Tag: BUHARI

  • Big questions as Buhari sacks Service Chiefs, NSA

    Big questions as Buhari sacks Service Chiefs, NSA

    The new men: Olonishakin, Ibas, Buratai, Monguno, Abubakar

    Morgan is Chief of Defence Intelligence

    Many questions were raised yesterday as President Muhammadu Buhari sacked the Service Chiefs.

    Also gone is the National Security Adviser (NSA).

    President Buhari named their replacements. He also appointed a new Chief of Defence Intelligence (CDI).

    Relieved of their duties are Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Lt.-Gen. Kenneth Minimah, Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) Vice Admiral Usman Jubrin, Chief of Air Staff (CAS) Air Marshal Adesola Amosun and NSA Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd).

    The President, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, named the new helmsmen. They are: Major-General Abayomi Gabriel Olonishakin (CDS), Major-General T.Y. Buratai (COAS), Rear Admiral Ibok-Ete Ekwe Ibas (CNS), Air Vice Marshal Sadique Abubakar (CAS), Air Vice Marshal Monday Riku Morgan, Chief of Defence Intelligence (CDI) and retired Maj-Gen Babagana Monguno (NSA).

    Among the questions being asked yesterday are:

    •Will there be a probe to establish how the multi-billion cash voted yearly for defence has been spent?

    •Buhari has said he would like to examine why the military, which earned accolades on many international assignments became so weakened it could not crush the Boko Haram insurgency;

    •Will the various courts martial go on, considering the fact that soldiers and officers on trial complained that they were not well armed to fight?

    •Will the re-organisation permeate the rank and file?

    The new CDS, who hails from Ekiti State, until his appointment, was the Head, Nigerian Army Training and Doctrine Command in Minna, Niger State.

    The new CAS, from Borno State, was the Commander of the Multinational Joint Task Force, which has its headquarters in Ndjamena, Chad, until his appointment.

    Gen. Buratai is former Commander of the Nigerian Army 2 Brigade in Port Harcourt, Rivers State and Commander of the Nigerian Army School of Infantry in Jaji, Kaduna State.

    The new CNS, from Cross River State, enlisted into the Nigerian Defence Academy as a member of the 26th Regular Course in 1979 and was commissioned as a Sub-Lieutenant in 1983.

    His previous appointments include: Naval Provost Marshal, Chief Staff Officer, Naval Training Command, Chief of Administration, Naval Headquarters, Flag Officer Commanding Western Naval Command and Chief of Logistics, Naval Headquarters.

    Until his appointment as CNS, he was the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Navy Holdings Limited.

    Air Vice Marshal Abubakar (NAF/1433), who is from Bauchi State, a former  Chief of Standards and Evaluation, NAF Headquarters; served as Chief of Defence Communications and Air Officer Commanding, NAF Training Command before he was named the CAS yesterday.

    Air Vice Marshal Abubakar was the Chief of Administration, NAF Headquarters.

    The CDI, Air Vice Marshal Morgan, hails from Benue State. He was commissioned into the Nigerian Air Force as a Pilot Officer in June, 1982.

    His previous appointments include Air Officer Commanding, NAF Logistics Command.

    The new NSA, who was a member of the Nigerian Defence Academy’s 21st Regular Course, before his retirement from the Army, held several command and staff appointments, including: Commander, Guards Brigade, Deputy Commandant, National Defence College, Chief of Defence Intelligence, Chief of Defence Logistics and Commander, Training and Doctrine Command.

    The Service chiefs will hold their appointments in an acting capacity until confirmed by the Senate.

    “President Buhari thanked the outgoing Service Chiefs and NSA for their services to the nation and wished them well in their future endeavours,” said the statement.

    The new Service chiefs and the NSA, who were at the Presidency yesterday, declined comment on the appointments.

     Falana: they should be held to account

    The sack of the Service Chiefs was long overdue, rights activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) said yesterday.

    He said: “They abandoned professionalism for politics and exposed the armed forces to unprecedented ridicule and odium. The bulk of the over N4 trillion earmarked for defence in the last five years was diverted. Hence the armed forces were unable to confront the rag tag army of the satanic Boko Haram sect.  

