Tag: contracts

  • SGF to explain how fake firms got N1.3b contracts

    SGF to explain how fake firms got N1.3b contracts

    Senator Sani states why panel summoned Babachir Lawal

    Many companies awarded contracts by the Presidential Initiative on the North East (PINE) cannot be located, a senator alleged yesterday.

    Senator Shehu Sani, Chairman, Senate adhoc committee on mounting humanitarian crisis in the North East, told reporters in Abuja that over 20 companies were involved in the phony contracts.

    Of the about N1.3 billion jobs awarded, the most controversial is the N220 million contract for the removal of wild grass and provision of 115 hectares of simplified irrigation in Yobe State, awarded to Rholavision Engineering Limited. The firm is linked  to Lawal.

    The Kaduna Central lawmaker, who described the development as “strange”, said that the inability of his committee to trace the addresses of the firms reinforced its desire to interact with the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Babachir David Lawal, who headed PINE.

    Sani said: “Meanwhile, you should understand that we are not investigating the SGF alone. We are investigating contracts that were awarded under the Presidential Initiative on the North East (PINE) and over 20 companies were involved.

    “But something very strange is the fact that some of these companies in these contracts we couldn’t actually trace their addresses.

    “We went there but we couldn’t find them. So the option before us is that it is easier for the camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for us to find some of these names here.”

    He added: “One of the persons we invited happens to be the SGF and his invitation followed the events that came after the interim report was tendered before the Senate and that was in his own claim that he was not given a fair hearing.

    “He sent a second letter asking for another opportunity to appear before us and he sent a letter to the committee through the leadership of the Senate and that letter overrides any other rumours you may have heard before.

    “Like all other persons, I read it on the pages of the newspapers that he went to court but we have never been served any letter on any legal action as far as we are concerned .

    “Before then, we also received a letter from the MD of Rolavision who said he was bereaved but the official letter is the one we received from the SGF, which he signed himself and he graciously told us that he needs a new date, based on the fact that the date that was set for today was not convenient for him. So that was the reason I tendered the letter in plenary.

    “We need to be meticulous because reputations and lives of people are concerned and it is on that background that on the final phase of the report, we have to do a thorough job.

    “We have our papers on the ground and we are set to invite all those persons. It was supposed to be today but, of course, it couldn’t happen. We assure the members of the public through the media that we are going to announce the next date for the public hearing.

    “But we are assuring Nigerians that we will discuss with the Senate to give us a convenient date that he is going to come because he is the head of this PINE and the companies that are associated with these contracts are known.

    “But we said we appreciate his humility due to the fact that what was stated on the pages of the newspapers was not correct.

    “In this time when there is a frosty relationship between the parliament and appointees of this government, I believe that this is a new phase – signing the letter himself, sending it to us, requesting for a new date. I think he has been humble and we are going to consider his request.

    “Well, the most important thing is that we have received the letter before the hearing and he has apologised to others for the inconveniences caused, but the issue is that we can’t afford to talk to others without him here because it would amount to simply coming out with a second report for which we will be accused of not giving some people a fair hearing.

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters, Senator Ita Enang,  said the insinuation of friction between the Executive and the Legislature was false.

    Enang told reporters that the Executive had great respect for the institution of the Senate.

    He said: “Let me state that the executive has great respect for the institution of the Senate and the distinguished senators themselves and that is why the SGF personally wrote and signed the letter requesting for a rescheduling of the meeting and not saying he would not come.

    “He is requesting for a rescheduling and the letter has been delivered and presented before the committee.

    “Once again, I say that we have great respect for the institution of the Senate, the National Assembly and indeed the legislature.

    “I am sure you haven’t had any heat about the 2017 budget because the executive and the legislature are working together.

    “I just want to say that what is happening is that the political space is active, not that it is tense.

    “It is active and showing that the legislature is concentrating on its work. The executive is being put under pressure in respect of what it should do and this is what is expected of the legislature under a democracy.

    “So, Nigerians should accept that there is nothing abnormal in this situation. It has been hotter than this at other times, but we are doing everything to make sure that the temperature doesn’t get higher than this.”

