Tag: Fed Govt

  • NLC to Fed. Govt: reimburse states for projects

    NLC to Fed. Govt: reimburse states for projects

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has urged the Federal Government to reimburse states for repair of some federal roads.

    The refund will enable the states to pay salaries, pensions and contractors’ debts, NLC president Ayuba Wabba told The Nation.

    Wabba said the reimbursement of the states would stimulate the economy.

    He said the government should devise palliative measures to help Nigerians who now have  to pay more for goods and services without a comensurate rise in salaries, pen sions and other earnings.

    Wabba urged Nigerians to use the  Eid-el-Fitri celebration to reflect on the state of the nation in order to confront its challenges.

    “I have no doubt that with discipline, piety, humility, scholarship, good neighbourliness or a sense of consideration for others and renewal of our faith in God, we shall prevail.

    Eid-el-Fitr avails us an opportunity to deepen our faith in our country and our belief in ourselves to fight the vices that divide us as well as stifle national development such as corruption, social injustice, inequity, discrimination, politics of exclusion and other vices. It also avails us an opportunity to experience the pains and pangs of hunger of the poor, the deprived and the excluded,” he said.

    In another development, the NLC has donated N1 million to the family of rights activist, Chima Ubani, who died in a road accident on September 25, 2005.

    Ayuba, who promised to sustain the gesture for five years, said the fund would support the tuition fee and other expenses of Ubani’s children.

    He praised the late Ubani for his impact in the labour struggle, adding that his effort would be documented.

    Meanwhile, members of the civil liberties organisations, who attended the meeting between the family and NLC, urged Wabba to unite the NLC, saying division among its members would hinder it’s development. Ubani’s widow, Ochuwa collected the cheque on behalf of the family.

  • Fed Govt condemns Nigerian teenager’s killing in London

    The Federal Government has condemned the stabbing to death of a Nigerian teenager, Fola Orebiyi, in London.

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa said the killing of Orebiyi was becoming worrisome.

    The presidential aide called for full investigation of the incident .

    In a statement by her Special Assistant on Media, Abdur-Rahman Balogun, she  said Nigeria would not condone the execution of her nationals abroad.

    Mrs Dabiri-Erewa urged Nigerians to support President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration in making Nigeria a better place.

    Orebiyi was stabbed to death in a street clash on Sunday July 3, in Notting Hill, London by a gang of youths. He was  chased into a busy road where he was stabbed in the neck in front of shocked passersby and tourists.

    Following the stabbing, he collapsed and bled to death and all efforts by the police and paramedics to resuscitate him, proved abortive.

    The deceased’s neighbour, Osman Sahal, told the police: “He was a nice boy and very considerate; none of us can understand how this could have happened. As far as I knew, he was never in trouble. I suppose we must now wait for the police to investigate.”

  • Fed Govt urges UK to probe stabbing of Nigerian teenager

    The Federal Government has condemned the stabbing to death of another Nigerian teenager in London, United Kingdom (UK).

    Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, senior special assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, said the killing of Orebiyi and other extra-judicial killing of Nigerias in UK was worrisome.

    The Presidential aide called for a full investigation of the incident and urged the UK government to ensure that justice prevails.

    In a statement by her Special Assistant on Media, Abdur-Rahman Balogun, Mrs. Dabiri-Erewa said the killing of 17-year-old Fola Orebiyi was unacceptable to the government and people of Nigeria.

    Condoling the family of the deceased, she prayed unto God to give the bereaved family the fortitude to bear the painful loss.

    She said while Nigeria would not condone crime and criminal tendencies, it takes exception to the harassment, killing and execution of its nationals abroad.

    Mrs. Dabiri-Erewa urged Nigerians to support the President Muhammadu Buhari administration in making Nigeria a better place.

    Orebiyi was reportedly stabbed to death in a street clash on Sunday, in Notting Hill, London, by a gang of youths.

    He was reportedly involved in a fight on a nearby estate with the gang, which chased him into the busy road, where he was stabbed in the neck in front of shocked passersby and tourists.

    The boy collapsed and bled to death and efforts by the Police and paramedics to resuscitate him failed.

    The deceased’s neighbour, Osman Sahal, told the police: “He was a nice boy and considerate; none of us can understand how this could have happened.