    Falana praised Buhari for sacking the Service Chiefs and the NSA. In his view, the President should go further to make the officers account for “the huge funds collected under the pretext of prosecuting the war on terror”.

    “We call on the new Service Chiefs to reorganise and motivate the highly demoralised troops, set aside the questionable verdicts of courts martial and stop the ongoing diversionary trials of officers and troops who were not equipped to fight the terrorists,” Falan said. 

    To a former Governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Balarabe Musa, the change was normal.

    But he was quick to advise the new Service Chiefs to support Buhari to address the the insurgency, which has crippled the Northeast. 

    He said: “This change is normal. Every new regime wants to effect change in line with its agenda. I think it is not a controversial thing, provided it is within the powers of the president

    “Let the new Service Chiefs give full support to the President so that the insurgency can be solved.”

    A former Military Governor in one of the Northcentral states, who preferred not to be named, said: “I don’t want to talk now to avoid being misunderstood. I am watching the nature of change being planned by the President.”

     

  • Buhari okays N160 to $1 for Christian pilgrims

    Buhari okays N160 to $1 for Christian pilgrims

    president Muhammadu Buhari has approved N160 to $1 exchange rate for the Nigeria Christian Pilgrims Commission’s (NCPC) operations.

    The commission’s Executive Secretary, John Keneddy-Opara, told State House correspondents after briefing Buhari on the commission’s activities at the State House, Abuja.

    He said: “As you are aware, he has approved $1 to N160 for the conventional exchange rate for this pilgrimage operation and he also agreed that he will continue to encourage us, particularly as we drive to ensure self-sustenance, to make sure that the pilgrims are able to pay for the pilgrimages by removing government sponsorship.

    “This is a journey and we are sure that we are going to succeed. So, he was very happy with the entire process. We are praying that God will help us to be a source of strength to Mr.

    President, so that the Federal Government and states will spend the necessary resources on other things while the pilgrimage is self-funding as time goes on.

    “We are already running four pilgrimages in one year. The first is the Easter pilgrimage, which has passed, the Youth Pilgrimage which we termed operation catch them young, the family pilgrimage and the overall pilgrimage. For those going to Israel for the 11 days trip, it is N379,840 and for the youth pilgrimage, it is going  to cost N357,000.”

    Nigerians on pilgrimage, he noted, can now undergo skill acquisition programme organised by the Nigerian Christian Pilgrims Commission and Israel’s Ministry of Agriculture, towards training them in the area of agriculture.

    He added: “We are introducing the pilgrimage pilot lottery scheme that will enable people who are lucky to be able to go on this trip without much dependence on the state and the Federal Government.”

    He said he was in the State House to brief the President on the activities of the commission.

    “I came to brief the President on the activities of the Nigerian Christian Pilgrims Commission. Earlier, my colleague, the Chairman of Hajj Commission had come to brief him.

    “I had to tell him where we are and how we started the commission and where we are today and our prayers. I want to say that the President was very happy with the commission and he said the commission has done very well.”

  • Onu rallies Igbo support for Buhari, APC

    Onu rallies Igbo support for Buhari, APC

    A NATIONAL leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, yesterday said every Nigerian, including the Igbo race, should support President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Onu, a former Abia State governor, made the urge when he hosted a five-member planning committee of the World Igbo Conference in his Abuja home.

    The committee was led Chief Ben Aranusi, who said the Ndigbo seemed not to know their rightful place in the country.

    He said the Ndigbo owed it a duty to fully support the President, who has demonstrated a genuine commitment to move the country forward with the faithful implementation of the APC blue print.

    Dr. Onu described as incalculable the benefits awaiting the Igbo, who he noted, live everywhere across the country.

    He assured his kinsmen that the Buhari-led administration will work for all irrespective of ethnic, political or religious inclination.

    Calling on the Ndigbo to rally round the APC and the President, the APC chief recalled that the Igbos in the 19 northern states demonstrated their commitment towards building this new thinking by voting massively for the in March 28 and April 11 general elections.

