Tag: Abuja

  • Minister pledges commitment to Abuja Master Plan

    Minister pledges commitment to Abuja Master Plan

    Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Senator Bala Mohammed has vowed to implement Abuja original Master Plan even if it results in stepping on toes.

    Senator Mohammed said the FCT Administration is committed to correcting all distortions on the Abuja Master Plan.

    He warned that all encroachments into lands originally mapped out in the Master Plan must be reversed, adding that Abuja will not be allowed to go the way of other cities in the country.

    Senator Mohammed stated this after the FCT Executive Committee meeting.

    In a statement issued by the Assistant Director/Chief Press Secretary to the FCT Minister, Muhammad Sule, he said when identified and recovered, all plots encroached into will be deed in the names of respective secretariats, departments and agencies (SDAs).

    The FCT Executive Committee also approved the immediate set up of a committee to identify all violations on the Abuja Master Plan in order to reverse such violations.

    The committee is headed by the Executive Secretary of the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA), Mr. Adamu Ismaila. Other members of the committee are the FCT Directors of Land Administration, Development Control, Abuja Geographic Information System, Urban and Regional Planning, Mapping and Survey, Parks and Recreation as well as representatives of the FCT Transportation Secretariat and Social Development Secretariat.

    The minister noted that President Goodluck Jonathan had expressed concern over the unwarranted violations of Abuja Master Plan and directed that such encroachments should be reversed as they affect the Abuja Master Plan.

    He instructed the committee to identify all the violations and extent of the violations in order to urgently remedy them because, he said, no part of the Abuja Master Plan would be compromised.

    He emphasised that the committee’s job is key to restoring the Abuja Master Plan, even as he urged members of the committee to take the assignment seriously by giving it the attention it deserves.

  • Photos: Exhibition of “Democracy Archives”

    Photos: Exhibition of “Democracy Archives”

  • Court asked to reopen Abuja multi-billion naira market

    High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT)  has been urged to order the reopening of the multi-billion naira Wuye Market, Abuja.

    It was shut following an earlier order of the court.

    The market, with a capacity for 1,700 shops, was commissioned in February by President Goodluck Jonathan. It has not been put to use due to the disagreement among interested parties.

    The court had, shortly after the market was commissioned, restrained the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA), a mortgage firm, All Purpose Shelters Limited (APSL) and the Abuja Property Development Company, from allocating the shops or opening the market for business.

    The court had, in its interim order, restrained the defendants “from allocating any office or offices in the market pending the hearing and determination of the substantive suit.”

    The suit with No: M/864/14 was filed by over 370 subscribers to the market project, under the aegis of Wuye Ultra Modern Market Owners, built under the public private partnership (PPP) and Build,Operate and Transfer  (BOT) agreement.

    But the 3rd defendants, APSL, in its amended statement of defence, urged the court to dismiss the plaintiffs’ case and order the re-opening of the market for business.

    Trouble started when the plaintiffs had demanded for keys after being given letters of provisional offer of allocation of shop/open space, but APSL was said to have insisted on their payment for the shops on the ground that it built the market with its own resources and bank loan.

    The plaintiffs claimed that APSL had, through an advertisement, invited and other members of the public to pay certain amount for allocation of shops in the market.

    The plaintiffs stated that the offer letter was released o them because they had met the terms of their allocation, a claim APSL described as untrue.

    “The letters released to the plaintiffs were clearly marked “letter of provisional offer of allocation of shops/open space” which is dependent on other conditions stipulated in their letters of provisional offer”, APSL said.

    It stated that the time it ought to recoup its investment has started running since February 6, 2014 when the market was commissioned.

    “The 3rd (APSL) defendant humbly urge the honourable Court in view of its investment to hold that the Plaintiffs are not entitled to Shops at Wuye Ultra Modern Market, Order that the shops be allocated t people who have paid for the value of development and Order that full scale business transaction be commenced to avoid dapidation of the buildings”, the 3rd defendant said.

    The case has been adjourned to October 9, 2014.

