Tag: Cross River

  • C/River: Ambassador shelves governorship ambition

    …backs Owan-Enoh

     

    The Nigerian Ambassador to Uganda and a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Cross River State, Dr Nya Asuquo, has shelved his governorship ambition and given his support to Senator John Owan-Enoh, who is aspiring for the top job in the state.

    Asuquo told reporters in Calabar on Friday that he decided to drop his own ambition after careful consideration.

    “Senator John Owan-Enoh has had an unblemished record in public service. He is driven by a strong passion to leave a positive and lasting impact on the lives of his people who he served with distinction.

    ” His humility, compassion, live for his people are qualities which has not gone unnoticed by even his most implacable critics. Senator Owan-Enoh sees public office as a vehicle of social engineering and an opportunity to make the difference in the society. In this regard, his selflessness and commitment to noble causes have won for him plaudits and set him apart as a compassionate leader.

    “His staying power is the people. The centrality of the people to his politics derives from his understanding of political office as a privilege and opportunity to serve. With this in mind, he has never taken the support of his constituents for granted.

    “I therefore implore all Cross Riverians to mobilize and vote for him so that together we may bring back the glory of our Cross River State,” he said.

    He expressed confidence that the State would be taken over by the APC in next year’s election.

    He also called for support for President Muhammadu Buhari.

  • Excitement as ex-commissioner joins senatorial race

    Constituents in the Central Senatorial District of Cross River State under the aegis of Central District Indigenes (CDI) have backed the ambition of former Commissioner of Information in the state, Akinwunmi Anderson Rickets to represent them in the Senate.

    They expressed their readiness to ensure Rickets’ victory at the polls, stating that his strides as commissioner during the immediate past administration was outstanding among his peers.

    Rising from its maiden meeting in Calabar, the state capital, CDI, the spokesperson of the indigenous group, Frank Agbor, commended Rickets for aligning with the All Progressives Congress (APC) to actualise his political dreams.

    ‘’The name Akinwumi Anderson Ricketts, the Obol Nkama 1 of Ugep, Yakurr Local Government Area of Cross River State resonates around the nooks and cranny of state. His populist disposition has enabled him to carve a niche for himself as a maverick politician and an emerging leader, whose disposition to the people as well as acceptability is obvious.

    ‘’In our present day society that is being pulled apart by atavistic cleavages and ethnic divisions which has greatly polarised the people amidst avarice and self-interest, the people need a peaceful, committed unifier, an instrument of motivation and harmonious co-existence to turn around things for the overall good of the society.

    ‘’In all of these, Obol Ricketts rightly fit into this description as he offers himself to serve the people of Central Senatorial District as a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. He is a lovable personality who, since growing into adulthood, has remained a vessel for progress and instruction of peace and development in and around his community and beyond. He has been a bridge builder, a true patriot that is revered and adored in his native Ijiman Ward in Ugep Urban and Yakurr Local Government Area as a whole,” he said.

    The people of the senatorial district, according to Agbor, are excited about Ricketts’ senatorial ambition and would mobilise people of the senatorial district and party members to give him the mandate to represent them come 2019.

    He added: “Akin, as he is fondly called by his peers and even senior friends, is a Public Relations expert – a profession in which he is currently a member of the Governing Council – the highest decision making organ of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR). As an accomplished businessman, Chief Ricketts had dedicated interest in a few companies, spread across different sectors of the nation’s economy such as oil and gas, construction, purchase and supply and shipping, among others.

    “For us and other stakeholders in his Cross River Central Senatorial District, especially those in the APC, we are ready to rally round this unassuming political juggernaut, which will surely be of great value to the people of the Central Senatorial District, the state and Nigeria in general.’

    ‘’These different platforms in the business environment enabled him to touch  the lives of many people that came in contact with him, including organisation of medical outreaches for different ailments in and around communities in Yakurr; scholarship awards for secondary and tertiary education, embarking on many community development projects not only in Ugep but also beyond his immediate communities.

