Category: Southeast report

  • 80% of primary schools in Southeast lack toilet facilities, says survey

    80% of primary schools in Southeast lack toilet facilities, says survey

    • ‘Pupils sit on floors’

    More than 80 per cent of public primary schools in the Southeast lack toilet facilities, according to a survey by the Centre for Social Awareness, Advocacy and Ethics (CSAAE).

    The survey, which covered 1,387 public primary schools, showed that most of the schools did not have access to toilets and running water, contrary to the Universal Basic Education Commission’s recommendation of at least two toilets for pupils in a primary school.

    The lack of these facilities, according to the survey, forces pupils to defecate in the open, exposing them to risks such as snake bites, insect bites and sexual assault.

    The report also highlighted the inadequate availability of textbooks and other learning materials, as well as absence of doctors and ambulances at primary health care centres.

    The survey’s findings underscore the need for improved infrastructure and resources in the region’s primary schools and health care facilities.

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    CSAAE Founder Rev.Fr Dr. Godswin Agbagwa, who made this known to reporters in Owerri, Imo State capital, said the organisation in 2021/2022 trained 190 youths to carry out the Local Government Good Governance Monitor (LGGM) project launched with the aim to advance good governance at local government level in the country.

    He expressed sadness that in all the states where the project was carried out, they performed poorly in the provision of toilets and running water.

    Agbagwa said only 29.08 per cent of primary schools in Anambra State, for instance, had access to toilet and running water, while in Imo and Abia, 26.44 per cent and 14.38 per cent of their primary schools boast of toilets and water facilities.

    He said: “Lack of toilets in our primary schools is a serious issue because the pupils are forced to go into the bush to empty bowels,” adding that they could be bitten by snakes, insects and other reptiles. “They can also be raped; the girls can contract diseases that may affect their health in years to come.”

  • Expert advocates functional feedback mechanism

    Expert advocates functional feedback mechanism

    Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) of the government in Ebonyi State have been advised to provide adequate and functional feedback mechanisms. 

    A communications expert with the State Accountability, Transparency, and Effectiveness (State2State) Activity, Nneka Acholonu Egbuna, gave the advice in Abakaliki at an orientation workshop on Communication Strategy for Priority Ministries and the Internal Revenue Service. 

    The workshop is part of the working relationship between USAID and Ebonyi State Government and Civil Society Organisations.

    It is geared towards transparent, accountable and effective governance for improved service delivery in three priority sectors, including Education, Health and Water, Sanitation and Hygiene.

    She told participants that ways of getting feedback included maintaining active social media channels for their organisations and also by providing contact details in all their messaging.

    Egbuna said having feedback channels would help the MDAs to get important feedbacks in real time that would help them to improve on their services and also checkmate fake government agents where necessary. 

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    She said the objective of the workshop was to acquaint information officers with the state’s communication strategy and its implementation action plan.

    The Special Assistant to the governor on ICT, Tony Nwizi, said the orientation would deepen the knowledge of information officers on how to better explain the activities of the government in the chosen sectors to the public.

    The Chairman of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Ebonyi State, Comrade Samson Nwafor, thanked  USAID and the State Team Lead for considering Ebonyi State for the orientation.

    One of the participants, Sylvester Egede, thanked the organisers of the programme, saying they would put into practice all they had learnt at the workshop.

  • Insecurity: PISE-P bold, courageous way to bring peace in South-East — Ribadu

    Insecurity: PISE-P bold, courageous way to bring peace in South-East — Ribadu

    The National Security Adviser (NSA) Mallam Nuhu Ribadu has lauded the new peace initiative in the South-East, saying it was a bold and courageous way to restore tranquility in the region. 

    The project is a new peace initiative championed by Peace in the South-East Project (PISE-P), which is pushing for a non-kinetic means of resolving the security and other sociological challenges in the South-East, improving infrastructure and achieving inclusion of the zone in the national equation. 

    So far, the initiative has gained the endorsement of Vice President, Kashim Shettima, the leadership of the National Assembly, the business class and many other notable Nigerians and institutions across the country.

    Receiving a delegation of the organisation led by the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Benjamin Kalu, on a courtesy call Thursday night, the NSA Ribadu said with PISE-P, common sense has taken over. 

    He said: “This is very good. Now, common sense has taken over. I think it’s a wonderful thing. It is the right thing to do. This is a bold, courageous one. The way you are going is the way it should come out. Our people have suffered. Unfortunately, things do happen. But let’s put it behind. This government is a different one. The President started very well. It’s a good one.”

    Kalu told the NSA that the new message of peace has received massive support from the people. 

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    “You encouraged me to lead from the front. The message of peace is a good one and it’s been embraced by all. We are using every platform to push it. Our people are responding. They say we want peace. We have developed a concept note. The DG DSS has been in support of this. This is what we have been doing anywhere we go to. Peace is better,” Kalu said.

