Category: Uncategorized

  • EKSU shut as students loot farm

    EKSU shut as students loot farm

    • Set ICT centre, five vehicles ablaze

    • Over colleague’s death

    The agricultural farm of the University of Ado Ekiti was yesterday looted. About 3,500 birds, 120 crates of eggs, 10 goats, 75 sheep, 25 rabbits, 30 pigs were carted away by students protesting the crushing to death of one of them by a hit and run driver.

    They also torched the institution’s Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Centre and set ablaze at least five vehicles and several buildings in the town.

    The university authorities said the losses might be more and immediately shut down the institution.

    Abiola Teslim Yusuf, a final year student died on Wednesday night of injuries he received after being run over by a vehicle close to Osekita Hostel, an off-campus students hostel in the town.

    The protesting students, about 150, launched out of their rooms early yesterday at the start of what was supposed to be a peaceful protest.

    However, the protest soon took a twist when the burning and looting started.

    The police spokesman in the state, Mr Victor Babayemi, said seven of the students who allegedly partook in the looting and vandalism have been arrested and a search for the fleeing driver commenced.

    The Vice Chancellor of the University, Professor Oladipo Patrick Aina, condemned “the most barbaric conduct displayed by supposedly cultured youngsters.”

    He told reporters that investigation would soon commence into the incident and the culprits brought to book.

    He said the action of the students was capable of jeopardising the on-going infrastructural development in the institution.

    Announcing the immediate and indefinite closure of the institution, Aina said the management, working in concert with internal security officials, would assess the level of damage to buildings and other properties, as well as uncover the extent of the involvement of students and staff.

    Prof Aina was disappointed at the failure of the police to respond to the institution’s distress call before the protest got out of hand.

    He said: “I had called the Police authority at about 7am on Friday to inform them when I got a security report that the students were mobilising for protest over the death of their colleague only for them to come well after the damage had been done.”

    The police denied the allegation with their spokesman, Victor Babayemi, saying they acted promptly.

    The VC said he personally supervised the transfer of the accident victim to the Ikere Ekiti Specialists Hospital for medical attention immediately after the mishap.

     

    He said: “When we realised that his condition was not stable the way we expected, we moved him down to the Intensive Care Unit of the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital. But on Friday, it was confirmed that he had to be operated upon by experts because he sustained serious head injury and this forced us to take him to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH).

    “The student died in Ibadan while being taken to LUTH on Friday. These are our efforts to ensure that he survived even when we have not asked about who was responsible for the student’s death.

    “I even went to Osekita Hostel on Friday shortly before the incident and spoke with the students, but it was shocking and amazing that they had to take to such act after all our efforts. To us, this is unjustifiable action that will be thoroughly investigated.”

  • Oloibiri Oil museum: Row over N34.9bn contracts

    Oloibiri Oil museum: Row over N34.9bn contracts

    •Aggrieved contractors ask Jonathan to intervene

    A fresh controversy has erupted over the award of N34.9billion contracts for the establishment of the Oil and Gas Research Centre and Museum in Oloibiri, Bayelsa State by the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP)

    Oloibiri, where oil exploration was first struck in Nigeria in 1956, is bereft of any significant development or infrastructure.

    To address the neglect of the village, the government decided to build the museum for which 10 contractors are now bidding.

    But the decision of the BPP to award some of the contracts to companies it had earlier refused a “No Objection” certificate has turned the jostle for the project dirtier.

    BPP had, in letters dated July 9 2012, July 12, 2012 and July 24 2012 and signed by the Director General, Emeka Eze, recommended seven companies to the Executive Secretary of the Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF).

    The seven firms which the BPP claimed to have “passed the Due Process” for the N33. 949, 076, 952.95billion projects are Beks Kimse Ltd, Megastar Construction and Technical Co. Ltd, Sajook Nigeria Ltd, Kinetic Electromechanic Nig. Ltd, Unipad Nigeria Ltd, Meson Investment Ltd and Commerce Services.

    But in a September 11, 2012 letter to the PTDF, the BPP made a U-turn and asked the PTDF to award the contracts to Beks Kimse Ltd, Megastar Construction and Technical Co. Ltd, Mercury Engineering Ltd., Gabezi Nigeria Limited, Kinetic Electromechanic Nig. Ltd, Meson Investment Ltd and Z Cubes Nigeria Ltd., at a cost of N34,962, 631,734.69

    Three firms earlier considered fit for the contracts by BPP were removed from the list.

    They are Sajook Nigeria Limited, Unipad Nigera Limited, and Commerce Services.

