Category: Special Report

  • Northern youths demand referendum for Igbo to go

    Leaders of the northern youth groups that  issued a three months ultimatum to Igbo yesterday called for the conduct of a referendum by the Federal government to enable Nigerians take a decision on whether the Igbo should be allowed to secede as being requested by separatist groups.

    The group spoke from hiding following Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai’s call for its members’ arrest.

    In the statement, the group lambasted the Chairman of the Northern States Governors Forum, Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima and El-Rufai for condemning their controversial statement and ordering the arrest of its signatories.

    Yesterday’s statement signed by Abdul-Azeez Suleiman, who signed the earlier statement, urged the Federal Government to urgently initiate the process for a peaceful referendum to allow the Igbo to go.

    The group however denied calling for violence in its initial quit notice.

    The statement said: “At the end, we came up with a position paper which we presented as the Kaduna Declaration in which we primarily called on the authorities and the international community to step in to formerlise the actualisation of the dream of a people who say in words and in action, and the whole nation appears to concur, that they are Biafrans, not Nigerians.

    “We further urged those Biafran nationales to relocate from the North to their newfound country in order to allow other people have peace. We are today compelled to make this further statement to clarify our stand on some issues that trailed the Kaduna Declaration made on Tuesday June 6, 2017.

    “After meeting to review the fallout of that Tuesday’s Declaration, our groups have noted hat some elements have for reasons best known to them, mischievously distorted the intent of our original script by alluding such words as ‘violence, ‘ ‘threat, ‘ ‘war’ and ‘mass action’ to it.

    “We find this mischievous because as cultured thoroughbred Northerners we have never anywhere and at anytime, under whatever circumstances, called anybody to violence as a means of conflict resolution.

    “In strict observance of that tradition we never employ violence as a means of pursuing our interest and, at every opportunity, we opt for peaceful engagements and implore people to eschew violence in all its ramifications.

    “This informs why, a majority of discerning Nigerians, not necessarily northerners alone, understood and identified with our express call for the Biafrans to be allowed to actualise their long-held secessionist aspiration.

    “We restate that we have never called anybody to violence and that people should discountenance the elements of fear and threat introduced by the distortions of merchants of mischief. We wholeheartedly endorse the moves made variously by our leaders to allay those fears and urge people to be peaceful and law-abiding while at the same time resolutely insisting on having the right thing done by allowing the Igbo to have and move to their dream country in accordance with the universal fundamental right to self-determination.

    “We restate our determination and commitment to ensuring that the North will never partake in any contrived arrangement that would still have the Biafran Igbo as a component. We reiterate our call on Nigerian authorities and recognized international bodies such as the ECOWAS, AU and UN to hasten the initiation of the process for the final actualization of the Biafran nation and with it the excision of the Igbos out of the present federation”.

  • Port Harcourt Refinery: A concession put on hold

    Port Harcourt Refinery: A concession put on hold

    The Federal Government’s plan to concession its refineries may not materialise soon. Reason: the Senate is investigating the proposed rehabilitation of the Port Harcourt Refinery and Petrochemical Company by a multinational oil firm. But, according to industry experts, an urgent resolution of the disagreement will be more beneficial to the country, reports Assistant Editor EMEKA UGWUANYI.

    The executive has been pitted against the legislature over the planned repair, maintenance and concession of the Port Harcourt Refinery and Petrochemical Company.

    Nigerian Agip Oil Company – the local subsidiary of Italian oil giant Eni, in partnership with Oando Plc, a Nigerian oil and gas conglomerate, were being considered for the job by the Federal Government before the National Assembly suspended the process.

    The Ministry of Petroleum Resources, which is driving the process for the government, believes that giving the facility to a private sector operator would serve Nigeria’s interest better.

    It was considering the technicalities and huge resources required to rehabilitate and manage a refinery but the Senate feels otherwise.

    To the lawmakers, the ministry erred by taking what they called a unilateral and unlawful action without recourse to transparency and due process. They accused the ministry of hiring a contractor without a wide consultation or conducting an open bid.

    According to them, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, should have engaged stakeholders and members of the public on the planned rehabilitation and concession of the refinery.

    They directed the executive to pull the brake on the rehabilitation plan pending the conclusion of investigation into the process that led to the award of the contract to Agip and Oando.

    Analysts argue that the executive may have acted in good faith following decades of government’s fruitless efforts to fix the moribund refineries, singing billions of Naira to carry out routine Turnaround Maintenances (TAMs).

    But the legislature said the executive, through the ministry and its Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) agency, should not have been involved in an arrangement that lacked transparency in a country guided by rules.

    The Head, Energy Research, Ecobank Group, Mr. Dolapo Oni, threw his weight behind the executive, describing the decision to engage private sector-driven firms to revamp the refineries as excellent. He said the refineries had suffered neglect for a long time.

    Oni said: “Private sector help is appreciated in revamping the refineries. The refineries have suffered poor maintenance and needed to be restored to their true state.

    “There are parts of the plants that need to be changed over the years, but because the refineries are managed by the government, there were no funds to put them in their proper shape.”

    He said Dr. Kachikwu has been globe-trotting in search of investors with the requisite technical and financial muscle to bring the refineries back on track.

    “So, when the minister found Agip agreeing to his proposal to take over the Port Harcourt refinery, he quickly handed it over to the firm,” he rationalised.

    Reacting to the Senate’s directive that all processes leading to the rehabilitation and concession of the refinery should be put on hold,  Oni said the lawmakers did no wrong for demanding transparent process.

    Oni said: “We don’t have the full details of the transaction. The minister didn’t explain whether the Agip/Oando partnership will transfer ownership of the refinery to the government at some point, or whether the partnership will seek repayment of the rehabilitation and management from the government. Making the details of the contract public is important.

    “Don’t also forget that the same Agip promised to build a brand new refinery in the Niger Delta. Will Agip hands off its involvement in the Port Harcourt refinery on completion of construction of the new one or will it manage the two refineries? These knotty areas need to be explained so that Nigerians and other interested investors will know.”

    Oni, however, said the Senate should have invited Kachikwu for proper briefing before stopping the contract, noting that such unilateral decision by the Senate does not speak well of the country to investors.

    “The Senate should have called for proper briefing with the minister before going public to stop the deal. The hallowed chamber’s action signals to the investors that we are not together as a people,” he said.

    The Ecobank Group research head agreed that the ministry needed to conduct a proper concession process and that the Senate must urgently notify the public what they found in the ministry and lift the suspension so that work will continue on the refinery.

    He urged the two arms of government to smoothen the rough edges because the refineries must work to end the huge foreign exchange that go into the importation of petroleum products.

    Last week, the Senate asked the Federal Government through Kachikwu to suspend all processes for the concession of the Port Harcourt refinery to Agip and Oando Plc. The suspension order was sequel to a motion moved by Senator Sabo Mohammed at the plenary.

    In the motion entitled: “Non-transparent transaction relating to the planned concession of the Port Harcourt Refinery to Agip and Oando by the Ministry,” the Senate expressed concern on the “non-transparent transactions” of the planned concession.

    In the motion, Mohammed said: “The Senate is aware that the Federal Government recently entered into an agreement with Nigerian Agip Oil Company, a subsidiary of Eni, an Italian oil giant, to construct a $15billion refinery in the Niger Delta region.

    “It is a deal that also includes investment by Agip in a power plant with the Italian company assisting Nigeria in the repairs of the Port Harcourt refinery.”

    “The Senate notes that the minister stated that the agreement was part of a broader Federal Government plan to increase capacity for local production and consumption of petroleum products, with the aim of ending fuel importation in Nigeria by 2019.

    “It also notes that while the resolve by the Federal Government to increase local refining capacity is laudable and should be applauded by all Nigerians, the observance of corporate governance principles and the country’s extant laws must be followed to the letter.”

    Senate President Bukola Saraki has named Senator Abubakar Kyari to head a seven-man ad hoc committee to investigate the transaction and the processes applied to select Agip/Oando for the deal.

    The Senate also mandated the committee to probe the cost and timeframe of the concession.

    The upper chamber, which suspended the transaction, stated that the planned concession of the refinery “without recourse to due process is illegal and a clear attempt at ridiculing Nigerians, and will definitely create a big hole that will be hard to fill in the anti-corruption crusade of the present administration.”

    The Senate said the usual practice in such transactions was to select partners through open and competitive bids. Such steps, it added, will prepare the business for sale, market the business, select the buyers and close the transaction.

    The Senate also said it was aware that the major stakeholders such as the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), a body statutorily empowered by law to conduct such an exercise and labour unions, were not consulted on the deal that has been scheduled for signing next month.

    Besides, the Senate expressed concerns that since Agip has no technical record or history in the Port Harcourt refinery that was built by a Japanese firm, one would have expected the concerned authority to look at the Warri refinery that was built by Agip where they have technical record.

    Mohammed had stated that the Senate was saddened that on assumption of office as the Group Managing Director (GMD) of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Kachukwu assured that the refineries would be working at 90 per cent installed capacity by the end of 2015.

    This, according to the minister, would drastically reduce fuel importation and subsidy payments. But Mohammed, stated that up till now, the refineries have yet to be fixed and cannot produce at 50 per cent capacity, let alone 90 per cent.

    To the lawmaker, such concession would have been wonderful if it would end importation of refined products by 2020.

    “Is it Agip or Oando Plc that is taking over the Port Harcourt refinery? Was there observance of the privatisation law as regards due diligence and selection from preferred bidders before ceding Port Harcourt refinery to Agip/Oando?” he asked, insisting that the minister must explain some issues in the transaction.

    Senator Dino Melaye also accused the executive of taking Nigerians for granted. Citing the concession of power supply to electricity generation and distribution companies and the concession of Ajaukuta and Delta steel companies, which have resulted to total decay of the industries, he said these may be replicated in the Port Harcourt refinery.

    The Chief Strategy and Corporate Services Officer of Oando Plc, Ainoije ‘Alex’ Irune, explained his company’s involvement in the deal.

    According to him, Oando bought into the project because of its belief in government’s aspiration to make Nigeria self-sufficient in fuel production.

    Irune said: “We wish to explicitly state that Oando shares the vision of the Nigerian Government to become a petroleum product self-sufficient country in the short to medium term and ultimately be a net exporter of such products.

    “Accordingly, pursuant to the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) reached with the Federal Government and NAOC/ENI. Oando will partner with NAOC/ ENI in the proposed rehabilitation of the Port Harcourt Refinery (PHRC).

    “This will be based on a Repair, Operate and Maintain (ROM) agreement, which will see PHRC’s capacity grow from its current 30 per cent to 100 per cent, its name plate capacity of 210,000 barrels per day.”

    He said that in line with the concerted efforts of the Ministry and the NNPC to aggressively drive private sector-led refineries’ rehabilitation and expansion programmes, Oando, as local partners to NAOC/ENI, will support the rehabilitation of PHRC’s on activities.

    According to him, a final agreement will be due by end of July after ongoing active negotiations.

    But, the outcome of the Senate’s probe panel will determine the agreement.

    Kachikwu, at the 172nd Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) meeting stated in Vienna, Austria, that the refineries concession cannot be done in an open bidding process because “it’s a highly technical area.”

    Also on May 9 after meeting with Acting President Yemi Osinbajo and Agip officials at the State House, , Kachikwu announced that the Nigerian Agip Oil Company had committed to repair the Port Harcourt refinery, as part of a $15 billion investment that includes building a 150,000 barrels per day refinery and a power plant in the country.

    Speaking on the floor of the Nigeria Stock Exchange on May 11, Oando’s Chief Executive Officer Wale Tinubu said his company had received approval of the Federal Government to partner with Agip on the refinery deal.

    Kachikwu said the entire refinery transaction was aimed at strengthening Nigeria’s drive to end fuel importation by 2019.

    He vowed to resign should Nigeria fail to achieve self-sufficiency in crude oil refining by 2019 with full implementation of government’s policies on the matter.

