Tag: crisis

  • Revenue crisis may hit Nigeria soon

    Revenue crisis may hit Nigeria soon

    SIR: Kindly permit me a space in your popular newspaper. Let us imagine a situation when crude oil prices do not exceed 40 US dollars per barrel and the demand for Nigeria’s oil drops because the US, a country that imports about 40 percent of Nigeria’s crude oil, cuts down significantly on imports of the product from Nigeria for other exporters of crude oil to that country.

    Let us contemplate a situation where the revenue of Nigeria can no longer support the constitutional allowances and remunerations that Nigeria’s rulers award themselves. Would it not be interesting to see scavengers of Abuja scamper away because the honey pot has been wiped clean? Board members of many redundant and unprofitable government corporations shall find nothing again to satisfy their lusts. State governors shall be hard pressed for their lack of ingenuity and creativity as they would not be able to cope with riots in their states caused by their inability to pay salaries of generally unproductive government workers. The centre will not hold again then, and the attraction of this union shall rapidly wither away.

    The saying “the need to diversify the economy” has become a cliché since nothing is being done in that direction by the leaders. However, lack of patriotic governance continues unabated.

    The 2013 federal budget proposal presented to the national legislature by President Jonathan reveals three present problems with Nigeria: First, the amount of revenue Nigeria should legitimately expect next year is not fully covered in the proposal. Two, the federal government is still acting as though there is no urgency for increased capital votes for expenditure on infrastructural development, education for the future challenges of new technology, welfare programs such as public housing in partnership with local governments (See the fourth schedule of the 1999 constitution which makes building and maintenance of houses for the poor and infirm mandatory for local councils), and on strategic partnership with state governments on projects and programs that will reduce unemployment. Three, there is no evidence that the federal government is eager to cut down on big government spending by implementing the recommendations of the Orosanya’s committee it had set up, which include either complete scrapping of redundant departments and agencies or merging some of them that perform duplicate functions. The budget proposal is silent on shrinking of the size of government in any form or shape.

    Why has the Jonathan government kept the revenue from gas sales from

    the Nigerian people? This lack of transparency is not acceptable, and our legislators must ask those relevant questions. They must unearth revenues that the federal government keeps away from both the state and local governments. An insidious conspiracy of forging figures is going on while Nigerians who know don’t talk and those who don’t know don’t ask.

    Does Nigeria need a revenue crisis to reveal information about our genuine revenues that is kept from our prying eyes? We are told how 400,000 barrels of crude oil are stolen daily! Don’t we have government anymore, or are those figures spouted out just to hide what is stolen by the kleptomaniacs in public office under some innocuous headings? Most probably, it would not move relevant government officials to resign, and neither would they lose their jobs should that figure rise to even 1 million barrels a day in the near future. The secrecy about our nation’s revenues, which is continually being spun by the PDP government, has come to be accepted as a difficult mathematical open problem that no polymath is presently inclined to consider.

    We must consider this problem. We need to resolve this seeming puzzle. A revenue crisis may hit Nigeria very soon except Nigerians are allowed to choose leaders who have a heart for the people. We can’t afford leaders who are never alarmed by their incompetence and

    lack of empathy for the people.

    • Leonard Shilgba,

    Associate Professor of Mathematics,u

    American University of Nigeria.

     

  • ‘Delta State ACN not in crisis’

    ‘Delta State ACN not in crisis’

    A Chieftain of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) Mr. Amechi Omagbeshi Ogbonnia at the weekend debunked the report of a crisis looming in the Delta State chapter of the party, describing the report as mere blackmail.

    Ogbonnia who was reacting to a newspaper report that the party was in disarray, said it is intact at the ward, local government and state executive levels.

    Ogbonnia said, “The Chairman of the party, Chief Adolor Okotie-Eboh, was a founding member of the PDP who contested for the senate and the party state chairman of the party but was frustrated by the former governor, Chief James lbori and having seen PDP as a conservative party, left it for the ACN where he rose to the position of the State Chairman.”

    “We have even seen that the person who wrote the report is not a member of ACN but from Democratic Peoples Party (DPP), so it is surprising that a non member could make comments about a party and l see what he has written as blackmail on the person of Chief Adolor Okotie-Eboh, a son of a former minister of Finance and Labour.”