  • Suya: Special delicacy for Abuja residents

    Suya: Special delicacy for Abuja residents

    Food, as one of the basic necessities of life, has different appeal to different ethnic groups in Nigeria. For instance, people from the Southwest relish ewa aganyin which is mashed beans and sauce. Those who reside in other regions look forward to enjoying it when they travel home. So, it is for those from the Southsouth. They look forward to having a taste of their native soups, such as Afang, white soup and Edikainkong.

    Food business is such that booms in Abuja as sellers never complain of low patronage. There is always someone to buy food, irrespective of the location.

    In Nigeria, food business is mostly engaged in by women, being, as it were, part of the home chores they carry out daily. There are also some businesses that seem to be the exclusive reserve for men. One of such is suya delicacy or barbecued cow meat or chicken.

    Some men, especially from the North, are not ashamed to be in suya business.

    In the North, what most travellers look forward to having is suya. It is a special delicacy peculiar to the North, even as it is enjoyed by people from other parts of the country. It is prepared and served in grades.

    Just as we have social classes, suya is prepared and served in a manner depicting one’s social class.

    Suya in the North is usually served with cabbage, onions, tomatoes, masa and their spice is made from blended kuli kuli, ground pepper, ginger, seasoning and salt.

    In Abuja, the love of this delicacy by most residents has increased the number of its peddlers greatly.

    Residents reveal that there are several types of mai suya; as the peddlers are called. There are the local ones that carry the suya in huge transparent bowls with its sauce gushing out of the side of the bowl, covered with newspapers or transparent nylon. This is the type of suya mostly patronised by the low income earners, mostly motorcycle riders and labourers, who want to have a taste of what the real suya is like.

    Then, there is the kind carried about in showcases to markets and parks, just like Kilishi is peddled about at such venues. Although this type of suya is again mostly patronised by the low income earners, once in a while, you find travellers enjoying it as well.

    But, the most popular kind of suya, which is well-liked in Abuja as in other parts of the country is the type made at bus stops, junctions or busy locations. It always looks mouth-watering because the men are experts in its preparation; they prepare it in such a way that it looks attractive. People always eat this type of suya.

    Another type is called balango, which is the normal type of roasted beef, intestine, fats, heart, liver and it is sold depending on the amount the customer has. The lowest amount that can fetch this type of suya is N100.

    There is also a type called dambonama. It is the shredded type of meat prepared from goat, sheep, lamb and chicken. This type is more expensive than the balango as the least amount of money that can fetch this type is N300.

    For lovers of meat, Abuja serves the very best of it and it can be seen in different locations. Our reporters went round some major suya spots to observe the processes it takes to get a suya to ones table.

    The one that catches the attention and makes tongues salivate is the chicken suya. The main suya which is inserted in a long stick to attract the attention of buyers who take turns irrespective of their class to get what they love to eat.

    Chicken suya which is mostly roasted or barbecued goes for N1, 300 and the beef goes for N300. The consumers don’t mind the price as they buy as much as they want. Some claim they use it to entertain special visitors.

    What caught the attention of our reporters is the patience most customers exhibit. Those who sell mostly at night paused at a point for their evening Magrib and Isha’a prayers.

    While they left for prayers, customers were still seen hanging around waiting patiently for the mai suya to come back.

    When asked why they waited, they simply replied: “It is a special delicacy that is worth waiting for. Meanwhile, their prayers do not take long.”

    Most customers told our reporters that they prefer the chicken suya because of the process of preparation and the spice used in its preparation.

    Although suya stands can be found in almost all streets and junctions of Abuja, most buyers do not mind the distance the suya stand is located, as they drive as far as over 30 kilometres for the kind of suya they love.

    Some of these spots have become extremely famous as most consumers patronize them regularly because of their tasty suya.

    In Abuja, there is a very famous suya spot that does not need much description as it is visited by most people.

    The spot has its brand name on cars and other items. Although some people might say it is just suya, residents who frequent the spot are so excited by the brand, even as they admit that they cannot imagine going elsewhere.

    A customer who pleaded anonymity regards going elsewhere to buy suya as “being unfaithful and cheating on his favourite spot with another which is difficult for a faithful guy like me.”

    Most of the customers do not only come to wait patiently to buy for themselves, family and loved ones but some who are travelling outside Abuja also buy the delicacy to take to loved ones outside the city because they claim that finding one as good as the kind they get at the spot is very difficult.