    In an interview with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Kachikwu restated Nigeria’s target to attain self-sufficiency in terms of crude oil refining by 2019, adding that the country should be more concerned about processing crude oil rather than shipping it out for processing elsewhere and importing refined products.

     

    Promises, woes of the refineries

    The NNPC Group Managing Director, Dr. Maikanti Baru, had last month stated that the corporation was shopping for $16 billion to grow its upstream and refining operations and increase the nation’s oil refining from the current 445,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 700,000 bpd within the next few years.

    He said: “With respect to our refineries, our plan is to rehabilitate and revamp our existing four refineries. We invite you investors to participate in this process. On successful rehabilitation and revamp, our plan is to upgrade the combined nameplate capacity from 445,000 barrels per day to 700,000 barrels a day within the next few years. We would require investments of between $5billion and $6billion.”

    Baru said the NNPC was mindful of the need to construct new refineries and hence, it will encourage investors in this area.

    According to him, the big picture is to transit from a net crude oil exporter to a net petroleum product exporter as more value and opportunities abound in the latter.

    Meanwhile, General Electric (GE) has pledged to assist the Federal Government in the revitalisation of the refineries. The President and Chief Executive Officer of GE’s Grid Solutions/Energy Connections, Africa, Dr. Lazarus Angbazo, told reporters that the company was waiting for the NNPC on the areas needing intervention.

    Angbazo confirmed that the resuscitation of the refineries would enable Nigeria become self-sufficient in petroleum production, adding that the company would not hesitate in helping the country to meet the 2019 target to halt importation of petroleum products.

    According to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN’s) report, the Federal Government spent $6.09 billion on petroleum imports in the first six months of last year despite the scarce foreign exchange and pressure on foreign exchange reserves.

    Even now, the government spends substantial amount on fuel importation and subsidy, the apex bank said.

    Between 2000 and 2017, the government spent over N10 trillion on fuel subsidies. According to the Chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream), Senator Marafa Kabir Garba, the NNPC alone collected over N5 trillion on subsidies from 2006 to 2015.

    The consensus of experts and industry stakeholders is that the only sustainable way to make the refineries work is to completely hand them over to private sector operators and not fronts of government officials.

  • What Buhari has changed in 24 months

    What Buhari has changed in 24 months

    The last two years have been filled with ups and downs. OLUKOREDE YISHAU chronicles the things that have not remained the same since President Muhammadu Buhari took the saddle.

    Dynamites were thrown. Grenades caused chaos. Gunshots rented the air. The scenes were Niger Delta. The victims were not human-beings but oil facilities – strategic ones for that matter. And the effects on oil production and export were not only huge and scary, but  was costly. The economy bled and needed oxygen to be on the path of recovery.

    Settling down to business, President Muhammadu Buhari and his team put up their thinking cap. The grievances of those blowing up the pipelines must be addressed. His deputy, Yemi Osinbajo, a professor of Law and now acting President, went from one creek to the other, preaching peace.

    He visited oil-producing communities, listened to the people and spelt out the Federal Government’s commitment as captured in the ‘New Vision for the Niger Delta’. The vision has answers to the 16-point Demand Agenda submitted to President Buhari by the Pan Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF) in November, last year.

    Thanks to the New Vision, the Nigerian Maritime University in Delta State is set to commence operation, additional N35 billion was approved for the Presidential Amnesty Programme,  approval has been granted for the establishment of Modular Refineries across the nine Niger Delta states and work has resumed on abandoned projects in the oil-rich region, including the East-West Road.

    The engagements with the Niger Delta and the Organisation of Oil Exporting Countries (OPEC) have helped to raise oil revenues to the extent that external reserves have grown by about $7 billion in the last six months. Some $87 million have also been added to the Excess Crude Account and $250 million to the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF).

    The engagement with OPEC involved rallying the organisation and Non-OPEC members to discuss stabilisation of the global oil market in Doha and in Algiers. This led to an exemption from the OPEC production freeze and rise in oil prices to $55/pb, for the first time in 16 months.

     

    Unlocking the potentials

    The Buhari administration has leveraged on its goodwill to attract multi-billion investments and loans from China and Morocco. Buhari’s April 2016 visit to China unlocked billions of dollars in infrastructure funding and construction has started on the 150km/hour rail line between Lagos and Ibadan, the first major product of the collaboration.

    One other potential-unlocking strategy the administration has come up with is the National Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (NERGP). Launched in April, it charts a course for the economy over the next four years.

    The NERGP, according to the Federal Government, is to restore economic growth, invest in Nigerians, and to build a globally competitive economy. It plans to achieve these objectives by giving priority to agriculture, power, macro-economy, energy efficiency, transportation infrastructure and driving industrialisation through Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs).

    As part of efforts to unlock the country’s potentials, power reform is being done. This has led to the launch of the N701 billion Payment Assurance Programme to guarantee payments to generating companies and gas suppliers.

    The Power Sector Recovery Programme, which was launched in March, has been endorsed by the World Bank.

    Another potential of the country, which was held down for years, is the capacity of the refineries. It has received serious attention in the last two years. Now, the total amount of crude being refined by the three refineries in Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna is now 10 million barrels. It was eight million barrels in 2015.

    Agriculture and solid minerals have gotten their groves back. The sector grew by 4.11 per cent last year. Solid   minerals recorded a seven per cent increase. The contribution of the Ministry of Solid Minerals to the Federation Account tripled to about N2 billion in 2016 up from N700 million in 2015.

     

    Other positives

    Despite the low oil prices at the international market, the country’s external reserves have grown by $7 billion since October last year; the Excess Crude Account has seen an inflow of $87 million and $500 million has been added to the Sovereign Wealth Fund, which represents the first inflows since the original $1 billion with which the Fund started in 2012.

    The Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and a soil map designed to aid fertilizer application has raised local production of grains. It has produced a model agricultural collaboration between Lagos and Kebbi states.  The country’s rice imports fell from 580,000 MT in 2015 to 58,000MT last year.

    A partnership between Nigeria and Morocco – Presidential Fertiliser Initiative – has resulted in the revitalisation of 11 blending plants. Through  the initiative, which involves Morocco, supplying the country phosphate, the country has recorded annual savings of $200 million in foreign exchange and 60 billion annually in budgetary provisions for fertiliser subsidies. Farmers now purchase fertiliser at N5, 500, 30 per cent cheaper than before.

    The administration is supporting MSMEs with $1.3 billion from the Development Bank of Nigeria (DBN). The cash was provided by the World Bank, German Development Bank, the African Development Bank (AfDB) and Agence Française de Development.

     

    Ease of Doing Business Reform Programme

    The Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council implemented its 60 National Action Plan between February and April. The plan has given willing investors the platform to search for company names on the website of the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC). Such investors can upload their registration documents directly to the CAC website without hiring lawyers to prepare registration documents.  A single form has been created for company incorporation to save time and reduce cost. The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) e-payment solution has been integrated with the CAC portal to facilitate e-stamping. The country now has a simplified Visa on Arrival (VoA) Process.

    To also ease business, a joint physical examination of cargo has been directed to ensure one point of contact between importers and officials. The CBN, Customs and commercial banks have been compelled to process Net Export Proceeds forms within 72 hours and Pre-Shipment Inspection Agencies (PIAs) must issue Certificate of Clean Inspection (CCI) within three days.

    The number of documents required for imports has been reduced from 14 to eight. The ones for exports have come down from 10 to seven. Now, terminal operators are mandated to finish container’s examination in 12 hours.

    Acting President Osinbajo sealed the National Action Plan by signing three Executive Orders to improve efficiency in the business environment and promote local procurement by government agencies.

     

    Infrastructural development

    The Buhari administration is revitalising the country’s 3,500 kilometre network of narrow-gauge railway. A consortium led by General Electric and comprising Transnet of South Africa, APM Terminals of the Netherlands and Sinohydro Consortium of China, is working on the Lagos-Kano Railway narrow-gauge Line. The Abuja Light Rail system will also go into operation later this year. The first line to be launched will connect the city centre with the airport, with a link to the Abuja-Kaduna Railway Line. The test-run is scheduled for November. Full operation is planned for the first quarter of 2018.

    The reconstruction of the Abuja Airport runway was done within the scheduled six-week period (March to April 2017).

     

    Giving fillip to the economy

    The economy has been the major challenge of this administration. To get the country out of the economic quagmire, the CBN is reforming the forex regime and this has increased stability in the market.  The appetite for Nigerian stocks by foreign portfolio investors has also increased. Also, the Eurobond raked in more than $7.8 billion compared to a pre-issuance target of $1 billion. Analysts have described the trend as demonstration of the restoration foreign investor’s confidence in the economic reform agenda.

    The CBN has created a new forex window for investors and exporters. CBN’s date has shown that the window has attracted $1.4 billion in its first four weeks of operation.

    The apex bank has also reviewed the list of 41 items excluded from the CBN forex window, in line with a request from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN). This is just as a Tariff-driven Tomato Policy has been introduced to promote local production.

    More funds in the hands of local contractors mean more strength for the economy. N1.2 trillion was released for capital expenditure in last year’s budget — the largest capital ever spent in a single budget in the country’s history. As a result of this, work has started on several projects, hitherto stalled. These cut across road, rail and power.

     

    Social Investment Programme

    Regarded as the most ambitious social safety net programme, the Social Investment Programme (SIP) has over one million beneficiaries. The 160,000 N-Power beneficiaries, who have had their details validated, receive N30, 000 monthly stipends. The validation of 40,000 others is ongoing.

    Significantly, 3,162,451 people in 26, 924 cooperative societies have been registered for the Government Enterprise and Empowerment (GEEP) Scheme. 57,234 interest-free loans have been issued in 28 states and Abuja, with women taking a chunk of 56 per cent.

    The administration is catering for 1,051,000 in 8, 587 primary school pupils through its Homegrown School Feeding Programme (HGSFP) in seven states. Over 11,000 cooks have been hired under the scheme.

    Through its Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) scheme, 26,942 beneficiaries now get N5, 000 monthly stipend in nine states and 84 local government areas of Niger, Kwara, Ekiti, Kogi, Oyo, Osun, Borno, Cross River and Bauchi states.

     

    Cleansing budgeting process/ BVN/ Efficiency Unit

    The anti-corruption war of the current administration is one thing that is clear to all as one of the things that have changed in the last 24 months.

    Aside the activities of the anti-graft agencies, the Presidential Initiative on Continuous Audit (PICA) is one anti-corruption effort not known to many. It is to strengthen controls over government finances through a continuous internal audit of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs). Thanks to this initiative more than 50,000 ghost workers have been identified. N198 billion was saved as a result of this in 2016.

    The anti-corruption war has generated Budget Reforms, which made the President to direct all government agencies to prepare their budgets in line with International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS). A budget template was developed for this purpose.

    For the first time, this year’s budget was collated, using a web-based application developed by the Budget Office of the Federation (BOF). MDAs were compelled to upload their proposals on a portal.

    The Bank Verification Number (BVN) has also saved the government a lot of money. All payments are done only into accounts with verifiable BVN. This helped to detect the 50,000 ghost workers using the Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System (IPPIS) platform.

    Through the creation of Efficiency Unit (EU), efficient use of government resources has been promoted. This has resulted in saving N15 billion that would have gone into travel, sitting allowances and souvenirs.

     

    TSA/ Open Government Partnership  and whistleblowing

    On August 7, 2015, the President compelled MDAs to close their accounts with commercial banks and transfer their balances to the CBN on or before September 15 of that year. By this action, he gave life to a policy launched in 2012 but left unimplemented. This has resulted in the consolidation of over 20,000 bank accounts. An average of N4.7 billion is saved monthly in banking charges. Over N5.244 trillion is in the TSA.

    The era of some MDAs having idle cash in banks and still borrowed exorbitantly from banks is gone for good.

