Tag: free

  • Glo gives N28b free airtime in overload promo

    Glo gives N28b free airtime in overload promo

    Second national carrier, Globacom, has said subscribers to its network have within the last two months received about N28billion worth of airtime from the Glo Overload Reloaded promo which is running.

    A re-launch of the promo earlier this year provided expansion to 400 per cent bonus airtime for a recharge of N200 and above, that is twice the initial 200 per cent bonus. The promo was one of those launched in the last quarter of 2014 which was designed to reward loyal and faithful subscribers.

    With more than 7,000 subscribers joining the promo and enjoying the benefits accruable since the re-launch, the company has given out  N27,523,577,800 bonus airtime to its subscribers.

    In the promo, a recharge of N200 gives a value of N1000 instantly, which is five times the value of recharge. N500 recharge gives the subscriber N2, 500 airtime value; N1000 gives N5000; N2000 gives N10,000; while N5000 gives N25,000 value.

    The bonus airtime can be used by subscribers to make calls to Glo lines and send SMS between 10pm and 8am. The validity period ranges from two to 15 days.

    Data subscribers on the network have also been enjoying the bonus. For example, a N2,500 data plan instantly gets 4.5GB worth of data, N5,000 gives 12GB, and N8000 gives 24GB of data.

    Also, customers who subscribe to the promo have the opportunity to be among the 120 millionaires that the promo will produce. Having produced 40 millionaires so far, 80 more will be announced in the next few weeks.

    Francis Oshin, a Glo subscriber, said the promo was a blessing to the industry.

  • So free education is doable!

    I am one person who is skeptical about free education and I will give my reasons.

    For many years, free education has been synonymous with poor education.  The common scenario is that the government announces it is implementing free education and says the learners should not pay fees.  It then promises to build structures and provide textbooks, and other facilities for all public schools.  However, when you visit schools, what greets you is the opposite: overcrowded classrooms, ill-equipped laboratories and workshop, and libraries empty of books.  Also, the school structures are usually dilapidated (fallen roofs, no windows or doors, crumbling building, name it), toilets non-existent or so bad that they are locked up, and no water or electricity supply. School buses and sports facilities are a plus; any public school that has them is extremely lucky.

    In such situations, teachers are not likely to be committed to their duties; and pupils would play truancy – after all, it is easy to slip out of a school that has a broken fence or leaky roofs or no toilets.  The result comes out as poor learning outcomes.  It is common knowledge that generally many of our learners do not achieve the minimum benchmark in public examinations.

    Public schools are also prone to problems of insecurity because street urchins make the premises their homes – where they hold football matches, smoke hemp, sleep and pass waste.  And as if that is not bad enough, they also threaten the teachers and pupils of the schools.

    This picture of free public education has made the policy unattractive.  While it worked in 1960s when it was introduced by Chief Obafemi Awolowo, critics have argued that corruption and increasing population and pressing demands of other sectors have made it impracticable in present-day Nigeria.

    But of recent, some state governments offering free education have made efforts to improve facilities in public primary and secondary schools.  For instance, Rivers, Lagos, Edo, and lately Imo States, to name some, have tried a lot in this regard.  Rivers started with the construction of some state-the-art primary schools.  Lagos also built some model secondary schools and initiated the Eko Secondary Education Project, which has provided grants directly to secondary schools to provide their own facilities and train teachers.  We have applauded many of these governments.

    However, at tertiary level, state governments have not tried to use free education to show how charitable they are.  They are more likely to announce bursaries and scholarships (both local and international) to brilliant and indigent students, or reduce tuition fees.  The part of tuition fee reduction is what I have quarreled with in the past.  Ekiti and Lagos states have slashed fees of recent.  Last week, the Lagos State University (LASU) even refunded over N200 million to students as surplus over tuition fees they had paid before the government slashed the fees to N25,000.  Why I question tuition-fee reduction is that while students are happy – and rightly so – about paying less because times are hard, the school managements have to deal with further reduction of funds in its coffers.  Most times, the government that reduces fees does not pay the difference to the schools to fill the gap in revenue created by the fee slash.

    It was therefore heartwarming to learn that a state in Nigeria has been doing so since 2012.  When Governor Rochas Okorocha cancelled fees at the Imo State-owned tertiary institutions, he followed it up with a cheque of N100,000 for each student of Imo State University (IMSU).  (Students in other institutions in the state enjoy free education as well).  This means that the university is still generating the amount it would have gotten from tuition fees; yet, the institution still gets its subvention from the state government.