  • Inflation of contracts: Senate is talking balderdash, says SGF

    Inflation of contracts: Senate is talking balderdash, says SGF

    Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) David Babachir Lawal, has denied accusation of contract inflation and abuse of office by the Senate.
    The Senate on Wednesday had asked Lawal, to immediately resign his position in order to face prosecution over alleged abuse of office, contract inflation and misappropriation of Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) funds.
    Responding to the accusation, the SGF said “the Senate is talking balderdash; it has developed the habit of bring him Down syndrome. Nigerians have decided that we should destroy our best.  We should all destroy the promising and best among us by bringing people down without a cause. This is just how I saw it.
    “I have the report of the Senate Committee in which it was said that I didn’t resign from Rholavision Nigeria Limited. Let me tell you, Rholavision was formed by me in December 1990, and it has been a company that was run very successfully.
    “Now, when I was appointed Secretary to the Government of the Federation, I resigned from that company on 18th August 2015. I can see that in their report, they are talking about 2016. I don’t know where they got their facts.
    “By the way, it is very instructive that when the committee was sitting, no effort was ever made to invite me to come and make a submission. It is therefore, surprising that they devoted a whole session of today (yesterday) at maligning me, claiming what is not true without even giving me the chance to come and put my own case before them” he lamented.


  • N1trn rail contracts: Contractors to refund N2.5b

    The Hon. Ehiozuwa Agbonayinma-headed House of Representatives adhoc committee investigating the award and execution of rail contracts was yesterday told that six contractors involved in the over N1 trillion Rail Contracts are to refund N2.5 billion to the coffers of the Federal Government.

    The contractors who participated in the railway construction and rehabilitation contracts are to make the  refunds for excess payments made to the contractors by the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC).

    Officials from the Office of the Auditor- General of the Federation who were at the continued hearing of the panel investigating the rail contracts awards at the National Assembly said Audit Queries on the contracts were unanswered.

    Since the beginning of the investigations in October last year, the panel met with former Chairmen of the Board of the NRC and other stakeholders in the course of the investigative hearing.

    According to the OAGF official, CCECC, handling Lagos to Jebba rail line, is to refund N640 million while Costain West Africa Ltd, executing Jebba to Kano rail line is to refund N608 million.

    Geo Group Asano, executing signalling and communications upgrade is to refund N368 million to government coffers.

    Eser West Africa handling the Port Harcourt-Markurdi rail line is expected to return N339 million.

    CCEGG in charge of the Markurdi-Kano rail line would cough out N353 million, while Routing Nigeria Ltd would refund N221 million.

    Also at the hearing yesterday, Minister of Transport, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi who made a brief appearance told the lawmakers that the Ministry would conduct a forensic audit of the railway sector and all agencies under it, to ascertain if due process was  carried out in all its previous operations.

    He said: “I have written to Mr. President to permit the audit.”

    The minister however told the Committee that since he was not the minister at the time the contracts were awarded, it may be difficult for him to answer questions pertaining to them.

  • Abandoned NDDC contracts

    Abandoned NDDC contracts

    •How much is involved? This is a knot that must be untied

    Nigerians eager to know exactly how much contractors of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) absconded with after collecting mobilisation fees might have to tarry awhile to enable the Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation  and officials of the commission complete the reconciliation of the accounts on abandoned contracts. What is certain for now is that some of the commission’s contractors collected mobilisation fees and disappeared.

    While the auditor-general’s office insists that about N70.4billion was involved in the contract scam between 2008 and 2012, the commission claims it is not more than N11billion. The development arose from the report presented to the Senate Committee on Public Accounts last week by the assistant director, public accounts division in the auditor-general’s office, Mr Emmanuel Akpan, which claimed that about 1,733 NDDC contractors disappeared after collecting N70.4billion.

    According to Akpan, “The real value of contracts upon which monies have been collected by NDDC contractors during the period under review, as of the time of auditing, was N70.4 billion and not N11 billion the NDDC office is claiming now.

    “There is the need for NDDC officials to practically prove that contractors involved in close to N60 billion gap they are trying to create have actually gone to site and executed their projects not on paper, but physically on ground”.

    But the commission, in response to a query from the auditor-general’s office, insisted that the amount involved was N11billion. NDDC’s Director of Finance, Jimoh Egbejule, said the commission had, on its own, audited the various projects awarded during the period under review, and discovered that the said scam affected N11 billion worth of projects and not N70.4 billion as reported by the Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation.