    The government keeps shutting corruption doors as they are discovered. One of such led to its signing on to the Open Government Partnership (OGP). Last year, President Buhari was at the International Anti-Corruption Summit organised by the Ubited Kingdom (UK) Government, where he pledged that Nigeria would join the international transparency, accountability and citizen engagement initiative. He fulfilled the promise last July when the country became the 70th  country to join the OGP.  This has led to an OGP National Steering Committee (NSC), which has developed a National Action Plan (2017–2019) to mainstream transparency in the management of public resources. The plan was submitted at the OGP Global Summit in Paris, France, in December last year.

    The anti-corruption drive has led to the Whistleblowing Policy which within its first two months of operation, yielded $160 million and N8 billion in recoveries of stolen government funds.

     

    A more transparent NNPC

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) was indicted by independent global reports for being opaque.

    One of the first steps the administration took was to reconstruct NNPC’s opaque accounting structure. This led to the closure of more than 40 accounts. Now, NNPC publishes its financial reports monthly and the operational deficits have been reduced by not less than 50 per cent. NNPC outstanding Annual Audits from 2011 to 2014 has been conducted.

    The agency is also undergoing other forms of restructuring that will make it an effective entity. The restructuring, analysts said, promote competition, predictable revenue generation and compliance with global best practices.

    The administration has also resolved the shadowy oil swap deals that had cost the country billions of dollars and left it at the mercy of a few rich Nigerians. The government has also introduced third party financing to eliminate direct funding of cash calls.  The administration has also renegotiated existing service contracts under Joint Venture and Production sharing contracts (PSC) Operations by about 30 per cent leading to operational efficiency improvements and cost reductions.

    The administration has also eliminated the Offshore Processing Agreement (OPA) through the introduction of the Direct Sales and Direct Purchase (DSDP) scheme with reputable off-shore refineries. This has yielded annual savings of $1 billion.

    The Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB) put together the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources, has now been passed into law by the Senate, after 17 years of failed efforts.

    In 2016, the Federal Government exited the cash call arrangement with Joint Ventures (JVs) with International Oil Companies (IOCs), which put pressure on government’s finances. The failure to fully fund them resulted in more than six billion dollars arrears as at December 2015.

    A new funding mechanism is being introduced to free the government from the budgetary obligation of coming up with the cash calls and increase oil production to about 2.5 million barrels per day.

    The reforms have led to the negotiation of the debt arrears owed the IOCs to $5.1 billion and a long-term repayment plan has been agreed on.

     

    No longer a pariah state

    Unlike in the past, the international community warmed up to the Buhari administration in the last twelve months. The President has enlisted the support of multilateral institutions, such as the World Bank and IMF, security agencies, Western countries and other friendly nations to source, locate and repatriate stolen assets.

    At one of his international engagements, specifically the London summit on anti-corruption, Buhari announced that Nigeria would begin the full implementation of the principles of the OPEN contracting data standards.  This was in furtherance of his trips to the Middle-East, where he had gone to sensitise the governments on the need to repatriate stolen assets and hand over the looters for trial in Nigeria. In January last year, Nigeria and UAE signed Judicial Agreements on Extradition, Transfer of Sentenced Persons, Mutual Legal Assistance on Criminal Matters.

    The Federal Government and the Swiss Government in March last year signed a Letter of Intent on the Restitution of Illegally-Acquired Assets forfeited in Switzerland. Under the agreement, Switzerland will repatriate $321 million illicitly   acquired by the Gen. Sani Abacha family.

     

    Boko Haram: No longer the Lord of Sambisa

    One of the first things Buhari changed was the military structure, which led to the relocation of the Nigerian Military Command Centre to Maiduguri in May 2015. The results are glaring: Over 12,000 persons have been rescued by the troops, including 106 of the Chibok schoolgirls; since December 2015, all territories previously under Boko Haram control have been regained; by June 2015, Nigeria provided $21 million to the Task Force; and in June 2015, the United States (U.S.) announced a $5 million support for the fight against terrorism in the sub-region.

    The seriousness with which the administration has pursued the anti-terror war has also led to the U.S. government further announcing an additional $40 million for humanitarian assistance in the sub-region.

    Boko Haram’s operational and spiritual headquarters, “Camp Zero”, in Sambisa Forest, has been captured. The army has arrested Usman Mohammed, (a.k.a. Khalid Al Barnawi), leader of the Ansaru Terrorist group and one of the most wanted Terrorists in the world, on whose head the U.S. placed a $6 m bounty. Also arrested and being prosecuted is Amodu Omale Salifu, leader of an ISIS affiliate group active in Northcentral.

    Presidential aides are confident that the next one year would bring better goodies for Nigerians in the area of security and others. They said the government has laid a proper foundation capable of putting the country on the right footing. Nigerians are waiting.

  • Tough times for heavy forex users

    Tough times for heavy forex users

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has overtime, pledged to meet all genuine foreign exchange (forex) demands of individuals and manufacturers. But that promise has collapsed in the face of rising forex scarcity and ongoing rationalisation of available forex for qualified users, especially manufacturers. Findings showed that banks now peg maximum forex approval per Letter of Credit (LC) at N50 million ($158,000). Manufacturers now source extra dollar for raw materials imports from the parallel market, with dire consequence on product costs and sustainability of their operations. That this is happening at a time more productive activities are needed to steer the economy out of recession and cut job losses across different segments of the economy is worrisome, writes COLLINS NWEZE. 

    It was Monday morning on April 24. As usual, the managing director of a Tier-1 bank was going through several files/requests on his table that needed urgent approval.

    The first on the list was a Letter of Credit (LC) of $200,000 from a leading Fast Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) manufacturing company meant for the importation of production raw materials.

    The LC is a letter from a bank to another bank (especially one in a different country) guaranteeing that a buyer’s payment to a seller will be received on time and for the correct amount. In the event that the buyer is unable to make payment on the purchase, the bank will be required to cover the full or remaining amount of the purchase.

    On seeing the LC, the bank chief took a deep breath, picked up the intercom and called the Head of Treasury to justify the request at this period of ‘severe dollar scarcity’.

    Expectedly, the request was promptly adjusted to N50 million ($158,000), before it was approved. In the face of severe dollar scarcity and need to ensure even distribution of available funds to critical segments of the economy, including manufacturers, lenders now peg maximum value of LC for approval at $158,000.

    The practice, which was confirmed by several bank customers affected by policy shift, is affecting the production volumes of major manufacturers and hurting turnover of major businesses.

    A source within the bank said any LC above $158,000 has to be approved by the managing director and such approval will depend on the forex availability within the period.

    “Customers can actually do LCs above $158,000, but have to source the excess from autonomous sources. The bank pegged it at that amount to ensure that the scarce dollar goes round. We know it is hurting businesses of our major customers, but we are only complying with directives from above,” the source told the reporter.

    Speaking further, the source explained that even where the LC customer is drawing from a facility account, the credit can only cover $158,000.

    “Anything outside this limit has to be approved by the managing director no matter how important the customer is,” the source said.

    Speaking also on the trend, Managing Director, Tempo Paper & Packaging Limited, Seun Obasanjo, said he opened three LCs before he was able to access $250,000 needed to import raw materials for his company.

    The company based in Otta, Ogun State, produces Adstar type polypropylene, agro-allied and shopping bags needed for the production requirements of cements and other products.

    “The money came in three tranches- $100,000; $100,000 and $50,000 for the required amount to be achieved. I believe the investor /exporter window opened by the CBN will increase dollar liquidity and help banks to meet their obligations better,” he said in a telephone chat with the reporter.

    Obasanjo said the banks have a big role to play in supporting the manufacturers, while the government should strive to fix the fundamental problems currently facing the economy, which include over dependence on crude oil, too much import and small export.

    He said every major manufacturer has felt pains of forex scarcity, adding that he bought dollar at N520/$ before the CBN interventions helped to stablise the local currency at current level. “For those of us employing people, we have no option than to stay in business no matter how much the naira exchanges against the dollar. People that need dollar to pay school fees, and perhaps medical bills may decide to wait until a favourable exchange rate is achieved, but manufacturers have to maintain their customer base, and remain in business. For us, commerce has to go on,” he said.

    He said the CBN has done well in stablising the exchange rate, but believed that more stills needs to be done. “The CBN is doing its best based on the volume of dollar at its disposal, but more still needs to be done,” he said.

    A manufacturer, who does not want his name in print, claims the policy is affecting his operations, and also clarifies what is going on. “The CBN has, in trying to manage the available dollar for imports and ensure that it goes round all genuine manufacturers and prevent a situation whereby a few people get allocations, and a majority of others do not get, pegged each invoice to be financed for import at $158,000. Before now, only very few people were getting forex, in short it was a matter of ‘who you know’ and that was perhaps why they adopted this new strategy,” he said.

    Continuing, she said the apex bank preferred to make the dollar spread round more importers rather than giving $1 million or $2 million to few people and majority of others get nothing.

    “They want the little available dollar to go round everybody. But the big question is: ‘For big manufacturing companies, what will $158,000 do for them? That will lead to retrenchment and underutilisation of production capacity,” he said.

    Sounding optimistic, he hoped that in the future, if the availability of dollars improves, the CBN may review that plan but for now, that is the situation.

    The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) called on the CBN to review its forex policy and give manufacturers better opportunity to thrive. Its Director-General, Muda Yusuf, picked holes in the rationing of forex by banks, saying it would cut production volumes and discourage investments in the economy.

    He said: “The recovery of the Nigerian economy will be driven largely by investors’ confidence.  The good news is that some progress has been made in the last couple of weeks to shore up this confidence.  The banks should therefore avoid any actions that could reverse this progress or undermine the growing confidence level.”

    Yusuf said reports of rationing by banks could give wrong signals to the players in the economy, trigger another round of uncertainties and activate new momentum of speculative activities in the forex market.   “What the economy needs is a forex market framework that ensures that all legitimate demands for forex are met.  There are indications that the CBN has commenced the creation of this framework with the easing of restrictions in the export and investors windows,” he said.

    The  Investors’ and Exporters’ FX Window, which started on April 24, is the CBN’s latest attempt to lure back investors who fled in the past two years, exacerbating a crisis that caused the economy to shrink in 2016 for the first time in a quarter century.

    The idea is that by creating a market for some types of investment transactions, policy makers can satisfy calls to float the currency without risking an inflationary spiral that may come from a formal devaluation.

    Managing Director, Cowry Assets Limited, Johnson Chukwu, said $158,000 maximum amount of LC is a significant improvement compared to what obtains earlier in the year when companies could not even access $10,000.

    He said that Nigeria’s forex earnings have improved, but the CBN does not have the capacity to meet all the forex demands. He said that the ongoing forex rationing is likely to end when the CBN has enough dollar to go round.

    On whether the ongoing rationing can lead to job losses, he said: “Every economic situation has implications. Six months ago, you cannot even get $100,000. I believe we have suffered the worst of situations. The CBN has to prioritise its dollar disbursement plans because it does not have the wall chest to meet all demands,” he said.

    Former Executive Director, Keystone Bank, Richard Obire, said the era of full forex availability is over, and we are in a regime where forex is scarce. He said the rationing of forex is not good enough for genuine manufacturers and could lead to more contraction in the economy if forex is not accessed at and when needed. “The economy has contracted and industrial capacity utilization at the end of 2016 was 25 per cent.  “If companies are producing at 25 per cent capacity, expanding production to boost the employment market will require providing enough forex needed to fund import of raw materials for real sector operations.

    He said although forex availability has improved, there is need for companies to also use local raw materials so as to reduce the demand for forex. He said that forex scarcity has led to many banks closing their branches, job losses in telecoms and other key sectors of the economy.

    MTN Nigeria, for instance, a fortnight ago sacked 280 workers while Ecobank Nigeria closed 74 of its branches as rising cost of operations worsened.

    Obire said not adequately providing forex to real sector operators can worsen the fate of the companies, as rising cost of operations impact on their profitability.

