Tag: abia

  • EFCC re-arraigns Orji Kalu, raises charges to 39 counts

    A former Governor of Abia, Orji Uzor Kalu, was on Tuesday re-arraigned at a Federal High Court in Lagos on an amended 39-count bordering on fraud.

    Kalu, who is now a member of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) is being prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    The anti-graft agency is prosecuting Kalu together with his former Commissioner for Finance, Ude Udeogo, and a company, Slok Nigeria Ltd., said to be owned by Kalu.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the EFCC had on Oct. 31, 2016, preferred 34 count charges, including a N3.2 billion fraud charge.

    Kalu and Udeogo had however, pleaded not guilty to the charges and were granted bail.

    The EFCC closed the prosecution in May 2018, after calling a total of 18 witnesses and tendering a plethora of evidences before the court.

    When the case came up on July 16, the EFCC Prosecutor, Mr Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), informed court of a “second further amended charge”, urging the court to order the accused to take their pleas.

    But Kalu’s defence team, comprising Mr Awa Kalu (SAN), Chief Solo Akuma (SAN) and Mr K. C. Nwofo (SAN), had all opposed the amended charge on grounds that it was not done in accordance with the provisions of the law.

    They urged the court to refuse the amended charge.

    In a short ruling on Tuesday, Justice Mohammed Idris (who has now been elevated to the court of appeal), while interpreting the provisions of Sections 216 and 217 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, held that the prosecution could amend the charge.

    According to the court, an alteration of a charge can be allowed at any time, while the court accordingly, calls upon the accused to plead to the new charge and proceed with trial.

    The court held that it cannot shut out the prosecution from filing a second amended charge as the defence had not showed that the amendment would be prejudicial to it.

    After the court’s ruling, the accused were then re-arraigned on the new charges, and they again, each pleaded not guilty, while the court allowed them to continue with the earlier bails granted.

    The defence team then informed the court of their various “no case submissions” filed on behalf of the accused, adding that they had served same on the prosecution, which in turn, filed a written address in reply.

    The defence argued that the prosecution’s address was over 100 pages and so, they would require time to study same and make a response.

    Idris then adjourned the case until July 25 to hear addresses on the “no case’’ submissions.

    In the charge, the accused were alleged to have committed the offence between August, 2001 and September, 2006.

    Kalu was alleged to have used his company, Slok Nigeria Ltd., to retain N200 million in an account in First Inland Bank, now First City Monument Bank.

    The sum is alleged to have formed part of funds illegally derived from the treasury of the Abia State Government,

    In one of the counts, Kalu, his company (Slok Nig Ltd), one Emeka Abone and Michael Akpan, who are said to be at large, were also alleged to have between 2001 and September 2006, collaborated to commit an offence.

    They were alleged to have concealed the genuine origin of an aggregate sum of N7.2 billion, which formed part of funds illegally derived from the Abia State Treasury, and converted same into several bank drafts, which were subsequently, paid into the account of Slok Nigeria Ltd.

    In counts one to 10, the accused were alleged to have retained about N2.7 billion in different accounts, which funds were said to belong to the Abia State Government.

    Cumulatively, in all the counts, the accused were alleged to have diverted over N7.1 billion from the Abia State Government’s treasury, during Kalu’s tenure as governor.

    The offences contravene the provisions of Sections 14, 15(6), 16, 17 and 21 of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2005.

    They also contravene the provisions of the Money Laundering Act of 1995 as amended by the amendment Act No. 9 of 2002 and Section 477 of the Criminal Code Act, Laws of the Federation, 1990.

  • Enyimba Economic City: Abia, Ruyi Group, Geometric sign agreements

    Work is expected to begin soon at the Enyimba Economic City on the Aba/Port Harcourt Highway.

    The Abia State government, Ruyi Group (Chinese largest Textile Manufacturer) and Geometric Power Company, Aba, have signed agreements for the start of the new economic city, as well as the provision of uninterrupted power supply to Aba.

    The agreements were signed at the Corporate Office of the Ruyi Group in Beijing, China, with the company signing three different Memoranda of Understanding (MoU) to begin her investment in Abia State.