    A reliable source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The award of the contracts has created tension because those the BPP earlier refused certificate of no objection have been given the jobs.

    “We call on President Goodluck Jonathan to look into the process and ensure justice.

    “Apart from awarding the contracts to those refused certificate of no objection, the sum of the contracts increased from N33.9billion to N34,962, 631,734.69.”

    Another source said: “We are suspecting a foul play because some of the companies that did not originally undergo Due Process Screening were awarded contracts.

    “In fact, three of the firms which have been finally shortlisted are said to belong to one person. That means an individual is getting about 50 to 60 per cent of the contracts.

    “The government should ask security agencies to probe the award of these contracts in the interest of justice.”

    A reliable source, however, said: “I think you should leave the BPP out of this issue because it conducted due diligence but at a point, the PTDF on July 10 rejected the companies that had passed the Due Process Certification for the Oil and Gas Museum in Oloibiri.

    “The Director General of BPP, Emeka Ezeh, in a letter of July 24 2012 titled “Due Process Review Report on Contract for the Establishment of Oil and Gas Research Centre and Museum Oloibiri, Bayelsa state by PTDF”, said, “the Bureau wishes to reiterate her earlier decision that, Due Process certificate of No Objection Cannot be granted for the award of the contracts for the establishment of Oil and Gas Research Centre and Museum, Oloibiri, Bayelsa state in favour of some contractors.

    “Award of contracts like these requires some technical challenges and the BPP has to weigh all options.

    “The DG of BPP has no vested interest in any of the affected companies. For the records, the BPP in a review report on July 9, 2012 said: ‘It is apparent that the PTDF reviews were skewed in favour of particular firms thereby deceiving other bidders and casting aspersions on the integrity of the government arising from non transparent procurement procedures.’

     

  • Azikiwe’s son to Nigerians: Give Igbo next president

    Chief Chukwuemeka Azikiwe, the first son of Nigeria’s first president, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, says it is the turn of the South East to produce the country’s next president in 2015.

    The Owelle of Onitsha said yesterday that the geo-political zone is truly deserving of the slot in 2015 because it has never held the position.

    He said his late father only served as a ceremonial president which cannot be equated with an executive president.

    Azikiwe who hosted members of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) at the Inosi Onira country home of his father said: “It is our legitimate right (Igbo) to aspire to the executive presidency of Nigeria.

    “We have never produced an executive president. Our father was a ceremonial president under the parliamentary system where power was vested in the Prime Minster and the parliament.

    “Aguiyi-Ironsi was an executive head of state for six months. Zoning will be a good thing to promote unity.

    “But we must realize that this thing is got by give and take and negotiation and diplomacy; it is not by force.

    “I think we should put our best foot forward, find those of our people that have good relations with the other zones; those who are trusted, listen to them in order to get Igbo president.

    “Also, the timing should be right. We will try as much as possible to get it soonest, but let’s be careful so that we don’t antagonize some other zones.”

    On Nigeria’s 52nd independence anniversary, he called for continued unity and patriotism among Nigerians and recalled the efforts made by his late father and other nationalists in getting the colonialists out of the country.

    “Our father taught us that your responsibility is to try and understand different people and judge people according to the content of their character, not by the appellation of their tribe or clan,” he said, adding: “My father believed that if you try and find the things that we share in common with other people it becomes easier to forge unity because you have a common front. So he would say let’s emphasise our common values; let’s concentrate on things that hold us together.”

  • Tinubu, Akeredolu, ACN governors storm Ondo for mega rally

    Tinubu, Akeredolu, ACN governors storm Ondo for mega rally

    All is now set for the gubernatorial rallies of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) ahead of next month’s governorship election.

    Expected at the three –day rallies starting on Tuesday in Ikare- Akoko in the Ondo North senatorial district are the party’s chieftains such as the National Chair, Chief Bisi Akande, National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Chief Segun Osoba; Otunba Niyi Adebayo; Chief Lam Adesina and all the governors of the six ACN controlled states.

    The campaign train will move to Ondo in the Central senatorial district on Wednesday and Ore, and move to the South senatorial district on Thursday.

    The Redemption rallies, as they are called, will afford the leaders of the party to present the ACN candidate, Mr Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN), to the people, and shed light on why the state should join the rest of the South West in the development train of regional integration.

    Besides, they will speak on how Governor Olusegun Mimiko has wasted the N660 billion that has accrued to the state during his tenure.

