Tag: FG

  • Capacity building: FG approves N300m for Nollywood

    Capacity building: FG approves N300m for Nollywood

    The Federal Government has approved N300 million out of the three billion naira intervention fund for capacity building in the Nigerian film industry.

    This is contained in a statement issued in Abuja on Sunday by Mr. Paul Nwabuikwu, Spokesman for the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

    “Action on the three billion naira support promised the Nigerian film industry by President Goodluck Jonathan has formally commenced with the roll out of a N300 million capacity building fund, “the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the spokesman as saying in the statement.

    The statement noted that the capacity building fund was the first of a series of initiatives planned under “Project Act Nollywood’’, adding that It was made up of two components.

    According to the statement, the first component is a Training Fund of N150 million, dedicated to training and skills acquisition for Nollywood practitioners in all competencies along the entire value chain of the industry.

    The statement said it include; scriptwriting, directing, production and production design, special effects, lighting, sound, HD techniques, acting, cinematography, make-up and editing, among others.

    It said the second component was the Capacity Development Fund which was also worth N150 million.

     

     

  • FG secures $500m to combat erosion

    •UN selects Nigeria to set up REDD+ University

    The Federal Government has secured a $500 million facility to address some of the erosion projects in the country, the Minister of Environment, HajiaHadizaMailafia, has disclosed.

    The minister also informed of plans by the United Nations (UN) to set up REDD+ University in the country.

    The decision, according to the minister, followed the nation’s ability to preserve its forest reserve.

    Mailafia spoke at the 2013 Mid Term Presidential Media briefing at the weekend in Abuja.

    She said: “The major challenge we have now is multinational. To this effect, the World Bank has come up with a $500 million facility that will be used over a period of three years to address the enormous challenge of erosion.

    “Over the years, the South Eastern part of this country has been constantly bedevilled with major erosion occurrences.

    “We have issues of erosion in Akwa Ibom for over three years; it’s still there so Mr. President has decided to address this beginning with the big one.

    “I want to congratulate and tell Nigerians that the United Nations has approved for a REDD+ university to be built in Nigeria because of our efforts in preserving Nigeria’s forest reserves.”

    She expressed fears that the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) of the Federal Government might be unsuccessful if issues of flooding and environmental degradation are not considered.

    She identified the Kizito Erosion Control project, Imo, Nekede as well as the erosion control project in Abeokuta, Ogun State as few of the completed projects, which are awaiting commissioning.

    On oil spillage, Mailafia said the Federal Government has supervised the clean-up of over four hundred and ninety-seven oil spill sites in the country.

    She said the ministry also remediated 430 lead poisoned homes and four hectares of lead poisoned industrial sites in Bagega village in Zamfara State.

    She blamed the large number of erosion sites in the nation on past administrations for not doing enough on erosion control.

    She said President Goodluck Jonathan has approved the upgrading of National Parks Service to paramilitary organisation with effect from January 2014.

    The Federal Government, the minister added, is set to privatise all the national parks in the nation.

    Mailifia said it was imperative for the Federal Government to tackle hazardous waste problems in the country especially those that involve the illegal importation and dumping of electrical and electronic waste (e-waste).

  • FG targets $1.3b from cassava chips export to China, Europe

    Nigeria is to rake in about $1.37 billion before 2015 through existing contractual agreements with China and European nations on export of dried cassava chips.

    The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. AkinwumiAdesina, gave the assurance at the 2013 Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) Mid-Term review at the weekend in Abuja.

    He said the Federal Government had already secured a contract to export 3.2 million metric tons of the produce to China.

    According to him: “Export opportunities exist for dried cassava chips as the world’s leading cassava producer. Nigeria is well positioned to benefit from this export market.

    “Based on existing contracts, Nigeria can earn between $802 million and $1.37 billion from dried chips exports to China and Europe.”

    He placed global market for cassava chips export between $1.5 and 2 billion dollars, adding that China remains world’s largest buyer of the produce used for ethanol production.

    Speaking on the value chains which include rice, cassava, livestock, cocoa, oil palm, cotton, among others, rice production, he said, have received significant boost in last one year.