    Chief of Staff to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and former Speaker of the House of Representatives Femi Gbajabiamila, has also endorsed the peace initiative. 

    Gbajabiamila gave his endorsement on Thursday when Kalu also led another delegation to inform him about the peace initiative for the South-East region.

  • Calabar-Odukpani road: Firm denies alleged N42b road contract

    Calabar-Odukpani road: Firm denies alleged N42b road contract

    A construction firm, Zeka Global Company Limited, which undertook the construction of Calabar-Odukpani dual carriageway, has described as false and baseless, claims that it received N42 billion as contract for the building of the dual carriageway.

    Dismissing the alleged N42 billion claim, a director with the construction firm, Ibrahim Adesina Tiamiyu, an engineer; disclosed that the contract was not even half of the figure being bandied by an online news portal.

    According to Tiamiyu, “it is completely false and mischievous to insinuate that the cost of the contract was N42 billion. The actual cost of the project was N17bn.”

    Offering insight into how Zeka Global Company Ltd was engaged by the Cross River State government, Tiamiyu said: “We came into the picture when other contractors were asking for cut-throat fees to handle the project and the government could not muster that. What Zeka did for the Cross River State was more or less a direct labour service which went a long way in reducing the cost of constructing the road. The award or engagement letter issued to us was to function as a “Service Provider” under a direct labour arrangement with the state Infrastructure Company, Infra-Cross. It was on the basis of our rich profile that Zeka was engaged. In fact, some contractors had charged the government about N60bn before the immediate past governor had to look in our direction that we should come in as a service provider.”

    The director lamented that in spite of their diligence and commitment to the completion of the project, “we are yet to be fully paid. The company is still being owed a balance of N2bn. This is besides debts owed the company from projects executed outside the dual carriageway for the state government

    “It is unfortunate that the purveyors of the phantom N42 billion contract sum were less concerned about fact-checking with the relevant ministries and agencies of government before speculating on the contract sum. “

    Located on 147 Ndidem Usang Iso Road, the company which began the construction in 2020 finally completed and delivered the project in 2023

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    Speaking on some failed portions of the road, Tiamiyu disclosed that “normally in road construction, there is a period called defects liability period where the road is open to traffic during a six months period in order to observe its behaviour. If there is a defect during the six months period, the contractor returns to site to fix or address whatever the defects are. So it’s not right to say the road has failed. In fact, it is mischievous to insinuate as such.”

    According to the director, there are a lot of factors that could have caused a road to fail. He clarified that “the portion of the road that gave way was later discovered to be sitting on shale materials. That was what caused that particular portion to give way. And with what we have noticed, we are waiting for the rains to cease so that we can return to the site to get it fixed, despite that the shale materials we found was not captured in the Bill of Engineering Measurement and Evaluation (BEME).”

    Corroborating Tiamiyu’s assertion, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Works, Dr. Godwin Akeke, Director, Civil, Ministry of Works, Dr. Desmond Ewa and Pius Okpa, Director, Inditek Partners and Consultant to the Cross River State Ministry of Works all agreed that “the issue on the portion of the road that gave way is not about the competence of Zeka as a company that handled the work. There were underlying issues which were not foreseen such as underground seepage of water, presence of amco pipes buried under the ground and prevalence of borrow pits. If these were not foreseen and were not part of the contractor’s design and schedule, the contractor would not handle them because they were not covered under the terms of engagement. So there will be need for variation because he did not know that undersee page was taking place there. Against this backdrop, the portion of the road was likely to give way. However, since it is still within the defects liability period the contractor will go back to site but with variation in the contract.

    So the issue of competence does not arise. People are making insinuation simply because it is an indigenous contractor and they will do everything to discredit them.”

    Tiamiyu, however, appealed: “We will greatly appreciate if the government can pay us the outstanding balance of N2bn due to the company to help quicken our return to site to fix the failed portion.”

  • Otti signs Aba Development Authority Bill into Law

    Otti signs Aba Development Authority Bill into Law

    Abia State Governor Alex Otti yesterday signed into law, the Greater Aba Development Authority (GADA) Bill recently passed by the House of Assembly.

    Speaking after assenting to the bill, Dr.  Otti said the establishment of the Greater Aba Development Authority is to give Aba a special focus as a commercial hub. He added: “Everyone who had followed the process of the campaigns and elections would have remembered that we have said that we needed a special focus on Aba, the commercial nerve centre of the state.”

    The governor said Aba combined what many cities had individually, noting that Aba was not just a commercial zone, but also an industrial hub where “we have all sorts of light manufacturing, heavy manufacturing, micro small and medium scale businesses, trading. Virtually every street in Aba is a market. Although we are working and organising them, it is a strength we recognise.”