    Still, Group Chief Executive Officer, Ecobank Group, Ade Ayeyemi, defended the forex policies and actions of the CBN.

    He spoke in South Africa at the 2017 World Economic Forum for Africa. Ayeyemi said the CBN was in the best position to decide forex management issues based on facts available to the financial regulator.

    In a note to investors, Managing Director, Afrinvest West Africa Limited, Ike Chioke, said the CBN’s- Purchasing Managers’ Index Report for April, showed an upturn in manufacturing activity in the first month of the new quarter.

    Buoyed by knock-on effects of the significant improvement in fiscal balance and the forex market – particularly related to forex liquidity – April manufacturing PMI expanded to 51.1 points (relative to 47.7 points in March 2017) after three consecutive months of contraction, settling in the positive region for the first time in 2017.

    The major drivers of the expansion in composite PMI were production level (58.5 points), new orders (50.1 points), and inventories (50.6 points) sub-indices which grew 7.7 percentage points (ppts), 4.5ppts and 1.5ppts month-on-month respectively to more than offset sustained contraction in employment level and relapse in supplier delivery time which posted an increase in March.

    He said: “Whilst we believe that the improvements in the manufacturing and non-manufacturing sectors reaffirm that the economy is on the path to recovery in the second quarter, as other macroeconomic indicators also suggest the decline in the employment sub-index of the manufacturing and non-manufacturing sectors remains a concern.”

    Chioke said the step-up in the CBN’s forex interventions has had a greater-than-expected impact arguing that the regulator may not abandon multiple currency practices and move to unification of the many rates. “We do not feel that these practices will generate sufficient autonomous inflows to create a fully functioning forex market. A downward adjustment to the interbank rate is likely,” he said.

    Other analysts said ongoing rationing of forex will adversely affect the manufacturing sector, and reverse the gains of recent months.

    For instance, at the height of forex scarcity last year, South African firms, Truworths and Clover announced their exit from Nigeria back in February last year, due to difficult operating environment. Tiger Brands also sold off its stake in Nigeria-based Dangote Flour, following challenging economic environment, biggest of which was forex scarcity.

    Managing Director, Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Bismarck Rewane, said the CBN supplied total of $1.2 billion in April into the interbank market, with intervention frequency of two to three times per week.

    Also, the cumulative forex supply since February 20, this year to date remained at $3.61 billion, compared to $5.83 billion sold in January to April 2016.

    Rewane explained that the new forex window for investors and exporters is trading at N374 to 380/$ leading to an acute naira shortage. However, the external reserves grew marginally to $31 billion and can take care of import and payment cover of 6.9 months.

    He said that foreign portfolio investors shun the Nigerian market as they await an adjustment in the official rate and remain skeptical about the investor/export forex window.

    Rewane said Nigeria is expected to return to positive growth this year at 0.8 per cent, and that will be driven by a recovery in oil production, continued growth in agriculture, and higher public investment.

    Speaking at the Access Bank Forex Seminar 2017 held in in Lagos at the weekend, with the theme: “The Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market- Paving the Way towards Restoring Confidence: A Market Perspective”, Rewane attributed the current naira appreciation to a sharp increase in Nigeria’s oil revenue estimated at a monthly value of $2.5 billion as well as the opening of a new investor/exporters window as a proxy for price discovery.

    Speaking on exchange rate stability, Managing Director, Renaissance Capital (RenCap) Nigeria, Temi Popoola, said the rate at which the naira exchanges against the dollar is inconsequential. He said the most important thing was for the investors to be able to come in and exit at will without encumbrances.

    “The argument should not be whether the naira is exchanged at N300 or N450 to dollar. It should be whether investors will be able to come in and go out of the market,” he said.

    Group Head, Global Markets at Access Bank Plc, Dapo Olagunju, said the new window allows investors to sell dollars at any rate they chose and is expected to help bring investors’ confidence into the market.

    He said: “Investors /Exporters FX Window help participants execute deals as based on their own market agreement. Today, both the dollar demand and supply sides are beginning to talk to each other and there is likely to be rate convergence soon,” he said.

    Continuing, he said previously, the CBN had over $4 billion forex backlog, and found it difficult to settle ticket remittances of airlines.

    “Today, we are seeing customers buying Business Travel Allowances and Personal Travel Allowances with ease. It has been a difficult time for banks. We also see a regulator that is ready to sanction any bank that violates its set rules,” he said during the forex seminar organised by Access Bank at the weekend.

    Assuring Access Bank customers that it will continue to meet their demands, Olagunju said: “There was a time Access Bank alone sold $1.5 billion to its customers in 2015. That shows we are with you all the time. We will ensure we protect your businesses because we know that if the exchange rate deteriorates further, many people will be hurt”.

    The Chief Executive Officer FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange, Bola Onadele, said foreign investors are warming to the foreign-exchange window to ease a severe shortage of dollars.

    The naira opened on Monday at 380.31 per dollar in the window. That’s about 17 per cent weaker than the interbank rate of 315 and close to the rate of 391 on the black-market, which many Nigerian businesses were forced to utilise as hard-currency supplies through official channels dried up.

    Eligible transactions in the window include those for loan repayments, interest payments, capital repatriation and remittances.

    While Nigeria devalued the naira on the interbank market last June, it stopped short of allowing a free float and intervened to prop up the exchange rate. Investors, concerned that the currency was overvalued, have stayed on the sidelines.

    Onadele, a former chief trader at Citigroup Inc.’s Nigerian unit who criticised the CBN last October for not freely floating the naira, said this time around Governor Godwin Emefiele was relaxed about the weaker rate.

    “The governor isn’t calling up, worrying about the rate,” Onadele said. “The CBN is ready to sell into this window, via the commercial banks. Any foreign portfolio investor that wants to leave Nigeria will get its money. If a foreign portfolio investor wants $100 million tomorrow, its bank should present the trade to the central bank. As long as the investor’s satisfied paying the rate, it will be done.”

    The CBN has consistently warned lenders to play by the rule in the forex market and equally sanctioned those that violate regulations. Last week, the CBN barred 16 commercial banks from accessing forex from the newly instituted SMEs Forex Window for refusing to sell forex to genuine Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) that met disbursement requirements.

    CBN spokesman Isaac Okorafor said banks were barred for refusing to sell forex to the SME actors after accessing over $300 million offered to them via the SMEs wholesale forex window since its creation in April.The SMEs Forex Window, which opened about a month ago was designed to help SMEs import eligible finished and semi-finished items not exceeding $20,000 for an enterprise per quarter.

    Okorafor said appropriate sanctions are spelt out by the CBN Act and the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA). He said staff and even chief executives of banks the affected banks could be punished where necessary.

    The CBN spokesman said the apex bank has already received series of complaints from bank customers, especially those that operate in the SMEs segment of the market that banks are frustrating their efforts at getting forex.

    He said some entrepreneurs still complain that banks are frustrating their efforts at obtaining forex for their eligible imports after the stipulated 48 hours.

    He appealed to bank customers and the SMEs to “please give us concrete evidence against these banks so that we can hold them responsible by way of sanctions.”

    He added: “Get a photocopy of your Form Q, Form X, Form A or Form M. Give us the name of the bank, branch and send to us and we will deal with them as example to others.

    “The only way we can make things better for Nigerians is for them to call the CBN whenever they are in trouble or whenever, or are getting frustrated by banks.”

    He warned that the CBN would not allow any form of instability in the interbank forex market. He urged  stakeholders to play by the rules for the benefit of the country and its economy.

  • SANUSI II Travails  of an  Emir

    SANUSI II Travails of an Emir

    Reports that the financial affairs of the Kano Emirate are being probed, have raised fears that powerful forces opposed to the outspoken Emir of Kano, Mohammed Sanusi II, are set to move against him. Kolade Adeyemi in Kano reports on the gathering storm.

