Tag: Anambra

  • Eight corps members renounce cultism, drug abuse in Anambra

    A total of eight corps members deployed to Anambra state for their national service on Tuesday denounced publicly their membership of cultism and drug addiction.

    No fewer than 15 of them also publicly gave up irregular migration, while others publicly embraced the Nigerian culture for the first time.

    Speaking during the closing ceremony of 2019 Batch ‘A’ orientation course at the Umunya camp, the NYSC State Coordinator, Kehinde Aremu said the achievements were recorded as result of trust and team spirit among camp officials.

    He said, “We have confidence that they have finally given up drugs especially marijuana. We also have every reason to believe that those who renounced cultism won’t go back to it again.

    “A marriage proposal of love with rings was publicly made this last Sunday between two corps members on camp.

    “Your excellency, you will be the special guest of honor when they fix their wedding date because it is Anambra wedding.

    “These are the manifestation of the spirit of Anambra, the light of the nation.”

    Aremu revealed that the repentant corps members would be handed over to the National Drug Law enforcement agencies for proper follow-up.

    He further challenged them to see themselves as revolutionary torch bearers, good ambassadors of the leading youth organization in Africa and shining examples to other youths.

    READ ALSO: Bring perpetrators, sponsors of cultism in Rivers to book, AAC’s Awara tells FG

    Governor of the state, Chief Willie Obiano, disclosed his administration’s plan to improve the remuneration and allowances of corps members to be posted to the rural and hard-to-reach parts of the state.

    Obiano, represented by commissioner for Youth Empowerment and Creative Economy, Bonaventure Enemali, was optimistic of the corps members’ readiness to positively elevate the fortunes of the state with their talents, education and high sense of responsibility.

    “Ample opportunity shall be given to you to contribute and excel in the implementation of government programmes, especially in areas of providing manpower for quality education, health care, agriculture, among others.

    “We shall not spare any effort in ensuring that your proven expertise and creative energy are fully harnessed towards making Anambra’s light more luminous and to improve the lives of the citizenry,” he assured.

  • Regulating Anambra’s obituary economy 

    Anambra, the mercurial pearl of Igbo nation nestling River Niger, is in the news again.

    We are not about to revisit the ferment of executive intemperance that led the sitting governor into allegedly calling the whole leader of the pan-Igbo organization, Ohanaeze, “an idiot” for endorsing the presidential candidate of the main opposition party ahead of the just-concluded general elections.

    Rather, we are confronted by the audacity of a new piece of legislation by the Anambra State Assembly seeking to smash through cultural barriers into some dark necromantic alley. Unambiguously named “A Law To Control Burial/Funeral Ceremonial Activities” and passed by a majority of the legislature, the act expressly seeks to abolish ostentation and impose a new culture of modesty. All thanks to its sponsor, the iconoclastic Charles Ezeani (representing Anaocha II constituency), who says it “is aimed at cutting down the cost of burial activities in the state”.

    Should Governor Willy Obiano assent with his golden fountain pen, it then becomes a grave felony ”to deposit any corpse in the mortuary or any place beyond two months from the date of the death, while burial ceremonies in the state shall be for one day.”

    No person, it further forewarns grimly, shall subject any relation of the deceased person to a mourning period of more than one week from the date of the burial ceremony.

    To confer the sobriety thought appropriate in the circumstance, the law also forbids traditional gunshot salute, praise-singing, blocking of roads/streets during obsequies or assumed ritual destruction of property.

    In what could only be targeted at relieving the bereaved of financial burden or unreasonable expectations, another clause states specifically that the family of the deceased “shall provide food for their kindred, relatives and other sympathizers at their own discretion.”

    Taken together, these proposals are, to say the least, quite earth-shaking indeed. Before arriving at this historic juncture, the report however did not state how much of public buy-in had been secured through the agency of public hearing facilitated by the state assembly over a potentially explosive proposition.

