Category: Special Report

  • U.S presidential polls: Issues for and against Biden, Trump

    U.S presidential polls: Issues for and against Biden, Trump

    When the President of the United States of America (U.S.A.), Joe Biden and his predecessor, Donald Trump, won their respective party nominations, it wasn’t a surprise to many. But, ahead of the November presidential election, IBRAHIM ADAM thinks through warning signs for both candidates and if Biden could benefit from the State of the Union address.

    The results of the Georgia, Mississippi and Washington primaries have cemented what analysts and observers of U.S elections have described as Biden and Trump’s rematch for the office of the President of the United States, as they have secured the Democratic and Republican Party nominations, respectively.

    Biden, who had no major rivals in his party, cleared the required 1,968 delegate threshold to be nominated, while Trump also exceeded the 1,215 delegate threshold.

    The two candidates will be officially nominated at their respective conventions in July and August.

    In his third State of the Union speech which lasted for 90 minutes, President Joe Biden emphasised the economic achievements of his administration and set himself apart from his predecessor. The State of the Union is “getting stronger and stronger and America is coming back,” he said.

    The coast became clearer for Donald Trump after his opponent, and former South Carolina Governor, Nikki Haley, withdrew from the Presidential race following Trump’s victory in 15 states and one territory, excluding Vermont at the Super Tuesday.

    President Joe Biden, after the Super Tuesday, warned of an “existential” national threat and “darkness” if his Republican rival wins the race for the White House. Four years ago, I ran because of the existential threat Donald Trump posed to the America we all believe in.

    “Tonight’s results leave the American people with a clear choice: Are we going to keep moving forward or will we allow Donald Trump to drag us backwards into the chaos, division and darkness that defined his term in office?” Biden wrote in a statement. 

    Immigration

    Trump used harsh and divisive tactics, such as dividing families at the border and using heated rhetoric to warn of the dangers of migrants. Biden advocated for a more compassionate strategy that would be in line with the aspirational values of America throughout the 2020 election campaign.

    Calling the unprecedented influx of asylum seekers a “border crisis,” Biden has, in recent weeks, advocated legislation that could temporarily seal the border and speed up deportations. He no longer makes mention of the early goal of giving “Dreamers,” or those brought into the country illegally as children, a route to citizenship.

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    The Trump administration’s deportation policies changed after Biden came into office, and as a result, there was a significant reduction in the number of individuals being deported from the country.

    This has been a significant distinction between the two governments. With Biden allegedly considering executive actions to speed up deportations for new arrivals, especially for those who do not qualify for asylum, the disparity may be closing slightly.

    In contrast, if Trump wins the election to the presidency, he has promised to conduct the “largest deportation operation” in US history to remove illegal immigrants. He then promised to employ the National Guard to carry out his intentions.

    Democrats, especially Biden, swore not to build “another foot of wall” when he assumed office and strongly criticised Donald Trump’s flagship border wall-building strategy.

    Republicans and Democrats criticised Biden last year after his administration unveiled plans to build a new border wall in Texas, which will be around 20 miles (32 km) of barriers constructed in a region of the Rio Grande Valley that is not heavily populated.

    Biden said he “had no choice” because funding for the construction was signed while Trump was president.

    “I tried to get them to redirect that money. They didn’t, they wouldn’t. I can’t stop that.” Biden said.  At his campaign rallies around the United States, Trump has persisted in promoting the building of border barriers.

    For the first time, according to a Monmouth University survey conducted on February 27, most Americans are in favour of building a border wall, with 53 per cent of respondents supporting the idea.

    During the State of the Union speech, Biden criticised lawmakers for failing to pass a bipartisan border bill that was met with strong resistance from House Republicans and put the blame for the bill’s failure on Trump.

    He said that the bill would have resulted in the hiring of 1,500 border security officers and an additional 100 immigration judges to assist in clearing the backlog of cases in the immigration system.    “The bill would save lives, and bring order to the border.

    “I’m told my predecessor called members of Congress in the Senate and demanded they block the bill. He feels it would be a political win for me and a political loss for him. It’s not about him. It’s not about me.

    “My Republican friends you owe it to the American people to get this bill done. We need to act. And if my predecessor is watching instead of playing politics and pressuring members of Congress to block this bill, join me in telling Congress to pass it!

    “We can do it together. But here’s what I will not do. I will not demonise immigrants saying they poison the blood of our country as he said in his own words. I will not separate families.

    “I will not ban people from America because of their faith. Unlike my predecessor, on my first day in office, I introduced a comprehensive plan to fix our immigration system, secure the border, and provide a pathway to citizenship for dreamers and so much more, because, unlike my predecessor, I know who we are as Americans.

    “We are the only nation in the world with a heart and soul that draws from old and new; home to Native Americans whose ancestors have been here for thousands of years, home to people from every place on Earth.

    Israel, Gaza and Ukraine

     In 2020, Biden used his rich background in foreign policy to describe Trump as a danger to American interests and allies globally.

    Biden is now facing his toughest challenge with a protest vote against his support of Israel in the ongoing conflict with Hamas in Palestine.

    More than 100,000 voters or 13 per cent of the total marked their ballots in the Michigan primary as “uncommitted,” expressing their disapproval of the President’s position on the Gaza War, sending a warning shot to Biden one week before Super Tuesday.

    Biden announced during his State of the Union speech that his administration would construct a “temporary pier” off the coast of Palestine to make humanitarian supplies easier.

    This, he said, will make it easy to receive large shipments carrying food, water, medicine and temporary shelter available for the Palestinians.

    Biden admitted that the war has taken a greater toll on innocent civilians with over “30, 000 killed” and said the only solution is a two-state solution.

    The U.S. President warned the Israeli leadership against using aid to Gaza as a bargaining chip as he described the ongoing war as “gut-wrenching.”

    “This war has taken a greater toll on innocent civilians than all previous wars in Gaza combined. More than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed. Thousands and thousands are innocent women and children. Girls and boys were also orphaned. Nearly two million more Palestinians are under bombardment or displaced. Homes destroyed neighbourhoods in rubble, cities in ruin. Families are without food, water, and medicine. It’s heartbreaking,” he said.

    Biden also pledged to work to bring every hostage home, pointing to American families whose loved ones are still being held by Hamas.

    On Ukraine, Biden stressed that he has been a “lifelong supporter” of the U.S. ally.

    Economy

    At the State of the Union speech, President Biden revealed that he inherited an economy “on the brink” during the COVID-19 pandemic, but his policies helped revive it.

    Biden also paid a nod to U.S. labour unions and the American middle class, while stressing that he plans to ensure that corporations pay their fair share.

    “I came to office determined to get us through one of the toughest periods in our nation’s history. And we have. It doesn’t make the news but in thousands of cities and towns, the American people are writing the greatest comeback story never told.

    “So let’s tell that story here and now. America’s comeback is building a future of American possibilities, building an economy from the middle out and the bottom up, not the top down, investing in all of America, in all Americans to make sure everyone has a fair shot and we leave no one behind!

    “The pandemic no longer controls our lives. The vaccines that saved us from COVID-19 are now being used to help beat cancer. We have turned setbacks into comebacks. That’s America! I inherited an economy that was on the brink. Now our economy is the envy of the world. 15 million new jobs in just three years, that’s a record. Unemployment is at 50-year lows.

    “A record 16 million Americans are starting small businesses and each one is an act of hope; with historic job growth and small business growth for Black, Hispanic and Asian Americans, 800,000 new manufacturing jobs in America and counting,”

    Biden explained that inflation in the country has dropped from nine per cent to three per cent.

    Trump’s threat

    Trump’s language hasn’t changed. He lost his primary platform when he was banned from Twitter in 2021. This may be a political benefit for him since fewer people experience his attacks. While some ignore his remarks that once could have raised eyebrows.

    He was not disqualified from the nomination even after being charged with 91 felonies. Rather, it has energised his core supporters.

    However, 33 per cent of North Carolina Republican primary voters and 40 per cent of Virginia Republican primary voters agreed that Trump would not be fit to serve as president if he were found guilty of a crime.

    Gun control

    Biden made a strong statement on reducing gun violence. The President made scathing remarks on Trump’s administration’s inaction on gun violence alongside explaining the steps his administration had taken to stop mass shootings.

    “I did do something by establishing the first-ever Office of Gun Violence Prevention in the White House that Vice-President Harris is leading. I’m proud we beat the National Rifle Association (NRA) when I signed the most significant gun safety law in nearly 30 years,”

    In a blistering critique of Trump, the President said: “My predecessor told the NRA he’s proud he did nothing on guns when he was President.”

    At the podium, Biden declared: “Now we must beat the NRA again! I’m demanding a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines! Pass universal background checks! None of this violates the Second Amendment or vilifies responsible gun owners,”

    Age limit

     That’s a bigger problem for Biden. His age wasn’t a major factor when he was elected President in 2020, but at 78, he already held the record for the oldest President in American history.

    Republicans point to every misstep made by the 81-year-old Biden as proof that he is not mentally and physically capable of being president.

    Democrats also criticised Trump for his mistakes, pointing out that at 77, he confused Nikki Haley with Nancy Pelosi, and mistakenly identified Barack Obama as Joe Biden.

    Trump’s ‘bloodbath’ comment 

     Donald Trump has been criticised after he warned that there will be a ‘bloodbath’ should he lose the November election in a fiery speech where he also branded migrants ‘animals.’

    Trump painted an apocalyptic vision of the country if Biden wins a second term while speaking at an airfield rally outside of Dayton, Ohio, to campaign for Republican Senate candidate, Bernie Moreno.

    “If I don´t get elected, it´s going to be a bloodbath for the whole that´s going to be the least of it; it´s going to be a bloodbath for the country. If this election isn’t won, I’m not sure that you’ll ever have another election in this country,” Trump said.

    The outcry over his comments quickly poured onto X platform (formerly known as Twitter), as users branded Trump ‘hateful’ ‘grotesque’ and ‘a dangerous lunatic’ over both his ‘bloodbath’ comment and reference to migrants as ‘animals.’

    Reacting to this, former Speaker and a frequent political foe of the former President, Nancy Pelosi the remarks highlight how important it is for Democrats to re-elect Biden.

    “We just have to win this election because he’s even predicting a bloodbath. What does that mean? Is he going to exact a bloodbath? There’s something wrong here.

    “Praising Hitler, praising the Russians, honestly, I mean, condemning our soldiers for losing or dying in war or being captured in war.”

    Pelosi pleaded with the American public to take these issues into account when they head to the polls in November.

  • Iran’s response to Israeli aggression sparks fears of another war

    Iran’s response to Israeli aggression sparks fears of another war

    The global community is gripped by apprehension as Iran’s formidable response unfolds, marked by the launch of over 300 drones and missiles in retaliation for Israel’s assault on the Iranian Consulate in Damascus on April 1. With tensions escalating to a fever pitch, fears abound that these escalating hostilities could serve as a catalyst for a catastrophic third World War. World leaders, recognising the gravity of the situation, have sounded alarm bells that the fallout from this exchange of fire threatens the already volatile Middle East. IBRAHIM ADAM writes

    Iran’s recent assault, comprising a barrage of missiles and drones aimed at Israel over the weekend, comes as a retaliatory response to last week’s suspected Israeli strike on its Consulate in Damascus, Syria, resulting in the loss of 13 lives. The international community has voiced deep concern in the wake of these strikes, with urgent calls for restraint emanating from the United Nations and various nations.

