Tag: Cross River

  • Ayade won’t introduce new taxes in Cross River

    Ayade won’t introduce new taxes in Cross River

    Cross River State Governor Ben Ayade has said his administration will not impose new taxes on the people.

    Instead, the governor pledged, it would harness the state’s natural resources to better the lot of the people.

    He said his administration’s core role is to protect the governed.

    Ayade spoke at the weekend in Calabar, the state capital, after listening to a presentation by a consulting firm and a bank on how to increase the state’s Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) with the introduction of new tax heads.

    The governor, who regretted that the model the investors presented, which had worked in Lagos and Ogun states to boost their IGR, would rather add to the hardship among Cross River residents.

    He said: “I want you to sympathise with the state of Cross River. We are a state whose corporate philosophy is bringing government to the people that need it the most. We are a people who believe in the Afro-centric theory of providing a shoulder for your tired brother to lean on.

    “If we deepen this theory, it might come to a point when there is a Kantian impression that tends to equate government and the economy in such a way that the government’s core role in Cross River State is to protect the governed. There is no developmental effort, no deliberate effort of raising IGR that will be premised on taxing your people to prosperity. As a government that has a corporate conscience, at any point you put a tax, you should ask yourself what you are giving to the people in return.”

    Ayade added: “When I do the Home Certification Process at a cost to a man who is a civil servant, I will be putting an extra burden on a shoulder, which is tired, with a deliberate struggle to see how I can get money and raise my IGR. I might celebrate the N11 billion in three months, but I have put one of my citizens out there in a bigger pain.

    “I don’t believe in taxing people to raise money; I believe in tasking my brain to raise money. The kind of programme you will bring to me that will excite me is the kind that will take advantage of our natural resources and convert them to wealth.”

  • NDLEA arrests 186 drug suspects in Cross River

    NDLEA arrests 186 drug suspects in Cross River

    The Cross River Command of the National Drugs Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) arrested 186 drug suspects in 2015, it has been learnt.

    Its State Commander, Mrs Anthonia Edeh, told reporters in Calabar, the state capital at the weekend that of the number, 169 were men and 17 women.

    Mrs Edeh said the command also impounded 368,908 kilogrammes of various categories of hard drugs within the period under review.

    She said: “Also, out of the hard drugs seized, 368,479 were cannabis sativa; 43,601 grammes of cocaine and nine grammes of psychotropic substance.”

    The NDLEA commander said the Federal High Court, sitting in Calabar, last year, convicted 54 suspects to various terms of imprisonment, ranging from one to 15 years, for drug-related offences.

    According to her, the command counselled and educated the public at schools, motor parks and markets on the dangers of hard drugs.

    She said: “Ninety nine clients were counselled and reintegrated into the society while the public was sensitised on the inherent dangers of drug abuse and the need to maintain a healthy lifestyle.”

    The NDLEA commander sought the support of Cross River government and other stakeholders in the fight against drug abuse and trafficking.

    She said: “There is also the need for the citizens to furnish the agency with information on illicit drug activities.”

    Mrs Edeh assured that the command would, this year, accelerate its fight against drug trafficking.

     

  • Cross River: Immigration arrests two suspected traffickers

    Cross River: Immigration arrests two suspected traffickers

    The Cross River Command of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) says it has arrested two suspected human traffickers as well as rescued 29 victims.

    State Comptroller of Immigration, Mrs. Funke Adeuyi, told reporters in Calabar Tuesday that the suspects and their victims were apprehended on January 10, 2016.

    Adeuyi said they were arrested by men of the NIS on border patrol at Itigidi in Abi local government area of the state.

    “On January 10, the immigration border patrol officers at Itigidi intercepted two buses containing 29 youth which we found out were victims of human traffickers.

    “On first line interrogation, we discover that a lot of them were going to an unknown destination.

    “We have profiled them and we have all cause to suspect that they were about to be trafficked to an unknown destination.”

    She said they would be handed over to the National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons.

    According to the State Comptroller, the two suspects had some monies with them, while some of the victims only had their mobile phones with them.

    “The victims told us during our first line investigation that they were being taken to a place where they would work and get some money.

    We reliably gathered from some of the victims that their parents were aware that the suspected traffickers were taking them away to do menial jobs that would earn them some money.

    “We would hand them over to NAPTIP for further investigation on the matter’’ she said.

    She advised parents to be careful in giving out their children or wards to people whom they do not know much about.

    Receiving the victims and suspected traffickers, Mr Victor Odudukudu, an official from NAPTIP, assured that the agency would continue with the investigation.