    While Ezeani’s motive could hardly be faulted in nobility and public-spiritedness, however, considering that key provisions are framed by a thinking that tends to suggest extremism of sorts, one is persuaded to assume that not much consultation took place with the stakeholders. It is very doubtful if the vested interests in the obituary value chain would have just sat by and allowed an arrangement that seeks to dim their lights or simply take bread away from their tables without raising a voice of dissent.

    By that single law, a whole universe of professionals will undoubtedly be facing existential threat, if not extinction already. A more austere burial means bearish market for mortuaries and the morticians, for instance. So, how are caterers, “Aso Ebi” (fabric) merchants, event planners, vintners, lessor of marquee/canopy/plastic chairs expected to survive now?

    What then happens to the familiar hawkers of white handkerchiefs or hand fans? To say nothing about traffickers of mint-fresh banknotes for “spraying”. Or those who thought they had struck gold by stocking milllion units of the rave-of-the-moment – the pistol-like cash-spraying machine fabricated in – where else? – China.

    We have not even considered “professional mourners” on hire to wail louder than the bereaved when the latter become too tired or had lost their voices to too much sorrow.

    Moreover, big or elaborate funerals also create brisk business for the masters of the two contrasting realms – the cosmic and the secular: rainmakers and alchemists who solemnly prime the canon for traditional gun-salute on the one hand; and native drummers who fall over each other in the driveway to usher you into the party venues with soliciting crescendo.

    Well, we were also not told whether Ezeani had contemplated a ceiling to the cost of a coffin permissible in Anambra soil henceforth. That may, in fact, drag us into a corpus of morbid details like the apocryphal tale of a thrifty coffin-maker who, upon being pressed for a concession, promised the customer a discount the next time. Or the theatrics of the hyperactive curator of the communal hearse, gleaming from meticulous preservation probably by generations, its utility yet creatively extended by the current custodian to double as family car to church service on Sundays.

    And lo, the king of them all – the musician who makes a fortune from performing at the big parties which the new Anambra law seeks to outlaw. At a time piracy has virtually made album sale unprofitable, who does not know that most artistes now hustle for live performances for subsistence, aside endorsement deals with rich corporate bodies. Of course, praise-singing is the short-cut.

    As an editor some fifteen years ago, I remember being approached by one of our star reporters (Emeka Eyinnaya) saying a famous Igbo musician was aghast at the headline given his interview we had published the previous week.

    While responding to a specific question, the iconic entertainer had stated rather casually that he was not in a position to know whether the provenance of money sprayed on him by those he usually eulogized at soirées was tainted or not.

    I cast the said headline to reflect such self-acquittal from possible complicity on account of a murky source.

    Apparently, a good number of his big spenders – most probably bigtime conmen or money ritualists – had rang him up to express bitterness at his impudence to speak so uncomplimentarily of the hands feeding him.

    But note, the respondent didn’t disown or dispute any portion of the transcript which could have been cited as basis to fault the “offending” title, but was simply unhappy that the interview he was reluctant to grant in the first place was now going to pour sand in his garri.

    Such is the sensitivity that sometimes underlines the rendition of eulogy at social parties and the tightrope musicians have to walk thereafter to remain in business.

    But while all the foregoing merely pertains to the consequences, the new Anambra funeral act would also appear to be in cold contempt of something more substantial – cultural sensibilities or habits. While it is much easier to fix damage at the material level, altering things at the cultural realm is never an easy task. Those already thinking the proposed law will suddenly usher the desired change in social behavior in that jurisdiction will, therefore, need some reality check by simply recalling the anti-spraying law similarly pushed by the Obasanjo administration in 2007.

    Despite that section 21 subsection 1-4 of the CBN bill passed by the sixth National Assembly prescribes heavy penalties beginning with arrest and a prison term of six months or N50,000 fine, Nigerians have not stopped spraying crisp Naira notes at social parties.

    Let us face it: the Igbo in Anambra are certainly not alone in turning burial to carnival of sorts. In most African societies, loud funerals are not only deemed fitting finale to an illustrious life but also considered one last debt owed the dead.

    Therefore, the common prayer among folks is not just the grace to die not faraway from one’s wardrobe only but also in the arms of one’s offspring who should be in material position to meet often high expectations of the community.

