Tag: Edo State

  • No industrial growth with paper certificate alone, says Obaseki

    No industrial growth with paper certificate alone, says Obaseki

    Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki  has said investment in vocational education is fundamental to job creation and industrialisation of the state as well as the country as oil revenue continues to dwindle.

    Obaseki spoke when he received donations made by the Nigerian Employers Consultative Association (NECA) in collaboration with the Industrial Training Funds (ITF), at Government Science Technical College, Benin.

    He commended the organisations for the donating electrical equipment and tools to the technical college.

    According to him, no country can grow industrially with `paper certificate’ alone; it must have technical skills to make the needed difference.

    The governor noted that most industrialised countries had in their workforces, people with vocational training who might not be university graduates.

    He said that plans were underway to set up three or five megawatts of power on the Government Science Technical College premises for its light industrial park to ensure constant electricity supply.

    The governor gave the assurance that the donated items would be judiciously utilised.

    The Director-General of NECA, Mr Olusegun Oshinowo, thanked the state government for emphasising improvement in vocational and technical education.

    Oshinowo said that the biggest challenge facing Nigeria was that of unemployment due to lack of technical skills to make youths employable.

    He urged that all hands should be on deck to tackle the challenge.

    The Principal of the college, Mrs Bose Imafidon, said that the benefitting electrical department was one of 10 departments with highest enrolment.

    Imafidon pledged to use the equipment for the intended purpose.

  • Godwin Obaseki and his unusual ways

    Godwin Obaseki and his unusual ways

    I would be the last person to use the platform of divinity to score political points but there is no denying the fact that Governor Godwin Obaseki has built up enormous goodwill in the short space of time that he has been at the helm of affairs in the governance of Edo State as the sitting governor.

    The monologues and diatribe of the PDP (People’s Democratic Party of Nigeria) was a constant and regular feature in days gone by. It was like the king dancing naked in the market square; he was the only one that did not realize that his antics were an aberration.  Chief Dan Orbih’s face was seen, and his voice was heard regularly in strident criticism of government policies and programmes.

    The visible and laudable achievements of Comrade Oshiomhole did not deter him from the media onslaught that passed for opposition by the PDP.  They spewed out misinformation and disinformation.  Sometimes, it degenerated to personal levels.

    And suddenly, a new sheriff came into town.  Godwin Nogheghase Obaseki was sworn in as Governor of Edo State in November, 2016.  Edo citizens went to sleep only to wake up the following morning to outstanding changes in their landscape or the environment.  The appellation of “wake and see Governor” gained ground.  It was no longer business as usual. Comrade Adams Oshiomhole spent eight years in office and during that tenure, he doggedly reversed the rot and decay that the PDP had inflicted on Edo citizens over a period of sixteen years.

    The problems were myriad and seemingly intractable but Oshiomhole’s determination paid off in terms of the high level of successes he recorded.  This was the legacy that Godwin Obaseki inherited on assumption of office late last year.  He could not afford to lower the bar.  He was determined to live up to the mandate that Oshiomhole handed him that Edo must be taken higher to the next level. Refuse heaps disappeared from our streets, traffic mayhem evaporated from our roads, traffic lights were obeyed, market women and street hawkers disappeared from the sidewalks.  Dormant, moribund and comatose public investments began to spring back to life.  The people had value added to their lives, and they rejoiced across party lines.  I was reminded of Proverbs 29:2 which says in part, “when the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice”.

    Over time, there came a general feeling in the air that something was missing, a vacuum created.  There was a loud silence.  Then it dawned on all and sundry that the hitherto strident, discordant and cacophonous opposition of the PDP was silent.  Chief Dan Orbih no longer had reason to moan about governance.  He had found contentment in the land which even he could not deny or ignore.  There were those infact, who wondered if the Chairman of the opposition party in Edo State was preparing grounds to defect to the APC as many of his erstwhile party faithful had done and are still dong in droves on a daily basis.  The voice of the people being the voice of God (vox populi, vox Dei), as they say, once again, a verse in the scriptures came readily to my mind.  Proverbs 16:7 says, “when a man’s ways please the Lord, even his enemies are at peace with him”.