    “We are going to interview the victims and interrogate the suspects.

    “We are also going to trace their family members and find out if they actually gave out their children to the suspects,’’ he said.

    One of the suspects, Mr Denis Agbor, said that he was taking the victims to Akure, Ondo state, to work in his restaurant.

    According to Agbor, he took the victims from Yakurr local government area of the state.

    “When I was about going back to my base in Akure, these people met me and appealed that I take them along with me and engage them in menial jobs.

    “I agreed to their appeal and promised that I will be paying those that will work in my restaurant some token while I will engage others elsewhere.
    “I am not taking them for anything bad; I was only trying to help them earn a living and I even know some of their parents,’’ he explained.

  • NSCDC destroys six illegal refineries in Cross River

    The Cross River State Commandant of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Mr. Adeuyi Dayo Clement, has disclosed that six refineries that were used for illegal bunkering were destroyed in the state last year.

    He said 15 suspects for various offences were arrested of which three out of seven facing trial have been convicted.

    The Commandant said the agency has stepped up operations to stamp out illegal bunkering and diversion of petroleum products in the state.

    He said they had also impounded drums of  diesel from pipeline vandals as well as recovered electricity cables.

    He said they were working with other security agencies in the state to ensure crime is checked.

    However, Clement complained that the command was faced with shortage of operational vehicles to carry out widespread monitoring of illegal activities.

    Though he said the vehicles available were strategically deployed across the state to get the best results, he appealed to the government and well meaning organisations to assist by providing more.

  • Towards Cross River of Ayade’s dream

    Towards Cross River of Ayade’s dream

    More than seven months into the four years tenure of Governor Bene Ayade, there is no doubt that he has not only consciously worked and walked with a single purpose toward the realisation of his campaign promises. Through his superior workable concepts which endeared the people more to him, he has emerged as a leader and political  juggernaut of repute in Cross River.

    Within this period, Ayade has recorded reasonable achievements. Even the most unreasonable and greasiest of all critics knows that but deliberately concealed that within them as a result of pride and the pull him down syndrome. Others do so because they are influenced by external political forces out to get a pound of flesh on what may be seen as an attempt to get at Ayade to exert their real or imaginary vendetta.

    Ayade has been able to change the mindset of the majority of Cross Riverians from viewing themselves and the state as being poor to the realization that the most important wealth and resources of any society is a people with the right frame of mind, attitude and ideological base and culture, and not just the trillion of barrels of crude oil and other natural resources on reserve, though these natural resources are imperative and veritable stimulators of growth and development, yet not in isolation of the human resources.

    Though civil and public service jobs are a vital employment tools and developmental ingredients, Ayade has been able to positively push away the mindset and orientation of the people from being at home while being refer to as a civil service state and people to the need to break loose and make an aggressive in-road into the private sector, the world of industries and entrepreneurship and technological innovation. In Ayade, many young Cross Riverians have been able to also come to term with the eternal truth that whatsoever can be conceived by the human mind can equally be reduced into concrete term, and that all that is required is the right attitude and the push to get at one’s set goal/target.

    Again, through the dexterity, audacity and the unquenchable determination  to provide sufficient hope in the a world currently swimming in despondency due to the global economic crunch, crash in the price of oil and other commodities and to change the conventional global held economic theory that whenever there is a global recession, the work force should be drastically compress, Ayade has chosen an unfamiliar but sane path and terrain of rather providing more job opportunities to put food in the tables of thousands of families in Cross River State.

    The traditional economic theory of reducing the size of the work force whenever there is a recession is a complete negation of the economy it strives fruitlessly to revamp. The simple logic is that when there is already hardship on the people and at the same times more persons are mindlessly thrown into the unemployment market, thereby compounding the recession crises. Keeping so many persons engaged and busy turn several persons from engaging in any antisocial activities and reducing crime in the society.

    Within a short time in office, Governor Ayade has established Cross River State as an undisputable voice , advocate and leader on the battle against the increasingly surging oceans and sea level, the scourging sun heat or global warming and the Noah-like flooding being experienced global, called, “Climate Change”. Ayade who led other African governors to the 2015 Summit on climate change in Paris, France, spoke forcefully in support of the continent which suffers greatly from the activities of the multinationals and the need for the United Nations and other relevant world bodies to channel resources to assist Africa which takes the greater burden of the climate change.

    Blessed with one of the world’s best remaining rain forests which is home to several endangered species, and working tirelessly to manage and conserve the forests for the good of the world, Ayade has brought in an innovation into the Carnival Calabar by introducing the Green Carnival, the first of its kind in the continent of Africa to stress the importance with which his administration attaches to the issue of climate change as 5 million trees are to be planted as part of the concerted efforts to checkmate climate change with its devastating effects on mankind. The theme of carnival was also hinged on climate change.