    Ruyi Group, which insisted that it won’t invest anywhere unless it is assured of regular power supply, signed an agreement with Geometric Power Company, Aba, as co-owners of the power generating and distributing firm.

    CEO of Geometric Power Company Prof. Bart Nnaji signed the agreement with the Ruyi Group for equity investment in the Geometric Power Company to enable the Chinese firm mobilise immediate funds for the completion and start-off of the Geometric Power Plant at Osisioma.

    Mr. Darl Uzu signed another agreement with the Chinese firm for the anchor investment of Ruyi Group in the Enyimba Economic City, while a third agreement was signed for the promotion of greater trade partnership between Nigerian businesses and their Chinese counterparts.

    Chairman of Ruyi Group Mr. Qiu Yu Fan was happy that after one year of due diligence and several visits, the investment came to fruition.

    He noted that his company has decided to diversify her operations into Africa and they have chosen Nigeria, Egypt and Ethiopia as new frontiers.

    He emphasised that he chose Nigeria because of Governor Okezie Ikpeazu’s doggedness.

    Ikpeazu described the occasion as one of the most fulfilling in his tenure. He noted that the investment will outlive his administration and confirm Abia State as the new preferred destination for investment in Nigeria.

    The governor noted that he had visited China five times in the last one year to further conversations on the workability of the investment of the Ruyi Group and expressed joy that his efforts have finally come to fruition.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Psychiatric hospital reunites 120 inmates with families

    The psychiatric hospital in Eket local government area of Akwa Ibom state has treated and discharged no fewer than 120 inmates and reunited them with their families.

    The official, a medical doctor, who did not want to be named, disclosed to journalists during an interaction that the rehabilitation and re-integration exercise took place on June 7.

    He said the patients were delivered to their various families within and outside the state by the State Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Welfare.

    Thursday was a day to discharge and integrate these former lunatics with their families; this year, government embarked on a mop up exercise and brought the lunatics to psychiatric hospital for two months.

    “They were under intensive psychotic care in the hospital for two months before they were discharged to their families.

    ” During the two months they were in the psychiatric hospital, the rate of lunatics on the streets of Eket, Ikot Ekpene and Uyo reduced because the exercise was targeted at the three LGAs.

    “The government has done well to take them away from the streets to reduce the nuisance they constituted to the public.

    Read Also: Ibom Specialist Hospital records first neuro surgery

    “These people will be with their families, take their medications and come back after one month for their medical check-up,” he said.

    “These inmates who have received treatment did not go to their relatives on their own; the ministry of women affairs and social welfare took them to their relatives.

    “They were taken to their families in Lagos, Enugu, Abia, Imo, Uyo and Cross River.

    “Money was given to them for support and upkeep before their coming back for medical check-up in a month’s time”.

    The official said that during the period that they were at the hospital, a major challenge was insufficient bed spaces.

    ”They were sleeping on the floor due to lack of beds space in the hospital”.

    The medical doctor commended the generosity of Gov. Udom Emmanuel of Akwa Ibom and appealed to the relatives and parents of the discharged inmates to complement the efforts of the state government by providing care and love to the people.

    When contacted, Dr. Dominic Ukpong, the Commissioner for Health, Akwa Ibom, confirmed the development but told our correspondent that the exercise was not handled by his ministry.

    “The mop up exercise was not carried out under my ministry but the ministry of women affairs and social welfare.

  • Police bust three suspected child trafficking syndicates in Abia

    …arrested 22 suspected criminals

    Abia police command has arrested members of three suspected child trafficking syndicates, including 17-year-old Gift Daniel, who sold her two-day-old baby boy for N670, 000.

    The Police Commissioner, Mr Anthony Ogbizi, said this on Monday, while briefing newsmen in Umuahia on the activities of the command.

    Ogbizi also said that the command arrested no fewer than 22 other suspected criminals, following raids by his men in the wake of renewed criminal acts in different parts of the state.

    Speaking in an interview with newsmen, Daniel said that she was compelled to sell the baby due to financial difficulties.