    Such has been the effect of the unusual approach to governance that has been adopted by Governor Godwin Obaseki that even the opposition PDP has been overwhelmed into silence.  Except for the thunderous, steady and determined beat of continuing development that is the hallmark of the APC administration of Godwin Obaseki which is an offshoot of Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, it is all quiet all over the length and breadth of Edoland, like it was on the Western Front in the theatres of war in Europe at the conclusion of WWII.  In the aftermath, the opposition PDP is barely able to catch its breath.  Such is the developmental pace of government and governance that is currently going on in Edo State.

    It is all kudos to the foresight and the visionary leadership of the APC.  The vibrant and ongoing synergy between the Party, ably led by Barr. Anslem Ojezua and the State Government ably and competently led by Godwin Obaseki is paying off handsomely in terms of dividends of democracy to the good people of Edo State.

    In the final analysis, everyone is a winner including even the PDP that can claim the pyrrhic victory of saying the heat they generated in the polity energized the APC to be a party that has delivered and continues to deliver on its campaign promises.  But for Godwin Nogheghase Obaseki, his track record performances bear testimony to the confidence of the Party leadership and the Edo electorate that said he is the best man for the job.  The people led, the courts affirmed, and the Heavens rejoiced.

     

    Azebamwan is the Edo State Publicity Secretary of the APC

     

     

  • Man in prison for ‘stealing’ eight year old minor

    Man in prison for ‘stealing’ eight year old minor

    An Egor Magistrates’ Court sitting in Benin City, the capital of Edo State Wednesday sentenced a 25-year old man, Ekene Nwane to 14 years imprisonment for stealing an eight-year old minor, Success Imasuen for money ritual.

    It was gathered that the convict dressed in a red gown, grabbed and hypnotized his victim while the primary-two pupil was playing with her sister closed to their mother’s shop.

    The mother, Everlyn Imasuen, an Okrika clothes seller after making fruitless attempt to rescue her daughter from the convict alerted the passers-by for help which led to the arrest of the convict.

    Prosecutor Osayomwanbor Omoruyi who tendered a confessional statement and red gown as exhibits, told the court the offence was committed at No. 62 Siluko Road, Benin City on the 19th of September, 2017.

    He said the offence is punishable under Section 371 of the Criminal Code Cap 48 Vol. II Laws of the defunct Bendel State of Nigeria 1976 as applicable in Edo State.

    The convict pleaded guilty to the one count charge leveled against him. He vowed not to engage in such a crime anymore.

    “Please forgive me, I will not do it again”, he pleaded.

    In her ruling, Chief Magistrate Igho Braimoh sentenced the convict to 14 years imprisonment without an option.

  • Ogba Zoo attack: We are on top of security situation, Obaseki assures

    Ogba Zoo attack: We are on top of security situation, Obaseki assures

    …Condemns killing of cops, commiserates with families

     

    The Governor of Edo State, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, has assured Edo people and Nigerians that his administration is on top of the security situation in the state.

    Obaseki gave the assurance after an emergency meeting with security agencies in the state at the Government House in Benin City.

    He condemned the gruesome killings of three police officers and the abduction of the Chief Executive of Ogba Zoological Garden and Nature Park, Mr. Andy Osa Enahire, on Sunday in Benin City.

    “Our hearts are with the families of the slain police officers and we promise to deploy all the resources at our disposal to ensure Mr Ehanire returns to his family in the shortest time possible, and unhurt,” the governor said.

    “When the Edo State Government received intelligence report on the kidnap of Mr. Osa Ehanire, we immediately contacted the relevant security agencies to do all within their powers to secure his release,” he added.

    Obaseki explained that Ehanire, who is a well known tourism practitioner in Nigeria, was scheduled to play a major role in the planned hosting of the 2017 edition of the World Tourism Day celebrations scheduled for Wednesday September 27, 2017 by the state government.

    He said the event was conceived to showcase the state’s huge ecotourism assets, woo domestic and foreign investors to the sector and put the state on the global tourism map.

  • Ogba Zoo attack: We are on top of security situation – Obaseki

    Ogba Zoo attack: We are on top of security situation – Obaseki

    The Governor of Edo State, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, has assured Edo people and Nigerians that his administration is on top of the security situation in the state.

    Obaseki gave the assurance after an emergency meeting with security agencies in the state at the Government House in Benin City.

    He condemned the gruesome killings of three police officers and the abduction of the Chief Executive of Ogba Zoological Garden and Nature Park, Mr. Andy Osa Enahire, on Sunday in Benin City.