    According to Muhammed Kolo, as long as I am concerned, this is the best suya spot in the whole of Abuja and beyond. Trust me, I know a lot about suya because I have been to a lot of spots and I love this one more.

    “The unfortunate thing about the joint is that people come from far to this place just to buy this suya and people like us have to try to fight them off often. Most of my friends who are familiar with this spot always pretend to come and visit me so that I can bring them here and buy suya for them. Sometimes, it can be frustrating, especially when I don’t have enough money.

    “Their chicken suya is not just like your typical kind of barbecued chicken you find in most spots. Theirs is well-spiced and they have a way of slicing the chicken in different spots while it cooks to ensure that the spice really gets in and when you eat it, you will not be able to go somewhere else again.”

    Mahmud Akilu, who was seen in the popular spot located around Maitama said: “This suya is worth it. I like it because it is the local chicken. It is not the type of chicken you find in most eateries. This type is locally groomed with strong bones. The good thing about it is that, the bones can also be chewed and enjoyed. I come from Area 11 Garki just for this and I do this at least three times a week.

    Mr. Ismaila who was seen with three big nylon bags filled with chicken suya said he has been patronising the place for over 10 years.

    He said: “I don’t know how long these people have been selling here but I know I have been patronising them for over 10 years now. I love their suya because it is prepared with charcoal.

    “It is not like oyibo microwave. This suya gives you the feeling that you are eating real and well prepared meat and the spices get into the innermost part of the meat. I take it with non-alcoholic wine. It is something you will relish.

    Another customer; Mrs. Adesina who came in company of her two children lamented the lack of proficiency in Hausa language, which she said has denied her the opportunity to interact with the sellers in their language to enable her to get her suya on time.

    She said: “Most people simply come and speak Hausa language to the mai suya and they get their meat in a matter of minutes. I have been standing here for long and I am yet to be attended to. My husband will be coming back from his trip today and he called that I should get it for him as he likes taking it with soaked Ijebu garri.”

  • AHEAD OF SUDAN V NIGERIA: Eagles arrive in Abuja camp today

    AHEAD OF SUDAN V NIGERIA: Eagles arrive in Abuja camp today

    • Egwuekwe is early bird

    Players of the Super Eagles are expected in Abuja today to begin Nigeria’s camping exercise for the 2015 African Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifying match away to Sudan this weekend.

    The team’s Media Officer, Ben Alaiya told NationSport that the players, whether plying their trades at home or abroad, should be in Abuja today.

    Some of the players were involved in their clubs’ league matches on Saturday and yesterday, nevertheless, Alaiya said all of them have been told they must be in camp latest tonight.

    “The camp officially opens today and we expect many of the players to hit Abuja latest tomorrow (today) night,” Alaiya said.

    “You know some of them were involved in their clubs’ matches on Saturday and today (Sunday) too. Players like Mikel Obi played in Chelsea’s 2-0 victory against Arsenal while Efe Ambrose of Celtic also played today.”

    He continued: “Training will start tomorrow evening because some of the players will be available to start training. But in the night we expect many of them to arrive.”

    Warri Wolves captain, Azubuike Egwuekwe is already in Abuja for the exercise.

    “Yes, I am already in Abuja on time for camping for the Sudan match,” the lanky central defender told NationSport. “You know that the matches against Sudan are vital for our qualification for the Nations Cup. So I don’t want to take chances at all likewise my colleagues who have all promised to be in Abuja unfailingly tomorrow.”

    His Wolves team mate, Gbolahan Salami has also promised to be among the early arrivals in Abuja today.

    NationSport scooped that caretaker coach of the team Stephen Keshi along with the team’s technical crew are in Abuja to receive the players.

  • Emirates upgrades Abuja capacity

    Barely two months after launching its operations to Abuja, Emirates has announced it will upgrade the route’s operating aircraft to a Boeing 777-200ER, starting from October 1st 2014.

    Emirates launched a daily service to Abuja, its second Nigerian gateway and 22nd passenger destination in Africa, on August 1st, utilising the Airbus A340-300.

    The new aircraft will continue to operate daily to Nigeria’s capital and offer 274 seats in the three cabins; 12 luxurious lie-flat seats in First Class, 42 deeply reclining seats in Business Class and a generous space for 220 passengers in Economy Class.