    It was when the two parties could not agree on the actual amount involved that the Senator Andy Uba-led committee adjourned sitting by one month to enable them reconcile their books and come up with an acceptable figure. “There is the need to stop this public hearing abruptly, so as to allow the three parties time to sit down and harmonise their findings and reports on the subject matter.

    “Definitely, this committee is not satisfied with what has happened, but we have to give them time to meet and harmonise whatever they can before coming back to us to present their updated reports, upon which we can now do the proper probing without one agency saying it doesn’t have the reports the other is presenting,” Senator Uba said.

    We agree with the committee on the need for reconciliation of reports by the parties. But one thing is clear, and that is the fact that some NDDC contractors collected money without executing their contracts. This is bad enough; irrespective of the amount involved. Even if it is one million naira, we must be worried.

    The commission was established in 2000 to facilitate the rapid and sustainable development of the Niger Delta and make it economically prosperous, socially stable, ecologically regenerative and politically peaceful. For an oil-producing region, these are laudable objectives. Government’s failure to address the challenges of oil pollution and also compensate the people of the region for the despoliation of their land and other issues associated with oil exploitation had in the past led to various crises between people in the region and the oil companies on the one hand, and the people and government on the other.

    It therefore would amount to a great disservice for any contactor to get money for the development of the region without executing the contract. The relevant agencies should within the stipulated one month reconcile their accounts and come up with the actual amount that the contractors absconded with.

    Thereafter, the culprits should be apprehended and prosecuted alongside their accomplices in the commission. It has always been the impression that contracts are not necessarily meant to be executed if the players can grease the palms of certain public officials. This dispensation should not condone such practices.

  • Osinbajo queries BPE chief on N1.5b ‘curious’ contracts

    Osinbajo queries BPE chief on N1.5b ‘curious’ contracts

    Agency: ex-director’s petition frivolous

    Disturbed by the alleged N1.45billion legal and consultancy fees scandal in the Bureau of Public Enterprises(BPE), Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has queried the Director-General of the agency, Benjamin Dikki, on the award of such contracts.

    The controversial contracts include a curious N950million job for the liquidation of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria(PHCN) when the company had seized to exist and N500million as consultancy fees to a government department.

    The DG is also expected to clarify the alleged payment of N27,188,232,208:20billion as premium for group life and group personal accident insurance for former staff of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria(PHCN).

    Another issue is the alleged diversion of N455,266,618;23 meant for the payment of retirement benefits to entertainment allowance for the staff.

    The query followed a petition to the Office of the Vice President by a former director of the BPE, Ibrahim Muhammad Kashim.

    Kashim said the N950million contract for the winding up of PHCN was unnecessary because PHCN was already a “shell” company.

    Before the action of the Vice President, the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) had asked the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to probe the contracts.

    The contracts were awarded contrary to the advice of the immediate past Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) and the BPP, it was learnt.

    The BPP requested the EFCC to investigate the payment scandal in a June 27, 2015 letter to the anti-graft agency.

    But a fresh petition by the ex-BPE director to the Office of the Vice President sparked the Presidency’s interest.

    A letter by the Office of the Vice President to the ex-director reads in part: “I am directed to acknowledge with thanks, the receipt of your letter dated 3rd November 2015 on the above stated subject.

    “His Excellency, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, GCON, Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria has further directed that the said document be forwarded to Director-General, Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) for his due consideration and response.

    “Please accept the assurances of His Excellency, the Vice President’s warm regards.”

    Earlier in his petition, Kashim said there was rot in the BPE which should be investigated by the Vice President, who is the Chairman of the National Council on Privatisation(NCP).

    He said: “Your Excellency, the former DG Miss Bolanle Onagoruwa, was removed partly because she refused to accept the appointment of a prominent PDP lawyer to wind up PHCN for an amount exceeding N1.5bn. ( When the proposal was sent to her, I was one of the Directors she confided in.)

    “ As lawyers, we reckoned that it was unthinkable, more so as all the assets of PHCN had been transferred through a presidential order to the Discos and Gencos while all the liabilities were to be handled by Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Company ( NEMLCO). PHCN is therefore a shell company.