    “As far as I knew, he was never in trouble. I suppose we must now wait for the police to investigate.”

    Orebiyi, who completed his General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) at Holland Park in London, was studying for his A’ Levels at the Chelsea Academy.

    After the incident, a yet-to-be identified 15-year-old boy was arrested by the London police.

    An anonymous teenager was quoted to have told the police: “I know what happened; he was protecting a friend over a silly beef, which turned violent.”

  • Fed Govt declares today, tomorrow  public holidays to celebrate Eid-el-Fitr

    Fed Govt declares today, tomorrow public holidays to celebrate Eid-el-Fitr

    The Federal Government has declared today and tomorrow as public holidays to mark the Eid el-Fitr celebration following the non-sighting of the moon on Monday.

    Minister of Interior Lt.-Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazau made the declaration yesterday in a statement by the Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Mr Bassey Akpanyung.

    He said the declaration became necessary following the directive by the President General, Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar III, that the Ramadan fast would continue on Tuesday as a result of the non-sighting of the moon.

    The minister urged Nigerians to use the period for sober reflection and ensure harmony, unity and peaceful co-existence.

    He called for support to the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari in his effort to pursue socio-economic and political growth of the nation.

    The minister wished Nigerians a peaceful celebration.

    The Federal Government earlier declared Tuesday and today as public holidays.

  • How to bridge housing deficit, by Fed Govt, stakeholders

    How to bridge housing deficit, by Fed Govt, stakeholders

    The Federal Government may have found an answer to the housing problem. It is considering the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model on the provision of affordable housing. OLUGBENGA ADANIKIN reports that the government is eyeing pension funds, dormant bank assets and unclaimed dividends to fund the sector.

    Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.”

    The above is the acceptable minimum according Article 25 (1) of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by the United Nations (UN).

    Nigeria, being a signatory to the declaration, recognizes housing as a basic right but the country has not been able to meet the housing needs of the citizenry. Uncomfortable with the situation, the President Muhammadu Bughari administration is leaving no stone unturned and it has taken the provision of affordable housing as a challenge.

    Some of the issues the government has to contend with are: access to land for sustainable and affordable housing delivery; access to capital market to finance the provision of housing units; granting of concessions and incentives as tools to galvanise the provision of affordable housing and the development of skills and technology.

    The Federal Government is giving priority to the housing sector as part of ways of creating job opportunities.

    Since his inauguration as Minister of Power, Works & Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, has been trying to adopt a sustainable approach to tackling the nation’s housing challenges to reduce deficit.

    He has at different fora, stressed the importance of planning and research. Observers say Fashola is being cautious to guard against the pitfall of the past in which the various national housing policies failed to satisfy the needs of targeted beneficiaries.

    According to the minister, about N100 billion would be needed to develop a new housing strategy and that adequate attention must be paid to research and effective planning.

    Fashola said: “If we can spend N10 billion in each state and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) on housing alone every year, subject to the capacity to raise the money and the capacity to utilise the funds, having regards to our current construction methods and the time it takes to complete construction, the ministry intends to change this by research and industrialisation of housing.”

    He assured Nigerians of an aggressive intervention to increase housing supply, by undertaking construction of public housing and formulating private sector participation-driven policies that will lead to and ownership of houses.

    But available statistics have shown that with an increasing population of about 180 million people, Nigeria has to upscale its efforts at providing cheap and available housing. It is believed that the country has a housing deficit ranging between 17 to 20 million.

    Experts, have however, disputed the figure, which they described as unreliable, demanding for an official statistics from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) to determine the nation’s exact housing dearth.

    The minister acknowledged this fact when he disclosed that the Federal government “was mindful of some figures about the size of housing deficit. Those figures need to be verified and we will undertake a process of scientific assessment to determine the accuracy of that data as well as the actual demand. But what those figures do for us, no matter how inaccurate they are, is that they define our journey for us.”

    Stakeholders wondered why the successive administrations had spurned their different proposals to offer a helping hand to actualise it vision.

    But the stakeholders may have used the just-concluded summit on affordable housing to convince the government on why everyone in the built industry must be brought on board in fashioning out a people-friendly policy.

    The all-inclusive plan involved engagement with German Development Cooperation (GIZ), alongside stakeholders such as Shelter Afrique, Trademore, Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN), Federal Housing Authority (FHA) and Real Estate Developers Association of Nigeria (REDAN) among others in the housing sector.

