Tag: BUHARI

  • In Paris,Buhari makes strong pitch for Lake Chad

    In Paris,Buhari makes strong pitch for Lake Chad

    ASK President Muhammadu Buhari what he thinks is the chief reason for the violence and insecurity in Nigeria, including the Boko Haram terrorism in the north-east, bloody wars between cattle herdsman and farmers in central Nigeria, erosion in the east and the environmental catastrophe in the coastal regions and he will say, almost upon instinct that it’s the climate change.

    The new Nigerian president who promised to tackle the problem of climate change in his inaugural speech has spun a compelling narrative on the disappearing Lake Chad, the environment around the Chad basin and how these have become the problem of the economy of the neighboring states through the failure of agriculture and joblessness which in turn have provided an easy recruitment into violent extremism.  It was a narrative so compelling that it literally arrested the attention of the world as 190 countries met in Paris to agree on the first global agreement on climate change. President of the United States, Barack Obama took it from here, illustrating how the drying up of the lake is becoming a major factor in the migration of Africans to the west, and on account of which, he agreed with our President that the revival of the lake had become a global imperative. It will require 14 billion U.S. Dollars to divert East African rivers to empty into the lake, the kind of money President Buahri told world leaders that his country cannot pay. He therefore asked for global assistance.

    President Buhari’s speech at the conference centered on two major planks: one, Nigeria under him has the political will to secure its ecological interests and two, we will work with the rest of the world to protect the environment without compromising industrial development.

    Starting with the Lake Chad, the President illustrated his awareness of the risk the changing climate presents to human security by recalling the richness of the waters and surrounding agriculture of the Lake Chad that attracted settlers, allowing the settled communities to enjoy education and comparable economic wellbeing. However, with prolonged drought and desertification, Lake Chad is now one-tenth of its original size, leading to poverty due to the failure of agriculture and fishing causing instability in the region that the insurgency of the Boko Haram has been able to cash in upon. The lake that once spread its territorial waters onto the four countries of the Lake Chad Basin Commission has now been reduced to a miserly presence on the Chadian territory, denying thereby direct access to its waters to Nigeria, Niger and Cameroon.

    Traders in Baga, the major trading hub which the army just recovered from the Boko Haram said on a good day, five truck-loads of fish are now transported out of town, in stark contrast to the 100 a day that carried fish from the interstate market in the past.

    Beyond the drought conditions of the Lake Chad, the President successfully showed the world Nigeria’s vulnerability to climate change as manifested in the various ecological zones.

    He cited the problem of soil erosion in the South as a consequence of “climate-change-related heavier and steadier than normal rainfall” that is worsening soil erosion in the subregion. “The recent increase in the number of reported severe landslides in the South-Eastern states of the country is an attestation to the possible climate change-induced changes in erosion intensity.”

    The President also reported on the sea-level rise, stating that Nigeria’s coastline is already undergoing “ pronounced morphological changes as a result of natural extreme events, such as sea surges and tidal waves.” He projected that 35% of the highly-productive Niger Delta could be lost if nothing was done to stop the anticipated global warming-induced accelerated sea level rise of between half-a-meter to one meter. Much of Lagos, the nation’s commercial capital will be abandoned if the sea waters rise by one meter.

    Forests and other ecosystems, he noted, which are already under significant pressure are being affected by the worsening climate change. In particular, he warned of persistent flooding and water logging that would make the coastal regeneration difficult and the Savannah region of Northern Nigeria becoming vulnerable to the reduction of rainfall. The recent violence wracking Kaduna, FCT, Plateau, Nassarawa and Benue states pitching herdsmen and farmers was equally cited, its primary factor, no doubt being the weather.

    The President listed a myriad of other implications arising for the climate change vulnerabilities of Nigeria including a major risk to access to potable water, increased energy demand for cooling; negative implications for tourism, one of the country’s fastest growing industries, as well as consequences for agriculture and food security.

    In line with the principles of the Paris conference, Nigeria joined 179 other countries-which together are responsible for 97 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions- to submit voluntary commitments on how and when they plan to cut emissions.

    In our specific case, the President submitted a two-stage proposal- an unconditional first phase to cut our own contribution to global warming by 20 percent, and this included a decisive plan to end the flaring of gas in our oil fields and a commitment to extending power supply to parts of the country that don’t enjoy electricity using solar energy and other renewable sources. On account of the latter, President Buhari accepted an invitation by Narendra Modi to join an international alliance of 121 “solar-rich” countries to advance the use of this clean source energy. The second phase of the Nigerian proposal described as equally bold would see the country cutting the emission by a total of 45 percent, however on condition of international support. The measures here include increased level of energy efficiency and a significant reduction in the use of generators while providing access to power to all Nigerians.