    Of notable significance, this marks Iran’s inaugural direct attack on the Israeli state. General Mohammad Bagheri, Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces, has declared the operation concluded, asserting its fulfillment of all objectives. However, Iran has issued a stern warning to Israel, indicating the potential for a more significant retaliation should Israel respond. Furthermore, Iran has explicitly stated that any support from the United States toward Israeli military action against Iran could result in the targeting of U.S. bases.

    According to Israeli military spokesperson R-Adm Daniel Hagari, an impressive 99 per cent of the barrage aimed at Israel and its allies was intercepted, underscoring the robustness of Israel’s defence systems. Hagari noted that all drones and cruise missiles were successfully neutralised before breaching Israeli airspace, though a few ballistic missiles managed to inflict minor damage on the Nevatim Airbase in the Southern Negev Desert.

    Highlighting the human toll, Hagari reported that 12 individuals sustained injuries, including a seven-year-old girl who suffered head injuries from shrapnel. Lt. Col. Peter Lerner of the Israel Defence Forces emphasised the severity of her condition, stating that she was “fighting for her life.”

    The timeline of events underscores the prolonged nature of the threat, as drones took several hours to breach Israeli airspace. Just prior to 2:00 a.m. local time (midnight BST), alarms blared across Israel, urging residents to seek refuge as the nation’s formidable air defences sprang into action, illuminating the night sky with detonations. Videos circulated online, capturing the interception of drones near Jerusalem’s revered Al-Aqsa Mosque, offering a glimpse into the tense atmosphere during the attack.

    Iran orchestrated a multifaceted assault, deploying drones and missiles from its own territory while also coordinating attacks from Iraqi, Syrian and Yemeni territories. With Iranian forces entrenched in Syria and alliances with militant groups in Iraq and Yemen, the assault showcased Tehran’s extensive reach in the region. Lebanon’s Hezbollah Movement, a formidable proxy force aligned with Iran, joined the fray by launching rockets at Israeli positions in the annexed Golan Heights simultaneously with the Iranian bombardment. Additionally, a second barrage followed hours later, further escalating the volatile situation in the region.

    Israel/Hamas war

     Before the weekend incident, Israel and the Palestinian group, Hamas have been at war since early October 2023. On the morning of October 7, waves of Hamas gunmen stormed across Gaza’s border into Israel, killing about 1,200 people. Hamas also fired thousands of rockets.

    Those killed included children, the elderly and 364 young people at a music festival. Hamas took more than 250 others to Gaza as hostages.

    Hamas justified its attack as a response to what it calls Israeli crimes against the Palestinian people.

    These include security raids on Islam’s third holiest site, the Al-Aqsa Mosque, in occupied East Jerusalem and Jewish settlement activity in the occupied West Bank.

    Israel immediately began a massive campaign of air strikes on targets in Gaza, in response to the Hamas attack.

    The Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel’s aims were the destruction of Hamas and the return of the hostages.

    Israel launched a ground invasion three weeks later. It has also bombarded Gaza from the sea.

    Attacks were initially focused on Northern Gaza, particularly Gaza City and the tunnels beneath it, which Israel said were the centre of military operations by Hamas.

    After a temporary truce in late November 2023, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) extended ground operations to Southern Gaza.

    Troops reached the heart of the second biggest city, Khan Younis, where the IDF said it believed top Hamas commanders were hiding. The IDF also pushed into refugee camps in Central Gaza.

    More than 33,000 Palestinians have been killed, and tens of thousands injured by Israeli strikes since the start of the war, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry. It said most were women and children.

    Attack a ‘declaration of war’ says Israel

     Israel has described Iran’s unprecedented 350-missile attack as a ‘declaration of war’ and confirmed it has approved plans for ‘offensive and defensive actions.’

    The country’s President, Isaac Herzog insisted that Israel did not want a war but suggested they would retaliate after Iran’s airstrike.

    He said: “It was about time the world faced this empire of evil in Tehran because its behaviour is unacceptable.

    ‘”It’s a declaration of war. We are considering all options and I’m quite confident we will take the necessary steps to protect and defend our people,”

    Countries that intercepted the drones 

    Almost all weapons were shot down by Israeli, U.S., and allied forces before they reached their targets.

    Israel’s key ally, the U.S., rushed to shoot down incoming fire. Joe Biden said the U.S. had helped to “take down nearly all” of the drones and missiles.

    British Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak said Royal Air Force (RAF) fighter jets had shot down “a number” of Iranian attack drones. Those drones were intercepted in Syria and Iraq, where the RAF was already operating as part of the Operation Shader Mission against Islamic State.

    Jordan’s air defences also intercepted and downed dozens of Iranian weapons that flew over its airspace, security sources told Reuters. The kingdom is highly critical of Israel but has a peace treaty and is a close U.S. ally.

    Israeli military spokesperson, R-Adm Daniel Hagari said France was among the countries involved in defending Israel, saying: “France has very good technology, jets, radar and I know they were contributing in patrolling airspace.”

    He said that he did not have exact details on whether French jets had shot down any of the missiles launched by Iran.

    G7 leaders, countries condemn strike 

    The President of the European Council, Charles Michel said that the bloc “unanimously condemned” the drone and missile attacks, but added that “all parties must exercise restraint.

    “We will continue all our efforts to work towards de-escalation. Ending the crisis in Gaza as soon as possible, notably through an immediate ceasefire, will make a difference,” Mr Michel said.

    Leaders of the G7 also said that they would try to stabilise the situation in the Middle East.

    “With its actions, Iran has further stepped toward the destabilisation of the region and risks provoking an uncontrollable regional escalation. This must be avoided,” a statement issued by the G7 President in Italy.

    U.S. President Joe Biden promised “ironclad” support for Israel after meeting with top security officials.

    “I just met with my national security team for an update on Iran’s attacks against Israel. Our commitment to Israel’s security against threats from Iran and its proxies is ironclad,” Mr Biden said on X.

    French President, Emmanuel Macron on X said: “I condemn in the strongest terms the unprecedented attack launched by Iran against Israel, which threatens to destabilise the region.

    “I express my solidarity with the Israeli people and France’s commitment to the security of Israel, our partners and regional stability,”

    Sunak condemned the “reckless” strikes, which he said “risk inflaming tensions and destabilising the region. Iran has, once again, demonstrated that it is intent on sowing chaos in its backyard.”

    The European Union Foreign Affairs Chief, Josep Borrell said the strikes were “an unprecedented escalation and a grave threat to regional security,”

    France’s Foreign Minister, Stephane Sejourne on X said that “in deciding to take this unprecedented action, Iran has reached a new level in its acts of destabilisation and is risking a military escalation.”

    Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, China call for restraint

    The Saudi Foreign Ministry has expressed concerns over the “recent military escalations” in the region and their “potential severe repercussions” following Iranian drone and missile attacks directed at Israel.

    The Saudi Foreign Ministry on X expressed its concern at the “military escalation” and called on “all parties to exercise utmost restraint and spare the region and its peoples from the dangers of war.

    “The ministry reaffirms the Kingdom’s position that stresses the need for the (UN) Security Council to take responsibility for maintaining international peace and security, especially in this highly sensitive region for global peace and security.”

    The ministry stressed the importance of “preventing any further exacerbation” of the crisis, warning of “dire consequences” should the situation worsen.

    The Nigerian Government also joined other members of the International community to call on Iran and Israel to exercise restraint.

    In a statement signed by the spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Francisca Omayuli, both countries were advised to consider the global commitment to peaceful conflict resolution for the betterment of global peace and security.

    “The Federal Government of Nigeria joins other members of the international community to call on Iran and Israel to exercise restraint, as diplomatic efforts are ongoing to ease tension and avoid a wider conflict in the Middle East.

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    “In this critical period, it behoves the two countries to reflect on the universal commitment to peaceful resolution of conflicts, for the advancement of global peace and security.”

    Egypt’s Foreign Ministry expressed its “deep concern” at the escalation of hostilities and called for “maximum restraint,” warning of the “risk of the regional expansion of the conflict,”

    China’s Foreign Ministry also urged restraint, even as it called for the implementation of a recent United Nations Security Council resolution demanding a ceasefire in Gaza.

    The United Arab Emirates (UAE) also called for “the utmost restraint” to avoid dangerous repercussions and the region being dragged to new levels of instability.

    The Foreign Ministry called for the resolution of “differences through dialogue and diplomatic channels and for adhering to the rule of law and respecting the United Nations Charter.”

    The President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen called on Iran to “immediately cease” attacks.

    Turkish Foreign Minister, Hakan Fidan told Iran’s Foreign Minister, Hossein Amirabdollahian in a phone call that Turkey does not want further escalation of tension in the region.

    Amirabdollahian told Fidan that its “retaliatory operation” against Israel had ended, adding that Iran would not launch a new operation unless it was attacked.

    ‘Iran notified neighbours 72 hours before the attacks’

     Foreign Minister, Hossein Amirabdollahian said Iran notified its neighbours of its retaliatory strikes on Israel 72 hours in advance.

    “About 72 hours before our operations, we informed our friends and neighbours in the region that Iran’s response against Israel was certain, legitimate and irrevocable,” Amirabdollahian told a media briefing.

    The White House has warned Israel that the U.S. will not participate in any retaliatory strikes on Iran, senior administration officials have said.

    Officials said Joe Biden urged Israel to consider its response “carefully,”

    A senior administration official said that Biden told Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu to “think very carefully and strategically” about how his forces replied to the unprecedented action, the first direct attack by Iran on the country.

    During a conversation between Biden and Netanyahu, they discussed “how to slow things down and think through things,” with Biden emphasising that Israel has “gotten the best of it.”

    The official declined to say, however, whether the White House warned against a significant response, saying only that “it is a calculation the Israelis have to make.”

    In a string of television appearances on U.S. networks, National Security Spokesman, John Kirby repeatedly said that the U.S. had made it clear to Israel that it seeks to avoid a wider conflict.

    The senior administration personnel said that the same message has been sent to Iran through diplomatic channels.

    The stance has sparked criticism from some U.S. lawmakers and former officials from both sides of the political spectrum.

    UN Secretary-General urges parties to avoid war

    The Secretary-General of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres has urged all parties to step back from the brink of a possible all-out conflict.

    At the UN Security Council in New York, Guterres said: “The people of the region are confronting a real danger of a devastating full-scale conflict. Now is the time to defuse and de-escalate. Now is the time for maximum restraint.”

    He said that it is vital to avoid “any action that could lead to major military confrontations on multiple fronts in the Middle East.”

    Guterres reminded member states of their obligations under the UN Charter, which prohibits the use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.

    He reinforced the importance of respecting the inviolability of diplomatic premises and personnel and referred to his condemnation of the recent attack on the Iranian Consulate in Damascus on April 1.

    Israel will exact a price from Iran, says Benny Gantz 

    A member of Israel’s war cabinet, Benny Gantz said his country will “exact a price from Iran in a way and time that suits us,” after the Iranian drone and missile attack.

    He said Iran met the strength of the Israeli security system and Iran’s retaliation would not be the end.

    “This event is not over and there was a need to build a regional coalition and extract a price from Iran, in a way and at a time that suits us.”

    Gantz added that Israel still needs to bring home its hostages and secure its southern and northern borders so that people who have evacuated their homes near those borders can return.

