Tag: Duke

  • I ‘ll run for presidency, says Duke

    I ‘ll run for presidency, says Duke

    FORMER Cross Rivers State Governor Donald Duke has indicated that he would still take a shot at the presidency, if he has the opportunity.

    Duke, who made this known in Lagos when he spoke at a programme, ‘The Nigerian Symposium for Emerging Leaders’, said it was because of his preference for the presidential seat that he did not vie for any federal legislative seat after serving out his terms as governor 10 years ago.

    Duke said he would still contest for the highest office in the country at the appropriate time and that his enthusiasm is not dampened by his failure to emerge as the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) the last time he aspired for that office.

    He said: “I do not have the flair for the legislature; standing up and sitting down at the chambers to raise a point. That was why I did not contest for the Senate but the presidency, after serving out my term as governor. I have contested the presidency before; I will still give it a shot when the opportunity presents itself. I believe I still have the energy in me.”

    He canvassed the reform of the country’s political system to accommodate wider participation and good governance and suggested the review of the electoral law to allow for independent candidacy.

    Duke said the country’s democracy would fare better if young people, who form the larger proportion of the population, took more active part in its political process. He added that most developed countries had young people as their leaders at one point or the other in their democratic history.

    He however urged young people to participate in the political process and use their prime to add value to the country saying power was never given easily. He added: “I want to urge young people in the country not to see leadership as if it belongs to some people, but do everything positive to be part of it. You can only make a difference at the prime of your life.

    “You can actually add value now, not when you are above 50. So, you need to be part of the political process and play your part. It is your right to be there; nobody is doing you a favour. You represent more than 60 per cent of the population; you don’t have to beg for it. Just make effort to make that change and contribute your quota to nation building.”

    Also speaking at the event, the Chief Executive Officer of Budgit, Seun Onigbinde, called on governments at all levels to always carry the people along in their budgetary proposals and implementation to achieve accountability.

     

  • Kukah, Soludo, Duke for forum

    Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Matthew Hassan Kukah, former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Prof Chukwuma Soludo and former Cross River State Governor Donald Duke are to speak at an event in Enugu  on March 2.

    Event Coordinator Prof. Ufo Okeke-Uzodike told reporters that Enugu Forum is a civic platform for development policy discourse.

    “Anchored by the African Heritage Institution (Afri-Heritage), formally known as the African Institute for Applied Economics (AIAE), Enugu Forum has provided a strong and genuine voice on issues that affect our continent, our country, and the Southeast.

    “It is not a secret that Nigeria is undergoing a period of economic recession and uncertainty, which has fuelled political tensions and social insecurity.

    “Given this backdrop, the Enugu Forum is organising a roundtable discussion on “Nigeria: A Prognosis of 2017” on March 2,’’ he said.

    Other discussants include former Minister of Education Dr. Oby Ezekwesili; former Minister of Solid Minerals and Education Prof. Akpan Ekpo, former University of Uyo Vice Chancellor and Prof. Osita Ogbu (Economic Adviser under ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo and Director Institute of Development Studies).

  • How to make states viable, by Obi, Duke, others

    How to make states viable, by Obi, Duke, others

    How can states be more viable? This  topped the agenda at the 11th Annual Lecture of a law firm, Aelex.

    Speakers, including former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi, and his Cross River State counterpart, Donald Duke, said states needed to innovate to survive.

    Former National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) Chairman Prof. Chidi Odinkalu faulted the creation of some states, saying they were designed to fail ab initio.

    “History of the emergence of the states show that there was a designed flaw and if we don’t fix it, we are not going to make any headway,” he said.

    They said there was an increasing disconnect between the government and the citizenry. They also decried the lack of visionary leadership, lack of planning, poor procurement process and lack of credible electoral processes.

    They identified an over-bloated civil service and lack of accountability as the major factors militating against stability, growth and viability of most states.

    Duke lamented the increasing disconnect between the government and the governed, saying it was a major cause of weakness in the present states structure.

