Tag: BUHARI

  • Stakeholders urge Buhari to sustain ban on frozen chicken

    Stakeholders urge Buhari to sustain ban on frozen chicken

    The President, Animal Science Association of Nigeria (ASAN) Mr Taiwo Adeoye has advised Resident Muhammadu Buhari to sustain ongoing ban on frozen poultry products.

    He said the ban will allow Nigeria to increase its animal protein production to meet the daily protein intake as recommended by the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO).

    Mr. Adeoye spoke during the  7th Annual General Meeting (AGM) and induction ceremony of the Nigerian Institute of Animal Science held at the international Conference Centre, University of Ibadan, Oyo state capital.

    “One of the ways to achieve hunger free Nigeria is the provision of a deliberate conducive atmosphere to encourage animal scientists to increase animal protein production to meet the daily protein intake as recommended by FAO,” he said.

    Adeoye, in a statement in Abuja, urged President Muhammadu Buhari to diversify the economy to animal production among other options.

    “To address this problem,  we need to build a large, strong, diversified, sustainable and competitive economy that guarantees high standard of living and quality of life for the people through efficient production guaranteed through professionalism,” he said.

    The President, Nigerian Institute of Animal Science, Professor Israel Adu, said the institute, in collaboration with the Federal Department of Animal Production and Husbandry Services, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, has produced the issue of Minimum Operating Standards (MOS) for curbing the spread of bird flu in Nigeria.

  • Buhari urges journalists to join anti-graft war

    Buhari urges journalists to join anti-graft war

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday urged journalists to join the fight against corruption.

    He said they should work towards strengthening the media because of its critical role  in democracy.

    The President spoke at the presentation of the book: 50 World Editors: Conversations with Journalism Masters on Trends and Best Practices, by Mike Awoyinfa and the late Dimgba Igwe.

    Buhari, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Information, Mrs. Oluseyi Abiodun, described the authors as “global models in journalism.”

    He praised the authors on the book, adding that Igwe’s tragic death was a huge loss.

    The authors started writing the book before Igwe was killed by a hit-and-run driver on September 6, 2014, near his Okota, Lagos, home.

    The President urged journalists to live by what the late Igwe stood for.

    “Igwe belonged to everybody, but belonged to nobody, because of his ability to call a spade a spade.

    “It is sad that he is no longer with us. He died as a true hero and a powerful columnist, who could not condone corruption, injustice and unrighteousness,”, he said.

    The President said the book launch was a fitting way to remember the late Igwe.

    “Today ought to have been a good one, where a renowned writer would have seen his dream come true, but all we have now are memories, the memories of a man that was cut short trying to keep fit and live long,” he said.

    He recalled the circumstances that led to Igwe’s death, saying: ”It is so sad that for over three hours, he was being moved from one hospital to the other until he bled to death. This is not acceptable in the new Nigeria.”

    He praised the authors’ effort and patience in making the book a reality, saying: “It is indeed a labour of love for journalism.”

    Buhari said the book, which took 10 years to produce, would be useful not only to journalists, but to politicians, administrators, among others, as it teaches practical journalism from experienced editors of famous media outfits across the globe.

    The President said he was pleased that five Nigerian editors were featured in the book.

    He described the book as a “story of a Nigerian dream’’, adding that the duo had mentored editors, publishers and managers in the media industry.

    According to him, the book was an epic writing that teaches journalism from the practical experiences of editors.

    He praised the authors for travelling globally to get notable journalists with wide experiences and knowledge, “which showed the book as a labour of love for journalism’’.

    The President said Igwe’s wife should be consoled that her husband died as a true hero and columnist, who could not suffer any act of corruption and injustice.

    “Igwe’s death is a parable for Nigeria, a country where security and impunity have become the norm such that somebody will commit a crime and believe that he will not be caught.

    “Tell the criminals that the long arm of the law will catchup with them soon. Even if you escape the judgement of man, you will not escape the judgement of God.’’

    He congratulated the authors for creating their own school of journalism, urging Nigerians to emulate how they related, in spite of coming from different ethnic groups.