    “Our hearts are with the families of the slain police officers and we promise to deploy all the resources at our disposal to ensure Mr Ehanire returns to his family in the shortest time possible, and unhurt,” the governor said.

    “When the Edo State Government received intelligence report on the kidnap of Mr. Osa Ehanire, we immediately contacted the relevant security agencies to do all within their powers to secure his release,” he added.

    Obaseki explained that Ehanire, who is a well known tourism practitioner in Nigeria, was scheduled to play a major role in the planned hosting of the 2017 edition of the World Tourism Day celebrations scheduled for Wednesday September 27, 2017 by the state government.

    He said the event was conceived to showcase the state’s huge ecotourism assets, woo domestic and foreign investors to the sector and put the state on the global tourism map.

  • Three policemen killed as gunmen kidnap Ogba Zoo boss

    Three policemen killed as gunmen kidnap Ogba Zoo boss

    Three policemen posted to provide security for fun seekers at the Ogba Zoo and Nature Park in Oredo local government area of Edo State have been killed by gunmen suspected to be kidnappers.

    The three policemen were killed at about 6pm while their arms and ammunition were collected by the attackers.

    Director and Chief Executive of the Ogba Zoo and Nature Park, Dr. Andy Ehanire, was abducted by the gunmen.

    It was gathered that the killing disrupted activities at the zoo as many fun seekers scampered for safety.

    Edo State police spokesman, DSP Moses Nkombe, who confirmed the killings and abduction on the phone said the situation has been brought under control.

    DSP Nkombe said the attackers would soon be arrested as security has been beefed up in the area.

    He assured members of the public that the zoo is safe for fun seekers.

  • World Tourism Day: Edo parades ecotourism assets, others

    World Tourism Day: Edo parades ecotourism assets, others

    As the world celebrates World Tourism Day on Wednesday, the Edo State Government has unveiled plans to host stakeholders in the tourism sector and parade her ecotourism assets to local and foreign investors.

    According to Governor Godwin Obaseki, the event will put on the world stage the huge tourism wealth that God has endowed the state with.

    “We have the best climate for investments in flora and fauna; zoo, green parks, gardens and wildlife parks. Our people are very hospitable and have been playing host to several tribes since the precolonial days, our location in Nigeria is strategic as you can access any part of the country with ease by land or air and we have clearly one of the richest cultures which is a major source of pride to Edo people,” Obaseki said.

    He explained that “tourism as the highest employer of labour worldwide, employing one in every ten jobs globally, holds a lot of opportunities for job creation and environmental preservation. We promised 200, 000 jobs in the first instance during our electioneering campaign and are determined to revamp the tourism sector where some of the jobs will be created.

    “We have water bodies that we intend to develop into world class beaches, the popular Benin Moat needs to be developed for tourism earnings, we have the Okpekpe Mountain Race that is fast growing in popularity and rating among sports enthusiasts, and currently, work is ongoing on the development of 58 tourist sites and destinations in the state to boost our local and foreign tourist receipts and enhance the quality of life in the state,” the governor said.

    Other areas currently receiving attention in the state, to pave way for a robust tourism sector is the sanitisation of intra-city transport system which used to be very chaotic.

    “The revamp of the Edo State Traffic Management Agency ( EDSTMA ), the ongoing adjustments of passengers’ pick up and drop off points by taxis and buses in the state and the removal of barriers to free movement in Benin City are deliberate measures taken by our administration to deliver a socially sane city,” Obaseki added.

    He assured that the next big deal for the Edo Tourism Sector is a blueprint which is being designed to clearly spell out the roles of supervisory agencies and ministries as well as investors as required by the United Nations World Tourism Organisation (WTO), so that Edo State will receive its share of the over $1 trillion revenues that tourist destinations get yearly.

    “Our hotels, restaurants, and other recreation and leisure places will be ranked, the jobs will be formalised and captured in our employment data bank as required by the industry,” he added.

    The governor further said the theme for this year’s World Tourism Day celebration: “Sustainable Tourism – A Tool for Development” is apt, considering the resolve by governments to sustain growth in areas they enjoy comparative and competitive advantage, protect the environment and the interests of stakeholders in the industry.