    Israel Finance Minister, Bezalel Smotrich demanded a response that “resonates throughout the Middle East,” and the National Security Minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir said Israel should “go crazy.”

    Smotrich, the Head of the far-right Religious Zionism Party said if Israel hesitates “we will put ourselves and our children in existential danger.”

    In a video statement, he called this a “moment of truth,” and said: “If our response resonates throughout the Middle East for generations to come, we will win.”

    Ben-Gvir, the leader of the far-right Jewish Power Party said Israel’s response must not be weak and “the concepts of containment and proportionality are concepts that passed away on October 7,” the day of the Hamas attack on Israel.

    Emirates, Etihad, other UAE airlines cancel flights 

     UAE airlines are among several cancelling and rerouting flights as tensions between Iran and Israel escalate.

    Emirates, Etihad Airways and Flydubai have scrapped some flights and rerouted others after Jordan, Israel, Lebanon and Iraq temporarily closed airspace after Iran attacked Israel.

    It has also rerouted several European and North American flights to avoid closed airspace in the region.

    “This is likely to cause some disruption and delays to several flights over the day,” a representative for the airline told The National.

    “Etihad Airways flights only operate through approved airspace. Safety is always our highest priority and we would never operate a flight unless it was safe to do so.”

  • Pressure to meet Band ‘A’ consumers’ 20-hour supply puts fragile national grid under threat

    Pressure to meet Band ‘A’ consumers’ 20-hour supply puts fragile national grid under threat

    • TCN, DisCos trade blames

    With the application for an upward review of the Multi-Year Tariff Order (MYTO) for the Band “A” customers, the Nigerian Electricity Supply Initiative (NESI) seems to have beaten more than it can chew. Its regulator, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) examined over 3,000 feeders and sifted out about 481 feeders to serve the 15 per cent of the customers who enjoy a minimum of 20 hours daily electricity supply. Consequently, the Commission’s Vice-Chairman, Dr Musilu Oseni, on April 3 broke the news to reporters in Abuja that it has approved a tariff of N225/kwh from its previous N68/kwh for the band.

    But how far has the NESI fared with the new tariff after its approval? At the take-off of the new rate, most customers who vented some electricity units cried out that the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) captured them among the premium Band A. They only got one-third of their previous units for the same amount they had always bought. Through all available communication media, they were quick to besiege the DisCo and NERC with a deluge of complaints. It was an embarrassment of sorts to both the Commission and the DisCo. Consequently, 48 hours later, NERC fined AEDC N200 million for violating the order by extending the rate to every other customer, irrespective of their band.

    The Commission’s management has said: “AEDC has been fined ₦200 million for failure to comply with the prescribed customer band classifications for the tariff billing.” NERC further explained that the decision follows a detailed review and customer feedback, revealing that AEDC had applied the new tariff to all customer bands, contrary to the Order designed to ensure fair billing practices.

    NERC insisted that “AEDC is, therefore, mandated to: a. Reimburse all customers in Bands B, C, D and E respectively that were billed above the allowed customer categories/tariff bands provided in the Order.

    b. “Reimburse, through the provision of the balance of customer tokens that the affected customers would be entitled to receive at the applicable rates and all token reimbursements shall be issued to the affected customers by April 11 2024.

    c. “Pay the sum of ₦200 million as a fine for the flagrant breach of the Commission’s Order.

    d. “File evidence of compliance with the directives in a and c with the Commission by April 12 2024.”

    NERC insisted that it was also part of its responsibility to protect consumer rights and ensure equitable practices within Nigeria’s electricity sector.

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    In the next few days, instead of the expected power, the DisCos churned out a litany of apologies for the failure to meet their contractual electricity supply.

    For instance, Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution Company (PHED) expressed its apologies to customers for the supply shortfall for the contractual hours on April 7 and 8, 2024. The energy distributor, in the veiled message, blamed it all on the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN). It informed the customers to “kindly note the current service shortfall experienced in areas where we did not meet up with the contractual supply hours on April 7 and 8 of 2024.

    “Our team is actively working with the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) to address these challenges and restore regular power supply to the affected areas promptly

    “We apologise for any inconvenience caused and appreciate your patience during this time.”

    Similarly, the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC) said TCN was accountable for its failure to meet its band “A” target. In a Public Notice to its customers, the energy distributor management said: “Dear esteemed Customers, We apologise for our inability to deliver the estimated hours of supply in your feeders. This was due to the following: TCN System Outages and Tripping on IBEDC feeders. We remain committed to supplying the estimated hours of supply.”

    The public notice, however, unsettled the TCN which swiftly issued a rejoinder, taking an exemption to the IBEDC woes.

    Its Public Affairs Manager, Ndidi Mbah said the IBEDC public notice was incorrect. She said the Transmission Company of Nigeria hereby notes that the publication circulated by IBEDC on April 9 2024, which stated that TCN is responsible for its failure to “deliver estimated hours of supply to your feeder,” due to System Outages and Tripping on TCN’s feeders is incorrect.

    “TCN took time to investigate the allegation and wishes to set the record straight and hereby notes as follows:

    1. That IBEDC’s publication on April 9 2024, across their social media platforms, attributing their inability to deliver estimated hours of supply to its customers is incorrect.

    2. That the feeders mentioned in the publication are NOT within the TCN network. This means that most of the listed feeders in the publication are 11kV operated by IBEDC and completely outside TCN’s Operational Control and in IBEDC’s network.

    3. That the reasons given for the outage on IBEDC 11kV and 33kV are earth/over current faults, which have no bearing on TCN’s frequency control operations.

    4. That the statement by IBEDC has been verified by TCN’s regional management in Osogbo in conjunction with IBEDC officials themselves and has been proven to be false, necessitating necessary corrections being made.

    “While TCN sees this misinformation of IBEDC as a ploy to undermine and mislead the public against regular power supply, we remain focused on supporting the government’s move towards a more robust and efficient power supply.

    “Consequently, TCN assures the public of its commitment to continue to work hard to effectively transport the entire bulk electricity received from the generating companies to distribution load centres nationwide.”

    Besides, the Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) apologised to its customers that the transmission company was responsible for its renege of the promise of service delivery.

    Again, TCN issued a rebuttal following the publication on BEDC’s social media platform on April 12 2024, on its inability to supply 20 hours of power supply to its band A customers. We hereby note that BEDC attributed this to tripping due to an earth fault at Amukpe and tripping due to an XLPE cable puncture at Effurun, both TCN substations. According to the TCN spokesperson, the BEDC was not correct.

    Mbah said: “The incorrect attribution of these faults to TCN is clearly shown in the table on that release by IBEDC. For clarity, we note that on April 11 2024, the Amukpe 33kV feeder tripped at 2:31 p.m. and was restored by 4.08 p.m. within one hour and 54 minutes.

    “The cause of the outage, which was clearly under BEDC purview, was an instantaneous earth fault caused by stormy weather, which was restored on trial reclosure after the rain had subsided.

    “Still, on April 11 2024, Effurun 33kV feeder tripped at 12:25 p.m., and it is still out. The cause of the tripping was an earth fault on the outgoing feeder upriser, also from the BEDC DISCO end. “This report is to set the records straight and to appeal that facts be stated as they are for the benefit of all.”

    The aforementioned examples are to deliberately bring to the fore the issues that have permeated the NESI since the approval of the 2024 Supplementary MYTO on April 3, 2024. It has largely been characterised by a devotion of negative energy to cleverly present reasons for failure instead of intensifying efforts at meeting the Band “A” electricity demand and surpassing it.

    Ordinarily, the target was to upgrade more customers from the lower bands to the premium Band A. But having test-run phase one, which the Minister of Power, Chief Adebayo Adelabu described as a pilot project, there is the propensity to downgrade more customers from “A” to “B” than upgrading them from “B” to “A”. The reason is that the NESI cannot sustain the essence of the band “A” customers.

    The weakness of the grid is evident in its performance since the take-off of the new MYTO.

    On April 8, 2024, The Nation reported that despite the new which adjusted the rate of the band “A” customers from N68.9 per kilowatt hour to N225KWh, the TCN sent out 3,009MW to the 11 electricity DisCos at 17:39 hour on Sunday, April 8, 2024, at 17:39.

    Its Independent System Operator made this known on its load profile platform, which The Nation sighted.

    The kernel of the upward tariff adjustment is that the band is guaranteed a minimum of 20 hours of supply daily, owing to the resultant increased revenue from improved service.

    Yet, in terms of generation of the same day, the System Operator added in its “Hourly Generation by Generation Companies GenCos,” at 15:00 hour on the same day was 3,370MW from 16 companies.

    The data showed that Dandikowa and Delta Gas generated 0MW.

    According to the TCN, the SO sent out 4,045.17MW to 11 DisCos on April 6 2024, and the GenCos produced an average of 4,045MW on the same day.

    The TCN further noted that on April 5 2024, the SO sent out an average of 4,066MW to the 11 DisCos. It also noted that the GenCos produced an average of 4,123MW on the same day.

    Issues in the industry are encompassing. Where the GenCos are not grappling with worn-out plants owing to indiscriminate switch on and off for fear of grid collapse, the TCN is battling to make up for the lack of a spinning reserve and Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA).

    On the other hand, the DisCos have deliberately refused to invest in their facilities due to the annoyance that the government prevented them from collecting a cost-reflective tariff. Some of the customers, on the other hand, have settled for energy theft. The theft is likely to hit a new dimension in the days to come as more premium customers must access electricity at all costs even when they cannot afford it.

    Already, the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE) has urged the government to withdraw the new tariff because it will culminate in an increase in the cost of goods.

    Twelve days after the April 2024 supplementary Multi-Year Tariff Order (MYTO) came into force, the grid has demonstrated a likelihood to snap if the operators fail to reinforce it with virile equipment and efficient management rather than resorting to the blame game.

  • Poultry farmers, suppliers, retailers lament rise in price of eggs

    Poultry farmers, suppliers, retailers lament rise in price of eggs

    Many Nigerian families who have eggs on their menu lists are not likely to enjoy the ‘luxury’ anymore as the price of eggs continues to soar and poultry farmers are shutting down their businesses. GBENGA ADERANTI looks at the challenges faced by the farmers and how they affect the price of eggs and the economy in general.

    Up until about three months ago, Mrs Tola Jacobs was getting between 20 and 30 crates of eggs from a poultry farmer in Ikorodu, Lagos every week. And when the poultry farmer sent a message to indicate that there would be a slight adjustment in the price of eggs, Mrs Jacobs was not bothered.

    “I was not perturbed because I knew that the price increase would be passed on to the consumers. The owner of the poultry where I was getting egg supply said if things continued the way they were, he might be forced to shut down his poultry farm indefinitely.

    “Many of us thought it was a joke, but true to what he said, we got there one Monday morning and he said he had suspended operation and had sold all his birds,” she said.

    Since the poultry farmer shut down, a part of Jacob’s business has been affected. Before now, she was making a substantial sum as gains from her egg business, unfortunately, the supply has stopped coming and her fortune has nose-dived.

    Mrs Jacobs is in a financial crisis as she can no longer continue with the payment of thrift savings she entered into.

    Another Lagos-based poultry farmer, Mr. Anya Okaro, looked despondent when our correspondent visited his depot on Tuesday afternoon. He too had also suspended activities at his poultry farm in Ikorodu, Lagos.

