Tag: Faith Yahaya

  • Airport closure: FG meets with foreign airlines operators

    Airport closure: FG meets with foreign airlines operators

    As anxieties mount over government proposed closure of the Nnamdi Azikwe International airport runway in Abuja, the federal government held a closed door meeting with foreign airlines in Abuja.
    Highlighting what transpired at the end of the meeting which lasted for over one and half hours, the Minister of State for Aviation, Hadi Sirika said the operators would be subjected to inspect some of the facilities that would be installed in Kaduna before the closure.
    According to him: “Foreign airline operators in Abuja have certain questions, queries and concerns and I am glad to inform you that even though we have not exhausted the questions 100 percent, we have done so by 95 percent.
    “They want to know whether Kaduna airport has an operational fence to ensure that the airport is secured, to know whether the airport can contain several aircrafts at the same time, to know the level of preparedness as regards security within the city of Kaduna enroute Abuja and the airport?
    He further said: “Whether there is the availability of Jet A1 in Kaduna? Whether the airlines will participate in the screening of passengers and baggage? Handling of aircrafts and catering also?
    “Possibility of having a breakdown of any of the aircrafts in operation in Kaduna, whether the airport or Kaduna as a city has the capacity to contain such breakdown and if there is the availability of engine system by which airlines talk to themselves?
    The operators according to the minister also sought to know if there is an office that the opeeators can use for the stipulated time.
    He said: “they also wanted to know if there are airline offices that can be used temporarily for six weeks and whether there are enough boarding gates and what happens if there is any delay in catering which is a necessity in all of the flight operations?
    “They also wanted to know if there was any delayed bag, how the bags could be tracked? Also, the fuel contracts that may arise knowing fully well that they are all engaged and they have some arrangements and agreement with fuel companies in Abuja and what will happen if they move to Kaduna?
    “We also talked about a delivery team to deliver procurement and also discussed the possibility of putting up a website where all these can be interactive and it will be between us and them”, he said.
    Moving forward, the Sirika said: “Because the questions are many, we have dealt with each of them, and some of them are subject to verification and inspection of Kaduna as an airport to see whether those facilities are available”.
    On whether the closure will be put on hold or not, he said: “We cannot continue to use the runway for safety reasons, the airport will be closed for six weeks. We want to take advantage of the dry season to be able to rehabilitate the only runway in Abuja and this is the demonstration of the fact that we have successfully succeeded in removing hitherto impunity in governance, we are able to consult, interact with members of the public and stakeholders in decision making in governance.
    “We are not closing the airport for fun, we are doing it in the interest of safety as demonstrated by high level of destruction of the runway”, he stated. 
    Some of the foreign airlines present at the meeting are: Ethiopian airways, Air France/KLM, Turkish Airlines, Lufthansa, Egyptair, and South Africa Airways
    The minister also noted that a media chat will be held to discuss further fears and concerns on the closure of the airport.
  • Air crashes in Nigeria caused by Windshear

