Tag: collapse

  • APGA advised to collapse into PDP

    A founding Vice-Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Anambra State and former chairman of the party’s Finance Committee, Chief Ben Ezeibe, has advised stakeholders of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) to collapse the party and formally join the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Ezeibe also faulted the governor of Anambra State, Willie Obiano, former governor, Peter Obi and APGA National Chairman, Chief Victor Umeh, for their conditional support for Jonathan’s 2015 presidential re-election. Ezeibe spoke to reporters in Enugu yesterday.

    He accused APGA leadership of hypocrisy, stating that their demand for high profile board appointment was a mere blackmail and an opportunistic outburst.

    Ezeibe advised the leadership of APGA to tow the best democratic practices by engaging in dialogue with PDP, the party that produced President Goodluck Jonathan, adding: “if you like the product of the party, you must also accept the party. Your support for Jonathan will be more meaningful if you join the party, PDP.”

    He said it was not acceptable for APGA to field candidates to contest all other political positions in Anambra State except that of presidency in 2015 general election. “The party must also consider fielding its own presidential candidates, if it feels it can go it alone,” he stressed.

    According to him: “It is important to clear the air at this stage so that our brothers and sisters in APGA are not further deceived or cowed into isolated local government party (APGA).PDP has a good product and candidate and we do not need APGA to vote him in. In 1999 and 2003 President Obasanjo was voted in without APGA, again in 2007 Yar’ Adua won without APGA support so what are we talking about. APGA or no APGA, PDP will deliver its candidate Jonathan in 2015,” he said.

  • Sunshine switch by Ezeji, Fabiyi may collapse

    Sunshine switch by Ezeji, Fabiyi may collapse

    The transfer of veteran striker Victor Ezeji and Benin Republic goalkeeper Emmanuel Fabiyi to Sunshine Stars may have hit the rocks as has been disputed.

    A source close to Sunshine Stars disclosed that both players have been training with the team with the hope of signing them for the second round, but the different ownership claims over them may scuttle the transfers.

    “Sunshine Stars are at crossroads on Ezeji (Victor) and Fabiyi (Emmanuel),” the source said.

    “Crown are claiming they own Ezeji, that he signed a year’s deal with them, which is still running and which was against the information the team gathered.

    “That is same for Fabiyi – Abia Warriors are claiming Fabiyi belongs to them and the player said something different.

    “Sunshine are looking for alternatives. The deals for both players are not certain at this moment.”

    Experienced campaigner Ezeji, for one, has featured for both Sharks and Dolphins and has posted a stint in Tunisia.

  • Photo: Collapsed building in Lagos

    Photo: Collapsed building in Lagos

  • Debt may collapse power system

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Privatisation Senator Gbenga Obadiah has raised the alarm that if the debt owed the power sector is not addressed, the power generation and transmission in the country will collapse.

    Obadara, made this observation during the committee’s oversight visit to the National Control Centre, (NCC) of the Nigeria Electric Power Grid in Osogbo,the Osun State capital, said the present status of power generation is so low that it cannot take the country to anywhere.

    According to him, the Senate is not happy with the present state of electricity in the country and would try its best to address it. He challenged stakeholders in the  power generation and transmission system to be dedicated as the senate would do all that it is necessary to address all the issues involved.

    Replying, the Executive Director, Transmission Company of Nigeria, TCN, Sahid Mohammed said the company is capable of generating 7,000 Mega Watts of electricity.

  • Why buildings collapse in Nigeria, by expert

    Why buildings collapse in Nigeria, by expert

    Afam Nwana is the Chairman/CEO of Abuja-based Mosaf Group of Companies. In this interview with NWANOSIKE ONU, he explains why buildings collapse and proffers solutions to the problem.

    As the helmsman of MOSAF, can you tell us your achievements so far in the past 30 years?

    Effectively, MOSAF Nigeria Limited started operation in July 1986. We have been like a growing child. There was a time we were pursuing gatehouses, fences and boys’ quarters, clearing and all. But now, we are building skyscrapers and power plants. We are designing rail lines, building hospitals and schools.