    To do this, Nigeria has asked for support from the rich countries accused by  Indian Prime Minister Modi of   “powering their way to prosperity on fossil fuel” at the expense of the developing countries.

    The moral underpin of the Paris conference states unequivocally that the rich countries must actually take responsibility for the current mess up of the global climate and lead the fight against global warming through several compensatory steps, one of which is a proposal to fund redemptive activities with an annual fund of 100 million U.S Dollars.

    In addition to drawing from this, Nigeria is asking for further international support in the form of finance and investment, technology and capacity building.

    All these proposals are in a document Nigeria joined other countries to table as its “Intended Nationally Determined Contribution, INDC.”

    In these documents, the countries of the world each outlined their goals and action plans towards a redemption of the environment and the steps, going forward they will be taking to achieve sustainable development and delivering on government priorities.

    In the case of Nigeria, President Buhari approved several policies and measures that will deliver immediate development benefits which are in addition to the climate benefits.

    These policies and measures, according the government document, set out to alleviate poverty,increase social welfare and inclusion, as well as improving individual wellbeing in a healthy environment. President Buhari made clear the political will on the part of the government at the center in Nigeria to tackle the catastrophic problems associated with climate change. Some of these, as manifested by the dirty air in our cities deriving from the use of diesel generators, cars and trucks as well as the burning of wastes that in turn spew up toxic gases are matters he said government will tackle.

    To achieve this massive transformation (oh, no! Transformation again?), the approved policy document sets out what it calls sector-specific strategies, policies, programs to reduce the impact of  climate change through actionable measures by the federal government ,the states, local governments, civil society, private sector, communities and individuals.

    In a nutshell, these measures will, hopefully improve awareness and preparedness for climate change impact; mobilize communities for climate change adaptation actions; reduce the impact of climate change on key sectors and vulnerable communities and integrate climate change adaptation into national, sectoral, state, local government planning and into the plans of universities, research and educational organizations, the civil society, the private sector and the media.

    Broken down, there are strategies for agriculture (crops and livestock); fresh water and coastal water resources and fisheries; forests; biodiversity; health and sanitation; human settlement and housing; energy; transport and communications; industry and commerce; disaster, migration and security.

    Equally, there are strategies for livelihoods which are about encouraging community participation including civil society organizations; the vulnerable groups who are not to be left out and strategies for education.

    The overall participation by Nigeria at the Conference of Parties to United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP-UNFCCC) agreement at the Paris Conference on Climate Change showed a rare type of seriousness on the part of our country. This is in terms of both preparation, pedagogy and actual participation.

    While this is a true reflection of President Muahmmadu Buhari’s self-professed seriousness of commitment to issues of the environment, it is also a testimony to the solid teamwork the new ministers, Mrs. Amina Ibrahim Mohammed and Ibrahim Usman Jibrin are injecting into the ministry responsible.

    It is equally important to note that this ministry which enjoys a rare combination of bureaucrats, scholars and technocrats in its staff had spent not less than one year setting out scenarios and priorities for the country at the conference, a spectacular effort that won the appreciation of the ministers and the President. No doubt, Nigeria’s historic presentation at the climate change conference is a milestone at the start of a long, tortuous journey.

    In the final analysis however, it is the resolutions taken and the actions that follow that will determine the success of Nigeria at the COP in Paris and the policies and actions that will be pursued.  For now however, it is gratifying that the President’s appeal to the rich nations, the UN and other world bodies has been heard and heeded, somewhat to a degree, with world leaders including India’s Modi and Barack Obama coming in tow.

     

    • Shehu is a Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity.
  • China, a dependable partner in my ‘change’ agenda, says Buhari

    China, a dependable partner in my ‘change’ agenda, says Buhari

    President Muham-madu Buhari yesterday described China as a strategic and dependable partner of his administration in changing the direction and content of governance.

    This he said includes the management of the country’s resources with priority on accountability, transparency and result-orientation in governance.

    Speaking at the Roundtable of Chinese and African Leaders on the last day of the Johannesburg Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in South Africa, Buhari said his administration has embarked on the “task of re-focusing our governance on the real needs of the vast majority of Nigerians.”

    He was confident that China “will always stand shoulder to shoulder with us in our quest to fulfill the aspirations of our people to propel them to prosperity.”

    On the 15-year-old FOCAC, President Buhari, who commended the theme of the Second Summit, “China-Africa Progressing Together: Win-Win Cooperation for Common Development, expressed the hope that it would “engender the right platform to engage Africa in all fields of human endeavours such as provision of essential infrastructure, skills development and capacity building, diversification of our economies and beneficiation of resources.”