    Air crashes in Nigeria caused by Windshear

    • Katsina Airport gets Windshear alert system
    The Federal Government has attributed the absence of Low-Level Windshear Alert System (LLWAS), at the airports to some of the crashes recorded in Nigeria.
    Some of the air crashes that occurred in Nigeria caused by Windshear are; the Sosoliso aircraft which crash landed in Port Harcourt on December 10th 2005 and the ADC aircraft which crashed while attempting to take-off from the Abuja airport on 29th October 2006.
    The ADC crash recorded 96 fatalities, including the Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammadu Maccido.
    To, however, forestall crashes in the future, the Federal Government yesterday commissioned the Low-Level Windshear Alert System (LLWAS), at the Umaru Musa Yar’Adua International Airport in Katsina.
    The newly installed facility has the ability to detect dangerous wind shear that drops aircraft at low altitudes.
    With the installation, 13 airports across the country now have the windshear alert system. The airports with LLWAS are; Abuja, Benin, Calabar, Enugu, Ilorin, Kaduna, Kano, Lagos, Owerri, Port Harcourt, Sokoto and Yola.
    Speaking in Katsina during the Commissioning of the facility, the Minister of State for Aviation, Hadi Sirika said: “weather phenomena generally affect air navigation and windshear is one of the most hazardous weather events to aircraft and windshear occurs when the speed and or direction of wind changes abruptly. It is particularly dangerous during takeoff and landing when the aircraft is at low altitudes.
    On the negative impact of windshear to flying, Sirika said: “a recent study by the Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) and NiMet has shown that this phenomenon is prevalent in every part of Nigeria. Reports from the AIB have also indicated that some of the unfortunate air crashes in Nigeria have been linked in one way or the other to windshear.
    “The installation of LLWAS at airports in Nigeria is, therefore, a right step towards achieving and sustaining safety in the Nigerian airspace. Aviation safety and security are top priority issues for the present government. The successful installation of LLWAS at 13 airports in the country by NiMet is therefore in consonance with the aviation safety policy of this administration.
    He also hinted that NIMET has procured and installed other weather monitoring equipment including Meteorological image receivers.
    The minister also noted that NIMET will soon commence the provision of weather and climate services to support activities in agriculture, water resources an environmental management in Katsina state.
    Also speaking, the Director General of NiMet, Anthony Anuforom, said with the installed facility, it will be possible to detect windshear around an airport and issue early warning to the pilots that will enable them take necessary safety precautions and avert crashes.
    He  further explained that the windshear at the Katsina airport has the capacity to detect calm, steady winds, wind shifts in relation to the runway, wind gusts, sustained divergent winds, (which indicate windshear), or strong and sustained divergent winds (indication of microbursts) around the airport.”
    Anuforom He also expressed optimism that with adequate funding, LLWAS would be installed soon in all the airports.
  • B’Haram: IGP seeks support from Botswana, Burkina Faso

    B’Haram: IGP seeks support from Botswana, Burkina Faso

    The Inspector General of Police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris has solicited the support of Botswana and Burkina Faso to bring Boko Haram to a halt.
    The IGP sought the support in Abuja on Wednesday when the High Commissioners of both Countries Mr Myron Bonang (Botswana) and Mr Piable Firmin (Burkina Faso) paid him a visit at the Force headquarters.
    This is contained in a statement in Abuja by the Force Spokesman, Don Awunah.
    “The IGP solicited their cooperation and support in the fight against terrorism in the country.”
    The IGP also emphasised that information sharing plays a vital role in tackling terrorism and other violent crimes
  • Abuja residents panic over bomb scare

    Abuja residents panic over bomb scare

    Abuja residents were on Thursday thrown into confusion following the alleged bomb scare at Jabi Lake Mall.
    Jabi Lake Mall is a busy area in Abuja that houses Shoprite, Game, and other shops within the area.
    It was learnt that residents and motorists were scared by a suspicious object, alleged to be IED, was found under the bridge near the mall.
    The Police, however, dismissed the suspicion of the residents saying that it was just a device being used for the measurement of the volume of water that goes through a pipe.
    According to the FCT Command Spokesman, Anjuguri Manzah: “No bomb in Abuja and the residents should not be thrown into any form of panic.
    “When we learnt about it, we immediately dispatched Explosive Ordinance Operatives to the area. They cordoned off the area to avoid further panic and it was discovered that the said bomb was just a device used in checking the volume if water that passes through a pipe.
    “A company working with one of the ministries was working a project and they left the device there. there is no need for us to panic and the device is not in any way an explosive.
    “So, we advise the public to go about their duties without fear as the police is committed to ensuring the security of lives and properties.
  • Police parade alleged killers of P’Harcourt-based lawyer

    Police parade alleged killers of P’Harcourt-based lawyer

    • Father, son named among suspects

    The Police have paraded a father, his son and two others for their alleged involvement in the kidnap and murder of a Port Harcourt – based human rights lawyer, Mr. Ken Atsuwete.

    The victim was murdered in cold blood on August 29 along Onuchiolu Road, Aluu in Ikwerre Local Government Area, Rivers State.

    The police explained that the suspects were arrested by the IGP’s Monitoring Unit based in Port Harcourt after an investigation.

    The suspects include Chibiko James Amuzuo Okwuono, Amadi Nathaniel, Ezims Aleru and Junior Aleru, from whom exhibits like one AK 47 rifle, 124 live ammunition and four AK 47 magazines were recovered.