    Buhari also advised other journalists to write books that would inspire people and add value to the growth of the nation.

    Former Ogun State Governor Aremu Olusegun Osoba, who chaired the event, urged kidnappers of  the wife of The Sun Deputy Managing Director Steve Nwosu, to free her.

    In an emotion-laden speech, he expressed concern about the kidnap of Mrs Toyin Nwosu, saying her abuductors should free her unharmed.

    Osoba also spoke about a programme aired on Aljazera that Nigerian journalists were beggars.

    He said: “It is unfortunate that publishers find it difficult to pay their young employees.”

    The former governor called on a collective effort to redeem the image of the media at the international level.

    Awoyinfa recounted their experience at The Concord, saying they were “masters in the act of casting headlines” and that their stories were as if they were “straight from the bible.”

    Awoyinfa read a long letter to his late friend, Igwe, saying not even time could heal the wound received as a result of his death.

    He said that the book was written because of the hunger, passion and love for the profession, expressing the hope that people could use it to gain knowledge.

    Awoyinfa said he would continue to launch a book every year in memory of Igwe.

    Scholar and essayist Prof. Adebayo Williams said the book should be a tribute to journalists, who were killed.

    The book’s reviewer, Mr. Eric Osagie, said the book shows that “journalism cannot simply be defined as history in a hurry.”

    He said the 682-page book talks about the passion and travails of international and local journalists.

     

  • Anambra APC to Ndigbo: be patient with Buhari

    •Consoles Ngige on father’s death

    The Anambra State Assembly Candidates forum has urged the Southeast to be patient with President Muhammadu Buhari on political appointments, saying the president has not miscalculated.

    The group said Ndigbo should support Buhari since he was the only one with sincerity of purpose to develop the Southeast as he promised during his campaigns.

    These were contained in a communiqué by the Chairman, Comrade James Chibuzo Chikwendu and Secretary, Ifeanyi Justine Okeke.

    The forum also condoled with the former Governor of Anambra State, Senator Chris Ngige, on the death of his father, Akunnia Pius Ngige.

    The group hailed the Buhari-led administration for the improvement in power supply.

     

  • Electricity rip-off: Buhari must act

    SIR: My experience in recent time with electricity supply could be assumed to be the same experience for millions of Nigerians. I bought a prepaid meter in 2008 and quite early in 2011 the meter stopped working. Consequently, I was made to pay fixed sum till a new billing system was introduced.

    In the first instance, the only alternative that Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) now Eko Electricity Distribution Company (EKEDC) could provide is for me to buy a new prepaid meter, which was annoying enough. For a family of three, it is surprising that my monthly bill jumped from an initial N5,000 to almost N30,000 in a two-room apartment. I have however kept to my monthly payment of N5,000 not minding their threats and what have you.

    Many things are wrong with this system. Firstly, there is no known template or yardstick for determining the actual electricity consumption, since there is no meter to be read or monitored. Somebody somewhere arbitrarily determines the electricity consumption and cost. Just like that. What manner of an unfair system could this be? This is what most Nigerians are passing through virtually every month.

    Secondly, the issue of N750 fixed charge. The purpose of the charge has not been explained till today. No tangible or tenable explanation has been offered for this amount which is collected monthly. Of what essence this fixed charge if when a customer’s prepaid meter is faulty, the only available option is a new one? Will the government whose mantra is fighting against corruption remain quiet in the face of this rip-off?

    Finally, if a customer is ready to buy a prepaid meter, the process itself is cumbersome.  Such a customer will be required to clear all his bills including crazy ones and the estimated bill arrived with no template of electricity usage. After this, the customer is expected to pay through bank draft the sum of N38,700 for the meter. Then the customer will be told that the meter will be ready in six months. In the meantime, within the six months (some were not given meter even in 12 months), the very same estimated bill (that the customer was asked to clear before beginning the process of buying a prepaid meter), will still be sent to the customer on monthly basis, and as expected the customer would have to pay. To me, this is wicked.

