Tag: Development

  • DFID: Osun on right path to growth, development

    •Aregbesola hailed for determination 

    The Department for International Development (DFID) has lauded the giant strides and determination of Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola in generating a robust development plan for the state.

    Also, the Commissioner for Economic Planning, Budget and Development Dr Olalekan Yinusa said the workshops for Sector Plan Development teams, approved by the state government, were yielding good results.

    He said the state was putting in place a robust development plan for the state in all sectors.

    The DFID, through its Southwest Reform Facilitator, Miss Rachel Illah, made the commendation at a three-day Envisioning/Capacity Building workshop for Sector Plan Development teams on Medium Term Sector Strategy (2019-2021) organised by the Ministry of Economic Planning, Budget and Development.

    It noted that Osun State was on the right path to development.

    Miss Illah said the governor’s passion, coupled with the machinery his administration set in motion for development, was encouraging and in line with the guidelines and regulations of the DFID.

    The DFID facilitator said the desire for growth and development by the state government, was worthy of emulation by other states in Nigeria.

    She noted that the most important ingredient of growth is the desire the state government had demonstrated.

    Miss Illah said the capacity building workshop was the right way to craft a development plan for any state, adding that no meaningful development can take place without a visible blueprint.

    She added: “I am amazed and impressed at what is going on in Osun. It is only very few states that do what Osun is doing. This is the best way to go, if you want to achieve a real and meaningful development plan or blueprint.”

    “This capacity-building workshop for sector plan development teams is a pointer to the fact that the state really knows what it wants to achieve in terms of growth and development.

    “I can see and feel the desire for growth and development by the people and government of this state. I can see through this workshop that the governor has been able to carry all stakeholders along.

    “I am happy to know that everyone is on the same page in Osun. This is what my organisation clamours for: that everyone, including the government, shares the same passion for development.”

     

    “This shows something significant. It shows the government in this state knows that it is not all about politicians. I am aware that this workshop is all-encompassing. I can see public servants, civil society organisations (CSOs), non-governmental organisations (NGOs), market women.

    “I have also seen members of political parties different from the ruling party in the state. It shows that government knows that the particular needs of the people should be the priority and not what government wants.

    “A budget for development should be directed at the particular needs of the masses for it to be meaningful.

    “The happiness of the people should be paramount to the government in planning for development and the Osun State government has taken this as priority, or else this workshop will not be happening in the first place.”

     

     

  • 118 Enugu communities receive N5m each for development projects

    118 Enugu communities receive N5m each for development projects

    One hundred and eighteen autonomous communities in Enugu State yesterday received N5m cheque each from the state governor, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi for development projects of their choice.

    The communities were those who were able to fulfill the requirements for the release of the fund, as the first tranche of the N10 million earmarked for every community in the state to execute development projects of their choice.

    The 118 autonomous communities that received their cheques, according to the Commissioner for Rural Development, Hon. Gab Onuzulike, were among the 450 communities approved by the Enugu State Executive Council (EXCO) that have opened accounts with designated banks.

    He added that the remaining communities will receive theirs as soon as they open bank accounts and send the details to the Ministry of Chieftaincy Matters/Rural Development.

    Ugwuanyi while presenting the cheques to the Traditional Rulers and the President Generals of Town Unions in the communities stated that the decision was in line with his administration’ resolve to empower each autonomous community in the state with the sum of N10 million  to carry out projects that would address their “peculiar and immediate development needs”.

    The governor added that the government decided that the choice of the projects and their execution were left “entirely” to the discretion and at the disposal of the stakeholders of each individual community.

    He said: “This was in fulfillment of our promise to promote participatory democracy and extensive rural development in the state as well as the involvement of all local communities in the implementation of government policies and programmes”.

    Ugwuanyi, who disclosed that the exercise was the first time in the history of the state, explained that the projects to be executed by the communities are different from those being done in various communities by his administration through the Community Development Project (CDP), the World Bank-assisted Community and Social Development Project (CSDP) as well as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    According to him, “to march words with action, the State Executive Council on the 22nd of November 2017, approved the release of the sum of N2.25 billion to cover the first tranche of N5 million to be given to every community in the state so as to enable them commence work on their self-chosen projects. The communities were also asked to open bank accounts for the lodgment of the said funds”.

    While thanking the communities that received the cheques for their support and eagerness to participate in “this historic scheme”, Gov. Ugwuanyi expressed explicit confidence that they will utilize the funds for the identified purposes for the improvement of the socio-economic conditions of their people, reassuring that his administration will not relent in its development efforts until the fruits of good governance are felt in every community in Enugu State.