    He said within one year, the nation was able to produce about 690, 000 metric tons of rice and milled 1.1 million metric tons of the produce during its first dry season farming in 10 northern states.

    According to him, the dry season rice plantation supported 268, 000 farmers on 264, 000 hectares in Bauchi, Gombe, Jigagwa, Kano, Katsina and Kogi states.

    Others are Niger, Sokoto, Zamfara and Kebbi.

    To avoid post production losses of citrus, pineapple and tomato crops, Adesina disclosed that Teragro has invested about N1 billion in processing fruit concentrates in the country.

    He lamented that concentrates of citrus fruit juice produced internally were mostly imported while water remains the only local ingredient.

  • Flood: UN to work with FG, Kogi on infrastructure

    Flood: UN to work with FG, Kogi on infrastructure

    The United Nations has pledged to partner with the Federal and Kogi State governments to provide resources for the replacement of infrastructure damaged during the 2012 flood disaster.

    The UN Under-Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordination, Baroness Valerie Amos, made the pledge on Friday in Lokoja during an assessment visits to flood impacted sites.

    She said that there was urgent need to replace damaged infrastructure so as to achieve full recovery.

    Amos said that flooding had become a worldwide phenomenon, blaming the development on climate change which she said was beyond the control of anybody.

    She said the UN would provide technical support for the state, saying that experts will be deployed in the areas of early warning signals, planning and preparedness for emergency situations.

    The UN official, who stated that she was visiting the state under a difficult circumstance, lamented the magnitude of losses suffered by the people during the disaster.

    She said that there was urgent need to evacuate people from flood plains in Lokoja and other parts of the state.

    She said that the UN will join hands with the state to establish camps where people can relocate to temporarily.

    Baroness Amos commended the Federal and Kogi State government for rising to the occasion when the flood struck in 2012.

    She said that government and disaster management agencies should learn from the experience so that the country can recover effectively after each incident.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Baroness Amos also visited the newly constructed water plant in Lokoja.

    She commended the state government for protecting the facility and ensuring supply of water to the people without much difficulty.

    The Deputy Governor, Mr. Yomi Awoniyi , who received the visitor said over 400,000 hectares of farmlands, several lives and infrastructural facilities worth billions of naira were washed away.

     

  • Subsidy protest: FG seeks dismissal of suits

    Subsidy protest: FG seeks dismissal of suits

    The Federal Government has asked a Lagos High Court, Ikeja, to dismiss a suit filed by Prof. Ben Nwabueze and Dr. Tunji Braithewaite, over alleged disruption of fuel subsidy protest in January 2012.

    The government made the request on Thursday in two separate applications filed against the suit by the Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Mohammed Adoke and the Nigerian Army.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the suit was filed by Nwabueze and Braithewaite– alongside 42 others– before Justice Yetunde Idowu on February 1, 2012.

    The applicants had alleged that security operatives had used tear gas to disperse their protests against the removal of fuel subsidy at Alausa, Ikeja on January 19, 2012.

    They had asked the court to declare the action as unconstitutional and an infringement on their fundamental human rights as guaranteed by Section 39(1) of the 1999 Constitution.

    They had further asked the court to order the Federal Government to pay each of them N10 million for infringing on their fundamental human rights.

    During Thursday’s proceedings, Counsel to the Chief of Army Staff and the Nigerian Army, Mr. Musa Ibrahim, urged the court to dismiss the suit.

    Ibrahim said the applicants’ claim of their right to protest was not supported by the Nigerian Constitution.

     

  • Atiku urges FG to dialogue with Adamawa, Borno, Yobe

    Atiku urges FG to dialogue with Adamawa, Borno, Yobe

    ...Blames insecurity on unemployment, poverty

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar on Friday spoke on the insecurity in the country, saying that there is need for the Federal Government to engage aggrieved parties in dialogue while taking decisive measures to protect innocent people.

    He, however, said the current emergency rule in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa State does not foreclose the immediate need for dialogue in that zone and other places.