    “His thirst for philanthropy knew no bound as Obol Ricketts is always interested and willing to support anybody irrespective of where you come from.’’

  • APC will win C/River in 2019 — Owan-Enoh

    A lawmaker representing Cross River Central Senatorial District in the National Assembly, Sen. John Owan-Enoh, has reiterated his confidence that the All Progressive Congress (APC) would win the 2019 general elections in the state.

    The senator restated this on Monday in Akpabuyo, Calabar South Local Government Area, while addressing supporters on the sidelines of his Local Government tour and consultations in view of his governorship aspiration.

    He told party supporters that APC in Cross River has been repositioned and better placed to win the governorship, legislative positions and also deliver votes for President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019.

    According to him, Cross River is in dire need of change in leadership, adding that the choice of the party to present a popular and acceptable candidate was very crucial.

    “I am here today to present myself before you and to seek your support during the primaries.

    “As a party, we must present a well accepted and popular candidate that can deliver Cross River at the polls in 2019.

    “We must unite across board to ensure that the party emerge victorious and take over Cross River in 2019,” he said.

    Mr Maurice Effiwat, the Director General of Owan-Enoh Campaign Organisation, appealed to all party supporters to desist from creating division within the party.

    Effiwat explained that the party needed a United outing in other to take over power from the Peoples Democratic Party in the state in 2019.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Owan-Enoh also visited Odukpani Local Government Area of the state, where he equally solicited for support for his gubernatorial ambition.

  • 2019: Why Ayade must be stopped in his tracks

    On that day of his inauguration on May 29, at the Calabar International Convention Centre (CICC), where thousands had defied the sweltering sun to behold his formal coronation as the first governor of northern Cross River extraction, Professor Ben Ayade was like an athlete in a relay team handed the baton to continue the race. That much was perhaps on everyones mind. He was expected to continue with the new normal. Struggling and sluggish.

    He was inheriting a state where its citizens were happy and content, a state of affairs where existence was all that preceded essence and survival was all that mattered. We were all happy with our civil servant toga as a state. We did not want any “disruptive influence”, no matter how well intended. Just continue with us the way you met us.

    Everything was “just okay”. In our servile existence, we had for long worn our docility like a badge of honour. We venerated the then existing club of a few “noblemen” as idols and in our idolatry, we worshipped them, kowtowed to them for our basic survival.

    In those days, the city of Calabar was like Lagos, Abuja or London to rural dwellers. Not many ever dreamt of stepping foot. It was an enclave for a few privileged fellas we held in awe. Next to the elite and privileged clan were the civil servants. They were few and far between. A gulf had existed then between them and us.

    There was “quiet”, “peace” and “order” in the land. We were greatly bonded by our subservience and resignation to fate. We were quite comfortable with the socioeconomic circumstances that were our lot or that were foisted on us. And we accepted them as our due share from God.

    Our dear Cross River! We wallowed in laughter and joy in the face of our deprivation of lack and want.

    It meant nothing to us even when our land was reckoned in excess and a juicy part of it was negotiated away without any formal conversation or due consultation and no resistance either. As if we knew ahead that oil was no longer going to play a major role in the international politics, we simply laughed it away and thanked our leaders for supervising or doing nothing over the relocation of 76 oil wells to a neighbouring state.

    As serfs, we dared not say a word because whatever that was considered alright to our feudal Lords was acceptable to us. We were happy to be so unfamiliar and unbothered with such terminologies like internally displaced persons (IDPs) such as being enjoyed in Bornu, Benue, Plateau and Adamawa today.

    We have always been a happy and acquiescent people. Even when government was being run like a secret cult, we were the happier for it. What did it matter anyway, even if we knew it was only 60 or at best persons that made up the government? After all, what you dont know, doesnt hurt you. Ignorance, they say, is bliss. We found joy living from hand to mouth and living one day at a time as long as we remained a civil service state. This appellation gave us so much pride and we wished it did not have to go away one day.