    ”The current situation in the poultry business is not appealing to farmers,” he told The Nation dejectedly.

    Before now, his depot at Akute, Ogun State, was a beehive of activities as retailers from Akute and environs converged on it to collect their supplies every Monday morning. That, however, has since ceased to be the case.

    On that Tuesday afternoon, nobody was around except Okaro who had come to keep an appointment with our correspondent. “Most of the farmers are quitting the business because of the high cost of input, especially the grains and the soya beans which constitute parts of the recipe of the feed,” he said.

    Today, according to Okaro, a bag of layer feeds sells for between N13500 and N15,000, with 200 birds consuming about a bag in a day, while they produce an average of 140 pieces of eggs per day.

    He disclosed that the cost of feeding keeps increasing every day, and so also the price of eggs. Unfortunately, the disposable income of consumers is not getting better and many of them are quitting the consumption of eggs.

    According to Okaro, the drop in the demand for eggs is what is causing many farmers to quit the business.

     “Realistically, a crate of eggs should sell for N4,000 for farmers to remain in business. Unfortunately, consumers are resisting the price increase. So farmers have no option; they either slow down or shut down the business,” Okaro said.

    He opined that except people look for alternatives in terms of inputs that would pull costs down, the price of eggs would continue to rise.

    He said: “A crate of egg in the open market now is about N4,000, but by the time you check the cost of producing one egg, you will find out that the profit margin for the farmer is very small. And for you to sustain the business, not to talk of expanding the business, the future is bleak. The government needs to do something.”

    Before the new development, Okaro was producing an average of 100 crates of eggs daily, and 700 hundred crates in a week. But all that has gone into the winds and he has had to sell his birds pending when normalcy would return to the business.

    He confirmed that the poultry farmers who remain in the business would continue to supply eggs but at exorbitant rates.

    He disclosed that many things are competing for the components used in producing feeds, warning that with time only a few people would be able to afford eggs on their menu lists.

     Okaro warned that if the trend is not addressed, the price of eggs could go beyond the reach of ordinary Nigerians. “I heard that they are already selling a crate of eggs for N4,500 in some places. We would be talking about N6,000 in the next two weeks,” he said.

    Investigation revealed that most farmers who could not cope with the cost of feed have shut down their businesses while others have scaled down their operations.

    Like some of his colleagues, Donald Ibegbu, another Lagos-based poultry farmer, has also shut down his poultry farm. Until recently, he was an average poultry farmer, producing about 100 crates of eggs daily.

    He said with the high cost of feeds, most poultry farmers are struggling to remain in business. “Presently the future is very hazy, and unless something extraordinary happens, it will get worse.”

    Read Also; Our economy ‘ll roar back to glory in coming months – Tinubu

    He said, warning that poultry farms will continue to fold up if the present trend continues.

    Mrs Suliat Aderinto, an egg supplier in Lambe, an Ogun community, was before now collecting more than 30 crates of eggs every week and within a week would run out of stock. However, since the increase in the price of eggs, according to her, demand has been very low, and this has forced her to reduce the number of crates she collects from farmers. Today, she collects between 18 and 20 crates a week.

    “Eggs are expensive. People are not even willing to buy. This has also forced me to reduce the number of crates I buy from the farm.

    “Many of my colleagues have stopped the business while some who are still in it have reduced the quantity they collect from farmers,” she told The Nation.

    She also disclosed that many farmers have sold off their birds because they could not afford the cost of poultry feeds. As a way of keeping their customers, many of the farmers who have shut down are referring their customers to their colleagues who are still producing in the hope that when normalcy returns, their customers will come back.

    “The truth is that most farmers have folded up. Some who had 300 birds before do not have more than 60 to 70 birds now, which would only give them two or three crates of eggs in a day,” Aderinto said.

    Shortage of egg supply has had a serious impact on Aderinto’s business.

    She said: “Imagine how much I was making from selling 30 crates of eggs every week. The gain I was making from the business was enough for me to cater to my needs.

    “If the eggs had been cheap, people would buy them. Those who were buying crates have stopped buying crates; they now buy half crates.

    “The money we make from the business has drastically reduced,” she said.

    Lending credence to the doldrums in the poultry business, former President of the Poultry Farmers Association of Nigeria (PFAN), who is also the Chairman of Tuns Farms International, Asiwaju Khamis Tunde Badmus, told The Nation that while Nigeria has enough infrastructural facilities, most poultry farmers do not have the working capital.

    “Most of the farmers producing 100 percent before are now producing 50 percent because the working capital has been eroded.

    “In addition, there is no purchasing power to buy feed in large quantities,” he said.

    Tuns Farms, one of the biggest suppliers of eggs in Nigeria, is also feeling the pain. As big as the farm is, it currently produces 20 percent of its capacity.

    “Many farmers are indeed closing down because their poultry farms do not have money to buy feed,” Badmus told our correspondent.

    According to him, with the current price of poultry feeds, it would be difficult for many poultry farmers to feed 5,000 chickens.

    “Unfortunately, the cost of feed is always increasing. If you transfer the cost of production to what you are selling, those who want to buy it do not have money. Egg has become a rich man’s commodity,” Badmus lamented.

    Our correspondent observed that eggs, which used to be regular commodities at parks, are fast disappearing. Before now, you would hardly visit bus stops and parks without seeing the boiled egg hawkers. But they are gradually disappearing.

    Also, many homes with eggs on their menu lists are already doing a rethink as the price of eggs goes beyond their reach.

    While the fear of scarcity increases, Badmus insists that there is nothing to fret about as the federal government has continued to address the challenges facing the economy.

    He, however, added a caveat: things could get worse if there are no urgent steps to assist poultry farmers.

    “We have the infrastructure to produce enough chickens to feed the whole of Africa. We have enough machines to produce the feeds,” he said.

    The poultry industry is said to be worth N10 trillion, sharing about 25 percent of agriculture’s contribution to the GDP as the sector employs more than 20 million Nigerians.

    Last year, a crate of eggs sold for between N2,500 and N3,000. But currently, a crate of eggs is sold for N4,000, and before the year runs out, it could cost between N5,000 and N6,000, as more and more farmers shut down their operations.

    Business under threat

    Investigations conducted by our correspondent revealed that while there are other essential components in the production of feed, soybeans and maize, the most essential ingredients, are grossly in short supply.

    It was gathered that since insecurity in the northern and middle belt zones of Nigeria became aggravated, many farmers have stayed away from the farms; a situation that has caused the scarcity of these important poultry feed components. The development has taken feeds beyond the reach of the average poultry farmer.

    And unlike before, when poultry farmers enjoyed a form of protection from the government, things are quite different now. Badmus said the practice before was for the government to give farmers maize from its reserve, but things have changed as the government is now more concerned about feeding its human population.

    While the increase in the price of poultry feeds has made it difficult for many poultry farmers to continue the business, Ibegbu is optimistic that with the naira appreciating, the prices of poultry feed would also come down.

    He, therefore, warned that the government should do something about components like soybeans and maize which are not dollar-dependent.

    Will there be scarcity of eggs?

    Ibegbu was of the view that there could be scarcity or glut, depending on the disposable income available to the average Nigerian.

    “How many people can buy a crate of eggs for N4,000?” he asked. “You know it is a function of demand and supply. If the farmers produce; can the people afford it?

    “If people can afford it, the scarcity of eggs may not be there. But what happens to the majority of Nigerians who use eggs as their source of protein? If they cannot afford it, malnutrition will set in. 

    “Yes, there will be scarcity in the sense that many of the farmers are going underground. Very few farmers are producing, meaning that we may not be able to produce enough. And if the number keeps going down, the class that will be able to purchase it may not be able to see it to buy. That may be the reason for scarcity.”

    Okaro also disclosed that shutting down has had a serious impact on him as it is difficult for him to fulfil some of his obligations.

    He said: “We still have the same bills to pay, and we are suffering because most of the things we were able to do before, we are not able to do today because of the disposable income we have at the moment.”

    Okaro is of the view that the challenge currently faced by farmers is temporary.

     “These things come as a circle. We are going down the hill, but we won’t continue this way. At a point when the government is doing what it is supposed to do, everything will become normal.

    “Every challenge also brings an opportunity for us to improve. But as of today, it looks bleak.

    “You are going to see the trajectory going up again, maybe in the next two years,” Okaro said.

    In the early 90s, many West African countries depended on Nigeria for their supply of eggs. Then, the poultry business was at its peak. It was a time when the government did everything possible to protect poultry farmers and support them with different kinds of incentives.

    Some months ago, the Chairman of the Poultry Farmers Association of Nigeria (PAN), Lagos State Chapter, Mr. Mojeed Iyiola, said 50 per cent of its members had shut down their poultry businesses due to sectoral challenges.

    According to Mojeed, poultry farmers lost over N3tn in 2023. The Lagos PAN chair said economic conditions had forced a significant number of poultry farmers to exit the industry.

    Scarcity likely to linger

    The Lagos PAN chair had hinted that the poultry farmers were facing difficulties in meeting the increasing demand for poultry products due to the closure of a significant portion of their farms; an indication of a possible short supply of eggs.

    According to him, “Most poultry farms in the country closed down last year due to difficulties faced in the sector.”

    “We are currently unable to meet the demands for eggs due to the shortage of poultry farms. Presently, we have a very low supply of eggs in the face of growing demands.”

    He disclosed that the problem has been aggravated by the astronomical rise in the prices of poultry feeds as well as the production cost.

    The price of maize, for example, has increased by 79.23% year-on-year from N329.05 for 1kg in December 2022 to N589.75 by December 2023. The monthly increase was 5.47% from N559.18 recorded in November 2023.

    According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) food price index for December 2023, the cost of chicken feed rose by 81.71% year-on-year from December 2022 to December 2023.

    Also, the price of medium agric eggs has increased year-on-year from December 2022 to December 2023 by 52.09%. For month-on-month inflation in eggs 4.39%.

    The Nation also gathered that the cost of poultry feed kept soaring as a result of insecurity as most farmers are finding it difficult to get to the farm. They are not producing soya beans and maize.

    Okaro insisted that while there is demand for maize and soya beans, there is no supply. According to him, the price of eggs would have skyrocketed if not for the ingenuity of some farmers who still want to stay in business.

    “Most of the poultry farmers have cut down the cost of production by working on internal efficiencies, making sure that the cost of production is reduced.

    “But in a situation where you cannot control it, you either fold the business or you scale down production,” he said.

    Mojeed also blamed the greed of some farmers for the increase in the price of eggs. According to the Lagos PAN chair, maize and soybeans, which are components of feed, are being exported to other countries by some greedy farmers.

    Arresting situation

    Most farmers have called for the importation of essential ingredients like maize and soybeans at least temporarily. But in the long term, the solution is for more people to go back to the farm, and for more people to go back to the farm, their security must be guaranteed.

    “The government must provide security for farmers to go back to the farm,” Okaro said. He also said it is not out of the way to subsidise fertilizers and seedlings, especially during the rainy season.

    While not denying the fact that other items are essential in feeds, he is hopeful that if the cost of maize and soya beans comes down, with other micro-ingredients from abroad being affordable and “with the stability and improvement we are hearing about foreign exchange, if the prices of the things added to boost the feeds also come down, things will be better,” Okaro said.