    Ayade paradigm shift from the mundane ways of economic reasoning and his phenomenal strides in the arts of statecraft and governance has stand him out as a leader with great, articulate mind with ideas and innovations to drive development to the state, though there are a few who are yet to come to term with Ayade’s leadership style which to them is not in tune with what they know or the business as usual way of doing things.

    It was based on this reality that sometime last year, Barrister Venatius Ikem in his article, “ The Ayade Phenomenon and the Crisis of Confidence in Cross River State”, agreed that Ayade comes into government with a daring steps to effect   revolution in governance, a paradigm shift to a system which left some persons “bemused, sometimes confused and even disappointed”. He however added by asking the following questions, “is his zeal to develop the state not showing? In other words no matter your opinion of Governor Ayade and the direction of his government, don’t you think his efforts however you perceive them, are directed at achieving something positive for the state”?

    Governor Ayade’s effort to bring in innovation to statecraft and governance, boost the avenue of sourcing for funds for social services and infrastructural development in a state like Cross River with very negligible share from the federation has attracted some misgiving from some persons who feels that the governor has refused to draw the line between business which is purely profit making and government which is service to the people. They also posited that the government new innovation in the art of governance was alien to them, not the normal way of doing things known to them. It is true that some persons find it difficult to accept or get adjusted to change, more so when they feel the change is sudden or that they cannot directly and immediately benefit from such change. But are the above position and accusations true?

    Is it true that government now and always has nothing to do with business and profit making, and that the Ayade leadership’s paradigm shift is deliberately forcing a bitter pile down the throats of the citizens and that his government does not have a human face? Certainly, this is not true as it is a misrepresentation of Ayade administration stand for and has demonstrated for the past seven months.

    First, it is historically verifiable that in an egalitarian and democratic society all over the world, Nigeria and Cross River State in particular, government had involved in business and still does so. For example, the former South-Eastern state of Nigeria (now Cross River and Akwa Ibom States), business outfits such as the liquidated Mercantile Bank and Manila Insurance were established as profit making outfits. The Government Printers, Cross River State Newspaper Corporation and CRBC were established as profit making outfits to handle government printing businesses, handle jobs from members of the public on profit basis, while at the same time serve as government mouth piece/information organ to the people and the carrier of the demands of the people to the government. Tinapa was established with government interest to make profit, just as the Calabar International Convention Centre (CICC), among others.

    Again it is impossible for a governor who within his seven six months in office has abolished tax payment for the poor and low income earners in the state, embarked on regular payment of salary to state workers, even before the end of each month, lifted a 13 years embargo on employment and has concluded plans to build 5,000 houses which will be provided with electricity and water for the poor and the voiceless in Cross River State. The enabling law and the Agency to take charge of the 5,000 houses is already in place with several other people-oriented laws now passed and bills yet to be passed into law. The above achievements and policy thrust of Governor Ayade does not portray a wicked business man and a bourgeoisie who accumulate wealth at the expense of the masses but a true friend of the ordinary man and woman on the street.

    Within the very short period under review, the administration of Ayade has attracted 500 Million Euros on PPP arrangement for the signature projects and another 10 billion US dollars from Henan Provincial Government of China for the building of China city in Cross River State including building Africa’s haulage centre in the state.

    In seven month under governor Ayade, ongoing work at the garment factory that will employ about 2000 persons mostly women and widows in particular is at advance stage, groundbreaking for the signature projects performed, most of the streets in Obudu town, one of the five urban centres in the state are now being lid up by power driven by diesel turbines and is currently providing pipe borne water to more than 3,000 families in Obudu, thereby fulfilling the promise he made to the people during his thanksgiving service last year.

    Between May 29, 2015 to December 31, 2015, Senator Ben Ayade has effectively laid a rock-solid base for the realisation of the his development blueprint including the building of a new city, Calas Vergas in Calabar and other cities in the senatorial districts generation of additional 90 megawatts electricity, setting up of a state security outfit tagged “Operation Skolombo”, a poultry and a Rice city.

    Ayade is not beclouded; he has a crystal clear vision and direction on how the administration was going to administer the people, employing the scarce resources of the state for the good of all citizens. It is based on this reality that in his inaugural speech, he asserted that there was need that “Every foot is on the pedal, we aim to harness new ideas and technology to reconstruct our state, reform our schools to guarantee first class education for our youth and empowerment our citizens with the skills they need to engage a brave new world”!