    WHEN on June 8, 2014, the Emir of Kano, Malam Muhammad Sanusi II ascended the throne of the Kano Emirate, it was a dream come true for him. Before then, the former Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), who gained popularity for his critical comments against the government of President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan which employed him, had always nursed the ambition of becoming the Emir of Kano. This dream he kept closer to his mind, shunning advises from his friends within and outside the country to put an eye on the presidency.
    In fact, on several occasions, Emir Muhammad Sanusi II, in a show of desperation, had stated that he would not mind becoming the Emir of Kano for just one-day. When the late Emir, Alhaji Ado Abdullahi Bayero died, there was a keen contest between him and three other persons, including the first son of the late Emir. However, because he enjoyed the sympathy of the immediate past governor, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, Emir Sanusi, amidst controversy and power play that resulted in heavy tension, was later crowned, against the wishes of the presidency under the control of former President Jonathan.
    Friends become foes
    It has remained a surprise to many analysts today how Kwankwaso and Sanusi mended walls since he was a chronic hater of Kwankwaso’s political ideology and policies which Sanusi consistently attacked when Kwankwaso served his first term between 1999 and 2003. Few months after climbing the throne, Emir Sanusi in his characteristic mannerism began to pick holes in ex-governor Kwankwaso’s administration, a move that earned him two queries from the former governor who was almost tempted to dethrone him. Until Kwankwaso served out his last tenure, the relationship between him and the Emir was not all that smooth owing to Emir Sanusi’s disagreement with some issues the former governor thought would have received the support of the monarch whom he personally installed, against the wishes of many stakeholders.
    The ordeal of Emir Sanusi who curried a number of enemies even within the palace because of his “strange” reform agenda did not abate as most of the palace chiefs got uncomfortable with and began to initiate secret plots against him. According a top Palace Chief who spoke on condition of anonymity, “Emir Sanusi II is the architect of his own downfall. You see, you cannot take away the fact that he was a Prince and a potential heir of the throne. But what he failed to understand is that there is a gap of difference between life as a scholar, banker or administrator with life as an Emir living in the Palace. There are rules within the Palace that he failed to study before exerting powers and wield influence to suppress people in the palace.
    The enemy within
    “When the Emir commenced certain reforms within the palace, he was advised but he refused to take the advice. This is the reason why the enemies of the Emir within the Palace continued to grow every day. Now, I can tell you authoritatively that those fighting Emir Sanusi II are using the Palace against him. They have people here who are reporting every activities of the Emir to them minute by minute,” the source stated.
    Another source at the Kano State Public Complaints and Anti Corruption Commission corroborated the Palace Chief as he insisted that 90 per cent of petitions against the Emir brought to the Commission were authored by members of the Emirate Council. Our source in the anti-corruption agency insisted that there are strong allegations of financial misappropriation against Emir Sanusi which prompted the probe. According a top officer in the Kano anti-corruption agency, “the petitions against the Emir emanated from what happened in the social media. Immediately the social media started their own, many people agitated for investigation and we have never uncovered the identity of those who initiated the investigation, but they called themselves Friends of the Emirate. Some of the petitions were signed, they brought them to the Commission and they keep disturbing us to act on the petition.
    “Now, you know this is an era where whistle blowers have protection; and they are within the Emirate CouncilI mean that those bringing the information and other sensitive documents to the Commission are within the Emirate Council; and they don’t want to be named. Look at what is happening, we have an inside source and by what they told us, then we deem it necessary, and very necessary to investigate the matter. Why we are investigating is not to embarrass anybody but only to ascertain the true situation of what was brought to us, and there is no more, no less,” the source stated.
    Though many have suspected that the travails of Emir Sanusi II is being instigated from Kano State Government House owing to recent comments credited to the Emir where he attacked the Light-Rail project of Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje during the Kaduna Economic Summit, but the Government House has washed its hands off the issue insisting that neither Governor Ganduje or any government official is interested in seeing the down fall of the Emir.
    Speaking to The Nation on the issue, the Commissioner for Information, Malam Muhammad Garba, described as mischievous the insinuations that the state government is behind the travails of Emir Sanusi Muhammad II. According to him, “Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje is a man that has respect for traditional institutions and will not invest time in issues that are not majorly for the development of Kano State. As I speak to you, he has been working round the clock to ensure that he delivers democratic dividends to the good people of the state.
    “So, the issue of probing the Emir and the emirate council is not the business of Governor Ganduje or the state government. There is an agency in charge of entertaining petitions and complaints in respect of matters bordering on corruption. The agency is independent and has its responsibility. They know how to go about doing their job; and Governor Ganduje does not influence their activities in any way; and as such, the governor has no hand in this matter.”
    Though the presidency has not made any comment on the issue yet, many also believe that the Emir is being haunted by some people in the presidency who are not comfortable with his latest outburst against the government of President Muhammadu Buhari. In fact, it is also suspected that there are thickening plots by some powerful individuals in the North to humiliate Emir Sanusi and as such influence his possible dethronement over most of his comments on the state of the North. Just last week, the Emir’s plan to travel to France was truncated. According a respected northern leader, as at last week, there were serious plot by the northern hegemony to prevail on Ganduje to dethrone him over his “stubborn” stance.
    The source noted that, “the Emir had planned to travel to France, at least to spend some time there and reflect on some issues. He prevailed on the Acting governor to sign his approval letter which was rejected, because the governor who was not around could not approve his trip.”
    Probing a controversial emir
    Rattled by the avalanche of allegations of financial misappropriation, the Kano Emirate Council last week came out clear to explain how the finance of the Emirate Council has been since Emir Sanusi II mounted the throne. They, however, debunked allegations that the Emir inherited N4 billion from the late Emir of Kano, His Highness, Alhaji Ado Abdullahi Bayero. Addressing reporters at the Emir’s Palace, Walin Kano, Alhaji Mahe Bashir Wali, reacted to reports that the Emirate spent N6 billion left behind by the former Emir, describing the allegations as untrue.
    Wali said that the Emir inherited only N1, 893, 378, 927.38, as against N4 billion touted by some people.
    He added that, “before the appointment of His Highness, the Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, the Kano Emirate Council has the sum of N2, 875, 168, and 431.17 under various banks as Fixed Deposit Accounts, out of which N981, 784, 503.79 was withdrawn and used during the late Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero on 7/2/2014 for the payment of Ado Bayero Royal City Project leaving a balance of N1, 893, 378, 927.38 with various banks.” The Kano Emirate Council further stated that about N152, 627,723.00 was paid to Dabo Gate for the procurement of furniture for the Palace, adding that, “after the demise of the late Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero, Peace Be Upon him, all his belongings, including the furniture were removed and distributed to his heirs in accordance with Islamic injunction.
    “The sum of N108 million was also paid to the heirs of the late Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero by the Emirate Council in respect of his personal cars inherited by the present Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II. The cars now form part of Kano Emirate Council fleet of vehicles in the Palace.” Walin Kano, however, dismissed allegations that the Emirate spent N15, 458,660.00 on travels, insisting that the amount was actually used for the construction and renovation of Fadancin Dare wing of the Palace.
    The Emirate Council also admitted raising two vouchers of N6, 993, 203.00 and N5, 560, 235.00 totalling N12, 559, 435.00 to Western Union being the cost of air tickets for the Emir’s entourage, “excluding the Emir who used to pay for his ticket.” Walin Kano, however, denied the allegations that the Emirate Council spent billions of Naira on chartered flight, adding that the Emirate Council chartered flight only twice for the Emir’s movement to Sokoto and Benin City.
    According to him, “The Council chartered an Air Flight only twice for His Highness for the following trips: In September, 2014 to Sokoto when the Emir paid a traditional homage (Mubaya’a) to Sultan of Sokoto after his turbaning as Emir of Kano and the Council spent N4, 651, 000.00
    “In January 2015 to Benin for his installation as Chancellor of Benin University and it cost the Emirate Council N9, 071, 000.00. All the trips were made as a result of lack of schedule flight at that time to make this important and historical trips and it cost the Council the sum of N13, 722, 00.00 as against alleged N9, 071, 000.00.” The Emirate Council, however, admitted that two bullet proof cars were purchased for the Emir at the cost of N142, 800, 000.00, but insisted that the purchase was based on the advice and approval of the state government. “This was as a result of an attack on the late Emir of Kano, Alhaji (Dr.) Ado Bayero on his way back from Murtala Muhammad Mosque to the Palace,” Walin Kano added.
    He also stated that N154, 873, 000.00 was paid for the purchase and replacement of vehicles that were destroyed when the Emir’s convoy was attacked by Boko Haram insurgents on his way back from Murtala Muhammad Mosque to the Palace.
    The Emirate Council also insisted that the two Rolls Royce executive cars for Emir Sanusi were purchased by his friends. On spending about N37, 054, 192.06 on phone calls, the Emirate Council stated that, “it is true that N37, 054, 192.06 was paid to Airtel due to the fact that the Emir has been identified with only one local mobile phone which he uses within and outside the country. “The majority of the charges are that of roaming which are normal. The telephones of the palace are upset by the Council particularly when it comes within the provision of the budget.”
    He added that, the Emirate Council actually received N1, 727, 938, 660.42 as grants from the state government between August 30, 2014 and March 1, 2017, “over and above the alleged figure of N1, 672, 953, 660.00. The Emirate Council should have received almost triple of this amount, in accordance with the law establishing Emirate Council fund of 2004.” Walin Kano further stated that, “from 2012 to date, the Council has been denied of this contribution where the sum of N1, 142, 938, 660.42 was spread and released over a period of two years i.e. 2014 and 2015 with an average monthly release of N23, 811, 222.09. The release is for the year 2012.
    “In 2016 to date, the contribution started to improve from the average of N23 million per month to N40 million and the Council received the sum of N585 million within 13 months. This amount covered the period of 2013 and part of 2014 which brings the sum of N1, 727,938,660.42 as total amount received between 30/07/2014 to 01/03/2017 as earlier mentioned. From our calculations, between January 2012 to September 2016 the sum of N6, 527,013,061.00 has been held by the state government.” Walin Kano said the Emirate is ever ready to cooperate with anybody or agency who needs more clarification on the alleged financial misappropriation in the Palace.
    Speaking to The Nation on why the Kano State Public Complaints and Anti-Corruption Commission is probing the Emir, the Executive Chairman of the Commission, Alhaji Muhuyi Magaji Rimingado said, “The position of the Commission is clear, by nature of section 9 of the law setting up the Commission; we are empowered to act on our own initiative to: upon receiving complaints or petition, investigate any administrative organ of government, traditional institutions and even private organizations. We are also empowered to open up investigation on any alleged corrupt person in the state, not minding your social status and position in the society. Now I must tell you that the Commission has adequate jurisdiction to entertain the matter at hand (probe of the Emir). Now, the Emirate Council as a traditional institution is part of government agency. If you look at the law establishing the Emirate Council, you find out that the Emirate Council and the Emir himself has been attached to the government. So, that is it, the Commission has the powers to investigate activities within the Emirate Council. Also, I have made it clear that I will be very objective in the course of the investigation. As I commence the investigation, not even the governor will call me and say do it this way because I have vowed not to succumb to pressure from any quarter. At the end of the day, if the Emir and Emirate Council are clean, no problem, if they are not clean, then the law will take its course.”
    In the meantime, the Kano city, the state and the nation wait with bated breath as the probe continues. Will history repeat itself as the Emir’s grandfather was years ago dethroned?

  • How to make economic roadmap work , by experts

    How to make economic roadmap work , by experts

    United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc Chairman Tony Elumelu, the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and some experts, at the weekend, described the Economic Recovery & Growth Plan (ERGP) as the right pill for the country’s economic pains.

    Reacting to ERGP, launched last Wednesday by President Muhammadu Buhari to reboot the economy, they believe the roadmap will help in tackling the economic recession, if well-implemented.

    The ERGP priorities include: stable macroeconomic environment, agricultural development and food security, power and energy and transportation infrastructure, among others.

    The government proposed no fewer than 60 interventions to stimulate key areas of priority.

    Speaking with The Nation, NLC President Ayuba Wabba said the organised workers’ union did not only believe in the plan but was also part of it.

    Ayuba said: “We were consulted on it and we believe it will work out this time around. For us, what is important is that the implementation should be done.

    “When we looked at the plan, we had some issues with it and when we met with the Minister of Budget and National Planning, we expressed our observations.

    “Generally, it is a good plan because the government now has an instrument to directly tackle the recession in the country.”

    The Secretary General of the National Union of Textile Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN), urged the Federal Government to engage all stakeholders in the implementation of the ERGP.

    “It is quite commendable that we have a growth and development plan for the nation. It is better late than never. All stakeholders including labour should be engaged in its implementation,” Aremu said.

    NLC’s  General Secretary Peter Eson-Ozo said the plan would help in tackling the nation’s economic woes by giving due attention to sectoral development.

    He, however, said that labour had emphasised that the plan should have targeted grassroots on a bottom-top approach.

    He expressed dismay that the grassroots was not sufficiently engaged in the process of the roadmap to economic recovery, saying that inputs from the constituencies and interest groups should have enriched such a document.

    According to him, stakeholders were not carried along from its conceptualisation to finishing. Rather, the government had only developed it consulting with stakeholders.

    Eson-Ozo said: “By the way, what is crucial is that they needed to dutifully implement it and see that the recession is actually tackled by all means.

    “So, we do hope that the policies evolved will work in the directions of the anticipated objectives and ultimately tackle the recession.”

    Although some capital market stakeholders and financial pundits commended the medium-term economic development plan 2017-2020. But many of the experts were cautious about the strategic direction and the plans’ implementation

    They said the economic blueprint could give the much-needed direction to government’s economic development agenda, especially with the inclusion of the critical stakeholders.

    The launch was attended by the leadership of the National Assembly, the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF), Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and relevant Ministries Department and Agencies (MDAs).

    According to them, the lack of political alignment within the ruling party and the various arms of government, the timing of the blueprint and the vagueness of the key performance indices (KPIs) to measure and guide its implementation may be its undoing.

    Commenting on the ERGP launch Elumelu noted that investors’ confidence was being restored and the productive sector being stimulated by the Federal Government’s latest moves, which according to him, were necessary to revamp the economy.

    He said: “I would like to commend the Federal Government of Nigeria and President Buhari on the recent launch of the ERGP. It is laudable that the government widely consulted with the private sector in putting together this economic plan, which I believe should help address the immediate critical need of the Nigerian economy.

    “As a stakeholder in Nigeria, I enjoin everyone to support these lofty agenda of the Government, which hopefully should see the economy return to its deserved high growth path,” Elumelu said.

    According to him, “no doubt, the fundamentals of the local economy remain strong and all must work with the government to harness the potentials, not only for today but also for the benefit of future generations.”

    GTI Capital Group Chief Operating Officer Kehinde Hassan said the success of any economic growth plan will rest on the wholesome political will and alignment to push through the bitter and decisive measures needed to drive some of the reforms.

    According to him, the government has not demonstrated enough political will to curb wastages and redirect the scarce resources to critical infrastructural development.

    The Buhari-led government remains as bloated as the previous administrations, he said.

    Citing Senegal that collapsed its bicameral national assembly into unicameral in critical measure to reduce cost of governance, Hassan urged the government to reduce the cost of governance to the barest minimum and invest more in capital projects for considerable economic gains.

    A chartered accountant, Mr. Kareem Ahmed, said the government should direct the ERGP towards solving the main economic problem of stable power, noting that no meaningful economic development could be achieved with erratic electricity.

    He said that rather than the usual long list of priorities, the ERGP should have focused on one or two major problems with identifiable solutions and timelines for achievement.

    “We believe the Federal Government’s peace-making initiative in the Niger Delta region is a necessity for the successful implementation of the ERGP as it will help the country enhance the earnings needed to deliver on the objectives of the new economic plan,” the Cowry Asset Management Limited stated.

    Some analysts expressed concern over lack of definite KPIs and the overall implementation of the roadmap.

