Tag: FG

  • FG has lost control of security – Report

    FG has lost control of security – Report

    … Says ‘Nigeria braces for escalation in terrorist attacks’

    The Nigerian government has lost control of security, according to its own advisers, and lacks a coherent strategy to counter the threat of terrorism, the United Kingdom Guardian reports.

    Senior political and military figures have told the Guardian of their growing pessimism over the government’s ability to contain Boko Haram, the Islamist sect responsible for a deadly wave of bombings and kidnappings in northern Nigeria, and are bracing themselves for an escalation in attacks.

    “We have a serious problem in Nigeria and there is no sense that the government has a real grip,” a senior official close to the government said on condition of anonymity.

    “The situation is not remotely under control. It is just a matter of time before we see more large-scale attacks that pose a significant threat to national security, and now Nigeria’s economic growth is also at risk,” the concerned official told the Guardian.

    Boko Haram – whose name is often translated as “western education is sinful” – has become increasingly sophisticated in its operations since first launching mass attacks in northern Nigeria in 2010.

    The sect first began using violence against the Nigerian government and police in 2003, and is believed to have advanced its operations in recent months by attracting funding and support from al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and al-Shabaab.

    In 2009 Boko Haram launched a new phase of operations following the killing of its leader, Muhammad Yusuf, by police and security forces.

    Since then, a spate of deadly church bombings has left hundreds dead, while attacks on mobile phone base stations have paralysed telecommunications in northern Nigeria, causing an estimated £3m worth of damage.

    The government has attempted to fight back against the sect, and claims to have killed at least 35 suspected militants earlier this week, and detained 60 others during raids in Adamawa and Yobe States – two of the areas most affected by the violence.

    But its failure to stop Boko Haram attacks has led many to question the leadership of President Goodluck Jonathan, who promised in March that security services would have ended the insurgency by June.

    A senior defence official, who asked not to be named, expressed concern that the government had failed to demonstrate the necessary political leadership to combat the threat posed by Boko Haram.

    “Leadership is the problem,” said the source. “When we had military dictatorships in Nigeria, we did not experience this kind of weak decision-making. There is no way we can combat this threat without more decisive action. You cannot divorce what is happening from weak leadership and the failure to repair the divisions in our society.”

    “The level of poverty in the north, and the way southerners are behaving with impunity – it is not surprising that there is this level of discontent in northern Nigeria.”

    Experts have frequently attributed the rise of Boko Haram to the growing divide between rich and poor in Nigeria, compounded by regionalism that has often pitched the largely Christian south against the predominantly Muslim north.

    Of the two-thirds of Nigerians – 100 million people – living below the poverty line, Nigeria’s national bureau of statistics said that the number living on less than one dollar a day was higher in the north, with rates of around 70 per cent, compared with rates closer to 50 per cent in the south.

    Much of the north has illiteracy rates of above 75 per cent.

    “These acts are a reaction against decades of neglect,” the source close to the government said. “They are similar factors to what we saw driving revolution in the Arab spring.

     

  • N1.89tr investments require for power sector – FG

    N1.89tr investments require for power sector – FG

    The Head of Service of the Federation, Alhaji Isa Bello Sali, on Monday said about N1.89 trillion worth of investments would be required to completely revamp the power sector.

    Sali spoke at the launch of the National Power Training Institute graduate skill development programmein Abuja

    According to him, the fund is expected to cover investments in four major areas of power- generation, transmission, distribution and alternative energy.

    He added that the expenditure aims at increasing generation, transmission and distribution capacity, in order to provide adequate and sustainable power for industrial growth and national development; intensifying rural electrification efforts in a more efficient manner and achieving optimal mix using the most appropriate technology.

    To achieve these objectives, the HOS said the Federal Government would create a deregulated and competitive electric power sector to attract foreign and local investments.

    He noted that with these objectives, only the best would be attracted to work in the sector.