    The Igwes and the Town Unions’ Presidents-General, the Chairman of Enugu State Council of Traditional Rulers, Amb. Lawrence Agubuzu thanked Gov. Ugwuanyi for the “innovative, unique, socio-economic and new developmental strategy for Enugu State”, saying that they are happy to have him as a governor.

    The Caretaker Committee Chairman of the Town Unions, Hon. Paully Eze had described the release of the fund as a pleasant surprise, saying that the governor has wiped away the tears of the people in so many communities, who he said had never experienced any development project in their areas.

    He maintained that the grassroots development programme, will ensure that government presence is registered in all the over 450 autonomous communities in the state, commending Gov. Ugwuanyi for his passion for the wellbeing of the people.

  • Feeding bottle federalism stunts growth, development, says Oyebode

    Feeding bottle federalism stunts growth, development, says Oyebode

    It is simply indefensible and unacceptable that nearly 60 years after independence, Nigeria remains in the quagmire of underperformance and stasis, Prof Akin Oyebode has said. In his lecture entitled: “Re-thinking the Nigerian nation: Issues and challenges” at the first year anniversary of Ondo State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, the constitutional lawyer says the ball is back in the people’s court to change the narrative by voting the right people into power.

    Nigeria is today at a crossroads. The multifarious ethnic nationalities, culture areas and linguistic groups hitched together by British imperialism are almost totally dissatisfied, if not actually disillusioned by the arrangement foisted on them. So high is the distaste of many for the framework for their co-habitation that loud voices are heard across the land for a reconsideration and necessity for refashioning a more equitable and fruitful paradigm.

    In the present atmosphere of irredentism, beggar-thy-neighbour policies and naked quest for ethnocentric supremacist tendencies by the powers-that-be, the disillusionment and intention of the malcontents and discomfited to go for broke in their search for alternatives become quite understandable.

    A people accustomed to the niceties of liberal democracy, self-esteem, freedom for all and life more abundant would naturally be uncomfortable with diabolical efforts to render them comatose and transform them into slaves or, at best, second class citizens in their fatherland.

    A people steeped in meritocratic values cannot but be aghast at the diktat of khakistocrats presumably intent on painting the country in their hue with the inexorable consequence of social conflagration and national atrophy. Whether wittingly, or unwittingly, the country is being nudged towards crises and perdition.

    It is within this ominous conjuncture that we are being called upon today to contemplate the unfolding scenario in our dear country with a view to charting possible ways out of the threatening catastrophe.

    Indeed, we are being asked to re-examine Nigeria’s nationhood and justify the essence of our being and justify our claim to membership of the universal family of nations.

    Accordingly, it is intended to begin by postulating the determinants of nationhood before uncovering the problematique of the Nigerian state as well as the successes and failures of successive administrations in the task of grappling with the contradictions of the polity which, it must be stated, had proven nearly overwhelming and created the oxymoron claiming to be making considerable progress in welding together the multifarious components of Nigeria while accelerating and intensifying the underdevelopment of the country.

    Finally, an attempt would be made to construct a prognosis of what can be done to lighten the burden of co-habitation among the disparate people that constitute the country’s population.

     

    When is a Nation?

     

    I am sure this august audience would readily recall the inimitable way in which our inimitable Nobel laureate had posed the national question a few years ago in a bid to dramatise the predicament of the Nigerian nation-state as currently constituted. While no prizes are on offer for unravelling the inadequacies of the Nigerian nation-state, it seems apposite to re-visit the indicia of statehood under international law in order to adumbrate the indeterminacy of Nigeria’s claim to nationhood.

    Accordingly, only entities possessing a defined territory, stable or fixed population, effective government and capacity to enter into relations with other States are considered States.

    Nevertheless, it needs be emphasized that possession of the stated indicia does not ipso facto translate into nationhood. Allegiance by the population to a central authority or common flag and national anthem, commonality of values which underpin co-habitation, guarantee of protection by the state against aggression or arbitrariness by other members of society number among the desiderata of a nation. A people bereft of these elements are little more than a rabble.

    Although Chief Awolowo’s restatement of Metternich’s formulation regarding countries and peoples who are a “geographical expression,” in comparison with nations has attained the status of conventional wisdom, the riposte that nearly every country or people had started off as a geographical expression could indeed exercise some heuristic value. The fact, however, bears re-stating that any country that intends to command the respect and loyalty of its people must exercise the reciprocal duty of protection toward them.

    For, if a people are denied due protection by their government, it becomes very difficult, if not, in fact, impossible to expect their allegiance to the state of which the government is merely a personification.

    A conscious people can be expected to withhold allegiance and support for an uncaring or tyrannical regime. The social contract is a dual carriage way and the rights of the people are a definite correlative duty which ultimately collapses where and when the government feels free to abandon its responsibilities to the people. The consequence of this is the metamorphosis of the natural right of the people to their right to rebel against an oppressive, tyrannical government.