    His words: “Ohaneze must be commended for what it’s doing as regards the welfare of Igbo throughout the country and beyond.

    “We have Igbo everywhere in Nigeria and across the world. We, as Igbo, are the only major ethnic group that is not indigenous to any other country in the world.

    So, you look at ethnic groups that are indigenous in Nigeria, what that means is that outside Nigeria, there is no other country for the Igbos. For other major ethnic groups, this is not the case.”

     

     

     

     

  • Buhari, NA and race against time

    To the conscientious analyst, neither Tambuwal nor Ekweremadu holds any appeal.

    Tambuwalisation,  which romped Aminu Tambuwal to the speakership, despite the ire of his ruling party, suited fine the opposition Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), during the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) hegemony.

    Yet, it has come back, in the new order, to plague the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC); with the loss of the Senate deputy presidency to the opposition PDP.

    Many would, of course, enter the softener: the Tambuwal-led House of Representatives proved much more people-centred; than the reactionary House expected under Mulikat Adeola-Akande, the PDP choice for Speaker.

    Yes — and the polity would appear not ungrateful.  But even that noble accident hardly vitiates the vile principle of rebellion against party.

    Now to Ekweremadu-isation, which has fired PDP’s Ike Ekweremadu to retain the senate deputy presidency, despite his PDP losing power.

    Indeed, it’s a real laugh seeing Godswill Akpabio, former Akwa Ibom governor and now a senator, wax lyrical on cant.  He claimed Ekweremadu was a product of some gobbledygook bi-partisan entente, involving public-spirited APC and PDP senators.  Nice attempt at deodorisation of a clear and brazen parliamentary coup — with even Akpabio hardly convincing himself!

    Of course, it was nothing of the sort.

    Rather, it was two blocs of colluding legislators — a minority, from the APC side, for strictly personal gains, stabbing their own party in the back; and a majority, from the PDP, attempting an obstructionist vanguard, to stall a clear mandate for change, hoping therefrom, to reap some future group political salvation.

    But as everything karma-like, and not unlike the eye-for-an-eye Mosaic law that soon leaves everybody blind, the Ekweremadu phase of this bad politics is even worse than the Tambuwal original.

    For all his rebellion, Speaker Tambuwal conceded the House Leader to Ms Adeola-Akande, his party’s original Speaker-designate.  But Ekweremadu is living example that Bukola Saraki, senate president, will make no such concession!  If he did, the deal would be off.  If Ekweremadu is in peril, the deal would be in danger.  That puts Saraki too in peril!

    Again, while the Tambuwal concession did not nullify the original rebellion, the Saraki intransigence portends a worse parliamentary plague next time.

    So long for a political class that thrives on expediency, and hardly on principle!

    But ethical or ruthless, life goes on.  President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB) demanded and got a mandate for change.  So, he is condemned to delivering on that mandate.

    The snag, though, is: even if his party has a healthy parliamentary majority, the Saraki-brewed Ekweremadu-isation tends to have vaporised all that.

    Right now the National Assembly appears fractured into three camps: the majority APC, who appear loyal to their party and the PMB agenda; the minority PDP, poised to play the opposition, by hook or by crook; and the penumbra of two minorities: the bulk PDP and APC rebel elements that cooked Saraki’s senate presidency, which could band together to eclipse the PMB plan, particularly if the group perceives it a threat to its own agenda — and political survival.

    Yet, fast-tracking such initiatives appears the badly needed redemption for a fast decaying polity.

    But bad news for PMB: when the chips are down, these two minorities could forge an illicit majority, filibustering against, if not terminally blocking legislative support for popular initiatives.  That simply means PMB may face more difficulties than anticipated, to garner legislative support for his programmes.

    That, indeed, would be very bad news for everyone.  This is because to put things right for Nigeria is a desperate race against time, where even a second’s delay could be serious, if not outright fatal.

    From the 2015 election, the partisan winners were from the North (North East, North Central and North West) and South West, where APC swept the polls.  The losers were from the South East and South-South, where PDP won.