    Afrinvest Securities cited the continuing vagueness of the country’s foreign exchange management targets, which were critical to attract the much-needed Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) required to support the ERGP.

    According to Afrinvest Securities, the absence of forward guidance on expected exchange rate posed a threat to the overall goal of stabilizing the macroeconomic environment.

    Afrinvest stated: “Our conversations with foreign investors continue to indicate that a bold policy action on the exchange rate and measures to improve liquidity in the space remain a major concern. Hence, a follow up guidance, beyond commitment to improve system liquidity as documented in the ERGP, is still a necessity.”

    Describing as laudable ongoing efforts to reduce fuel importation by revamping local refineries, the company noted that increased local production will boost government’s revenue drive. , these would require significant investment in capacity upgrade as well as close monitoring of operating performance.

    The Afrinvest analysts commended the ERGP for recognising the strategic importance of transport and transport infrastructure to the attainment of national economic objectives.

    They, however, pointed out that government’s spending alone might not be sufficient for the investment required to attain the desired result. He pushed for private sector participation for effective delivery.

    “Overall, we believe the ERGP like many economic road maps in Nigeria clearly captures the critical challenges currently facing the economy and proposes strategies to address them. However, our concern remains that Nigeria is often long on planning but short on implementation and delivery with recent policy pronouncements as references. That said, we believe that the plan to carve out a ‘Delivery Unit’ within the Presidency as well as the Ministry of Budget & National Planning to champion the monitoring, evaluation and implementation of the plan, is a step in the right direction,” Afrinvest stated.

    CardinalStone Partners described the ERGP as ambitious but that it would require much more hard work to achieve the broad targets under the plan. The firm faulted the ERGP for lack of specifics on the measures that would be adopted to improve foreign exchange liquidity and narrow the spread between the interbank and parallel market rates.

    It said: “After two years of policy execution malaise, a coherent policy was overdue. Whilst the plan provides some grounds to suggest an eventual lift-off given the ambitious targets that have been set, concerns persist regarding its actual implementation.

    “The biggest concern, which relates to whether a shift is underway that could restore confidence in the CBN’s management of the currency, is not explicitly answered by the plan. The wording on foreign exchange liberalisation suggests that this is still work in progress, and broadly adopts the need for flexibility, which in itself will not provide enough comfort for investors,” CardinalStone Partners said.

    The investment firm noted: “Achieving these targets in the next three years seems quite ambitious given the country’s sluggishness in policy implementation or execution.

    “Hence, we do not think the plan has provided enough basis to change our earlier expectations for the macro-environment and capital market activities in 2017.”

    The Project Director, Cassava: Adding Value for Africa(C:AVA), Prof Kolawole Adebayo identified political risk as a major threat to the successful implementation of government Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).

    He noted that there were numerous threats to the success of the ERGP, with the plan coming at the tail end of the first term of the present regime.

    The government, he explained,  has barely one more year to prove that the  ERGP will not go the way of its forebears.

    According to him, there is little reason to question the government’s capacity to intervene if something goes seriously wrong after 2019.

    He said the success of the ERGP would depend not only on its implementation but also on the commitment of the succeeding administration to see it through to the terminal year.

    His words: “Some of the commodities zeroed on have longer gestation periods as a such as a short term development plan will work . I don’t think the component that deals with agriculture was well thought out.”

    He said the real challenge was whether the recommendations and policy issues in the plan were realistic, considering the short time frame, or whether the policies were not too ambitious in their targets.

    The National President of Federation of Agricultural Commodities Association of Nigeria, Dr Victor Iyama,  believes cutting  down on  spending and increasing infrastructural investment spending will set the stage for better growth.

    Iyama noted that it is possible for the government  to achieve these targets if it is well executed.

    He said: “All that is being planned is good but in this country, the challenge of poor execution.if well executed I see it working.”

    A Professor of Food science and fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science, Isaac Adeyemi ,noted  that  the blueprint  was necessary to address  the country’s economy would remain on a path of decline.

    He said government should take ownership of the plan, by taking responsibility for its full implementation.

    He said the private sector and stakeholders should be involved in the implementation of the plan. However, to strengthen governance.

    He said he would love to see performance management reflected not only “defined, clear and measurable deliverables for every ministry, department and agency of government,” but for same to become targets by which every minister and public office holder would be measured.

    An economist based in Lagos, Olatunji Adeoye, said one of the challenges facing the current administration was in the area of economy. He commended the ERGP policy plans adding that Nigerians should cooperate with the government to make the initiative work.

    He said it will give the economy the needed direction and opportunity to recover after it slipped into recession last year.

    He said many foreigners will not be interested in investing in the economy, and will also  have long-term plan on how to grow it. “We are likely to see more capital inflows as the economy takes shapes in the months ahead. We are happy that crude oil prices is rising and will continue to rise in the coming months and that is important for the economy to recover,” he said.

    Another economist, Lasak Mojeed, said implementation of the ERGP is key because here  are several exceptional and great documents that are in the custody of government but are never implemented. He said the ERGP is a great concept but will be greater at implementation.

    “Until we see it  working, and government moves from paper to action, nothing will come out of it,” he said.

    He said the content of the ERGP shows that government is already approaching the solution to the nation’s economic challenges with the same will and commitment it had demonstrated in the fight against corruption and economic development.

    He said the fact that the ERGP had brought together all the sectoral plans for agriculture and food security, energy and transport infrastructure, industrialisation and among others means it can actually be used to revive the economy.

    The President, Shippers Association Lagos State, Mr Jonathan Nicol, also said the number of empty containers leaving the ports were many because the government and the people of Nigeria were yet to go back to the land as it was done using the first republic.

    “Agriculture was the main stay of the economy before the oil was discovered in large quantity. Successive government had paid lip services to the development of agricultural sector. Therefore,  it is to the benefit of Nigeria and Nigerians if the current administration focuses of the sectors to boost the economy and provide employment to the restive youths across the country,” he said.

    But, an importer, Mr Sesan Adelaja, cautioned the government to be careful of portfolio farmers that truncated the Operation Feed the Nation and Green Revolution initiatives of Obasanjo and Shehu Shagari administrations.

    Adelaja identified peasant farming as the bane of agricultural development of the country and urged the governments at all levels to embrace mechanized farming to boost export.

    The ERGP initiative, he said, would only have meaning to Nigerians if it translates to foods on their tables and money into their pockets.

    Odilim Enwegbara, an economist, told The Nation that “the problem here is that there’s no fully interrogated economic recovery and growth road map. Economic assumptions they have made in the ERGP are too generic and too loose. They might have told some beautiful stories, but there is truly nothing serious accompnaying the beautiful economic stories. In other words, all was done without specificity and without how they will be achieved and the specific outcomes.”

    Economic road map, he noted, “like a building architectural drawings should only make sense when the bill of quantities is known and financing sources are clearly stated. In other words, it is not enough to state some good economic intentions unless they are accompanied with enough ways about how they are to be realised.”

  • Adeboye to those behind naira devaluation: you won’t live to enjoy your illicit gains

    Adeboye to those behind naira devaluation: you won’t live to enjoy your illicit gains

    From the board rooms and seminar halls, the battle to strengthen the naira went spiritual yesterday. The Redeemed Christian Church of God Worldwide General Overseer Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye has declared that those responsible for the drastic loss in the Naira’s value will not live to enjoy their illicit gains.

    The cleric was delivering a sermon at the special Sunday service organised by RCCG Region 11 (aka Ikoyi/Victoria Island family) at the Tafawa Balewa Square, Onikan, Lagos.

    Pastor Adeboye said the message was a revelation he received from God early this year, but which he was sharing for the first time.

    “Those who are deliberately destroying the Naira will make the money but will not spend it,” he said.

    The Naira has drastically and dramatically nose-dived in value in recent months, exchanging at over N500 to the United States (U.S.) dollar before it began to appreciate lately.

    Yesterday’s service was the first of its kind by Region 11, whose appellation was changed from “Ikoyi/Victoria Island Family” by Pastor Adeboye.

    “On my way here this morning, while I was on the long bridge, God told me to change your name to Blessed Family,” he said.

    Dwelling on the theme of the programme, which is “Enlarge”, Pastor Adeboye said it connotes the presence of the enlarger as well as the one to be enlarged.

    “God is not interested in addition but in multiplication” he said, adding that God has pleasure in the prosperity of His people.

    He enjoined the organisers to  take next year’s edition to the National Stadium because “God would have so much enlarged you that this venue would be too small for you”.

    Pastor Adeboye  admonished the congregation to always do the will of God and be ready to pay the price for greatness.

    Using his personal life as an example, Pastor Adeboye said his greatest desire was to become the youngest vice-chancellor in Africa but that God blessed him beyond his wildest imagination.

    “I might not have become the youngest Vice-Chancellor, but today I have many vice-chancellors who call me ‘daddy’ and I have my own university,” he said.

    “If you would be committed to the vision and mission of RCCG, you cannot die without commanding influence.

    “There is a special influence and special anointing upon RCCG,” he added.

    The Mother-in-Israel, Pastor  Folu Adeboye, described the programme as “the beginning of a new day” while appreciating those who grew the region from humble beginnings at Our Saviour’s School in the 1980s.

    The service started with the Regional Pastor, Charles Kpandei, leading the congregation to sing the Blessed Family’s special song.

    He paid tributes to his predecessor, Pastor  Oretayo Adetola, whom he described as the “matriarch” of the Blessed Family.

    Dignitaries at  the special Sunday service include the RCCG National Overseer, the National Secretary (represented), National Treasurer, Elders Fola Aboaba, Felix Ohiwerei, Okey Mofunaya, the Chief of Defence Staff, General Gabriel Olonisakin and provincial pastors, among others.

  • Travails of Nigerians, Africans in India

    Travails of Nigerians, Africans in India

    In this piece for The Nation, an Indian journalist of South African origin,  ROBIN SHUKLA examines the travails of Nigerians and other Africans in India,  where brown seems darker than black

    For  a nation greatly distressed over its people getting harassed and killed in racist attacks in the U.S., India seems to have minimal qualms over its own senseless hatred of Africans.

    March 27, 2017 saw three African youths being brutalised by a large mob of Noida residents. The attackers were reportedly incensed over the death of a 16-year-old Indian drug-user who succumbed to a probable overdose, and over the subsequent release of five Nigeria-born students suspected of having provided drugs to the deceased.

    Nigerian attacked by Noida mob on March 27, 2017
    Nigerian attacked by Noida mob on March 27, 2017

    Anti-African violence has again reared its ugly head after a lull of about seven months. Last year, sometime in July 2016, there were two kinds of reports coming out of Africa: One was of Indian PM Narendra Modi’s five-day-four-nation jaunt to Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania and Kenya. The other pertained to retaliatory violence unleashed against Indian traders in Congo over the killing of a Congolese woman, Cynthia (32), who was murdered by her Indian husband and chopped into pieces in Hyderabad, India!

    During his much tom-tommed people-to-people interactions in those four countries, Modi failed to address the issue of frequent racist attacks across India that had riled the entire African continent of 54 countries. One can only hope that nobody stokes anti-India sentiments there in retaliation for the current Noida attacks, because the video footages are very sickening.

    In the aftermath of Monday’s attack, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj had tweeted, “I have asked for a report from Government of Uttar Pradesh about the reported attack on African students in Noida’ and ‘He (UP CM Yogi Adityanath) has assured that there will be a fair and impartial investigation into this unfortunate incident.”

    Ministry of external affairs spokesperson Gopal Baglay said: “The government is committed to ensuring safety and security of all foreigners in India. People from Africa, including students and youth, remain our valued partners.”

    The administration had obviously failed to see an oncoming situation, even though on March 25, 2017, more than 500 (some say 1,000) residents of Greater Noida housing societies had taken a morcha to the SSP office to protest against what they termed ‘police inaction.’ That the marchers were holding printed banners and posters seeking the eviction of Nigerians should have alerted police to the fact that there was a behind-the-scenes channelizing of hatred, and that the morcha was not just a spontaneous expression of anger against an Indian drug-user’s death.