    We are equally involved in project management and consultancy services, developing merger projects like rail lines, airports, cargo facilities and canals.

    We are happy that we are involved in the conceptualisation and development of some serious projects in Nigeria. We are now involved in building the biggest laboratory in the West Coast of Africa for Standard Organisation of Nigeria at Ogba Industrial Estate in Lagos which sits on almost 1.5 hectares of land.

    We are involved in such projects as planning of/and designing the Calabar and Lagos coastal rail lines in conjunction with our international partners. We are also involved in the construction of the Kaduna 230 mega watts power plant as well as the Wind Farm Development in Katsina. We are involved in solar farm in Jigawa.  So, MOSAF has come of age and we thank God that in the last 29 years, we have done well. But we wouldn’t have done all these without a team of dedicated and loyal staff that providence provided for us.

    What are your policy thrusts in terms of running MOSAF as an indigenous company?

    We are an indigenous construction company. In the circumstances, we, in 1992, started what we call reactivation of the Nigeria Chamber of Indigenous Contractors which I had the privilege of serving as the Secretary General. Incidentally, that was during Ibrahim Babangida’s regime. He asked us to come up with a construction policy which government would sign into law to check capital flight.

    I provided two offices with a secretary, a car and fully furnished offices for the Nigerian Chambers of Indigenous Contractors in Lagos with the aim of developing indigenous capacities, capabilities and competences.

    We put in place a policy framework, but the then government failed to implement the proposal.  Nigeria needs a signed construction policy as it obtains in countries like Israel, America, India, Australia and England.

    The construction industry can bring in a lot of money for Nigeria because if we have a policy and people are benefiting from it, we can export construction and generate a lot of foreign exchange for the country. That has been my goal in the last 20 years as the Secretary-General and Deputy Chairman of Nigeria Chambers of Indigenous Contractors.

    As a Fellow of the Nigerian Society of Engineers, I have been training engineers and impacting on Nigerians positively.  MOSAF group has been training a lot of people and they are doing very well. We need a government policy that will help drive it to the next level.

     

    As an indigenous contractor and a foremost engineer in the system, how worried are you about frequent building s collapse? Again, are you not worried about issues concerning construction quality and the quality of delivery by your colleagues?

    When you have data, policy and law but you don’t implement them, what you get is chaos or anarchy.  The system cannot produce anything better. Buildings are collapsing because contracts are awarded to people who are practising contractors.  Everybody is a contractor.

    Contracts should be awarded to the right people based on the right policies guiding such process.  We have been talking about policy implementation. Let me mention one of the policies we are talking about.  We mentioned it to Babangida, and I remember I was singled out in the Senate building of the Tafawa Balewa Square when Babangida was the President. He asked if the indigenous contractors could build the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas. I raised my hand but I was not allowed to talk.

    Construction is about logistics. But let it be handled by professionals. What am saying about policy is that any big project in Nigeria that is above 50 million Dollars should be given to a foreign company but make a policy that a percentage of it must be carried out locally and those local contractors must be satisfied that these companies have competences and capabilities to carry out the task, while they could be supervised by big contractors.

    After executing five to 10 projects, the indigenous contractors would have gathered the experiences, competences and capabilities to execute complex projects. We are experiencing building collapse because we tend to contract out big jobs without proper supervision to ensure they do not use labourers instead of using skilled labour. When you give out a project on contract without adequate supervision, it is difficult to hold somebody accountable with regard to quality assurance.

    We should not forget the issue of corruption which is endemic.  When those supervising a project are after how to line their pockets with money, then they are not professionals. We have always emphasised that we should be given jobs and allow us to do it professionally.

    Since we have been in the industry in the past 30 years, no building which we have constructed has collapsed. Go and check our records. We stand to be challenged in whatever service we have delivered. But when you give projects to non-professionals, what you get is what you bargained for.

    Albert Enstein said that “everything is related”. Just as we are talking about construction engineering, it goes the same way with other professions which we all belong to. We have quack tailors, quack doctors, quack journalists, quack politicians and quack engineers. That is why we are experiencing building collapse. But none that we built has collapsed.

    In terms of regulations, how can government ensure quality assurance in the delivery of projects executed by indigenous contractors?

