Tag: Abuja

  • Why Abuja land swap option is desirable

    Why Abuja land swap option is desirable

    SIR: Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Senator Bala Mohammed has evolved diverse policies and institutionalized several programmes tailored towards making the nation’s capital city of Abuja one of the best capital cities in the world. In spite of several challenges confronting the administration, especially population explosion, financial constraints and activities of land speculators, he has refused to budge and continued to forge ahead with single-mindedness of purpose and iron-clad determination to succeed where others had failed.

    One of the strategies and programmes for moving FCT forward evolved by the minister is the land swap policy. The policy involves the granting of land to competent real estate developers who will in turn provide infrastructure, such as good roads, electricity, portable water, storm water drainage, sewer lines and communication ducts to the residents, without any financial or technical demand to the government.

    The approach is not new. It is a land-based financing of infrastructure, which the World Bank has endorsed as suitable for any country that is experiencing budget crisis. Many developed and developing countries like France, Japan, the United States, China, Denmark, Egypt and India found it necessary to adopt land-based financing techniques during periods of rapid urban growth like we are experiencing now in Abuja. The underlying basic philosophy is infrastructure development to keep pace with urban growth.

    It is trite to say that a capital city devoid of infrastructural facilities is like a car without an engine. The proposed land swap option holds lots of benefits not only for Abuja, but also for the indigenes, Nigerians in general and even the investors. It will integrate real property development with infrastructure provision; aspire to keep pace with existing urban growth and to break the present traffic gridlock by opening up more districts within the FCT and also hope to correct the distortions occasioned by mass housing development in Phase III. Much more importantly, it intends to deploy global best practice in resettlement issues to such an extent that the economic aspects, social cohesion and cultural leanings of Project Affected Persons (PAP) are preserved and enhanced.

    All things being equal, the land swap initiative if implemented to the letter can rescue FCT from its current risk of being overwhelmed by a continuously burgeoning population arising from a maddening rush from ubiquitous troubled spots in the country. This is certainly one masterstroke that is sure to meet the expectations of the Federal Government to deliver standard housing to the people of Nigeria at a very reasonable rate.

    • Rogers Edor Ochela

    Abuja

  • Suspected thieves arrested on Abuja flight

    Suspected thieves arrested on Abuja flight

    Two passengers on an Abuja-bound Med-View Airline flight were on Wednesday arrested by Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria( FAAN) security personnel for attempting to steal the sum of N1.5m from the hand-luggage compartment of the aircraft.

    Confirming the development , FAAN General Manager, corporate communications  Mr Yakubu Dati said  the flight which was scheduled to depart MMA2 for Abuja at 9.00am , but had to be  delayed due to  the incident.

    Dati explained that the attention of FAAN’s Aviation Security personnel was called to the said aircraft by the cabin crew of the airline when an argument ensued between two passengers over missing money from the luggage of one of the passengers, who raised an alarm

    Two of the passengers who were suspected by the passenger who raised the alarm were later subjected to body search and substantial amounts of money were found on them.

    The two men were later taken away and are undergoing preliminary interrogation at FAAN’s Crime Investigation Bureau, from where they would be handed over to the Police for further investigations.

     Dati said :” FAAN wishes to assure the public, especially passengers, that people engaged in nefarious activities at our airports, will no longer find life comfortable at our airports, as adequate security measures have been put in place to make our airports safer and more secure.”

    Meanwhile, a source at the airport hinted that the suspected passengers trailed the man from the bank where he collected the money.

    On arrival at the MMA 2, the suspects were said to have monitored the other passenger to Medview  Airlines counter, bought tickets  and  solicited from the personnel at the check in counters to put their seats near the other passenger, to enable them put their black bag at the same overhead cabin compartment.

    The source hinted that as the suspected thieves stood up to collect the money in a black nylon bag  from the overhead cabin compartment, the owner got suspicious to check his bag for his personal items for prayers, when he observed that his bag was open, and the money had disappeared, forcing him to raise alarm.

    As an argument ensued, the pilot directed that the aircraft could not embark on the flight, until some security checks were carried out,which led to the discovery of the money on the seat of the suspected passengers.

  • 18 dead, 9 injured in Kwali-Gwagwalada Road accident

    18 dead, 9 injured in Kwali-Gwagwalada Road accident

    Eighteen persons died in an accident, which occurred along the Kwali-Gwagwalada Road, Abuja, on Wednesday morning, the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) confirmed.

    A statement issued by Mr Jonas Agwu, the FRSC Public Education Officer, said that nine others sustained various degrees of injuries in the accident.