    • Ulayi and Asha are media aides to the Cross River State governor

     

  • Disenchantment over Senator Rose Oko in Cross River

    Disenchantment over Senator Rose Oko in Cross River

    For most constituents of the northern senatorial district in Cross River State, represented in the Senate by Mrs Rose Oko, there appears to be a sense of disenchantment. The senator, who during the build up to the elections had kept making headlines for emerging winner despite the people not knowing her whereabouts, is in the news again.

    This time from it is from the people she represents, particularly those who worked for her emergence.

    According to them, they are being shortchanged, as her alleged continuous absence in the Senate, was not to their advantage.

    According to a former leader of Yala local Government Council and member of the Peoples Democratic Party Elders Forum, Mr Gabe Usibe, the people of the northern senatorial district are displeased over her “abysmal and lackluster representation at the national assembly as evident in her silence and conspicuous absence during plenary.”

    While charging the senator to up her game and be more sensitive to her constituents, Usibe said: “I express the public opinion towards her level of ingratitude to the people of Yala local government area and the northern senatorial district without words of gratitude to the people despite the sacrifice made delivering her at the polls, even at wake of anomic outburst.”

    Usibe, who is also the Coordinator of the Northern Cross River Parliament, advised the people of the northern senatorial district to be conscious of such imposition in the future.

    He also advised northern leaders to be more cohesive and wary of what he described as the senator’s antics to enable them deliver on their mandates.

    He expressed worry at the relationship between political leaders in the north and their subordinates stressing that premium has always been placed on supporters from other senatorial districts in the state than those from the north, an attitude he described as political servitude.

    He charged the youths to desist from all forms of social vices in order not to be used as thugs because they would always be abandoned, bearing the last election in mind.

    His words, “We were giving a bitter pill to swallow in terms of her aspirations to the senate. We supported her because we felt she would be a sensitive representative, but to our chagrin, she has not met the expectations of the people in terms of her capability. As a people we regret our support for Rose Oko, and I feel it is more or less nemesis on us that we are getting what we are getting now. It is nemesis because we had all the wherewithal to say no to such an imposition, but we kept quite because of whatever. She was abroad receiving medical treatment. She did not partake in the primaries and all, but we still went ahead to support her.

    “I would ask her to resign. If she can no longer function as the senator, let her resign because it is obvious, that he lacks the capacity to represent us as a people.”

    While commending Governor Ben Ayade for his signature projects, he urged Cross Riverians to be law abiding, dutiful and prayerful for the government.

    He urged that the people be patient with the governor to deliver on the promises he has made.

  • NSCDC destroys six illegal refineries in Cross River 

    NSCDC destroys six illegal refineries in Cross River 

    The Cross River State Commandant of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Mr. Adeuyi Dayo Clement, Tuesday disclosed that six refineries that were used for illegal bunkering were destroyed in the state last year.

    He said 15 suspects for various offences were arrested of which three out of seven facing trial have been convicted.

    The Commandant said the agency has stepped up operations to stamp out illegal bunkering and diversion of petroleum products in the state.

    He said they had also impounded drums of diesel from pipeline vandals as well as recovered electricity cables.

    He said they were working with other security agencies in the state to ensure crime is checked.

    However, Clement complained that the command was faced with shortage of operational vehicles to carry out widespread monitoring of illegal activities.

    Though he said the vehicles available were strategically deployed across the state to get the best results, he appealed to the government and well meaning organisations to assist by providing more.

     

  • Disenchantment over Senator Rose Oko in Cross River

    Disenchantment over Senator Rose Oko in Cross River

    For most constituents of the northern senatorial district in Cross River State, represented in the Senate by Mrs Rose Oko, there appears to be a sense of disenchantment. The senator, who during the build up to the elections had kept making headlines for emerging winner despite the people not knowing her whereabouts, is in the news again.

    This time from it is from the people she represents, particularly those who worked for her emergence.

    According to them, they are being shortchanged, as her alleged continuous absence in the Senate, was not to their advantage.

    According to a former leader of Yala local Government Council and member of the Peoples Democratic Party Elders Forum, Mr Gabe Usibe, the people of the northern senatorial district are displeased over her “abysmal and lackluster representation at the national assembly as evident in her silence and conspicuous absence during plenary.”

    While charging the senator to up her game and be more sensitive to her constituents, Usibe said: “I express the public opinion towards her level of ingratitude to the people of Yala local government area and the northern senatorial district without words of gratitude to the people despite the sacrifice made delivering her at the polls, even at wake of anomic outburst.”