     

    Earlier attacks on Africans

    Last year, on May 25, 2016, a grand Africa Day Celebrations event was almost boycotted by 42 African nations because a 23-year-old Congolese national, Masonga Kitanda Oliver, had been beaten to death in the Vasant Kunj area of India’s capital, Delhi, only five days earlier, on May 20.

    Congolese national Masonda Ketanda Oliver, killed in Delhi on May 20, 2016
    Congolese national Masonda Ketanda Oliver, killed in Delhi on May 20, 2016

    Diplomats of African nations had planned to stay away from the Africa Day Celebrations, organized in Delhi by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, as a mark of protest against the discrimination and violence faced by their countrymen in various parts of India. The envoys of several African countries signed and sent a strong letter ticking off the Indian government for failing to protect their nationals.

    As a matter of fact, hundreds of Africans were set to march alongside members of the Association of African Students of India in an anti-racism rally to condemn the atrocities. However, senior BJP leaders like the then Minister of State for External Affairs, General (retd) V.K. Singh and Sushma Swaraj had made placating noises about brotherhood, shared histories, etc, and the rally was cancelled. Some diplomats later condescended to attend the Africa Day Celebrations where they voiced their concerns and displeasure over India’s treatment of Africans.

    Alem Woldermariam, the Ambassador of Eritrea, warned, “Given the pervading climate of fear and insecurity in Delhi, the African heads of mission are left with little option than to consider recommending to their governments not to send new students to India, unless and until their safety can be guaranteed.’

    Ironically, on May 25, 2016, on the day Africa Day Celebrations event was held in Delhi, a 23-year-old male Nigerian student, Ghazeem, was assaulted with an iron rod and had to be hospitalized after a tiff over parking his car in Hyderabad. A day later there were as many as four attacks with bats and iron rods on nine African nationals, including four women and a boy, in the villages of Rajpur Khurd and Maidan Garhi located in South Delhi.

    It would be pertinent to point out that Rajpur Khurd, in addition to its population of about 5,000 Rathi Jats, has more than a 1,000 African men and women renting spaces for up to Rs.15,000 per month and friction between locals and the dark-skinned foreigners has continued to trigger violence from time to time.

     

    Sordid history

    The state of Karnataka brought real shame to India in February 2016, when a 21-year-old Tanzanian woman was pulled out of her car in Bengaluru, her clothes torn off by a mob that beat her up and continued to chase her even as she fled into a bus. The horror of horrors was that passengers, our own dear Kannadigas, pushed her out of the bus and into the hands of her ravagers even as Bengaluru police looked on and then stood by mutely as her car was torched by the mob.

    Tanzanian woman was beaten and stripped in Bangalore in February 2016
    Tanzanian woman was beaten and stripped in Bangalore in February 2016

    Bengaluru has been bad to Africans before. In March 2015, a mob in the northeast part of the city attacked men from the Ivory Coast with stones and beer bottles. In July 2013, 44-year-old Wandoh Timothy from Chad was attacked by a mob in Bangalore after an argument with bikers while he was on his way to pick up his three-year-old daughter from school. Timothy has been living in India for more than a decade and is happily married to an Indian girl.

    - Chad national Wandoh Timothy, attacked by a mob in Bangalore in July 2013, seen here with his family
    – Chad national Wandoh Timothy, attacked by a mob in Bangalore in July 2013, seen here with his family

    In September 2014, three students, Yohan, Mapaga and Guira, from Gabon and Burkina Faso were set upon by a mob at a Delhi metro station for alleged eve-teasing.

    Most of us may remember the despicable behavior of Aam Aadmi Party’s cabinet minister Somnath Bharti who, in January 2014, led a raid against Ugandan women for alleged drug dealing and prostitution rackets in Delhi. Most of the women were allegedly molested, leading to uproar in their home country.

    In December 2013, 36-year-old Obodo Uzoma Simeon from Nigeria was hacked to death in north Goa, allegedly the fallout of a drug peddling dispute. There were spontaneous street protests by other Africans, many from Nigeria itself and police had to intervene to prevent a law and order situation.

    On April 21, 2012, Yannick Nihangaza from Burundi was attacked by nine youth from well-to-do families in Jalandhar, Punjab. He was hospitalized and went into a coma, from which he recovered a few months later. The traumatized young man died after two years, in his home on July 1, 2014.

    Nigerian national Obodo Uzoma Simeon, killed in Goa in December 2013
    Nigerian national Obodo Uzoma Simeon, killed in Goa in December 2013

     

    Color prejudices run deep

    Even a cursory enquiry will expose the scary situation of the common Indian perceiving Africans as almost a subspecies, and many Africans have gone on record about the teasing and baiting they have had to cope with from unknown persons or groups on the streets of India, or from their overtly suspicious neighbors who view every African as a drug-smuggling or online-racketeering Nigerian.

    Anti-African prejudices continue to run deep in Goa where even BJP ministers are known to have mouthed off uncalled for remarks and later had to eat their words for reasons of political correctness. Nothing is mentioned however about the violent Russians who have virtually taken over swathes of Goa’s beachfront areas into which Indians are discouraged from entering.

     

    The dangerous downside

    On the numbers front, there could be a fine line we are crossing as population equations could well work against us. We may have at best about 50,000 Africans currently in India as against the millions of Indians living and working in that continent. At any time, injustices highlighted here could trigger violent retaliation in various parts of Africa, a situation India could ill-afford.

    There was a backlash of sorts after the killings of Masonga Kitanda Oliver and Cynthia, with many Indian settlers getting roughed up and shot at while their shops were vandalized in the Congolese capital of Kinshasa. There are about 5,000 Indian living in that country.

    On the economic front, India’s trade with Africa is worth approximately $72 billion, and it sources 24% of its crude oil from Africa. Several Indian private companies have invested there in the agriculture, renewable energy, pharmaceutical, automobile, telecommunication and engineering goods sectors.

    China’s trade there was pegged at upwards of $200 billion in 2012, three times as much as that of India, with US figures pegged at $100 billion. Bad relations and the presence of such business rivals could be our undoing.

    Gabon and Burkina Faso nationals, Yohan, Mapaga and Guira, attacked in a Delhi Metro station in September 2014
    Gabon and Burkina Faso nationals, Yohan, Mapaga and Guira, attacked in a Delhi Metro station in September 2014

    What about dark-skinned Indians and Asians?

    There is scarcely a dusky complexioned Indian who will not have heard the word kalia or kali being used in reference to him or her because of skin tone.

    The advertising for fairness creams which one sees on almost all of the hundreds of TV channels and scores of magazines and newspapers in almost all languages may easily be crossing the billion-rupee mark each year.

    Parents and grandparents groom little girls with applications of various pastes made from ingredients in the kitchen to lighten their color. As they grow older, manufactured cosmetics get used and there are several in the market to choose from.

    Even players like Nivea, who were satisfied with the success of their winter creams and lotions and deo-sprays, have graduated from under-arm whiteners to lotions that could bring in fairness all over!

    The obsession with fairness is not a factor only with the fairer sex. There are Fair and Handsome creams, face washes, and lotions and many other such products for the men and boys, with superstars and cricketing legends endorsing and vouching for their efficacy. The contagion has spread as easily as cream and lotion, thanks to the deep-rooted prejudice that Indians have against their dark-skinned countrymen or women.

    Matrimonial prospects are better for the fair and good-looking while those a few shades down have to offer a dowry of extra cash and goods to get a chance at being carted away by a spouse.

     

    Not a new problem, God suffered too

    Colour equations in India have avowedly ancient origins. As the Vicco people tell us in their jingles, a fair and lovely complexion is guaranteed because their turmeric cream has ingredients recommended in ancient Ayurvedic texts.Yashomati Maiya se boley Nandlala Radha kyun gori, mai kyun kala

    These are the first words of a popular song from the super hit film, Satyam Shivam Sundaram, which even today has sing-along acceptability among all age groups and persuasions. Little Lord Krishna is asking his mother, “why is it that Radha is fair and I am black”.

    Our dusky curd-grabbing flute-playing god is the stuff of many romantic legends and enjoys absolute devotion among Hindus. He has an overseas presence via the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), where mostly white devotees adopt Indian sadhu and sadhvi nomenclatures and attract attention at various temples across the globe with their heavily accented chanting and their swaying and dancing to bhajans sung to an accompaniment of cymbals and drum beats.

    Unfortunately, acceptance of black or dark skin is limited only to Krishna and a few other gods and goddesses like the dark Kali Mata (Durga) and the pitch black Balaji of Tirupati.

    In fact, Lord Balaji is probably the most venerated figure, ensconced atop Andhra Pradesh’s Tirupati Hills, the most visited place of pilgrimage in India when compared to all the mountain trudging and river dipping at various other yatras, kumbhs and maha-kumbhs in the East, West and Northern parts of the country and also the Sabarimala walkathon in the southern state of Kerala.

    Skin color may well continue to be one among India’s various intolerance issues, but it may not be safe to continue to subject Africans to our biases and prejudices. If patience runs out, those of us living in or visiting Africa may find it difficult to mouth the usual drivel about ‘Africans being our brothers and being very safe in India’ with our badly bruised lips and broken teeth.

  • Ambode’s birthday gifts to Tinubu

    Ambode’s birthday gifts to Tinubu

    •Hard times ahead for criminals in Lagos

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, aside hosting a state dinner to mark Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s 65th birthday, also honoured the former governor with brand new roads and bridge. Two days before, he also rebranded a project dear to Tinubu’s heart, the Neigbourhood Watch, writes WALE AJETUNMOBI

    Aboru and Abesan communities in Alimosho, popular as Tinubu’s Country, in Lagos came alive five days ago.  A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and former Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, was there to inaugurate Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s projects to mark his 65th birthday.

    People trouped out in thousands to receive Tinubu and other eminent Nigerians, including Osun Governor Rauf Aregbesola; Senator Isiaka Adeleke; Deputy Governor Idiat Adebule; former Deputy Governor Femi Pedro; Senator representing Lagos West, Solomon n Adeola; Senator Ibrahim Kazaure from Jigawa State; Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Mudashiru Obasa; and members of the Lagos State Executive Council.

    Ambode described the event as a historic day in the life of the people of Alimosho and the state. He recalled his visit to the Aboru  in March 2016, saying that aside the state of the road, which was totally unacceptable, there were reports of series of deaths and fatal accidents caused by the presence of a valley, adding that he immediately directed that work should commence in the area.

    He said: “Exactly one year after, we are here to keep our promise to the good people of Aboru, Abesan and other communities and reaffirm our commitment that no community or area will be left behind. Every Lagosian counts. We are a government of inclusion.”

    He said the 480 metres bridge linking Aboru to Abesan, both in the Agbado Oke-Odo Local Council of Alimosho Local Government Area would significantly ease the burden of travel between the two communities by reducing travel time.

    The governor said aside the bridge, additional adjoining inner roads to create an efficient road network that will aid connectivity permanently were also constructed.

    Ambode listed the roads to include Church Street, Giwa Street, Victor Fagbemi Road, Ogunfayo Road, Ogundare Street, Salami Kazeem, all totalling 5.5km with drainage, walkways and street lights, adding that the road network would ease the pressure on the Abeokuta Expressway and links residents with Iyana Ipaja, LASU-Iba Expressway.

    Night life is gradually returning to the area as the road and the Link Bridge have been connected to the ‘Light Up Lagos’ Project, an initiative of  the Ambode’s administration.

    The governor also flagged off the turning of sod for the construction of a network of roads within the boundaries of Lagos and Ogun States, saying that it was in honour of Tinubu, whom he described as the brain behind the 21st century Lagos.

    He expressed optimism that the roads which have been identified for immediate construction and rehabilitation would complete the new face of Alimosho constituency, saying that work would commence in one week.