    She said that her first baby, also a boy, was sold by her own mother after delivery, hence her resolve to personally sell the second baby.

    “My mother sent me away from the house, when I became pregnant for the second baby and because of the financial difficulties, I started looking for somebody to help me.”

    Daniel said that she was given N50,000 by the woman that brokered the transaction, 38-year-old Ngozi Nwaiwu, while the nurse, Kate Charles, who helped her during her delivery, got N30,000.

    Nwaiwu, who also confirmed the sale to newsmen, said she was trying to help Daniel, considering her plight.

    Police also arrested 22-year-old Blessing Chukwu, who sold her three-week-old baby girl, along with the alleged buyer, 40-year-old Chinasa Okpara.

    Other alleged accomplices, Mrs Puphemia Omende and his husband, Kelechi, a medical practitioner, were also arrested.

    Police alleged that the couple facilitated the transaction at their facility, Winnies Hospital, Okigwe, where the baby was born.

    Okpara said that she paid N360,000 for the baby and blamed her action on her 13-year-old fruitless marriage.

    Chukwu said she already had four children out of wedlock.

    She said that she was given N190,000, for the three-week old baby, blaming her action on financial challenges.

    They were arrested at the Federal Medical Centre, Umuahia, were the baby had reportedly been on admission for the past three weeks.

    The command also nabbed 23-year-old Rose Chukwu together with her relation, Joy Sunday, while allegedly attempting to kidnap a little boy at Uzuakoli in Bende Local Government Area.

    Police alleged that the duo kidnapped the boy at Township Primary School, Uzuakoli, after school and replaced his uniform with another shirt. They were taking him away when someone alerted the police.

    The suspects denied the alleged kidnap attempt, saying that they saw the boy wandering and felt that he missed his way and decided to help him to find his way back home.

    Read Also: Police arrest suspects with human head 

    News Agency of Nigeria reports that no fewer than 22 other people, mostly young men, were arrested for various offences, including robbery, cultism and kidnapping.

    Ogbizi expressed discomfort with the ease suspected criminals were being discharged by courts during prosecution.

    “I am worried about the way the Ministry of Justice discharges suspected criminals. They should consult the police before releasing them.”

    He said that suspected criminals, who got released during prosecution, return to society to continue with their criminality.

    The police boss said that the suspects, who were paraded before newsmen, would be arraigned at the end of the investigation.

  • Police bust three suspected child trafficking syndicates in Abia

    Abia police command has arrested members of three suspected child trafficking syndicates, including 17-year-old Gift Daniel, who sold her two-day-old baby boy for N670, 000.

    The Police Commissioner, Mr Anthony Ogbizi, said this on Monday, while briefing newsmen in Umuahia on the activities of the command.

    Ogbizi also said that the command arrested no fewer than 22 other suspected criminals, following raids by his men in the wake of renewed criminal acts in different parts of the state.

    Speaking in an interview with newsmen, Daniel said that she was compelled to sell the baby due to financial difficulties.

    She said that her first baby, also a boy, was sold by her own mother after delivery, hence her resolve to personally sell the second baby.

    “My mother sent me away from the house, when I became pregnant for the second baby and because of the financial difficulties, I started looking for somebody to help me.”

    Daniel said that she was given N50,000 by the woman that brokered the transaction, 38-year-old Ngozi Nwaiwu, while the nurse, Kate Charles, who helped her during her delivery, got N30,000.

    Nwaiwu, who also confirmed the sale to newsmen, said she was trying to help Daniel, considering her plight.

    Police also arrested 22-year-old Blessing Chukwu, who sold her three-week-old baby girl, along with the alleged buyer, 40-year-old Chinasa Okpara.

    Other alleged accomplices, Mrs Puphemia Omende and his husband, Kelechi, a medical practitioner, were also arrested.

    Police alleged that the couple facilitated the transaction at their facility, Winnies Hospital, Okigwe, where the baby was born.

    Okpara said that she paid N360,000 for the baby and blamed her action on her 13-year-old fruitless marriage.