    “The likes of Dr. Veronica Ogbuagu, Professor Eferakeya Adegor and others that the report favours are those not working in the interest of ACN in the Delta Central and the state al large and l am calling on them to repent, change their attitude towards the party so that they can join us as progressives that we have always be instead causing disunity among members”

    Ogbonnia also said that the leadership of Chief Adolor Okotie-Eboh is recognised at the national level of the ACN party, pointing out that he was one of the members that attended the party’s retreat in Ghana recently as published by Ghana’s magazine. He said there was no time the leadership of Chief Okotie-Eboh was used as stooge by the ruling party or at any time sold out to PDP, describing the report as blackmail.

    He alleged that Ogbuagu, Prof. Adego and others wanted to hijack the leadership of the party but said that when they could not succeed, decided to take measures like blackmail to tarnish the image of the existing state executive headed by Chief Adolor Okotie-Eboh

  • Plateau  pupils caught in wages crisis

    Plateau pupils caught in wages crisis

     Plateau State pupils are roaming the streets. Weeds are taking over their schools’ premises because of the protracted strike (now six months old) by their teachers over the minimum wage. YUSUFU AMINU IDEGU examines the causes and effects of the crisis.

    All is not well with the teaching profession in Plateau State. Teachers have spent more time outside the classrooms in the past five years. This is largely due to frequent strikes by them over welfare issues.

    At the moment, teachers in state-owned primary and secondary schools have been out of the classrooms since May, due to the strike declared by local government workers’ union – the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) Plateau State chapter. All appeals to get them back to work failed as they insisted that something concrete must be done about the 18 per cent minimum wage.

    The Executive Chairman of the Plateau State Universal Education Board (SUBEB), Mrs Lyop Mang, insists teachers have no business embarking on strike because they are enjoying the best times in their career under the administration of Governor Jonah David Jang.

    Nevertheless, the state has witnessed more strikes during this administration than in the past.

    Jang himself acknowledged this fact recently while addressing stakeholders in the Government House in Jos.

    He said at the meeting: “There is no governor in the history of the state that has taken care of workers’ welfare than I have done, yet no administration had witnessed the number of strikes witnessed under my administration. Something must be wrong and I want to know.”

    In his five years as governor, Jang has trained 52,122 teachers at various professional levels between 2007 and 2012; implemented 27.5 per cent teachers’ salary allowance as well as employed 500 teachers of English and Mathematics in secondary schools.

    On assumption of office in 2007, Jang was said to have paid a backlog of teachers’ leave and transport allowances to the tune of N636 million, owed two years before his tenure. The governor regularised payment of teacher’s salaries by ensuring promotion of teachers are released timely.

    To improve the school environment, Jang renovated 175 primary schools, constructed over 500 classrooms, and distributed about 50,000 plastic chairs/desks. He established 19 new nomadic schools in seven LGAs while 1,395 sets of dual desks, seven tables and 20 pieces of universal furniture were provided for physically-challenged learners.

    Also, over 400,000 copies of English, Mathematics and science textbooks with additional 290,000 other books were distributed to schools. The state ensures the 1,033 schools receive instructional materials yearly.

    In addition, 67,264 registers, lesson note books, weekly dairies and assorted books were distributed to schools. Most importantly, the governor purchased 34 motorcycles for the 17 LGEAs.

    All these were possible after the convocation of several education summits between 2007 and 2009.

    However, the current strike is the result of a disagreement over the implementation of the N18,000 minimum wage introduced by the Federal Government in 2010. The government told workers it would pay 50 per cent of the wages initially and would increase to 100 per cent if the allocation from the Federal Government increases.

    At the end of Jang’s meeting with the stakeholders, it was agreed that a committee of elders be constituted to mediate between the aggrieved workers and government for an amicable settlement of the disputed wage. The high profile committee is chaired by a former military administrator of the state, Rear Admiral Samuel Bitrus Atukum (rtd).

    The elders committee held several meetings with the striking workers. The issue of minimum wage was resolved and the government reached an agreement with NULGE and the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON) to pay 55 per cent of the N18,000 minimum wage.