    He listed the roads to include Ikola Road with Odo Obasanjo Bridge – 6.4km (from Ipaja/Command to Ilo River); Ogunseye Road – 1.75km (from Ajasa/Command to Ikola Road);Oko Filling Road – 1.5km (from AIT to Ilo River); Osenatu Ilo road – 620m (from Ibari Road to Ilo River); Amikanle road – 3.1km (from AIT to Ogunseye Road); Aina Aladi road – 1.9km (from AIT to Ilo River) and Aiyetoro Road with a bridge– 1.4km (from New Market/Ishefun Road intersection to Ilo River).

    He appealed to the residents of the communities to cooperate with the contractors so as to enable them deliver the network of roads not later than the scheduled completion date.

    Mosan Okunola Community Development Association (CDA) Chairman Pastor Gbenga Adanri used the opportunity of the occasion to debunk insinuation that the people of the area were not happy with the government and even protested, saying there was nothing of such.

    “I like to debunk the untrue impression that we are not happy with Governor Ambode. There is no truth in it. I don’t know where that is coming from and I must say here that we the people are very happy with him. We are happy because our roads have been put in proper shape and we now have a bridge to travel seamlessly within Aboru and Abesan.

    “Before now, if your wife is pregnant and wants to deliver, to cross to the other side was always a big issue and we always indulged in prayer that nothing untoward should happen but today, we can move freely,” Adanri said.

    Tinubu poured accolades on Ambode over his sterling performance in the last 22 months, saying that the Governor has made him proud. He said the achievements of Ambode were a reflection of a Governor who is not only a thinker but a doer, and expressed satisfaction that he was delivering on the promises to the people.

    Tinubu also inaugurated a primary healthcare centre named after him and donated to Aboru Community by the contractor who handled the projects.

    The former governor said: “Akinwunmi Ambode has reflected that he is clearly a thinker and doer. I want to say thank you because experience is a great teacher and I am experienced. I am on the spot and I have watched things in Lagos since my tenure ended.

    “I was worried hell when you (Ambode) took over, not about your credibility, character or capacity, but because however wise or smart a man is, if there is no resources to back the ideas, production would be zero, progress would be zero.

    “When you (Ambode) took over, I know you inherited a burden of debt. The debt profile of Lagos was high, I was wondering how you will re-engineer and face the challenges to make progress.

    “Today, I can see your report card, you have scored well, and you have shown prudency especially in the judicious use of resources of the State.

    “You didn’t disappoint us. Ambode is silently achieving, meticulously planning, religiously executing and brilliantly giving results for Lagos State,” the former Lagos governor said.

    Tinubu said all over Lagos, the results of good governance was being felt by the people, and wished Ambode sound health and wisdom to continue to lead the State.

    “All over Lagos, we are seeing the results. At Oshodi, on our way down here, you can see what is happening there, that place is a construction site. It used to be a den of robbers but what is going on here now is developmental activities for the benefit of the entire country. Ambode is very quiet, very peaceful, not a noise maker, but he is delivering on the job.

    “Today, you (Ambode) have given me a good birthday present. This is a great opportunity for me to be very proud again. Therefore, if we can continue in this direction of infrastructural development in the manner Governor Ambode is moving, Lagos will soon match international states or country anywhere in the world.”

    Nathaniel Ajayi, a resident of Abesan community, described succinctly Ambode’s interventions when he said: “I was born in 1993 here in Abesan, I had always dreamt that one day the kind of development I see in Victoria Island, Lekki and Ikeja will take place here. Today our governor has made my dream come true.”

    Aregbesola and Senator representing Lagos West at the Senate, Solomon Olamilekan Adeola said it was obvious that Ambode started well and is doing well, and solicited the cooperation of the people to engender further dividends of democracy and good governance.

    Two days earlier, Ambode launched the rebranded Lagos Neighbourhood Safety Corps. It is meant to ensure security of lives and property communities.  At the launch of the Neighbourhood Safety Corps held at Agege Stadium, 177 cars and vehicles equipped with communication gadgets, 377 motorcycles, 377 helmets, 4,000 bicycles and metal detectors were released to the Corp to ensure that illegal weapons are not smuggled into public places.

    Ambode said the move was another giant step towards enhancing security and a vital part of the ongoing efforts of his administration to reform the security and justice sector.

    The governor, who on August 15, 2016 assented to the law that created the Neighbourhood Safety Corps, said the Corps had been designed to provide a second layer of policing in order to ensure that the State and communities are more secure.

    He acknowledged the fact that the Nigerian Police had been very supportive to the State Government especially in fighting crime, but that the need for the Neighbourhood Corps arose from the identified security challenges confronting the State due to huge population, adding that the members of the Corps would complement police especially in areas of community policing.

    “Let me, however, make it abundantly clear that the Neighbourhood Safety Corps is not in any way in competition with the regular Police Force.

    “In actual fact, they are expected to assist and complement the Police by providing useful intelligence for crime prevention and to facilitate the arrest of perpetrators of criminal activities in our communities,” governor Ambode said.

    He added that in realization of the fact that nothing can be more important in law enforcement than educating the people in charge of enforcing the law, the rebranded Neighbourhood Corps have been trained and equipped with the requisite knowledge and skills to complement the good work of the Nigerian Police.

    He said in addition to the induction on orthodox community policing techniques, the Corps were also trained on how to mediate disputes and the art of negotiating for peaceful resolution; balancing communal interest in resolving disputes and proactive policing engagement instead of reactive policing.

    “Special hotlines have also been created direct to the Executive Secretary and senior management of the Neighbourhood Safety Corps Agency for easy communication with our communities in the event of any crime.

    “Any valuable information given to the Corps will attract handsome rewards from the state government. I therefore call on all Lagosians to join hands with us to say a final no to crime in our state.

    “All these equipment have been made possible through the judicious use of tax payers’ money and funds from the State Lottery Fund for good causes. Please continue to pay your taxes for a better Lagos.

    “I am very happy to state that through this Safety Corps initiative the State Government has created over 7,000 jobs for officers of the Corps, artisans and other support staff. Job creation is at the heart of economic prosperity and we remain fully committed to a more prosperous Lagos for our citizens,” the governor said.

    Ambode urged the Corps not to indulge in brutalizing citizens, but that they should exercise lot of restraint, patience, understanding and maturity while carrying out their duties.

    He added that to further strengthen security, a new executive bill to regulate employment of domestic workers and security guards would soon be forwarded to the State House of Assembly, explaining that the bill, among others, will prescribe regulations for the set of workers and other details to monitor their activities.

    Ambode said there was no longer any room for child abuse or under aged workers, adding that it had been discovered that domestic workers were largely undocumented and pose a grave security threat in the State.

    He also said the recruiting agencies, under the bill, would be licensed and regulated to ensure safety.

    Ambode also handed over four vans fitted with Close Circuit Television Cameras (CCTVs) to the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) of the State Police Command.

    The Corp’s rebranding and the roads and bridge inaugurated mean economic activities would witness a boom in the coming months, while motorists would have better stories to tell – with criminals singing dirge.

  • How The Nation’s story changed girl’s life

    How The Nation’s story changed girl’s life

    Miss Òpémipó Ogunséyé, an orphan who will be 20 on April 12, thought she would never use her legs again.  But a story in this newspaper titled Please, help me to make something out of my life changed all that.

    A Belgian and Managing Director, World Telecom Labs, Mr. Leigh Smith, was in Nigeria when the story was published. Smith, who almost had his leg amputated several years ago, read the story and decided to help.

    All thanks to Smith, Miss Ogunseye now has her legs backs and also has money in an account to fund her education.

    He said: “Whenever I am in Nigeria, I always stayed in the same hotel in Abuja. I liked to swim but the hotel swimming pool was closed off because they were building a new wing on the hotel next door. So, I met with the general manager and explained that I wanted to use the pool to get some exercise. There-and-then, he gave me special permission to use the pool. Everytime I made a booking, the pool would be cleaned and I used it regularly while there.

    “This set up worked well for about seven visits before I read about Òpémipó’s story in The Nation. That November, when I arrived the reception, the officials were happy to see me and promptly, they gave me the key to the swimming pool. Unknown to me, the GM had not seen my request that while at the hotel, I would use the swimming pool. So, he did not instruct for the pool to be cleaned.

    “The next night, I went for a swim. I was already in the water before I realised that it was not cleaned as before. I accidentally had a very small cut on my knee but didn’t know that bacteria entered through this cut into my lower leg. Within the next three days, my left leg had gotten swollen. Fortunately, on the Friday night I had to fly to Cape Town to attend a telecoms conference. I arrived early Saturday morning and went straight to Christian Barnard Hospital next to my hotel for a check up.

    “The doctors immediately explained that the issue with my leg looked serious and that I needed to be checked in. Immediately, they started series of checks and later told me that they found few serious complications as they found Strepicoccous bacteria in my system. Then, they moved me into the intensive care as I had stopped breathing at some point and my kidneys stopped working.

    “By the third day, the medical team thought I was going to die and the next option for them was to amputate my left leg. They were still deliberating on the process of cutting off my leg when fortunately, the antibiotics earlier administered started killing off the bacteria by the fourth day. Eventually, I ended up being in the intensive care for eight days and lasted three whole weeks in hospital. That was how I was saved from losing my leg simply because I swam in dirty swimming pool. I think I might have wanted to end my life. So, when I read Òpémipó’s story in your newspaper, it really touched my heart because what happened to her very, very nearly happened to me.

    “This episode took me about three months before I began walking short distances. Gradually, it improved but the infection and the treatment affected the lymphatic circulation in my leg. Once monthly, I still get some physiotherapy treatment to massage out the swelling. But I am largely fine and my leg is very much okay.”

    Smith, for about two years, ensured that Òpémipó got treated medically at the Federal Medical Centre, Idi-Aba, Abeokuta, Ogun State, where she had her crushed leg replaced with Prosthesis, an artificial cast.

    Last week, Smith accompanied by this reporter, Òpémipó’s uncle, Michael, her elder sister, Elizabeth and Miss Ogunseye, was at a Sterling Banks branch on Victoria Island to open an account to fund her education. Smith had made prior arrangements with the bank to open the account.

    Explaining why he opened an account for Òpémipó, the benefactor said: “As a first step to helping her, I wanted to set up a bank account so that if and when I want to I can give her some financial support. I will like to support her to be educated and if she wants to go to university, all well. As you reported in the initial story, she was appealing to someone to help her as she said: ‘I still want to make something out of my life’. Yes, she needed to be on her feet. And now that she is back up, I am also prepared to give her some financial assistance to get a good education to actually make something out of her life. By the way, her Uncle Mike has been kindly supporting her and paying her school fees. In fact, his magnanimity towards his late sister’s two daughters should not go unrecognised. All I am doing is just helping Òpémipó to get started with an opportunity to have a better life, not anything to be sensationalised.”

    An elated Miss Ogunseye told the reporter: “From the beginning, I felt my world had come to a sudden end. I had dreams I was hoping to pursue. In fact, I was about sitting for my WAEC back then. But that was truncated by the accident and the fact that I was seriously in pains and on hospital admission. In short, I went through a lot for my young age. But I thank God and I really want to appreciate my uncle, Mr. Michael and aunty, his wife, Mr. Leigh, my elder sister, Elizabeth and several others I can’t mention here.

    “I am grateful, because they kept me going and that is why I can, and indeed, I am preparing for the upcoming WAEC this year 2017. Ordinarily by now, I should be in about 300 or 400level in the university. But I thank God who allowed the story to be written on me and made Mr. Smith to read and he contacted us.

    “After I was discharged from the hospital, Mr. Smith came over to our place and that was it. Since then, he has been an angel that God sent to my life. He has helped out in so many ways that if I counting, I won’t finish anytime soon.

    “I want to be a journalist. I want to go around the world. I want to be the voice for people who are going through similar situation I had been through. I want people who have given up to see that there will always be a better tomorrow. They just have to be patient and always believe in God.”