    Chukwu said she already had four children out of wedlock.

    She said that she was given N190,000, for the three-week old baby, blaming her action on financial challenges.

    They were arrested at the Federal Medical Centre, Umuahia,  were the baby had reportedly been on admission for the past three weeks.

    The command also nabbed 23-year-old Rose Chukwu together with her relation, Joy Sunday, while allegedly attempting to kidnap a little boy at Uzuakoli in Bende Local Government Area.

    Police alleged that the duo kidnapped the boy at Township Primary School, Uzuakoli, after school and replaced his uniform with another shirt. They were taking him away when someone alerted the police.

    The suspects denied the alleged kidnap attempt, saying that they saw the boy wandering and felt that he missed his way and decided to help him to find his way back home.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that no fewer than 22 other people, mostly young men, were arrested for various offences, including robbery, cultism and kidnapping.

    Ogbizi expressed discomfort with the ease suspected criminals were being discharged by courts during prosecution.

    “I am worried about the way the Ministry of Justice discharges suspected criminals. They should consult the police before releasing them.”

    He said that suspected criminals, who got released during prosecution, return to society to continue with their criminality.

    The police boss said that the suspects, who were paraded  before newsmen, would be arraigned at the end of the investigation. (NAN)

  • ENDANGERED SCHOOLS’ FURORE

    Following an expose published by The Nation in February on decay infrastructure in public schools in Abia, Ebonyi and Cross Rivers states, the commissioners of education in the affected states rose swiftly in defence of their principals, enumerating the steps they said were being taken to remedy the situation and improve the learning conditions of pupils. INNOCENT DURU revisited the states 10 months after the publication and reports that improvements in the conditions of most of the schools were hardly noticeable in spite of intervention claims by the state governments.

    Anyone who had read the claims made by the commissioners of education in Cross River, Ebonyi and Abia states about what their various governors were doing to arrest the infrastructural decay in public schools in their domains would have no reason to doubt that better days had come for the pupils and their teachers. Their claims, contained in our report titled Eyesore: Deplorable State of Public Schools in Abia, Ebonyi and Cross River, were as assuring as they are convincing.

    For example, in the said report, the Cross River State Commissioner for Education, Mr Goddy Ettah, had reeled out the state government’s achievements in the education sector and its avowed commitment to transforming public education in the state when our correspondent drew his attention to the deplorable learning conditions in some schools in Ababene, a suburb of Obubra Local Government Area of the state.

    He said: “Contracts have just been awarded as an intervention to improve the infrastructure in our public primary schools. We have increased our monitoring and supervision. We have also improved security in our schools.

    “Recently, a team from Canada came to conduct a need assessment to enable the state government know where to intervene. You don’t intervene in a problem you don’t know. You need to know the problem.”

    However, a fresh visit to one of the schools, Community Primary School V, Ababene, left much to be desired. Rather than improve, the learning conditions in the school appeared to have worsened. Checks conducted by our correspondent revealed that all the dilapidated buildings in the school remained unattended to, with many of the pupils still learning under a mango tree the headmaster also used as an offices.

    Capturing the situation in a tone of innocence, one of the pupils said: “Sun comes here. Rain comes here. Ants are here and they bite our bumbum (bums), our hands and our legs. Some of them enter (into) our bodies (dresses) and bite us. No toilet here. I always run home to pooh.”

    Corroborating the pupil’s claims, a teacher in the school said: “What the pupil said is an understatement. The condition here is worse. The shade provided by the mango tree is what the children and the headmaster use as classroom and office because there are classrooms not to talk of offices. As you can see, we spread mats under the tree for the pupils to sit on. Lessons come to an end the moment rain begins to fall. The children would not even wait for you to tell them to go before they start running home.

    The pupils in the few available classrooms are also not spared of the discomfort, because the roofs are leaking and there are no windows or doors to shield them. At times, they run into neigbours’ houses when it is raining. Now the hamattan season is approaching, but this is how they will still be exposed to the harsh weather conditions.