    Identifying with the laudable objectives of FOCAC in cultivating, fostering and deepening political, economic, technological, social and other forms of relations between China and Africa, President Buhari praised China for the vision behind the establishment of FOCAC as a platform for higher level Africa-China relationship.

    Africa, he said, “expects Chinese investment flows to the real sector of our economies to promote African enterprises. Our over-riding objectives are to tackle the challenge of unemployment, wealth creation, food security and industrialization.”

    He also stressed the crucial link between political stability, security and sustainable development on the African continent. “We are convinced that Africa can only leverage productively on the potentials of ties with strategic and development partners in an atmosphere of political stability and security of lives and property as well as in a policy environment that guarantees the sanctity of collaborative joint ventures and investment on the basis of agreed rules and regulations.”

    Drawing the attention of the Summit to the threat posed by global challenges such as fresh political conflicts, terrorism and other forms of extremism; trans-border crimes; illegal arms trade; irregular migration and cybercrimes, he said collective action was required to confront these new threats to global peace.

    He said, “these are veritable threats to peace and security and without peace and security we cannot succeed in our development objectives,” he stressed.

    He wanted  China and Africa to  work together to confront the above threats, as well as the challenge of climate change “for which Africa remains badly affected with severe threats to food security and social stability,” in addition to “unacceptable levels of poverty, unemployment and youth restiveness.”

     

  • Supplementary budget passage, victory for democracy, says Buhari

    Supplementary budget passage, victory for democracy, says Buhari

    President Mohammadu Buhari has commended the National Assembly for the passage of the 2015 Supplementary Budget.

    The president said the quick passage of the N574.5 estimated budget would enable him tackle the challenges confronting Nigerians over scarcity of fuel, among other pressing economic challenges.

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters (House of Representatives), Abdulrahman Kawu Sumaila, said the president viewed the passage of the bill as a national service devoid of partisan politics by the lawmakers.

    He said: “It has became imperative that the National Assembly pass the budget in order to give the president the legislative backing to carry out important projects across the country in line with the change mantra.

    “The Senate and the House of Representatives acted promptly and in the national interest by expeditiously passing the supplementary budget. This is commendable and it is the spirit of true democrats, because the passage of the bill would go a long way to cushion the economic hardship facing Nigerians, especially the fuel scarcity as a result of the non-payment of petroleum subsidy to the marketers.”

  • Atilade support Buhari stance on Biafra protestants 

    The South West Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria, Arch Bishop Magnus Atlade, has thrown his weight behind the stance of President Muhammadu Buhari against protests by Biafra groups.

    Atolde said this in an interview with The Nation recently at the Intercessory Prayers of Faith for Peace and change for Development and Progress in Nigeria organised by the Christian Association of Nigeria, South West in collaboration with Christian NGOs.

    The programe tagged:  Talitha Cumi, Arise, Walk and Pray for Nigeria brought together hundreds of Christian faithful drawn from across various denominations and nongovernmental organizations.  It featured a three-day prayer and fasting, prayer walk from Yaba to the National Stadium, and thanksgiving.

    According to him, Nigeria has existed for over 100 years and we have lived together as one in spite of our tribal, language and religious differences. No groups can destroy the unity and understanding we share together as a nation.

    He opined that the Biafran agitators are selfish individuals who are not true representatives of the Ibo nation and should not be allowed to fester like other terrorists groups in the country.

    He noted that the Boko Haram group festered and its resultant effect  to the nation has been very disastrous: over 1.8million have been displaced and about – thousands killed because they were not contained on time.

    He asserted that  the demonstrators are not the majority of the Ibo and cannot decide for millions of Ibos spread across the country.

    Although, he urged the federal government to work on the Confab report and commit it to a referendum and Nigerians can vote on it and those who want to go can go.

    He cited the recent referendum carried out by Scotland to leave the United Kingdom where majority of the people in Scotland voted to remain with the United Kingdom and that buried the clamour in some quarters that they want to live.

    Atilade stressed that it is not in the interest of an individual or groups of individuals to decide for the generality of the country.

    He also lamented the continuous rage of Boko Haram in parts of the country, who according to him requires government decisive action.

    On Boko Haram continous reign of terror, he said that President Buhari should drive members of the group in their various cells and areas where they are so that Nigeria can experience peace.