    Briefing journalists on Friday in Abuja about their operation, Force Spokesman, Don Awunah, said: “Four suspects were arrested in connection with the case.  The leader of the gang, Chibiko James, is a 22-year-old native of Umuchie in Omuna Local Governmnet Area of Rivers State.

    “He is a self-confessed member of the Iceland Cult group, Kelga Marinner and a notorious kidnapper.

    “He also confessed to having led his gang of armed men to murder the deceased. The AK 47 rifle with which he killed the deceased was recovered.

    “Also, contrary to public suspicion that he was hired to assassinate the deceased, the suspect, according to his statement, revealed that the murder was a result of botched kidnap attempt,” Awunah stated.

    He also said that other members of the gang confessed to committing the crime.

    The suspects, in what appeared to be a blame game, blamed each other for the crime.

    The gang leader, James, explained that Ezims Aleru and his wife were responsible for the operation.

    According to him, “this man (Ezims) led us into all these things. He and his wife are responsible for this operation.”

    Asked if they committed the crime, another member of the gang, Nathaniel Amadi, 21, said: “We did it, but it was not intentional.

    “I joined the gang because my father was killed, our house was burnt and my mother is sick in the hospital. We did not know that the man we kidnapped was a lawyer.

    “The man died because he was struggling and dragging the gun with us. He died in the process of dragging the gun. While we were struggling, he mistakenly shot himself in the leg and died. We didn’t intend to kill him.”

    Asked if they were hired to do the job, he simply said: “We were not sent. We didn’t even know who he was.

    “We saw his car approaching on the road and we decided to stop him and try our luck. “We actually wanted to kidnap him for ransom, but he ended up dead.

    On why he joined the gang, Amadi said: “It is because I am jobless. How am I expected to survive in this harsh economy?

    “Since they burnt my house, nobody takes care of my mother and I am the only child she gave birth to, and she is presently suffering from stroke.

    “It was frustration that led me into this.”

    Also speaking about his involvement, Ezims Aleru, 48 said: “I was in the cell on the day the victim was killed.

    “When I was released from the cell, Chibiko came to my house around 11 pm with a gun and he said that I should help him keep it because he wanted to travel and would come back the following day.

    “That was how I got involved in this whole thing, and same goes for my son.

    “The only mistake I made was collecting the gun from Chubiko.

    “If I had known, I would have asked him what he used the gun for and why he asked me to hide it. But that is the only mistake I made.”

  • FG inaugurates governing board of NPA, NIMASA

    FG inaugurates governing board of NPA, NIMASA

    The Federal Government has inaugurated the governing board of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), and Nigerians Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA).

    The government during the inauguration charged members of the board to contribute meaningfully towards achieving the set mandate of both agencies.

    The NIMASA board has 11 members and has as its chairman, Maj. Gen. Jonathan India Garba, and S.U Galadanchi, Ms. Nene Betty Dike, Rear Admiral Adeniyi Osinowo, Dakuku Peterside, Bashir Yusuf Jamoh, Joseph Oluwarotimi Fashakin, Gambo Ahmed, Asekomhe Otaakhia Keneth, Mohammed Gidado Mu’azu and Barrister Ebele Obi  as members.

    The NPA governing board which comprises of eleven members will be chaired by Mr. Emmanuel Olajide Adesoye.

    Other members of the board are: Mrs. Uche Okoro, Hadiza Bala Usman, Mohammed Bello Koko, Dr. Sekonte Davis, Prof. Idris Abubakar, Supo Shasore, Sueliman Ibrahim Halilu, Constance Harry Marshal, Umar Shua’ibu and Charles Efe Emukowhate Sylvester.

    Charging the board member, the Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi in Abuja yesterday said: “The appointment was approved by  President Buhari and we believe that with this board, NIMASA can achieve its core mandate of promoting the development of indigenous commercial shipping capacity in international and coastal shipping trade and also regulate and promote maritime safety, security, marine pollution and maritime labour through fleet acquisition and expansion, manpower development,  interagency collaboration, maritime safety and security and ship registration amongst others.

    As for the NPA, Amaechi said: “the mandate of the NPA is to construct develop ports, docks, harbours, piers, wharves, canals, water courses, embankment, revetment and jetties.