    Other state governors need to follow the Okorocha approach.  If they do, universities will not have to come up with all kinds of levies to make the money back in other ways.  While the governments put their houses in order, managements of tertiary institutions also need to make judicious use of funds.  It is not only political office holders that mismanage funds; heads of tertiary are not saints.  If they use the funds that come to them well, our institutions will not be as bad as they are.

    If Prof Ukachukwu Awuzie, the immediate past National President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), who is presently the vice chancellor of IMSU can actually run his university without students paying fees and says free education, then other school managers should take a second look at how they manage funds.

    Awuzie said: “Free education at the university level is possible in Nigeria, it depends on how you apply the resources. All it takes is honesty, transparency, accountability and passion. When these are applied free education is possible”.  Let us prove him right.

  • African Bar seeks free, fair elections

    The African Bar Association (AFBA) has urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to ensure that the March 28 and April 11 elections are free and fair.

    At its maiden press briefing in Lagos by its interim executive committee led by Mr Hannibal Uwaifo, the association said it would pay close attention to the general elections even though it was not accredited as an observer by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) because it applied late.

    Uwaifo, who is the interim president, said AFBA would do its bit towards ensuring violence-free exercise.

    “We’re going to be monitoring the elections from our own vantage point. I also know that our colleagues in the African Bar Association are also monitoring it, such as the Director of Information and Protocol. We’ll be issuing statements of a broad nature in due course.

    “We’ll encourage a fair electoral process, an independent umpire, political tolerance and we’ll be discouraging violence. We’ll urge those who win to be magnanimous in victory and those who lose to take it with all sense of equanimity,” Uwaifo said.

    Members of the interim executive are Uwaifo (Nigeria), Mr Dev Erriah, Vice-President (Mauritius); Mrs Flavania Charles (Tanzania), General Secretary; Mrs Obele Akinniranye, Deputy General Secretary; Mr Nyamordi Ochieng-Nyamogo, Director of Information/Protocol (Kenya) and Mr George Chisanga (Zambia). Mr Stenford Moyo of Zimbabwe is the governing council chair, while Mrs Funmi Oluyede is the co-chair.

    To assist the AFBA interim executive are former Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS) Director-General, Prof Epiphany Azinge (SAN), who will serve as Chairman, African Bar Research Council; Mrs Joseph Anenih (Chairperson, African Women Lawyers’ Forum and Inter-Governmental Relations); former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Lagos Branch Chairman, Chijioke Okoli (Co-ordinator, Nigeria Committee) and Gogo Karibi Whyte as Chairman, Organisation and Planning.

    Also appointed were Mr. Kolade Adegboyega, who is the Director for Budget & Planning; Rudolf Ezeani, executive director; Mr. Val Oaiya as Chairman AFBA conferences; Chukwuma Ezeala as Chairman, elections committee West Africa; Mrs Tola Rotimi Chairperson Public Rights Reference Council and John Austin Unachukwu, who was appointed as the Media Officer.

    Uwaifo said AFBA is a non-governmental organisation formed in 1972 in Lusaka, Zambia, to foster unity and encourage cross border practice; corporation amongst lawyers in advancing the legal profession and promoting rule of law and good governance in Africa; helping members to defend citizens’ rights; and helping African nations attain high level of transparency in governance as well as eliminating corruption.

    AFBA suffered setback due to political interference, but in order to sustain its founding fathers’ dreams, the immediate past President Charles Idehen constituted the interim committee pending the next AFBA conference when elections would be held into substantive offices.

    Uwauifo said membership of AFBA is open to individual lawyers in Africa, and registration forms can be obtained from its temporary secretariat on 8, Ribadu Road, Ikoyi, Lagos.

     

     

  • Body canvasses free, credible, polls

    An Igbo socio-cultural group, Ndigbo for Good Governance (NGG), has called for free, fair and transparent polls that to reflect the wishes of the citizenry.

    It urged candidates to embrace civilised politics of issues relevant to the people’s well-being and national development during  campaigns.

    The body decried violence, saying candidates should remember the Abuja peace accord entered into by their leaders and presidential candidates.

    In a statement by the group’s Coordinator, Mr. Chima Ebere Nwankwo, NGG, describing the elections as crucial for the survival of the country, enjoined eligible voters to obtain their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    It hailed President Goodluck Jonathan for nominating an Abia indigene, Col. Austin Akobundu (retd), as a minister and hoped that the former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) national vice chairman (Southeast) would perform well.

    NGG enjoined the Senate to confirm his nomination.

    The statement reads: “We condemn the political brawling and violence in recent times, despite the peace accord signed by parties’ leaders and presidential candidates. Violence is politically-dangerous, morally-wrong and socially- reprehensible. It is a step backward in nation building and has tainted our image, battered by insurgency in the Northeast.

