Tag: ABA

  • IPOB sit-at-home order: Markets shutdown in Aba

    Traders of major markets in Aba, the commercial nerve of Abia State, on Saturday heeded to the call by the leadership of proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) which asked residents of the Southeast to sit-at-home in protest of the Anambra governorship election.

    Masked men suspected to be IPOB members had on Thursday stormed various markets in Aba including warning traders through a leaflet which they circulated of the dangers awaiting them if they open for business yesterday.

    According IPOB the essence of the sit-at-home order was to further pressurize the federal government to heed to their demand for a referendum which their leader and Director of Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu was championing until September 14 when personnel of the Nigerian Army struck the palace of Kanu’s father.

    The commissioner of police had assured business owners, visitors and residents of their safety with the assurance from leadership of various markets agreeing to open their gates for traders and shoppers to carry out their businesses without any harassment or fear of being intimidated by any group of persons.

    But our reporter who went round the commercial city to monitor compliance of the traders to the orders of IPOB and security agencies reports that Ariaria, Ahia Ohuru, Shopping Center, Cemetery and major markets witnessed low turnout of traders.

    Our reporter also reported that shops along Azikiwe road, Faulks, Kent, Jubilee, Hospital, Market, Ehi road, Nsulu and other major business centres located within the city centre were shutdown.

    Some of the few respondents, including Mr. Offor Clement who spoke to our reporter at different locations of the city, said that they decided to observe the sit-at-home order to avoid being caught in the web of any crisis between the police and members of the IPOB who had vowed to ensure that no trader opened for business.

    They lamented the billions of naira they might have lost as a result of the sit-at-home order. This is even as people who opened for shop stated that they have not being intimidated or harassed by anybody.

    A member of the secessionist group who gave his name as Ikedichi said the outcome of the sit-at-home order was a litmus test of what they are going to do in 2019, because according to him, there will be total boycott of the election in the remaining southeast states in 2019.

    A source at the Aba Area Command of Nigeria Police told our correspondent that they have deployed their men especially in muftis at strategic locations and flash-points to avoid any breakdown of law and order in the commercial town.

     

  • Mother, two kids escape as truck rams into house

    Mother, two kids escape as truck rams into house

    A woman and her two children alongside other tenants have escaped being crushed by a truck which rammed into their residence in Aba, the commercial capital of Abia State.

    Mrs. Lucy Nnaji was said to be bathing her children when the incident took place in the Ogbor Hill area of the city.

    The Nation gathered that property worth millions of naira was damaged in the incident, leaving the affected residents in agony.

    The truck, with the registration number Lagos AAA 114 XU, was loaded with crates of empty 7Up bottles and heading to Aba from Akwa Ibom State.

    It was learnt that the driver while descending a hill leading to the brewing company lost control of the vehicle as a result of brake failure and rammed it into the building after attempts to control the vehicle failed.

    Mrs Nnaji’s husband, Sunday Nnaji, attributed the escape to God’s mercy, saying it was divine intervention that saved his wife and two children from calamity.

    He added that he wouldn’t have been able to explain it to his relatives and in-laws.

    According to Nnaji, his wife was bathing their two children in front of their shop when the truck rammed into the building.

    He said following the impact of the accident, some debris fell on them but no one died.

    Another shop owner narrating what happened said he was with his wife, Lucy in the shop when he left to see someone nearby.

    Mr. Uko said he was still on his way going when the incident occurred and he rushed back and saw the trailer’s bonnet resting right inside their shop.

    Uko said his wife was saved because she saw the truck coming uncontrollably towards their shop and she ran away before it ended into the building.

    A resident of the building, Mrs. Chinyere Agu lamented that household properties in her apartment were destroyed beyond repair as a result of the accident.

    An eyewitness, Okechukwu Nwagbaoso said before the truck rammed into the building, it uprooted an electric transformer and hit two vehicles including a Mercedes Benz C-180 model.