    So, virtual partisan political warfare, at least in the next four years, would be between the North/South West (to further press their electoral hegemony) and the South-East/South-South (to defend their turf).

    But overall, all of the geo-political zones were losers on the developmental turf, according to findings from a new poverty study on Nigeria from Oxford University (mentioned on this page last week), known as the Oxford poverty and human development initiative (OPHI), and formally cited as OPHI 2015, with the latest stats from as late as June 2015.

    OPHI does not measure poverty as just “no money”; but more rigorously as conditions precedent: either to reinforce poverty; or break that yoke to deliver development.

    So, by its 10-point indicators, broken down into three major planks, a state might be flush with cash, yet work to deepen poverty by its low infrastructure (social and physical); or be low on cash, but high on infrastructure, to dislodge poverty.

    Trite: presidential mandates are national.  But if all politics is local, PMB has extra motivation to push pro-people, anti-poverty initiatives, needing urgent legislative support.

    From the OPHI data, the 10 poorest states, with corresponding destitution, are from the president’s home region: Yobe, Zamfara, Jigawa, Bauchi, Kebbi, Sokoto, Katsina, Taraba, Gombe and Kano — in that order.

    On this list is Katsina, PMB’s home state, Kano, the North’s commercial dynamo and Sokoto, the North West’s spiritual headquarters.  So, if he desires his presidency to be impactful, PMB must, against poverty, race against time.

    The top 10 states least affected by poverty and destitution are a mishmash: Lagos, Osun, Anambra, Ekiti, Edo, Imo, Abia, Rivers, Kwara and Akwa Ibom — in that order.

    Still, that four states, Lagos, Osun, Ekiti and Edo, dominate the top five tends to underscore the development bent of the states ruled, or once ruled, by the defunct ACN.  It also appears in the presidential camp, in the intra-APC parliamentary showdown.  More: the group should be zealous PMB partners, in a fierce anti-poverty war  — lest their areas slip back into the poverty mash, in this period of national economic angst.

    South East did far better than the South-South on the OPHI scale, despite SS’s relative bigger share of the central cake. On the other hand, Kwara, at spot 9, sits at the apex of all the northern states.

    Given the balance of the power in the National Assembly, and balance of fortune on the OPHI scale, could Saraki’s rebel APC legislators then team up with PDP-dominated SE and SS to block PMB and legislatively frustrate his initiatives?

    Sans bad politics, there is no sense in that, since no state or geo-political zone is immune from poverty.  But bad politics makes it a possibility, especially if collective good threatens to turn individual ruin.

    That is why, to succeed, PMB must marshal a strong coalition in parliament — with enough grassroots developmental carrots as drivers, to build a bi-partisan progressive vanguard.

    But if this commonsense viewpoint falters?  Then, he must build a media-people coalition outside parliament to enforce parliamentary common sense that, in Jeremy Bentham-speak, pushes the greatest happiness of the greatest number.

    That is the only way the change mandate of March 28 won’t end yet another grand betrayal.

    If he desires his presidency to be impactful, PMB must, against poverty, race against time

  • Emerhor: Buhari needs Nigerians to make change

    The Delta State All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate, Olorogun O’tega Emerhor, has urged those attacking President Muhammadu Buhari to work with the government for the “Change” Nigerians voted for.

    In a statement by his Senior Special Adviser on Media and Political Communication, Dr. Fred Latimore Oghenesivbe, the APC chieftain said the President’s attackers should understand that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) wrecked the nation’s socio-economic boat for 16 years.

    Emerhor noted that this was the reason the Buhari administration needed time to scrutinise the books of the Jonathan’s administration before recruiting new hands to run the system.

    The governorship candidate posited that Mr. President, who is well known globally for his “Zero Corruption” crusade, will not be in a hurry to do the needful, adding that it is expected that after 16 years of massive corruption and economic saboutage, the APC-led government will dig deep to ensure sanity and good governance.

    Oghenesivbe quoted Emerhor as saying that President Buhari being a proactive and transparent leader deserves commendation from Nigerians for ordering the immediate closure of some bank accounts of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and in the same token ordered the sharing of taxes from the Nigerian Liquefied Gas Company (LNG) to the three tiers of government.