    The numerous abandoned projects include the Doom-dome, Ondo road dualisation, Owo road dualisation, Arakale road dualisation, Arigidi Tomato paste factory, Owena Multipurpose dam, Alpha D factory.

     

  • Akeredolu’s vision on education

    Akeredolu’s vision on education

    EDUCATION makes the difference. Always. Especially applied knowledge, in all areas of human endeavour. Countries such as China (fastest developing economy), India (best in medical tourism and ICT),Cuba(with the most computer literate citizens) and even neighbouring Ghana which has since become a destination of choice for the children of Nigeria’s nouveau riche, have shown what quality education could do for its people. It was for the singular purpose of the focus on education that the defunct Western Region administration of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo first gained international attention back in the sixties. But we must ask ourselves what exactly that government did right? It was the first and still remains the only one in the country to have earmarked 26 per cent of its annual budget as earnings from cocoa to fund it. Thus, it fulfilled the benchmark set by the United Nations Organisation, as monitored by UNESCO.

    Based on this premise, the gubernatorial candidate of the Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, Barrister Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, has made public his party’s manifesto in the critical area of educational development. Worried about the parlous state of education in the country and more so in Ondo State, with the national embarrassment of increasing failure figures at external examinations such as those conducted by WAEC,NECO and JAMB Akeredolu, has affirmed that his administration will make a paradigm shift. In that wise, education will be made free and compulsory at the primary and secondary school levels. All public schools will be restored to their former glory.

    To achieve his noble vision in this direction, emphasis will be placed on sustainable infrastructural development and training of teachers in all schools across the three Senatorial Districts of the state. He posited that unlike Mimiko who spent a whopping amount of over N600 million on one mega school, such huge sum would be equitably distributed to build solid structures for the public schools. It goes beyond mere fanciful school buildings to having well-equipped libraries, laboratories as well as the provision of state-of-the-art computers to pupils and students across the state. Only recently, Ekiti state, one of those under the ACN party was voted as the most ICT compliant amongst, the states. This will serve as an inspiration for us.

    Furthermore, unlike the Mimiko administration which refused to employ one single teacher over the past three and half years, Akeredolu’s ACN-led government is going to channel much resources towards human capacity building. The teacher-to-students’ ratio as recommended by the UNO is far from being attained in the state. Therefore, more qualified teachers will be employed. And he affirms his commitment to the payment of the minimum wage, as a booster to increase performance.

    In a similar vein, the querulous issue of underfunding in all the tertiary institutions of learning including Universities, Polytechnics and Colleges of Education will be resolved. Of utmost significance to Barrister Akeredolu is the review of curriculum in such citadels of knowledge. This will be done to meet the challenges of the 21st Century. The salutary aim is to ensure that more graduates from Ondo State are not only employable but be gainfully employed through its forward-looking entrepreneurship scheme. The cardinal objective is also to make each graduate from the state to imbibe the attributes of critical thinking, initiative and effective communication skills.

    Not left out in the determined drive to make the state the reference point in education as it was in the sixties, development will be holistic. Therefore, other institutions of learning such as schools of Nursing and Vocational schools are accorded the desired attention in terms of funding, provision of durable infrastructure and staffing.

    Besides, the focus will be on applied scientific knowledge. On 5 that score, Information, Communication, Technology(ICT) shall form the solid plank upon which the administration will base development. Ondo State wishes to create its own Silicon Valley, comparable to what exists in the United States. If it could be done there, who says it cannot be replicated here or even done better? To give light to this lofty dream, efforts are afoot to have credible data on Ondo State indigenes in the Diaspora. The aim of course, is to get them back home to use their wealth of experience to industrialise their homeland. With a clement economic climate this will be made possible, through well structured Public Private Partnership, PPP.

    The vision is to establish modern and well equipped TECHY VILLAGE (TV) in each of the three Senatorial Districts. There will be a synergy between technical colleges, local artisans and the TVs to update their knowledge. The government will encourage these artisans to take part in the execution of its projects. Several of them will gain easy access to soft loans spread over a reasonable period of time to actualise their dreams. Different vocations will be accommodated in this all-embracing attempt to free Ondo people from the clutches of the unjustifiable poverty foisted on them by the directionless government of Mimiko.

    To increase their daily income such artisans in the state will be encouraged to take some quality time off their trades to update their skills at the TVs. Some will be involved in the fabrication of machines to expand the scope of small and medium scale enterprises across the state. Therefore, with time, many Ondo citizens will be active as collaborators with policy makers in the fields of agriculture, health care delivery, sound education development, road construction and tourism.