    “We demand civilised politics of issues relevant to the people’s well-being and national development. We urge security agents to fish out perpetrators of violence and their sponsors and bring them to book to act as a deterrent to others.

    “We enjoin registered voters to collect their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) to ensure they vote for credible candidates. The elections are crucial for the survival of democracy. We advocate free, fair, credible and acceptable polls that will reflect the wishes of the citizens.”

  • Banks in Free Trade Zones get tax, duty waivers

    Banks in Free Trade Zones get tax, duty waivers

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said it would henceforth grant tax and duty waivers to banks operating in the Free Trade Zones (FTZs).

    CBN Director, Banking and Payment System, ‘Dipo Fatokun, who made this known in a circular, said the incentives will further the apex bank’s mandate for the development of banking operations in the country.

    The incentives, contained in the guidelines for banking operations in FTZ released yesterday, include freedom to move funds in and out of the zone on all eligible transactions, exemption from stamp duties on all its documents, exemption from withholding tax deductions on interest payable on deposits, dividends and royalties and exemption from corporate and capital gains taxes.

    The lenders, Fatokun said, will also be exempted from payment of duties on imports of furniture, office equipment and other facilities necessary for its operations; and any other incentives as may be approved by the CBN, from time to time.

    He said only banks or financial holding companies licensed under the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA), or licensed foreign banks, shall qualify to apply to the authority for approval to establish presence to carry on banking business in Nigeria’s FTZs.

    The CBN Director said the provisions of the Nigerian Export Processing Zone Authority (NEPZA) Act, Oil and Gas Free Trade Zone Act, BOFIA, CBN Act, and Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation  Act and all guidelines and regulations issued pursuant to these Acts shall apply to banks operating in the FTZs.

    “Without prejudice to the powers of NEPZA to grant Licenses, no enterprise shall carry on banking business in any FTZ in Nigeria without a prior approval granted to the parent bank and banking license granted to the subsidiary by the CBN. The required minimum paid-up capital to operate in FTZ of Nigeria shall be $10 million, or such other amount as the CBN may from time to time prescribe. In addition, a bank in the FTZ shall meet all the prudential requirements as may be specified from time to time by the CBN,” he said.

    Fatokun said a bank in the FTZs shall disclose to the CBN, the equity interests of its directors and key officers in any enterprise in the zones within 14 days of acquisition of such interest.

    He said a licensed bank in the FTZ may accept deposits; grant to any person, advance, loans, or credit facility, or give any financial guarantee, or incur any other liability on behalf of any person; make remittances of funds abroad or to Nigeria Customs Territory on behalf of any non-resident; undertake any other foreign exchange transaction as may be prescribed by the CBN, from time to time; and carry out any other activity that may be approved by the CBN.

    However, the CBN stopped such lenders from sourcing foreign exchange from the official foreign exchange market of the Nigeria Customs Territory; opening an account for a customer in contravention of the Know-Your-Customer (KYC) principles; undertaking any other transactions which are inimical to the interest of the FTZ; and any other activity that may be specified by the CBN or other relevant authorities, from time to time.

    Also, banks within the FTZs are required to ensure strict adherence to the provisions of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011 (as amended), Terrorism (Prevention) Act, 2011 (as amended) and the Central Bank of Nigeria AML/CFT Regulations for Banks and Other Financial Institutions in Nigeria, 2013.

    The sources of funds for the lenders include deposits from non-bank customers such as Multinational Corporations, International Corporations, Non-resident or resident persons or entities, approved Enterprises in the FTZs, Regional Financial Agencies or Institutions and Euro-Money Markets; Inter-bank borrowing within the FTZs or with foreign banks; Export Proceeds; Equity Capital; and Such other sources of funds as may be approved by the CBN from time to time in consultation with the Authority.

  • Lawyers urged to stand for free, fair elections

    Lawyers urged to stand for free, fair elections

    Participants in the just concluded 2015 annual law week of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Owerri Branch, have urged lawyers to ensure free, fair and credible elections.

    The theme of the law week was “ 2015  general elections in Nigeria: the task before the legal profession.”

    Imo State governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha urged lawyers to help proffer solution to the country’s problems.

    He said: “When God chooses a man, there is nothing anybody can do about it, I respect lawyers because they  make and unmake the Nigerian state. So, the fear of  legal  profession is the beginning of political wisdom.”

    He expressed concern that the campaigns are moving away from issues, rather, the focus is now on ethnicity and religion.

    Okorochas said the Police, the Army, the Department of State Security (DSS) and money would play crucial roles in determining who wins elections. To the governor, whoever has control  over them usually wins.