    He said the wife of one of the occupants of the car gave birth to twin boys earlier in the day and that they were going to see them in the hospital when the accident occurred.

    Nwagbaoso said that they were grateful to God that despite the intensity of the accident, no life was lost and called on government to assist those whose properties were destroyed.

    The driver of the truck, Ibanga Edet disclosed that he was coming from Akwa Ibom and on reaching the Seventh Day Adventist (SDA) Church, Ogbor Hill less than half a kilometer to the 7UP Bottling Company the brakes of the truck failed.

    Edet said he had to control the truck down the Ogbor slope before he lost control and the trailer hit two vehicles, uprooted an electric transformer before ramming into the building.

    He thanked God for sparing his life and averting the death of occupants of the building.

     

  • Abia CP urges residents to ignore IPOB threats to shut down Aba

    Abia CP urges residents to ignore IPOB threats to shut down Aba

    Masked men suspected to be members of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) on Thursday stormed popular Powerline sections of the Ariaria International Market, Aba, Abia State, sharing Anti-Anambra Saturday poll.

    The presence of the masked men, The Nation gathered caused panic among visitors and shoppers in the market.

    According to a flyer made available to our correspondent, their message is that people shouldn’t participate in Anambra election come Saturday.

    They also urged shop owners in Ariaria not to open shops for business come Saturday in solidarity to their counterparts in Anambra who they said were not going to be part of the voting process of choosing who governs Anambra in the next four years.

    Our correspondent gathered that the sharing of the flyers have created panic among traders of Ariaria on whether the market will be opening for business on Saturday or not.

    Some of the traders however, expressed fears of coming to the market on Saturday to avoid being caught in the web of any possible crisis between the masked men and security agencies.

    The Chairman of Ariaria, Mr. Emeka Igara could not be reached for comments on the threat by the masked men.

    But the Commissioner of Police in Abia State, Mr. Anthony Ogbizi in a press briefing urged Abia residents and traders at the Ariaria international market to disregard the threats by members of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra to shut down the markets in the state on Saturday November 18th, 2017.

    Ogbizi said the State Police command acting on intelligence gathered that IPOB members has been circulating leaflets aimed at intimidating law abiding citizens from doing their lawful business.

    The Police boss, who spoke at the command headquarters in Umuahia stated that members of the group in show of support to their counterparts in Anambra State were spreading false information that the Saturday governorship election will not hold in Anambra State.

    He disclosed that the intent of IPOB members, who no longer wear the outlawed Biafra insignia or hoisting Biafra flags, is to cause confusion and disrupt the peace and security of the State.

    He dismissed the misinformation and propaganda of IPOB members as baseless, urging members of the public to disregard them.

    He said, “The Police here by wish to inform the general public that the Anambra State election will on November 18, 2017 as selected. We advise all law abiding citizens in Anambra state to go out and exercise their civic duty on Saturday.

    “The Police also assure the general public, particularly all people in Abia State of adequate protection of their lives and properties”.

    Ogbizi maintained that the police will deal decisively with any person or persons operating under whatever guise to spread rumor and confusion in the State.

    He disclosed that Police officers have been deployed to Start stop and search operation on all borders between Abia and Anambra State from Friday November 17 to November 19, 2017.

    He urged all businessmen operating in Ariria or any other part of the state, to co-operate with the Police and other security agencies by promptly providing information on any gathering of any outlawed group for necessary action.

  • Aba shoe industry: Road to global market

    Aba shoe industry: Road to global market

    The shoe making industry in Aba, Abia State, exports about one million pairs daily to African countries. This has given it a firm grip on the African market. But, with the formation of Aba shoemakers into cooperative societies to enable them access funds from development finance institutions, build capacity and link international markets, among other initiatives, the industry appears set to take the global shoe market by storm, while contributing to Nigeria’s industrialisation and job creation drive. Asst Editor OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE reports.