     

    Nigeria’s fault lines

     

    The yoking together of the various people inhabiting Nigeria through what has been described as “the mistake of 1914” has continued to pose serious challenges to many of them who barely have very little in common with others.

    Today, Nigeria is a multi-ethnic, multi-lingual, multi-religious conglomeration ostensibly at war with itself in the quixotic and frenetic quest for nationhood. Whereas there ought to have been strength in diversity, the removal of the scaffolding that held the people together during colonial rule merely accentuated fissiparous, centrifugal and dysfunctional tendencies which colonialism had generally masked.

    Can we forget that things had boiled over to the extent that the country had endured a fratricidal 30-month civil war, which we had pretended ended with “no victor and no vanquished”?

    The militariat which had dismantled the federal arrangement of our founding fathers and foisted a quasi-unitary constitutional framework on the people ensured that Nigeria remained a work in progress so much so that the component units of our unique federation are compelled to go cap in hand to Abuja every month for their sustenance. The “feeding bottle” federalism has effectively stunted Nigeria’s growth and development as the country nudges more and more toward perdition.

    It is indisputable that no-one has a say on where and to whom one is born or his ethnic nationality. Accordingly, a far-sighted government should blunt the rough edges of ethnic and religious idiosyncracies by putting in place policies based on equality of status and opportunity in furtherance of self-actualisation of every citizen. But what do we see today? Increasing emphasis is being placed on ethnic origin, native language and religious persuasion which is not only dysfunctional and counter-productive but also seriously flawed and inimical to the corporate needs and interests of the country as well as national unity, social well-being and collective progress. Until and unless the forces of reaction and ethnocentricity are effectively combated, the country would continue to make progress only in a negative and reverse direction.

     

    Grappling with contradictions

     

    As stated above, Nigeria is chafing under the stranglehold of severe contradictions. Granted that nation-building is everywhere a continuous and laborious project, the situation in Nigeria would seem to have been complicated by a dearth of patriotic and insightful leaders possessing a well thought-out strategic plan to change the country for the better.

    The multiplicity of ethnic nationalities numbering over 400, it must be conceded, makes the task of governance a forbidden one. Yet, ways need to be devised and necessary adjustments made to infuse the people with a sense of belonging and collective stake in Nigeria incorporated.

    It might well be wishful thinking to canvass downplaying the state of origin of key players on the country’s political or security chessboard in deference to competence and meritocracy. Nevertheless, there is a felt need for social engineering and endearment of the various constituencies in the polity in order to carry along as many people possible through socially relevant and just5ifiable socio-economic and political programmes and policies.

    The experience of other countries with regard to socio-economic and political transformation within a reasonable timeline is enough to teach us requisite strategies and tactics for our own transition from the third world to the first.

    We are all Africans even if our native languages are not the same. Accordingly, it is not too much to ask that we de-emphasize our differences in the overall interest of our collective need and national progress. It needs be brought home to all concerned that there are immense benefits to be derived from harnessing our endowments in the larger interest of Nigeria.

    As the world’s largest concentration of black people, we have a historical mandate to actualise our dreams and aspirations, unencumbered by parochial and self-serving nuances. Undue emphasis on ethnicity and religion should be seen as an unnecessary and avoidable hindrance to achieving the utilitarian hopes and aspirations of our people.

     

    Reconciling and resolving divisive and divergent tendencies in contemporary Nigeria

     

    The push and pull factors in relation to nation-building in Nigeria exert tremendous influence on the country’s growth and development. While there are forces wedded to the status quo, there also exist forces ranged towards radical or revolutionary change in the scheme of things. The interplay or clash of these forces can be best grasped through an understanding of the ratio and balance of class forces within the polity.

    To the extent that the dominant ideas of every epoch are those of the ruling class, to that extent can it be said that the outlook and consciousness of the ruling class have a bearing on its capacity to come to grips with the contradictions in the society. In other words, solutions to problems prevalent in the society depend largely on the existing power equation and the perception of the political leadership and how any resolution or reconciliation impinges on the existing power equation and perceived threats to the ruling class.

    Where and when by act or omission, the state is unable to exterminate threats to its existence, the extinction of the state must be deemed imminent. This is why no effort must be spared to ensure the elimination of threats to the survival of Nigeria.

    The pernicious and callous aggression by Fulani herdsmen across the country should serve as a wake-up call to all men and women of goodwill and humanitarian disposition on the necessity for peaceful co-habitation among Nigerians.