    He also added that they can invest and deal with monies of the Authority not immediately required on such securities or in such investment and manner as may, from time to time be expedient and also appoint, license and manage pilots of vessels.
  • ‘You have no right to torture crime suspects’

    ‘You have no right to torture crime suspects’

    The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris has warned operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) to desist from torture and extra-judicial killings of crime suspects.

    Similarly, the IGP noted that no Police personnel all over the world has the right to kill crime suspects.

    However, he urged SARS personnel to always respect the rights of every Nigerian, adding that it is the way they can change existing negative perception of the Force.

    Speaking to the Commanders and other operatives of the squad from various state commands at the Force headquarters in Abuja on Thursday, IGP while making reference to the latest report by Amnesty International stated that policemen have a lot to do to correct the public perception that they do not follow due process in their operations.

    He said: “You should respect the constitutional rights of every Nigerian. You don’t have the authority to take lives, you don’t have the authority to change a civil case to a criminal case, you don’t have right to torture suspects.”

    He also warned against use of excessive force, and reckless use of firearms, which he said could cause public panic.

    Idris also noted that the squad would undergo retraining and restructuring, adding that the civil society organisations would be involved in the overhauling process to contribute to the training programme.

    The police chief stated that the squad would be an intelligence of the Force to assist with intelligence gathering, stressing that the SARS’ operation would henceforth be intelligence-based.

    As part of measures to monitor their operation, the IGP also disclosed that operatives would be given new badges and attached to state Commissioners of Police, while those in Abuja and Lagos would be under the Deputy Inspector-General of Police in charge of operations.

     

  • Brutality: IGP faults Amnesty Int’l report  

    Brutality: IGP faults Amnesty Int’l report  

    The Inspector General of Police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris has described a recent Amnesty International report alleging torture in Police Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) detention cells as bias and unfortunate.

    Similarly, the IGP claimed that the police management was not given room to air their side of the story before Amnesty rushed rushed to foreign media.

    A new report by the International agency alleged that the elite Nigerian police squad (SARS) set up to combat violent crime tortures detainees to extract lucrative bribes and confessions.

    According to the report, the Special Anti-Robbery Squad demands bribes, steals and extorts money from criminal suspects and their families and is “fomenting a toxic climate of fear and corruption.

    Reacting to the report in Abuja on Wednesday, IGP Idris‎ said the Amnesty International has taken a bias position against the Nigerian Police Force, adding that the report did not reflect the position of the Police.

    ‎While alleging that the Force was not given a chance to respond to the allegations in the report before it was made public, the IGP explained that recently, Amnesty International and other Civil Society Groups requested to inspect SARS detention facilities and other police detention centres across the country and were allowed to do so only for them to say the cells were prearranged and kept clean because they were coming.

    However, IGP Idris warned police commanders and other senior officers to ensure their officers and men operate within international best practices as the Police will not tolerate any action that would bring embarrassment to the Force.
  • ‎How AUN is using technology to tackle illiteracy

    ‎How AUN is using technology to tackle illiteracy

    The American University of Nigeria has being leading the fight against illiteracy in Yola, Adamawa state capital and other states in the North East. Faith Yahaya who visited Yola recently, writes on the school and its effort to reduce illiteracy among school children in the region.

    A survey conducted sometime ago by UNESCO’s showed that despite moves to better the country’s education system, about 65 million Nigerians remain illiterate.

    The pointer here is that we do not need soothsayers to tell us that the statistic is alarming and as a matter of national urgency, we need to work to redress our literacy crisis. The issue of illiteracy especially how to reduce or eradicate it has come up at different fora, but can it be reduced or eradicated?

    There are so many children who are out of school, while those in school right now cannot boast of even getting the quality education they desire, as there are fundamental issues to be addressed. Are the teachers well trained, is the environment conducive and are the policy makers introducing right policy that will encourage better learning?

    The usual maxim we get is that Nigerians or blacks don’t read, but how do we instil the culture of reading into kids when statistics has it that 35 million Nigerian adults are illiterate?

    Another point that has come to fore is the fact that children of illiterate parents are likely to be illiterate themselves, except in rare cases. This is a fact that we are faced with whether we admit it or not. The situation of illiteracy became worse in some parts of the country with attacks by Boko Haram on some communities which left so many displaced.

    To underscore the importance of education, many people have come up with ideas of how illiteracy and poverty which have been the bane of our society can be addressed.