    So, whereas the bereaved in, say, western societies might consider as parting gift memorializing the departed by instituting a foundation to propagate the idea they cherished while alive, the average African would rather preserve the memory of their dead by hosting a shindig to be remembered as the grandest in a generation.

    In Yorubaland, such jollification falls under the rubric of “Owambe”. In Edo, it is called “Obito”.

    It is, therefore, doubtful if this age-old lifestyle can be legislated out of existence overnight like the Anambra’s funeral act envisages. The “Owambe” industry in Lagos is reportedly worth a whopping N26b, for instance. While the culture of ostentation must be seen as constituting ready normative offence, one would rather suggest the adoption of a civic engagement approach to wean the society off such hang-over. The underling mindset speaks to what psychologists call the edifice complex. It partly explains the obsession for bogus things – big cars, big houses, long convoys.

    We also see this showoffishness manifesting in the knack for titles that make many insist that their names be prefixed with “Sir, Chief, Dr, Engineer…”

    There is an urgent need for a re-orientation of the society to begin to see the nobility in simplicity. The crusade is not for government alone but also the traditional and religious institutions as well. Meanwhile, rather than prohibit loud parties, what stops the authorities from imposing punitive taxes on those who choose to exceed the threshold considered modest?

     

     

    Sowore’s affirmative gesture 

    Given the popular notion that lack of accountability is one of the chief ills of our politics, how amazing that an affirmative gesture a fortnight ago by the presidential candidate of the African Action Congress (AAC), Omoyele Sowore, went almost unnoticed.

    Without any prompting, AAC released a statement of account of its campaign spanning a year. We are told the party was able to raise a total of N157 million through a GoFundMe vehicle opened with Zenith Bank.

    It covered assorted costs ranging from travel, accommodation, renting town halls, refreshments, mobilizing attendees to “N740,000 spent on security and intelligence”.

    With this, Sowore, publisher of Sahara Reporters (the hard-hitting citizen-journalism platform), has undoubtedly set a record in campaign financing in Nigeria and demonstrated a responsibility and accountability rare among recipients of public donations towards a civic cause.

    Well, it surely will be a tall order asking the older, more established parties to render similar account or open their books for public scrutiny. More like the futility of looking for a virgin in a maternity ward. Interestingly, Sowore, a one-time student union president at University of Lagos, would seem the biggest revelation of the 2019 general polls, coming sixth ahead of a few big names in the contest involving 73 candidates.

    It is quite instructive that AAC’s GoFundMe account swelled from the widow’s mite sent by tens of thousands of Nigerians sold on Sowore’s advocacy of a new Nigeria. There couldn’t be a better way to show fidelity to those who sowed in faith and who, potentially, could become the foundation of Sowore’s captive audience for future aspirations.

    While Sowore has given an account, not a few other parties are still embroiled in bitter fight over money. We hear of party executives bickering with their standard-bearers either over not making full disclosure of cash donations or spending without transparency.

    It is as if some did not see a border between their personal pockets and the party’s pouch.

    The puzzle then: if such folks cannot account for little purse of a small party, how are we to trust them with the nation’s treasury?

  • Anambra to establish farm markets

    The Anambra State Government has announced plans to establish agro-farm markets in major cities across the state to encourage farmers to sell their produce and boost agriculture in the state.

    Commissioner for Agriculture, Mechanisation, Processing and Export Afam Mbanefo, made this known while opening a Commodity Agricultural Forum (CAF) in Awka yesterday.

    The forum consists of agricultural stakeholders under the International Fund For Agricultural Development (IFAD) Assisted Value Chain Development Programme (VCDP) in the state.

    Mbanefo said the ministry was also working closely with the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) to ensure that only certified and wholesome products were sold to consumers.

    “We have designed the structure and how it will work; we are creating platforms for farmers to key into businesses from their produce,” he said.

    Read also: Regulating Anambra’s obituary economy 

    Mbanefo also said the government planned to increase inputs disbursement to farmers in the state for the 2019 farming season, particularly farmers affected by the 2018 flood.