    “The upgrade of our Abuja service to a Boeing 777 demonstrates our commitment to the Nigerian market and another step to ensure we offer world class products to our customers in Nigeria.

    “Since its launch on August 1st 2014, Emirates boosted international tourism and trade in Abuja from a raft of destinations in the Far East, West Asia, Middle East, Europe and North America,” said Adil Al Ghaith, Emirates Senior Vice President, Commercial Operations, Northern and Western Africa.

  • That big show in Abuja

    That big show in Abuja

    It was a colourful ceremony in Abuja on Monday.

    The sartorial elegance of the guests and the hall festooned with flowers, red carpet and all. The bounteous harvest of awards for a rare assemblage of honourable men and women who stepped forward to be garlanded by no less a honourable personality than Dr Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan, GCFR, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.

    The government ensured that no one missed the excitement. It was televised live. But, as they say, the enemy can never kill a big game.  Even before the curtain was drawn on the ceremony, those who have refused to see anything good in the Transformation Agenda had gone to town to lampoon it, deriding it the way some angry youths would a rowdy village festival.

    “I agree that the honorees are prominent Nigerians. They are,” a fellow argued, “but how many of them are eminent?”

         He then went on to report what people have been saying in university staff rooms, restrooms and newsrooms on the National Honours Awards. Most of the comments, obviously from disgruntled Nigerians and professional critics who would want to rip apart anything they can’t reap from so cheaply, centre on the recipients.

         Take, for instance, the service chiefs. The critics wonder why they should be honoured, considering the security challenges we are facing. Were they honoured for failing in their promise to subdue Boko Haram? Must they be on the list? Where are the Chibok girls? The commentators went on and on, railing about the awards as if, like corruption, they had become a crime that must be confronted headlong.

    Are they right? No, I dare say. Where were these fellows when the President explained clearly that terrorism is a global phenomenon which no nation has been able to defeat? Besides, have we ever sat down to think of how Boko Haram would have spread if the military had been asleep? The insurgency, after all, has been confined to the Northeast, although there are occasional strikes in some cities – a suicide bomber here and another there –  including Abuja. Isn’t this a rare feat in warfare? We have heard of soldiers abandoning the fronts for some tactical monoeuvre in Cameroun; not officers and, indeed, not a service chief. So why all the noise?

    To many of the idle critics, it is an assault on the sensibility of all mothers that some 216 Chibok girls snatched off their dormitories on April 15 in what has been touted as one of the worst mass abductions ever remain in captivity and those who are supposed to lead the battle for their retrieval are being decked with medals. But, haven’t we been told by President Jonathan and the military that the girls’ whereabouts is known and that they will soon be released, hale and hearty? Where is our patience, the stoicism for which we are well known? Does any good thing come without perseverance? Can we now say because these girls are yet to return home that Nigeria should be ungrateful to the military chiefs? Haba. Where is that sense of equity and fairness for which we are famous?

         But the critics were not done. They went on to attack the government for not honouring the late Dr Ameyo Stella Shade Adadevoh, the woman who physically prevented the late Patrick Sawyer from spreading the Ebola virus and died after contracting the disease. No; the awards are for only the living, the authorities said.

    If a medal could be awarded posthumously, I am sure the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) would have pushed for one of its dearest, the late Chief Lamidi Adedibu, the inimitable Ibadan politician and exponent of amala and abula politics whose vote harvesting formula has become such a big hit. So effective it was in Ekiti that it was christened “stomach infrastructure”, even as some observers insisted that it was all a veneer for the complex rigging of the May 21 election.

    The presidential cook also got a medal. This, in the view of the rusty critics who pose as academics and intellectuals, is cheapening the awards. Wrong. The President’s steward is as important as any other member of the kitchen cabinet. He must be loyal, dutiful and skilful, with a wonderful culinary expertise. In other words, he must be dexterous in cooking tuwo shinkafa and tuwo masara. He must be able to differentiate okazi (ukazi) from utazi and uziza leaves. He must be able to handle banga, ukwobi, nsala, ofe Owerri and ofe din a nwayi,the one also called “lovers’ soup”, as well as  every other dish that may attract the presidential palate at any time.