    He spoke from his vantage position as an industrialist. And by the time he drew attention to the huge, but largely untapped potential of Aba shoe making industry, President, Abia Think-Tank Association, Mazi Sam Ohuabunwa, left no one in doubt that the industry may well be the tonic to galvanise Nigeria’s industrialisation and create jobs.

    He said, for instance, that the shoe making industry in Aba, the commercial/industrial nerve centre of Abia State, exports an estimated one million pairs of shoes daily to other African countries, such as Cameroon, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Gabon, among others.

    The icing on the cake of this thriving shoe industry, according to the industrialist and former Chairman, Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), is that the shoemakers produce quality shoes that compare with Italian footwears and other notable global brands.

    He, however, expressed regrets that, despite leading the African market, the Aba shoe Industry was yet to have a presence outside the continent, blaming it on the low patronage of made-in-Nigeria products caused by lack of policy backing by the government.

    “When made-in-Nigeria products are patronised by the government and ordinary people, more goods will be produced, wealth created and prosperity will be spread among Nigerians,” Ohuabunwa said.

    He said once the made-in-Nigeria policy is sustained in the medium and long term, the percentage of Nigeria’s manufactured products in composite of export will increase and the percentage of total imported goods will decrease.

    Urging Nigerians to develop confidence in made-in-Nigeria products and trade on them in order to facilitate more productivity in the country, Ohuabunwa pointed out that Aba remained the economic and industrial hub of Eastern states and Nigeria with great potential yawning for exploitation.

    He said as part of efforts to position the Aba shoe making industry for exploits in the global shoe making market, a number of initiatives have taken off. “We have started forming the shoemakers into cooperative societies so that they can have access to funding from development finance institutions like the Bank of Industry (BoI) as well as capacity building and linkage to international market,” Ohuabunwa said.

    For instance, the Industrial Training Fund (ITF) has scaled up the skills of the shoe makers while the Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) introduced quality standards in the production process of the shoe making industry.

    Last year, members of the Leather Products Manufacturers Association (LEPMAS) in Abia State also received a N10.4 million loan from the Bank of Agriculture (BoA). The loan was aimed at supporting the standardisation of finished leather products.

    The loan was facilitated by the United Kingdom (UK’s) Department for International Development (DFID) and Market Development in the Niger Delta (MADE).

    According to Ohuabunwa, these efforts became necessary after he “found out that they (Aba shoemakers) were doing the work without mini­mum support from anybody”. “

    But when I calculated their returns on those investments, I found they were peanuts. They work like elephant, but eat like ant. They sweat to bring in their ingenuity, but because they are not properly harnessed, the return on investments is meager,”he said.

    Indeed, over the years, all shades of small and large scale industrialists and artisans in Aba, including operators in the city’s booming shoe making industry, have been yearning for attention.

    The commercial city, popularly called ‘Enyimba City’, is said to be home to over 110, 000 artisans engaged in making shoes, bags, and belts, while over 50, 000 others engage in garment making.

    The city is home to various industrial clusters and burgeoning micro, small and medium enterprises. The ‘A Line’ section of the Ariaria International Market, for instance, boasts a range of finished leather products, including shoes and bags created through the ingenuity of Aba artisans.

    It will be recalled that in 2002, Aba attracted World Bank’s attention, with the visit of its then President Mr. James Wolfensohn, accompanied by the then Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. The visited raised hope of a possible massive intervention to fix the infrastructural needs of the city.

    The visitors were told that one of the major problems facing Medium, Small and Micro Enterprises (MSMEs) in Aba was lack of electricity supply. The Aba shoe makers also complained that foreign manufacturers of adhesives used in making shoes were hoarding high quality adhesives from them. This, they claimed, affected the durability and competitiveness of made-in-Aba shoes.

    Although, governments at both national and sub-national levels have not been able to address these issues until recently when the prevailing economic realities caused by recession appeared to have forced them to start looking inwards. Both the state and Federal Government ministries and agencies, including private sector operators, are now coming up with measures to reposition the industry.