    He assured that the President will do anything and everything within his powers to correct the ills in all ministries, departments and agencies of government through forensic auditing, blocking of financial leakages, prosecution of corrupt government officials.

    Emerhor, a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), is optimistic that the 50 per cent cut in the salaries of Mr. President and  Vice-President is a pointer to the fact that other senior public officers and political office holders will have to adjust and be ready to make similar sacrifice.

  • Address power problems, contractors urge Buhari

    The chairman of Abuja chapter of Licensed Electrical Contractors Association of Nigeria LECAN, Chief Vitus Ofodum has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to urgently address power challenges.

    Speaking with journalists in his office in Abuja, the chairman called on the president to address the anomalies in the electricity industry.

    Chief Ofodum kicked against the use of quacks in electricity works, a condition which he said if not checked would continue to cause serious problems in the quality of electricity services and consumption in the country.

    He decried the use of quacks by Power Holdings Company of Nigeria (PHCN) in electricity works, adding that since the company took over management of the industry from the government, it only concentrated on abnormal profit maximisation without giving good people of Nigeria the needed services.

    He said: “PHCN is expected to put money into the system and rectify all the problems in the service works on the ground instead of maximizing abnormal profits and employing quacks.”

    Calling on the government to take over the management of electricity as was obtainable before, he said that with the level of corruption in Nigeria, the country was not yet ripe to privatise electricity.

    He alleged that Abuja Electricity Distribution Board (AEDB) has converted marketers to engineers; a situation which he said was not obtainable in Suleja, Niger state, where engineers are different from marketers.

    Chief Ofodum insisted on the use of professionals in the industry.

    He called on the present government to ensure that electricity laws are strictly adhered in other to increase the quality of power generation in the country.

    He added that before former President Goodluck Jonathan left the office, he signed into law the Electricity Management Services (EMS) which ensured that every electricity work was done in conformity with electricity laws.

  • Another look at Buhari’s bailout

    SIR: Last week, the Federal government announced the much anticipated relief package, aka “bail out,” to enable distressed states clear the backlog of salaries they are owing as well as encourage economic boom and productivity.

    The package came in three measures: one, the allocation of N413.7 billion proceeds from NLNG among the three tiers of government; two, CBN Special Intervention Fund of N250 – 300 billion and three, the restructuring of commercial loans of N660 billion by Debt Management Office (DMO) with a view of increasing their tenure to 15 years so as to reduce debt service obligations of  distressed states.

    Although I had my initial thoughts on how we could encourage these distressed states to exit financial insolvency and become productive permanently, I must commend the foresight of President Muhammadu Buhari on this score. The president  has shown a great quality of leadership which is responsive courage.  No matter how we want to look at it, Nigeria exists to provide security and seek welfare for its people; so, in this era of army of distressed states, the Federal government is under obligation to explore ways of finding quick-fix solutions to this national issue and ensure peace and prosperity in the country.

    However, Nigeria cannot elect to be a country that encourages laziness and spendthriftism; it must enthrone a model that encourages hard work and diligence in the management of public fund so that it can speedily attain economic development. Again, given what states receive monthly from the federation coffers as monthly allocation, there is absolutely no reason why Ebonyi pays its workers as at when due while Rivers and Osun are owing their own workers from four to 11 months. The only word to explain this massive wonder is mismanagement.

    Luckily, all states in Nigeria are massively blessed by providence with material and human resources to excel and reach the sky; from Sokoto to Anambra and Osun, our soils are arable and harbour natural resources, we also have competent people to drive our economy if state governors had developed synergy with the federal government towards the development and encouragement of exploration of natural resources in their domains.

