Tag: begins

  • Fed Govt begins payment to ex-Nigeria Airways workers

    THE Federal Government has begun the payment of 50 per cent entitlements of ex-workers of the defunct Nigeria Airways, who have successfully completed verification exercise.

    Chairman, Nigeria Airways Elders Forum Mr. Godwin Jibodu confirmed the development to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday in Lagos.

    Jibodu said the government had kept to its promise to start crediting the bank accounts of the beneficiaries, who have completed the verification process.

    He said: “I can confirm that some of our people have started receiving alerts and it is wonderful news to us. The payment comes three days after a pensioner completes the process.

    “We are very grateful to the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration for finally coming to wipe our tears away after all these years.

    “The government has given hope to these pensioners and now, they will be able to attend to their health issues and other responsibilities.”

  • Lagos West Anglican begins Synod today

    The four-day annual Synod of Anglican Diocese of Lagos West begins today.

    The annual meeting will attract dignitaries, the clergy, laity and delegates from churches.

    The Synod is expected to take decisions on spiritual and temporal matters concerning the Church in Nigeria and the country’s precarious situation.

    Diocesan Bishop Revd. James Olusola Odedeji, will use the Synod to further shape his episcopacy, built around three points: spiritual development, aggressive evangelism and youth empowerment.

    A statement yesterday by the Diocesan Communicator, Mr. Mobolade Omonijo, said highlights of the programmes, which will end with a thanksgiving on Sunday, include an opening service today, presentation of the presidential charge tomorrow by the bishop and final deliberations by committees and approval of communiqué on Saturday.

    Those expected include Lagos State Governor Akinwumi Ambode and other dignitaries from Lagos and other states.

    Dioceses within the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) and the United States of America (U.S.A) have also indicated their representation.

    Bishop Odedeji, who is concerned about the precarious situation in the country, has held prayers, starting with last Friday’s pre-Synod vigil at the Archbishop Vining Memorial Cathedral Church in Ikeja, and all churches, since then.

  • Melaye’s recall process begins April 28

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has released the timetable for the recall of Senator Dino Melaye (Kogi West).

    The Kogi State Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Prof. James Apam, said following the Appeal Court’s ruling that the recall can start, INEC fixed April 28 for the verification and  May 5 for the referendum.

    Apam, who spoke at a stakeholders’ forum in Lokoja, said the process will begin with an invite to electorate, who signed the recall register, to identify their signatures.

    According to him, if the process is successful, the commission will proceed to the next stage where a referendum of all registered voters will be conducted.

    He continued: “Here, voters will be asked to vote either Yes or No to the question of whether they want Senator Dino Melaye recalled.

    “If the answer is able to meet the constitutional requirements of 51 per cent ‘Yes’, the process moves to the next stage, but if it fails, the process stops.”

    The Court of Appeal in Abuja, last week, ruled against Melaye’s suit challenging the move to recall him.

    “As a law abiding people, INEC will not do anything outside the dictate of the law. That is why we have to wait till after the judgment before going ahead with the process”, Apam added.

    On the continuous voters’ registration, Apam said 210,000 Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) were ready for collection, and so urged owners to come for them.

     

  • Fed Govt begins work on 41 roads

    Fed Govt begins work on 41 roads

    THE Federal Government has concluded plans to begin road repair interventions on 41 damaged highways across the country following flooding.

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola said this yesterday in Abuja at a meeting with contractors handling Federal Government’s projects.

    Fashola said the rehabilitation will be embarked upon alongside ongoing road construction projects.

    Popular among the roads are Benue-Makurdi highway, major highways in the Southeast among other flooded projects inspected by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

    “I will quickly also go to the interventions we have already planned, in addition to major construction works that is going on. We also have rehabilitation works using specific contractors to improve motorability and we would be working on 41 roads across the country and trying to make some remediation for them as a result of what has happened during the rainy seasons.

    “We will be intervening across the country, including the Benue-Makurdi, South-East and places where the Vice President visited as a result of flood. So, we are just getting ready to complete our procurement processes and roll-out,” Fashola said.

    He issued a directive to the contractors to ensure completion of the projects before the Christmas season.

    Fashola said it became important, considering traffics and other difficulties commuters might face during the festive period.

    According to him, the meeting was meant to get contractors to site, as the country approaches end of the year.

    On the Federal Government’s N100 billion Sukuk bond, he said if fully subscribed, it would cover 25 major roads.

    Sukuk is one of the financial instruments used by governments and organisations to raise funds.

    However, unlike conventional bonds, which proceeds can be used for a wide variety of purposes, including recurrent expenditure, funds realised from Sukuk issuance could only be deployed to assets such as infrastructure.

