heart’s desires. So that when she looks back, she will realise that she has impacted humanity, and God will continue to elevate her.

    Read Also: Protest: UNIBEN reopens Monday, directs students to produce sworn affidavit

    “We are so happy. The marvellous Sisi Daisy delivers whatever she promises. That is the unique thing about her. It is not a case of an abandoned project. Unlike many abandoned projects in UNIBEN that we are still hoping will be completed, if not in my tenure, but in the tenure of the next vice-chancellor.”

    The varsity’s Vice-Chancellor also stated that by the time the donor would clock 90, the university would probably have Senator Daisy Danjuma hostels everywhere in the higher institution.

    The representative of the donor, Sir Andy Ehanire, who is the Managing Director of Ogba Zoological Garden and Nature Park on Airport Road, Benin, while also speaking, appreciated UNIBEN for singling out Senator Danjuma and her husband for honourary doctoral degrees.

    Ehanire said: “I was around at the inauguration of the first hostel. I know that UNIBEN’s Students’ Union President made a passionate plea that the Danjuma’s family should not forget the boys.

    “I have also bought into the agenda. So, I pray that two hostels should go on at the same time for the boys.

    “The donor always means well. I sometimes believe she shares attributes with the Vice-Chancellor of UNIBEN, Prof. Lilian Salami. They both carry a lot of goodwill, and exude a lot of charm. Anytime they are around, it is progress.”

    A past President of UNIBEN’s Alumni Association, Prince Richard Ahonaruogho, SAN, who is a former member of the Governing Council of UNIBEN, in his remarks, noted that the donation of hostels to UNIBEN was highly appreciated, deserving special commendation, and should be emulated, in order to move forward.

    Ahonaruogho called on individuals, organisations, members of UNIBEN’s alumni association, and other stakeholders to continue to support the university, stressing that the government alone could not develop the great citadel of learning, with their contributions and donations to forever be remembered.

  • Hunger Protest: Account for 13% derivation, IGR other funds -APC tells Oborevwori

    Hunger Protest: Account for 13% derivation, IGR other funds -APC tells Oborevwori

    • Says state receives more from FAAC, yet bogged by debts

    Delta All Progressives Congress (APC) has criticised as a “shameful and despicable lie” claim by Gov Sheriff Oborevwori that he had reduced the state’s debt profile from N500 billion to N370 billion.

    In reaction to the PDP Governor’s claim, APC lambasted the governor, who was Speaker when his predecessor embarked on a borrowing spree.

    In a statement, Delta State APC’s Publicity Secretary, Valentine Onojeghuo, said Oborevwori is “insensitive and without a human face”, lamenting that he had not taken any action to bring succour to the people of the State, despite the economic crunch in the country.

    The party blamed the state’s huge debt profile on the dubious loans collected by ex-Gov Ifeanyi Okowa which was approved by Gov Oborevwori during his time as Speaker of the state’s legislature.

    Onojeghuo said, “a majority of these questionable loans were borrowed from a bank he (Okowa) is alleged to have vested interests. And there is no indication that the State benefited anything from this colossal amount that was borrowed as most of this money was spent on his failed presidential ambition, while the rest went into installing Sheriff Oborevwori as his successor.”

    Continuing, “It is not a secret that Delta State is one of the states with the highest FAAC allocations and IGR, but with nothing to show for it in the last 20 years of PDP misrule.

    Read Also: Hunger protest: Account for 13% derivation, IGR other funds – APC tells Oborevwori

    “In the first place, the State got to this unenviable position of being the most heavily indebted state during the administration of Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa, the grandfather of the ‘prosperity for all’ deception, where billions of naira were collected in dubious loans approved by the State House of Assembly under Sheriff Oborevwori as speaker.”

    It said that Delta is one of the states with the highest federal allocation and internally generated revenue there with nothing to show in the last twenty years of PDP misrule.

    It said rather than the false narrative of debt reduction through prudent management more than half of federal accruals to the state were debited at source in “strict compliance with irrevocable standing order and used to service debts piled up by both Okowa and Oborevwori.”

    The party said the state remains one of the poorest states in terms of capital project development, adding that the only project ongoing is the Effurun and Enerhen flyover projects.