    The branch Chairman, Mr. Stanley Chidozie Imo said  lawyers owe a duty not only to their clients, but to the country to uphold the rule of law and deepen democratic ideals and norms.

    Justice Mary Peter–Odili of the Supreme Court, who chaired the event, urged lawyers as ministers in the temple of Justice to always assist the court to arrive at the ‘justice of the matter.’

    Justice Odili said: “Firstly the role of the legal practitioner when faced with the disputes that would naturally occur at the end of the political battles in the fields of play precisely at the polling booths, the ward level, the local government and the state level collation centres as the case may be.  The election proper cannot be complete without taking into consideration the pre-election dissatisfactions, which may or may not be possible disputes warranting a recourse to the law court

    “Therefore, a responsibility is placed on him not to take on a brief that would only lead to an irritation of the courts as the perceived dispute,  when looked at properly,  may not be  more than a whimsical fancy of a politician seeking notice. When such a presentation occurs,  it behoves the legal counsel to render the required advice and urge the client to seek mediation outside of the court or to forget the perceived wrong, which would take the party nowhere.

    “For the umpire, judicial officers presiding in the various courts to which these disputes would be presented, there is a duty to ensure that the courts are not made an arena for frivolous petitions or processes that merely pander to the vanity of a particular legal practitioner seeking to display his legal prowess or knowledge of the law or allow a politician to create unnecessary tension with a pending legal process, which is dead on arrival.  In this case, the Judge is enjoined to terminate the process firmly and without temporising.

    “On the other hand would be a political dispute properly before court and one for which a decision would be made either way. There is no gainsaying the fact that justice must not only be done, but would be manifestly seen to have been done as the old adage goes.

    “There must be the fact within the sight of the judge at all times, that justice and peace go together none going alone because  when justice is compromised, peace can never be and no one including the judge,  ‘ is safe in  the environment that no longer knows peace and tranquility.”

    Examining whether there is conflict between the provisions of Sections 285 (6) (7) and 36 of the Nigeria Constitution, former Deputy Director, Nigerian Law School, Enugu Campus, Prof Ernest Ojukwu (SAN) said: If two ideas, beliefs, stories, etc. conflict, it is not possible for them to exist together or for them both to be true.” Can Sections 285(6)/(7) of the Nigerian Constitution exist side by side with Section 36?

    Prof. Ojukwu said: “International Human Rights norms accept that the right of access to the courts is not absolute and that the right could be limited by matters related to issues of  court procedure and  limitation rules and have set some guidelines on which to base a review of national laws and practices on this derogation

    “Examples or the criteria for validating such laws and rules against access to justice have been provided by the United Nations ( UN)  Human Rights Committee and European court of  Human Rights as stated above. Using such criteria, one can conclude that Section 2R5 (6) and (7) of the Nigerian Constitution does not conflict with Section 16 of the Nigerian Constitution, but are permissible limitations under International Law on the right to access to justice.

    “Section 285(6) and (7) as stated earlier were inserted in the Constitution as an amendment to legal regime to cure a mischief brought about by a gap that tended to foist all Nigerians political leaders that were not chosen through the will of the people, the stolen mandate as it has been described. The trial and appeal limitations provided by the law give equal opportunities to both parties in an election petition. The period provided is reasonable and practicable; it does not “restrict the access left to the individual in such a way or to such an extent that the very essence or the right is impaired.” The provisions are also appropriate  between  the means employed and the aim sought to be achieved.

    Speaking on the legal profession and the task before it in the 2015 elections, the Keynote speaker, Justice P. C. Onumajulu, who is a former Chief Judge of Imo State,  identified  general task for all legal practitioners, lawyers at the Bar, the Bench and the general counsel.

    He said: “The term legal profession refers to the profession of persons, who are lawyers which in turn refers to persons who have had courses of training in law and have been inducted into the profession  by being ‘called’ to Bar and therefore, entitled to practice the profession of law in and outside the courts. The lawyer is a versatile professional for he may be a judge, a private,  official legal practitioner, a teacher of law in an institution a director or secretary of any, corporation or other public or private body or institution, a  civil servant, an office holder in any capacity etc.”

    He continued: “The lawyer at the bar in his duty to the court, must show absolute and total respect to the courts and tribunals before which he appears and assist such tribunals to discover the truth of the matter in litigation by frank, truthful and honest statements. correct procedural steps and justifiable actions. He should not hide facts to mislead the courts of tribunal.”

