Tag: berates

  • Sultan berates Arewa Youths over quit notice to Igbo

    Sultan berates Arewa Youths over quit notice to Igbo

    SULTAN of Sokoto, Muhammed Sa’ad Abubakar III, came down hard on the Northern youth who issued a quit notice to the Igbo.

    He said he was never in support of the Arewa Youths’ October 1 ultimatum to the Igbo to leave the north.

    The Youths have since withdrawn the notice following the Intervention of some well-meaning Nigerians, including governors.

    The Islamic leader threw his weight behind restructuring, saying it does not mean dividing the nation but fixing imbalance in distribution of power and wealth.

    The monarch said:” If anybody or group of persons plans negative attack on the Igbos it should be done to him first.”

    Abubakar spoke in Sokoto when he received the World Igbo Union Leader, His Imperial Majesty (HIM) Sir Dr. Meshach Ahanta yesterday.

    On calls to restructure the nation, he said it does not mean galvanizing or dividing Nigeria but simply means making adjustment here and there for equal accommodation to all and sundry in the country.

    He said it was a purposeful agitation for pure equity and fair play religiously, socially and economically.

    He however pointed out the agitation for pulling out by some people or calls for disintegration cannot solve any of the problems facing the country.

    Abubakar rather said the way forward is round table dialogue, talking humanly, not carrying arms or dangerous weapons.

    The royal father blamed the politicians for most of the problems bedeviling Nigerians, saying: “they come to you during campaigns, promise you heaven in your house, air conditions on all roads and milk entering your mouth hourly without any effort from you.

    “As soon as they win, they zoom to Abuja and start planning or arranging comfort for themselves while some from rural areas move to state capital with careless abandonment of the voters.”

    He called on the electorates to ensure their votes go to credible persons seeking political offices.

    “That is the only way forward even as I condemn all about the quit order, the violent method of agitations for independence, kidnappings, vandalisation and hiding under religion to kill through the use of suicide bombing instruments, believing that it will lead one to heaven”.

  • Adeleke berates PDP

    Adeleke berates PDP

    Former Osun State Governor Isiaka Adeleke has berated the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for misleading the people on the outcome of the last sitting of the election tribunal hearing the petition filed by its candidate, Senator Iyiola Omisore, challenging the victory of Rauf Aregbesola in the August 9 governorship election.

    Adeleke, an All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate for Osun West Senatorial district, advised the people to disregard the claim by the PDP members that the tribunal delivered a judgment in  Omisore’s favour.

    A statement by his media aide, Olumide Lawal,  said what transpired last Friday at the tribunal was that the petitioners-the PDP and Omisore- and respondents, the APC, submitted the final written addresses.

  • Group berates Lagos CP

    Group berates Lagos CP

    A group, the Centre for Rights and Grassroots Initiative (CRGI), has blamed the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Kayode Aderanti, for the indiscriminate and unregulated pasting of campaign posters.

    A few weeks ago, Aderanti served a notice directing his officers to arrest any personnel of the State Signage and Advertisement Agency (LASAA) found removing posters.

    CRGI’s Executive Director Nelson Ekujumi told reporters that since the police gave the directive the street have been flooded with political posters, thereby defacing the environment.

    Aside the environmental impact, Ekujumi also lamented the negative impact it has on the regulated outdoor business.

    “We wish to bring to your notice for urgent redress, threats to the constitution, public peace, health, democratic and economic rights of Lagosians by the indiscriminate and unregulated pasting of posters and billboards of political parties, ahead of the 2015 general elections.

    “Our investigation revealed that this act of lawlessness and impunity has resulted in the termination of two outdoor agencies advertisements by their sponsors and economic loss. As is expected, more is to follow, whose consequences on our already comatose economy is better imagined”.

    “We are disappointed that the police as an agency of the state set up by law can threaten and intimidate another agency of the state, (LASAA) established by the same law from performing its statutory responsibilities.”