    Imagine if he is the sloppy type and he adds too much salt to the President’s meal or too much sugar to his coffee and his tummy begins to rumble in the middle of a speech at one of those high profile sessions. Just imagine. To the best of my research ability, Dr Jonathan has never had to abandon a speech to visit the washroom. Shouldn’t the nation show some gratitude for his chef’s remarkable ability?

    Something tells me that the man who selects those sharp bowler hats will also be recognised some day. So will the exquisite designer of those long dresses with glittering golden buttons and chains, the dress that many Nigerians now wear in solidarity with His Excellency and his Transformation Agenda. And the driver, the one who ensures that the President’s waist isn’t strained on those rare occasions when the car has to pass through one of those few rough roads that will soon be fixed. And the unknown chap who shines those gleaming shoes. And the wine taster, who must ensure that the President and his guests get the best from the world’s reputable cellars.

    Talking about roads. Works Minister Mike Onolememen was all smiles as a reporter interviewed him on television after he got his award. “It is a challenge for us to deliver better service”, he said. He is right, a cheeky fellow said, adding: “Don’t our roads deserve better attention?”

    Chief Nyesom Wike’s award infuriated many academics who wondered whether he was being rewarded for the teachers’ strike that kept universities shut for almost a year. They said he was better known as a Rivers State politician than the occupier of the Education portfolio? They called him all manner of names, including “woman wrapper”, apparently on account of his being close to the First Lady. But, isn’t Wike a loyal party man? Who else could have given Governor Rotimi Amaechi, who Wike plans to succeed, such a run for his money? Now the chief has got the reward of being loyal. But will he get the big prize?

    Wike was not the only politician who was honoured. There were many others, including Otunba – sorry, a slip there – Dr, as he would now want to be addressed, Iyiola Omisore. Some, who obviously did not bother to understand the basis for the awards, questioned his inclusion on the list. Is it, they queried, for losing the Osun election? Gentlemen, fair is fair; Omisore fought a good fight. But then, doesn’t  his side-kick, who played a major role in that war of an election, Police Affairs Minister Jelili Adesiyan, the one who vowed to beat up Isiaka Adeleke, deserve to be honoured, if not for being a loyal party man but for his pugilistic virtuosity?

    Asked by reporters if it was true Adesiyan punched Adeleke, as alleged by the first civilian governor, the one called Serubawon (hit them with fear), he replied: “My regret is that I did not beat him as he claimed I did. If I had not been a minister, I would have flogged him like a baby… He is lying, if he says Omisore and I beat him. One upper or lower cut would have landed him in hospital. You know me…Ta lo nje ode aperin niwaju ode apayan (who is an elephant hunter in the presence of a hunter who kills human beings)? I will one day leave office as a minister and any time I leave office, I will fight Adeleke.”

    Governor Jonah Jang was all smiles as his medal dangled on his neck. Another insolent fellow to whom impudence seems to be a normal behaviour questioned his eligibility for the award. He was quickly reminded that Jang is the chairman of the Villa-backed faction of the Governors’ Forum. There was so much noise after the forum’s election, which Amaechi won by 26 votes to Jang’s 19. But the Jang faction, by a strange application of arithmetic principles and backed solidly by the Villa, insisted that 19 was greater than 26, a proposition he has continued to defend. For being so principled, doesn’t Jang deserve his reward?

    Chief Tom Ikimi also got an award. An observer asked: “what for? For quitting APC for PDP?” The architect-politician has paid his dues. He was foreign minister in those turbulent days  of the Abacha regime, when Nigeria became a problem to the world and all our values were shredded. The chief did his best to help that regime. Now, his expertise will soon be pressed to service for the PDP. What better way to show appreciation?

    To all those worthy awardees, I say congratulations.

  • Abuja’s mountainous garbage dumps

    Abuja’s mountainous garbage dumps

    When the idea of moving Nigeria’s capital city from Lagos to Abuja was conceived in the late 1970s, it was believed that the new capital city would be less congested and neater  than Lagos that seemed so crowded and grimy so much so that it fell short of international standard of what a country’s capital should be.

    The perception, as encapsulated in the Abuja Master Plan, was a world-class capital that would match those of  USA, England, Japan and Germany, among others that are near perfect in terms of tidiness and orderliness.