    “The duty to his client is to strive for honesty, and to the best of his ability and learning,  to put across the case of his client to the court to give sound legal opinion and be  courageous. He must know that  election matters have limited tenure and span, and interest of justice demands  that a complaint against an election by way of an election petition should be expeditiously heard and disposed of by the judge to enable the parties to such a petition know, in good time their relative positions. Time, therefore, is of strict essence in election matters. Thus, election petitions should be devoid of procedural clogs incessant and protracted adjournments that cause delay in the disposition of substantive issues and disputes therein

    “This is where the judge has a great task to face and in performing this task he must eschew all forms of bribery and corruption. He must be prepared and able, in spite of all odds, to dispense justice timeously, judiciously and judicially, avoiding in the process, all manner of technicalities that affect the merits of the petition before him because his role requires a high degree of honesty, integrity, transparency, courage and above all the fear and faith in God,” Onumajulu said.

    Former Director-General of Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS), Prof. Epiphany  Azinge (SAN) said there was the need to examine  the role of the Bar and Bench at this critical period of the national history.

    “It cannot be denied that many lawyers are already  looking forward  to the flurry of actives that will characterise the forthcoming elections in the nature of election petitions. For many,  the prayer is that the harvest should be plenty and bountiful. Some are eager to invoke the jurisdiction of tribunals for minute and insignificant reasons all because they want to partake in the sharing  or redistribution of the nations cake, for others their claim to fame is the posturing  of being close to one or two judges  in an election  tribunal.”

    Azinge continued: “There is no denying the fact that lawyers and judges have not fared well as far  as public perception of their role in election  petitions is concerned. This image must change. In some instances, post election violence have occurred because lawyers rightly or wrongly have advised that an election was not free and fair. We must be conscious of our responsibility to the wider society and not to ourselves, our advice and actions should be such that we can defend whenever called upon to do so.”

    Allegations of judicial corruption, he said,  resonates more in election petitions. “Judges must be careful not to be compromised by politicians. Politicians are naturally loquacious and therefore, cannot keep a bargain that transactions between parties are confidential. Win or loose at tribunals, politicians normally quote chapters, verses  and footnots of their dealings with interested parties. So, it is not in the interest of counsel or judges to have dealings with politicians. I hope that 2015 will mark the beginning of judicial  rebirth and that lawyers and judges will stand up to be counted as contributing positively not only to the integrity of the electoral  process,  but also ensuring that judgments of election petitions are unimpeachable,” he said.

    General Mohammadu Buhari, he said, at the Abuja Accord for non-violence on  January 14, delivered a scathing indictment on the judiciary in handling of election matters, saying they  must strive to do their job to the best of their ability. “Even at that, our judiciary remains one of the best in the world. It is my considered opinion that politicians should be careful on how they tarnish the image of the judiciary before the global community,” he said.

    Azinge said it is the responsibility of counsel to explain judgment of courts to their clients to avoid reckless and sentimental imputations by disputants.  “As at the time of preparing this address, the judicial workers were still on strike on. The timing of the strike is not too good for the nation. Firstly, it may not allow the impaneling of election tribunals and secondly most of pre-election matters in court many not be concluded before the election. I want to appeal to all well-meaning Nigerians to see to the immediate resolution of the issues the judicial workers are agitating for,” he said.

    Financial autonomy for the judiciary, he said, is not a matter for debate. “Indeed, states that are yet to buy into that policy should rethink and act immediately,” Azinge said.

    Tangentially related to this, in the words of Azinge, is the crisis rocking the judiciary in Rivers State. “This is not the time to reflect on arguments on both sides of the divide, but to clearly indicate that the image of the Nigerian judiciary has been badly dented by this episode. How can we sell the message that the judiciary is the last hope of the masses when the judiciary cannot resolve its own problem. I think the proper message to the judiciary is “physician  heal thyself,” he said.

    He appealed to the Chief Justice of Nigeria to ensure that the matter is speedily resolved. “May I also invite all well-meaning  members of the bar and bench to intervene and bring this matter to an end before the election starts on  February  14.  Everybody is invited to assist to ensure that we do not end up becoming  a failed state. As always, lawyers have a role to play in ensuring that the right things are done by the appropriate  authorities,” Azinge said.

     

     

     

             

     

  • 26,000 Katsina civil servants benefit from Glo free lines

    26,000 Katsina civil servants benefit from Glo free lines

    Over 26,000 civil servants in Katsina State will receive free SIM cards under the Globacom National Free Access Programme designed to improve the way government workers live, play and interact.

    Receiving the package on behalf of the workers, Katsina State Governor, Alhaji Ibrahim Shema represented by the State Head of Service, Alhaji Muhammad Lawal Aliyu, commended Globacom for the gesture and promised that the facilities would be utilised to improve government business and promote cordiality among government workers.