    Otti said: “When we invest heavily in infrastructural renewal in Aba, it is because we recognise the potential Aba has and we believe if we improve on ease of doing business, we attract a lot of businesses.” 

    He congratulated the Speaker of the House of Assembly, other lawmakers and members of the Executive Council on the passage of the bill, saying with the law, Aba’s rejuvenation had got a legal backing to bring about the needed development in the city.

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    Presenting the bill earlier for the governor’s assent, Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Ikechukwu Uwanna, said it was passed into law by the Assembly on December 8, 2023.

    He said the Greater Development Aba Authority bill is the first bill Otti is signing into law and congratulated the governor on achieving the feat 

    The Director General of the Greater Development Aba Authority, Mr. Uche Ukeje, described the law as a special vehicle that would drive the development of Aba and realise the governor’s vision about the city. 

     Secretary to the State Government, Prof. Kenneth Kalu; Special Adviser on Legislative Matters, Luke Onyeani; Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Ferdinand Ekeoma, among other top government officials, were present at the event.

  • Fishermen list pollution, trawlers’ incursion, others as obstacles to vocation

    Fishermen list pollution, trawlers’ incursion, others as obstacles to vocation

    Traditional fishermen operating in the creeks, rivers and Atlantic coastlines of Bayelsa State have listed oil pollution, incursion by industrial fishing trawlers and unnatural fishing methods as obstacles to their vocation.

    They identified the challenges yesterday at a capacity building workshop organised by Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) in Yenagoa.

    The fishermen identified the obstacles at a brainstorming session facilitated by the Research and Publications Lead at HOMEF, Dr. Ogechi Cookey, saying they were responsible for dwindling catch by fishermen across the Niger Delta.

    According to them, industrial fishing trawlers restricted by law from operating near the coastline often encroach to ‘sweep’ the waterways by overfishing and catching fingerlings that ought to grow to replenish the fish stock.

    They also lamented that some fishermen use some local leaves and mix them with chemicals to boost catch to the detriment of the food chain.

    A community leader in Ikarama, Yenagoa Local Government, Chief Washington Odoyibo, noted that oil exploration and associated spills had wiped out fish species and made the waters toxic to support fishing.

    He said during oil spill incidents, the booms used to trap crude from spreading obstruct navigation by fishing boats and regretted that oil firms often abandon the booms even after clean up.

    Also, a community leader in Ikarama, Chief Mrs Ayibakuro Warder, noted that prolonged exposure to crude and inhaling the toxic fumes had increased the prevalence of asthma and other respiratory ailments.

    Warder said: “The frequent spills in Ikarama has led to diagnosis of many new strange ailments previously not common, and women are worst hit because they stay longer on the farms and get exposed to crude.

    “The report by Bayelsa Oil and Environmental Commission found higher than normal levels of heavy metals in breast milk of breastfeeding mothers.

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    “High rate of miscarriages among women of reproductive ages in oil communities was also reported by the study.” 

    A renowned environmentalist, Chief Alagoa Morris, praised HOMEF for building the capacity of fishermen to defend their environmental and human rights.

    Morris, who is also technical adviser on Environment to Bayelsa Governor, urged the fishermen to make contributions that would help policy makers to formulate policies to improve fisheries.

    Senior Special Assistant on Tourism to Bayelsa State Governor, Dr Piriye Kiyaromo, in his goodwill message, noted that there was a link between fishing and tourism.

    He said tourists often accompany fishermen on fishing expeditions even as they also add to the culinary experience of tourists who crave local dishes.

    Kiyaramo noted that the proposed State Ministry of Blue Economy in Bayelsa would take care of the concerns and challenges faced by fishermen, who form a significant segment of the blue economy.

  • UNIPORT gets 65 new professors

    UNIPORT gets 65 new professors

    The University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT) has promoted 42 senior academics to the rank of professors and 23 others to associate professors.

    Spokesman Dr. Sam Kpenu said in a statement in Port Harcourt yesterday that the new professors passed through stringent selection criteria set up by the university.

    “The promotions followed approval by the Minister of Education on December 8.

    “The academics were promoted following the recommendations of the Central A & PC Academic meeting of UNIPORT held on November 23.

    “The university hereby announces the promotion of 42 officials nominated as professors of their disciplines and 23 others as associate professors (readers),” he said.

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    A breakdown of the promotion showed the professors’ category has 10 new professors from the Faculty of Education; Faculty of Science got 10, Faculty of Humanities, eight, College of Health Sciences, eight; Faculty of Agriculture, three; Faculty of Engineering, one; Faculty of Social Science, one, and Faculty of Management Sciences,  one.

    In the Associate Professor (Readers’) category, Faculty of Education produced seven new readers; Faculty of Humanities, five, and Faculty of Science, three.

    Others are Faculty of Engineering, two; Faculty of Science, two; College of Health Sciences, two; Faculty of Agriculture, one and Faculty of Computing, one.