    President Buhari should look into the issue. The president cannot and must not claim ignorance of this practice by electricity providers. The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Agency (NERC), though empowered to deal with such issues has been ineffective. President Buhari needs to ask questions about the provision of prepaid meters, at least made-in-Nigeria prepaid meters (which are not available to customers) that was presented to him during the briefing from the Ministry of Power.

    The government owes citizens the responsibility to defend them against unfair practices. Citizens must not be made to pay for what they did not use.

    • Adedeji Nurudeen Badejo,

    Surulere, Lagos.

     

     

  • Osun retirees to Buhari: save us

    •Workers assault two journalists       •Pupils protest

    Retired public servants under the aegis of the Nigerian Union of Pensioners in Osun State have called on President Muhammadu Buhari to mandate Governor Rauf Aregbesola to pay their 10-month pension and gratuities.

    They also called on him to declare a state of emergency in the state to avoid total break down of law and order.

    Addressing a briefing yesterday in Osogbo, the state capital, the Chairman of the Union, Tunde Ogunniyi, said: “The Rauf Aregbesola administration is insensitive, considering the spate of death of pensioners and government workers.

    “Since threat to peace and security is a major constitutional reason for the declaration of the state of emergency, we hereby call on the Federal Government and the National Assembly to take over the affairs of the state by declaring a state of emergency in Osun State.

    “This government owes pensioners between 10-15 months and gratuities have not been paid since December 31, 2012. These amount to deliberate display of callousness, greediness, wickedness, flagrant disobedience to the rule of law, mal-administration and fraud.”

    They also called on the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to take over the direct payment of money to each pensioner, the retirees said in the alternative, the Federal Government should place an embargo on the government from accessing the loan which they alleged that governor was planning to divert to fund some projects.

    According to them: “We also want to warn these Lagos contractors to immediately pack all their equipment and leave Osun within one week because their safety can no longer be guaranteed.”

    Aggrieved workers yesterday beat up two journalists– Abass Okandeji of Muri International Television (MiTV) and Adeniyi Folorunsho of ONTV.

    The duo were at the state secretariat on Gbongan Road in Osogbo, where the workers were protesting the non-payment of their salary arrears.

    While the journalists were trying to cover the procession, the protesters reportedly transferred their anger on them.

    It was gathered that the intervention of their colleagues, Ismail Afolabi and Abdullah Afolabi of Heartbeat magazine together with some officials of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) saved the victims from being killed.

    The MiTV and ONTV reporters were allegedly mistaken for reporters of the state-owned television station, the Osun State Broadcasting Corporation (OSBC.)

    The aggrieved workers were allegedly quoted at a public event to have threatened to deal with the OSBC crew for allegedly airing false news about the situation of the state.

    The two journalists were said to have been rushed to the Government House clinic.

    Abass was said to have sustained injury on his chest and Adeniyi a deep cut on his left hand.

    Their working tools, including cameras, were allegedly destroyed by the aggrieved workers.

    Also, some secondary school pupils in Osogbo yesterday protested against “payment of tax” directed by the government to be paid by their parents.

    The over 200 aggrieved pupils gathered at the popular Olaiya junction before marching on the state secretariat.

    The students believed to have come from Osogbo High School caused a traffic gridlock.

    A pupil, Oluwaseun Bamigboye, said the protest was necessary to discourage the government from asking for tax from their parents, who have not been paid for many months.

    They wondered why the government will eject them from school because “they said our parents have not paid the tax”.

    Singing anti-government songs, the pupils called on the government to pay their teachers and parents without delay.

    The Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education, Lawrence Oyeniran, advised the pupils to go back to their classrooms,  assuring them that the matter would be resolved.

     

     

     

     

  • Expert drums up support for Buhari, Ajimobi

    The Managing Director of Mainsail Micro-finance Bank, Taofeek Gbolagade Rahman, has assured the people of Oyo State of better days ahead in the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Rahman spoke in Ibadan while featuring on a radio programme anchored by a private station in the state capital.

    He advised South westerners not to panic as more appointments would soon be made that will favour them, saying that what Buhari needs now is our unflinching support and love in order to make our country great and vibrant again. On the issue of workers’ salaries in Oyo State, the financial expert said the workers should be calm, assuring that the salary problem is not peculiar to the state alone.