    According to him, the state of affairs in the country was contrary to the dreams of the founding fathers. He called for a collective vision towards realising an ideal state.

    Obi said leadership was key to viable states.

    “The first thing we must do to make the States work has to do with the vision of trhe leader. If the elected leader has a vision of what to do, being the driver, he can whip everybody into line.

    “Our politicians make campaign promises, but the moment we are elected into the office, they come up with all forms of agenda, some four point agenda, others two or six point agenda as the case may be.

    “In doing this, there is no coordination; there is no planning, no coordinated plans on how to grow the States in terms of resources and manpower

    “When I assumed office, there was no office, there was no Governor’s Lodge and I called Dr. Chris Ngige and said, Chris, where is your office and he responded: ‘Peter,  you are now the Governor. Wherever you are, that is the office.’

    “I remembered that Nigeria is a signatory to the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and with that document, you have everything a state needs to grow.

    “So I picked it and used it to develop a strategy called Anambra State Integrated Development Strategy (ANIDS).

    “That was the process that allowed me to look into each goal properly, study how to deliver it how to budget for it and make life easy for the masses.  I made it people driven, went to each community in the State and asked each of them what do you need in this community and so on.”

    Obi regretted a situation where leaders come into the office without plans of what to do for the people.

    He urged leaders to sit down,  reduce costs of governance, look at the peculiar needs of their states and embark on projects that would impact on the lives of the people

    Former Access Bank chief Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede emphasised the need to effectively manage state resources.

    “There is a need for a set of rules and dynamics on which you agree on how to allocate resources in the system. Jurisprudence of governance has a common principle; people who we choose to manage the resources must be prudent.

    “The electoral system must be transparent and credible. The mode and method of creating the states must make them viable unlike what we have had in the past.

    “We have an electoral system that has not worked so well, it has not produced the best from among us. Most governors you area beholding are just waiting for Federal allocation, they just plan around it and nothing more.

    “Leadership is the solver of human problems; you need a Governor who sees beyond this point, who sees into the future irrespective of national vision. Any Governor who does have a vision isn will not know how to attract foreign investors; he will not know how to conduct credible electoral system and will be a dampener of visions. Every State to improve its areas of strengths, producing goods and services on which it has a comparative advantage over other states,” Aig-Imoukhuede said.

    Another speaker, Mr. Isaac Babatunde, emphasised accountability, saying that those who run the states were not held accountable by the masses.

    He said: “Until we start living within our income, we cannot move forward.  And unless we create a critical mass like Singapore by which we get intelligent  and qualified people to lead us,  we will not work as states.”

    Aelex Managing Partner, Mr. Theophilu Emuwa, thanked all participants for finding time to attend the lecture.

    A partner at the firm, Mrs. Funke Adekoya (SAN) expressed satisfaction with the turn out, stating that the vision of the law firm’s founders was achieved.

  • Ita-Giwa, Duke’s wife back Calabar Festival

    Senator Florence Ita-Giwa aka Mama Bakassi, wife of former Cross Rivers State governor Mrs. Owanari Duke and other stakeholders have endorsed this year’s edition of the Calabar festival holding next month.

    Ita-Giwa, who spoke during a pre-carnival masque party in Lagos, organised by OKHMA Global Limited, a Lagos-based marketing firm, said the festival would bring a fresh offering for tourists across the globe.

    She said the festival, which has gone beyond a mere tourism booster, has become a platform to address developmental issues, such as climate change.

    According to Ita-Giwa, the festival has become an intellectual event, provide an opportunity to show efforts of the government to look beyond oil and sell Calabar as a tourist destination to the world.

    She said there would be food festival in this year edition where various foods from Cross Rivers would be showcased to the world.

    Also, Duke said the festival presents a lot of travel, business opportunities for brands and has the entire requirement needed by foreigners who want to book for a flight, hotel either as an individual, corporate or families.

  • New signings have  improved Ikorodu  Utd, says Duke

    New signings have improved Ikorodu Utd, says Duke

    Ikorodu United are yet to hit the 20 points mark after 24 league  matches despite an improved performance in the second half of the season.