    Fashola explained that the proposed 25 roads are integral parts of A1 to A4, saying: “If you look at the proposed 25 roads, they are the roads that are integral parts of A1 to A4.

    “The A1 is the Lagos to Sokoto highway, A2 is the Warri-Kastina, A3 is Port Harcourt-Potiskum, Yobe and A4 is Calabar-Maiduguri. One thing that all these roads share in common is that they originate from our ports and end in the boundary… If Sukuk is fully subscribed for, we will have 25 major roads we would have some interventions.”

    But, the contractors stated that pending projects would be completed only, if funding is made available.

    They blamed the weather for delays in project implementation, stressing that it affected progress of some federal projects.

    However, the contractors promised to resume work at the sites immediately the dry season sets in.

  • Agboyi-Ketu LCDA begins flood advocacy

    The Agboyi-Ketu Local Council Development Area (LCDA) has organised an advocacy on flood-prone areas.

    Its Head of the Department of Environment, Ezekiel Odebiyi, who led the exercise at the behest of LCDA Chairman, Mayor Dele Oshinowo, said it would teach council residents how to avert the “impending” flood.

    During the tour of Owode, Ajegunle, Thomas, Lawal and Esomojumi, residents were sensitised on how to ensure safety of life and property.

    Odebiyi warned that dumping of waste into drainage channels, defecating in the open and intake of unhygienic water must be avoided.

    He charged residents to be environmentally conscious, and to do their all to avoid water-borne diseases like cholera, diarrhoea, dysentery, typhoid among others.

    Odebiyi also appealed to them to keep relevant documents safe.

  • Lagos begins demolition of 57 distressed buildings

    Lagos begins demolition of 57 distressed buildings

    The Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA) yesterday began the demolition of 57 distressed buildings across the city.

    The Nation learnt that 114 distressed buildings were identified, 34 on Lagos Island.

    LASBCA officials, escorted by armed policemen, stormed the Island yesterday for the exercise.

    Its General Manager, Lekan Shodeinde, said it was the first phase of the exercise approved by Governor Akinwunmi Ambode.

    Shodeinde, an engineer, said owners were served notices prior to the exercise.

    He said the exercise was to stem the tide of collapsed buildings.

    Thirteen buildings were expected to be demolished yesterday; others would go during the second phase of the exercise.

    Shodeinde said owners would be given 90 days to pay for the demolished buildings, failing which government would seize the land.

    He said before the demolition, owners would be given time to remedy the situation, including subjecting the property to integrity test.

    According to him, the property will be demolished if found to be unsafe after the test.

  • How it all begins

    How it all begins

    The social media was literally on fire last week when the story about the Students Union executives and legislators at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife was reported in the Punch of September 15. The paper reported that the executives presented a budget of N1, 837, 550 to make official phone calls between August, 2015 and January, 2016. Nigerians were furious online.

    According to the paper, it relied on a copy of the Students Union budget made available to it which was debated by members of the student representative council two days before the publication of the story. It added that the leaders also had a separate budget for internet facilities and sending of bulk Short Message Service (SMS).

    The sum, which did not include the one for purchase of phones, was budgeted by the leadership of the central executive council and students’ representative council led by Mr. Omotayo Akande and Mr. Adebari Aare. Others are the clerk, deputy speaker, halls of residence executives, chairmen and secretary of transport, judicial, and budget and finance committees. The students union leaders, who in all budgeted N26, 090, 469 for their various needs, are expecting an income of about N15million.

    A breakdown of the budget showed that the speaker, Mr. Adebari Aare, proposed to spend N232, 500 for official phone calls for 310 days, while the president of the union also proposed to make calls for 180 days with N108, 000. Among other items that surfaced on the president’s budget were fueling at the cost of N270, 000; bus maintenance, N300, 000; ‘intervention’, N300, 000; and security vote, N300, 000.

    Also contained in the speaker’s budget is welfare costing N217, 000; long journey and short journey accommodation, N1, 250, 000; long and short journey trip, N500, 000 among others. However, the paper reported that the Chairman, Budget and Finance Committee, Mr. Abayomi Samuel, said the budget “had not been approved.” His committee also has a budget of N114, 000 for phone calls. “Some of the expenses,” he stated “had been reduced.”

    Wow! We are really living in interesting times. Like some Nigerians who reacted to the story, I wasn’t aware that student leaders now run this kind of budgets. This goes to show the impact our ways of doing things has affected virtually every facet of our society; even the spiritual is not spared.