    “You can see the children kept in the dilapidated building covered with palm fronds; in what way are they better than the ones learning under the mango tree? We are learning under the most inhuman conditions here.

    “After your (initial) report, we had thought that they would come and rehabilitate the classrooms. But it appears that all the promises made by the commissioner in the report were mere propaganda. They probably did not know that you would take the pains to come back and check to see whether they did what they promised to do. We commend you for the efforts at making the government responsive and seeking better living conditions for the poor.”

    In Ebonyi State, the learning conditions in the schools previously visited by The Nation had also not improved. The Commissioner for Education in the state, Prof John Eke, had in our previous report debunked the claim that the state government appeared insensitive to the situations in the state’s public schools, saying that the state government had never rested on its oars in its quest to make public schools attractive to pupils and their parents.

    According to him, “the government of Ebonyi State has renovated more than 100 schools. We constructed and distributed 50, 000 furniture for the children. We have also transformed blackboards to whiteboards. The project to supply furniture was launched three days ago. As I am speaking with you, they are being distributed to every school.”

    He added: “The government has spent N1.7 billion on renovation. We have intervention fund from the Universal Basic Education Commission. Past administrations could not access it because of counterpart funding. While we are renovating and building new ones, we are also setting up some schools.”

    However, our correspondent’s revisit last week to Central Urban School 1 and 2 as well as Urban Community School 1 and 2, which are located very close to the Government House, invalidated the commissioner’s claims.

    There was no trace of new or rehabilitated building in the premises of the two schools. Rather, the compounds were littered with dilapidated buildings which have been totally abandoned by the teachers and pupils.

    Following the challenge of lack of classrooms, many pupils in different classes at Central Urban Primary School 1 and 2 are now merged and made to learn in a single classroom that has no door, window or ceiling.

    An aggrieved teacher who conducted our correspondent round the school said: “This is Primary 6A and B. There are about 80 pupils in this small classroom. Imagine having keeping that number in this stuffy condition. As you can see, the classroom has no ceiling and the roof is very low. This makes the heat generated by the sun to come very hard on the pupils as well as their teachers.

    “There is no weather condition that is good for the pupils in this kind of setting. When rain falls, it comes in and disturbs them because there are no windows or doors. When the sun shines, the heat is unbearable. That is the terrible condition we have found ourselves in.”

    Another teacher in the school said: “We have abandoned many of the classrooms because they are dilapidated. There are times snakes come out from the abandoned buildings, causing serious panic all over the place. To make matters worse there is no toilet in the school. The pupils urinate or defecate around the dilapidated structures where snakes have at various times been found. As teachers, we always beg neighbours to allow us to use their toilets when we are pressed.”

    It was also a sordid tale at Urban Community School 1 and 2 where a long stretch of dilapidated classroom that was being managed when The Nation visited in February had been completely abandoned.

    “We have locked it up because it is no longer safe for the pupils and teachers to stay there. We have complained and written series of petitions without any positive response. We have had to contribute money to repair the headmistress’ office when it was leaking,” a teacher remarked.

    Public schools in Abia State are also not exempted from the dearth of infrastructure in schools. The Commissioner for Education, Prof Ikechi Mgbeoji, had admitted in our previous report that some schools in parts of the state were in bad conditions, but assured that the government was frantically addressing the situation.

    But there was not much seen to justify the assertion in respect of providing furniture for the pupils and rehabilitating their dilapidated structures. A revisit, last week, to Amaisii Community Primary School in Umuokpo area of Obingwa Local Government Area was revealing. The pupils were found sitting on the ground like destitute while lecture was going on.

    One of the pupils who gave her name simply as Blessing said: “It is a huge challenge learning in this condition. We are never clean because we sit on the ground. Our books are also permanently dirty because of this. We are constantly suffering from cough and catarrh. We don’t like it at all.”

    Government’s seeming apathy to public school education was also evident at Owoahiafor Comprehensive Senior Secondary School in Obingwa Local Government Area. The premises were grossly unkempt with all the buildings except a new one under construction falling apart.