    Strangely, nothing is being said of the people who made these states distressed through wanton mismanagement. Elsewhere it has been said that re-election and election campaigns are the reasons why some states are unable to pay their workers today. Some people were and/or the governors of these states. It is therefore pertinent that as the president extends relief package to the distressed states to clear this mess with the right hand, he should also extend EFCC, ICPC, etc to the people who brought these states on their knees. The president must use this time to show us how committed he is in fighting corruption and retrieving whatever that might have been stolen from the public till in the days of impunity. By and large, Nigeria can choose to strengthen its anti-corruption agencies now or be ready to be extending relief packages to distressed states perpetually.  Moving forward, returning governors who put their states in this present economic mess must also be compelled to work under Federal government supervision in the use of this stimulus package and its eventual repayment schedule. The DMO, CBN and Federal Ministry of Finance should jointly ensure that this relief package impact positively on the economy and our people as such it would not be out of place for President Buhari to set up a supervisory committee to monitor the disbursement and use of this money if not some state governors would divert the money without paying their workers after all a beggar, they say, have no choice.

    We must not create a tradition that would encourage state governors to continue to rape the treasury of their states or even go on borrowing spree that would be repaid by the next generation given the restructuring of loans by DMO. So, stringent guidelines must be set for accessing the CBN Special Bail-out Intervention Fund of N300 billion in order not to set a precedent for rewarding laziness and low productivity.

     

    • Okafor C. Udoka

    Ikeja, Lagos.

  • Buhari: Signs of good things to come

    SIR: President Buhari has offered to take only 50% of his salary as President and Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces. That is N7 million per annum, as against his entitlement of N14 million. So has his Vice, Professor Osinbajo. Nigerians are excited. They are very excited. They see the gesture as a symbol of the coming years of serious accountability on the part of government.

    When I ruminate over the circumstances that brought Nigeria to its knees and made it a paradox, a country where a majority of the citizens continues to suffer deprivation despite the enormous wealth the country is endowed with; when I think about how educated Nigerians continue to run away from their country in droves because they are unable to stand the heat of indiscipline that has become the hallmark of the nation’s culture; when I remember how all the good things of life, the steadily running taps, the roads which were mended as soon as they showed signs of weakness, the electricity that never failed by day or by night, the hospitals that never lacked drugs and the schools where dedicated teachers ensured that the education of children entrusted into the care was their main priority, I shudder to see the “progress” Nigerian political leaders claim to have made since their country acquired self-rule in 1960.

    I reflect that had the military not made their exploitative incursion into the democratic evolution of Nigeria, obviously the country would have been far more formidably built than the fragile democracy they now boast of. It was the military that introduced the rogue politicians who have continued since 1966 to dominate the helm of affairs in Nigeria. It was the military that ushered in the rogue businessmen and women who have continued to parade the corridors of power in the country till today. It was the military that turned the country inside out and outside in.

    The military created a rogue situation which made government a lucrative business for those who could stand the heat, those who could do or die in the process. For those whose philosophy of life was ‘live and let live’ belonging to Nigeria was like having a bad dream.

    That God will use a military General to restore the rights of Nigerian citizens to decent wages; to restore sanity and accountability in public office and to give Nigerians back their dignity within the international community – things Satan stole from them through his agents, the rogue politicians and rogue businessmen and women  – is to my simple mind, very significant. It is not only a glimpse into the will of God, it is a symbol of things to come.

    President Buhari has taken the first bold step forward. But we must not forget. There is no coordinated effort yet. Even the governors have different opinions on the issue. One thing is obvious, though, and that is that in all this, there is a yawning need to curb the salaries and allowances of Nigerian politicians now that the exercise has begun from the Presidency. Nigerian legislators are the highest paid in the whole world. Nigerians have continued to ask why that should be so. What are they doing better than the legislators in the UK, the USA, Japan, Canada, China and elsewhere?

    If President Buhari must succeed in this campaign, the Executive Arm of government must initiate a Bill which will drastically slash the remuneration of Nigerian public office holders at every level so that it will no longer be attractive to rogue politicians. The Buhari Administration should get information on how much legislators earn in America, the UK, Japan, Korea, Canada and China. Then the administration should take the average and deliver that to Nigerians as the wage of a Nigerian legislator.

    Nigerians need to move their democracy forward now that they have a man they can trust is not the greedy type. This executive bill must be well packaged and presented in such a way that if they refuse it, the whole world will know that Nigerian legislators are not willing to serve their nation and that they are more interested in serving their private pockets.