    Government wades in

    Recently, Abia State governor, Okezie Ikpeazu, brokered a $1.5billion deal with Chinese firm, Huajian Shoe industry in Dongguan, Guangzhou, China. According to him, Abia–Huajian shoe industry will have the capacity to produce 5,000 shoes per day and employ about 10,000 people directly and indirectly.

    On October 1, 2016, Ikpeazu launched an e-commerce site to make it possible for Aba-made merchandise to be retailed across the country. Part of the government’s reform was to provide infrastructure for the markets to thrive.

    When a delegation of Leather and Allied Products Manufacturers Association of Abia State (LEAPMAAS) recently visited the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, the group commended him for his support for the campaign on made-in-Nigeria products. Saraki said the necessary legal instrument has been put in place to strengthen the campaign.

    “Today, we have made it a national project,” he told the delegation from Abia, adding that the Senate had amended the Public Procurement Act “to give your efforts a solid legal backing that will ensure patronage for your products and that of other local manufacturers”.

    Saraki said the House of Representatives will soon pass the same law, which, according to him, would make it binding that “government agencies must necessarily and compulsorily patronise locally made goods. It has started with orders made for boots by the Army. If the Army is doing that, I also challenge all the other agencies to follow suit.”

    The Senate President challenged all the Senate committee chairmen “to ensure that all the other agencies, whether it is Air Force, Navy, Customs, even the Road Safety, Civil Defense and National Youth Service Corps follow suit”.

    He commended the Nigerian Army for demonstrating the readiness to patronise locally made products through their purchase of 50, 000 boots from Aba.

    To make other government agencies toe the same line, the Senate President said patronage of made-in-Nigeria products would be included as part of the conditions to be fulfilled by government ministries, agencies and departments (MDAs) in due time.

    Organised private sector too

    The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) has also called on the government to implement the Public Procurement Act, which gave preference to locally manufactured goods, pointing out that until this is implemented, indigenous manufacturers will continue to operate under very unhealthy policies.

    MAN President, Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs, specifically called for a 60 per cent home-bias in public procurement, where locally produced goods and services will be given preference against their foreign alternatives.

    He explained that in support of the campaign for made-in-Nigeria goods, his association partnered ENABLE2, a Department for International Development (DFID) programme, to drive home the message.

    He said the idea was aimed at improving the patronage of locally manufactured products by Nigerians, the government, Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) through an effective and inward looking public procurement process.

    The MAN boss said the campaign has made reasonable progress and necessitated the call for the review of the current public procurement Act. Others are the introduction of the Executive Order, improved government patronage of ‘Made-in-Nigeria’ products and the current build up against smuggling and counterfeit activities in the country.

    The Nation learnt that contempt and neglect of Aba-made products by Nigerian consumers, was borne out of decades of opulence engendered by petro-dollar, which made Nigerians and government to develop huge appetite for foreign goods and services.

    The situation was so pervasive that Aba artisans, as part of survival strategy, developed inferiority complex and had to start inscribing ‘made-in-Brazil’ or ‘made-in-Italy’ or ‘made-in-Spain’ on shoes that were designed and produced in Aba.

    “It worked for us then,” said Chief Emenike Uche, a shoe manufacturer in Aba. According to him, “Our own people started buying the same shoes, bags that they were referring to as Aba-made, thinking they were buying imported goods”.

    Indeed, before now ‘Aba Made’ was taken as derogatory statement, meaning that it is not only locally produced, but also of very low and inferior quality. Nigerians from other parts of the country contemptuously referred to Aba products as “Aba-made”, which was an expression of inferiority in comparison to imported goods.

    This is despite Aba’s reputation as the  city with the largest concentration of MSMEs in the West African sub-region. The city acquired its popularity through sheer ingenuity, which, over the years, exploded into local manufacturing of various products, including fabrication of machine parts.