    “Governor Abiola Ajimobi is well tested, trusted and humane. With his experience in the oil and gas sector, I am sure he would lift the state out of the present crisis,” Rahman said.

    He praised the governor for running an all-inclusive government, adding that he knows and values democracy.

     

  • Re: Let Buhari be king of the North

    SIR: I read the article titled “Let Buhari be King of the North” published on page 22 of The Nation of Tuesday, September 8, written by AbdulWahaab Oba wherein he joined issues with an earlier article written by Fani-Kayode in his article titled “Nigerian President or King of the North?”

    In the said comment, Oba made bold effort to strengthen records with respect to appointments made by President Buhari and the ones by past President Jonathan. Fani Kayode tried to Oba submitted that Buhari’s template for a better Nigeria anchored on bringing in people of like minds who may come from a circled area should be supported.

    There is an Igbo adage which says that it does not matter who is one’s mother’s concubine, in so far as he has his hands filled with rat heads. Quite honestly, the world is permanently under ideological cleavages of which only an author and his disciples in that ideological divide will bring to manifestation and practical reality their common believe.

    By clear provisions of Section 14 of the 1999 constitution (as amended), the security and welfare of the people of Nigeria shall be the primary purpose of the government while composition of the government of the federation or any of its agencies and the conduct of its affairs shall be carried out in such a manner as to reflect the federal character of Nigeria and the need to promote national unity and also to command loyalty. It is in the light of the principle of federal character in terms of appointment and occupation of offices of people of various ethnic backgrounds that Fani Kayode is coming from while Abdul Wahaab Oba is coming from the principle of the security and welfare of the people of Nigeria as the supreme objective of government.

    Section 5 of the 1999 constitution (as amended) provides that the executive powers of the federation shall be vested in the president and may be exercised by him either directly or through the vice president or ministers of the government of the federation or officers in the public service of the federation.

    I think, Fani-Kayode was economical with the truth and also hasty in condemning President Buhari on this issue in that by clear provisions of Section 147 of the 1999 constitution, the president is by compulsion required to appoint at least one minister from each state, who shall be an indigene of such state. Again, Fani-Kayode, did not list out all occupants of offices in the public service of the federation who exercise executive powers of Nigeria as a federation to enable readers know whether there are no officers from any section of the federation who is exercising executive powers by virtue of his office. Again, it is a fact that President Buhari as at the time of these articles has not appointed his ministers. It is in the light of the above summation that the mischief of Fani-Kayode becomes manifest.

    Fani Kayode should be reminded that his Jonathan’s creation of ethnic champions did not assist our growth as a nation in that ethnic and religious champions found it easy to abandon their people to enhance the depth of their pockets. Emeka Wogu, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Anyim Pius Anyim and Ike Ekweremadu were labour minister, Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Secretary to the Government of the Federation and Deputy Senate President respectively, yet, Enugu-Port Harcourt express road, Enugu-Onitsha express road, Okigwe-Ideato federal road, Aba-Ikot Ekpene federal road, Ohafia-Arochukwu federal road all collapsed and remained death traps within the period. Jonathan never commissioned one single federal project in the entire South-east throughout his failed term. Elder Orubebe was the minister overseeing the affairs of Niger-Delta area when Bayelsa women, about 10 in number were burnt to death in their ill-fated valentine voyage to Dame Patience Jonathan on account of terrible state of East-West road.

    Nigerians have heard enough from our ethic champions of today’s history and like the animals in the “Animal Farm” they have shown us that all animals are equal, but some are more equal than others. The new song is a new dawn; let ethnic champions give us a space.

     

    • Victor C. Nwaugo Esq.

    Hospital Road, Aba

     

  • My Fears for Buhari (2)

    Last week, this column dwelt on the president’s 100 days in office. It highlighted the initial hiccups, particularly the unending drama at the National Assembly which, by all account, is still simmering and could slow down the wheel of governance. It also touched on other problems and prospects of the Buhari administration.