    For over 23 years, long before our 76 oil wells were donated to a sister state, there was a freeze on recruitment into the civil service. It made good sense then not to recruit people into the states workforce because it was better to offer them fish than to open their eyes to the art of fishing, which in the process could have created an egalitarian society. God forbid!

    Ichabod! Ichabod! The glory hath departed from our state.

    We were in such a blissful state until Ichabod left us on May 29, 2015. Until 2015, the word industrialization was not native to us. Totally alien. It only existed in the vocabulary of other states, not our Cross River.

    Then came Governor Ben Ayade with his egalitarian pursuit of happiness for all. Haba!

    On the day of his swearing in, he clearly cut the persona of a gadfly. An avant-garde with an uncommon approach to governance. He spoke with so much gusto and bravura. Like an eager beaver, he evinced a leader in a hurry to make an impact. He burned to recalibrate the economic architecture of the state.

    His advent signposted the emergence of a new generation of leader. A paradigm shift. Cross River was on a cusp of history. A new song was being written. A whole new chapter was being penned. The very “disruptive influence” we so much feared became the highpoint of his governance- prompt and regular payment of salary, lifting of a 23-year-old embargo on recruitment into the civil service, tax exemption for zero income people, establishment of the largest garment factory with spinoff benefits for over 3000 women, most of whom are widows, the setting up of the state-owned pharmaceutical company (Calapharm), the first in the whole of the South South of Nigeria; the Rice seedling and multiplication centre; the San Carlos banana plantation in Odukpani; the cocoa processing mill in Ikom; the Ogoja automated vitaminized rice mill; the British/Canadian international school in Obudu; the ongoing construction of noodle factory; the toothpick factory in Yakuur, among several other “disruptive” ventures across the state in just less than four years. Why does he want to vanquish our time-honoured laidback, civil servant status we had long held so jealously?

    It is on account of this wind of industrialization currently sweeping across the state that the governor must be stopped in his tracks before it is too late. Why shouldnt he be stopped?

    Why should he attempt to decouple us from our dependence on measly federal allocation with his unrelenting industrialization drive and his insistence on constructing a deep seaport when all we want is to continue to function as a state reduced to want in body, soul and spirit?

    For no just reason, this governor that has become the pride and jewel of the states workforce decided to give a sense of belong to thousands of Cross Riverians, many of whom have nicknamed him the “Alert Master”, on account of the regular salary alerts they have become accustomed to for the past three years. That is why he must be stopped in his tracks, ahead of 2019.

    Wittingly or unwittingly, he is succeeding in completely blurring the line that had existed between “them and us”, no thanks to his inclusive governance approach where every hamlet now boasts of an appointee in government. So what is going to happen to the master/servant status quo relationship that was once the defining feature in governance?

    Again, just when we thought we had put the wounds of the brazen expropriation of our Bakassi Peninsula and the attendant ceding of our 76 oil wells behind us, the governor has been crying his eyes out for redress while those under whom the unconscionable infraction actually took place continue to play the ostrich. What kind of a defender of the people does he think he is anyway? Are we not happy that this happened? After all, we did not raise an eyebrow.

    Again, hear this: Politics with ethics. Whats that? Who plays politics with ethics in this part of the world? Providing a shoulder for your neighbor to lean on? Haba Governor! This sounds so strange! Your neighbor must not lean on you! Let them fall and die. Yes, fall and die. That is correct politics. Now you can understand why you must be stopped in your tracks for being Bobo Nice with the so called neighbor whose brand of politics is rather an undiluted PHD (Pull Him Down).

    But because Ayade came like a mystery wrapped in an enigma of riddle, he remains the protagonist in the big story of Cross River State until 2023.

    Mr Governor, continue to put your shoulders to the wheel and strive for what is best for the state. For that is the stuff legends are made.

    • Obogo is Deputy Chief Press Secretary to Governor Ben Ayade
  • Protests rock C’River PDP over automatic tickets

    …mass defection looms

     

    Protests rocked the Peoples Democratic Party Secretariat in Cross River State on Monday following reports that the National Working Committee of the party has decided to give automatic tickets to National Assembly members.