    The former United States of America President, Bill Clinton, said literacy is not a luxury”, but a right and a responsibility”, but how many people have this so called right in Nigeria?

    According to former United Nations Secretary General, Dr Kofi Anan, “Literacy is a bridge from misery to hope. It is a basic tool for daily life in modern society. It is a wall against poverty, and a building block of development. Literacy is a vehicle for the promotion of cultural and national identity”

    Nelson Mandela also said that education is the most powerful weapon which one can use to change the world.

    There is no denying that literacy is vital to the achievement of every growth index but despite this, illiteracy has continued to be problem.

    To successfully confront poverty, disease, religious fanaticism, political chaos, ethnic bigotry, gender discrimination, economic depression among others, collective efforts must be made to enhance the literary level.

    With the continuous increase in illiteracy level, an expert has said Nigeria needs to do a lot if it wants to remain relevant in the world.

    The African Development Information marked the North Eastern zone of Nigeria as the least educated region in the federation with 52.4 percent uneducated males and 61.1 percent uneducated females.

    With this worrisome statistics, an education expert, the President of the American University of Nigeria (AUN), Prof. Margee Ensign stated that the level of illiteracy ravaging the northeast can be eradicated in three years.

    To eradicate illiteracy, Prof. Ensign said policy makers need to adopt technology noting that if it is done, north-eastern Nigeria will wave illiteracy bye. While she also suggested a shift from the traditional mode of teaching which is the use of classrooms and chalkboard or marker to embracing technology, Ensign however stressed that “What is important is the demographics.

    Nigeria is one of the fastest growing countries in the world with a population of about 180 million now. Do you know where the population will be in the next 26 years? Just double it and that will make Nigeria 360million. How are you going to educate the kids that are born everyday? It is really important that policy makers think about it because with the piece of statistics, it is really unfortunate that Nigeria has more children out of school than any other country in the world. Nigeria has millions of illiterates and now with the insurgency, 2 million more have been added to this groups of people. With these statistics, do you think you have time to do things the traditional way? It is not possible but that is what the policy makers are saying.

    The policy makers are saying you should build schools, train teachers but the fact is that, many of the children in schools now don’t get an education that will prepare them to have an income or prepare them to be productive citizens of the country. So, I really believe there is only one way to do it and that is technology and that is why we are pioneering the use of technology in Yola and the Northeast”.

    Besides, since the solution for Nigeria’s rapidly growing population and for education is technology, she agreed that Nigeria can do it well, “It is not the second best solution, I think if we do it well, Nigeria will leapfrog. If we don’t do it in the traditional way, we are going to teach these kids how to learn by accessing information, by having critical thinking skills to evaluate things and they will be the model for the world but we are not there yet because we don’t have approval to do those things and that is why someone needs to shakeup the people at the top really hard. I would love to have the approval to offer this education in a blended format in every major city in this country so that people can learn both online and in person. The research shows that it is the best way to do it. So, it is not the second best solution to use technology but the best but the policy makers are not there yet,” she added.

    She also disclosed that the school initiated a programme called Feed and Read as part of ways to impact knowledge into young kids, noting that It is the children on the street who are learning how to read, half of them are listening to radio while half are on tablet computers. With this initiative, kids learn in matter of months. “With the programme, the children read well, they have confidence and that is how Nigeria is going to change quickly because Nigeria does not have a lot of time and if we don’t educate the 2 million who are out of school in the northeast plus 14 million who are already out of school, we are going to have social unrest for a very long time. So, these people must have education, they must learn how to have

    income, they must learn new skills. We are basically doing model projects in Yola and it will scale them up to the northeast and then they can go anywhere in the country”.

    Having suggested technology as the panacea to eradicating illiteracy, it is high time we look in that direction. At individual level, we need to be better at making parents throughout the country aware of the critical importance learning and education play in their children’s future. A child who can read and write sufficiently will enjoy better employment prospects, better earning capacity, better access to healthcare and be less likely to face social exclusion. Reducing illiteracy should therefore be viewed as an investment, rather than a cost, for both the governments and households. Overcoming illiteracy in Nigeria will require a long-term commitment from governments, NGOs, educators and parents. We can no longer look to just one group to provide solutions or outcomes and that is why we need to work together to implement reforms and programmes like the one suggested by Prof. Ensign.