    Controversy trails state governments’ claim of intervention

    It was learnt that shortly after our report in February, the Cross River State Government supplied 50 chairs and 50 tables to Community Primary School V, Ababene. But laudable as the gesture was, checks revealed that absence of decent classrooms in the school compelled the pupils to carry the chairs and tables allocated to them home after school hours every day and taking them back to school the following morning. The development, according to the pupils, is burdensome.

    “It is not easy to carry the chairs and tables home every day. It weakens us, but no matter how weak or sick we are, we still have to carry them. If we don’t, we would sit on the floor for lessons. If we had good buildings, we would not be doing this,” a pupil who gave his name as Emma said.

    Another controversy trailing the supplied furniture is the inscription Cross River SUBEB UBEC 2012-2015 Intervention on them. The question being asked among the people is why the state government is giving out furniture marked 2012-2015 intervention project to schools in 2017, and what had happened to the money the commissioner told our correspondent in February was earmarked for rehabilitation of primary schools in the state.

    A parent, who gave his name as Ofat, said: “Something is fishy. Our children have been sitting on bare floor until you published that report. Many are still without furniture till today. Does it mean they had these pieces of furniture but deliberately did not give them to our children? It is unfortunate. This is wickedness of man by his fellow man.”

    In Ebonyi, hordes of pupils still sit on bare floor despite the commissioner’s claim in February that pieces of school furniture were flying all over the state. The project gladly trumpeted by the education commissioner is also enmeshed in controversy. Some of the teachers who spoke with The Nation condemned the quality of the furniture, describing it as a waste of resources.

    A teacher at Central Urban Primary School 1 and 2 said: “The chairs and tables are not strong, and that is why we gave them to the nursery pupils. If the grown up pupils sit on them, they would collapse very soon. It is the benches and desks provided by adult education students that we gave to the grown up students. If you check the two, you will see a huge difference.

    “What the government did is a waste of resources. It would be good if they tell us how much each of the chairs and tables cost and the total sum spent on the project.

    “A good number of the pupils are still sitting on bare floor. Many of the pupils have seats today because many are absent. If all the pupils were around, you would see so many of them on the floor. So many teachers don’t even have chairs and tables. We use our laps as tables when writing.”

    Contrary to the commissioner’s claim in the previous report that 50,000 pieces of furniture were distributed, the teacher said each school got only 15 chairs and 15 tables, wondering how 15 chairs per school to less than 2,000 schools would equal 50,000.

    “Fifty thousand pieces of furniture in 15 places would mean that more than 3, 300 schools got the supply. We don’t have that number of primary schools in Ebonyi State. So, that claim is a lie from the pit of hell,” a teacher said.

    The Nation’s visit to Abia State revealed that the state government had begun to construct new buildings in some of the schools mentioned in our earlier report. Construction of new buildings and renovation of one old structure was observed at Alaukwu Secondary School located in Umuobiakwa, the hometown of the incumbent governor, Dr Okezie Ikpeazu while a newly constructed bungalow was sighted at Owoahiafor Comprehensive Senior Secondary School in Obingwa Local Government Area.

    Some parents who spoke with our correspondent decried the construction of new classrooms, particularly in Owahiafor Comprehensive Secondary School which has so many uncompleted or dilapidated structures.

    “What is the need for a new building when there are so many in the school that are not in use? There are many school buildings that were started in other places that have not been completed till now. Instead of spending scarce resources building new structures, it would have been better to use the funds to renovate the existing ones and equip them with furniture and other materials that would enhance learning. This is self-aggrandisement and nothing more,” a parent, Fidelis Eze, said.

    We’ve renovated more schools than other states in Nigeria- Ebonyi

    In spite of the observed rot in some of the schools visited in Ebonyi, the Commissioner for Education, Prof John Eke, said the state stands head and shoulders above other states in the area in terms of renovating schools.

    Eke, who told our reporter in February that the state was ready to distribute 50, 000 pieces of furniture, said: “We have distributed over 20, 223 furniture for a start. That is what I have on my record. We are doing another one. Even if it is 1,000 that we distributed, it is better than nothing.