    Quite refreshingly, Nigerians have embarked on a countdown to the formation of the much-awaited new cabinet which the president has promised to put together before the end of this month. Sure, the composition of the new cabinet will provide a binocular for people to view the direction of the new administration, most importantly, the road it will take to usher in its change agenda.

    Only last week, the president insisted that past officials of government, including elected governors, ministers and other appointees who still had in their possession, diplomatic passports, should hand them over immediately. That, in itself, is a departure from the rotten past where former government officials who had ended their services to the country or who were even disgraced out of office, still enjoy the perks of office, including waving their diplomatic passports at international airports.

    Anyway, like all new governments, the Buhari administration has launched itself into a flurry of action and activities to implement diverse novel policy and governance directions to stymie those put in place by the last Jonathan administration. Some of these novel ideas include, the observance of new rules of engagement in the Civil Service that has invariably made a cabinet minister a ceremonial head of a ministry, the running of a single treasury account for all manners of payment and expenditure by a Ministry, Department and Agency (MDA); the determination to arrest revenue leakages in both the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC and lately, the Nigeria Customs Service, NCS, among others.

    There was also the reappointment of Alhaji Habibu Abdullahi, as the Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority, in place of Alhaji Sanusi Ado Bayero, who was appointed to the position in the twilight of the Jonathan administration. All these graphically illustrate the race to erase all vestiges of the past government and replace it with a redemptive coloration.

    Now, the president is confronted with the albatross of fulfilling many of the campaign promises he made to Nigerians in the heat of the hustling that preceded the Presidential election. With the benefit of hindsight, many Nigerians are beginning to see that with the realities on ground, it will virtually be very Herculean, if not impossible, to fulfill the President’s “messianic” promises such as feeding school pupils and students; payment of a Welfare Allowance of N5,000 to all unemployed Nigerian youths; considerably bringing down the exchange rate of the naira to other currencies and all that.

    It is conventional wisdom that apart from Admiral Murtala Nyako, the immediate past elected governor of Adamawa State, no President’s party man or woman is currently being investigated or facing trial for corruption or corruptive practices. This has elicited some loud whispers in the polity. The fact of the Nyako case is that he was already being sought for trial before he escaped overseas and only came back to Nigeria to face his EFCC inquisitors after Buhari was sworn in as Nigeria’s President on May 29. Many Nigerians are aware of the apparent selective amnesia on the part of the government agencies responsible for the investigation and prosecution of alleged cases of corruption and corruptive practices. In their view, the exercise, which is Buhari’s main thrust of coming into office, may not be holistic and all-encompassing, if the opposition PDP alone is made to face the scrutiny of these federal anti-corruption agencies, while others are walking free.

    Concurrently, the impending probe of the sourcing, payments and delivery of military hardware and consumables, albeit, in the public domain, may unearth figures, in and out of the military establishment, who may have soiled their hands. The concern of this column is that this tribe of treasury looters, may, out of self-protection and interests, take or initiate proactive actions to protect those interests through unconstitutional means. This scenario is also indicative of the “powerful oil barons” and those “hidden” interests in the purchase and operations of the various unbundled units of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN, who may baulk at moves to either expose them or truncate their avenues of milking our common patrimony.

    Surprisingly, rather than concentrate on providing good governance, a mantra that formed a major plank of the people’s acceptance of the APC/Buhari aggregation prior to the election, the party and, by extension, the President, has not dropped its toga of being in the opposition. The party’s predilection for joining issues on any topic and its predisposition to stirring the hornet’s nest of contentious issues, have tended to create a backlash of problems for the president. For example, sometime ago, a governor told everyone with authoritative glee that President Buhari was given a list of persons who stole and stashed away billions of Nigeria’s petro-dollars. He also said a former minister has been slated for trial and consequent jailing. Soon after, the American State Department came out, forcefully, to deny that anything of that sort ever happened during President Buhari’s recent visit to the United States of America.