    With the development, there are indications that there would be a mass defection of more of the party’s stalwarts and supporters across the state to other political platforms in the state.

    Hundreds of placard carrying youths as well as National Assembly aspirants at the party secretariat in Calabar said they were going to resist the decision of the party.

    Some of the placards read, “We reject imposition of candidates”, “Automatic tickets will kill PDP in Cross River”, “Farewell to PDP in Cross River”, “Danger awaits Cross River PDP” among others.

    Addressing reporters an aspirant to the Senate seat of the Southern Senatorial District and former chairman of the party in the state, Ntufam Ekpo Okon, said they would be forced to seek other alternatives if the decision is not reversed.

    Okon, who was flanked by other National Assembly aspirants, said, “We are members of the PDP. Even the name of the party is anchored on the people and democracy and therefore we would stand firmly against it. We will not blink and allow this to go on unchallenged. We are conversant with democratic values and the content of the constitution of our party. We have read the guidelines for these primaries, the process of nomination party primaries and we did not just jump into this. We have been members who have paid our dues. Now the process have started, we paid our nomination forms and paid all fees required only for us to be called and told that the NWC of our party has taken a position to direct all incumbent members of the National Assembly should be returned unopposed. That means even if we go through the congresses, we do not stand any chance because they would send names that they have decided to send.

    “It does not even end at that. They pretended as if we were going to have congress to elect adhoc delegates. And meanwhile did not do any congresses anywhere in the 196 wards of Cross River and wrote lists of delegates to support that charade. The truth of the matter is that it is unfortunate because it means that PDP, as a party, has learnt nothing. All that befell PDP in 2015, one would have expected that PDP would have come out of this situation wiser. But if this is what PDP has chosen to do, it is not acceptable and it is not going to go down well with us and we will not accept it. We are members of the party and insist that let they be level playing field. We are ready to contest on a level playing field. That charade called congresses of Saturday, anyway it did not hold, they just sat down and wrote down names, would not hold, must be cancelled forthwith, and let us do a democratically conducted exercise, supervised by INEC, let us ensure our party members make a choice.

    “Look at APC. They are doing direct primaries. If I remember after the 2015 windfall that finished us, the Ekweremadu committee recommended a direct primary. We jettisoned all that. Today even the indirect primaries we cannot open our hearts and do the right thing.

    “These days people who are holding office, you don’t want to access them on their acceptability. You force them on the electorates and party members. If this was the case, why didn’t you make the pronouncement and stop selling forms. You sold forms, collected money from us and now turn round to and shortchange us it is unacceptable.

    “We want the party to reverse itself on this dangerous process and do the right thing. If they don’t, we will consult with our people and do the needful. I am running an election. It is my aspiration but it is an aspiration that goes beyond me. There are so many people, big and small who have become part of this aspiration. If they say I should move to another party I will move. If they say I should stay, I would stay. One thing is sure that I would stand with the people.

    “We have told our supporters to be calm. Even at time PDP had absolute control of the political space in Nigeria, this level of impunity never happened. That you get to a point where just sit down and blackmail the party, threatening that if they don’t give them the ticket and because of that the party would surrender the will of the membership to them. I challenge them that if they defect they will only make big headlines in the newspapers, not impact in the field. I challenge them.”

    Other National Assembly aspirants who were with Okon include Meil Inyang, Edward Ogon, Saviour Nyong, Don Claimz Enahme, Dr Godwin Amanke among others.

  • 2019: APC stakeholders insist Cross River North retains governorship ticket

    Stakeholders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) from the northern senatorial district of Cross River State, have insisted that in line with the zoning formula of the party, the 2019 governorship ticket must remain in the district.

    The resolution was contained in a five point communiqué issued at the end of the northern APC stakeholders meeting held in Ogoja Local Government Area.

    The APC leaders argued that the governorship ticket of the party is still domiciled in the north as the party is operating an eight-year zoning formula, which has been used to fill positions from national to ward levels.