    “This year, we brought in lots of tractors and we are targeting rice, maize and cassava.

    “We have already profiled over 3,000 farmers, who will benefit more agro inputs in the coming weeks,” he said.

    The State Programme Coordinator of VCDP, Mr Nnamdi Agwuncha, said the forum was organised to enable stakeholders, including farmers, agro dealers, processors and marketers to share knowledge, showcase achievements and solve challenges.

    “Farmers in the state are not only making money but are also solving problems of food, unemployment, increased income and reducing poverty,” Agwuncha said.

    Also, Mrs Ngozi Ebue of Divine Destiny Multipurpose Cooperative Society, Anaku Community and Mrs Philomen Ekemezie of Amarachukwu Special Purpose Cooperative Society, Umueri community, lauded VCDP for their support.

    The beneficiaries, who shared testimonies of how their lives have been transformed through VCDP’s support, displayed produce, including rice flour, rice seeds, milled rice and cassava chin chin among others.

  • Computer rejects some JAMB candidates in Anambra

    No fewer than 10 candidates for the ongoing Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) in Anambra failed to participate in the examination due to failure of the computer to confirm their thumbprint.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondent, who monitored the UTME in Awka on Friday, reports that the affected candidates for the examination were walked out of the hall because the computers could not confirm them as candidates.

    Some of the candidates who spoke to NAN expressed shock that the computers rejected them after printing out their details.

    Miss Chiamaka Okoro said she registered for the UTME with a centre at Basilica of the Holy Trinity center at Onitsha but was asked to leave the hall when the computer could not confirm her candidacy for the exam.

    Okoro said that she had lodged her complaint at the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) office in Awka as was directed by its official at the centre.

    Mr Paschal Okoro, the father of the candidate, described the experience as `embarrassing’ saying that a letter had been submitted to the Abuja office through Awka JAMB office.

    He called on the examination body to work on the correction process as soon as possible to enable the students participate in the ongoing examination.

    Miss Francisca Onuzulike said that her details was not also confirmed at her exam centre adding that she had already lodged her complaints to JAMB.

    Onuzulike however, said that there was no specific assurance from JAMB officers but that her complaint was documented in a paper given to them.

    Miss Amarachi Orjiaka said that her thumb print was not popping up during her verification at her Army Day centre in Onitsha which led to her not taking part in the April 11 examination scheduled for 7am.

    Orjiaka said that the mix up was very demoralising and appealed to the examination body to take quick action and create a date for her own examination.

    Meanwhile, Miss Ngozi Nwude a senior officer at Integral Development Consults IDK,Computer Based Test (CBT) approved centre in Awka metropolis said that the UTME was moving on well in the centre

    Read also: Candidates urge JAMB to upgrade computers for calculations

    Nwude said that some of their candidates had thumb print confirmation problem and that their records had been taken and incident form given to the affected candidates to fill for actions to be taken by the appropriate body.

    She said outside the thumb print confirmation that there was no other problem encountered so far while the examination progressed.

    Miss Charity Uboma, a candidate of the centre told NAN that she experienced no hitches while answering her questions.

    Miss Grace Kachi, another candidate from the IDK centre said that she preferred the CBT to pencil and paper examinations.

    NAN reports that the JAMB officers refused to speak to the correspondent who was in the office to ascertain the situation of the examinations in the state.

    The agency also reports that 33 approved CBT centres exist in Anambra and that UTME was ongoing in the state. (NAN)

  • Obosi Crisis: You lack powers to suspend Chiefs, Family tells Monarch

    The Umuezechieamalu Family of Obosi Kingdom in Idemili North Local Government Area of Anambra has rejected the suspension of their representative, Chief Hyacinth Udemba, from the King’s Cabinet (“Eze na Ndi Ichie Obosi”).

    The family which expressed their rejection on Friday after they met to deliberate the matter.

    It will be recalled that Obosi monarch, Igwe Chidubem Iweka, had in March suspended three members of the cabinet for allegedly joining domes youths to take dead bodies of two Obosi youths to his palace.

    The act, he said, was considered sacrilegious as Obosi customs forbids the traditional ruler from seeing human corpse.