    Never was it thought to be a city where refuse dumps would be competing in height with one of the tallest mountains, let alone being overcrowded like the Old Oshodi in Lagos State.

    We concede that in the first few years after it finally became the nation’s capital from 1986 during the regime of Military President  Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, there was an appreciable level of orderliness and neatness. However, the same cannot be said of  Nigeria’s capital city. It has been characterised by seemingly irreversible inclination to why it took over from Lagos as capital city, which are congestion and filthiness. Several mountains-like refuse dumps beautify the city, especially in the area councils. The situation has become a source of worry to successive administrations of  the Federal Capital Territory and residents of the area.

    In the circumstances, residents of  Kubwa 2 Extension, Bwari Area Council of the FCT, have cried out to the administration of the council over what they called “life-threatening refuse heaps”. They urged the council to save them from the looming danger that may result from the mountainous garbage dump. This, they said, the council could do by evacuating the garbage mass along the Kubwa-Dutse Road which is causing health hazard to the people.

    In a chat with our correspondent, most of the residents said the garbage has piled for a very long time, adding that there was need for the council to evacuate it as the stench oozing out of the heap was becoming unbearable.

    One of the residents, Ike Eguna, said the area was not the best place to be designated a garbage dump as it was along the road, stressing that people pass through there breathing in the bad odour.

    “The garbage heap is along the road. Most people pass through there to church and when we do, we don’t always feel comfortable. We have to pass the area in a rush. It is rather disgusting and one is scared of the health hazard it might cause to people,” he said.

    Another resident, Gonu Boku, pleaded with the council to designate another areawhere people could be dumping their garbage. He added that very soon the garbage heap will make the road impassable.

    “When that happens, I don’t know what we will do. It is already happening.

    We are calling on the council authorities to help in evacuating it before the situation becomes worse,” he said.

    Another resident, Hassana Muhammed, added  that  the mai bolas had made matters worse at the area as they travel from all parts of  Kubwa and

    Dutse to pill refuse there, adding that there was need for the mai bolas to be shown the designated venues where they could dump the garbage.

  • Govt flies abandoned girl to Abuja

    Govt flies abandoned girl to Abuja

    It has been confirmed that the Federal Government has moved the Chibok girl, Susan Ishaya, abandoned by Boko Haram, to Abuja for further treatment.

    She was moved from the Police Hospital in Yola on Saturday to an undisclosed location in Abuja where she is receiving treatment.

    Susan’s identity is yet to be confirmed or her parents identified, since the parents, who travelled to Yola to meet her with the Vice Principal of the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok were unable to see her because she was flown out without their knowledge.

    The Director of Publicity, Kibaku Area Development Association (KADA), Dr. Manasseh Allen, spoke yesterday in Abuja at the gathering of the #BringBackOurGirls advocacy members.

    He said it would be important to Susan’s recovery if she was reunited with her parents.

    His words: “She was moved by security agencies to Abuja from Yola yesterday. Her location has not been disclosed to us, they are working on her medical condition first before they can acquire any information from her.

    “They have found out that she is still incoherent,  she keeps repeating herself and at times she keeps repeating statements, which means we cannot depend on her words for now, but our leaders are in touch with the authorities and government. As I speak to you now, there are people on standby waiting on the military authorities so that they can have access to Susan and ensure proper medical attention is given to her before we can go on with whatever can come after.

    “No parent has made any contact with her. As I’m speaking to you, no one can say she is from Chibok because no one is yet to meet her.

    “My concern is that in every rehabilitation, family is essential, even in the healing process. So it is essential that Susan is reunited with her family as soon as possible so that the process of her psychological healing will be complete.”

  • Bishops plan prayer in Abuja

    The Catholic Bishop Conference of Nigeria is set to hold an all-night prayer in Abuja to end insecurity.

    The bishops urged the government to protect lives and defend the nation, saying its duty was to protect the citizens.

    The clerics in a statement at the end of their second Annual Plenary meeting in Warri, Delta State, said the prayer would hold on November 13 and 14.

    “The Federal Government must do more than it is doing to prevent our nation from drifting. It must prevent anarchy and bring criminals to justice,” they said.