    “The Cross River North All Progressive Congress (APC) acknowledges that, the APC is a fair and just party. That, they acknowledge that there is an existing zoning structure within the nation, state and other components of the country that has led to the relative growth and success of the APC in the state and the country, generally.

    “That, the Cross River North All Progressive Congress (APC) expresses faith in the collective existence of various components of the state in the light of justice, fairness and equity.

    “That, Cross River State, being a component of this stability and growth of the party, the Cross River North All Progressives Congress (APC) expects and anticipates that other parts of the state should respect the existing zoning template.”

  • Husband, wife sell only son in Calabar

    The Cross River State Police Command has arrested one Mr Daniel Bassey and his wife, Magdalene, for selling their two-year old son for an undisclosed amount in Calabar.

    Addressing reporters in Calabar on Tuesday, Commissioner of Police, Hafiz Inuwa, said the couple was arrested when the wife reported at the Efut Divisional Headquarters that her husband took their only son, Moses Bassey, to an unknown person in Port Harcourt through one woman simply known as Mummy and collected an undisclosed amount of money.

    “The suspect was later arrested. During interrogation, it was revealed by Daniel Bassey that the complainant, Mrs Magdalene Bassey, mother of the baby was party to the transaction. The duo are now in police custody to unravel the cause of this inhuman action and possible prosecution,” Inuwa said.

    He said efforts were on by the police to ensure that the baby is recovered.

    Daniel Bassey, who was paraded alongside his wife and 78 other suspects, admitted to the crime.

    Read Also: Mantu’s son, Umar, joins race for House of Reps seat

    He said he was 27 years old.

    Daniel, an indigene of Akwa Ibom State, said he did it because of economic hardship.

    Daniel who said he has two children, said the boy was his second child. His first child, a girl, is three years old.

    His wife, Magdalene, who said she was 22 years old and from Bakassi local government area in Cross River State, admitted that she consented to the act.

    She said she agreed to it so they could solve their financial problems.

    The police Commissioner, Inuwa, who paraded 80 suspects for various offences, said they had seized 11 firearms, N92, 000 cash and recovered two vehicles.

    He said security was everybody’s business and appealed to members of the public to be patriotic by shearing timely and useful information to help the police do their job better.

  • UNICEF partners traditional rulers to end violence against children

    The United Nations Children’s Fund ( UNICEF ) says it is working with traditional rulers in the campaign to end violence against children in Cross River State.

    Speaking at a workshop organized in collaboration with the Ministry of Women Affairs and Department of Chieftaincy Affairs, for traditional rulers in Calabar on Tuesday, Child Protection Specialist UNICEF Nigeria, Enugu Field Office Mrs Nkiru Maduechesi said it was pertinent to bring them on board in the campaign as opinion leaders in the communities.

    She said the workshop was for traditional leaders of the three local government areas of Akwamkpa, Calabar Municipal and Calabar-South local government areas.

    “The theme is ending violence against children through community mechanism. The essence is to sensitize and renew the commitment if the traditional institution to support the ongoing campaign to end violence against children in Cross River State, which is quite prevalent because we believe that the community leaders are the gate keepers and opinion leaders and so need to be on board with this campaign.

    “As a UN agency to ensure then rights of children are protected we started a work called the child protection systems strengthening in the state. Cross River is one of the four model states in Nigeria. The others are Lagos, Gombe and Plateau. Part of what we are doing is bringing all actors on board to end violence against children because issues of violence against children is not just a human rights violation for the child, but also a source of economic underdevelopment.

    Read Also: UNICEF urges Bauchi to redeem N250m counterpart fund

    “When children are abused, they lose their opportunity to fulfill their potential and that is economic loss to the family, state and country at large. When a child is pregnant because the child has been raped that child drops out of school. That child could have HIV and because of that instead of government using the money for other things, they now use it to respond to HIV, which if they had acted in preventing from happening in the first place, would have saved some economic resources,” Maduechesi said.