    Badmus implored the government to go back to the era when poultry farmers were assisted. “At that time, we had a glut of egg production in Nigeria. The federal government gave us an import licence. We were allowed to import soybeans and feed, it prevented any form of scarcity of eggs.”

    Realising that the federal government has invested heavily in maize, he advised that the importation of the feed component should be a stop-gap process till the poultry sector is stabilised.

    “Again, the government should make available the working capital, because those who had 20,000 birds before can hardly boast of 10,000 now. If the government makes funds available and each farmer can go to the development banks instead of commercial banks, things will be better,” he said.

    A few of the poultry farmers who were able to access the funds were able to survive. They produced eggs and chickens in large quantities because there was a market for local poultry production; there was demand and everybody invested.

    This made it possible for the poultry farmers to do out growers’ schemes successfully.

    Speaking on the success of the scheme, Badmus said: “We would give you a day-old chick and feed. When these chicks come of age, you return to us and we slaughter them. It grew, we were in the Republic of Benin, Togo, Ghana, and at a stage, we were supplying KFC Ghana chicken.

    “When another government came, it scattered the whole process and since then things have become worse. It was a bit difficult to do business. But irrespective of what is happening in the sector, we have the infrastructure on the ground in Nigeria to produce for local consumption and export, the challenge is lack of working capital.”

    Badmus revealed that at a point when the poultry sector was in crisis, the country depended on imported frozen foods to the extent of importing chicken from Brazil and other parts of the world; imported turkey parts flooded the Nigerian market.

    As a way of bringing sanity into the sector, the presidency formed a committee to revive the poultry industry. Then the government gave poultry farmers a special tariff.

    Contrary to proposals in certain quarters that the country could embark on the importation of eggs as a temporary measure, Badmus warned that it would be dangerous for the country to embark on the importation of eggs, saying, “We are exposing ourselves to big risk because we could be poisoned through this.”

    To prove that the danger is real, he gave an example of the imported frozen chickens that are being preserved with formalin, a chemical that is used in preserving dead bodies. He disclosed that Nigerians risk cancer by consuming imported chicken preserved with formalin.

  • When the Army sought media support on insecurity

    When the Army sought media support on insecurity

    Peace, security and development are inseparable. They are products of human rights, because the more a society promotes, protects and fulfils the human rights of its people, the greater its chances for curbing violence and resolving conflicts peacefully. OKUNGBOWA AIWERIE writes that mindful of this reality, the Nigerian Army organised a one-day chat with the media in Asaba, Delta State for reporters in the Southsouth zone tagged “Nigerian Army Civic Quarterly Media Chat for the First Quarter of 2024” to sensitise them to the need to cooperate with the military in fighting insecurity.

    Bothered about the near-collapse of a peaceful environment in almost every part of the country; which, most times results in attacks and killing of military personnel and loss of lives of civilians, the Nigerian Army, in its bid to strengthen relations with the media, recently organised a one-day retreat for journalists in the Southsouth geopolitical zone.

    Recognising the fact that a solid and legitimate rule of law system protects the human rights of people, holds power accountable, prevents violent crime and provides fair and legitimate avenues to resolve conflict, the Army expresses the view that peace and security, which could include personal security and democracy enhances and sustains socio-economic or human development.

    Experts have noted that “peace is an essential element to the realisation of all human rights. It is a product of human rights because, the more a society promotes, protects and fulfils the human rights of its people, the greater its chances for curbing violence and resolving conflicts peacefully.

    “Peace is a quality energy that brings balance. World Peace grows through non-violence, acceptance, fairness and communication.”

    The event “Nigerian Army Civic Quarterly Media Chat for the First Quarter of 2024,” attracted reporters from the print, broadcast and online mediums and took place in Asaba, the Delta State capital.

    Also in attendance were media executives, the academia and retired military personnel.

    In an address at the media chat, the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant-General Taoreed Lagbaja canvassed media support for the military in addressing insecurity challenges which the country is experiencing.

    According to him, the support was crucial in attaining national security and development in the face of competition for media attention by terrorists.

    Lieutenant-General Lagbaja, who was represented by the General Officer Commanding 6 Division, Major-General Jamal Abdussalam said the event, with the theme “Imperatives of Military-Media Partnership for the Attainment of National Security,” underscores the critical role that collaboration between the military and media plays in safeguarding national security.

    He said: “The Nigerian Army recognises the enormous impact of the media as a vital link between the military and the public in providing essential information, shaping public opinion and holding institutions accountable.

    He said the media chat was aimed at creating an environment conducive to dialogue among the Nigerian Army and media practitioners, to facilitate the exchange of valuable information and ideas for mutual benefit.

    He said the Nigerian Army is striving to deliver on its constitutional mandate, even as he urged the media to uphold the highest standards of professionalism, accuracy, impartiality and patriotism by ensuring that their reports contribute positively to national security.

    He said the event was planned to foster avenues for collaboration among the military and civil actors given the difficulties presented by the activities of criminals.

    He urged the media to refrain from inadvertently amplifying the activities of terrorists, insurgents and other deviant groups which thrive on attention and exploitation to instil fear in law-abiding citizens.

    His words: “The unprovoked killing of some of our troops carrying out their constitutional assignment in Okuama Community in Delta State comes to mind.

    “More worrisome was the orchestrated use of disinformation to misguide the public about the true account of the incident.

    “I, therefore, take this moment to urge the media to refrain from inadvertently amplifying the activities of these undesirable elements.

    “Terrorists, insurgents and other deviant groups thrive on attention and exploit propaganda to instil fear in law-abiding citizens.”

    The Army Chief of Civil-Military Affairs, Major-General Nosakhare Ugbo noted that threats to national security could emerge from various sources, including disinformation and urged journalists to be patriotic, especially with competition from terrorists for media attention.

    His words: “It is equally aimed at inspiring members of the Fourth Estate of the Realm from this region to continue to support and positively portray the Nigerian Army through constructive and objective reportage.”

    He noted the role of the media in shaping public perception of military operations, adding that the Nigerian Army’s ability to effectively communicate its mission and actions is crucial in garnering support and trust.

    Ugbo said the Nigerian Army is committed to keeping the media informed of its activities through civil-military relations programmes.

    He maintained that the army has the responsibility to engage with the media by providing access to information without compromising operational security and sensitive intelligence.

    He urged the media to embrace responsible journalism that is grounded in accuracy and objectivity.

    The Director-General of Voice of Nigeria who was the Special Guest of Honour, Mr. Jibrin Ndace suggested regular engagements between the media and the military to ensure that accurate information was disseminated to the public to foster understanding and trust.

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    His words: “This collaboration plays a pivotal role and serves as a beacon of transparency, ensuring that accurate information is disseminated to the public to foster understanding and trust.”

    Delta State Commissioner for Information, Dr Ifeanyi Osuoza noted that the media was not hostile to the military, stressing that rather it is a bridge linking the government, its agencies and officials to the public.

    He praised the army’s collaborative efforts with the media in the interest of national security.

    He said: “Establishing this all-important relationship will provide the military the opportunity to communicate with the people and get them to understand what it is doing, clarifying grey areas and carrying them along for them (public) to have a buy-in into the mission of the military.”

    The Chairman of Delta State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Mr Churchill Oyowe called for sustained interaction between the military and the media to mobilise the public to support efforts to address current security challenges.

    The Guest Speaker, Major-General Olusegun Adeleke (rtd) in a lecture titled “Enhancing National Security Through Media/ Military Engagement,” described the relationship between military-media relationship in Nigeria as largely of “suspicion and adversarial,” due to the nature, cultures and history of both institutions.

    He said: “The reason for this frosty relationship is that the media, by its nature, is sceptical, intrusive, freewheeling and entrepreneurial, which makes it respond to the basic tenets of its existence to expose the actions of the government, including the military to public scrutiny.

    “On the other hand, the military is overly concerned with the successful conduct of its operations, which usually require the maintenance of operational security.”

    He enumerated the issues that drive engagement activities of the media-military to include humanitarian, human rights, child soldiering and target acquisition and engagement/acquisition and engagement.

    According to him, a major dilemma faced by the media covering military operations include whether to prioritise national security concerns or the public’s right to know; while the military may grapple with ethical questions about how much information to reveal and how to balance transparency with security.

    He said the military and the media sometimes appear to have contrary views or perceptions of what constitutes national security, especially during military operations.

    Adeleke suggested that the military should ensure that as much information as possible is made available to the press at the point of filing their stories, even as he urged future planners of media-military relations to consider innovative approaches such as increasing security with media coverage for embedded journalists.

    He also urged the military and media to jointly establish clear protocols for information-sharing and reporting.

    He called on military leaders to organise regular press briefings and interviews to update the media and the public on important developments, policies and initiatives.

    The military should conduct debriefings and after-action reviews with media representatives following major events or operations.

    He further urged the military to respect the independence of journalists and their right to report without undue influence or censorship.

    In another paper presented at the event titled “Promoting Military-Media Trust for Enhanced Public Support towards Addressing Nigeria Security Challenges,” Prof. Godwin Oboh, using media theories, highlighted the imperatives of cooperation between both institutions.

    The interactive event had two panels of discussants moderated by journalists who dissected the lectures presented.

  • Making Lagos livable for residents

    Making Lagos livable for residents

    Beyond providing palliatives to cushion the effects of economic challenges ravaging the country, the Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu-led administration is investing in long-term projects that will, in the long run, make life more livable for the people. OYEBOLA OWOLABI reports

    Currently, Nigerians are experiencing situations that are so taxing. This is because the country is, at present, in the throes of the worst economic slump.

    This, experts say, resulted from the unanticipated and abrupt fuel subsidy removal and Naira devaluation. The governments, at all levels, have launched palliative measures to ease the people’s pains pending when the situation evens out.

    In Lagos State, Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu also rolled out certain measures to ease the burden. However, beyond the interim measures, the government is investing in some long-term projects to make life more livable to engender prosperity across the state.

    Food security and sufficiency

    Governor Sanwo-Olu in 2021 launched the Five-Year Agricultural Roadmap to pave the way for developing agricultural value chains where the state has competitive and comparative advantages to move self-sufficiency in food production from 18 to 40 per cent.

    The Commissioner for Agriculture, Ms. Bisola Olusanya, said the Roadmap is also expected to boost food production and drastically reduce post-harvest losses, thus encouraging private sector investments that would trigger agricultural transformation in the Southwestern states. To this end, the Fresh Agricultural Produce Hub in Idi-Oro, Mushin is active and bubbly with activities.

    But the government is moving a step ahead still. According to Governor Sanwo-Olu, the state is building the largest food logistics hub in Sub-Saharan Africa. The hub is 65 per cent ready.

    He said: “One of our plans for ensuring food security is to build food hubs across the state. Today, we are building the largest logistic hub in Sub-Saharan Africa. It is 65 per cent ready and, hopefully, be fully ready before the end of the year. The hub is a cold and dry storage facility to push produce to our people.

    “The hub will also dovetail into the middle-level markets, just like in Idi-Oro. We are building another four of those hub in Ajah, Abule-Egba, Agege and Ikorodo. We hope they will be ready before the end of the year. We have also identified locations for another seven of such hubs.”

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     Mini-ranching

    In the meat value chain, the government is looking to establish mini-ranches that will fatten cattle to meet the large demand for meat.

    According to Sanwo-Olu, about four million cattle are consumed yearly, and Lagos alone accounts for about two million. This thus prompted the government to evolve a project that would meet the demand for meat.