  • Lagos APC berates Agbaje over “blackmail comments”

    ALL Progressives Congress (APC) Lagos State chapter has asked voters in the state to take a close and critical look at the personality of Mr. Jimi Agbaje, the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) ,over his recent statement that the “South South can collapse Nigeria’s economy” if President Jonathan is not re-elected.

    In a release signed by the party’s Publicity Secretary, Mr. Joe Igbokwe, the party says Lagosians will be making a great mistake if Agbaje, who it claimed “lacks training in simple economics and the monumental power of a diversified economy, is voted into power in error.”

    The Lagos APC added, “APC is at a loss and completely dumbfounded that a candidate that says he wants to govern a dynamic, powerful, prosperous and enlightened state like Lagos is resorting to this type of cheap and strange blackmail in the 21st century in order to win elections.

    “For Jimi Agbaje’s information, South-South crude oil has become a curse to Nigeria instead of blessing. Crude oil has ruined our capacity to reason, to think and to explore other areas like agriculture, science and technology, industrialisation, building and construction industry and many others sectors.

    “Japan, Germany, France, Italy, South Korea, Spain, Netherlands, Turkey, Sweden, Switzerland, Singapore etc have no oil and yet they have given a good account of themselves in the global economy through commitments, power of critical thinking and dint of hard work.

    “Even in the Third World, there are many countries that are surviving without oil. In 1997, Dell Computers made more money than Nigeria with just 12,000 workers. MEARSK Containers, a shipping company, Apple, HP make more money than Nigeria and yet Jimi Agbaje, a pharmacist, cannot think in the 21st century.

    “We have told anybody who cares to listen in Lagos that Jimi Agbaje is a pretender and a hustler who lacks the capacity and cognate experience to dream of governing a state like Lagos. Jimi has never been a councillor, he has never served in a local government, and he has never been a commissioner, a House of Assembly member or a Special Adviser. He has never served at the federal level either. So where is the experience for Lagosians to trust him with the treasury of Lagos?”

    The party noted that Lagosians are not ready to allow a learner to experiment with the destiny of the state, adding that its candidate is a credible alternative, Akiwunmi Ambode, who served Lagos State for 27years as a civil servant and retired as the State’s Accountant General.

    “Those who know better tell us that the power of a man is in his head and not inside the soil as Jimi Agbaje will want us to believe. Nigerians are looking for a day when attention would be paid to other areas in Nigeria’s economy instead of running this mono economy that has ruined and destroyed our country,” the Lagos APC stated.

    In a similar vein, Deputy Whip of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Rotimi Abiru, has described the statement credited to the PDP candidate that he would rule Lagos like Plateau, Niger and Gombe, three states presently controlled by PDP, as highly unfortunate and retrogressive.

    Agbaje allegedly made the statement at the flag-off of the PDP presidential campaign at the Tafawa Balewa Square (TBS) Lagos on Thursday.

    Abiru said: “If someone like Jimi Agbaje who some Lagosians thought had something upstairs could wish a state like Lagos regression, it’s now clear that he is an enemy of Lagos. He wants to take the state backwards. If someone who is aspiring to lead the state of excellence could think of running Lagos like Plateau, Niger and Gombe states, such a person is a failure, because he wants to take us back.”

  • LCCI berates CAC over poor service delivery

    The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has noted with concern the frustration faced by investors in the course of business incorporation.

    LCCI President Mr. Remi Bello said rather than live up to the high expectations of investors of a better service delivery, the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) has deteriorated in service delivery.

    He pointed out, for instance, that rather than take 24 hours to register a business as promised by CAC, business incorporation now takes well over one week in most cases.

    “A major component of the ‘Ease of Doing Business Report’ of the World Bank is the ease of business registration. The performance on this score is not satisfactory,” Bello said.

    LCCI’s observations were contained in a communiqué it issued at the end of its council meeting in Lagos, last week. The communiqué signed by its Director General, Mr. Muda Yusuf, and made available to The Nation, urged CAC’s management to urgently fix the observed shortcomings to realise the dream of making the country a leading investment destination in Africa.