    Sali submitted that the possession of practical skills and proven track record would be the requisite qualification for those expected to operate in the rejuvenated power sector.

     

  • Flood: Anambra urges FG to release Ecological Fund

    Flood: Anambra urges FG to release Ecological Fund

    The Secretary to Anambra State Government, Mr. Oseloka Obaze, has called on the Federal Government to release money from the Ecological Fund to states affected by flood and other natural disasters.

    Obaze, who made the call in a chat with journalists in Awka on Saturday, said the money would enable the affected states to render essential support to victims as well as repair damaged infrastructure.

    He said the damage done by the disasters was too severe for the states to manage alone.

    The SSG said there was need to construct embankment along the banks of the River Niger to avert recurrence of the flood in the state.

    “We are doing our best in Anambra to manage the ecological situation in the state by relocating the victims and providing relief materials but it is not enough.

    “The challenges are enormous; they are beyond the resources of the state; there is also need to build embankment along the bank of the Niger River.

    “And the ecological funds of the federal government are meant for such purposes,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the SSG as saying during the interactive session.

     

  • Governors’ meeting over Excess Crude Account deadlock

    Governors’ meeting over Excess Crude Account deadlock

    Attempts to seek out of court settlement on the disagreement between the federal and state governments over the excess crude account has failed, it was leant on Thursday.
    The account is reported to be in the region of $8billion.
    The 36 states governors who met under the umbrella of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum took the decision to head back to court to enforce the federal government’s adherence to the constitution on the issue at the end of their meeting late Wednesday night.
    Some of the Governors at the meeting include, Rotimi Ameachi of Rivers, Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti, Babatunde Fashola of Lagos, Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun, Murtala Nyako of Adamawa, Danbaba Danfulani Suntai of Taraba, Adams Oshiomhole of Edo, Sulivan Chime of Enugu and Abdulfatai Ahmed of Kwara.
    The Chairman of the NGF, Governor Amaechi, who made the disclosure at the end of their meeting, said the essence was to stop the illegal deduction from the revenue.
    This may also endanger the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) set up by President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration to replace the account.
    SWF like the one before it is also facing some challenges as the governors are still uncertain about its methods of operations.
    The account was created by former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration in 2004 to act as a buffer during crash of crude oil price.
    The account was to save monies in excess of the budgeted benchmark price of crude oil.
    The states had argued that the account is illegal and that the federal government did not seek their input in the first place before establishing it, to receive funds in excess of estimated prices of crude oil.
    But the federal government on its part claimed that the account is being kept as a stabilization fund to protect the country against global economic crisis as witnessed between 2008-2009 global meltdown.
    However, the governors do not want to be part of it, describing the process as illegal.
    Besides, the governors also decried the process whereby it is only the federal government that has control over the use of the fund.
    The acrimony between the federal and state governments has been on since 2007.
    The governors had approached the Supreme Court, asking for a refund of their shares of the federation revenue which have been used to fund the subsidy regime among other things.

  • Resolve causes of violence, Don tasks FG

    Resolve causes of violence, Don tasks FG

    Professor of Criminology, Etannibi Alemika, has urged the Federal Government to find effective and long-lasting solutions to factors causing ethno-religious violence in parts of the country.

    He spoke at the on- going 8th all Nigerian Editors Conference in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital.

    In a paper titled Cost of Insurgency in Nigeria, Alemika pointed out that necessary preventive measures should be taken to develop and sustain the capacity of security agencies and citizens to deal with all phases of terrorism.

    The University of Jos don explained that the media play a strategic role in tackling insurgency and terrorism, adding that media practitioners must display discretion in making sure reports on terrorism and insurgency do not weaken state capacity and counter-insurgency measures.

    He also canvassed for necessary information flow between media practitioners and security agencies.

    He identified the risk factors in the emergence and scale of insurgency and terrorism as economic, political, ineffective state capacity, religious and social division factors.

    Alemika explained that insurgency imposes different costs on individuals, groups, governments and the society.