    “We didn’t do too well in the first round of the NPFL which has left us in a bad position but in the mid-season transfer window,  the team brought in some experienced quality signings and that has equalled to an improved performance so far in the second round, ” Paul Duke told Goal.

    “Giving up isn’t an option for us, it looks difficult but we shall continue to fight for every point home or away, to give up a fight means the end. We aren’t going to give up.

    “The few matches left this season still has a whole lot of points at stake which make a huge positive change to our current position. So basically we aren’t done yet,  we are fighters and will see the battle till the end.”

  • Duke Energy stakes $4.9b on Piedmont Natural Gas

    Duke Energy Corp, the largest U.S. power company by generation capacity, said it would buy Piedmont Natural Gas Co for $4.9-billion (U.S.) in cash, helping expand its natural gas distribution business.

    Duke offered $60 in cash for each Piedmont share, representing a premium of about 42 per cent premium to the stock’s Friday close.

    A glut of supply from shale fields has ensured relatively stable pricing for natural gas distributors such as Piedmont.

    This has prompted a number of U.S. power producers to boost their natural gas infrastructure and lower dependence on power generation as demand for electricity weakens due to increased energy efficiency.

    Southern Co said in August it would buy AGL Resources Inc for about $8-billion in cash.

    Duke and Piedmont are also among the partners in the $5-billion 550-mile (885-km) Atlantic Coast pipeline, which moves gas from Pennsylvania’s Marcellus shale field to North Carolina and Virginia. AGL resources also has a five per cent stake in the pipeline.Duke sells power to 7.3 million customers in North and South Carolina, Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky at rates set by state regulators. It also provides regulated natgas services to about 500,000 customers in Ohio and Kentucky.

    Piedmont has about 1 million customers in North and South Carolina and Tennessee.

  • Duke demands return of oil wells to Cross River

    Duke demands return of oil wells to Cross River

    Former governor of Cross River State, Mr Donald Duke, yesterday, used the occasion of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential rally in Cross River State to demand the return of the oil wells the state lost to neighbors Akwa Ibom as a result of the loss of Bakassi to Cameroon.

    The demand elicited wild cheers from the crowd at the UJ Esuene Stadium, venue of the rally.

    The feeling in the state towards the Federal Government has been that of repressed anger, as it is felt that what they had have been taken from them.

    Duke begged that at worst, a political solution should be applied to solve the problem which has put the state in a very precarious economic situation.

    The former governor also pointed that the federal roads in the state were in deplorable conditions, and urged the Federal Government to urgently attend to these problems.

    He promised Jonathan of the state’s support towards his re-election bid.

    Jonathan, who later spoke, avoided a direct response to the issue of the oil wells and poor state of federal roads.

    He said his administration would focus on young people.

    He promised the extension of the East-West road to Calabar and a rail line that would run from Lagos to the Obudu Ranch in Obanliku Local Government Area of the state.

    The president also promised to encourage manufacturing in the state, as well as ensure the dredging of the Calabar channel to enable Tinapa and other businesses to flourish.

    “God willing, when you send us back, we will sit down with you and look at the priorities of the state and how we would go about it,” President Jonathan said.

    He thanked the state for their support to him.

    Also speaking, Governor Liyel Imoke said the president did not need to come to the state to campaign, as they were already behind him.

    Jonathan commissioned the Margaret Ekpo Airport by-pass, a 6.8 km road with an interchange bridge designed to ease traffic within Calabar.

  • Duke, others charge women on skills acquisition

    Duke, others charge women on skills acquisition

    Life of the former Governor of Cross River, Mrs. Onari Duke, has called on Nigeria women to tap into their natural creative talents to succeed in their chosen profession.

    Duke said this at the 2014 Women in Business and Leadership Summit organised by GLEEDH Foundation in Lagos recently.

    The programme, tagged: ‘Women Transforming Communities, Developing Economics’ brought together hundreds of women from the public and private sectors, government functionaries, small business owners, educationists, civil society groups, media experts.