    The focus of the summit was on the type of housing Nigerians will prefer, taking into cognisance their cultural diversities; the definition of affordability; which cadres of Nigerians actually need government-assisted housing, the starting point and the choice housing.

    In search of enduing solutions

    According to the minister, solving the summit’s focus would require extensive research and surveys, which he stated had commenced, the outcome of which would fast-track a reduction in the deficit.

    The expected policy would awaken the agencies under the ministry to their responsible on the provision of affordable shelter. The FMBN, which, hitherto, failed in its duty sourcing funds from insurance companies, banks into the National Housing Fund (NHF) will be alive to its role of providing affordable housing.

    FMBN’ mandate among others is to ensure constant loans’ provision to Nigerians for the purpose of building housing units.

    However, the performance of the mortgage banker has been anything but satisfactory. Hence, Federal Government has concluded plans recapitalise the FMBN for better efficiency.

    The provision of 40,000 housing units by the Federal Housing Authority (FHA) in 40 years has not been commensurate with Nigeria’s rising population. At the suumiit, stakeholders recommended the possibility of raising a special fund for housing sector just like the Petroleum Trust Development Fund (PTDF) and the Education Trust Fund (ETF), among others.

    It is believed that with a dedicated fund for the sector, developers could source finance to build affordable structures for the people.

    In his opening remarks at the summit, Fashola said: “We need to maintain the single digit interest rate in mortgage loan even if it requires subsidising for the low income earners; recapitalise the FMBN and enforcement of the NHF contribution as enshrined in the enabling Act; there is need for PENCOM to invest a sizeable part of the pension funds, dormant assets of banks and unclaimed dividends in Primary Mortgage Products (PMDs).

    “The need to put in place the appropriate construction financing schemes including funding sources for multilateral schemes; and for stakeholders to join the ministry in liaising with the National Assembly to fast-track the amendment of the relevant laws already submitted such as foreclosure, mortgage and insurance laws.”

    Also recommended at the summit were the provision of houses for special members of the public such as People Living With HIV/Aids (PLWHA); the aged, motherless children as well as the less-privileged, who may not have the resources to own a shelter.

    As a way out, the minister identified the need to review some of the conventional ways of implementing the national housing policy, informing his audience that the Federal government has collapsed the existing 100 housing models into 12.

    According to the minister, the government has a plan to further streamline the 12 models to six to reflect the nation’s cultural diversity and market demand.

    The rationale behind this, he said, is not far-fetched from having a coordinated building plan for all developers in the country. They include one-bedroom, two-bedroom, three-bedroom flats, bungalows and condominiums that will represent the ‘Nigerian House’ which responds to our cultural diversity.

    Concerns over affordability

    Like two inseparable variables ‘affordability’ and ‘housing’ drew stakeholders’ attention at the summit. Should affordability be measured based on low income earners?; How can you make shelter actually affordable?; Considering the rising cost of building materials including tiles, cement, iron among others, can houses really be affordable? Is affordability the same thing as low-cost housing? These and many more were questions that brought the best out of participants at the summit.

    Key stakeholders came up with variety of definitions of affordable housing.

    To Dr. Joshua Egbagbe, “affordable housing from the off taker-driven perspective, is the home ownership capacity of an average Nigerian citizen: to build, buy, or rent, a cost-effective house; based on spending a total amount, inclusive of all related costs, of not more than one-third of the individual’s take home pay, calculated on an installment (monthly or annual basis), up to the average working age limit of 60 years”.

    Another participant, Prof. Layi Egunjobi, said: “Affordable housing is housing that a person or group can pay for with or without government assistance and according to the present and future socio-economic circumstances of the person or group in question.”

    Brig. Gen. PMO Reis defined it as “the provision of accessible and subsidised housing solutions on a sustainable basis through end-users driven initiatives”.

    Alhaji Kabiru Abdulallahi said described “affordable housing is a house with some incentives, flexibility that allows a citizen own a house without stress”.

    The Centre for Affordable Housing and UN-Habitat defined affordable housing as, “housing that is accessible, appropriate, and secure, for the needs of the low and moderate income households, and is priced so that these households are also able to meet their other basic living costs like health, education and feeding. This is usually estimated at about 30 per cent (or one-third) of gross household income.”