    Through dint of hard work, thousands of artisans in Aba have carved a niche for themselves in finished leather products such as shoes, bags, and belts among others. But while the artisans were busy churning out their products, the government was not looking their way and no conscious policy was formulated to encourage them.

    Despite the fact that Aba-made shoes, bags, belts and garments are making waves in other countries within the West African sub-region and even beyond, successive Nigerian governments have failed to fully exploit the industry’s huge potential through the implementation of the right policies.

    But a major turnaround appears to be in the offing, following the renewed attention on the Aba shoe industry. Although, this was prompted by the economic recession and the need to look towards the non oil economy including a revitalised shoe industry, operators and stakeholders are optimistic that the industry is well placed to drive Nigeria’s quest for industrialisation and job creation.

  • Six persons arrested in Aba over child trafficking

    Personnel of Vigilante Group of Nigeria (VGN), Abia State with headquarters at World Bank Housing Estate, Osisioma Local Government Area of the state have reportedly arrested six members of a child trafficking syndicate.

     Some of the suspects were reportedly arrested by operatives of Abia VGN on a tip off at Abayi in Osisioma Council Area of the state.

     The suspects and other members of the syndicate who were are still at large until the time of filing the report, according to sources were reportedly responsible for the abduction and sudden disappearance of children in Aba and its environs.

     The Nation reliably gathered that the group also works with its members scattered in other southeast and south-south states who illegally sell off the stolen children to potential buyers.

     Unconfirmed reports have it that the syndicate targets children between three months to three years and sell them to people who will illegally adopt them or use them for money ritual at a sum between N150, 000 to N300, 000 depending on the bargaining power of the would be buyer.

     Diamond Agbarata, an Assistant Commander and Head of Intelligence and Investigation of VGN in the state while narrating how the suspects were arrested said that it was through intelligence gathering by its personnel.

     Agbarata disclosed that they were able to rescue a four year-old boy who was kidnapped on his way from church on Sunday with his brother in Mbano, Imo State.

    Agbarata stated that among the suspects were a couple from Mbano in Imo State who had on selling their baby boy got hooked in the business apparently because of the proceeds that they made and have since become agents in the business.

     It was gathered that that the couple in order to spread their tentacles was recruiting more people into the business from other parts of the southeast with special interest in Imo State.

    In the words of Agbarata “By 9PM Monday my officers on duty within the Abayi area got information that people suspected to be child traffickers are within the neighbourhood. My men accosted them. When they were questioned, they said that they are going to lodge in a hotel. Looking at them, they were not supposed to have the money to pay for hotel. Not convinced by their answer, the personnel brought them to our office and on interrogation, they made confessional statements that they are child trafficking syndicate.

    “They also disclosed one of the buyers of the children they kidnapped as one Ifeanyi who hails from Mbano, Imo state, a husband to one of the child trafficker; Nnenna, his wife. He is from Umuihe, Umuozulim, Isiala Mbano in Imo state while his wife, Nnenna Ugorji was from Ihite-Obi Ahiazu Mbaise in the same Imo State.

    “They had a male issue when they were introduced into the business of which they sold to buyer. The wife is pregnant for the second time. Seeing that the business is lucrative, they could not wait for the second baby to be delivered.

    “Ifeanyi’s father came here and confessed that his son is a notorious criminal and that he stole his brother’s child and sold.

    “Another relative confirmed that Ifeanyi was living with him in Lagos, he stole his money and when the police came to arrest him, he jumped from two storey building and has not been seen since two years. Ifeanyi confessed of abducting 4 children they kept somewhere in Aba and my men have gone to recover them.

    “They have another woman that buys the children that stays at Obigbo in River state. They have gone to arrest the woman. Another buyer, a woman is on our radar until recently she was arrested somewhere in Abayi and brought here.

    “She confessed being a member of the syndicate. She buys and sells to potential buyers.”

    He said that they would be handing over the suspects to Police for continued investigation and possible prosecution of the suspects in court.