  • Guinea Bissau: Why I picked Obasanjo to mediate in crisis – Buhari

    Guinea Bissau: Why I picked Obasanjo to mediate in crisis – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has said he enlisted former President Olusegun Obasanjo to mediate in the political crisis in Guinea Bissau because of his wide political and military experience and strong commitment to the unity of Nigeria and Africa.

    He made the disclosure during an audience with the President of Guinea Bissau, Mr. Jose Mario Bavz, on the sidelines of the Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in Johannesburg, South Africa.

    Buhari, in a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said: “I sent President Olusegun Obasanjo because he is the only person living or dead that has ruled Nigeria for 11 years.

    “I served under him as a military Head of State. He has a strong commitment to Nigeria and Africa. That was why I looked for him and asked him to collaborate with President Macky Sall of Senegal to stabilize the situation of Guinea Bissau.”

    While appreciating President Bavz’s expression of thanks for Nigeria’s support during the crisis in his country, President Buhari told his Guinea Bissau counterpart that the “least Nigeria could do is what we did to stabilize your country,”

    “You can count on our support at all times.”

    President Bavz had said he came to thank President Buhari for everything Nigeria has been doing for his country, adding that he has been looking forward to such an opportunity.

    “I am not in a position to assist you but I pray for you every day. I want to take you as my big brother and share from your experience,” he said.

    While thanking the Nigerian leader for sending former President Obasanjo as a Special Envoy to restore peace to his country, the Guinea Bissau leader noted that “Nigeria is part of the solution and stability” of his country.

     

  • Buhari vows to remove obstacles to rail development

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday pledged in Johannesburg that his administration will take necessary action to correct lapses which have hindered the implementation of agreements signed with China under past administrations for the development of rail transportation in Nigeria.

    Speaking at bilateral talks with President Xi Jinping at the  Forum of China-Africa Cooperation, President Buhari said that the Federal Government will strive to fulfil Nigeria’s obligations under the agreements as their implementation will help to boost the country’s economy and generate thousands of new jobs.

    “I have looked into the previous agreements and we will now keep our part of the bargain,” President Buhari assured President Xi Jinping.

    Buhari, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, also applauded China’s ongoing support for the development of Nigeria’s agricultural sector, noting that Chinese advisers deployed to some states of the federation were helping to train farmers on water conservation and the use of more productive seeds.

    President Jinping described Nigeria as a very important ally of China in Africa, saying that the two countries need to boost their bilateral relations, for the good of their citizens.

    He said that China was keen to work with Nigeria for the mutual benefit of both countries.

    At the opening session of the summit attended by President Buhari and more than 30 other African leaders, the Chinese President had pledged $60 Billion Dollars of new development aid to African countries.

  • Buhari’s foreign trips not frivolous — Minister

    Buhari’s foreign trips not frivolous — Minister

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s foreign trips since assuming office are critical to the implementation of his administration key policies of enhancing security, jump-starting the economy, creating jobs and fighting corruption, Information and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed said yesterday.

    All the trips have been anything but frivolous  and they have started yielding fruits in terms of turning the tide in the fight against Boko Haram, Mohammed said in a statement in Abuja.

    ‘’Nigerians, whether in the ruling or the opposition parties, have a right to ask questions about the activities of their President, but it is absolutely important that they do so from an informed, rather than partisan or sensational, standpoint,’’ he said.

    The Minister explained that most of the President’s trips – to Nigeria’s neighbouring countries of Benin, Cameroon, Chad and Niger, as well as to Germany, the US, France and the UN – were devoted to rallying regional and global support for the war against terrorism.

    He added:’’He was in Germany at the invitation of the G7 to solicit support from the industrialized nations for the war against terrorism. No one who has witnessed the killings and maiming in the past seven years by Boko Haram will call such trips frivolous. After all, the security and welfare of the citizens are the reason for the existence of any government.

    ‘’The President’s visit to South Africa was to attend the regular summit of the African Union; the trip to Ghana was aimed at fostering

    better relations with a brotherly country; the trip to India was for the India-Africa summit that provided the opportunity to explore ways of enhancing Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) from Indian investors, while the trip to Iran was to attend the forum of gas exporting countries, a veritable platform for discussing how to better harness Nigeria’s abundant gas resources for industrial/domestic consumption and export, at a time of dwindling oil prices.

    ‘’The President also travelled to Malta to attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, from where he travelled to Paris for the UN Conference on Climate Change. The President’s second trip to South Africa since assuming office is for the China-Africa forum. On the few occasions that the President has embarked on a state visit, he has tied that to an agenda that will further the quest for support for the war against terror and the efforts to enhance FDIs, thus stimulating economic growth and creating jobs.’’