    Simon Gusah came up with a simpler definition when he stated that “affordable housing depends perhaps on if the Federal Government can provide houses for people within the income bracket of those on Level 10 to 15 and 16 in the public service and those in the private sector such as drivers, farmers, market men and women, artisans and so on.

    According to the minister, foreign experts have defined to him affordable housing as, “a 47 m², two-bedroom bungalow with external toilets, to be shared with others, at $5000 in Haiti (N1.4 million at an exchange rate of N280 to the dollar). He asked the participants: “Is this what we should do?

    “The other example was to prescribe a mortgage of at least 10 to 15 years, with single digit interest and to ensure that the beneficiary must not spend more than 30 per cent of his income on housing, so that he or she can meet other needs of dependents.”

    Stakeholders however agreed that if affordable housing could be defined relatively to reflect the current economic situation and reduce the biting deficit, they might have gotten it right.

    But aside from government’s commitment to build for the poor, it is imperative to indigenize the concept ‘affordable housing’ to really address the deficit.

    “Our housing policy must be tied to our income, which must be tied to our jobs. It is the way to create the credit that our housing industry desperately needs,” Fashola emphasised.

    PPP as the way to go

    If the Federal Government must succeed in the area of housing, it must partner the private sector. The Public- Private Partnership (PPP) model has become imperative to attain such feat.

    In developed nations, the PPP is a model that has worked and sustainable. Stakeholders were unequivocal that their active involvement will do a lot to reducing the current deficit.

    Buying into the PPP idea, the minister said the 4000 workers on the ministry’s payroll would be insufficient to deliver the required homes.

    At his maiden news conference, Fashola had unveiled a comprehensive housing plan that will involve the building of 12 flats per block and 480 flats per state and 17,760 flats nationwide. He promised to deliver about 40 blocks of housing units in each state and the FCT with partnership from state governors.

    He said: “This will mean at a minimum of 4 doors and 2 windows very conservatively per home; a demand for 71, 040 doors and 35,520 windows nationwide in a year, which we will encourage to be made in Nigeria.

    “These figures are only examples and not fixed in definition and they are subject first to budgetary approvals and availability of finance.”

    The stakeholders at summit concluded that segregation, stratification, classes of people and their income bracket must be put into consideration in the delivery of affordable housing units.

  • Fed Govt moves against terror attack at airports

    Fed Govt moves against terror attack at airports

    As part of efforts to improve security at airports, the Federal Government, at the weekend, began a security profiling of aviation personnel at the runway, tarmac, apron and other restricted areas of airport terminals.

    Part of the reasons for carrying out the critical safety and personnel security profiling is to ensure that only airport workers at the air side without suspicious character are issued On Duty Cards that grant them unrestricted access to critical areas of the airport .

    These include airport runways, taxi-ways, apron and tarmac.

    Managing Director of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) Saleh Dunoma said this in Lagos at the weekend.

    He said government is developing intelligence among security agencies to avert any terror threat at airports.

    The FAAN’s MD said the intelligence gathering involves analysis of vulnerability to ensure effective security coverage of airports.

    Dunoma said FAAN has developed efficient security system in response to new security challenges.

    He said: “Security is already in place, the only thing is that once things happen you need to beef it up to a certain level above what we already have on ground. Such measures have been put in place.

    “ All airports have been advised through a circular that they should improve security intelligence, especially on the landside,” he said.

    “ FAAN is developing intelligence, which has become effective tool in result-oriented security apparatus.

    “ Intelligence has been part of the security system together with hi-tech and ever advancing security equipment. The agency has ensured effective security coverage of the airports over the years.”

  • Itsekiri, Fed Govt celebrate Nanna of Koko’s 100th year demise

    Itsekiri, Fed Govt celebrate Nanna of Koko’s 100th year demise

    The Itsekiri nation yesterday joined the extended Nanna Olomu family and the Federal Government to celebrate the 100th year of the death as well as the life and reign of Chief Nanna Olomu of Koko.

    Olomu, an iconic Itsekiri leader, was born about 1840.

    He became an influential merchant, who was later made the governor (gofune) of the Benin River area, (Itsekiri land) by the then colonial administration.

    His a reign lasted about 10 years (1885 to 1894).