    The communiqué also called for a peaceful political transition. “As the 2015 elections approaches, the LCCI Council reiterated the importance of peace in the transition process. Without peace very little economic activity will take place and it is the citizens that will bear the brunt,” the communiqué said.

    The LCCI Council said it was disturbed by the recent disturbances and assault on the Judiciary in Ekiti State, noting that “This is clearly not a good omen. The LCCI therefore, calls on the major organs of government especially the law enforcement agencies and the Independent National Electoral Commission to redouble their efforts in ensuring a peaceful democratic transition.”

    The LCCI Council however, welcomed the proposal by the Federal Government to partner Lagos State Government to ensure the speedy completion of the reconstruction work on the Lagos/Badagry expressway. Bello said the collaboration was long overdue and that it was wise to allow national development concerns take precedence over partisan considerations at all times.

    In his words: “The Lagos/Badagry road is very strategic, not just for the development of the country, but the facilitation of trade between Nigeria and other countries in the West African sub region.  Over 70 per cent of freight and human movements between Nigeria and countries in the sub region take place on this corridor.  Its current deplorable state is thus taking a huge toll on economic activities in the country and the sub region.”

    He called for the development of a partnership framework to accelerate the completion of the reconstruction work on the road which, according to him, is in the interest of the nation’s economy, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) economic integration aspirations and the welfare of millions of citizens resident on the corridor to do so.

  • NUT berates Fed Govt over unpaid teachers’  allowance

    NUT berates Fed Govt over unpaid teachers’ allowance

    The National President of the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), Michael Olukoya,  has condemned the Federal Government over its refusal to pay teachers in unity schools and other federal schools 27.5 per cent Teachers Allowance.

    Olukoya, who also decried the dearth of teachers in schools, said state governments annually retire teachers without  replacing them.

    According to him, this has led to a decline in teacher-pupil ratio in the public schools.

    He spoke yesterday during the 56th (5th Quadrennial) National Delegates’ conference of the NUT in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital.

    He frowned at the state governments for congratulating themselves for providing free primary and secondary education, saying the reality remained that the needed number of teachers to function in schools was not sufficient.

    He explained that the pupil/students-teacher ratio has continued to increase  and this development posed serious impediment to effective teaching and learning.

    His words: “It is unfortunate that the Federal Government – leader in political authority and the one expected to show the light for others to follow, could not accord its teachers in Unity Schools and all other Federal agencies’ schools, the needed honour of paying them the 27.5 per cent Teachers Allowance, which came into effect since 2008.

    “You are all witnesses to the magnitude of infrastructural decay and near absence of educational facilities in some of our schools. This adverse situation has gone a long way to compound the deplorable conditions of our public schools.

    “This despicable condition lends a tacit support and stimulation for the growth of private schools, inspite of the enormous school fees charged by these private schools. One may not dig deep to uncover the fact that most of these schools are owned by key government functionaries past and present.

    “The scenario creates a picture that it is a deliberate but tacit policy of the states to under develop the public schools to encourage their private enterprise to prosper, flourish and boom to the detriment of public schools and the common man.

    “The NUT says ‘no’ to this subtle approach to privatisation of education. Education is a fundamental human rights and the government must do all within her reach to provide basic education as a social service to the citizenry without any inkling of discrimination as regard to social class, and religion.”

    Olukoya appealed to federal and state governments to compensate the families of  the 173 teachers (170 from Borno and 3 from Yobe states) who died in terror attacks.

    Speaking at the conference, President Goodluck Jonathan reiterated the commitment of the Federal Government to teachers’ training .

    Jonathan, who was represented by Minister of Labour and Productivity, Emeka Wogu, said without quality teachers, nation building would be difficult to achieve.

    He described the theme of conference: “Changing Nigeria’s Fortune through Quality Teachers” as apt, saying it captured Nigerians’ aspirations.

    Jonathan urged the union to always tow the line of peace and dialogue.