  • Bureau trains security personnel in handling guests 

    Bureau trains security personnel in handling guests 

    Cross River State Tourism Bureau, in an effort to ensure proper handling of guests by security personnel, yesterday trained military and paramilitary personnel to better serve tourists during the Christmas festival/carnival 2023.

    The Managing Director, Cross River State Tourism Bureau, Prince Ojoi Ekpenyong, said the security personnel expected to undergo the training included those from the Army, Navy, Air Force, Police, Civil Defence, VIO, Road Safety, Immigrations, Customs and even private security services. 

    He said: ”The essence of this training is to return Cross River State to that world-class destination. Security men are our first gatekeepers, they’re the one who interact with our visitors, so we are here to let them know that they must welcome our visitors with a smile. They must do their jobs with love and professionalism.

    “The training is aimed at promoting a police friendly environment in Cross River. Whether you like it or not, when the police and other agencies solve the problem on the road with love, more people will come to Cross River State.” 

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    Launching the one-day training, House of Assembly Speaker Elvert Ayambem hailed Ekpenyong for taking steps to train security personnel as part of the modernisation of the tourism industry.

    “Most of the countries people travel to, they don’t even have what we have in Cross River State. I’m thanking the governor for rejigging the tourism of Cross River State.”

    Giving the overview of the training, Vice President, Federation of Tourism Association of Nigeria (FTAN), Justina Ovat, said the training would inculcate the spirit of hospitality and excellent service to drive exceptional guest experience during Calabar Carnival. 

  • We’ll bring development to Edo, says aspirant

    We’ll bring development to Edo, says aspirant

    A governorship aspirant in Edo, Victor Eboigbe, has vowed to bring development to the state if is he elected as the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and eventually wins.

    He made this known at Ward 1, Ewohimi, Esan South East Local Government.

     Eboigbe said: “We are gathered here today because I want to tell you, my people, that I have taken the decision to vie for the position of governor of our dear state.

    “There is no way I can ever make the final formal decision without first informing you.

    “You have to be the first to know because charity, the saying goes, begins at home.”

     The aspirant, a federal commissioner with Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC), recalled his political journey from the Action Congress (AC), through the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) to the APC.

    He urged the people to rally round him as they have always done over the years.

     He said the time has come for the people to be involved in governance.

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     Eboigbe thanked the people for their support, which, according to him, is the pivot on which his success stands.

    “I am glad we have walked roads together. I am happier today that we are still together, knowing that we have many more memorable journeys to go together. Your ever ready support made past journeys possible. With it I have contended with and conquered numerous challenges. With it, I will be able to conquer more, including this one.

     “With your support, I am certain that I will be able to make our dear state the envy of other states in the provision of people-oriented development. This is the reason I am stepping forward to take the challenge. This is the reason I am putting it before you,” he said.

  • NDDC seeks partnership on green innovation

    NDDC seeks partnership on green innovation

    Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) has expressed determination to embrace clean energy sources through practical approaches, nature-based solutions and green innovations.

    Speaking during a side event at the Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai, the NDDC Managing Director, Dr. Samuel Ogbuku, said the commission was leveraging on the key sectors of the energy transition plan, to develop new green skills and create new jobs. 

    Ogbuku in a statement signed by the NDDC Director, Corporate Affairs, Pius Ughakpoteni, said significant investments, partnerships and collaboration were required to succeed in such direction.

    He said: “Our gathering at COP28 is a reminder of the urgent need for several and collective actions to address the issues of climate change.

    “Sustainable development for the Niger Delta is underscored by the high vulnerability of the region to impacts of climate change and environmental pollution. 

    “The high exposure of the region to sea level rise, storm surges, coastal erosion and river flooding, compounded by increasing human-induced pressures on coastal areas, made the region one of the most impacted by climate change in Africa.”

    Ogbuku said the vulnerability of the region was further aggravated by oil spillages, gas flaring and environmental degradation.

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    He said: “While Niger Delta is a critical ecosystem, rich in natural resource, and a significant contributor to the global economy, this vast resource is intricately interwoven with compounding climate change and environmental issues. These resources have the leveraging-capacity for the transition to a low carbon, climate-resilient development pathway.” 

    The NDDC boss said the commission would explore the four major themes of COP28, namely technology and innovation, inclusion, frontline communities and finance.

    He explained that NDDC was participating at the climate change conference to leverage the spirit of the themes to seek partnerships in green innovations and finance to fast-track green initiatives aimed at limiting global warming to 1.5 degree centigrade by 2030.

    Ogbuku said: “NDDC is determined to mainstream climate considerations in our operations and in our development planning and implementation. Our theme at this Side Event, ‘Green Innovation for Climate-Resilient Development in the Niger Delta Region: A Credible Approach for Net-Zero Target’, shows our commitment to national and international direction for carbon neutrality.”