    Power/electricity

    As part of efforts to make electricity more available and affordable, Governor Sanwo-Olu said the government has transmitted the Lagos State Electricity Bill to the House of Assembly. This, he noted, would help to untangle and unbundle the two DisCos currently operating in the state and allow other players to participate.

    “The state currently has six IPPS running but we need to localise the laws and regulations so that investments can come in. Hence, we have transmitted a bill to the House of Assembly towards setting up our equivalent of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). This is to help unbundle the system to allow new investments in energy generation and distribution. We will also have more investments in gas and other alternative sources of energy.

    Infrastructure/rail

    On January 24, 2023, the Blue Rail Line was inaugurated and, on February 29, 2024, the Red Rail was inaugurated. These projects form part of the Lagos Rail Mass Transit (LRMT) Scheme. Governor Sanwo-Olu, however, promised greater investments in the rail component of transportation.

    “The beauty of rail is in its connectivity, and so we will ensure that all lines on the LRMT are interconnected for seamless commuting,” he said.

     Road

    According to Governor Sanwo-Olu, the state has built over 10,000km of roads. He, however, said the state would need N5 trillion yearly to address road infrastructure alone, an amount which is bigger than the state’s budget.

    He said: “Lagos is below the water level, and so our roads fail easily because the water table makes the land soft. Another factor is the human detrimental actions. We have just banned Styrofoam because it blocks drainage systems. Water and bitumen are enemies, and so we have to spend a lot more on maintenance.

    “But, notwithstanding, the government is working to address the challenges of bad roads, especially inner roads. We are working with the local governments and they have agreed to rehabilitate 114 roads concurrently, while the state government will support with additional 50 or 60 roads. This means that we will be working on about 180 roads simultaneously. The implication of this is that there will be discomfort and hindered movements because of road closures and rerouting. But we trust Lagosians to understand that it is all for their good.”

    Fourth Mainland Bridge

     The 37 km-long Fourth Mainland Bridge will, perhaps, be the biggest project of the century when completed. Governor Sanwo-Olu has assured the people that the project is on course. According to him, the groundbreaking will be done in April despite the delays.

    He said: “The Fourth Mainland Bridge is delayed because of funding challenges. But I have given my word that the groundbreaking will be done in April.

    “The dynamics of funding have changed globally, and what they are asking for are things we cannot provide. We have thus done an extensive creative redesign of the entire project. Where we originally planned eight lanes, we reduced to four, where we planned three levels of bridges, we reduced to one. But all these do not take away the fact that the Fourth Mainland Bridge will be built. The implementation will be broken into three phases to ease our affairs, but it will be built.”

    Health

    The state intends to establish a university of medical sciences to bridge the gap in teaching and learning. According to Sanwo-Olu, the institution will strengthen the state’s medical infrastructure, and counter the mass exodus of medical personnel. Professional medical programmes that will be studied in the proposed university include all branches of medicine, pharmacy and pharmacology, and medical and health support courses.

    “Lagos State, in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Health and the National Universities Commission (NUC), will establish a medical university before the end of this year. This is a strategic intervention moment for us. The institution will be targeted at graduating 1,500 doctors yearly.

    The government is also building the Massey Children’s Hospital, a 150-bed specialist hospital for children in Lagos. The government is rebuilding, remodelling and repositioning the hospital into a seven-storey, 150-bed, ultra-modern, fit-for-purpose Pediatrics Programmed and Emergency General Hospital.

    Sanwo-Olu said the hospital will be the biggest Children’s Hospital in Sub-Saharan Africa when completed. According to him, the construction of the facility reflects his administration’s unwavering determination to bridge all gaps in the health sector.

    He said: “As a responsive government, we identified the inadequacy of the present Massey Street Children’s Hospital to continue to meet the needs of a megacity with a population of 22 million people. As a result of the steady and increasing number of patients who daily throng the hospital to access medical services, the capacity has been overstretched and must be urgently upgraded to provide quality service to patients.”

    Commissioner for Health Prof. Akin Abayomi also said the hospital will be the first product of the medical blueprint strategy championed by the governor for transforming the state’s healthcare infrastructure.

  • When Akeredolu’s widow receives her rites in Imo community

    When Akeredolu’s widow receives her rites in Imo community

    One of the mores in Igbo land which have continued to be observed is the Mgbafu Mkpe rite. The traditional Igbo ceremony is performed after the death and burial of a woman’s husband. CHRIS NJOKU reports that the recent handover of Mrs Betty Anyanwu-Akeredolu to her late husband’s family at the Mgbafu Mkpe ceremony in the Emeabiam Community in Imo State serves as a poignant ritual that symbolises the community’s support and care for widows during times of loss and transition

    In some Igbo cultural areas, several customs and traditions are observed when a woman’s husband dies. In some circumstances, the widow is subjected to various horrid conditions if there husband’s relations suspect that their brother’s death was not natural. If they strongly holds the view that the deceased’s wife has a hand in his death, they would administer some oaths on the widow to prove her innocence in the death of her husband. In some extreme cases where the widow has no male child, she is relieved of her husband’s properties, which are inherited by the kinsmen.

    Again, when a woman is married to a far place, and the husband dies, the relations of the widow would want the relations of the late husband to reassure them that the widow is still wanted and cherished. The traditional rite, in this case, is known as mgbafu mkpe rite which is performed after the passing and burial of a woman’s husband.

    The Mgbafu Mkpe rite holds profound cultural and social significance in Igbo land as it serves as a poignant ritual that symbolises the community’s support and care for widows during times of loss and transition.

    The traditional Igbo ceremony, performed after the passing and burial of a woman’s husband, embodies the essence of unity, respect for tradition, and the preservation of cultural heritage specific to the Igbo community.

    Embracing tradition and unity

    The Mgbafu Mkpe rite not only signifies the acceptance of the widow within the husband’s family but also highlights the community’s commitment to upholding age-old mores that define their identity.

    Through the ceremony, the community demonstrates its unity and solidarity by coming together to honour and support widows to ensure that they are cared for and respected as a result of the loss of their spouses.

    Preserving cultural heritage

    At the heart of the Mgbafu Mkpe rite lays the preservation of cultural heritage and traditions that have been passed down through generations. This ritual serves as a testament to the values of family ties, respect for elders and the importance of community support in times of grief. By adhering to the customs, the Igbo community reaffirms its cultural identity and strengthens social bonds that have endured over time.

    Connecting tradition to modern times

    The Mgbafu Mkpe rite continues to hold relevance in contemporary society, bridging the gap between tradition and modernity. As communities evolve, the ceremony remains a steadfast reminder of the enduring values of unity, respect and care for those in need. Its timeless significance resonates with individuals and families, emphasising the importance of honouring customs that shape their cultural legacy.

    Transitioning with tradition

     Against this backdrop of cultural significance and community unity, the recent handover of Mrs Betty Anyanwu-Akeredolu to her late husband’s family at the Mgbafu Mkpe ceremony in the Emeabiam Community takes on added meaning.

    In the serene atmosphere that enveloped Emeabiam Community in Owerri West Local Government Area of Imo State on Sunday, March 31, 2024, the traditional Mgbafu Mkpe ceremony unfolded at the late Chief BUB and Nneoma Dora Anyanwu’s compound in Umuikea Emeabiam. This symbolic gesture not only reflects the enduring traditions of Igbo land but also underscores the commitment of the community to support and care for widows through age-old customs.

    The event marked a significant moment for Chief Betty Anyanwu-Akeredolu, the wife of the late Ondo State Governor, Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN, CON), who passed away in December 2023.

    A symbolic handover

    Representing Umuegeolu Kindred, Elder Herbert Igbo facilitated the symbolic handover of Chief Betty Anyanwu-Akeredolu to the immediate younger brother of the late Governor, Prof. Wole Akeredolu.

    Igbo said: “We must ensure Chief Betty is embraced and cared for as one of our own, in line with our traditions.”

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    Tradition and gratitude

    Before the handover, the Akeredolus honoured tradition by presenting kola nuts, palm wine and a she-goat to the Umuegeolu Kindred, along with customary items to the Anyanwu family.

    Prof. Wole Akeredolu expressed heartfelt gratitude, stating that “we are grateful for the support and understanding shown by our extended family and community during this challenging time. We will continue to uphold our responsibilities towards Chief Betty.”

    Cultural significance

     Chief Celestine Okoro, the Principal Adviser to the Emeabiam Elders’ Council highlighted the cultural significance of the Mgbafu Mkpe ceremony, emphasising its importance within the Imo State community.

    Chief Okoro said: “This ceremony symbolises our unity, respect for tradition and commitment to caring for those in need within our community.”

    Unity and respect

    The presence of members of Umuegeolu family, Ndi Mgboto Emeabiam, Oha n’Ikoro Emeabiam and Babajide Akeredolu underscored the unity and respect shown during the ceremony.

    Babajide Akeredolu, one of Betty’s sons said: “It is heartening to witness the solidarity and support within our community. This ceremony reflects our values and traditions, uniting us in times of both joy and sorrow.”

    The Traditional ruler of Emeambia Autonomous Community, Eze Eunans Eke, Okpo 1 of Umuokpo told The Nation that the traditional rite is a long-preserved heritage.

    He said that rite is an acceptance of the woman by her husband’s relatives after the burial of her husband.

    “When a woman loses her husband, there is this tradition to let her people know that she has lost her husband. She visits her place (village) for Mkpe (mourning) or Azu Mkpe (after mourning) to let her people know that her husband is dead and that she is now mourning.

    “The relatives or immediate relatives of her husband usually accompany her to such visit. What that means is that they want to know if where she is married to would accept her again after the demise of her husband. Somebody from her husband’s place would follow her on that journey to identify that she is truly their wife and that even though her husband is late, somebody will have to stand out to accept that she is still our wife and I would continue from where her late husband stopped.  This is one of the significances of that matter.

    “So, usually in Igbo land, it is called Isi Mkpe, maybe somebody from her husband’s place will stand out to say I am taking her back from where my brother stopped.  I will be taking care of her, she is in good hands. This is the reason these things are done.”

    Continuing, he said: “In that arena, usually, there are representatives of the woman’s family, there are also representatives of where she is married to. They will be there where public questions would be asked from the woman’s relatives.

    Jokingly, he said: “Now that our daughter is here, we will not allow her to go back to her late husband’s place. Who is going to take care of her, we are taking her, we would allow her to go back there again and then someone from the husband’s place will say no she is still our wife, we still need her, we are here to take her back, we are going to take care of her and we will take care of every of her responsibilities. This is how it is spelt out. Questions are asked and positive answers are given.

    “However, if the woman has been a torn in their flesh, if the woman has not given them peace, if the woman is a pain, they don’t want her again; maybe the death of her husband has become a leeway to send her away.  In such circumstance, they would tell you to take her back; we don’t want to marry her again.

    “But, in this case, the husband’s brother came to say we need her, she is still part of us and I stand to say I will continue from where my late brother has stopped. I will take care of her.”

    He described the outing as very successful. “As far as I’m concerned, it was successful and positive.

    The royal father, therefore, advised:  “There is no perfect marriage or perfect relationship. The man who married her would have endured a lot of things while he was alive. They would not have told anybody what they had passed through. As long as she has lived with her husband for more or closer to 40 years, I think they should tolerate her and she should tolerate them also and as much as the man loved her all these years, they should accommodate her.”