    Consequentially, they would see themselves as part and parcel of government and not view government as a distant body of ‘them’ and ‘us’. It is for the good people of the state to realise that they have been short changed for far too long that campaigns are being taken to their door steps. Barrister Akeredolu and his able, resourceful and indefatigable team members are on a salvaging mission to take the state from the grip of impostors, rabble-rousers and fraudsters who have wasted the common patrimony of the Sunshine State. Their hands are firmly on deck to set sail to the harbour of hope for a brighter future. They are carrying out this salvaging mission through sound education. And it is all because, sound education makes the difference.

     

    Ajanaku is director of Media and Publicity, Akeredolu

    Campaign Organisation.

     

  • Independence: Abubakar assures of adequate security

    Independence: Abubakar assures of adequate security

    THE Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, has expressed the preparedness of the Force to ensure hitch-free 52nd Independence celebration.

    The police boss spoke with reporters yesterday in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, shortly before being decorated with an honorary doctorate degree by a faith-based Islamic private institution, Al-Hikhmah University at its second convocation.

    Other dignitaries honoured by the university included Governors AbdulFatah Ahmed, Isiaka Abiola Ajimobi, Aliyu Wammako and Abdul-Aziz Yari of Kwara, Oyo, Sokoto and Zamfara states as well as Comptroller-General of Nigeria Customs, Alhaji Dikko Abdullahi.

    Abubakar expressed delight with improvement in the nation’s security situation compared with what was on ground eight months ago when he assumed office.

    The police boss said the recoveny arms and ammunitions in parts of the country was testimony of progress so far recorded in the area of security.

    According to him: “Nigeria is better today security wise. There is peace and stability in the country.

    “We shall continue to do our best to ensure security of life and property of the citizenry.”

    On the 52nd Independence anniversary of Nigeria, he said the police will ensure criminals have no hiding place.

    On the proposed police intelligence school slated for Ilorin, the IGP said: “the school will soon take off. We have gotten the bill for it. The land has been allocated and we are trying to mobilise contractors to site so that the project can start.”

     

  • 248 escape death at MMIA as  Qatar Air makes emergency landing

    248 escape death at MMIA as Qatar Air makes emergency landing

    Panic swept through the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja, yesterday following a distress call from an in- bound Qatar Airways plane intimating the control tower of difficulty in its tyres retracting for landing.

    On board the Airbus A330 were 248 passengers.

    The message from the pilot of flight QR592 from Doha to Lagos soon sparked a flurry of activities in the aviation sector which is desperate to rebuild its image in the aftermath of the June 3, 2012 crash of Dana plane in Lagos which claimed over 153 lives.

    The Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) alerted the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) which in turn mobilized the Army, Police, Civil Defence, Road Safety, the Medics, Federal Fire Service, State Fire service and Julius Berger fire Unit.

    Their response was swift.

    By 11.30am they had all assembled in strategic places at the airport and quickly broke into three groups and apportioned responsibilities accordingly.

    In group one were eight firemen and NEMA officials fully equipped with fire fighting gadgets. They were positioned where the plane was to touch down and their duty was to put out any fire that might break out.

    Next to them, in the second group, were medical and para-medical personnel who were to administer first aid treatment on those on board the plane after evacuation and before referral to appropriate hospitals, while in the third group were FRSC, Civil Defence and Police officers who were deployed on emergency routes that might be needed to get victims to the hospital.

    The main routes were airport to the nearby Lagos State University Teaching Hospital and airport to the Nigerian Air Force medical centre.

    But by the time the plane eventually landed at 12.57 there was no need to put the plan into use as the tyres retracted after several attempts by the pilot.

    The passengers were not even aware of what was going on until they disembarked.

    “The plane has landed safely,” said Harold Demuren, the Director general of the NCAA said, adding: “We lost one of the tyres.”

    The aircraft landed at the cargo terminal and was then towed to an area where passengers were able to disembark.

    He said that no passengers were injured during the emergency landing and that one of the plane’s tyres had to be replaced. A mechanic at the airport said one of the plane’s left tyres was flat.

    Three passengers who were on board said the crew had made no announcements about the mechanical problem during the flight.

    “They landed safely. There was no problem. I didn’t notice any other thing,” said Raphael Ashala, 30, a Nigerian who was on his way back from a Doha business trip.

    One of the tyres was said to have burst shortly after take- off from Doha.