  • Corps member who drowned in Bayelsa

    Johnson Uduebor, a youth Corps member, drowned in Bayelsa on September 8. Here is the true story of how the Edo State-born star was dimmed, reports MIKE ODIEGWU

    Johnson Uduebor woke up as fit as a fiddle on September 8. The young man, who hailed from Edo State, was full of life. For him, that day in the Ologoghe community, Ogbia, Bayelsa State, where he served his fatherland as a member of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), was bright and held many promises.

    A hard-working Uduebor, whose Place of Primary Assignment (PPA) was the Ologoghe Community Secondary School, had a dream. He dreamt of taking advantage of the school holiday to secure his future. He wanted to key into the agricultural revolution by cultivating cassava. His ultimate aim was to keep himself busy after passing out in December instead of parading the streets in search of scarce jobs.

    The Batch B Stream 2 Corps member’s main objective was to produce cassava flour popularly known as garri because of its scarcity and high demand in Bayelsa. But all his dreams, aspirations and efforts were swallowed by Bayelsa waters.

    Uduebor never knew the danger lurking around. Already, he purchased a parcel of land alongside his colleague and lodge mate, Jethro Ololade, for cultivation. On the fateful day, the duo set out to clear the land and get it ready for cultivation. They went to the site without their life jackets.

    In fact, there was no need for the jackets since the farmland could be accessed by land. As they trekked, they spoke about the farmland; how fertile it was and the kind of yields they expected from it.  It was a smooth journey. They got the work done without bruises, though they were exhausted.

    At the end, Uduebor and his friend decided to trek back to their lodge. But the Edo man never saw his lodge again. He was buried underneath the water.

    Ololade, who survived drowning, but yet to recover from the shock, narrated how they ended up having a boat accident. He said around their lodge, they saw one of their students, a 15-year-old boy, paddling a rickety canoe. The boy, whose name was not given, was just learning how to paddle a canoe.

    “We were almost at our lodge because it was a walkable distance when we saw the boy. There was no need for us to board the boat because we would get home without using the water. But on sighting our student, Uduebor beckoned on him.

    “When the boy came with his canoe, we exchanged pleasantries with him and Uduebor suggested that we join him in the boat to cross over to the other side since the distance was not much,” he said.

    Ololade said he tried to discourage him from boarding the canoe. He said the paddler even told them that he was an amateur, who was just learning how to survive the Ijaw way. He confirmed that the boy also said the boat was too small and too fragile for three persons.

    But the Corps members decided to board for the sake of having the feeling of sailing on water.

    “We just wanted to experience being on water for the first time. That’s why Uduebor suggested it and I agreed,”he said.

    The canoe boy struggled with his emergency passengers across the water. He was almost at the shores, when the tide rose with speed and overturned the canoe. Ololade was able to jump with all his energy to the shores and held tenaciously to a stump of a tree. The canoe boy did the same. Both of them were rescued by an elderly woman.

    However, Uduebor was nowhere to be found. He fell into the water that was filled with hyacinths. The community was thrown into confusion when news filtered in that a Corps member was missing along the Ogbia waterways. Some community folks dived into the spot to save him but could not find him.

    Ololade said: “I was able to struggle and hold onto the stump of a tree and was rescued by an old woman. The boy paddling the canoe almost got drowned but was rescued by the old woman too. Johnson was nowhere to be found. He was searched for thoroughly but the search yielded no fruit.”

    Indeed, the community of Corps members were in disarray when Ololade returned to the lodge without his friend. The leadership of the NYSC in the state immediately started making frantic efforts to locate the missing corps member.

    On September 11, the state coordinator, NYSC, Mrs. Loto Bolade, who could not control her tears, led a delegation to the distressed area in the company of the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Youth Matters, Appah Kelvin, the NYSC Public Relations Officer, Mathew Ngobua and other senior officials of the scheme.

    As the search for Uduebor continued, Mrs. Bolade and her entourage boarded a boat and went round the riverine communities in Ogbia, assembled Corps members posted in the areas and warned them against traveling by water no matter the distance without their life jackets. She reminded them of the orientations they received in the camp on how to use life jackets that were given to them. She prayed for them.

    Mrs. Bolade was still hopeful that Uduebor would be found alive. She concluded that perhaps the young man, who was loved in the community because of his humility, intelligence and hard-work, had been rescued in any neighbouring community, but was unconscious to identify himself.

    The state government was involved. The government set up a committee led by the former Secretary to the State Government, Chief Serena Dokubo-Spiff with a mandate to comb all the nooks and crannies of the creeks to find the missing Corps member.