    But it was cut short by a cocktail of conspiracies and political manoeuvrings, which culminated in the British-Ebrohimi war in 1894, the eventual collapse of Nanna’s political and commercial empire, his escape to Lagos, his eventual surrender, trial in Calabar between 1894 and 1895 and his deportation to Accra in Ghana, where he stayed for another 10 years (1896 to 1906).

    Olomu returned to Koko in the Warri North Local Government Area of Delta State, a distance of about 45 minutes by speedboat ride to his fallen Ebrohimi homestead.

    The Itsekiri leader built a new palace and lived for another 10 years, until July 3, 1916, when he passed on.

    This centenary celebration, inspired by foremost Itsekiri history writer and administrator, Pa J. O. S. Ayomike, was capped yesterday at Koko town with series of presentations, including a visit to the head of Nanna family and Olare-Aja (traditional head) of Koko, Chief Victor Nanna, dances and visit to the Nanna Living History Museum.

    At Nanna’s home, the Curator of the Nanna Living History Museum, Wilson Onime, presented the goodwill message from the Director-General of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM), Yusuf Usman, to the community head.

    At the museum, which used to be Chief Nanna’s palace and acquired by the Federal Government as one of Nigeria’s monuments and sites in 1979 and inaugurated as a museum in 1996 by the late Head of State, General Sani Abacha, Pa Ayomike, who is married to one of Nanna Olomu’s granddaughters, Mrs Utsaghan Ayomike, gave a brief speech on the significance of the celebration.

    He said: “Nana was buried with a giant diamond ring and he lays in death on a regal catafalque fabricated by his children who learnt the sophistry of carpentry and other vocations while studying in Ghana, where their father was deported.

    “In Accra, he became a Christian.

    “Today, we are celebrating his 100 years in death. But Ralph Moore, the Consul General, who signed the charges against him, seized his properties, placed a £500 reward for his arrest, tried and pronounced life sentence on him. But when he went back to Britain, he lost his mind and took his own life.”

  • How Fed Govt can prosecute looters, by lawyer

    The Federal Government has been advised to push for the amendment of the Constitution to stipulate a time limit for the prosecution of corruption and related cases to eliminate delays in the trial of corrupt public officers and treasury looters.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Sebastine Hon, who said this, warned that the trials of some public officers may linger beyond the tenure of this administration if nothing was done to ensure speedy prosecution of corruption and related cases. He suggested the inclusion of some major provisions of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) in the Constitution.

    Hon, who noted such ACJA provisions as prohibition of stay of proceedings in criminal trials, said he support the effort by the National Assembly to review the Constitution, but said such review must give financial autonomy to the Judiciary and local governments.

    The lawyer spoke in Abuja on Saturday while announcing plans for the presentation, in Abuja, on July 12, of his 1,300-page book – S.T. Hon’s constitutional and migration law in Nigeria – which discussed, among others, over 4,000 decisions of Nigerian and foreign courts on issues covered.

    Hon advocated the abrogation of pension provisions for political office holders  on the grounds that it was immoral for people, who begged to be elected to serve to constitute liability to the state by drawing pensions. He faulted the restriction of immunity to leaders of the Executive arm, and argued that the nation should either abolish the concept of immunity or extend it to other arms of government.

    He called for a review of the jurisdiction of the National Industrial Court (NIC), because, as it is, it is arguable whether, besides fundamental rights cases, there is a right of appeal against its decision.

    “It is not good to say that matters that affect the welfare of workers and their employers are going to terminate at the NIC.  I will suggest we push up the appellate jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal to include appeals from the NIC. My book has proactively dealt with this issue. It is necessary that we amend the 3rd Alteration Act to expressly restore the supervisory jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal on all matters dealt with by the NIC.

    “I will also suggest an amendment that will provide time limit, in the Constitution, for trials of corruption and terrorism matters. Because when they first amended Section 285 and introduced sub-sections 6, 7 and 8, which provide for 100 days at the election trial and 60 days each for the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court, most of us criticised it. But now everyone agrees there is wisdom in the amendment.

    “So, nothing also stops us from abridging the time within which trials on corruption and terrorism matters should start and conclude. Nothing also stops us from elevating those provisions in the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) concerning the prohibition of stay of proceedings to become constitutional provisions, because we are faced with a hydra-headed monster called corruption, and except something is done and done quickly and fundamentally, we may be saying goodbye to project Nigeria’’.