     

    • Emeka Asinugo

    London

  • Buhari approves N160 to $1 rate for Christian Pilgrims’ operations

    Buhari approves N160 to $1 rate for Christian Pilgrims’ operations

    President Muhammadu Buhari has approved N160 to $1 exchange rate for Nigeria Christian Pilgrims Commission’s (NCPC) operations.

    This was disclosed to State House correspondents by the Executive Secretary of the Commission, John Keneddy-Opara, after briefing President Buhari on the Commission’s activities at the State House, Abuja.

    He said: “As you are aware he has approved $1 to N160 for the conventional exchange rate for this pilgrimage operation and he also agreed that he will continue to encourage us particularly as we drive to ensure self sustenance.

    “This is a journey and we are sure that we are going to succeed. So he was very happy with the entire process. We are praying that God will help us to be a source of strength to Mr. President, so that the Federal government and states will spend the necessary resources on other things while the pilgrimage is self funding as time goes on.

    “We are already running four pilgrimages in one year. The first is the Easter pilgrimage which has passed, the Youth Pilgrimage which we termed operation catch them young, the family pilgrimage and the overall pilgrimage. For those going to Israel for the 11 days trip, it is N379, 840 and for the youth pilgrimage it is going to cost N357, 000.”

    According to him, Nigerians on pilgrimage can now undergo skill acquisition programme organised by the Nigerian Christian Pilgrims Commission and Ministry of Agriculture in Israel towards training them in the area of agriculture.

    He added: “We are introducing the pilgrimage pilot lottery scheme that will enable people who are lucky to go on this trip without much dependence on the state and the federal government.”

    Kennedy-Opara said he was in the State House to brief the President on the activities of the commission.

    He said: “I came to brief the President on the activities of the Nigerian Christian Pilgrims’ Commission, earlier my colleague, the Chairman of Hajj Commission had come to brief him.

    “I had to tell him where we are and how we started the commission and where we are today and our prayers and I want to say that the President was very happy with the commission and he said the commission has done very well.”

     

  • Update: Buhari appoints new Service Chiefs, NSA

    Update: Buhari appoints new Service Chiefs, NSA

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday sacked service chiefs and the National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki.

    The President in a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, also announced their replacement.

    The statement listed six new services chiefs and the NSA.

    It reads: “The President has approved the following appointments – Major-Gen. Abayomi Gabriel Olonishakin – Chief of Defence Staff; Major-Gen. T.Y. Buratai – Chief of Army Staff, Rear Admiral Ibok-Ete Ekwe Ibas – Chief of Naval Staff.

    “Air Vice Marshal Sadique Abubakar , Chief of Air Staff, Air Vice Marshal Monday Riku Morgan, Chief of Defence Intelligence and Major-Gen. Babagana Monguno (rtd) , National Security Adviser.

    The new Chief of Defence Staff, who hails from Ekiti State, until his new appointment was the Head of the Nigerian Army Training and Doctrine Command in Minna, Niger State.

    The new COAS, Maj.-Gen. Buratai, who hails from Borno State, until his new appointment was the Commander of the Multinational Joint Task Force which has its headquarters in Ndjamena, Chad.

    Maj-Gen. Buratai has previously served as Commander of the Nigerian Army’s 2nd Brigade in Port Harcourt and Commander of the Nigerian Army School of Infantry in Jaji, Kaduna State.

     

    The new Chief of Naval Staff, Rear Admiral Ibas, who hails from Cross River State, enlisted into the Nigerian Defence Academy as a member of the 26th Regular Course in 1979 and was commissioned as a Sub-Lieutenant in 1983.

    His previous appointments include – Naval Provost Marshal, Chief Staff Officer, Naval Training Command, Chief of Administration, Naval Headquarters, Flag Officer Commanding Western Naval Command and Chief of Logistics, Naval Headquarters.

    Until his appointment as Chief of Naval Staff, he was the Chief Executive Officer of Navy Holdings Limited.