    “You are talking like somebody who is not in Ebonyi. We are doing the highest number of renovation in the country as I speak to you. We have done so much more than any other state.”

    When our correspondent informed the commissioner that he had visited some of the schools in the state, he said: “My brother, we have 1,666 primary schools. So, if we have done about 200 within a very short period, it is significant. We have budgeted some to be done next year. We are doing it on local government basis. That St Theresa you mentioned is newly allocated. If you go to rural areas, you will see renovations coming up.”

    Efforts made to speak with the Cross River State Commissioner for Education, Mr. Goddy Eta, were unsuccessful as he neither answered his calls nor replied to a text message our correspondent sent to his mobile phone.

    The Commissioner for Information, Mrs Rosemary Archibong, who later spoke with our correspondent, said: “The government is set to rehabilitate schools, and we cannot do all of them at the same time. As at now, over 270 schools have been taken up by SUBEB for rehabilitation. Out of that over 100 have been completed and returned. The school in Ababene will also be visited.”

    On the furniture bearing 2012 -2015, the commissioner said: “Not all the money that was meant for that period was accessed. What this government did was that the money for a particular period that we have been able to get, we must inscribe the particular year the fund was meant for on the project. This is for accountability sake.”

    Abia State Commissioner for Education, Prof Ikechi Mgbeoji’s line could not be reached, but our correspondent was able to reach out to the Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Appollos Enyinnaya.

    Explaining why the state was building new structures where many dilapidated and uncompleted buildings abound, Enyinnaya said: “Government’s idea is that you have a complete school. Some people might see one, two, three buildings in a school and feel they don’t need another building but such people don’t know the population of the schools. They don’t know the new policy of the ministry, which could be to have 12 students per classroom so that the teachers can have ample time to attend to the pupils.

    “All the schools we are building and renovating now will have furniture when the work is completed. You don’t put chairs in an open space. A schools is not just the structures that you have there; it is made up of every other component like quality teachers.

    “We have a partnership with some Australian organisations to train our secondary school teachers.”

     

     

  • Abia, firms sign agreement on modular refinery, hydrocarbon deposits development

    Abia State has signed a joint venture agreement with two companies to establish a modular refinery and develop hydrocarbon deposits in Ukwa West Local Government.

    The government entered into the agreement with AG Goldtrust Ltd and Whitepage International Concept Ltd at the Office of the Secretary to the State Government, Umuahia.

    The SSG, Dr. Eme Okoro, said the agreement would create an avenue for development.

    He described the signing as a ‘business development’ that will explore the value chain of hydrocarbon resources.

    Okoro said the government hoped there would be more jobs for youths through this.

    He said the people of Ukwa West would not be isolated because the refinery and hydrocarbon exploration would be in the area.

    “As we sign this agreement, we want to alert you that we are sticklers for performance that is linked and integrated to results.

    “The signing of agreement is an activity which we expect will be galvanised into results and yield revenues either in human capacity development or empowering the people who own the area,’’ Okoro said.

    The Managing Director of AG Goldtrust Ltd, Mr. Freeman George-Amadim, said his company would deliver.

    He said the modular refinery would spur industrial revolution and lead to economic development.

    Chief Executive Officer of Whitepage International Mr. Yakubu Mohammed said his company would ensure the exploration and development benefited the government and people.

  • Abia extends time of tricycle operators

    Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu has extended the operational time for commercial tricycles from 6 am to 9 pm daily.

    A statement by the Commissioner for Information, John Okiyi give no reasons, but said the order took effect from Monday, April 30.

    This is coming about three weeks after operators plying Ngwa road protested alleged extortion by revenue agents, and demanded extension till 9 pm.

    The statement advised them to work within the time frame and support security agencies to maintain peace in the state.

    The operators thanked the governor and promised to work within the time frame.

  • Nasarawa, Yobe, Cross River pay highest price for kerosene in March

    The National Bureau of Statistics ( NBS ), says residents of Nasarawa, Yobe and Cross River, paid the highest price for kerosene in March.

    The NBS said this in its National Household Kerosene “Price Watch’’ for March, 2018 released in Abuja on Wednesday.