    He said: “Undoubtedly, education holds the magic wand for national development and advancement basically due to the fact that without a well educated population, there is no way we can effectively and efficiently harness and mange our resources for socio-economic, geo-political and other institutional sustainable development.

    “This is why we must lay emphasis on the training and education of our children and youths in whose hands the management of the future affairs of our country lies. These noble objectives cannot be achieved in any nation such as ours, without quality teachers as you have advocated in your theme for today’s event.

    “This administration is mindful of this fact and education as the bedrock of civilisation forms part of the transformation agenda and other economic policies, programmes and projects currently being considered and implemented in the nation.

    “In this regard, government have in the recent past re-inaugurated a lot of reforms with the sole aim of improving teachers’ skill and welfare to compliment its structural innovations. There eventually would result in better working conditions for teachers and better learning conditions for learners.”

    The Minister of State for Education, Nyesom Wike, urged teachers at the secondary and tertiary levels to place emphasis on Science, Mathematics, English and Technology.

    Wike said: “It is important to also add the need to have, not just purely academic curriculum, but also training in soft curriculum like Critical Thinking Skills, Analytical Skills, Communication Skills, Interpersonal Relations Skills, and Customer Service Skills.

    “We must make learning come alive, real ad fun through required, justifiable Fieldtrips and Career Days (integrated into the curriculum). It is important to mention here that parents must be constructively involved in the education of their children, through Parents Teachers Association PTAs, parenting classes, adult literacy programmes and faith-based organisation.”

  • Rivers CJ crisis: Port Harcourt NBA chairman berates lawyers over protest

    The Chairman, Port Harcourt branch of the Rivers State chapter of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Lawrence Oko-Jaja, has condemned the protest by some lawyers over the absence of the state Chief Judge (CJ).

    The office of the CJ became vacant after the retirement of the last CJ, Justice Iche Ndu, last August.

    Governor Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi appointed the President of the state Customary Court of Appeal, Justice Peter Agumagu, in a three-month acting capacity. He ended his tenure last November.

    Lawyers in Port Harcourt under the aegis of the “Forum of concerned lawyers of the NBA”, yesterday staged a peaceful protest at the state High Court and the Federal High Court, over the failure of Amaechi to appoint a substantive CJ, seven months after Justice Ndu left office.

    The protest disrupted activities at the courts. It was led by Chris Itamunoala, an ex-Port Harcourt branch chairmanship candidate.

    Oko-Jaja expressed disappointment about the decision to take to the streets over issues that have to do with the appointment of a CJ.

    He said the NBA’s role in the process does not go beyond recommendation, based on the nomination list sent to them.

    Oko-Jaja said there are other better ways to handle the problem, instead of marching on the streets, stressing that lawyers are noble and professionals, who are expected to use dialogue and appeal in handling issues of concern.

    He disassociated the chairmen of the five branches of the NBA and their members from the protest, saying the state NBA executives are discussing with the governor on the issue.

     

  • ASUU berates Mark for comment on Onosode’s team

    The University of Ibadan (UI) chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Nigerian Universities (ASUU) has condemned the alleged derision of the leader of the government team negotiating with the union, Deacon Gamaliel Onosode.

    This was part of the resolutions the union reached at the weekend at the end of its congress in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, on the strike.

    The resolution, which was signed by the UI-ASUU Chairman, Dr Olusegun Ajiboye, urged Mark to apologise to Onosode.

    He said the elder statesman “deserves respect as a man of proven integrity and impeccable character”.

    The congress advised the Senate President to be sensitive to the plight of the masses and teach the youths the need to obey agreements.

    It said President Goodluck Jonathan was the vice president, who allegedly instructed the government team to sign the agreement.

    Mark had reportedly said: “For those who negotiated on behalf of the Federal Government with ASUU in October 2009, the facts made available to us today by the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, Uche Chukwumereje, showed that they are people who do not know their right from their left.

    “In the process, they put the Federal Government into the problem it is facing today, because when the agreements were read out, I thought they were mere proposals, only for Chukwumereje to confirm that they signed the largely un-implementable agreements, which are characterised by the payment of all manner of allowances.”