    A situation which hampers reciprocal love, respect and trust for fellow human beings is, quite frankly, antithetical to peace, order and good government and should be unequivocally and strongly condemned by all who wish Nigeria well.

     

    Where do we go from here?

     

    These are indeed harrowing times for Nigeria and Nigerians when majority of our young ones have lost faith and confidence in the Nigeria project. They are ready to vote with their feet at the slightest opportunity in order to pursue their dreams elsewhere. They no longer have heroes here and seek succor in foreign football teams, foreign music and foreign dressing.

    The middle-aged and elderly are also generally dispirited but find it a little more difficult to jump ship on account of existential demands. So, they are condemned to live out the rest of their lives under the threat of armed robbers, kidnappers and hired assassins.

    This leads me to the question, what is to be done and how do we emerge from the labyrinth of crying poverty, underdevelopment and inexorable descent into the hobbesian state of nature?

    It would seem that there is a felt necessity to re-invent the country and re-create the basic values which had helped hold the country together – love and mutual respect, fairness in inter-personal relationships, good neighborliness, etc. In an age of collective self-doubt and general despondency, the powers-that-be must evince a resolve to effect a turnaround in our affairs and create the pre-conditions for a better tomorrow.

    In addition, we need to enlist credible protagonists and believers in the Nigeria project in order to re-kindle confidence and hope in the Nigerian dream. They should be in the vanguard of the crusade for a kinder and gentler country which would make life worth living again.

    There is need for a moral re-armament in order to advocate the benefits of one nation and one people not through hackneyed programmes such as the NYSC (National Youth Service Corps) but innovative policies that would fire the imagination of our youth, de-emphasizing state of origin, ethnicity, religious and cultural orientation in favour of a broad national ethos and love for and commitment to a united Nigeria.

    For far too long have we allowed the country to drift and be rudderless like a ship at sea without a compass. We have not tapped sufficiently into the transient patriotism witnessed whenever the Super Eagles are engaging foreign teams arising largely from failure to provide “democracy dividends” to the preponderant majority of the population. What is called for now is a recovery mission on a national scale aimed at inculcating integrative nationalistic values.

    Regrettably, this cannot come to pass automatically. There first has to be an awareness by the nation’s political leadership of the acuity of the situation. Next, well elaborated programmes and policies must be put in place as a blueprint of national goals and objectives.

    It is simply indefensible and unacceptable that nearly 60 years after the country’s political independence, we are still in the quagmire of underperformance and stasis. Therefore, a consensus has to be forged among opinion leaders across the country regarding the country’s vision and mission with in-built timelines of the roadmap for Nigeria’s transformation.

    Disparate, uncoordinated efforts would need to be substituted with harmonized plans which put Nigeria first. Venal politicking, ethnocentricity, influence-peddling and racketeering must be immediately jettisoned in favour of pan-Nigeria endeavours and attitudes such that whoever falls below expectation is expeditiously sanctioned irrespective of his state of origin, religious persuasion or circumstances of his birth and any other consideration.

    It is only when law is applied without distinction that the country can be said to be making progress on its journey towards nationhood. Double standards, sacred cows and a hominem application of laws should no longer find a place in our national experience.

    In the final analysis, Nigeria’s journey to nationhood would be considerably shortened if politically correct public office-holders are brought to power. We need to constantly remember the sentiments of Joseph d’ Maistre to the effect that a people get the government they deserve.

    So, the ball is back in the court of the people who must always ensure that the right people are voted into power.

  • Tax efficiency and development

    Singapore, a city-state much smaller than Lagos State in landmass, is often touted and rightly so, as a marvel of rapid, yet sustainable economic development and advancement. Its success in transforming from a third to a first world country in a period less than 40 years has continued to impress, if not astound people.

    Singapore, before its transformation, faced the problem of overcrowding in the city, poor living conditions, a severe lack of infrastructure, and low technology, among others. Its current status as a thriving international business hub, characterized by a high standard of living, did not happen by chance. It was orchestrated through proactive and deliberate far-sighted planning.

    The problems that Singapore surmounted on the path to economic development and prosperity are some of the issues that Lagos State is today tackling as it aspires to transform into an efficiently run and more productive mega-city with vastly improved living conditions. A review of Singapore’s model reveals that, among other things, there was a systematic approach to the development of infrastructure.

    While Singapore’s experience shows clearly that infrastructure is central to socio-economic advancement, several studies by experts on other economies across the world have also identified a strong positive and even symbiotic link between infrastructure or infrastructure spending and growth. Any economy that wants to pursue sustainable growth must therefore invest in its infrastructure.