    However, an area that most people are not paying any attention to is the subterranean moves and posturing for the presidential election of 2019, even when the newly-sworn-in federal government is still tottering and trying to consolidate. There is no gainsaying the fact that the virtual “war” for the soul of the National Assembly cadre of principal officers was one fought solely to position certain persons for the prime positions at the presidency, post-2019. Among the top echelon and rank and file of the APC, there are talks of the likelihood of President Buhari resorting to the “Mandela Option”, that is, doing one presidential term and leaving the terrain open to the likes of Nasir Ahmed el-Rufai, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso; Atiku Abubakar, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, who is currently in the visible and powerful position of President of the Senate and others.

    It is for this reason that activities at the various power points in the APC are now geared towards having a foothold, no matter how tenuous, in the cabinet currently being put together by the President. In addition to labouring to be in the good books of Buhari, those with ambitions for 2019, are strengthening their stranglehold on the fiefdoms they presently control for a possible last-ditch bid for the formation of a new party, where their interests or objectives, will be best served. Many consider the current posturing as a dress rehearsal for 2019 as the fireworks will commence as soon as the President engages the home-bend at the dusk of his first term.

    There is a school of thought also, that conjectures a grand plan in which the President’s foot-soldiers will, either by self-help or prodding from the main man himself, plot a second term, which, in any case, he is constitutionally-entitled to, and in the process, rubbish the ambitions of those who are rearing to go after his job. What the above scenarios signpost is that whichever way it is viewed, the president’s path is laden with mines with the likelihood of, God forbid, some catastrophic consequences. This is the more reason the president should consistently be on the alert and continuously watch his back.

    As it is, President Muhammadu Buhari has a date with history, positively or negatively, depending on how he handles the myriad of problems and challenges that presently confront his administration and the nation. But he will be best remembered for either assuaging the dire conditions of the larger mass of the Nigerian people or for compounding them.                                                                  Concluded.

     

  • What Boko Haram wants in exchange for Chibok girls- Buhari

    What Boko Haram wants in exchange for Chibok girls- Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has given an insight into on-going federal government’s negotiation with the the Boko Haram insurgent group.

    Buhari spoke on the negotiation while responding to questions from members of the Nigerian community in France under the auspices of Nigerians In Diaspora Organization (NIDO) on Tuesday.

    He revealed that one the conditions given by the group was for the Federal Government to release one of its members who has been strategic in developing Improvised Explosives Devices (IEDs).

    But he said that the government will not accept such a demand.

    [ad id=”403656″]” They wanted us to release one of their leaders who is a strategic person in developing and making Improvised IEDs that is causing a lot of havoc in the country by blowing people in Churches, Mosque, market places, motor parks and other places. But is very important that if we are going to talk to any body, we have to know how much he is worth.

    “Let them bring all the girls and then, we will be prepared to negotiate, I will allow them to come back to Nigeria or to be absolved in the community. We have to be very careful, the concern we have for the Chibok girls, one only imagine if they got a daughter there between 14 and 18 and for more than one and a half year, a lot of the parents who have died would rather see the graves of their daughters rather the condition they imagine they are in.

    “This has drawn a lot of sympathy though out the world, that is why this government is getting very hard in negotiating and getting the balance of those who are alive, ” Buhari stated

  • We’ve started negotiations with Boko Haram leaders, says Buhari

    We’ve started negotiations with Boko Haram leaders, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday said that the Federal Government has began negotiations with members of the Boko Haram sect towards securing release of over 200 secondary school girls abducted in Chibok, Borno State.
    Buhari made the disclosure while responding to questions from members of the Nigerian community in France under the auspices of Nigerians In Diaspora Organization (NIDO).
    Stressing that his administration was worried by the continued abduction of the girls by their captors, he said that the administration is working tirelessly to get them released.
    Noting that the incident has attracted global attention and sympathy within Nigeria, he said that the government can not continue to fold its arms and watch.
    ” The issue of Chibok girls has occupied our minds and because of the international attention it drew and the sympathy through out the country and the world, the government is negotiating with some of the Boko Haram leadership,” Buhari said
    According to him, the government had to first establish genuine members of the sect in order not to make the mistake of engaging the wrong persons.