    His words: “That is why the government must do all that is necessary in a democratic society to protect lives and property. Thus, there is the need to engage aggrieved groups in dialogue while taking decisive security measures to protect innocent people. I hope that the current emergency rule in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States does not obviate the urgent need for such dialogue in that zone and elsewhere.”

    Atiku spoke as the Special Guest of Honour at the 4th District Conference 2013 of the Rotary International in Abuja. The theme of the conference was “Creating a Culture of Peace through Service.”

    He attributed the insecurity in the country to unemployment, poverty and growing rate of corrupt practices.

    The ex-Vice President said: “Whatever the immediate causes of these conflicts and insecurity, there is no doubt that the high level of unemployment, poverty and accompanying alienation, especially of our young people, have provided veritable recruiting grounds for these insurgencies and other forms of criminality.

    “And these are taking place within the context of a collapsed educational system, poor investment climate, less than mediocre governance and increasing corruption.”

    Atiku noted that hardly a day goes by without fresh slaughter of fellow citizens in one part of the country or the other due to robbery, kidnapping and violent insurgencies in the north.

    He said that there are struggles between Muslims and Christians, herdsmen and farmers even as security operatives on rescue mission have been accused of atrocities against civilians.

    He noted that wave of insecurity has badly hurt the economies of Borno, Yobe , Plateau, Adamawa and Kaduna States .

     

  • FG to construct extra rail lines

    FG to construct extra rail lines

    The Federal Government has disclosed plans to construct seven rail lines in addition to the existing and rehabilitated gauges.

    The Minister of Transport, Senator Idris Umar, revealed this at the inauguration of boards for the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) on Tuesday in Abuja.

    He said the ministry had commenced feasibility studies on the project and these would be completed by September, 2013.

    “We are currently carrying out feasibility studies to create seven additional standard gauge lines. The feasibility study would be completed by September this year, the result of which would be advertised for potential investors for their development under the Public Private Partnership (PPP),” Idris said.

    The Federal Government, since commencement of the present administration had embarked on actualizing a 25-year plan to resuscitate and revitalize the nation’s railways system.

    The plan which is in three phase involves railway system transition, modernization as well as system stabilization.

    The minister restated commitments to complete on-going rehabilitation of Port Harcourt to Maiduguri rail line before the year ends.

    According to him, the construction of Itakpe-Ajaokuta-Warri and Abuja-Kaduna standard gauge lines are expected to be on track next year.

    Speaking on the review of NRC Act, Umar said the Bill has been approved by the National Council on Privatization but would be presented to the Federal Executive Council (FEC) for further endorsement.

     

  • FG’s ‘war on terror’ records tentative victory

    FG’s ‘war on terror’ records tentative victory

     

    Nuradin Mohammed used to resent and fear the troops who swept past his fish stall in this northeast Nigerian city on the trail of Islamist insurgents Boko Haram. Now, for the first time, he thinks they may be on his side.

    “We are pleased the president has finally recognized our peril and we pray his plan works,” Mohammed said, frying fish by the roadside as a crowd of young children looked on hungrily and trucks packed with troops rumbled past.

    President Goodluck Jonathan took a gamble when he launched a big offensive this month on Boko Haram’s four-year-old attempt to establish an Islamic state in mainly Muslim northern Nigeria.

    The crackdown risks stoking, rather than quashing the rebellion, but has so far met with a surprising degree of support in a region that has long accused the oil-rich Christian south of neglect.

    “We felt let down and ignored. We are afraid soldiers will come bullying the public, which makes people want to join the Boko Haram, but we hope this time is different,” Mohammed said.

    Only a few months ago, Jonathan was telling foreign leaders that Boko Haram was a small problem that would be over soon.

    In declaring an emergency on May 14 in Borno, Yobe and Adawmawa states and ordering thousands of troops and air strikes on suspected Islamist camps, he said they were “terrorists” whose “declaration of war” could not go unanswered.

    Civilians like Mohammed appear to have had enough of being caught in the crossfire of a rebellion that has killed thousands in Africa’s No. 1 oil producer and provoked fears of a descent into chaos in one of the continent’s most dynamic economies.