    It added that whereas the 13% Derivation funds, running into billions, paid during ex-President Buhari’s administration was used by Rivers ex-Governor Nyesom Wike to construct over six flyovers, ex-Governor Okowa frittered away Delta’s windfall.

    Onojeghuo said the state was littered with decrepit roads that had been washed away by rains and had become death traps and hotspots for kidnappers.

    He highlighted the plight of pensioners in the State who are owed billions in arrears, adding that many have died in penury and abject poverty without any payment of their retirement gratuities.

  • Crisis: Court bars Agballah, nine others from parading as Enugu APC exco

    Crisis: Court bars Agballah, nine others from parading as Enugu APC exco

    A High Court sitting in Enugu State has granted an injunction preventing Barr Ugochukwu Agballah from parading as the chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Enugu State.

    The order obtained by our correspondent on Friday was signed by J. I. Agu, Esq, Deputy Chief Registrar 1.

    Also barred from parading as officials of the party are: the Deputy Chairman, Chief Augustine Alumonah, Mr. Jude Chinedu Aniogbo, Mr. Moses Emeka Eze, Barr. Sunday Ugwoke, Mr. Ugwu Christian Kanayo, Mr. Eze Chidiebere Johnson, Queen Charles, Onyekachi T. Ezeagu, Comrade Idoko Chikadibia.

    Agballah was penultimate week suspended as the state chairman of the APC, by the state executive council of the party.

    He was suspended alongside three other executive members of the party in the state: Chief Augustine Alumonah (State Deputy Chairman); Mr Jude Aniogbo (State Treasurer) and Mr Emeka Eze (State Organizing Secretary). They were accused of abusing their offices.

    Read Also: Court bars Agballah, nine others from parading as Enugu APC exco

    However, the suit, NO: E/548/2024, filed before Hon. Justice C.V.C. Ezeugwu, has Nwafor Alphonsus Onyeachonam, Acting State Chairman, APC, Enugu State Chapter, Chief Michael Ezeanyawu, State Publicity Secretary, Comrade Peter Chime, State Youth Leader, Mr. Uba Uthman Onah (Chairman Forum Of L.G Chairmen and Comrade Samuel Okonkwo, (Chairman Forum Of L.G Secretaries) listed as plaintiffs/applicants.

    They sued for themselves and on behalf of the APC State Executive Committee members in Enugu State.

    The court document said, “UPON an application by Motion Ex-parte brought pursuant to Order 3 Rule 24); Order 38 Rules 1, 2 and 4(a); Order 7 Rule 5; and Order 39 Rules 1 and 2 of the High Court Rules of Enugu State, 2020; Sections 6 and 36 of the Constitution of Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as Amended); supported by a 46-paragraph affidavit deposed to by Chief Michael Ezeanyawu, and filed at the High Court Registry, Enugu on 2nd day of August, 2024; seeking an Order for Interim Injunction and Substituted Service.

  • Nigeria Wikimedia community inaugurates policy team

    Nigeria Wikimedia community inaugurates policy team

    The Nigeria Wikimedia Community Public Policy Advocacy Team has held its inaugural meeting to kick start its Public Policy Advocacy initiatives aimed at envisioning and engaging in social change in public policies and human rights, enhancing a friendly internet environment for open knowledge.

    The group comprises of representatives of Nigeria Wikimedia affiliates, public policy experts and community members and participants.

     Present at the meeting are Olaniyan Olushola (Group coordinator); Olatunde Isaac ( Wikimedia UG Nigeria); Dr. Nkem Osuigwe ( African Library & Information Associations & Institutions ); Tochi Precious ( Igbo Wikimedians User Group); Ammar Abdulhamid ( Hausa Wikimedians User Group); Mikaeel Adeshina, Kayode Yussuf ( Wikimedia UG Nigeria); Ceslauce Ogbonaya ( Igbo Wikimedians User Group); Levi Kambali ( Tyap Wikimedians User Group); and Rhoda James ( Secretary).

    Read Also: Wikimedia UG Nigeria marks International Mother Tongue Day

    The campaign is to create awareness through workshops, seminars, and public talks and raise awareness about the open knowledge principles.