    Going by the estimate, the expected revenue is N15 million but the student leaders intend to spend N26 million thus leaving a deficit of N11 million. That would be a deficit of about 70 percent! If the leadership of a student union begins to think they should spend money they don’t intend to earn, mostly on frivolous expenditure, is anyone then in doubt that we are already in “deep deep trouble,” (apologies to one of my former lecturers)?

    I definitely did not miss out the sum of N300,000 as “security vote” and another N300,000 for “intervention.” The import of those proposed allocations is that the chairman wants to spend money that would not be accounted for. In governance and political parlance in Nigeria “security vote” and others like “ecological fund” are areas that have been abused in the past – in essence; few actually question how the funds are expended. I still recollect vividly how a late political godfather queried on live television why he should not have a fair chunk of the “security vote” of his state since he plays a pivotal role in containing his ever restless constituency.

    What, I may ask, is the meaning of the N1.25 million voted for “long journey and short journey accommodation” and “long and short journey trip”? My investigation revealed that when student leaders travel to another institution of learning these days they no longer sleep on such campuses but rather sleep in the best hotels in the town. By so doing, they miss out on the peculiarities of the campus in question.

    An ex-student leader told me that most of the leaders travel with a retinue of female “aides” hence the need to sleep in the best hotels in town. And then what can one say about those scandalous sums of money voted for telephone calls?

    I find it extremely disturbing that student leaders would generate this sort of reckless, indeed irresponsible budget proposal. Ironically, it’s a microcosm of the ills of governance in Nigeria. Where do we start to root out the evil? How do they intend to finance the budget deficit of N11 million? Will they go a borrowing or seek for bail-out funds from the institution’s authority?

    Remember these are the youths that Nigerians are hoping to see as tomorrow’s leaders. What good leadership will these students give to the people when they finally become tomorrow’s leaders? That’s why it is important to fight corruption from the grassroots. These student union leaders are already grooming themselves to become monsters when they finally take up public service.

    I was also made to understand that the union leadership may have done their “homework” very well with credible data from the accounts department. They already know the total amount that will accrue to students union’s account from the union dues to be paid by both new and returning students’ at the beginning of the academic session. Perhaps that was why they made a budget of N26million when they already know that N15million revenue will be generated. What it means is that the present SUG will definitely loot the treasury and make sure nothing is left at the end of their tenure. What is being replicated here is what is actually happening in our polity.

    What I equally find worrying about the report was that the students in the school are divided in over this issue. How can, and why should they, be divided over this issue? I expect them to be unified in opposing this highly questionable act by their executives. This is where our problem as a society really lays – our society’s inability to effectively evolve a critical unified public opinion backed up with actions to check dishonesty amongst public office holders.

    These were the same students who reportedly stoned the convoy of former President Goodluck Jonathan who they accused of running a corrupt government. Now they’ve given us a bird’s eye view of the sordid affairs that is a recurring decimal in student leadership these days. Little wonder that their elections now have all the trappings of elections in the “real world.” I was told by a student that some candidates even go to the extent of kidnapping candidates of “opposition parties” before the day of election.

    I don’t think it will come as a shock to many that the government is now fully involved in election matters on our campuses. In the last political dispensation, we saw how student leaders became “endorsement consultants” as they arranged their colleagues to be at the forefront of anointing political candidates contesting various elections.

    A few questions would suffice here: how did things become this terrible? When did we get to a situation where mediocrity had an upper hand over competence and capacity? Where exactly did we miss our steps? Can this situation be remedied or we should, like some have said, resign to fate that it is the will of God for us? I am asking these questions from a myriad of questions against the backdrop of barefaced stories of corruption we hear on a daily basis.

    At the back of my mind, I know the answers are not far-fetched; we’ve lost touch with that core societal values without which a society collapses. We no longer see reasons why things should be done the right way. It’s now “old-fashioned, archaic and retrogressive” to imbibe decorum in our daily engagements. We seem to be in a hurry to always get things done the wrong way.

    If it were in climes where people face facts head-on, citizens would have long hit the streets to draw attention to their woes. We are so comfortable in our dealings that whatever befalls is seen as what God has destined for us. A building that does not follow laid down plans collapses and we say it’s the will of God, a container crushes people to death, it’s still part of God’s will etc. President Buhari hits the bull’s eye some months ago when he said if we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill us.

     

  • Enactus entrepreneurship contest begins

    This year’s edition of Enactus National Entrepreneurship Challenge will start on Tuesday.

    The contest, which will hold at Civic Centre on Victoria Island, Lagos, will be attended by hundreds of students from higher institutions across the country.

    The event with the theme: Enabling progress, will afford participants to showcase their innovative ideas and solutions to many challenges in business, community-based and educational projects.

    The students are expected to tackle real problems that will have positive impact on people, business and society.