    Others suspended were Chief Osita Chidoka (Ike Obosi) and Chief Linus Mgbakaogu (Atta Obosi).

    Read Also: Obi campaigns in Obosi, Nkpor, others

    But the Umuezechieamalu Family in a statement by Mr. Obiora Arinze and Mr Tony Arinze, Chairman and Secretary respectively said they were disappointed with the way they had been treated in spite of their contributions to the traditional institution.

    They noted that members of Ndi Ichie had immunity from committing sacrileges as the customs of Obosi covers them under (“One abu Nso”), adding that only the particular family that performs cleansing rites had the right to declare an act a sacrilege.

    “It is therefore, painful that the only reward for the indispensable role we have the in crowning of Eze Obosi has in recent time been the impunity of arbitrarily suspending of our Ndi Ichie without reference to our family being stakeholders in kingship institution

    “In view of the above, we disagree with the suspension of “Akamkposi Obosi” by a nonentity in the Eze na Ndi Ichie relationship.

    “We wish to state that the Igwe has been proved not to possess the powers to suspend or expel Ndi Ichie Obosi as earlier attempts were unsuccessful and of no effect whatsoever,” they said.

    Umuezechieamalu Family therefor, calls for the immediate reversal of the suspension and urged that due process be followed if there was need.

    “We urge the public to discountenance the various media propaganda by any individual or group which are meant to tarnish the image of our well revered son, obviously to divert attention from the heinous crimes and murders going on in our community.

    “Finally, we pray that men of good conscience and you Igwe should initiate a process that will resolve the various escalating crisis in Obosi to enthrone peaceful co-existence among our people,” they said.

  • FG dissolves governing council of Oko Poly

    President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the dissolution of the Governing Council of the Federal Polytechnic, Oko, Anambra state.

    This is contained in a statement by the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Education, Mr Sonny Echono in Abuja on Thursday.

    READ ALSO: Oko poly campus submerged in flood

    The permanent secretary said the dissolution was with immediate effect.

    He said the federal government appreciated the services the former council members rendered to the polytechnic, while wishing them success in their future endeavours.

    Chief Lasbury Amadi was the Chairman of the board of the Polytechnic.

  • Breaking: Anambra Assembly passes bill to reduce burial expenses

    A Bill seeking to curtail burial and funeral expenses in Anambra State has been passed by the state House of Assembly.

    The Bill which was sponsored by the member representing Anaocha 11 constituency,Hon Charles Ezeani, was passed after due consideration by the House during Wednesday’s plenary.

    The burial and funeral expenses had been on the rise in the state, which forced the Catholic Bishop of Awka, Most Rev Paulinus Ezeokafor to raise the alarm a few years ago.

    The Cleric said if not curtailed, people in the state would go hungry after such burial ceremonies, while also advocated for a one-day burial instead of three and four days being practised in Anambra.

    The Bill provided that in the event of death, no person shall deposit any corpse in the mortuary or any place beyond two months from the date of the death

    Also, while burial ceremonies in the state shall be for one day.

    The Bill equally places ban on destruction of property, gunshots, praise singing, blocking of roads and streets during burial ceremonies in the state as defaulters shall be punished according to the law.

    Read Also; Anambra APC to tribunal: nullify APGA’s victory in Idemili South

    The bill also made it clear that from the commencement of the law, no person shall subject any relation of the deceased person to a mourning period of more than one week from the date of the burial ceremony.

    While explaining further, the sponsor of the bill , Charles Ezeani, maintained that the bill also made provision for a monitoring and implementation committee that would enforce the law as well as their responsibilities.

    He described the bill as important and a great achievement by the 6th Anambra Assembly, adding that the bill had put to rest the high cost of burial and funeral activities in the state.

    However, the speaker, Hon Rita Maduagwu commended the lawmakers for passing the bill.

    According to her, it would moderate burial expenses in the state.

  • Anambra APC to tribunal: nullify APGA’s victory in Idemili South

    The All Progressives Congress ( APC ), has urged the Anambra Election Petitions Tribunal, sitting in Awka to nullify the election of Mr Chukwuka Ezenwune of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) as winner of Idemili South constituency.