    Lagos State’s current drive at giving a massive boost to infrastructure development must therefore be welcomed as a leap in the right direction. Addressing the huge infrastructure deficit is crucial to unlocking the potential of the state and attaining the growth and development that we all desire. However, infrastructure development requires funding.

    If we agree that infrastructure development is that which must be done, then the required funding is equally that which must be secured. But the funds must be procured in a way that will ensure an effective and sustainable developmental programme.

    In advanced economies like Singapore’s, taxation constitutes a major source of government revenue and is an acceptable practice among their citizens. Taxation is also employed in other ways such as tariffs that protect local industries from foreign competition, checking undesirable practices and fostering inclusive development through asymmetric application.

    These economies also prove beyond doubt that taxation is a veritable source of funding for sustainable development, perhaps with its added advantage of empowering the citizens to demand more accountability from governments and as well constraining governments towards more transparency and efficient utilisation of funds. Apparently, making development everybody’s business fosters better growth.

    Tax to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio (total tax collected as a percentage of the market value of all officially recognized final goods and services produced within a country in a given period), and the tax contribution to a country’s revenues are good indicators of efficient tax systems. In 2016, tax revenue in the European Union was 40 per cent of GDP (France 47 per cent, United Kingdom 35 per cent) and accounted for around 90 per cent of government revenues. Tax is usually about 26 per cent of GDP in the US and accounts for about 85 per cent of government revenue. In Singapore, it is about 14 per cent and 68 per cent, respectively.

    Nigeria’s tax to GDP ratio of six per cent clearly depicts the poor state of taxation in the country while at the same offering the opportunity to significantly increase government revenues.

    Lagos State’s internally generated revenue (IGR) for 2017 was N501billion, amounting to an average of N41.7billion per month.  Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State has set an improvement target of N50billion per month for 2018. But even this ambitious plan will have to be scaled up progressively and substantially, considering the fact that the cost of fixing the state’s infrastructure deficit has been estimated at $50 billion.

    It is small wonder, therefore, that Lagos State is embracing taxation as a major source to secure the required revenues to fund the massive infrastructure gap in the state. With current low awareness and compliance rates, an estimated population of 24 million people (with more than seven million gainfully employed) and thriving businesses, Lagos can rely on taxation to provide the funds to drive its development.

    To get the full benefits though, taxation must be administered efficiently. This means there should be a high compliance rate by taxpayers and low administrative costs relative to the revenue collected. This is more easily achieved when the tax system is fair, simple, well organized and enforceable

    Achieving this efficiency requires a new approach to tax administration by the government. For instance, ramping up the awareness of citizens to the imperative of taxation, bringing a lot more people and businesses into the tax net (with demonstrable efforts at attaining total compliance of all eligible taxpayers), and applying some taxes asymmetrically such that the poor may not be as burdened as the rich will create a sense of fairness while increasing total funds accruable.

    The use of technology to improve the ease of remittance by citizens and businesses, the harmonization of certain taxes can also make taxation simpler for the taxpayer while improving the government’s ability at enforcement. Reviewing the tax rates that have become obsolete is also essential.

    Efficient taxation leaves a fair burden on all citizens and businesses while accruing substantial funds to the state’s coffers. It engenders more participation of citizens in governance which in turn forces more transparency and fiscal discipline on the government on spending and more rigour in the selection of projects to deploy funds to.

    The funds accruable from efficient taxation are also more predictable, unlike allocations from the federal government, which are subject to the vagaries of the crude oil market. Predictability helps to make proper and long term planning, which is essential for sustainable infrastructure development

    Efficient infrastructure supports economic growth as it facilitates timely delivery of information, goods and services, while accelerating the attainment of social objectives such as improved healthcare, higher educational standards and higher standards of living. It also attracts foreign direct investments from multinational corporations which act in synergy with the efforts of government while improving the tourism potential.

    Several infrastructure development projects have already been initiated by the Lagos State government. The entertainment and transport hub under construction at Oworonshoki is visible to all commuters that ply the Third Mainland Bridge as well as the improved lighting and security of that axis. Light rail construction is underway along with road constructions and rehabilitations while the exploitation of marine transport opportunities are in the works. The provision of pedestrian bridges, lay byes and street lifting have improved the safety and security of citizens and also decongested traffic.

    A lot still needs to be done to redress Nigeria’s infrastructure deficit. It is hoped that Lagos State can expedite the attainment of efficient tax administration so that the economic development Lagosians crave will be accelerated through well planned and proactive investments in infrastructure.

     

    • Adedeji, a tax and revenue expert lives, in Abuja.
  • Lagos charts new course for sport development

    Lagos charts new course for sport development

    Chairman of Lagos State Sports Commission (LSSC), Dr Kweku Tandoh has said that the mandate is to ensure that sports become pivotal in the state in line with Governor Akinwunmi Ambode vision to see that the state becomes a sports hub.