     

  • You are part of PDP failure, Akeredolu tells Mimiko

    You are part of PDP failure, Akeredolu tells Mimiko

    The Akeredolu Campaign Organisation (ACO) has challenged Ondo State governor, Dr Olusegun Mimiko, to explain why he should not share in the blame of the Dr. Segun Agagu- led Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) government.

    The organisation said Mimiko is also responsible for the failure of the PDP government, which he strongly berated and described as the years of the holocaust at the gubernatorial debate in Akure at the weekend.

    A statement by the Director of Media, Publicity and Strategy Akeredolu Campaign Organisation, Mr. Idowu Ajanaku said: “Is Mimiko not the Secretary to the State Government and member of the State Executive Council in the Agagu government?

    “If he was that pained why did he not denounce the policies of that administration or resign?”

    It also noted: “The same Mimiko was rewarded with a ministerial appointment by the same PDP and under former President Obasanjo whose administration paupersied the entire South West, leaving the Ota road, his home town in a dilapidated state.”

    ACO added it is irresponsible of Mimiko to promise to continue working for the state after his admission of failure during the debate.

    The organisation queried: “In saying he was going to continue what he is doing now, is it that he would continue to build market stalls, boreholes his token gifts to the people of Ondo in the 21st century?

    “Would he continue to build fountains where there is no pipe borne water? Will he continue to conceive abandoned projects like the Doom-Dome, Ondo township road dualisation, Owo township road dualisation?

    “Will he continue to aggravate youths of the State with gross unemployment? Will he continue to punish the Staff of Adekunle Ajasin University and Rufus Giwa Polytechnic Owo who have not been paid 28 months areas of salaries and allowances against the holy writ that a labourer is worthy of his wage?”

  • Financial irregularities: Lagos  Assembly to sanction errant MDAs

    Financial irregularities: Lagos Assembly to sanction errant MDAs

    The Lagos State House of Assembly will henceforth sanction any Ministry, Department and Agency (MDAs) that fails to update Fixed Assets Register and Unretired Payment Vouchers as such offence would be regarded as negligence of governmental duty.

    This was contained in the recommendations of the House Committee on Public Accounts (State), which was presented by the committee chairman, Yusuf Ayinla, at the Committee of the Whole House. Ayinla in the report, which was on the accounts of the state government for the year ended 31st December, 2010, disclosed that some MDAs were guilty of certain anomalies that needed urgent intervention.

    Some of the anomalies, according to him, include late submission of financial statements, non-reconciliation of bank statements, non-submission of relevant documents with payment vouchers, negligence of accountants and internal auditors to effectively monitor financial matters in their MDAs, among others.

    The House, in its resolutions, resolved that MDAs that have revenue potentials should henceforth prepare realistic revenue estimates and block loopholes that characterised collection of the state revenues so as to forestall incessant shortfalls.

    It was also resolved that all ongoing projects embarked upon by the MDAs in the year under consideration should be expeditiously executed while evidence of completion should be forwarded to the Assembly.

    The lawmakers also asked MDAs’ accountants and internal Auditors to ensure that all irregularities found in their accounts during the exercise should be rectified within two months or face appropriate sanctions.

    The lawmakers also admonished internal auditors to ensure regular reconciliation of nominal roll registers with payroll in order to avoid incidence of ghost workers, emphasising that prompt transfers of salaries of officers deployed must be carried out immediately, while unclaimed ones should be remitted to the chests

    35 MDAs were indicted in the report due to observations raised by the PAC regarding outstanding issues in their account.

     

  • Lagos Assembly wants better NYSC Camp  

    Lagos Assembly wants better NYSC Camp  

    LAGOS State House of Assembly has appealed to the state government to urgently build a befitting National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) orientation camp.

    The Chairman, House Committee on House Services and Special Duties, Hon. Ipoola Omisore, made the call when he led the committee members on a visit to the Ministry of Special Duties as part of its oversight function.

    Omisore, who said said that the NYSC orientation camp was nothing to write home about if compared to other others, argued it behoves a mega city to have a befitting NYSC orientation camp.

    He said it would be a misplaced priority if the government leaves the camp in such a bad shape.

    According to him: “We must do what is expected of us and we must rise up to our responsibilities.

    “When it comes to the issue of Corps members, Lagos has the highest chunk and people must be adequately catered for without fear or favour.

    “But it is sad that out of all the South-West states, Lagos State has the poorest NYSC camp.”

    Responding, the Commissioner for Special Duties, Dr. Wale Ahmed, said the state has been working tirelessly to ensure there is a befitting NYSC orientation camp.

    He assured the project will materialise soonest.