    “Immediately after her removal, the current DG established a committee that awarded the assignment to the preferred law firm. I publicly expressed my disagreement. The DG sent for me and solicited for my support as it was from our bosses. I maintained my position, as a result of which the matter was never tabled at, or brought to the management committee for deliberation and approval before going to NCP.

    “ I still maintain that PHCN was a shell company that had no assets and or liabilities. Winding up a shell company surely cannot be done for close to a billion naira. It was fraudulent.

    Regarding the payment of over N27billion for insurance premium, the ex-director said at the time, PHCN had no more staff.

    He added: “The DG one day invited me to his office. He informed me of a memo that would be sent to Management Committee for its consideration and approval. He suggested that we should pass it, since I was the one that usually chaired such meetings. It was to approve for transmission to the chairman of NCP the payment of N27,188,232,208:20 billionas premium to Great Nigeria Insurance Plc for group life and group personal accident insurance for PHCN staff. I told him it cannot pass, for even a law 101 student knows the cliche ‘No premium No cover’.

    “And in any case at that time PHCN had no staff. However, I learnt later that the same paper came to BPE with all the necessary approvals, and I believe the money was paid.”

    On retirement benefits, Kashim alleged that the amount approved for BPE staff was converted to Entertainment Allowance.

    He said: “ One of the items approved by the NCP was Terminal Benefits for exiting staff. It was to take effect from 2015. For that purpose NCP approved for inclusion into 2015 national budget the sum of N455,266,618:23. The staff due to retire in 2015 are:(1)Ibrahim Muhammad Kashim(Director), (2)Hajiya Fati Abubakar (Director);and (3) Afolabi Mathew(Deputy Director).

    “ The amount approved by the NCP as terminal benefit was meant only for three of us retiring in 2015. It meant that BPE should in 2015 seek NCP’s approval for staff retiring in 2016. (As a matter of fact there will be only one retiring staff in 2016).

    “The DG by these acts has wrongly converted our terminal benefits to pay management staff entertainment allowances. This he did to calm the restiveness of the management staff as he had completely spent the internally generated revenue on his weekly trips to Zuru in Kebbi State to campaign for a political party (in deed he  even bought a pilot vehicle fitted with a siren to facilitate the trips).

    “Let the DG BPE Mr. Benjamin Ezra Dikki tell Nigerians by publicising the minutes of meetings where in those matters were presented to the management committee of the BPE and that it deliberated and recommended to the NCP for approval in line with the extant law. The BPE is the secretariat of the NCP. Matters going to NCP have to be discussed and approved by the management committee. Why none of the payments in question came before the committee was because I objected to it, so the DG went elsewhere and got the memos approved after which he disbursed the money. And it was my stance that made the DG in an attempt to pay me back, to circumvent NCPs approval that amended the BPE Staff Condition of Service, just to ensure that I don’t get my terminal benefits.

    “Not only that, he equally converted the approved sum for retiring staff in 2015 to be converted into recurrent management staff entertainment allowance.”

    In its defence, the BPE said its ex-director lied and misled the public in his petition to the Vice President.

    The BPE, in a statement by its Head, Public Communications, Alex E. Okoh, said: “Kashim lied when he stated,  “….. The former DG Ms Bolanle Onagoruwa was removed partly because she has refused to accept the appointment of a prominent PDP lawyer to wind up PHCN for an amount  exceeding N1.5billion… immediately after her removal the current DG established a committee that awarded the assignment to the preferred law firm.”

    “The fact is that the National Council on Privatisation at its 3rd Meeting of 2013 held on Thursday May 9, 2013 had approved the engagement of Messrs J K Gadzama as the consultant for winding up of PHCN.  Benjamin Ezra Dikki was appointed acting DG on 27th November, 2013, over six months later.”

    On insurance premium, the BPE added: “The provision of Group Life Insurance Policy for employees is mandatory and compulsory under Section 4(1) (5&6) of the Pension Reform Act 2004. The maxim of no premium no cover does not apply here where the law explicitly provides, ‘Every employer shall maintain Group Life Insurance Policy in favour of each employee for a minimum of three times the total annual emoluments of the employee and premium shall be paid not later than the date of commencement of the cover’.

    “Thus, PHCN Successor Companies as employers of labour before privatisation were mandated by law to provide these classes of insurance to its employee in compliance with the Pension Act.