    Usibe, who is also the Coordinator of the Northern Cross River Parliament, advised the people of the northern senatorial district to be conscious of such imposition in the future.

    He also advised northern leaders to be more cohesive and wary of what he described as the senator’s antics to enable them deliver on their mandates.

    He expressed worry at the relationship between political leaders in the north and their subordinates stressing that premium has always been placed on supporters from other senatorial districts in the state than those from the north, an attitude he described as political servitude.

    He charged the youths to desist from all forms of social vices in order not to be used as thugs because they would always be abandoned, bearing the last election in mind.

    His words, “We were giving a bitter pill to swallow in terms of her aspirations to the senate. We supported her because we felt she would be a sensitive representative, but to our chagrin, she has not met the expectations of the people in terms of her capability. As a people we regret our support for Rose Oko, and I feel it is more or less nemesis on us that we are getting what we are getting now. It is nemesis because we had all the wherewithal to say no to such an imposition, but we kept quite because of whatever. She was abroad receiving medical treatment. She did not partake in the primaries and all, but we still went ahead to support her.

    “I would ask her to resign. If she can no longer function as the senator, let her resign because it is obvious, that he lacks the capacity to represent us as a people.”

    While commending Governor Ben Ayade for his signature projects, he urged Cross Riverians to be law abiding, dutiful and prayerful for the government.

    He urged that the people be patient with the governor to deliver on the promises he has made.

  • Calabar Carnival is the largest street party in Africa – Ayade

    Calabar Carnival is the largest street party in Africa – Ayade

    Governor Ben Ayade of Cross River, has described the annual Calabar Carnival as the “largest street party in Africa.’’

    The governor, who made the remark on Monday in Calabar at the grand finale of the 2015 carnival, noted that the festival is unique in promoting talents and unity among Nigerians.

    Ayade pointed out that apart from promoting talents and creativity, the carnival had united the people of Cross River and other Nigerians.

    “We are celebrating 11 years of the carnival; the greatest street party ever; the greatest show in West Africa, this is just the beginning.

    “This is my first carnival as governor of the state. We will continue to add new innovations to make it colourful in the years ahead,’’ he assured.

    He said that the theme for this year’s carnival is “climate change,’’ adding that the hospitality of the state had continued to attract tourists from across the world.

    The governor commended the efforts of people of the state and the participants for making the 2015 carnival a success.

    Earlier in his remarks, Mr Gabriel Onah, Chairman, Calabar Carnival Commission, disclosed that nine countries participated in the carnival.

    He listed the countries to include: Spain, France, Italy, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Burundi, Ghana and Brazil.

    Onah said that the carnival had continued to produce commercial content into the state.

    “Tourism is indeed our own oil. We will use tourism to market the state to the world.

    “The attention of the world is focused on Calabar today, as you can see, the state is wearing a new look,’’ he said.

    A spectator, Mr Philip Ita, who described the carnival as a street party that unites the people, commended the government for sustaining it for the past 11 years.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the 12 kilometers carnival walk commenced from Mary Slessor road, IBB way, Marian road, MCC way, Calabar highway and terminated at the U.J Esuene stadium.

  • China to invest $10b in Cross River, says Ayade

    China to invest $10b in Cross River, says Ayade

    Cross River Governor Ben Ayade yesterday said businessmen from the Henan Province of China will invest $10 billion in the state.

    The governor said a new China city would be built in Cross River by the Provincial Government.

    Ayade, who spoke at the Margaret Ekpo International Airport, Calabar, the state capital, hinted of the expected arrival of 100 investors from Henan to set up various companies and industries in the state.

    The governor said other teams of investors would focus on various key projects, including agricultural investments, renewable energy, the garment factory, hydro-power projects and the seaport.

    He said: “We have a large group coming in for agriculture; huge investments are coming in through renewable energy. We have a large group coming in, in terms of garment factory. We have a team also coming in hugely to invest in hydro-power project and the seaport.”

    Ayade said a logistics hub for Africa, which would focus on the Manufacturing sector, would also be established in the state.

    The governor noted that with the necessary arrangements on ground, his earlier budget of N350 billion for the 2016 fiscal year would be surpassed.

    On Carnival Calabar, said to be the largest street party in Africa, Ayade said it would assume greater heights this year.

    The governor said it would be awesome, filled with new excitement and a deepened content.

    He added: “Cross River, after 10 years of the carnival, needs to have a change. This year will be the first carnival under my watch. We are deepening the content, with new excitement. I use this opportunity to call on all to come to Calabar as the 2015 carnival will be quite awesome.”