    The statement said that the accident occurred at about 1.35 a.m. on Wednesday when a J5 bus with registration number XA 726 NSR lost control and rammed into a luxury bus with registration number XG 413 FGC.

    It said the 17 occupants of the J5 bus died instantly, while one died later in the hospital, adding that the dead were all males.

    According to the FRSC, 13 of the corpses have been deposited at the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital mortuary, while the other five were taken to the morgue at Kwali General Hospital.

    The commission said that N217,000 was recovered from the wrecked bus, and promised that the money would be handed over to relations of the victims.

    “The FRSC wishes to urge those whose relations travelled through the Kano–Lagos and Lokoja –Sokoto routes to check the Kwali General Hospital and University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, Gwagwalada for identification and collection of the corpses.

    “The injured victims have been taken to the Gwagwalada Teaching Hospital for medical attention.”

    It said that 96 people, including 70 males, 16 females and 10 children were involved in the crash.

    The statement appealed to motorists to avoid night journeys because of the dangers associated with such trips.

  • Unending saga of governor’s Abuja ‘property’

    The National Judicial Council (NJC) queries the Chief Judge of the Federal Capital Territory over failure to carry out a court order. Assistant Editor, GBADE OGUNWALE, reports

    Justice Jude Okeke of High Court 21 of the Federal Capital Territory had ruled on a case brought before him by a company, Nestello Gateways Group, against the Governor of Zamfara State, Alhaji Abdulaziz Yari. The company had sued Yari who was at the time a serving member of the House of Representatives to court over a property rented out to him by it in 2008 but which the governor claimed to have bought from an erstwhile employee of the company, Mr. Obina Kanu, sometime in 2010. The bone of contention was that Kanu, who is now on the run and has been declared wanted by the police, was alleged to have sold the property without the consent of the owners.

    In the judgement delivered by Justice Okeke on June 11, 2010, the judge had ordered the eviction of the governor and had also ordered him to pay outstanding rent arrears and profit, totalling about N400, 000 to the owners of the property. However, owing to some inexplicable administrative hiccups, the eviction order could not be effected until May 8, 2012. The eviction order was successfully executed with every single unit of the governor’s personal effects evacuated and moved to a magistrate court in Karu, one of the satellite towns in the FCT. But without any recourse to the court, the possession of the property reverted to Governor Yari the very next day, May 9, 2010, ostensibly on “orders from above”. Based on this queer order, the governor moved back into the house with all his personal property earlier seized by the court released to him. Piqued by the governor’s action, owners of the property had gone back to court to seek enforcement of the eviction order. Consequently, the court ordered another eviction on October 15, 2012. Armed with the court judgment and police approval to that effect, the court’s enforcement officers arrived at the property. The enforcement officers were prevented from executing the order by fierce-looking armed policemen.

    In a report submitted to the Director of Litigation and signed by the court’s enforcement team leader, Mallam Abunakar Karofi, and dated October 16, 2012, the court officials narrated what they described as a shocking experience in the course of their official duty. A certified copy of the report, sourced by our correspondent read in part: “On the 15th of October, 2012, we went to the premises known as No. 1 Fatai Williams Street, Asokoro, Abuja (herein after referred to as the premises) to enforce and handover the keys to the premises as previously approved by the Deputy Sheriff and the Director of Litigation. The ruling was given by Justice Jude Okeke on the 26th September, 2012.

    All necessary paper work was done and concluded before we set out to enforce the said judgment. We got the police report and the police approval, which we used to book our arrival at the Asokoro Police Station to notify them of our purpose and destination. Upon our arrival at the residence, we met about eight people who unknown to us, were mobile policemen, supposedly stationed in the premises. We introduced ourselves and told them our intention, but to our greatest surprise, they said “NO”, they said nothing will be enforced; they quickly went inside the house and appeared fully dressed in their mobile police uniform and carrying guns.”

    The full report detailed how they were prevented from carrying out a legitimate court order.

    Disturbed by this act of obstruction of justice by the governor and the policemen, the Director of Litigation of the Court, Uche Ezinne Bilikisu, on October 16, 2012, wrote a memo to the Chief Registrar, Mrs Oluwatoyin Yahaya seeking directive as to the appropriate action on the matter. The Chief Registrar had written a memo which she forwarded to the Chief Judge, Justice Lawal Gummi. The Chief Registrar’s minutes on the memo to the Chief Judge, reads: “My lord, the narration on page 73-75 is most disappointing. I urge my lord to consider writing the Inspector General of Police and CP, FCT on the behaviour of their men”. The memo was dated October 17, 2012. The Chief Judge asked the Chief Registrar to write to the CP. But he was silent on the need to write to the Inspector General of Police, as suggested in the memo.