    “It was established that there was an Insurance Policy between GNIP and PHCN.  Premiums were outstanding  for year 2011/2012 amounting to N13,607,151,141.10 and renewable for the year 2012/2013 at the sums of N13,581,080,774.10, totalling  N27,188,232,208.20 for which payment was outstanding.  PHCN had already filed claims with GNIP for 267 staff that died in active service for compensation to the relations/widows of the deceased.

    “GNIP did not pay the claim because PHCN did not pay premiums due for 2011/2012 and 2012/2013. PHCN submitted these claims to the Implementation Committee set up by the National Council on Privatisation for the processing of entitlements to PHCN Staff  that  then made representations to the then Minister of Power.

    “The Minister of Power presented the matter to the Vice President in a memo dated 23/12/2013.   It was subsequently presented to and approved by the National Council on Privatisation at its 3rd meeting held on August 4th, 2014, for payment.  BPE transferred the sum to the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation for further action.

    “As mentioned earlier, at a special meeting held, on January 12, 2013 the NCP set up an Implementation Committee, chaired by the Minister of State for Power to handle the processing and payment of entitlements of PHCN Staff based on the approvals given at the same meeting.

    “This Implementation Committee chaired by a Minister comprised of representatives of various Ministries and Agencies, was superior to BPE management.  Thus no single one of the forty tranches of payments to PHCN Staff ever came to the BPE management for consideration.

    “It is in compliance to the same process that the Insurance premium payment did not have to come to BPE management as insinuated by Ibrahim Kashim.

    “Once the implementation Committee processed and verified PHCN Staff entitlements, it advised BPE and BPE remitted the relevant sums to the office of Accountant General of the Federation that effected payments as appropriate.”

    The BPE denied allegation of diversion of retirement benefits of BPE staff including the entitlements of Kashim.

    It said: “The Bureau in its desire to ameliorate the plight of its former staff who retired and the financial dislocation they went through before they could access payments from their RSA, decided to explore the provision of Section 4(4) (a) on the Pension Act which gives employers the discretion to make additional payments of benefits to its retiring employees.

    “It was intended to provide a cushion of funding for retiring staff pending when they were able to process and access their RSA’s.  Consequently, the National Council on Privatisation approval was sought to create terminal benefits for the Bureau’s staff who are retiring.

    “This was, however, subject to the approval of the Salaries and Wages Commission, the body that has the statutory powers to approve Salaries and Allowance of Public Servants.  The Salaries and Wages Commission declined approval of the Terminal Benefits on the grounds that the Bureau cannot be singled out of the entire Public Service for such special treatment.  Once the Salaries and Wages Commission does not approve the benefits, such cannot be included in the budget template and be funded.

    “By the provisions of the Pension Act and the determination of the Salaries and Wages Commission, there is no terminal benefit payable to Mallam Ibrahim M Kashim or any staff.

    “We wish to emphasise that all retirement benefits are paid by PENCOM in line with the Pension Act and all the ex-director’s records have been forwarded to PENCOM for payment. He has been advised to follow up with PENCOM for payment.”

  • ‘Govt approves 90 contracts’

    About 90 contracts were approved between January and June, the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) said in its bi-annual report.

    The report, made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on yesterday statedthat the contracts will be executed over three years.

    It said contracts for the supply and installation of 753, 002 electricity meters under the Presidential Initiative to Nigerians were awarded through the Ministry of Power at the cost of N27.1 billion.

    It said 23 contracts, ranging from the provision of solid waste collection in Abuja Municipal Area Council to the construction of sewage facilities and management services, will be executed in the Federal Capital Territory..

    The report added that four of the contracts will be implemented by the Ministry of Water Resources, including the rehabilitation and expansion of the Central Ogbia Regional water supply in Bayelsa.

    The report also said that the Ministry of Water Resources awarded contract for the construction of Irawo Earth Dam project in Oyo State.

    It said that five contracts were awarded through the Ministry of Petroleum Resources for the construction of the Head Office building complex for the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board in Bayelsa.

    It said the Ministry of Works awarded contract for the expansion of Suleja-Minna Phase two Road in Niger with funding from the Subsidy Re-investment Programme 2014 appropriation.

    The report also said that the government awarded contract through the Ministry of Works for the expansion of Abuja-Keffi expressway and the expansion of Keffi-Akwanga-Lafia-Markudi road.