    On September 12, the committee, including Mrs. Bolade, visited the missing corps member’s community and met with the principal of his school. The principal, who lamented the development, said he was not aware that the corps members purchased land for farming.

    He said he had given all of them serving in the community a parcel of land for cultivation. He added that if he had known that Uduebor wanted a personal farmland, he would have provided a parcel for him free of charge.

    The principal also said the Corps members had no need for cultivation of land since they were to pass out in December. But Ololade explained to the committee that they embarked on the project to keep them busy after passing out because of the high level of unemployment in the country. He said they had planned to come back, harvest the cassava and process it into flour for sale.

    Days turned to a week, but Uduebor was nowhere in sight. Funds were provided and more divers and search parties were employed to locate Uduebor. Divers spread their tentacles and explored the waters of Ogbia, Nembe and Brass. Mrs. Bolade was not herself. Everyday she would go to the community and come back to Yenagoa with sorrow.

    Eventually, some experienced divers went back to the spot of the incident and found the remains of Uduebor on September 17. After nine days underneath the water, Uduebor was found clutching heaps of water hyacinth. The body was conveyed to the morgue of the Federal  Medical Centre (FMC) Yenagoa.

    It was a period of mourning for all the Corps members and officials of NYSC. Mrs. Bolade cried like a baby. She refused to be consoled. In fact, people thought she was the biological mother of the deceased.

    On Tuesday, the remains of Uduebor, who died serving his fatherland were released to his family and evacuated to Edo State for burial. For his parents, it was an incalculable and irreparable loss; an investment gone down the drains.

    It was one death too many. They lamented that the death of Uduebor was avoidable. One of the Corps members, who identified himself as Daniel, said he would never go close to water again without his life jacket.

    Also, Destiny, another Corps member, described Uduebor as a cool-headed man. He wondered why he boarded a boat without his life jacket.

    “Despite all the warnings, it is sad that just a few minutes of joy could land Uduebor in the grave,”he said.

     

     

  • Water, water everywhere

    Water, water everywhere

    Water,  water everywhere. The paradox of water.  I am not referring to the tragic floods of Benue State nor those of Texas caused by Hurricane Harvey. I am  not referring to  Huricane IRMA which has caused so much devastation in  the Caribbean and United States. Rather, my  mind is on the ancient riverine Community of Gelegele in Ovia North East Local Government Area of Edo State which I visited again on Friday September 8.  It was like keeping an appointment with destiny; I had promised myself and officials of the Presidential Amnesty Programme that the next time we visit the town, we must leave a positive mark. I had no doubt what that should be.

    Gelelge is an oil-rich town in the watery creeks of the Niger Delta which has almost been by-passed by civilization and development in spite of centuries of contact with Europeans..

    Its being virtually  submerged in water, the town had no safe drinking water. It reminded me of the sailor in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s famous poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” who was in a ship at sea, but had no water to drink because it was salt water. He had lamented “Water, water everywhere, nor any drop to drink”

    Like the Ancient Mariner, Gelegele was virtually inside water, but had none to drink.  The town   being oil rich,  with gas flaring right inside it, but not in a demonstrable way, benefitting from its natural resources, was another paradox.

    I knew that  the government of President Muhammadu Buhari has evolved   policies to stop gas flaring, involve the people  directly in the wealth of their land by  encouraging them to participate in the Modular Refinery project,  produce mass jobs with the proposed pipeline surveillance project and generally, take the lead in the development of the Region. But I was also conscious  of the reality  that these cannot be achieved immediately, so I thought of some quick-impact project  that would make life easier. So I decided that we need  to develop a big borehole that would be high yielding, easy to operate and easy to maintain.

    It was Chinua Achebe in his  1960 book , “No Longer at Ease” who admonished that “A man who lives on the banks of the Niger (River) should not wash his hands in spittle.”  That could well be the  story of Gelelege.

    When I returned to Gelegele on September 8, to commission the borehole, I felt a sense of fulfillment although this is essentially,  a gesture. I felt one with the people and the community; I felt  we had a bond that will grow.  Speaking and interacting with the community, led by His Royal Majesty Alagbabunafa of Olodiama with the Zonal President of the Ijaw National Congress (INC)  Chief Robinson Ogunkoru, I  had a feeling of elation especially when they let it be known that this is a Government that has rekindled their hope and an administration they can trust.