    The Permanent Secretary of the Department of Chieftaincy Affairs, Mr Thomas Erete, said violence against children was rampant and appealed to the traditional rulers to use their positions as leaders in their various communities to check the problem with the knowledge they would get from the workshop.

  • NSCDC apprehends six in Cross River

    Cross River State Command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) says it has arrested six suspected illegal miners in Biase Local Government Area.

    Its Commandant, Mr Stephen Lar, told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday in Calabar that the suspects were arrested at a mining site on Monday.

    Lar said the command had declared zero tolerance for illegal mining due to the increasing activities of unlicensed miners in the state. According to him, NSCDC will ensure the nation’s economy is not sabotaged.

    He said: “Mining is the statutory responsibility of the Federal Government, anybody who engages in mining must obtain a licence from the Federal Ministry of Mines and Steel Development.

    “We were informed of these illegal activities through a tip off in Biase Local Government Area of the state.

    “Illegal mining has become a lucrative activity in that area and my men swung into action and arrested these people in the act.

    “We are going to carry out an intensive investigation to find out from the Federal Ministry of Mines and Steel if they have license to operate or not. After that, we can prosecute them in the court of law to serve as a deterrent to others’.”

    The commandant told NAN that the command had reduced vandalism and oil bunkering in the state, saying the command was now handling illegal mining.

    “The eagle eye of NSCDC is everywhere, residents in Cross River should shun all acts of illegality because the law will not respect anybody found wanting.

    He said since he took over two months ago, he had arraigned 24 suspects for crimes, particularly in the oil sector.

    “We have achieved a lot during this short period that I resumed work here; I must commend all the officers and men of this command for their efforts in fighting all forms of illegality.

    One of the suspects told NAN he worked with one of the mining companies in Biase.

    “My company did not ask me to go in search of the precious stones and I don’t have any licence to operate.”

    I only got information that there is a new target area that has large precious stones, that was why I had to take some guys along with me to the place. The area where I got the precious stones does not fall within my company’s area, I only went there to get them and sell in order to buy food to eat,” he said.

     

  • Illegal mining: NSCDC arrest six suspects in C/River

    Cross River Command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) says it  has arrested six suspected illegal miners  in Biase Local Government Area of  the state.

    NSCDC Commandant in Anambra, Mr Stephen Lar, told our reporter on Wednesday in Calabar that the suspects were arrested at a mining site on Monday.

    Lar said that the command had declared zero tolerance for illegal mining due to increasing activities of unlicensed miners in the state.

    According to him, NSCDC was saddled with the responsibility of ensuring that the nation’s economy is not sabotaged.

    “Mining is the statutory responsibility of the Federal Government, anybody who engages in mining must obtain a licence from the Federal Ministry of Mines and Steel Development.

    “We were informed of these illegal activities through a tip off in Biase Local Government Area of the state.

    “Illegal mining has become a lucrative activity in that area and my men swung into action and arrested these people in the act.

    “We are going to carry out an intensive investigation to find out from the Federal Ministry of Mines and Steel if they have license to operate or not.

    “After that, we can prosecute them in the court of law to serve as a deterrent to others’’, he said.

    The commandant told our reporter that the command had reduced cases of vandalism and oil bunkering to the barest minimum in the state, saying that the command was now handling illegal mining.

    Read Also: Mining ministry accesses N15b intervention fund

    “The eagle eye of NSCDC is everywhere, residents in Cross River should shun all acts of illegality because the law will not respect anybody found wanting.

    He said that since he took over the command two months ago, he has arraigned 24 suspects  for various crimes, particularly in the oil sector.

    “We have achieved a lot during this short period that I resumed work here; I must commend all  the officers and men of this command for their  efforts in fighting all forms of illegality.

    One of the suspects told our reporter  that he was a staff of one of the mining companies in Biase.

    “My company did not ask me to go in search of the precious stones and I don’t have any licence to operate.

    “I only got information that there is a new target area that has large precious stones, that was why I had to take some guys along with me to the place.

    “The area where I got the precious stones does not fall within my company’s area, I only went there to get them  and sell in order to buy food to eat’’, he explained.