    The newly-appointed boss of the LSSC stated that to realise this vision, three key areas – infrastructure development, taking sports back to schools and capacity-building of coaches and sports officers – are fundamental areas that would be looked into.

    He noted that affordable facilities would be built in communities and would be made accessible to the people at the grassroots to help them hone their skills. He also said that existing facilities would be refurbished, while promising that the Agege Stadium would be ready for MFM FC campaign in the CAF Champions League. He also assured that the Onikan Stadium, which is undergoing renovation, would become a state-of-the-heart facility when completed.   While speaking on the importance of taking sports back to school, Tandoh stated that the private schools will be actively involved due to the availability of facilities in such school and he said a modality would be worked out to allow public school pupils use the private school facilities in the locality.

    He also said the LSSC would work closely with the Ministry of Education and see if more time should be allotted to sports in the school curriculum. “We need to work more with the Ministry of Education the same way we need to work with private schools in the state. We established that there is a gap between the private and the public schools in the area of participation in sport so we have too bridge this gap.”

    The LSSC boss also noted that the commission can only boast of about 12 coaches under its employment, saying that moves are on to bring in more coaches either on contract or as full staffs. He said the commission was targeting 90 coaches for its various sports federations and activities, assuring that they would undergo refresher courses to boost their knowledge.

    He also said the governor has given verbal assurance to host the Dawn Games, while the LSSC would support the classics that has brought Lagos international acclaim and confirmed it as a tourism destination.

    Tandoh restated the state’s government decision not to float a football club, but leave it for the private sector, while assuring that the government would provide the enabling environment and support for such clubs to thrive.

  • UI needs N70b for academic growth

    UI needs N70b for academic growth

    VICE Chancellor of the University of Ibadan (UI) Prof Abel Olayinka has said the institution plans to raise N70 billion to improve the premier university’s academic excellence.

    The fund raising is coming on the heels of the university’s 70th anniversary this year.

    Towards the celebration, UI management yesterday inaugurated a high-level committee to plan, coordinate and execute activities to mark the milestone.

    UI, established in 1948, will be 70 next November.

    Inaugurating the committee, Prof Olayinka noted that “though 70 years in the life of the university was relatively young when compared with some other universities across the world, some which are as old as 700 years, UI must joyfully mark this milestone, considering its contributions to national development”.

    According to Olayinka, this is the university which has produced high-calibre human resources for Nigeria and the world.

    He said: “Indeed, we can confidently say our products are our pride as people believe that once this product is from Ibadan, it must be the best.”

    Olayinka said UI would be shopping for N70 billion for its capital projects.

    The vice chancellor expressed optimism that the dream is achievable, if all UI products are properly harnessed.

    He said: “Given its prestigious position in higher education in Nigeria, some people have the belief that every educated Nigerian is either a direct or indirect product of UI. This is because if you did not attend UI, you must have been taught somewhere by someone who attended UI, or who was taught by someone who trained in UI. Therefore, UI belongs to all Nigerians.

    “In the last 70 years of our academic excellence, our achievements are numerous and impactful as it can be seen in the quality of our products in every sphere of life.

    “Therefore, we feel it will not be a bad idea if we come together on this occasion to celebrate, reflect on the journey so far and plan for the future. We intend to bring back our old alumni for flashback and reminiscence, celebrate our icons and inspire the current students towards nothing but the best.”

    Olayinka urged the alumni to get ready for the epoch celebration, saying every alumnus should think about what to give back to the university.

    Officials at the meeting include Deputy Vice Chancellor (Administration), Prof Ambrose Emilorun Aiyelari; Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academic) Prof Adeyinka Aderinto; Registrar Mr. Olumiji Olukoya; University Librarian Dr. Mrs. Helen Komolafe Opadeji and Provost, College of Medicine, Prof Oluwabunmi Olapade Olaopa.

     

     

     

  • Yobe: Of recession and development

    With a record 82 percent budget implementation rate and more in the lived reality of the people’s lives – 2017 will go down as a tipping-point year in the annals of Yobe State’s socio-economic recovery.

    First, the economic recession in which the country was stuck for most of the year was a pivotal, defining moment. The recession depleted the nation’s revenue earning and meant that many states across the country, at some point, were unable to meet certain basic obligations to their people, including obligation to workers who are at the front and centre of every service delivery effort. With less going into workers’ pockets, local businesses took a hit as well resulting in many of them finding it hard to replenish their inventories.