    In its policy advocacy, the group engages policymakers at local, state, and federal levels to advocate for legislation and policies that promote open access to government data, research publications, and educational resources as well as capacity-building workshops

  • FG warns contractors over delay on Enugu-Onitsha road project

    FG warns contractors over delay on Enugu-Onitsha road project

    The Federal Government has issued a stern warning to contractors handling the dualization of the 107km Enugu-Onitsha road, citing dissatisfaction with the slow pace of work. 

    The Minister of Works, David Umahi said the project must align with the Renewed Hope administration’s policies on infrastructure development, particularly concerning project speed, quality, and the comfort of road users.

    Umahi gave the directive in Abuja on Thursday 8th August 2024 during a meeting with the management of MTN Nigeria, the funder of road construction under the Road Infrastructure Development and Refurbishment Investment Tax Credit Scheme, representatives of the Enugu State Government, and the two contractors handling the project, Reynolds Construction Company (RCC) Ltd and Nigercat Ltd.

    The Minister, who maintained that the delays in the project were not due to funding issues but rather a lack of execution on the part of the contractors, expressed disappointment over the current condition of the road and criticized the contractors for their lack of commitment and insensitivity to the plight of road users.

    Read Also: FG warns contractors over delays in Enugu-Onitsha road project

    He said, “The MTN has engaged the subcontractors, two subcontractors, RCC Ltd and Nigercat Ltd. The first time I supervised that project, I discovered that the Nigercat section where we have a binder course had failed. 

    “I directed that the binder course must be scarified and reinstated, and I knew it was inherited. I want to believe that it has been done.

    “Let me express my disappointment over the slow pace of work on that project. It’s one of the worst roads in this country. 

    “Everywhere we have diversion; diverting from the one that RCC and the Nigercat had completed, the contractors are not kind enough to even put stone based on the diversion points. 

    “So, by the reason of the launching of our ‘Operation Free our Roads,’ it is now a violation of the policy on the side of the controllers and directors of the Federal Ministry of Works where we have vehicles falling on any project that is ongoing or where there are potholes on our roads.” 

    Umahi recounted a recent inspection of the road alongside the Governor of Enugu State, where they witnessed firsthand the severe traffic congestion and discomfort faced by road users, particularly at the Abakpa section, where RCC Ltd had blocked off part of the road to lay binder, forcing all traffic onto a poorly maintained single carriageway. 

    “I have continued to say that Nigerians should not be suffering while contractors are building roads for our people. It does not happen in any other country, the way it happens in Nigeria. 

    “The public must know that the President’s intention is not for them to suffer while trying to fix the roads, and it is their right to insist that contractors should fix the roads that they are engaged on. 

    “Most of the time, contractors bring very serious nuisances, hardships, and pains to the public, and they don’t care.”

  • ANSIEC tasked on credible council polls to develop communities in Anambra

    ANSIEC tasked on credible council polls to develop communities in Anambra

    The newly inaugurated Board Members of the Anambra State Independent Electoral Commission (ANSIEC) have been tasked to ensure a credible local government electoral process to drive sustainable socioeconomic and infrastructure development of local communities in the state.

    President, Princeton Leadership Forum Africa, Dr. Prince Chibuike Echem, gave the charge in a statement made available to reporters in Abuja on Friday.

    Echem, who is also the Founder, Okenwa Ogbuka Foundation, said the upcoming local government elections in the state represent a significant moment in our state’s democratic journey.

    He said governance at the local level is fundamental to sustainable democracy and inclusive socioeconomic and infrastructure development of Anambra State.

    Read Also: Anambra election: Princeton President, Dr Echem, tasks ANSIEC board on credible LG polls

    He said the integrity of the elections would shape the future of public service and political leadership recruitment at the local levels, improve the quality of governance outcomes, and impact the lives of residents in Anambra State through the local government administration, which is the closest government to the people.

    Echem urged the Chairman and Commissioners of ANSIEC to approach the sacred duties of their solemn mandate with unwavering commitment, diligence and dedication to high standards of public service excellence.