    He praised Globacom for preparing a directory of all government functionaries from the governor and key officers to the least worker at both the state and local government levels, observing that this would engender friendlier business environment in the state.

    Earlier, Globacom’s Head of  Public Sector, Babatunde Amunikoro, who said the project would facilitate ease of communications among civil servants in the state, thanked the state government for partnering with Globacom to connect workers through the cost effective scheme.

    He said: “The package will enhance security measures across the length and breadth of the state and significantly increase efficiency in the state civil service,” adding that the package is aimed to improve the way civil servants interact.

  • ‘$68.1b fresh FDI coming from free zones’

    ‘$68.1b fresh FDI coming from free zones’

    The Federal Government is targeting about $68.1billion fresh Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) from eight newly licensed free zones, the Nigeria Export Processing Zones Authority (NEPZA), has said.

    NEPZA Managing Director, Gbenga Kuye,  said the enhanced efficiency of the agency, in line with the Transformation Agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan, had helped to fast-track approvals for zones, based on the new checklist and methodology put in place for assessing requests.

    Kuye who spoke in Abuja yesterday, said the investments attracted already, and the incoming ones that had been sealed, provide a solid foundation for a stronger economy and greatly improved the standard of living of Nigerians, adding that the current administration should be commended for the feat.

    He said: “Based on the new checklist and methodology put in place for assessing Free Zone requests, the President approved the following: Centenary City Free Zone (Business and Tourism Destination), with expected investment of about $18billion; Ogogoro Industrial Park, Lagos (oil and gas activities) $160million; and the Nigeria International Commerce City, Lagos, (formerly Eko Atlantic City) $38billion.

    “Others are  Badagry Creek Industrial Park, Lagos-$1.3billion; Nigeria Aviation Handling Company (NAHCO) Free Zone-$25.5million; Dangote Refinery/ Petrochemical Park-$9billion; Lekki Deep Sea Port (under Lagos Free Trade Zone)-$1.4billion; and Samsung Heavy Industries and Mega Construction Integrated FZE (under LADOL Free Zone)-$300million.

    “The Authority is currently at advanced stages for the approval of the proposed Kogi Industrial Park. We are also  consulting with the Cross Rivers State government on the establishment of an Automotive Industrial Cluster in the state.

    “This is sequel to a bilateral relation agreement between Nigeria and Japan, in which Japan has proposed to help develop an auto industrial cluster in Calabar. This is being done in conjunction with the National Automotive Council. Consultations are also ongoing for the revamping of the Idu Industrial Area located in Abuja.”

  • Will elections be free and fair?

    Will elections be free and fair?

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has a duty to organise the general elections without compromising ethics and sacrificing the rules of the game on the altar of partisanship. But, stakeholders, especially leading actors, also have a role to play in ensuring a hitch-free exercise. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU highlights the mistakes the electoral agency and other actors must avoid during the contest.

    Anxiety has enveloped the polity, ahead of the general elections. Politicians are threatening fire and brimstone. Now, there is almost a lull in governance. Much attention is devoted to preparations for the critical polls. Will the election be free and fair? Will it be peaceful and credible? Will Nigeria survive the electoral fever?

    On January 1, President Goodluck Jonathan was combative. In his message to the trembling nation, he warned trouble makers against the danger of violence. He said a repeat of the post-2011 electoral violence will not permitted. The President’s speech was anticipatory. Noting that lives and property were lost, following the announcement of the last presidential election results, he said trouble makers will be severely dealt with.

    The poll may hold in an atmosphere of tension. President Jonathan’s assurance that the poll will be free and fair has provoked ambivalent reaction. Human rights activist Nelson Ekinjimi noted that election has become a war in Nigeria. “When the Vice President said that election will be war in Osun, the President did not caution him,” he recalled.

     

    Policing votes

    Recently, Police Inspector-General Sulaiman Abba also assured that police will police the votes to prevent fraud. But, when he said that policemen will make sure that voters move 300 metres away from the polling unit after voting, there was an uproar. “Police should not only protect the ballot boxes and the voters, the electorate should also have the opportunity to police their votes,” said Ekunjimi, who is the Director of the Centre for Rights and Grassroots Initiative (CRGI).

    Many cleric have been appealing to the political class to ponder on the fate of a country in crisis. They have also called for special prayers among the congregation. In their view, politicians who lack the fear of God may violate the sanctity of the ballot box. Recently, former Foreign Affairs Minister Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi alerted the nation to the inflow of arms and ammunitions. In a country reputed for ethno-religious violence, he expressed worry over what may be the outcome of the presidential poll. If the President, who is from the South is declared winner, will the North accept the result? If the All Progressives Congress (APC) flag bearer, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, who is from the North, is the winner, will the Southsouth or the Niger Delta accept the outcome? he asked. Akinyemi suggested that both candidates should sign an undertaking that there will be no post-election violence. The advice has been ignored.