    The NBS report said that residents of Nasarawa paid an average price of N306.07 per litre for kerosene, Yobe paid N300.78 while Cross River residents paid N300.68 for the product.

    Meanwhile, the report noted that states with the lowest average price per litre of kerosene were Abia; N229.35; Delta; N227.77 and Borno; N225.13.

    The report said that average price per litre paid by consumers for kerosene decreased by -6.79 per cent month-on-month and -13.66 per cent year-on-year from N288.57 in February to N268.99 in March.

    Read Also: Yobe donates N200m for Army Barrack project

    Similarly, the report said that average price per gallon paid by consumers for the product decreased by -8.45 per cent month-on-month, and -19.57 per cent year-on-year from N1,030.33 in February to N943.27 in March.

    It, however, said that states with the highest average price per gallon of kerosene were Kebbi, N1,105.00; Benue, N1,096.67 ; and Jigawa, N1,061.90, respectively.

    It also noted that states with the lowest average price per gallon of kerosene were Ebonyi, N828.57; Delta, N821.54; and Rivers, N814.08.

    NAN

  • Two die in auto crash involving Abia Gov’s wife convoy

    Tragedy struck on Tuesday in Abia, when two women died in an auto crash involving the convoy bearing the wife of Abia Governor, Mrs Nkechi Ikpeazu.

    One of the dead  women was  identified as  Mrs Promise Uche-Nwamkpa, wife of a former member of the Abia state House of Assembly. The second  woman was  Mrs Nwamaka Maduchukwu, a senior special assistant on media to Mrs. Ikpeazu.

    The accident occurred when the motorcade was returning to Umuahia from Ntigha-Uzor in Obingwa Local Government Area of Abia, where Ikpeazu had attended a burial.

    Witnesses said that the Hummer carrying the deceased somersaulted thrice, when the driver attempted to overtake a vehicle at Ndiolumbe around 5 p.m.

    A female occupant of the vehicle, who escaped unhurt, told our correspondent that the driver was on high speed when the accident occurred.

    “The driver was on high speed and everybody in the vehicle was asking him to slow down. Suddenly the bus started jumping up and down before it started somersaulting,” she said.

    She said that the vehicle somersaulted about three times and that she only found herself seated safely on a field by the road.

    The middle-aged, fair-complexioned woman, who was wearing a dress designed for the burial, was full of praises to God, saying that “I escaped death by His grace.”

    The driver of the Hummer, Mr Bright Ugwubujor, blamed the accident on brake failure.

    Narrating the incident to our correspondent at the Accident and Emergency Unit of the Federal Medical Centre, Umuahia, Ugwubujor said that the accident occurred when he attempted to overtake a vehicle ahead of him.

    “When I tried to overtake the vehicle, I noticed an oncoming vehicle and attempted to retreat but I encountered a bump on the road and when I tried to apply the brake it could not work.

    “Immediately, the vehicle began to somersault,” he said.

    A medical doctor at the unit, where all the victims were brought for medical attention, confirmed that the death of the  two women.

    He said that other occupants of the bus, including the driver sustained bruises and minor injuries.

    He further said Mrs Promise Uche-Nwamkpa, was brought in dead to the hospital.

    The second woman, Mrs Nwamaka Maduchukwu, gave up while doctors were battling to resuscitate her with the aid of an oxygen, he said

    Maduchukwu was  a widow and mother of four children.

    She was also the chairperson, State Information Chapel of the Abia Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists ( NUJ ).

    The Chairman of NUJ in the state,  Mr John Emejor,  who was at the hospital to sympathise with the victims, has expressed shock  over the incident.

    Also, the former lawmaker, Uche-Nwamkpa, who came to the hospital to identify the body  of his wife, wept uncontrollably.

    Her body was thereafter taken to the hospital morgue.

    Meanwhile, members of Maduchukwu’s church and colleagues resorted to frantic prayers to revive her.

    An aide to the governor’s wife, Mr Chika Ojiegbe, said the Office of the Wife of the Governor “will issue a release soon.”

    NAN