    Consequently, the Director of Litigation had, on January 14, 2013, written to the then Commissioner of Police, FCT Command, Mr. Aderele Shinaba, reproducing extracts from the report of the court’s enforcement officers and demanding that the said policemen, already identified, be reprimanded. Nothing was done even before the commissioner was redeployed.

    At this point, the governor had started reconstruction work on the building with the roof, windows and other fittings dismantled. Scaffolds were erected around what is left of the structure. Alarmed by the development, the owners of the property on December 17, 2012, petitioned the National Judicial Council (NJC) chaired by the Chief Justice of Nigeria, detailing the sequence of events in respect of the case and the shoddy handling of same.

    The petitioners also narrated how several requests they made to the court to collect the keys to the property were ignored by the authorities of the court. In the petition, the petitioners pointed fingers at Chief Judge Gummi, the trial judge, Justice Okeke, the Chief Registrar and the Director of Litigation. Apparently ruffled by the content of the petition, the Director of Litigation, acting on behalf of the Chief Registrar, quickly wrote to the lawyer of the petitioners, Amobi Nzelu, to come and collect the keys to the property.

    The letter, dated January 18, 2013 stated: “We refer to your letters dated 10th May, 2012, 18th May, 2012 and 2nd August, 2012 respectively requesting for the release of keys of the recovered N0.1, Fatai Williams, Asokoro, Abuja. I am directed to inform you that the keys are ready for collection and that you may come for the same please. Thank you for your usual cooperation.”

    Meanwhile, written requests previously made by the property owners on the three separate dates as indicated in the Director of Litigation’s letter, had been ignored by the authorities of the court. In response to the belated letter by the court, requesting the property owners to come forward for the keys, Nzelu had, in a letter dated January 17, 2013, expressed disappointment with the actions of certain top officials of the court in respect of the case. Curiously, while the letter by Director of Litigation was dated January 18, 2013, Nzelu’s response was dated January 17, 2013. Could the lawyer’s response have come a day before he received the letter he responded to?

    The entire scenario raises questions about the sanctity of judicial pronouncements .

     

  • Ogun PDP: The Abuja ‘coup’

    Ogun PDP: The Abuja ‘coup’

    There has been an upbeat in the polity. From all indications, there is a looming volatile and combustible confusion that is capable of tearing into shreds the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, the party that claims to be the biggest in Africa.

    There’s no doubt that the PDP is a party run by ‘big people’, which has offered too little to Nigerians in the last 14 years of democratic governance. Therefore, those who call the party an alliance of strange bedfellows may not be too wrong after all as most of the members seem to be united in only one accord – the love of the stomach and filthy lucre.

    Every now and again, the rumbles that tear through the soul of the party are far greater than a volcanic eruption with devastating consequences. I am sure, Bamanga Tukur, the national chairman of the party, cannot be sleeping with his two eyes closed at the moment. This is because some elements within the party cannot really come to terms with his style of administration. To them, he has come on board to ‘chop’ and not to offer any valuable legacy in leadership.

    For now, Tukur seems to have held the rampaging tempest trying to dislodge him from his post at bay. One moment, it is as if he would not survive yet another day in office; the next moment, he is on the offensive again, fighting real and imaginary enemies. By the last count, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, the former national secretary of the party, and Bode Mustapha, the national auditor, have been yanked off their offices. If Oyinlola’s ouster was through the instrumentality of the law, Mustapha’s case was quite curious, dramatic, intriguing and strange. The latter was the culmination of several subtle but treacherous moves aided and abetted by Tukur and his lackeys. In this latest chess game, Bode George, the discredited party chieftain who is going about with a moral baggage of an ex-convict, played a prominent role.

    George had, a fortnight ago, surreptitiously corralled chieftains of the party from the South-west into Abuja for a meeting with Tukur. Some of the leaders of the party who could read between the lines stayed away from that purposeless extravaganza. But others, who were goaded by vaulting ambitions and greed, could not smell any rat. They consequently rail-roaded their motley crowd of followers into the Golgotha that had been prepared for them in Abuja. What followed is the mass slaughter that was unleashed on the unsuspecting party faithful.

    Though the ‘family meeting’ was cloaked in the façade of a reconciliation gambit, those at the meeting were dumbfounded when they discovered that they had voluntarily walked into a booby trap set for them by Bode George and others. In one fell swoop, all the contending groups in Ogun State PDP – the Olusegun Obasanjo’s, Jubril Martins Kuye’s and Gbenga Daniel’s groups – were all deposited inside the trash can. The only man left standing is Buruji Kashamu, who, apparently, had a fore-knowledge of the tsunami.