    However, schools cannot resume because NULGE wants salaries owed during the five months strike paid.

    Its state Chairman, Emmanuel Loman said:“A lot of meetings have been held, but these workers have continued to stand in the way of amicable resolution. The elders’ committee has even gone as far as promising the workers additional five per cent to the 50 per cent they were originally offered, which the workers rejected. They insisted on 100 per cent payment of the minimum wage which we chairmen cannot obviously afford to pay due to continued reduction in our monthly allocation.

    “Everyone has been expecting the workers to call off the strike but they came again insisting that the salaries of the last five months of the strike should be paid before they call it off. This, again, is another stumbling block because we operate on “no work no pay rule”. This is a rule NULGE is aware of long before now.”

    The issue of no-work-no-pay rule is not a new policy in Plateau State. Medical workers who went on strike for months resumed work without any payment of salary arrears. The same condition applied to teachers of state-owned tertiary institutions who were on strike last year.

    However, teachers insist that their welfare suffered a severe set back under the Jang administration, saying renovations and construction of new classrooms does not translate to improved salaries.

    Joel Mathew, a primary school teacher in Jos North LGA said: “The present government deceived us at the early stage. The governor cleared the backlog of salaries owed us by past administration and we applauded him then not knowing that he will be the worst. Now, it is clear to us that the governor was not sincere with the welfare of the teachers.

    “How can you say you care for teacher’s welfare, yet you allow them to go on strike due to your failure to treat us like our counterparts in other states? For instance, the latest reason for our strike, the governor agreed to pay the minimum wage, but we are on strike because he failed to implement his own agreement.

    “A governor that claims to have the best welfare for teachers will allow teachers to be on strike for five good months. What sort of welfare package is that?” queried Ayuba Gyang, a teacher in Riyom LGA.

    Another teacher from Jos South LGA, Laraba Joshua, also claimed the governor’s act of solidarity at the beginning was deceptive.

    “This government does not care if Plateau children go to school or not. We are highly disappointed because Governor Jang at the initial stage declared a state of emergency in education in the state and raised our hope; we thought he was going to do something serious. He now appear to be the worst governor in education because if he can allow teachers to be on strike for six months, it shows he does not care for education in the state”

    Yohana Pam, a teacher in Jos North had this to say: “I’m currently looking for a job. We are not complaining about conducive working environment; we have that already but the governor should know we deserve better pay like teachers of other states.”

    However, Mrs Mang said teachers were involved in the strike out of sympathy not because the government has not done enough.

    She said: “The truth about this strike is that we don’t have a problem with our teachers in terms of provision of welfare and conducive working environment. The present governor is second to none in the country in funding of education. My teachers are on a sympathetic strike because they fall under NULGE union; it is NULGE that is on strike here, not NLC. But NLC has to join in solidarity; this is the truth.”

    She went on:“The issue of salaries of local government workers has nothing to do with state governor because local governments receive their allocation directly through the Ministry for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs

    “Education has been enjoying a lion share in annual budget in Plateau State since the state governor declared a state of emergency on its educational sector in 2007. The records are there to show and the projects are there for all to see.”

    Mrs Mang said to avoid such unnecessary closure of schools, the Federal Government should allow SUBEB to handle teachers remuneration.

    “This is why I am of the suggestion that if the Federal government is interested in an uninterrupted education system, teachers should be removed from government ministries and handed over to SUBEB all over the federation, so that they will not be forced to join general strikes by NULGE as we are witnessing.”

    Mrs Mang also faulted the insistence that the government should pay the workers for the months they were on strike.

    “If workers who refused to go to work for months are asking for salary arrears, who will pay school children that has been loitering at home within the period? Who will pay parents who have lost loved ones as a result of the strike? I don’t think their demand is reasonable.

    “I, therefore, appeal to the workers to drop their pride and resume work. I want them to consider the fact that the effect of children not going to school due to strikes will be on us adults because if they turn out to be criminals tomorrow, all of us, including these teachers, will face the consequence of mass illiterate children turned criminals.”

    So far, there is the state will resume soon even as the first term is already half way. At the moment, private schools are having a field day in Jos, exploiting frustrated parents who could not afford to keep their wards at home because of the prolonged strike.