    Even usually critical northern governors and elders have been cautiously supportive of Christian southerner Jonathan’s new firm tactics, which include the offer of an amnesty to any militants who willingly surrender.

    “I now fully understand the strategy: show strength and be magnanimous at the same time,” previously critical northern opposition politician Alhaji Bashir Tofa told Reuters.

    But it will take more than just firmness to win against a movement that has proved remarkably resilient under the leadership of Abubakar Shekau, a fiery militant who likes to make finger-waving Internet videos holding a Kalashnikov.

    Ousted from Nigeria’s city centres in an earlier crackdown last year, the Islamists, whose name in the Hausa language means “Western education is sinful” withdrew to the remote semi-desert region of the northeast bordering with Chad, Cameroon and Niger.

     

    In this isolated zone, they scared off local officials and took de facto control of at least 10 out of 27 council areas.

    This recalled what happened in 2012 in Mali, where al Qaeda-allied Islamist rebels seized control of the Sahel country’s Saharan north before taking several cities and towns. A French military offensive drove them back earlier this year.

    In the past two months Boko Haram mounted some of their boldest attacks to date, including one that killed 55 people.

    Jonathan’s administration knows that just sending in more troops will never totally defeat a foe that can hide among the civilian population, even if that population has been put off by Boko Haram attacks on churches, universities and markets.

    “In some ways youths had more in common with Boko Haram than soldiers and wealthy politicians,” said Borno public servant Ali Shuwa. Behind him, scrawny goats chew on a rubbish pile.

    “But I think people are tired of the fighting.”

    As with the “surge” of extra United States soldiers that former President George Bush ordered into Iraq in 2007 to prevent the country disintegrating into ethnic and sectarian bloodshed, experts say Nigeria’s military needs a change of tactics that will motivate the population to actively cooperate with it.

    “The major focus should be on securing the local population. It is popular legitimacy that will provide the intelligence necessary to fight insurgents and terrorists,” said Kole Shettima, a Nigerian pro-democracy activist.

    Regarding this, Jonathan agreed to free some detained Boko Haram suspects this week, including all women and children, one of Boko Haram’s top demands. This is a sign he is willing to take steps towards reconciliation with moderate elements.

    It reinforced the message that a panel he set up to try to establish a dialogue with Boko Haram is sincere.

    “This is the most concerted effort yet … They’ve hit it with a big stick and then dangled a carrot in front of them,” said Peter Sharwood-Smith, Nigeria head of security firm Drum Cussac. “They now realize the huge task in front of them.”

    Maiduguri, the once thriving hub of an ancient Islamic trading route, has been decimated by the conflict. Soldiers hunch behind sandbag bunkers on streets strewn with rubble from bomb blasts.

    Traders hang carpets and piles of sandals hopefully outside corrugated-iron roofed shacks, while young boys peddle oranges and watermelons from wooden carts. But there are few buyers.

    Boko Haram has infiltrated so deeply here that some parents don’t know their children are members. Civilians don’t want to turn against insurgents because informants are often killed.

    “It could be him or her watching us,” said Ali, a teenage boy selling jerry cans of fuel, pointing out onto the street. “People have been killed just on a rumor of informing.”

    It was in Maiduguri in 2002 that a cleric called Mohammed Yusuf founded a radical Islamist movement initially tagged ‘Nigeria’s Taliban’, but later nicknamed ‘Boko Haram’ because of its virulent opposition to Western influences.

    A military crackdown against an uprising by the group in 2009 killed 800 people. This included Yusuf, who died in police custody, a catalyst for years of reprisals on security forces.

    Jonathan says he will clamp down on military excesses after reports of human rights abuses by soldiers in the northeast, although rights groups and foreign diplomats think these may continue going unpunished given the secrecy of the operation.

    Rights activists say soldiers carry out extra-judicial killings and torture suspects never face trial.

    “We welcome that Jonathan has finally recognized publicly the abuses but these words must be turned into actions for his operation to have legitimacy,” a western diplomat in Abuja said.