    Also, a politician and cleric, Prof. Yusuf Obaje, who said that the election will be peaceful, what the nation should prepare for is the challenge of managing the reaction to the exercise. The former university don and Aso Rock Chaplain said he could not predict the reaction that will follow its outcome in a country ravaged by poverty and political ignorance. Obaje warned that, if there is a tie at the presidential election, it could be more challenging. “If there is a third party, this could have resolved the hurdle,” he added.

    Many stakeholders have warned about the desperation by politicians. For the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which has been in power for 16 years, the fear of losing out is rife. The issues on the front burner-insecurity, poor economy and poverty-have made the contest to provoke unprecedented passion. As the PDP tries to justify its push for continuity by reeling out Dr. Jonathan’s achievements, more questions are being raised. These include the decayed infrastructure, especially power outage and roads which have become death traps, soaring unemployment, and corruption. The party has now raised n21 billion to fight the electoral battle.

     

    Inflammable remarks

    The opposition appears to be coming out stronger than 2011 on a bigger platform.  It appears unbothered by the show of bravado by the ruling party. It would appear that the two major partie are of equal strength. Their leaders are also credited with some inflammable remarks. Since the APC was formed, it has survived major obstacles and put its house in order. Therefore, the opposition is louder in its quest for change and power shift more than before. Although the PDP relies on the power of incumbency, the APC National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, has said that it will crumble on poll day. Warning against electoral malpractices, he threatened that the APC will not hesitate to form a parallel government, if the winner is declared the loser.

    The PDP National Secretary, Prof. Wale Oladipo, has warned the APC against over-confidence. He described Buhari as a man who is unfit to rule. “A 72 years old is facing a 52 years old candidate. he has defeated him before. he will defeat him again,” he said. The former university don, however, drew wild criticisms when he described the General as a semi-literate jackboot. But, Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi said that the PDP is uncomfortable because the handwriting is bold on the wall. “2015 is a year we have to take our destiny in our hands,” he said, urging Nigerians to gird their loins.

    Thuggery is also booming, with jobless youths accepting to become willing tools in the hands of unscrupulous politicians. The educated thugs now complement the efforts of motor parks in wrecking havoc. Irked by the recruitment of youths for nefarious activities, Oyo State PDP governorship candidate chided the elite for targeting vulnerable youths. He wondered why rich politicians who keep their children in good schools abroad recruit the children of the poor as thugs and sacrificial lambs.

     

    Political intolerance

    The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega,  has also expressed worry about growing political desperation and lack of tolerance. He said the commission was ready to conduct a transparent poll. But, he warned that the actors may erect roadblocks on the way of peaceful exercise. “The greatest obstacle is the conduct of the political class”, he added.

    Beyond the apparent hot exchanges between the two divides are unresolved issues germane to credible polls. APC National Publicity Secretary Alhaji Layiwola Mohammed said that, if care is not taken, INEC, despite its assurances, may bungle the exercise. He alluded to the controversy surrounding the distribution of the Permanent Voter’s Cards (PVCs). He said the exercise was not tidy. “We have our fears. The PVC distribution was bungled,” he said, adding that the mistake has not been corrected. Collaborating Mohammed’s view, Ekunjimi pointed out that some state governments have even threatened to take INEC to court over the shoddy exercise.

    However, Ekunjimi is worried by other unresolved matters. He complained about lack of concrete arrangement for policing the votes. The rights activist noted the assurance by Jega that policemen who do not appear in their uniform will not be allowed to take part in the electoral duty. But, he said the power that be may over-rule him. Besides, he said the police cannot be trusted, judging by their antecedents as biased security agents on poll day. “The police has disdain for the opposition. That was why the security details of the Speaker of House of Representatives, Hon. Aminu Tambuwal, was withdrawn in a provocative manner. Can the police be trusted with policing the votes? he asked.

    Other stakeholders are not comfortable with the INEC’s position on run-off, if there is a tie. The law stipulates that a re-run should take place in seven days. But, Jega doubted the ability of the electoral agency to meet the deadline. He said the seven days are not enough. Any amendment of the electoral law may not be feasible before the polls.