    It was a well- orchestrated coup d’état. A few hours to the Abuja parley, Tukur, through a top legal practitioner based in Abuja, went round the courts and withdrew all the pending cases instituted against Buruji’s group by one of the other groups. The dummy that was sold was that Buruji would follow suit and withdraw all his court cases to pave way for genuine reconciliation. But this was not to be. As soon as the other cases were withdrawn, Buruji became adamant and would not take part in such a charade. That action actually sent a danger signal to the other groups. But alas, it was damn too late in the day to do a rethink or a re-map of strategy. That was how the other contending groups were led to the slaughter slab.

    With power now fully in Buruji’s kitty, the businessman turned politician was said to have thoroughly lambasted Gbenga Daniel, the immediate past governor of Ogun State, who is widely believed to have contributed enormously to the streak of misfortune that has trailed the party in Ogun State in recent times. He was said to have pointedly told Daniel that he (Daniel) was an impostor having left the PDP in 2011 to pitch his tent with the Peoples Party of Nigeria, PPN, the party he founded and funded to achieve a selfish motive.

    Daniel has been desperate to return to the PDP ever since because of the messy situation he found himself soon after the 2011 election. In that election, his favourite PPN came a miserable third behind the PDP and the Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, who came second and first respectively. Not even his attempt to ‘romance’ Kunle Amosun, the incumbent governor of the state, now his nemesis, had paid off. Instead, Daniel has been at the receiving end of a barrage of legal cocktails which have greatly unsettled him. He is, therefore, believed to be seeking sanctuary in the PDP as one sure way to wriggle out of the political cobweb in which he has been trapped.

    During the campaign for the 2011 general election, Daniel had confidently boasted to whoever cared to listen, including President Goodluck Jonathan himself, that he was capable of winning the governorship election in Ogun State, through the PPN. At that time, his illusion was that he could win the election and then ‘decamp’ with his PPN followers almost immediately back to the PDP. By doing this, he was obviously infatuated with a false sense of superiority and unfounded popularity even at a time it was clear that his public rating had plummeted.

    It appeared that Jonathan and the party hierarchy in Abuja was sucked in by these vainglorious and delusive promises. This is apparent from events leading to the 2011 election. Daniel had so much sweet-tongued the president to toeing his line of thoughts that any contrary opinion expressed over the delicate position of the PDP in Ogun State election at that time was easily dismissed with a wave of the hand.

    Today, Daniel is like a fish out of water, hence his desperation for a reunion with Ogun PDP by all means. Unfortunately, in trying to reunite with the PDP in Ogun State, he is not willing to follow the laid-down procedure of the party -go back to his ward and rejoin the party. Perhaps, he believes that as a former chief executive of the state, it would be too demeaning for him to be subjected to such party procedures. He has not also helped matters by his blunt refusal to make up with those whom he had stepped or even crushed their toes during the 2011 general election. Above all, there is also this problem of trying to seize the control of the PDP in Ogun State, a move many of the stakeholders consider insulting and outlandish.

    Apart from the kid’s gloves with which Mr. President, Tukur and the party hierarchy in Abuja are treating Daniel for reasons best known to them, some of the past governors of PDP, namely Segun Oni, Olusegun Agagu and Adebayo Alao-Akala, are also believed to be fronting for him and doing whatever is possible to bring him back to the fold. Of particular mention is Oni, who, as former vice-chairman of the party in the South-west, preoccupied himself with the task of bringing in the embattled former governor. Unfortunately, that solo effort has led to his sudden ouster from the exalted position.

    By now, all the powerful men of yesterday must have seen the nakedness of power. They are now like political lepers, courtesy of selfishness and greed. What is certain is that Tukur may have only scored a Pyrrhic victory as the South-west PDP, particularly Ogun PDP, gets further enmeshed and embroiled in internal wrangling. Until genuine reconciliation is effected, the crisis in Ogun State PDP is far from being over. In fact, it has just begun!

  • Chime reported back in Abuja

    Chime reported back in Abuja

    Ailing Governor Sullivan Chime of Enugu State is reported back in the country.

    Reports said Chime arrived Abuja on a scheduled British Airways flight at about 5.45am on Thursday.

    The Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Chukwudi Achife confirmed the governor’s return and said that he will be in Enugu on Friday.

    More details later…

     

  • Commissioning of Federal Staff Hospital, Jabi, Abuja

    Commissioning of Federal Staff Hospital, Jabi, Abuja