    In preparation for the contest, the participants visited cities and rural communities across the country to initiate projects that would impact and improve the quality of life and standard of living. The projects were nominated for the contest and students are expected to defend the feasibility of their work.

    Teams from over 40 tertiary institutions will present their individual projects before a panel of more than 60 business leaders, who will evaluate the projects’ feasibility and opportunities. The contestants will go through two preliminary stages and teams with best projects will proceed to the grand finale, where winner will emerge.

    The team that wins first position will get the chance to represent Nigeria at the Enactus World Cup holding in Johannesburg, South Africa between October 14 and 16.

    The event will feature a special competition for prizes in the second edition of Sahara Light Up Nigeria Challenge. The contest, sponsored by Sahara Group, is structured to stretch the creativity and ingenuity of the Enactus teams in developing energy projects that can generate electricity and conserve power for the future use.

    There will also be a Future Women in Leadership Forum, where women leaders in each Enactus team will be engaged in mentorship to develop their leadership skills and achieve their full potentials. The objective of forum is to provide answers to key questions on leadership, using practical life examples.

    Enactus is an international non-profit organisation that brings together students, academics and business leaders who are committed to using the power of entrepreneurial action to improve the quality of life and standard of living of the people.

     

     

  • NEMA begins integration of 4,000  Nigerian returnees from Niger Republic

    NEMA begins integration of 4,000 Nigerian returnees from Niger Republic

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) yesterday said it had commenced the transportation of  about 4,000 repatriated Nigerian refugees from Niger Republic to their home states.

    It made the disclosure following reports of repatriation of about 6,000 Nigerians from the neighbouring country.

    NEMA said the returnees had fled their homes for neighbouring Niger Reoublic at the peak of Boko Haram’s onslaught.

    It said the returnees were being transported from Geidam, Yobe State, where they arrived, to their respective states to meet their families and friends, adding that the transportation of the remaining 2,000 would be completed by Sunday.

    The refugees were chased out of the Lake Chad region and asked to return to their country for security reasons.

    Receiving the returnees, the agency’s Director-General, Muhammad Sani Sidi, who was represented by the Head, Search and Rescue,  Air Commodore Charles Otegbade, said more persons were being expected.

    He said NEMA was also providing basic support, such as food and sleeping materials, to the returnees  at the transit camps in Geidam, adding that security and medical support for the sick were being facilitated.

    He said two pregnant women with signs of labour were immediately rushed to the Yobe State General Hospital in the town where qualified medical personnel were now attending to them.

    Otegbade said the returnees were being profiled before transported, adding that most of them were fishermen from Taraba, Kaduna, Kebbi, Sokoto,  Kano, Borno, Benue and Yobe states.

    According to a statement by NEMA’s press officer, Manzo Ezekiel, the first batch of the returnees numbering about 400 were transported  in 18 buses from Geidam to Sokoto and Kebbi states.

  • Sanya Airways begins direct freighter service

    SANYA Airways Corporation, a United States of America (USA) registered airline, has announced its readiness to commence a new freighter service from the world’s busiest airport, Atlanta, to Nigeria’s economic capital, Lagos, with a B767-300ER on Aircraft Crew Maintenance Insurance (ACMI) programme from ABX Global.

    The B767 freighter, according to the chief operating officer (COO), of the airline, Segun Adesanya, will initially operate weekly frequency on a continuation leg to Lagos from Liege, in Belgium, and then to Namibia where it will airlift perishables bound to Liege.

    Adesanya claimed the B767 venture would enable the airline to market perishable exports from Southern Africa to Europe, a market he revealed that is now growing rapidly.

    He also stated that the service would provide inbound capacity for Sanya shipment in Europe and USA for onward connectivity to its West African network as well as provide equal opportunity for delivering products that are bought on line abroad by African traders.

    The COO explained that the aircraft loading capability makes it the best to offer payload up to 45 tonnes as well as accept long and oversize pieces thereby making its service a new dimension of business to and from Africa.

    His words: “We are very excited with this new venture that will be cost-effective cargo solutions to freight forwarders, traders, online users for heavy and outsize pieces, energy equipment, time critical cargo and dangerous goods.

    He continued: “Sanya Airways Corporation is able to provide highly competitive pricing, offer block space, backloads and other commercially innovative solutions that are value-added service to our clients.”

    He disclosed that his company’s partner in Nigeria, Broadline Services Limited (BSL), would assist the airline with documentation collection, customs formalities where required, while trucking and warehousing arrangements will be provided by Nahco Aviance.

    Adesanya, a Nigerian, who hails from Ogun State, therefore solicited for an enabling environment, cooperation, understanding and best work ethics while promising to service the international community by making Lagos the main hub in Africa.