    “ VGN doesn’t have the power to prosecute. We do primary investigation to find some facts so that no one tampers with our evidence. After this, we shall take all of them to the police for further investigation and possible prosecution, because when they go to court, they may call us to come and give evidence because, we arrested the suspects first. We urge people to pin down their ears on the ground and provide security agencies with necessary information about crime and nefarious activities going on in their neighbourhood.

    One of the suspects, Kingsley Onuoha from Mbano, Imo state confessed of abducting a small boy from Obollo, his maternal home which he brought to Aba.

    Onuoha said he was convinced by his friends who have called and persuaded him over time.

    He said that he took the child on Sunday while the child was returning from the church. He sent the other one on errand and as that one left, he took the other one to Aba.

    Asked how much that he was paid for bringing the child, He said that he was told on phone that they sell one for 200,000 naira but said that when he brought the child, they told him that the child has overgrown the age of the children they do sell.

    According to him, they told him not to worry, that he would get his money as soon as they concluded arrangement with the would be buyer who turned out to be Mrs. Adaeze Nwankwo that based in Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

  • ‘We’re happy to be alive’

    ‘We’re happy to be alive’

    The children looked happy and eager to do their duties. They were well dressed and moved with agility and enthusiasm as they came forward to present their gifts.

    It was the harvest day for children of Christ Holy Church (CHC) in Aba, the commercial centre of Abia State.

    Their parents were just as cheerful. Why? There was need, they said,  to thank God for preserving the lives of their children.

    A parishioner explained that harvest in the church whether adult or children’s harvest serves as a covenant between them and God and so therefore, they don’t joke with it.

    Nothing, the parishioner stressed, is enough to thank God for keeping their children alive and in good health throughout the year.

    Some of the children including Miss Ozioma in an interview said that they were happy to be part of this year’s harvest.

    They thanked their parents for making sure that they participated in the harvest and prayed that they would live to be part of many harvests to come.

    Speaking with the Head Children and Women Department and wife of Bishop of Province III, Snr. Deaconess Christiana Umeh after the harvest, she stated that the harvest is annual and stressed that the benefits of the exercise cannot be overemphasized.

    According to Mrs. Umeh “We are doing it for the glory of God. We are gathering our children to train them the way that they will go so that when they grow up, they will never depart from it.

    “We are training our children who will represent us in the future so that they will learn how to give God thanks when they grow. In another way, we are introducing them to show them that God is the giver of life and wealth and we are the steward of God. Since God has handed over all that He has created to human being, so every human being has every cause to give God whatever He deposited in His hands. We are training our children to learn how to give God from the little resources they were given by God.”

    She used the opportunity to advice those who were to learn and inculcate the habit of thanksgiving to do so, stating that the benefits of thanksgiving is endless especially when one gives with all his heart.

    In a welcome address Mrs. Uche Udodi, one of the leaders of the children’s department thanked the leadership of the church and the entire congregation for the support which they have given to the children’s department over the years.

    Mrs. Udodi said, “The children department has actually increased because virtually every month new babies are added to our numerical strength. As a matter of fact, we didn’t record any death from last year till today, which is why we have come to express our profound gratitude to him with our substance.”

    Earlier in his homily, Bishop Nathan Umeh, the Province III head and Bishop of Aba Superintendency preaching on the topic “You will be accepted if you do what is right” reminded the congregants of the need of giving wholeheartedly.

    According to the cleric, stated that God accepted the sacrifice of Abel, the brother of Cain because Abel understood the importance of giving which was why has chose the fattest of his flock to present as burnt offering unlike what his brother Cain did.

    Umeh who took his texts from 2 Corinthians 9 vs 6-10, Psalm 50 vs 12, Psalm 103 vs 2, Colossians 3 vs 17, and Philippians 4 vs 17 described God as one who is not poor or hungry to be asking man to give Him what to eat.