    How Governor Ibrahim Geidam successfully navigated Yobe State through that difficult period still puzzles many keen observers of the state’s socio-economic development. The governor, for instance, not only did not take any bank loans to finance expenditures, such as salary payments, he towered above with visible impact in the lives of the people while never slowing down on the projects he was executing. Projects in healthcare, road construction, school renovation and expansions, waters supply in communities across state, etc., were carried on with unbelievable consistency and panache.

    Part of this has to do with his background as an accountant and auditor who knows what it takes to maintain a balanced sheet but most of it is about his commitment to the values of transparency and accountability in the conduct of government business. These ensured that the governor remained faithful to the provisions of the 2017 budget and the budgets before that; they ensured that he measured every single move that the government makes according to the strength of its purse and resulted in never invoking any expenditure or spending unless he was sure the government could properly finance it.

    As a consequence of these measures, Yobe emerged stronger because of the governor’s leadership.

    In healthcare, for example, 2017 marked the formal opening to the public of the brand new Yobe State University Teaching Hospital (SUTH) that Governor Geidam has built. The government recruited more than 500 doctors, nurses and other professionals to work in the hospital well ahead of the commencement of clinical services.

    The year also marked the completion of most of the rehabilitation and expansion works carried out in major government hospitals across the state. It marked the procurement and installation of new and badly needed equipment that those hospitals in Gashu’a, Gaidam, Potiskum and Damaturu need to provide quality services to the people in those areas. It marked the start and completion of the construction of a new College of Medical Sciences complex based inside of the Yobe State University campus in Damaturu.

    More significantly, the year marked the expansion of Yobe’s drive in maternal and child care, topping the third straight year in which no case of polio was reported throughout the state because of the measures being taken to prevent its resurgence and those of other child-killer diseases. Indices for maternal and child health also improved significantly. In short, in 2017, Yobe’s healthcare sector got better than in the previous year.

    Professionals wowed by the governor’s effort to transform a sector so vital to the lives of everyday people expectedly took notice. First, the Society of Gynaecology and Obstetrics of Nigeria (SOGON) conferred its honorary membership on the governor for his effort at improving the health of women and children in the state. Then, two weeks later, the umbrella body of all medical and dental practitioners in the country, the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) through its Yobe State branch, followed suit by honouring the governor at a well-attended ceremony in Damaturu.

    Outside of the health sector, 2017 was also historic for Yobe’s education sector. It’s the sector that was the hardest hit by Boko Haram violence. So much of Yobe’s education infrastructure was destroyed during those insurgency years by a ragtag army of crazed fanatics who hold fundamentally distorted – and demonstrably wrong – notions about the place of western education in Islam.

    As a result of these setbacks, primary and secondary education, for the most part, had to be rebuilt across the state from the ground up. Progress, of course, wasn’t easy. But because of Governor Geidam’s determination, many primary schools have been rebuilt and expanded and provided with the basic learning tools and supplies that the pupils enrolled in them need.

    In secondary education, five secondary schools were selected and worked upon by the Geidam administration. The schools were totally rebuilt, expanded and furnished with new classroom, staffroom, hostel and staff quarter furniture, laboratory equipment and chemicals and other vital supplies at over N2.8 billion.

    Six more secondary schools are slated to be totally rehabilitated and equipped this year. This means that by the end of 2018, an environment more conducive and more amenable to great teaching and learning would be fully secured for a lot of Yobe’s secondary school students.

    The preceding year also marked the start of Yobe’s International Cargo Airport project. When completed in November this year, the airport will not only be Yobe’s first, it will be the first of its kind to be wholly dedicated to cargo and freight services in the Northeast, a move likely to accelerate business and other economic activities in a region now recovering from so much devastation from Boko Haram attacks.

    Governor Geidam will surely build on these and other milestones of his administration in this ‘legacy’ year. As he nears the end of his eventful two-terms in office and the start of the rest that he so richly deserves, the governor will seek to make even more impact in the lives of the people by, amongst others, completing ongoing projects and starting new ones. He will consolidate on his feats in security, healthcare, education, water supply, agriculture and the civil service, amongst others, and make the APC, his political party, even stronger political platform around which to rally the people.

    He’s already started the year strong with a donation of vehicles worth N350 million to the military as they make their final push to defeat Boko Haram. He’s paid N1.1 billion as gratuities to retired workers. He’s saying, by these actions, that 2018 will be as action-packed as the preceding year and the years before that.

    • Bego sent this piece from Damaturu, Yobe State.
  • ‘Restructuring will foster peace, justice, development’

    ‘Restructuring will foster peace, justice, development’

    The Christian Welfare Initiative (CWI) has joined other Nigerians calling for the restructuring of the country to foster peace, justice and development.