     

  • Fed Govt threatens contempt charges against Obiano, AG over land

    Fed Govt threatens contempt charges against Obiano, AG over land

    •Govt seeking N50b damages

    The Federal Government has threatened to press N50 billion contempt charges against the Anambra State Government for the state’s revocation of its land in Awka, the state capital.

    Through its lead counsel, Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN), the Federal Government threatened to sue Governor Willie Obiano and the state’s Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice.

    The N50 billion suit against the state government is on its purported revocation of the 148.337 hectares of land at Amansea, Awka, for Federal Government’s Sites and Services Scheme.

    Ozekhome wrote the Anambra State Attorney-General, alleging disobedience to Supreme Court’s directives.

    The letter was copied to the counsel to the state government, Dr. Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), and the Chief Registrar of the Supreme Court of Nigeria in Abuja.

    The lawyer warned that his client would not hesitate to institute contempt procedure Obiano, the state’s Attorney-General and others involved in the land revocation, if the apex court’s directives were not immediately adhered to.

    The Federal Government had sued the Anambra State Government at the Supreme Court, asking for N50 billion as exemplary and aggravated damages it suffered, among other claims, following the state’s purported revocation of its (Fedral) land.

    A full panel of the apex court, presided over by Justice Ibrahim Tanko Muhammed on June 9, adjourned the matter till February 13, 2017, for hearing of the motion on notice for interlocutory injunction filed by counsel to the Federal Government.

    He directed the parties to maintain status quo.

    But in the letter by Ozekhome to Anambra State AG, he averred that despite the apex court’s admonition, the state government had carried on further developmental works on the land.

    The letter reads: “Our attention has been draw lately by our clients to the fact that notwithstanding the admonition of the apex court and the undertaking by your counsel, Dr. Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), to communicate to you the need to desist from further acts on or concerning the res, the subject matter of dispute, before the apex court, the Anambra State Government has gone ahead with renewed vigour and zeal to carry on further developmental works on the res. Your clients had moved to the site after it was served court processes on this matter and after you had responded to same.

    “We would want to believe, in the circumstances, that the admonition of the apex court had not been communicated to you by your counsel at the time of our writing you this letter. Assuming, without conceding, that this is the position, we hereby bring to your notice the admonition of the apex court, per Honourable Justice Ibrahim Tanko Muhammed, JSC, presiding, which is to the effect that further acts of development on the land be stopped forthwith so as not to foist a situation of fait accompli on the apex court. The doctrine of lis pendens now prevails.

    “If, however, the reverse is the case, that this admonition has been communicated to you by Dr. Ikpeazu (SAN), but you still choose to ignore same, we hereby bring to your notice that such flagrant disobedience of the apex court’s directives can be visited with dire legal consequences. Even if there was no order – whether direct or otherwise – was made that you maintain the status quo, we expect you to do so as a matter of judicial pertinence. See the case of Governor of Lagos State vs Ojukwu (1986) 1 NWLR (Part 18) Pg. 61 at Pg. 626 Paras 26.

    “Sir, we hope we will not be pushed to press this matter further as we firmly believe that you will call the Anambra State Government to order, to desist from taking further steps which are inimical to the apex court’s directives.

    “We shall not hesitate to do the needful and take all necessary legal steps to ensure compliance with the apex court’s directives in the event that our modest request to desist from further development of the res is not heeded.

    “We shall immediately issue Forms 48 and 49 against the governor, yourself and any other person involved in this blatant desecration of our citadel of justice. A stitch in time saves nine. To say more, will be otiose.”

     

  • Fed Govt reduces 100 national housing model to 12

    The Federal Government yesterday said  it has reduced the country’s national housing design models from 100 to about 12.

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, who spoke during the maiden Affordable Housing Summit in Abuja, said the 12 models would further be reduced to six.

    Fashola also said for about 40 years of operation, the Federal Housing Authority (FHA) only built 40, 000 housing units.

    He said such houses were built irregularly, thus necessitating the need for research and planning to determine the housing needs of the masses.

    According to him, the ministry has commenced moves to examine the class of the society that actually needed affordable housing and at what cost.

    He said: “Our internal reappraisal reveals that since inception, FHA has built about 40,000 housing units in approximately 40 years.”