    He charged his parishioners not to be deceived like Cain allowed himself to be deceived and later missed out the blessing he should have gotten from God if he had gave God the best of His flock.

    Highlight of the event was presentation of harvest items, drama and song rendition by the children including offering of special prayers for parents, the church, the state and the country at large.

     

  • Relief as Abia lifts curfew

    Relief as Abia lifts curfew

    Residents of Aba, the commercial nerve of Abia State and its environs have hissed sigh of relief following the decision of the state governor, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu to lift the curfew imposed on Aba at the heat of the crisis that erupted between members of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and personnel of the Nigerian Army.

    Ikpeazu had on September 12 imposed 6pm to 6am indefinite curfew on Aba which later changed to 10pm to 6am as a security measure to restrict movement of people while government and other security agencies in the state were making frantic efforts to contain the security threats in Aba after yet-to-be identified persons set the Ariaria Police Station ablaze using petrol bomb.

    Residents who spoke to our reporter on Thursday stated that they were happy that the governor has decided to lift the curfew.

    They expressed hope that night life which has been grounded in the past one month would gradually come alive as it was the case in the past.

    A fast food vendor who identified himself as Kelechi who sells food at night near Aba Main Park lamented the effect of the curfew on his business, stating “business has been at its lowest ebb in the last one month due to the government’s restriction on movement of people and vehicles in and out of Aba.

    “With this ban on movement of vehicles and persons being lifted and trading hours now elongated, we expect that our night business will improve. We expect that social life will also improve”.

    A shoe maker at Ariaria International market who corroborated Kelechi’s position said that they (shoe makers) would be at the advantage of the end of the curfew as they expect to have more customers from different parts of Africa coming to buy from them especially as they approach November when many people come to buy what they will sell or use for Christmas.

    A release issued by the Chief Press Secretary to the State Governor, Mr. Enyinnaya Appolos said that the state government after reviewing the security situation in Aba and its environs decided to rest the curfew because of the improved security situation and peace which has since returned to Aba after the unrest.

    According to the release, the Governor thanked heads of security agencies in the state for rising to the challenge of nipping insecurity in the bud and also called on Aba residents and visitors to the commercial city to remain vigilant while they go about their lawful businesses without any fear of intimidation and harassment by any person.

    “The Governor wishes to also express his appreciation to Aba residents, visitors and security agents for ensuring compliance with the curfew which was imposed to ensure the preservation of lives and properties.

    Governor Ikpeazu wishes to appeal to residents and visitors to remain vigilant to ensure that the prevailing peace and tranquility in the commercial city is not threatened or breached.”

  • Ikpeazu lifts curfew in Aba

    Ikpeazu lifts curfew in Aba

    Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia has lifted the 10p.m. to 6a.m. curfew imposed on Aba on Sept. 12, as a result of improved security situation in the commercial city.

    Ikpeazu via a statement issued in Umuahia on Wednesday by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr Enyinnaya Appolos, commended Aba residents for compliance during the period the curfew lasted.

    The governor commended the residents of Aba for complying with the curfew order and urged them to remain law abiding in order to ensure lasting peace in the city.

    Read: Ikpeazu slams soldiers for harassing Abia residents

    He thanked security agencies for their efforts during the period the curfew lasted and protection of lives and property in Aba.

    The Abia Government imposed the dusk-to-dawn curfew, following clashes between some members of pro-Biafra group and the military.

    The curfew was reviewed on Sept. 18 from 10 p.m to 6 a.m.

  • ASUP urges Abia to pay poly staff

    ASUP urges Abia to pay poly staff

    ABIA State Polytechnic Aba, has hosted delegates of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) for its 89th National Executive Council (NEC) meeting.

    Though the attendees discussed the affairs of the union, the occasion was also an opportunity for  the national body to call on the state government to clear the salary arrears owed their members in the state polytechnic.

    The Nation learnt that majority of the workers were yet to receive salaries in the past seven months, a situation many of the workers said has made life excruciatingly difficult for them.