  • PHCN firms bid crisis deepens

    PHCN firms bid crisis deepens

    •My fear, by Uduaghan

     

    THERE seems to be no end to the bickering over the bidding for the Power Distribution Companies (DISCOS), despite the government’s insistence that the process was clean.

    A committee has been set up to review parts of the process to ensure the success of a particular company which is interested in the Benin Disco, a source said yesterday.

    The committee is said to be headed by a permanent secretary.

    “It is to protect the interest of a company with huge losses. Besides, the company is incompetent, but it is connected with a very senior official of the Presidency,” the source said, pleading not to be named.

    Delta State Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan urged the National Assembly to intervene in the sale of the distribution companies of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) to ensure that it follows due process.

    Uduaghan spoke in Asaba, the state capital, while hosting members of the House of Representatives’ Committee on Petroleum Resources (Down stream sector).

    He said he was worried that the companies may fall into wrong hands.

    Uduaghan said a situation where the communities and states directly affected are sidelined does not portend good for the people.

    He said with “such shoddy process of sale”, the companies would end up in the hands of people, who cannot deliver.

    The governor said stable electricity supply is necessary for economic growth and urged the authorities not to politicise the unbundling process.

    He said if it is done wrongly, it could create more problems for the country.

    Uduaghan said: “State governments play crucial roles in the energy sector as regards the provision of transformers and setting up of electric lines. Governors are deeply concerned about the power situation and when the chips are down, it is the state governments that communities run to for transformers and other equipment. States should be accommodated in the privatisation process”

    He said the nation experienced similar challenges in the petroleum sector when some oil wells were sold without involving the communities and the states, adding that eventually, most of the beneficiaries were unable to access the wells.

    Chairman of the committee Mr. Dakuku Peterside said they were in the state to inspect Federal Government projects.

    Peterside said the routine oversight function was necessary to check what was being done with funds and ascertain whether projects earmarked for the state were executed.

    He said Delta was strategic in the oil industry and should not be ignored in the implementation of projects and programmes.

     

  • UNIPORT four: Fresh crisis brews in Aluu

    UNIPORT four: Fresh crisis brews in Aluu

    Another crisis may erupt in Omuokiri-Aluu, Ikwerre Local Government Area of Rivers State, where four students of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT) were murdered on October 5.

    UNIPORT students are believed to be planning more attacks on Omuokiri-Aluu, in spite of the closure of the university following Tuesday’s violent protest. Besides, it was learnt yesterday that some ethnic groups in Rivers State, where the victims hailed from, were gearing up to avenge the murder.

    Omuokiri-Aluu is still deserted, with policemen massively deployed in the area, to prevent a likely breakdown of law and order.

    Two of the lynched students hailed from Okrika in Okrika Local Government Area of Rivers State, where First Lady Jonathan hails from.

    The spokesman of the umbrella organisation of Aluu Clan the Ogbakor Aluu, Mr. Garshon Benson, pleaded with those planning fresh attacks to desist from doing so and give peace a chance.

    Aluu clan comprises nine communities. The spokesman insists that where the murder took place was totally inhabited by students and non-indigenes. He said no Aluu son could spill the blood of fellow human beings, as the custom and tradition of the clan forbid it.

    The victims: Biringa Chiadika Lordson, Year Two, Theatre Arts, U2010/1805036; Ugonna Kelechi Obuzor, Year Two, Geology, U2010/5565149; Mike Lloyd Toku, Year Two, Civil Engineering, U2010/3010094 and Tekena Erikena, a Certificate student in the Faculty of Education, were lynched in Omuokiri-Aluu, for allegedly stealing mobile phones and laptops.

    Benson said: “It has come to our notice that some ethnic groups in the state, whose sons were among those murdered, are threatening to attack Aluu.

    “We warn strongly that we will no longer fold our arms and watch further destruction of our communities and the infliction of pains and injuries on the good and law-abiding people of Aluu clan.

    “We also call on the security agencies to take note of this threat to attack Aluu and forestall it.”

    The spokesman also stated that no Aluu person had hand in the murder of the undergraduates.