    Ezenwune was declared winner of the March 9 state assembly election for Idemili South constituency by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    But Mr Bona Orakwe, of the APC in his petition, marked EPT/AN/SHA/35/2019, contended that the APGA candidate did not score the highest number of lawful votes.

    Joined as respondents are APGA, INEC, Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) and Returning Officer for the local government area.

    The petitioner contended that the APGA candidate did not score lawful majority votes cast in the election and therefore should not have been returned as winner.

    Read Also: Ambode hails Lagosians for remaining steadfast with APC

    Ezenwune scored 10, 710 votes, ahead of the second-placed Mr Frank Okigbo of People Democratic Party who scored 4,071, while Orakwe garnered 3,210 votes to come third in the contest.

    Orakwe said the election was marred with irregularities and substantial non-compliance to the Electoral Act, which affected the result declared by INEC.

    He contended that he scored the highest number of lawful votes cast and should be declared the winners or in the alternative nullify the election held on March 9 and order for fresh poll.

  • ‘Obi introduced equity not zoning in Anambra’

    Former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi did not introduce nor contemplate introducing zoning for the governorship elections, his media adviser, Valentine Obienyem, has said.

    Obienyem was reacting to reports that Obi introduced zoning in the governorship politics of Anambra State.

    In a statement yesterday, Obienyem acknowledged that Obi insisted that the governorship should go to Anambra North against position of his then party, the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). According to him, it was more of Obi, “in the spirit of justice and equity insisting that the governorship should go to Anambra North since they were, at that time, the only zone yet to produce a governor”.

    He noted that it was more of Obi trying to achieve balance of representation.

    Obienyem added that his boss’s position was “equitable and not to be confused with entrenchment of rotation in Anambra’s Charter of Equity or whatever it is”.

    The statement reads: “If at any time the state wants rotation or any form of political arrangement, it would not be the imposition of one man because, if allowed to stand, history may interpret such as a predisposition of Obi to autocracy.

    “In a democracy, decisions are by consensus and not a one-man-show.”

  • Anambra most wanted criminal suspect remanded

    Most wanted criminal suspect in Anambra state, Ikechukwu Udensi (alias IKANDA), has been remanded in Onitsha prison till Thursday, May 30.

    This followed his arraignment on Friday before Chief Magistrate, Chioma Amuche of Magistrate Court Two Onitsha over his involvement in the murder of an Onitsha-based businessman late Ndubuisi Nwokolo.

    The suspect was accused of committing the crime on June 2018 in accomplice with five others at large including Tochukwu Aneke, Eze Okwuchukwu and Ebuka Udensi.

    Counsel to the complainant, Chief Barr Charles Okafor, lauded the Nigerian Police Force for the arrest as well as ensuring his prosecution for murder case.

    He said: “We are looking upon the judiciary to deliver justice in this case. The Magistrate Court Onitsha has no jurisdiction to try the case presided over by Magistrate Chioma Amuche.

    “The only thing she has power to do is to remand the accused person; after which we are coming back on 30th May 2019 for compliance.

    “The compliance is to ensure that the case file is forwarded to Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) for which the case would be referred to Onitsha High Court which has powers and jurisdiction to entertain murder cases.”

    Chairman of Ogalonye Bright Street Line, Main Market Onitsha, Mr. Francis Maduka, demanded justice to put an end to this kind of atrocity in the state.

    He said: “Every right thinking person in Anambra state understood that IKANDA was declared wanted for many killing atrocities he has committed in Onitsha.

    Read Also: NEPAD trains 500 Anambra youths

    “Although he has those backing him up, he takes the state as though it was his personal property; that’s why he killed the deceased.”

    Present at the court were the mother, father and wife of the deceased (Ndubuisi Nwokolo), former chairman, Onitsha Market Amalgamated Traders Association (OMATA), Chief Godwin Okeke.

    There were protesters outside the courtroom, demanding fierce justice against IKANDA who allegedly killed one of their own.