    In his welcome address at the 5th National Conference and fund-raising for the creativity centre for the disabled persons, President of the CWI, Professor Magnus Adeyemi Atilade, said there was the urgent need for the nation to be structured “because the present political structure is faulty and lopsided, favouring one side of the country against other.”

    He declared: “The national question remains unresolved staring the nation in the face and threatening the unity and oneness of the country. We need to revisit and rearrange the present set-up of the country”.

    Atilade said the neglect of the physically disabled persons remains a spiritual challenge to the conscience of the nation.

    “Let us give them a voice in governance and space in everyday life and living by making provision to accommodate their special and peculiar needs. We all must provide succour for the weak in our society,”Atilade said.

    Professor Atilade, still on restructuring, said there must be fairness, equity and justice in the way Nigeria’s administration is being run, in terms of political appointments, distribution of national wealth and so on.

    The CWI president also called on honest Christians to join politics in the interest of their children’s future. Christians’ involvement in politics and governance is an important part of the fulfilment of God’s purpose for the body of Christ, equipped with anointing for dominion and authority. The theme of the conference was “Resolving the National Question: Remembering the physically challenged persons.” It was held in conjunction with Cherish Victory and Jesus People Enabled Band.

    Speakers at the conference included Elder Ayo Opadokun, social activist; and Mrs Irene Patrick Ogbogu, Executive Director, Disability Right Advocacy Centre, while Sir Debo Omotosho, Chairman, Bond Group, was the chairman of the event.

  • 2018: Amosun assures of accelerated development in Ogun

    2018: Amosun assures of accelerated development in Ogun

    Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun has assured the residents of accelerated development this year.

    In his New Year broadcast, the governor noted that the “Mission to Rebuild” Ogun State of his administration had continued to gather momentum and yielding good results across the state.

    According to him, his government will leave no stone unturned in developing the state and improving the lives of the people.

    Amosun said: “Our eyes are firmly set at finishing high, finishing strong and finishing well.”

    His administration, the governor said, would not relent at making positive, inclusive and lasting impact on the lives of our people.

    He added: “To achieve this, the consolidation of the Rebuilding Mission of our dear state will be vigorously pursued this year to ensure the completion of all ongoing projects.

    “No doubt, these projects and the developmental strides have made our state to rise to the top tier among the comity of states and made us the pride of our citizens at home and in the Diaspora.

    “Even, our most ardent critics have come to the conclusion that Ogun State has carved a niche of excellence for itself in the delivery of good governance to our people with the stamp of ‘Ogun Standard’ proudly imprinted on all that we do.”

    The governor thanked the people for their support, which he said contributed to the numerous achievements his administration recorded in the past six and a half years.

    He described them as invaluable partners in progress, saying their partnership manifested in the successes the administration recorded in the state’s economic development.

    Amosun said: “As we celebrate this New Year, let us use the opportunity of this festive period to reflect on the journey before us. We must map out improved and more workable strategies for better achievements. Without doubt, our tomorrow will be better than our today.”

  • Community leaders tasked on development

    The Chairman of the Badagry Local Government, Hon Olusegun Onilude, has called on the political, religion and traditional leaders in the council area to come together to fashion out a developmental agenda for the area.

    He made this call during the account of his stewardship to the people of the council area and the official commissioning of a 40- million naira Oba C.D. Akran Legislative House.

    Onilude, who bemoaned the slow pace of the development of the ancient town,  said: “It is high time all hands were on deck to proffer solutions to the problems militating against the growth of the local government area. It is disheartening to note that local council areas created out of the Badagry Local Government Area are developing more than the parent local government area. I have been privileged to visit all the LCDAs. There is none without an imposing and befitting structure.”

    He pointed out that there was the need for the convocation of a stakeholders’ meeting to fashion out a blue print for the holistic development of Badagry as a whole to meet up with the development in other parts of Lagos State.

    He noted that one of the challenges he met on ground when he assumed office was the lack of  befitting office accommodation and a legislative chamber for the councillors.

    This situation, he pointed out, made the council to swing into action to complete the Oba C.D Akran Legislative House containing offices and a legislative chamber.

    “It was tastefully furnished to provide comfort for our legislators in their duty of law making,”he said.

    The council boss said during the five months in the saddle, his administration had been able to complete and equip the Ajido and Tohon Primary Health centres to boost the health service delivery to the people of the area.

    “As part of our administration’s resolve to boost water supply in the council area, we have constructed two boreholes with generating sets for the people of Isalu and Gberefun, while the council had also graded some roads such as Isalu, Samuel Ekundayo and Elyon, among others, to facilitate the easy movement of goods and services,”he said.

    Onilude urged the people of the local government area to perform their civic responsibilities by paying their rates, dues and tolls promptly in order to aid the provision of social amenities in the area.