    It said the Ministry of Education awarded contract for Phase two of the expansion/completion of the TETFund intervention in special Science, Engineering and Technology (SET) Project, educational training laboratories and workshop/equipment for 73 Nigerian public universities.

  • Firm battles to retain N9.2b cooking stove contracts

    •Contractor sues Fed Govt to stop termination

    Messrs Integra Renewable Energy Services Limited is battling to retain the N9.2 billion clean cook stove contract and wonder bags.

    The Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Environment, Fatima Mede, said the contractor, who was hired by the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan, to supply the facilities had sued the Federal Government.

    She spoke with State House correspondents after briefing President Muhammadu Buhari on her ministry’s activities at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    Mrs. Mede said the contractor went to court to forestall the termination of the multi-million contract by the Buhari-led government.

    The Jonathan-led Federal Executive Council (FEC) on November 26, 2014 approved N9.2 billion (Value Added Tax inclusive) to purchase 750,000 units of clean cook stove and 18,000 wonder bags.

    It was awarded to Messrs Integra Renewable Energy Services Limited, which has been entertaining fear that the Buhari administration might terminate the contract.

    The permanent secretary, who confirmed the legal action, said her ministry had notified the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation on the development, assuring that the government would argue its position in court.

    When asked if there were plans to terminate the contract, Mrs. Mede said it was subjudiceto comment on a matter pending before the court.

    Her words: “The matter is in court right now, so there is a limit to how I can talk about the issue of cooking stove. The contractor took government to court asking the court to grant an injunction for government not to terminate the contract.

    “We will go there and argue our case. The government will go and we have briefed the Attorney-General’s Office. We will present our case on the issue that led to the contractor taking us to court, it will be explained and the court will decide.”

    Explaining her mission at the Presidential Villa, Mrs. Mede said the President raised concerns about environmental degradation across the country at the meeting.

    According to her, the President was aware a properly managed environment was crucial to the nation’s sustainability, describing as alarming the desertification and deforestation rate in the country.

    The permanent secretary, who said over 43 per cent of Nigerians were affected by the effect of desertification, pointed to the unending clashes between the itinerant herdsmen and farmers because of forced migration.

    Mrs. Mede said the President directed her ministry to consider the promotion of cooking gas, especially in the cities as a way to scale down the rate at which wood was being fetched as fuel for cooking.

    She said: “For instance, if everybody in Abuja is using LPG to cook, the rate at which people cut down wood to sell will be reduced.

    “The President is also concerned about the fact that Lake Chad is receding from the 33,000 square kilometres about two decades ago to just 300 square kilometres which has affected the farmers, fishermen and the livelihood of the people around that area.

    “So, he has directed that we should go and look at the report submitted in 1920 on how to prevent Lake Chad from drying up, so that the communities around, even border communities, including the countries benefiting from activities of fishermen and livelihood, based on Lake Chad are not affected.

    “So, he has directed that we should bring up that report immediately and see how we can promote the use of LPG to reduce the rate at which trees are being cut down.

    “He was also concerned about the level of environmental management, solid waste, erosion control, pollution, air quality, climate change, the general environmental situation in the country.”

     

  • Unwholesome contracts

    Unwholesome contracts

    •President Jonathan’s pipeline deal with militants is at best subversive

    The last minute attempt by President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan’s administration to use the country’s resources to woo voters for the up-coming general elections should be condemned by all Nigerians. One of such is the doling out of about N9 billion to companies owned by duplicitous militant groups, through a dubious oil pipeline protection contract, for political support. The alleged prominent beneficiaries of the contract include Asari Dokubo, Fredrick Fasheun, Gani Adams, Government Ekpomuopolo, and a few others. Most of these men, but for political interests, should have been in prison or in the dock, on charges of grievous crimes against the state.

    Now, because the president seeks to win the coming election at all costs, these men whose conduct rankles, now have prime assets of the state, handed over to them to guard. The president’s decision to put the safety of our petroleum pipelines in the custody of openly reckless and lawless men, defies common sense and logic. While past contracts to the militants yielded more vandalisation, as the administration has never seized to bemoan the loss of crude oil, the renewal and expansion of similar contracts, at higher costs, shows that the administration is bereft of ideas.