    According to her, there are immense opportunities for women who can tap into their natural skills, acumen, talents and experience in the development of our country.

    “We have women in government who should see themselves as role models and are serving the people not because they are women but because they have the skill, experience and expertise needed for the position,” she said.

    Also speaking, the special Adviser to the Ogun State Governor on Millennium Development Goals, Mrs. Hamsfat Abiola-Costello, said that women can make a lot of changes in public sector if they are committed to service.

    She cited countries such as China, India, Japan and other world powers who invested so much in the development of their public service and have attained greater level of success.

    Earlier in her opening speech, the Chief Executive Officer, Centre For African Culture and Development (CEFACD), Professor Sophie Oluwole, challenged Nigerian women to be actively engaged in governance at all levels.

    In his welcome address, Africa Director, GLEEHD, Dayo Israel, said that the summit is aimed at addressing the importance of networking within professional fields and focus on the role of women in developing, transforming and sustaining Africa’s economies and communities.

  • Duke, Abiola, Oboli, Sosan, others for women summit 

    Duke, Abiola, Oboli, Sosan, others for women summit 

    The former First Lady of Cross River State, H.E Mrs Onari Duke; Special Assistant to the Governor of Ogun State on MDG’s, Dr. Hafsat Abiola and former Deputy Governor of Lagos State, Princess Sarah Bisi Sosan, are to grace the   GLEEHD   Foundation’s Women in Business and Leadership Summit (WIBLES) coming up on August 20 at The Dream Centre in Lagos.

    The theme, Women – Transforming Societies, Developing Economies, would feature various plenary sessions, including Transforming Public Service through Women Participation, Women in Business: Transforming the Market Place, Emerging Women Leaders: Leadership through Influence, Media and Imaging Women as Transformers and a Mayor’s Forum, featuring local government chairpersons with the plenary theme – Women Transforming Communities.

     In a statement issued by the GLEEHD’s Africa Director, Dayo Israel said that the summit will address the importance of networking within professional fields and focus on the role of women in developing, transforming and sustaining Africa’s economies and communities.

    According to him, our Sustainable Livelihood Programs have focused on empowering women and youths at all levels as part of our vision of an Africa in which everyone can achieve their potential with government truly serving the needs of their people.

    He added: “Participants at the Women in Business and Leadership Summit will connect with other leading women, hear inspirational stories and learn valuable tactics that they can use to develop their lives and vision. No one should miss out on this transformative one-day event”.

    Israel continued: “We are working with other international organizations and donor agencies, including the United Nations, ECOSOC,  Commonwealth Secretariat, Federal Government, Government of Malawi, UKTI, British Council, UNICEF Nigeria, A.D King Foundation, Commonwealth Democracy Initiative, Save the Children, Rostra Consulting, Amandla Consulting and other international development partners in promoting development in Africa.

  • World Cup: Mark leads FG delegation to Brazil

    .. Imoke, Shema, Haruna, Bala, Duke on the trip

    Senate President, David Mark, on Tuesday led a high powered Federal Government’s delegation to the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil.

    President Goodluck Jonathan had in a letter mandated Mark to lead the delegation which includes Chairman Senate Committee on Sports, Senator Adamu Gumba and his House of Representatives’ counterpart Geofrey Gaiya.

    Also on the entourage, according to a statement issued by the Chief Press Secretary to the Senate President, Paul Mumeh, in Abuja, are governors of Cross River State, Liyel Imoke, his Katsina State counterpart, Shehu Shema, Federal Capital Territory Minister Bala Mohammed, Culture and Tourism’s Edem Duke as well as Youth Development Minister, Boni Haruna.

    Others are –Minister of Sports, Tamuno Danagogo, Minister of State Foreign Affairs 1, Prof. Viola Onwuliri, and Commissioner of Police Kola Sodipo.

    According to the statement, Mark will deliver President Jonathan’s goodwill message to the players and officials and also hold pep talks with them ahead of their opening game against Iran on June 16.