    Three things are necessary. First and foremost, there must be a Nigerian construction policy. Secondly, there must be a Nigerian construction bank. Thirdly, there must be enforcement of the laws that have been put in place.

    What will be the functions of the construction banks?

    When you have construction bank and construction policy, the problem of funding which results in cutting corners will be eradicated.  Every builder will be registered just like we have in other professions like the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) which is saddled with the responsibility of monitoring the activities of lawyers. When you go to the bank to take loan to do a job, they will check, the regulatory bodies will do the double checking and you will find out that one of the people who do a lot of checking is the bank. Before a bank gives you loan facility, it makes sure that a lot of things are in place.

    I have done jobs abroad and I know such things help to put check on the contractors. A contractor can’t claim to have built 10 or 20-floor edifice when he has never built a bungalow.

    One secret that is sustaining MOSAF is that whatever we have done, we did it through documentation.  Secondly, we don’t pay any money unless through the bank. So, the bank has been our accountant and auditor that check our books regularly.

    Those things help to instill discipline in the contractor because discipline is very important in quality and quality gives standard and standard gives sustainability. That is the role of a bank.

    In terms of quality delivery, time and competence of your engineers and basically quality assurance, what can you say are the landmark projects your firm has executed in the past 30 years?

    When we have finished executing projects, people always say they were executed by Julius Berger. This makes my engineers and members of staff angry. I will tell them to cheer up because it means that the project executed met international standard.

    But I want to tell you that we are matching them technology to technology, competence to competence and all that. The only thing we don’t have is patronage because we are not a foreign construction firm.

    In terms of corporate social responsibilities, how has your company affected the lives of members of your host communities, especially the less-privileged people?

    Everywhere we had worked, we ensure that we affected the lives of the people positively. In the Niger Delta region, we built halls and trained a lot of people in various fields.  In my community, Enugu-Ukwu, we empowered 371 widows.  We train orphans, we build schools and churches. We have a foundation called “The Friends of the Environment”, whose core mandate is cleaning the environment and the best environment to clean is your brain.

    You are where you are today because your parents cleaned your brain, that is the greatest environment, clean this environment and every other thing is cleaned.

    With the limited resources available to us, we have been able to impact positively on the education sector. We have trained over 169 graduates. The records are there to show.

    Your firm is 30 years old. What are your expectations of this company in the next 10 years?

    Rail line all through the West Coast, move about 100 million people along the West Coast, build a rail line along the West Coast to move human beings.  The greatest thing you can do to human beings is to move them. If there are trains for mass movement of human beings, there will be fewer disasters like air crash and road accidents. People will have alternative means of transportation. We don’t have a choice for now.

    In the next 10 years, MOSAF would want to play major role in the development of the country’s railway system.

    Are you investing in that technology; are you working with the government to that effect?

    Yes we are working with government and foreign concerns. What we need is to be supported.

    Which of the countries are you collaborating with?  Is your presence only in Nigeria or does it go beyond Africa?

    We are collaborating with firms in German, America, England, French in the area of rails development, construction of power plants and consultancy.

    In the area of project management, we collaborate with British firms, Asian firms and Hong Kong. We are collaborating with Indians on massive housing projects.

  • Why buildings collapse, by SON DG

    Director-General of the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), Dr. Joseph Odumodu has attributed the incessant buildings collapse to the use of sub-standard products by builders. At an interactive session with reporters in Lagos, Odumodu said the agency’s field checks showed that many block moulders have no idea of the standards guiding their business, adding that the rate of buildings collapse in Nigeria in the last five years is more than the one recorded in the last 15 years.

    Odumodu said the agency’s business was the protection of lives and property, adding that SON is playing its role. “SON is fully playing its role in the country. Our business is to protect and safeguard the lives and property of Nigerians,” he said. He frowned at a situation where moulders literally mould sand with tint of cement and pass such as cement blocks and sell at low rates to make money. According to him, any block that is less than N200 is sub-standard.