    Even more disturbing is the unlawfulness of handing over the core responsibilities of the Nigerian security agencies to companies that are strange to the constitution. The president should know that it is the responsibility of the Navy to protect the petroleum pipelines within the maritime zone of our nation, while other statutory security agencies are responsible for the safety of the pipelines littering the nation’s landscape. So we ask, why should a democratically elected president prefer to use illegal agencies to achieve a lawful purpose?

    In seeking an alliance with the militants, we recall that the promoters of some of these companies had recently threatened that they will blow up the pipelines if President Jonathan loses the next election. Strangely, despite making such threats openly, the Federal Government, led by the president, failed to rein in these men or condemn their actions. While not calling them to order is a dereliction of duty, it is fearful that the president has now put the same pipelines in their custody. We ask, could there be a collusion between the president and the militants to put our prime national resources in harm’s way, should the president lose the election?

    Considering the humongous resources put in the hands of these men, there is the likelihood that in the least, plans are afoot to foist anarchy on our country, using these men who live short and brutish lives. As we recently witnessed in Lagos in the hands of Oodu’a Peoples Congress (OPC), the byword for the financial inducement by President Jonathan is a reckless march to anarchy, to please the paymaster. The reason why President Jonathan is priming these roughnecks to get ready for anarchy may be because he is afraid that he will lose a free, fair and credible election.

    We however urge those sent on the dubious errand to remember that the Federal Government has no right to issue them a license to break the laws of the land. Whether they have lawful contracts or not, the resort to anarchy and mayhem are offences against the laws of the land, and any person who engages in that will be held accountable in due course. We also remind them that the life of this administration will come to an end, whether by this election or another. So, in their personal interests, they should remember that sooner or later, the day of reckoning will come.

  • How Oyo awards contracts, by Ajimobi

    How Oyo awards contracts, by Ajimobi

    Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State has threatened to publish the names of people who got contracts from the  government since 2011 when he assumed office.

    He said this was to determine the percentage of the indigenes who got jobs from the government.

    His threat came on the heels of false claims by the opposition that all contracts in the state were awarded outside and taken to Lagos State, thereby denying indigenes of  the benefit of getting jobs .

    Last week, at the declaration of former governor Adebayo Alao-Akala to contest the 2015 governorship election, he  accused Governor Ajimobi of taking the majority of the contracts to his stooges in Lagos State .

    But, speaking at the Ibadan Recreation Club at the weekend where he (Ajimobi) was made the grand patron of the club established in 1902 by the colonial masters, Ajimobi told the elite class that 95 percent of the contracts so far awarded by his administration were given to the indigenes.

    He said the remaining five  per cent were jobs that could not be handled by local contractors. He threatened to publish the names of the contractors to enable the public see the veracity of his claims.

    The governor said: “These people are ignorant of what we are doing . Some will say they are not giving jobs (contracts) to the people of Oyo State. Let me tell you today that we have given out thousands of jobs,  over 95 percent are given to Oyo State indigenes. If not for the people who pleaded, I have made up my mind to publish the names of Oyo State indigenes who were awarded contracts in the state one by one. Today we have started constructing model schools, any Oyo State indigene who has interest should apply. The contract ranges from N500million to N1.5billion but they will use their fund to kick start, then we will pay them later”.

    He spoke also on the dwindling federal allocation and meagre state resources, which he said inspite of the limited resources his administration, it had continued to provide the needed amenities to the people of the state.

    The governor said: “For a state that gets N4billion every month, our salary and wages bill amounts to N4.6billion every month, ab initio we are running a deficit system and now the allocation has been reduced to N3.6billion. Recently we increased the salaries and wages of workers and the promise I made to the workers that their salary would be higher than that of other states in the Southwest. Today I have fulfil that promise.

    “The teachers have never had it so good, the pensioners have never had it so good. So, what we are saying in essence is that this government is working.

  • Amaechi, Wike disagree on contracts for model schools

    Amaechi, Wike disagree on contracts for model schools

    Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi and Minister of State for Education Nyesom Wike have disagreed on the award of contracts for model schools and roads.

    During a tour of Obio/Akpor Local Government Area at the weekend, Amaechi accused Wike, his former chief of staff, of diverting over N2 billion meant for the building of 14 model primary schools in the area.

    He also accused Wike of depriving Rivers people of good governance.