    He said that on October 9, Omuokiri-Aluu was invaded by UNIPORT students, whom he claimed were armed with dangerous weapons and burnt over 10 houses, destroyed 60 vehicles in the full glare of policemen, whom he said ought to have stopped them.

    Benson said three Aluu persons (two children and an aged woman) are still missing after a head count. He urged the government and security agencies to fish out the perpetrators of the arson, bring them to justice and compensate the victims.

    Rivers police spokesman Ben Ugwuegbulam, said policemen had been massively deployed in Aluu and its environs, to forestall untoward incidents.

  • Oke berates Mimiko over education crisis

    The Olusola Oke Campaign Organisation [OOCO] has berated the Ondo State government for the collapse in the education sector of the state.

    A statement by the Deputy Director of the Organisation, Rotimi Ogunleye, described as an unpardonable failure the situation where all the tertiary institutions in the state have been shut down due to government’s insensitivity and high handedness.

    Oke who is the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state also carpeted the government over the refusal to pay secondary school teachers the 27.5% professional allowance it promised them two years ago.

    “It is sad that a government which calls itself a caring heart has unleashed draconian regime and outright terrorism on the workers of the state- owned Adekunle Ajasin University and the Rufus Giwa Polytechnic.

    “Today, over 3,000 staff of the institutions are on strike while over 8,000 students of the two institutions are left wandering about.”

     

     

     

  • How govt is resolving crisis, by minister

    How govt is resolving crisis, by minister

    Minister of Interior Abba Moro, yesterday said the Federal Government’s dialogue with Boko Haram is achieving results.

    He also explained that the government has adopted three variables to deal with the sect.

    The variables are curtailment, managing consequences of violence and dialogue.

    He said he has written to the Police and the State Security Service(SSS) to probe allegation of gun-running against him.

    He said he wants security agencies to conduct a search in all his houses and if he is found guilty of stockpiling arms, he should be dealt with according to the law.

    Moro, who spoke in Abuja, said the ongoing dialogue with the sect has reduced attacks and violence in the north.

    He said: “Let me say that the Boko Haram situation is a very complex situation, it is a very unfortunate situation. I want to believe that this present administration, a democratically elected government, believes that it has responsibilities for all Nigerians  that are law-abiding and going about their legitimate businesses without recourse to violence and Nigerians that one way or the other feel aggrieved and have taken the path of violence to express their grievances.

    “With the  evolvement of Boko Haram and its crises, the Federal Government took various steps and opened various options. One, the step of curtailment; two, the step of managing the consequences of violence and crises where they occurred; and of course, the noble cause of dialogue because experience has shown that in all war situations, at the end peace is only achieved through dialogue, through talking.

    “And so, the Federal Government has ordinarily made itself available for talking, especially if the proponents of Boko Haram and the crises open up and present themselves as people that can be easily identified and dealt with.

    “So, I believe that it is only in conformity with civilized norm that the Federal Government would continue to talk with members of the Boko Haram.

    And I want to tell you this. It is a combination of all these options that the Federal Government has taken (enforcing peace, enlisting support for peace through dialogue).

    “While we have not been able to come completely to grips with the Boko Haram crisis, you will agree with me that when you are talking, there is less violence.

    “And today, we are discovering that people have started  accepting peace as the only option for even achieving the results that they want to achieve through violence.

    On allegation of gun-running and stock-piling of arms to intimidate political opponents in Benue State, the Minister said: “I am not a violent person, I am a democrat.”

    He said a similar allegation was made in 2005 for which he was arraigned in a High court by the SSS and he was discharged and acquitted by the court.

    Moro added: “They even  went to the ridiculous extent of insinuating that I confiscated the arms donated to the Civil Defence Corp by the Nigerian Army. Statutorily, as minister of interior supervising the Nigeria Security Civil Defence Corp.

    “ I went to take delivery of the arms donated by the Army to the Civil Defence Corp, symbolic delivery and from that point that I took delivery of the crates, they were loaded into the vehicles of the Nigerian Army, escorted by the Nigerian Army to the depot, to the armoury of the Civil Defence Corp, the first and the last that I saw of those arms was when I was taking delivery of the crates.