    The DG of SON pointed out that some moulders use one bag of cement to make about 80 blocks, whereas a bag of cement should make between 25 and 30 blocks. “I have met with block moulders association and some of them confessed to me that they make substandard blocks. This is not acceptable. Some block moulders produce 80 blocks with a bag of cement. Some get up to 60. No building can stand with that kind of mixture. A bag of cement should produce between 25 and 30 blocks. Any block that is sold for less than N200 is a substandard block. But we discovered that some of the blocks are sold for N160,” he said.

    Explaining further, Odumodu said a cement of 32.5 grade is meant for plastering and block moulding, while that of 42.5 grade is for heavy concrete and building bridges. He said all cement manufacturers in Nigeria have met with the quality standard. On the possible discontinuation of the 32.5 grade, he said the issue will be left for the technical committee to look into, adding that a committee, which will not be chaired by SON, will soon be set up to look into it. He said the committee is made up of cement manufacturers, block moulders, consumers, civil society groups, and even the press.

    He pointed out that all the cement manufacturers in Nigeria are producing 32.5 grade, even when the Federal Government specified 42.5 for the importers.” All the cement companies in Nigeria are making use of the 32.5. At the time the Federal Government specified 42.5 for the importers, the Nigerian manufacturing companies are producing 32.5. Even companies that have been producing since independence are making 32.5,” he clarified.

    Odumodu however, pointed out that any company that wants to move from 32.5 to 42.5 is free to do so, provided there won’t be increase in the price of cement. “Of course there may be a change in the cost of production, but whether you are doing 32.5 or 42.5, you must maintain the same price. And the manufacturers have the responsibility to let the consumers know what they are buying. This is very important, “Odumodu said, adding that part of the measures to bring sanity in the industry is for block moulder to register with local associations.

    “Every block moulder must register with and belong to a local association. We want to hold people responsible. Every block moulder must have a registration number that his product must carry so that when a building collapses and we look at the blocks, we can invite the maker to give us some explanations.

    It is not just because SON wants it, but because it will serve the interest of everybody, “ he said.

    Recently, cement manufacturers in Nigeria had distanced themselves from claims that poor cement quality is responsible for the growing cases of building collapse in the country.

  • ‘Nigeria on the brink of collapse’

    ‘Nigeria on the brink of collapse’

    An elder statesman, Chief Deji Fasuan, has said the country is on the brink of collapse.

    Fasuan was reacting to former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s letter to President Goodluck Jonathan.

    His statement reads: “Nigeria is in the doldrums, we all knew about it Nigeria is the butt of all jokes the is well known but what is new if not alarming is that a former President and godfather of the incumbent sat down and wrote to the President and to the world at large, an eighteen page letter, full of explicable indictments and stating boldly that he stands by them is a new dimension to the political history of Nigeria.

    “Some people have cast OBJ in one conclave which is Obasanjo in government is a dictator a small time tyrant with a big measure of impunity whereas OBJ out of government is a model democrat, even a patriot who loves his country dearly. Has this compartmentalisation again come in to the fore? Whatever conclusion Nigerians arrive at one fact has emerged, Nigeria totters Nigeria is on the brink. This reminds me of my age long belief that Nigeria is too big a space to be ruled by a blackman, any blackman, God does not endow the blackman to tule colossal landmarks like Nigeria. Rather the blackman is ideally suited to rule or to preside over small estates like the ones that dot the West African Coast. In short, he lacks the commitment and capacity to manage affairs of Nigeria.

    “For a long long time to come, OBJ’s exposure will be a subject of passionate debate the corporate offices, among professional politicians, market places and University Union Government. The Americans spoke about 2015 some years back and we jeered at them.

    “Are we not nearing their doom’s day? God help!”

  • SON sets up taskforce on building collapse

    THE Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has set up a task force on building collapse.

    In a letter dated July 22, by SON to the President, Building Collapse Prevention Guild (BCPG), Mr Kunle Awobodu, the organisation said its director-general has approved members of Building Collapse Task Force to work with SON to rid building/construction industry of activities that undermine the industry.

    The letter reads in part: “The Director-General/Chief Executive has approved the taskforce to work with your team on the collaboration activities as he promised during the meeting held with him on Wednesday, April 24, 2013 at SON operational Headquarter, Lagos.”