    Elder Richard, another member of the kindred, explained that Mgbafu Mkpe serves as a poignant reminder of the rich cultural heritage and traditions that bind communities together.

    He said through rituals and ceremonies such as these, “the essence of unity, respect and care for widows is preserved, ensuring that customs are upheld and cherished for generations to come.”

    He said: “The community’s commitment to honouring its traditions and supporting those in need remains a cornerstone of its identity and strength.”

  • How my visit to Opokuma challenged my perception about the N’Delta

    How my visit to Opokuma challenged my perception about the N’Delta

    By Uche Igwe 

    My recent visit to the Opokuma community in Bayelsa state was quite a memorable eye-opener. It was initially for a funeral. One of our colleagues, Pereowei, lost his father, Pa Ebiowei Percy Joses and we all had to join him in solidarity. In truth, it was a trip I would have loved to avoid if I had a choice. But Mr. Pereowei and I share a fascinating history and his community brings up mixed memories. I met him many years ago while working on a not-for-profit project with the Late Mrs. Augustina Alaere Alaibe. Aunty Alaere (as we fondly called her) is one of the most compassionate and visionary women I have ever come across. 

    I worked with her closely and enjoyed her confidence and generosity. Looking back at the impact of the Family Reorientation Education and Empowerment (FREE), one would only imagine her kind of vision. My last visit to Opokuma was to commission a community library and self-esteem centre she built. Nobel Laureate Professor Wole Soyinka was a special guest at the event, which was widely attended. I remember joyfully accompanying Aunty back to Port Harcourt after the ceremony. We said goodbye to each other, but I did not know it was our last. 

    Anyway, it has been fourteen years now since we lost this indescribable Amazon. I was away in Scotland during her funeral, although I visited her husband in London before her remains were brought home for burial. Somehow, I had not visited Opokuma since then. When my friend announced the death of his father and later the funeral, I knew that I had to be there. As part of my trip, I decided to first to visit Trofani, Aunty’s community. It was my first time, so I arranged for Ebiowei Koinyan to accompany me. Ebi is from the same community and promised to guide me. 

    He did a bit more by giving me elaborate historical insight into some of the landmark events that took place in these communities. We passed by Okordia-Zarama, Sampou junction, Kalama junction, Kaiama, Odi and Aduku before heading to Trofani. 

    The journey was smooth, but the state of the east-west road slowed us down. 

    My colleague, Gideon, who drove the car, did his best to avoid the damaged parts of the road. Flooding hurt the road to the point that urgent attention is needed. Even with my drivers excellent driving skills, the journey took us longer than necessary. It was already dark when we got to Mbiama junction. The timing of our trip and the news about disturbances in some communities in the nearby Delta state made me a bit nervous as the night drew near. However, I did not share my apprehension with Ebi or the driver, so we continued.

    Interestingly, solar streetlights illuminated most communities, making our journey easier. It was very refreshing driving through Kaima and Odi, and later Opokuma. The lighting across the communities was both spectacular and distinctive. When I last visited, many of these communities were in utter darkness as they were yet to be connected to the national grid. It was quite fascinating to note the street lights were provided by the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC). 

    The street lights provided sufficient illumination that bolstered our confidence as we drove around in the night. I was told that some of these street lights have been used by students to read at night. Ebi pointed us to the blue and white painting on the poles, suggesting that the solar street lighting is part of a deliberate effort by the NDDC to contribute to fighting insecurity in the region. 

    Our return back to Opokuma was hitch-free. We all assembled in the house of the former Managing Director of NDDC, Mr. Timi Alaibe, before proceeding to Pereowei’s house. Unsurprisingly, we were joined by the current Managing Director of NDDC, Dr Samuel Ogbuku, and his delegation.  What was supposed to be a funeral vigil almost turned into a carnival as guests were entertained with all sorts of music, especially reggae.

    By the time the vigil ended, it was way past midnight. We drove back to Yenagoa, where we found a hotel where we spent the night. It has been more than a week since we got back from that event, yet the picture of the illuminated streets keeps flashing back in my mind. 

    Those images permanently challenged my initial impression of the journey and helped me conquer my fears. I can speak for these communities in Bayelsa State because I was there. When I shared this experience with some friends, they confirmed that the situation is the same in other states. Providing street lighting may not be all that is needed to develop the Niger Delta; however, it is an important step in the right direction which must be applauded. 

    The stereotype of the Niger Delta as a region of poverty, insecurity and conflict is something many people have been made to believe over time. It will take a lot to challenge and counter it, but the situation on the ground suggests that some of these narratives are often exaggerated. Things have changed, but probably not at the pace that many people will expect when you take stock of the quantum of resources that have been extracted from the region. Yet, I will argue that Niger Delta is probably one of the safest regions in the country as of today. 

    The NDDC has its own share of criticisms and reputational baggage, but these footprints suggest that something different is going on under the new leadership in the agency. The infrastructural gap still remains. Solar street lighting interventions are valuable; however, there are opportunities to scale up these interventions to provision mini-grids to produce the required transformative impact on the livelihoods in these communities. 

    Dr Uche Igwe is a visiting fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science(LSE). He can be reached at ucheigwe@mail.com

  • Coping with the effects of traffic congestion

    Coping with the effects of traffic congestion

    Despite all legacy projects and ambitious road infrastructure, traffic management, a key component of the first pillar of the THEMES+ agenda of the Sanwo-Olu administration, remains a huge challenge, writes ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE

    Traffic congestion is common in metropolitan Lagos, where vehicles, pedestrians and public transport co-share the road in a complex and frustrating web. Several factors, including high population density, inadequate and bad road infrastructure, limited transport alternatives and sprawling urban slums, all contribute to traffic congestion.

    However, transportation experts state that traffic congestion leaves far-reaching effects beyond mere inconveniences. Usually, traffic congestion has far-reaching health, economic and environmental effects, and prolonged exposure to it could have wider physical and mental health implications.

    Though successive administrations had not been helpless, solutions have just been inadequate to tame the hydra-headed monster that now attends to the “good problems” that her bustling population has now turned almost every part of the state into an urban slum for the absence of transportation alternatives.

    From the Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu era, when the state hit the 10 million headcount (thereby becoming a megacity), to the Babajide Sanwo-Olu administration which inherited a 23 million population, the challenge of traffic management has never been less daunting.

    Besides being just a state with a heavy population of 10 per cent of the nation’s population, Lagos is Nigeria’s economic and commercial capital and Africa’s fifth biggest economy. It is home to the busiest air and sea ports. Despite being the state with the smallest land size, it accounts for 400 vehicles per kilometre of road, in a country where the national average is 30 vehicles per kilometre.

    All of these indicators point to the fact that the state’s roads would be burdened for a long time except more transit modes are provided and public transport alternatives become more valued.

    Traffic congestion is a condition of transportation that is characterized by slow speed, longer trips, longer time and increased vehicular queuing. Since the 1950s when Lagos began to witness a shift in travel patterns, traffic congestion on urban road networks has gradually increased alongside transit demand even as the interactions between vehicles and pedestrians using the road as shared assets resulted in congestion.

    According to the Nubeo Traffic Time Index’s latest rating, a platform that delivers real-time information on traffic index (including commute time, CO2 emissions overall traffic system inefficiencies and other ways of life), Lagos, leads five other African cities with the worst traffic congestion rating. Lagos leads other cities such as Nairobi (Kenya), Cairo (Egypt), Pretoria (South Africa), and Cape Town (South Africa).

    While Lagos’ traffic index stands at 342.5 and a time index of 67.4, Nairobi has a traffic index of 253.6 and a time index of 53.4, and Cairo records 244.5 in traffic index and 50.2 time index. Pretoria and Cape Town, two South African cities captured in the Nubeo report had 230.5 and 45.5 and 208.9 and 42.5 on traffic index and time index respectively.

    Painting the picture more graphically, renowned transportation expert Patrick Adenusi described Lagos traffic as “simply maddening,” and one which the government would do well to address frontally if the state must return to the path of efficiency and real growth.

    In a simple calculation sent to The Nation, Adenusi said in terms of man-hour loss: “If you are in traffic for four hours daily, in five days, you would have spent 20 hours a week and 1,044 hours a year. That is 43.5 days or one and a half months, just idling behind your steering wheel. Imagine the cost of the man-hour loss in terms of fuel. For the cost, Adenusi said you spend N610. If a thousand vehicles are caught in avoidable traffic daily, that is N610,000 in five days it is N3 million, while in 20 working days, it costs N12.2 million. In a year, that is N146.4 million wasted on just an extra litre of fuel bought for being in traffic. The figure becomes more staggering, he said, if the cost of carbon emission, noise pollution, engine wear and tear, delayed and undelivered goods and services and shocks and stresses on the citizens are imputed monthly.

    “If a million people are caught in four-hour traffic daily, that is a combined 43,500,000 days a year.”

    For him, the only legacy Sanwo-Olu could leave for Lagosians is to resolve what he called “the deliberately created traffic congestion, by diagnosing the root causes to solve them and make changes.

    A former dean of the School of Transportation and Logistics at the Lagos State University (LASU-SOTL), Prof. Samuel Odewunmi, partly agreed with Adenusi that traffic in the state is “deliberately created.” He cited instances where the government would block major arterial roads just because of major construction or minor rehabilitation, citing instances of the Lagos-Badagry Expressway along which route LASU is, which has been under one form of construction or the other in the last two and half decades.

    He said that quickly fixing roads and opening up alternative roads where much-delayed work is anticipated, would bring relief to motorists and traffic congestion recorded on the roads would be reduced.

    The Special Adviser to the Governor on Transportation Mr Sola Giwa would however highlight attitudinal challenges of motorists and road users as another major trigger of road congestion.

    Addressing a stakeholders’ forum made up of Events Centre owners recently, Giwa painted a scenario of a traffic pattern that could attend a small impediment, even for as low as five minutes. Any brief period spent patronizing roadside hawkers by motorists leaves a spillover effect that might take no less than four to five hours of hard work by LASTMA officials to clean up.

    “Because you have an average of 400 vehicles per kilometre of road in metropolitan Lagos, any breach of traffic flow leaves a backlog of traffic congestion. Anytime you are held in traffic, and you are wondering why, or perhaps, you went through the hours only to discover nothing that could have impeded traffic flow, just know that somebody just caused it by buying something on the go.”

    Giwa may not be wrong. Statistics have shown that for every three minutes of traffic glitch, the road gets messy for an hour or two and could be longer, should there be other factors impeding traffic.

    But there could be other causative factors. Planet Project Managing Director, Mr Abiodun Otunola identified pedestrian interferences as another major impediment to smooth traffic flow in metropolitan Lagos. Otunola, who has been involved in many road improvement initiatives by Lagos State said one fundamental flaw of Nigeria’s road construction was that it was built for the motorists only in mind. “Because of the lack of access, other road users – pedestrians, cyclists, bikers, even PLDs, get on to the roads and their interference usually causes traffic flow”.

    This is not discounting the ubiquitous bad roads that are almost everywhere. The poor state of roads, he said could also be a major cause as traffic has been proved to improve significantly anywhere the government just carried out road repair, thereby improving journey time and travel experience of both motorists, commuters and other road users.

    James Adeleke, a civil servant, working in Alausa, the state secretariat, however, added to the list of factors causing traffic congestion in the state.