    Amaechi said: “What I did when I assumed office as governor in 2007 was think of how to put food on the table of our people as an alternative to militancy. I built economic infrastructure and you can see it yourselves. In every model school we built, we employed 50 persons and we have built about 500 model primary schools. For every health centre we built, we employed a minimum of 50 persons and we have built 140 model primary health centres. When we came, hospitals had only 200 doctors. We employed 200 more to make it 400. We knew 400 will not be enough and we employed 200 more to make it 600 doctors. With these plans, we were able to reduce poverty and unemployment.”

    The governor, who chairs the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), said he would soon “expose Wike for who he is”.

    In a telephone interview yesterday, the Chief of Staff, Chief Tony Okocha, told reporters that Wike was desperate to be Rivers’ governor in 2015.

    Okocha said: “I am surprised that Wike is displaying ignorance. He ought to know that Amaechi does not award contracts. The governor is the chairman of the State Executive Council. Contracts of up to N50 million are presented at SEC meetings and the contractors would be invited to defend the contract, while the line commissioner would liaise with the contractor.

    “Wike is concocting lies to disparage Amaechi. Wike is unnecessarily ambitious. He is a drowning man. He is desperate to be Rivers governor next year. Wike is showing Nigerians who he is. He cannot be trusted. He is so unreliable and can betray anybody. Wike has demonstrated to Rivers people that they should not allow him to take them to the dark ages.

    “The junior minister of education is putting touts and attack-dogs together in his Grassroots Development Initiative (GDI) to unleash mayhem on peace-loving Rivers people, as witnessed in Rumueprikom and Rumuigbo (Obio/Akpor LGA) on Wednesday. Wike’s quest for power is driving him mad.

    “Wike had a terrible background and was very disrespectful of elders while growing up, such that his family members did not give him a plot of land because he was the black sheep of the family. You know what land means in Ikwerreland. Wike went to the Nigerian Law School in 1996 and finished in 1997. He joined the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 1998 and became the Chairman of Obio/Akpor Local Government Council in 1999.

    “He has never practised as a lawyer. Let him tell Nigerians where he has worked, outside politics. Everything Wike has today he stole from the government. The then Environment Commissioner, Okey Chinda, is now working with Wike. Let Chinda explain what he did with the funds for the landscaping of Port Harcourt.”

    Okocha alleged that Wike allegedly “cornered” funds meant for many model schools and roads through his cronies and companies.

    He urged the people not to take the minister seriously, describing him as “a jester, who is seeking attention”.

    Wike denied the allegations and accused Amaechi of diverting over N3 billion meant for the landscaping of Port Harcourt “through his friends in Ghana”.

    While hosting people from Evo Kingdom, Obio/Akpor Council, in Port Harcourt, Wike said he had nothing to do with the alleged N2 billion school scam and the N7.5 billion for the construction of the 1,000-bed Adolphus Karibi-Whyte Specialist Hospital at the Greater Port Harcourt City.

    He said: “Amaechi has never given me any money to build a school. Let him mention those schools and communities. Assuming he gave me 14 schools, am I the commissioner for Education? If he gave me the contract and the job was not done, why didn’t he arrest me? If he gave me the job and I refused to do it, why did he recommend me to be appointed as a minister?

    “Amaechi should account for the N7.5 billion ($50 million) contract for the construction of the 1,000-bed Adolphus Karibi-Whyte Specialist Hospital. The $50 million was released to the Rivers State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Sampson Parker, without due approval. I wonder why the hospital has not been built, despite demolishing the old one that was in good use. Where is that money and where is the 1,000-bed hospital?

    “In Amaechi’s government, a Ghanaian contractor was hired for the landscaping of Port Harcourt City for about N3 billion, which was abandoned and the contractor fled. On the fumigation of Port Harcourt City against mosquitoes, over N3 billion was paid to Cuban contractors but the job was not done and the money is yet to be recovered. Are you not seeing mosquitoes where you live?”

    On his governorship ambition, the minister said nobody could intimidate him, adding that the people would hear from him soon.

    The face-off between Amaechi and Wike (both Ikwerre) was as a result of the governor’s statement that no Ikwerre man would succeed him.

    He said the position should go to another senatorial district/ethnic group, but Wike insists he is qualified to be the next governor.