    The letter was signed by the Head of Department, Metereology Directorate, O. F. Manafa, for SON’s Director-General, Dr. Joseph Odumodu.

    SON’s Building Collapse Task Force members include: Olagoroye Oke, a Civil Engineer; Chaiya Minyel, an Architect; Abdulrasak Oyewopo, Mechanical Engineer; Francis Onyeji, Chemical Technologist; Maureen Okeke, Lawyer; and Onipede Adeoye, Civil/Building Engineer.

    Some of the factors responsible for collapse of building according to BCPG, include use of substandard building materials; faulty foundation; wrong construction methodology; shoddy jobs; poor procurement system; faulty design; poor concrete mix; engagement of quacks by building owners; government’s lack of capacity to monitor and supervise building and construction sites and lack of building approval among others.

    BCPG is made up of volunteers, who are professionals and artisans in the building/construction environment, who came together for the purpose of putting an end to the embarrassing incidents of building collapse in Nigeria., especially Lagos.

    “BCPG members comprised professionals in the built environment which include land surveyors, architects, engineers, builders, quantity surveyors, town planners and estate surveyors. And we have, since inception about two years ago, embarked on sensitisation and training programmes for bricklayers, concrete workers and other artisans,” said Awobodu.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Board failure cause of banks’collapse, says Dozie

    Board failure cause of banks’collapse, says Dozie

    THE founder of Diamond Bank, Dr Pascal Dozie, has said the spate of banking failures in the country in the past was a reflection of the failure of the board of the banks.

    Dozie, who is Chairman of MTN Nigeria, spoke at a Stakeholders’ consultative forum on guidelines for corporate governance in the telecommunications industry organised by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).

    It has as theme Board leadership and governance.

    He said people who take board’s appointment should see such opportunity as a “sacred call to service.”

    He stressed that being a director is not a tea party.

    According to him, directors must see themselves as playing pivotal roles in the success of the company, arguing that should things go wrong, the board should be held responsible. This, he said, is because the board performs oversight functions in the company.

    He said the Company and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) states how a board should be constituted, adding that it is the duty of the board to appoint one among its members to serve as its chairman.

    Dozie said the chairman has a great role to play as he has the onerous task of motivating the board and ensuring that decisions are implemented because time is a scarce resource.

    He said the leadership of the board of any company is a sine qua non to its success as it determines whether the company swims or sinks.

    He added that if a chairman becomes too “autocratic to the chagrin of the directors,” voting him out becomes an open option.

    He said for effective communication, it is imperative that the chief executive officer of companies remain part of the board, adding that the helmsman would not have an excuse not to implement policies agreed upon at the management level.

    On the level of compliance with corporate governance in the country, he said it would be difficult to assess, adding that the big firms were complying.

    He, however, said it does not necessarily have to be corporate governance, insisting that all that is needed to be done is to follow the provisions of CAMA by managing the companies well and avoiding promoting people through looking ethnicity or nepotism.

  • Nigeria on the brink of collapse, says Ikuforiji

    Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Adeyemi Ikuforiji has said the country is on the brink of collapse.

    He spoke in his office while receiving the “Most Friendly Supporter of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Award” from executives of the NBA, Ikeja branch, led by its Chairman, Mr. Onyekachi Ubani.

    Ikuforiji said: “The country is at cross roads. We call on God to help us but we need to have a sober reflection, put heads together and proffer solutions to our problems. The nation is on the brink of collapse, but we must not allow it to break up because its beauty lies in its big size.”

    He urged the NBA to “stand out as the voice of reason against oppression and uphold the country’s unity and progress”.

    “It is only when a body like the NBA takes the lead that others will follow. I have a lot of respect for NBA because I know what it is capable of doing,” the Speaker added.

    Ubani described Ikuforiji’s trial at the Federal High Court, Ikoyi, for alleged money laundering as “political”.

    He said: “The Assembly, under your leadership, has lived up to the people’s expectation and you have put it on the path of greatness.

    “The NBA is solidly behind you. Whatever you are undergoing now is a political scheme, but God will vindicate you. Definitely, the righteous will be vindicated.”