    But I had more good news for them.  The President Buhari Government is not only committed to ending gas flaring , but the process will also lead to the direct creation of an estimated thirty six thousand  direct jobs and two hundred thousand indirect jobs in the Niger Delta Region. Additionally, some six million households  will have  access to renewable energy as the gas being flared, will be harnessed and channeled to homes.

    The Gelegele people expressed  their appreciation but had a request; they want to play an active part in the surveillance of pipelines. On  this I assured them that it is the policy of government to make  this project, community-based; the conviction of  the Government is that the best persons who can do such a job, are the very communities through which the pipelines pass. Another request they made, is for skill acquisition centres; this I told them the Presidential Amnesty Programme is willing to look into within its budgetary approvals.

    The next day, I was in  Ondo State where I visited Governor Oluwarotimi Odunayo Akeredolu  who wants the Federal Government to expand the Amnesty Programme to accommodate more youths in the Region  in order  to reduce youth restiveness. He also  advised that educational training should be domesticated. I was happy about this as one of my first acts as Coordinator  of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, was to domesticate the offshore training of the project.

    The Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Ondo State Council also conferred on me the award of Niger Delta Peace Ambassador.. The NUJ Chairman, Mr. James Sowole said this was in recognition of my “dynamic” leadership of the Amnesty Programme and my Peace-Building Initiatives in the Niger Delta.

    At the Second Summit of the National Council of Niger Delta (NCND) held in Akure, I was elated as the Vice President, Professor  Yemi Osinbajo  rolled out the plans of the administration for the Niger Delta including the injection of more funds into the Presidential Amnesty Programme  for overall greater impact in the Region.

    I was also privileged to accompany the Vice President to Igbokoda, in Ilaje where he listened to the people, addressed and interacted with them at the Ondo State Niger Delta Communities Stakeholders Town Hall Meeting. I had nothing but praise for the youths who have maintained peace and along with the rest of the populace, warmly welcomed the Vice President and his delegation.

    I came away from Ondo State ever convinced that the most challenging task we have is to engage the youths in whatever way; from vocation, education, training (especially in agriculture) empowerment to make them self-employed, to mass employment. I also had no doubt that this cannot be left to the federal and state governments alone; the private sector- especially the oil and gas companies- has to play a major role.

     

    • Brig.-Gen. Boroh is the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme.

     

  • International Peace Day: Obaseki sues for peace

    International Peace Day: Obaseki sues for peace

    The Governor of Edo State, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, has harped on the need for tolerance, dialogue and good neighbourliness among the citizenry and nations as an essential ingredient for attaining global peace.

    Obaseki said this in commemoration of the United Nations International Day of Peace, marked on September 21, with this year’s celebration, tagged Together for peace: respect, safety and dignity for all.

     According to the governor, tolerance of each other’s differences is vital to global peace and harmony, just as is conflict avoidance in our continuous quest for the best human environment to realise our God-given potential.

     He noted that while the imperative for peace is sacrosanct, “conflict has come to define relations among countries and even communities. In addressing these conflicts, we must always remember that critical stakeholders and competing interests would always clash. Hence, the need for continuous dialogue, support, tolerance and reconciliation.”

     He acknowledged that the journey to peaceful coexistence among Nigeria’s diverse ethnic nationalities has been characterised by thorny paths, noting that the onus lies on critical stakeholders, including government and other actors in society, to design programmes and policies that guarantee equity, safety, security and dignity for all and promote initiatives that instil hope in  the poor masses.

    He added, “Building a just society requires that everyone is given equal opportunity to live to their full potential.

    Creating equal opportunities that respect and guarantee rights of the weak as well as safeguard the interest of minorities is a principle that must and should be upheld. As we preach peace on this day, it is important that these issues do not just get a fleeting mention but that we see them fit as ingredients for policy design.”

    The governor condemned the resort to violence in the quest to resolve conflicts and advised that there has never been a better option than to engage in dialogue and reconciliation in managing conflict or transitioning from a conflict situation.

    “We have seen the adverse effects of violence, whether in Nigeria or elsewhere. We encourage everyone, especially young people, to take this day out to show unconditional kindness to their neighbours and other members of their communities,” he said.

    The ideals of peace, according to him, should be a guiding principle in interacting with others, ensuring that our relations are not defined by parochial considerations or targeted at alienating any member of the community, irrespective of their ethnic and religious orientations.