    According to him, apart from bad roads, the improper habit of commercial bus operators is a major factor. Many of them have scant regard for designated public spaces and just park and pick commuters at their whims. Most of the time, traffic ensues when commercial drivers just park anywhere they like just to pick up passengers and they might be stationed there for some minutes just soliciting patronage. He cited instances at the inward and outward Berger Bus Stop, on the entrance into Lagos and at the Secretariat Bus Stop, among other places. For him, strict enforcement could help to drive sanity down the throats of operators who must be punished for adding to the woes of the commuting public.

    Mrs Romoke Adeyemo said she has observed some sanity since the KAI Brigade (men of the Lagos State Sanitation Corps), started arresting those dashing across the expressways, especially at locations where you have pedestrian bridges. Insisting that this also contributes to traffic snarls around the city-state, the middle-aged woman, a fashion designer at Fadeyi said buses stop anywhere they see a pool of commuters, not minding it is not designated as a bus stop by the state.

    Usman Aliyu, a transportation expert said the bus stops at the desk of the state government to demonstrate the will to do what is needed to arrest traffic congestion by arresting all that contributes to it.

    Aliyu said though the government had since 2002 done well by establishing the Lagos State Traffic Management Agency, the agency, he lamented had morphed from being charged with managing traffic in the bustling metropolis to a strictly revenue-generating one, where attention is more at watching out only for infractions for the benefit of generating fines for the government rather than managing traffic and educating innocent motorists.

    Aliyu, who runs a consulting outfit in Lagos Island said the government must continue to play its roles if the task of ensuring a reduction in traffic congestion is to be achieved.

    Though the government has been introducing more alternatives to the roads, Aliyu contends that the road mode would continue to play a major role and absorb between 70% and 80% of travel modes despite the injection of new alternatives like water buses and rail cars (the blue and red lines), thereby underscoring the reason the government must continue to work on deepening its share of public transportation by improving acceptability of public transportation modes and year-round rehabilitation of bad road portions to improve traveller’s experience.

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    Various studies by Wikipedia, the online research resource behemoth, indicated that traffic congestion is better handled not only by redistributing traffic via the injection of more alternative modes of transportation but also by addressing it holistically by managing the supply and demand end.

    Congestion, Wikipedia further added, can be reduced by either increasing road capacity (supply) or by reducing traffic (demand). Capacity can be increased in several ways, but needs to take into account latent demand otherwise it may be used more wrongly than anticipated. Critics of the approach of adding capacity have compared it to “fighting obesity by letting out your belt” (inducing demand that did not exist before). For example, when new lanes are created, households with a second car that used to be parked most of the time may begin to use the second car for commuting. Reducing road capacity has in turn been attacked as removing free choice as well as increasing travel costs and times, placing an especially high burden on the low-income residents who must commute to work.

    Increased supply can include Adding more capacity at bottlenecks (such as by adding more lanes at the expense of hard shoulders or safety zones, removing local obstacles like bridge supports, or adding more capacity by adding more lanes.

    Reduction of demand on the other hand can include parking restrictions, making motor vehicle use less attractive by increasing the monetary and non-monetary costs of parking or introducing greater competition for limited city or road space. Most transport planning experts agree that free parking distorts the market in favour of car travel, thereby increasing congestion.

    Park-and-ride facilities, parking at a distance and allowing continuation by public transport or ride-sharing are other ways to reduce traffic congestion.

    Park-and-ride car parks are commonly found at metro stations, freeway entrances in suburban areas and at the edge of smaller cities.

    Reduction of road capacity to force traffic onto other travel modes can also serve as a means of reducing gridlock. Methods include traffic calming and the shared space concept.

    It is argued that as the government adopts more of these, it should be able to achieve a significant reduction in traffic congestion and bring more respite to the people who daily commute on the roads, bringing smiles, rather than sadness to their faces anytime they think of jumping on the road to prosecute the most minutest of reasons why they must use the road.

  • Soludo’s hard stance on building collapse

    Soludo’s hard stance on building collapse

    Before now, issues of building collapse were strange in Anambra State. This may be because there was no compromise in the rules and regulations guiding the construction industry in the state. Unfortunately, the nasty incident has become a recurring trend over time, so much so that no fewer than 20 lives are said to have been lost and many others were injured. Southeast Bureau Chief, NWANOSIKE ONU reports that Governor Charles Soludo has taken a hard stance to correct the anomaly.

    Less than three weeks after a three-storey building collapsed at the Odu-Igbo section of the Ochanja Market in Onitsha, killing no fewer than six people, another five-storey building has collapsed at Basden Street, Fegge, in the commercial city of Onitsha, in Onitsha South Local Government Area of Anambra State.

    Unlike before, the issue of building collapse seems to be a recurring one, which results in loss of life and property. The causes of these collapses range from poor construction practices, lack of proper building regulations and inadequate enforcement of existing regulations.

    The effects of a building collapse could be catastrophic. They may include the loss of lives, the incapacity of those who were injured in the collapse, the destruction of property, financial losses, the wastage of time and valuable resources and an increase in the number of homeless people, among other effects.

    Buildings can collapse due to several reasons. Experts in the construction industry believe that “a structure can collapse due to soil absorbency, poor design; poor quality material or maybe even due to fire or earthquake or Tsunami. The engineer cannot prevent the structure from collapse or failure but can warn the residents and certify that the structure is unfit for dwelling.”

    Authorities also say that other reasons that could lead to building collapse include substituting specified materials for substandard ones. Other areas of concern include poor concrete mixes, premature removal of formworks and general poor workmanship; use of substandard materials; and use of substandard blocks from block factories.

    In recent times, building collapse has become a recurrent issue in every nook and cranny of Anambra State.

    Some of the areas where the incident has been noticed, perhaps often, are the commercial and industrial cities of Onitsha and Nnewi; where most of the buildings are alleged to have been erected without specifications.

    In the process, people get various degrees of injuries, lose their lives and goods or are rendered homeless. There are casualties in such incidences as witnessed a few weeks ago when a three-storey building collapsed at Odu-Igbo Market, Ochanja on one Monday night. When the building collapsed, five people died instantly while about 26 people were trapped.

    The incident forced Governor Chukwuma Soludo to cut short his programmes to pay an unscheduled visit to the scene. The level of devastation unsettled him.

    As if that was not enough, another five-storey building collapsed a week later. This time around, the incident occurred at Fegge. Before the Fegge and Ochanga incidents, the same thing had played out in Nnewi and its neighbouring town of Ozubulu, among others.

    In Anambra State, no fewer than 20 people had lost their lives, while several others were hospitalised due to various degrees of injuries.

    Such a thing has become reoccurring because it has been said that at least, one building collapses every three months.

    Worried about the horrid situation, the Soludo administration has expressed its commitment to tackling the menace; which he described as a preventable tragedy.

    He said one of the best ways to confront the anomaly is through tackling the issues of impunity and illegal constructions. He revealed that the collapsed buildings were erected by private developers without the government’s approval.

    But, does he have the willpower to carry out his plans to sanitise the construction industry in Anambra State?

    Some stakeholders believe that Soludo has the political will to right the wrongs in the state’s construction industry. As a corroboration of stakeholders’ opinions, the governor is said to have already marked some buildings for demolition. The marked buildings, according to him, did not meet the government’s specifications in terms of approval.

    Again, the governor has evolved plans to redesign some areas where rock-solid structures would be erected.

    He said: “All buildings constructed without proper approval will be brought down henceforth, including structures currently under construction at other markets.

    “A comprehensive inventory of buildings in Anambra markets and public places will be conducted.

    “Markets will undergo integrity tests to identify and remove potentially unsafe structures, and individuals found responsible for illegal construction will face legal consequences.”

    He emphasised the importance of prioritising public safety, even as he vowed to eradicate “the impunity and lawlessness” that have enveloped the construction industry. We can’t afford to waste one life because of the greed of a few.”

    The Chairman of Ochanja Market, Mr Bonaventure Mmuo told The Nation that all market leaders in the state must adhere to the governor’s instruction. He said the issue of building collapse is giving Anambra State a bad name.

    Governor Soludo has instructed the Chairman of Onitsha South Local Government Area, Chief Emeka Orji to begin the demolition of illegal structures in the area. The demolition instruction followed the collapse of a five-storey building in Fegge.

    The illegal structures, according to Soludo, belong to the state and not Nigeria Inland Water Ways (NIWA).

    In a chat with The Nation, the Secretary of the Hausa Community in Onitsha North and South local government areas, Alhaji Ishawu Imam praised the governor and the chairman for their decision to give them time to move their properties out from the buildings marked for demolition.

    “We’re happy with the developmental programmes of the Soludo-led administration. We pledge our continued support to the government,” he said.

    The council boss told The Nation that most buildings currently under construction would be subjected to integrity tests to avoid further catastrophe.

    He said he would meet with the Chairman of the Physical Planning Board in Awka before the government commences the process.

    “Everywhere in Onitsha cannot be market. We have declared war on illegal structures and we shall ensure that the right things are done about building collapse in Onitsha South Local Government Area,” Orji said.

    However, the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN) said it would not relent in its effort to curb the menace of quackery in the state and country.

    The Chairman of the Council in Anambra State, Victor Meju told The Nation that substandard materials and poor foundation are the reasons for building collapse.

    This, according to hi, had claimed many lives in Nnewi, Ozubulu Onitsha and other cities in Nigeria.

    He told The Nation that COREN is collaborating with the administration of Soludo to ensure that those faking engineering practices are stopped.

    Meju reeled off some statistics on the number of casualties resulting from building collapse. He said there were three in Nnewi, two in Ozubulu and 11 in Onitsha.

    “We have heard about a series of deaths as a result of building collapse in the state. Before, it used to be Lagos, but it has become rampant in Anambra.

    “In the first week of May 2024, I will lead a campaign in the state concerning building collapse. We have failed in that aspect. We are bringing in young engineers with high technical qualities. Our retired colleagues don’t have the new models anymore.

    “If you go to many sites, you will see Architects posing as engineers. Those things have to stop,” the COREN chairman said.

    He advised prospective builders: “When embarking on such a massive building project, keep behind political, ethnic and religious sentiment and consult the council for proper orientation. When such buildings collapse, they create tension and panic among the residents.”

    The Chairman of Anambra State Physical Planning Board, Chike Maduekwe, a lawyer said such things wouldn’t be happening if proper procedures were followed.

    During his visit to one of the collapsed sites in Onitsha, Soludo promised that he would ensure that the victims of the collapsed building get justice.

    He said: “When investigations are completed, the developer, the chairman of the market and every other person involved in the disaster will be prosecuted and jailed.

    “The remaining building under construction by the same developer which is close to the collapsed one will be demolished immediately after rescue operations on the site have been completed.”

    On how to stop frequent building collapses, Soludo said that henceforth, the erection of any building in any market in Anambra State must get his approval, or else it will be demolished.

    He also said every other existing building must pass through an integrity test.

    The major problem any administration faces is selective justice. As Soludo has rolled out his plans for the state, those who are likely to suffer it are the less privileged.

    Those the government will descend on are those who have no one to speak for them. Their friends, cronies and associates would be free from any such exercise.

    No government works without implementing its policies. The governor has reeled off brilliant ideas to tackle building collapse in the state. How it works out remains a conjecture.