  • Union urges Buhari on agric workers’ plight

    Union urges Buhari on agric workers’ plight

    Nigeria’s dream of repositioning her economy through agriculture may suffer a setback if the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration fails to address issues on workers’  welfare.

    One of such issues is the agitation for the implementation of the hazard allowance for workers in the agricultural and allied sector. The agitation has been on for over 15 years.

    Speaking with reporters at the weekend, the International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurants, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers Association (IUF), urged Buhari to, as a matter of priority, approve for implementation, the allowance for which a memorandum was forwarded to the last Federal Executive Council (FEC) in April, before the inauguration of this administration.

    Its Chairman, Leke Success, said the international body decided to intervene to make the Federal Government appreciate the importance of hazard allowance. He noted that the allowance is necessary because workers continue to suffer one form of injury, or the other in the course of doing their jobs.

    He said: “Our demand is against the backdrop of the determination of President Buhari to diversify our economy and make agriculture the pillar for national growth and development. We believe that for this to be realised, genuine efforts must be made to resolve all issues capable of hindering the smooth operation and administration of all the necessary policies being designed for the revival of  agric activities in the country.”

    Mr. Success lamented that all these years, agric workers had taken the line of dialogue instead of outright confrontation to demand for the implementation of the welfare package, whereas their counterparts in the livestock and veterinary sub-sector, categorised as health workers, have long been enjoying the benefit.

    He said the demand for the implementation of the allowance for workers, under the Agriculture and Allied Employees’ Union of Nigeria (AAEUN), is not on the basis of a penchant for allowances, but rather on a realistic appreciation of occupational dangers encounter on a day-to-day basis in the line of their duties.

    The IUF chief, submitted that both international and local research have validated that out of a total of 335,000 fatal workplace accidents that occur yearly globally, about 170,000, involve workers engaged in agricultural activities.

    He said even the advent of technology aimed at reducing stress and hardship associated with agriculture, has come with its risks which are related, not only to the operation of sophisticated machinery such as tractors and harvesters, but also exposure, resulting from intensive use of pesticides and a variety of agro-chemicals. According to him, these often account for  the high rate of illness, injury and even death of workers in the sector.

  • Buhari, Saraki meet at Aso Rock

    Buhari, Saraki meet at Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari met with the Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Thursday.

    Saraki, who was wearing blue babanriga, arrived for the closed-door meeting without his usual high number of aides.

    The meeting which lasted for about one hour was described as private.

    Emerging from the meeting, Saraki did not speak with journalists.

    No official statement has been issued concerning the meeting as at the time of filing this report.

  • Spare nobody in Arms deal probe – Activist

    Spare nobody in Arms deal probe – Activist

    An activist , Segun Lema Thursday urged the Economic and Financial crimes Commission (EFCC) and Department of State Security (DSS) not to spare anybody suspected to be connected with the ongoing arm deal probe.

    He particularly demanded that the former President, Dr Goodluck Jonathan must not be treated as a sacred cow in the struggle to expose those allegedly behind the scam.

    He said as the former President, he should be mandated to explain what he knew about the misappropriation of the $21b meant for the purchase of arms.

    Lema said Jonathan as the consenting authority, was in best position to tell Nigerians the role he played in the arms deal

    The former Vice Chairman, Okitipupa branch of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) emphasised that Nigerians deserved explanation from the former President on the matter.

    According to him, the money was meant to purchase arms and combat terrorism and insurgency in the northeast of Nigeria.

    The EFCC had on Tuesday arrested the chairman of DAAR Communication, Chief Raymond Dokpesi, former National Security Adviser (NSA), Col Sambo Dasuki (Rtd), Amb. Bashir Yuguda and Atahiru Bafarawa over their alleged involvement in the disappearance of the money

    The military authority had also invited the immediate past Chief of Defense Staff, Air Vice Marshall Alex Badeh (Rtd) and former Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen Azubuike Ihejirika over their alleged involvement in the arms deal.

    He said the invitation of former President Jonathan on the matter would throw more light on the issue and unravel the circumstances that led to the misappropriation of the money.

    He hailed the arrest of former Chief of Defence Staff, Air Vice Marshall Badeh and Lt Gen. ihejirika by the EFCC and urged the anti graft Agency to prosecute whoever that was involved in the deal accordingly.

    He lamented that some individuals whom Nigerians look up to as symbol of the nation could because of their selfish interests, worked against the collective interest of the nation in its quest to combat terrorism, insurgency and protect the lives and properties of the citizenry.

    The legal practitioner however urged the President Mohammadu Buhari to ensure that the money is recovered and punish whosoever that is linked to it accordingly, saying “Nobody is bigger than the law.”