    The UI-ASUU resolution berated Mark for playing ignorance on the true position of the 2009 FGN/ASUU agreement, even though he was the Senate President at the time.

    The union noted that the outburst of the Senate President showed that those leading the country were not patriotic enough because they behaved as strangers to happenings in the country.

    The congress wondered whether the Senate President was sleeping when the National Assembly passed a bill approving the retirement age of university professors from 65 to 70 years, a component of the 2009 agreement.

    The ASUU-UI criticised Mark for describing the agreement as largely un-implementable.

    It challenged him to publish his salaries and allowances to Nigerians.

    The resolution said: “The congress considered the personality of Deacon Gamaliel Onosode, an alumnus of the University College, Ibadan, who has served as the Chairman of the Governing Councils of UI and the University of Lagos (UNILAG), a successful businessman who has served the country in various intervention capacities.

  • Wike berates critics of First Lady’s honorary degree

    The Supervising Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike, yesterday faulted those criticising the First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, for the honorary doctorate degree conferred on her by a university in South Korea.

    The minister said the criticisms were “not only out of place, but bereft of common sense”.

    Critics of the award had claimed that it was ill-timed and improper for the First Lady to receive it when Nigerian universities were shut down because of the strike by Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    Wike said there was nothing wrong with the action of the First Lady since it was the university that extended the gesture to her.

    The minister said the award was in recognition of the First Lady’s humanitarian services and the fight against cyber crimes.

    He said: “One will not necessarily bother himself because most of these critics do not understand how governance operates.

    “The mere fact that ASUU is not on campus does not mean all activities of government would be grounded.

    “It does not also mean that other workers of the universities are not working. They are working; the only thing is that academic activities are not taking place.

    “So, if other institutions all over the world want to honour the First Lady for her contribution to mankind, I do not see anything wrong with that.

    “That ASUU is on strike does not mean all universities are on strike. University of Ilorin is a public university but they are not on strike.

    “There are also other private universities in this country. So, to me such criticism is completely out of place; it does not make any sense,” he stated.

    He also appealed to the ASUU members to shift grounds on their demands, just the way government had done, in order to end the four months strike.

    He noted that the demands of the teachers had been there for over 20 years.

    Stressing that it was impossible for the government to fully fund the tertiary institutions, he advocated financial autonomy for the institutions.

  • ACF berates PDP governors, Anenih, over democratic violations

    ACF berates PDP governors, Anenih, over democratic violations

    The pan-northern socio-political organsation, Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), said yesterday the call by Chief Tony Anenih, the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), for the exclusion of the President and serving governors from the party’s primaries, is anti-democratic and against the tenet of the Electoral Act.

    In a communiqué at the end of its National Working Committee (NWC) meeting in Kaduna, the forum also frowned at the controversy surrounding the recent Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) election.

    It described the controversy as undemocratic and a development that can stifle internal democracy.

    The communiqué, by ACF’s National Publicity Secretary Anthony Sani, advised the governors and leaders of the party to ensure that the nation’s democracy is premised on liberty, justice, decency and sanctity of votes cast.

    The ACF called for moves to harmonise its activities with those of the Northern Elders’ Forum (NEF) to ensure that the North pursues common vision, objectives, and strategy for unity and peaceful coexistence.

    It noted that these are needed for the socio-economic and political development of the region as well as other parts of the country.

    The communiqué reads: “The NWC was called to specifically asses the preparations for the annual general meeting (AGM) of the ACF scheduled to hold on June 20 in Kaduna, as well as to review the unfolding events in the polity and development in the efforts to tame the proliferation of fora and groups, which profess to speak for the same North.

    “The meeting deliberated and resolved that the following statement be issued. The meeting welcomed the progress made by the joint meetings between the ACF and the NEF for the express purpose of fashioning how best the North can pursue common vision, common objectives, and common strategy, for achieving northern unity and peaceful coexistence needed for meaningful socio-economic and political development, not only of northern region but across the country.