    The National Chairman of Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics in Nigeria, Comrade Usman Yusuf Dutse, in a speech, called on Abia State government and management of the Abia State Polytechnic to pay workers of the polytechnic their arrears of salaries.

    Dutse who was on the visit with other members of Council of National Officers of ASUP, noted that staff of the institution could be more productive if they were paid promptly.

    He said that the choice of Abia Poly as the venue for the NEC meeting was deliberate and timely as they wanted to use the opportunity to show solidarity with the institution chapter who were being owed for about nine months arrears of salaries.

    He stressed that regular payment of workers’ salaries motivates them to work hard.

    ASUP national chairman, who said that he was visiting the school 10 after his initial visit, noted that the school was ripe for expansion and called for the release of 2014 promotion lists of staff which he said was long overdue.

    He used the opportunity to laud the cordial relationship existing between the management and staff of the school and called for the confirmation of members of the management who have been on acting capacity since February they were appointed by the state governor.

    Responding, the acting rector, Abia State Polytechnic, Prof. Eboh assured that efforts were on by the management of the instruction and the state government to ensure that staff members of the polytechnic were paid their arrears of salaries.

    Abia Poly rector who described the polytechnic as one of the best in the country said that the management on assumption of office in February 2017 met backlog of salary arrears from July 2016 till January this year which they were gradually paying off, adding that as part of the commitment of the management to offset the huge backlog, stated that between the month of April and June, they (management) were able to pay their workers five months arrears of salaries.

    According him, the institution have been able to receive from the state government N680m subvention since he assumed office, but regretted that the effect of the present economic crunch being faced by the country became a setback to the inflow of funds to the polytechnic.

    The rector who thanked the staff of the institution especially the leadership of the ASUP AbiaPoly chapter for showing understanding with the management promised that the 2014 promotion lists of staff would soon be out, stating that the management has been running transparent and open door policy since they assumed leadership.

    He also disclosed that work had already commenced at the permanent site of the campus located off Enugu-Aba-Port Harcourt Expressway where more facilities including student hostels and among educational and recreational facilities would be introduced for a better academic growth of the students.

    He added that to save the institution from wastages, the management had plugged some of the identified areas through which individuals siphon the institution’s funds in the past, adding that internal mechanism have been put in place to ensure that anyone that engages in fraudulent would be fished out.

  • Armed men attack warehouse, made away with cash

    Armed men attack warehouse, made away with cash

    A three man gang of robbers have reportedly attacked a warehouse located opposite St. Michael’s Anglican Church, along St. Michael’s road, Aba, Abia State.

    The gunmen who were said to have struck the place in a commercial tricycle at about 5pm on Monday were reported to have made away with undisclosed huge amount of money which the owner of the warehouse was said to have been paid to by his customers who came to buy goods from him.

    The Nation learnt that the hoodlums before leaving the place shot at one of the workers in the warehouse that was later rushed to an undisclosed private clinic where treatment was being administered. It was however not clear if there was any confrontation between the robbers and the victim.

    The robbers who many believed have been carrying surveillance on the area before they struck was said to have left the scene with the same tricycle with a commercial plate number which they came with.

    The incident was said to have caused pandemonium and forced business owners in the area to close shop abruptly.

    An eyewitness who gave her name as Grace described the incident as surprising, stressing that the hoodlums executed their plans as if they had someone carrying surveillance for them in the area.

    “The owner of the shop, we learnt offloaded goods at the weekend and since Monday morning he has been making sales as many people have been coming to carry bell of clothes. The place has been busy and no one would have suspected that such a thing could happen. In fact, it took everyone by surprise. They even want to release gun in the air while they were leaving, but the short gun which they came with couldn’t shoot again while they were driving off,” the eyewitness narrated.

    Business and economic activities have since returned to the area when our reporter visited the area on Tuesday as many shop owners who said that it was the first time such a thing was happening around the area said that they have become more vigilant than ever after the incident.