    Security sources say Jonathan’s army faces a tough task in defeating resilient Islamist fighters, who have shown their ability to re-arm and counter-attack and who know the remote southern fringe of the Sahara better than most soldiers.

    A military source in Maiduguri told Reuters they had found the first days of the latest offensive harder than expected against “an enemy willing to hide anywhere and do anything”.

    Boko Haram is not one cohesive group and new independent splinter-operations are emerging, making negotiations difficult.

    The longer this goes one, the costlier it will be, and not only in human terms. Nigeria spent 700 billion naira ($4.4 bln) on security in the four months to April, the central bank said.

    Porous borders with Chad and Niger have been used to transport weapons from Libyan and Malian conflict zones and Western governments are concerned about Boko Haram’s increasing ties with al Qaeda linked groups in the Sahel – a fact which could draw Nigeria’s neighbors further into the conflict.

    “Even the U.S. government couldn’t contain guerrilla fighters in Afghanistan and Iraq, so do you think we can?” Sakuria Mohammed, a Borno legislator told Reuters in Maiduguri, where his mother was kidnapped by Boko Haram this month.

    “The fighting is a symptom and therefore the military will not solve this. We must create jobs, rebuild this once great region and give youths a better option than Boko Haram.”

     

    Culled from Reuters

  • Senate seeks FG’s action on flooding

    Senate seeks FG’s action on flooding

    The Senate on Thursday mandated its joint committee on Water Resources, Environment, Marine Transport and Special Duties to find out the level of preparedness of the Federal Government to avert flooding during the year.

    The directive followed a motion on “emergency preparedness for 2013 flood and rainfall prediction.”

    It was sponsored by Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules and Business, Senator Ita Enang (Akwa Ibom North East) and 80 others.

    Enang in his lead debate noted that excessive rainfall in 2012 in the country coupled with release of water from the Lagdo dam in Cameroon led to devastating flooding in most part of the country.

    He said the water released from the dam flowed through River Benue and merged at the confluence of River Benue and Niger at Lokoja leading to massive flooding, death, submerging of houses and farmlands in Lokoja, Kogi State.

    He noted that the flooding also affected Delta and Bayelsa States estuary where there are many tributaries, most of the tributaries silted and filled with sand such that the large volume of water from River Benue and Niger could not find sufficient dept to channel the volume of water to the Atlantic Ocean.

    Enang said that unless concerted effort is made by the Federal and state Governments and relevant agencies to clear the water routes such as bridges and channels, obstruction of flow of water to the ocean will continue.

    He said that there was an urgent need to dredge the coastlines of major rivers and ocean within the country’s inland territories where sand has accumulated in order to further reduce the impact of the restriction of water channels on seasonal flooding.

    Senate President, David Mark, who summed up contributions by senators, said that there was no local government in the country that did not suffer flooding in 2012.

    Mark noted that the implication of the massive flooding in parts of the country was the inability of the country to prepare for emergency situations.

     

  • Insecurity: Govt deploys security operatives to southern Kaduna

    Insecurity: Govt deploys security operatives to southern Kaduna

    The Kaduna State Government yesterday deployed security operatives to investigate the incessant attacks in the southern part of the state.

    The Director-General of Media and Publicity to the Governor, Alhaji Ahmed Maiyaki, broke the news to the News Agency of the Nigeria (NAN) in Kaduna.

    Maiyaki said the security operatives are expected to investigate the series of attacks in the area to enable the government proffer a lasting solution.

    NAN recalls that Zantang chiefdom in Kaura Local Government Area of the state was on Monday night attacked by unknown gunmen who killed 12 residents.

    Several others sustained various degrees of injury while properties worth millions of naira were burnt during the renewed mayhem.

    Maiyaki condemned the attack and urged the people to remain calm and law-abiding.

    The governor’s aide promised that the Mukhtar Yero administration will address the security challenges.

    He commiserated with the people of the community over the killings and loss of property.

    Maiyaki assured that the government will soon end the spate of attacks in the area.