     

    Litmust test for INEC

    Since the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) nearly bungled the last Anambra State governorship election last year, it has been under fire.  The controversy generated by the Ekiti governorship poll has not also been resolved. To avoid the pitfalls of the past,  Ayo Opadokun, the Coordinator of the Coalition of Democrats for Electoral reforms (CODER), urged the commission to use card readers for the polls.

    Almost four years ago, INEC was about restoring public confidence in the ballot box. The 2011 polls were less controversial than the 2007 conducted by his predecessor, Prof, Maurice Iwu, which were trailed  by a floodgate of litigations. But, that confidence diminished, following its poor showing in subsequent elections and by-elections. Since election, as pointed out by the cleric and politician, Pastor Tunde Bakare, can be free and yet, fraudulent, there are some mistakes INEC must avoid during the general elections. In his view, experience has shown that while the election can be free at the level of voting and counting at the polling booths, it can be fraudulent at the level of collation of results at the collation centers. In fact, in 2011, the poll was hurriedly called off, four hours after it took off nationwide, when it was discovered that polling materials were in short supply.

    In Anambra, the collation was also flawed. In some polling units, there were no result sheets. Many voters cried foul, pointing out that the INEC was not well prepared for the exercise. INEC had officials reported late for the assignment in many local governments. Where the officials reported for the exercise, they did not show up with polling materials. Voters were disillusioned. Many returned home in protest. Later, the commission shifted the exercise in some units till the next day.

    The voter’s register is also critical to the exercise. The omission of voters’ name may induce tension as they are  disfranchised. Also, the accreditation hurdle is a recurring decimal. Voters usually raise objections to the late accreditation and voting. The late arrival of polling officers and electoral materials is also worrisome. In 2011, many voters  returned home without voting because their names were not found in the voters’ register. Some electoral officers gave INEC a bad name. Even, the NIEC Chairman had to hand over a polling officer to the police for interrogation in Anambra.

     

    Do-or-die affair

    Elections have become a burden in Nigeria, owing to the do-or-die contest, thuggery and violence, which often make the critical contest a sort of war. During the Ekiti election, Amaechi was allegedly prevented from entering Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, during the campaigns in the order of the former Minister of State for Defence, Senator Musiliu Obanikoro. In Osun, prominent APC chieftains were harassed on the eve of the governorship elections. “Policemen and soldiers invaded my compund around 1 am. There was sporadic shooting. But, I escaped,” recalled former Governor Isiaka Adeleke. It was the same scenario across the 20 local governments.

    In Anambra, election observers were arrested and briefly detained. They complained about the way their accreditation was handled by the INEC, adding that they were subjected to ridicule while on a national assignment. “The same thing happened in Osun. Policemen harassed reporters and observers. I was prevented from taking the picture of voters on the queue. My camera was even damaged,” said Ekunjimi.

    Two days ago, Lagos APC Publicity Secretary Joe Igbokwe raised an alarm. He said that over-zealousness on the part of policemen and soldiers could spell doom. Igbokwe alleged that plans were underway by Southwest PDP leaders to use police to harass and intimidate APC members. In his petition to the army and police authorities, he said there would be confusion, if the plot is hatched. He therefore, advised the security agencies to maintain neutrality and offer protection to all stakeholders, irrespective of their political leanings.

  • Free tests, drugs for the sick

    Free tests, drugs for the sick

    More than 350 residents of Ago-Egun community in Ilaje, Bariga Local Government Area of Lagos State have benefitted from the free health mission of the council’s immediate past Supervisory Councilor for Health, Hon. Babatunde Osinbajo.

    The beneficiaries, especially children and adults, underwent tests on hypertension, diabetes and blood pressure, among others. They also got free drugs.

    Osinbajo, a younger brother to the vice presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, also donated a water borehole to the community.

    Hon. Osinbajo, who was there to monitor the exercise, told The Nation: “We started these projects early in 2013 out of my deep passion for the welfare of the less-privileged. I can’t stand seeing people suffer around me. I derive fulfilment in putting smiles on the faces of the have-nots. It is a rare spirit that runs in our family.

    “I’m from Ward ‘E’. I have taken my time to traverse every nook and cranny of the entire council area and have found out what the challenges of majority of our people are. I, therefore, felt the bounden burden to do the best I could to lessen their sufferings within the ambit of my God-given enablement. It is a divine calling that must be shared by the privileged few among us across the country to make Nigeria better.”

    Asked if he had any political ambition, the philanthropist replied: “I nurse no political ambition. What I have done for my people so far and what I will still do by God’s grace, are being activated by divine instruction. You don’t need to expect something back from the people before lifting them from the claws of deprivations. After all, what did Jesus Christ demand for all He did for us? So, it is about our attitude to life and how much we care for our fellowmen.”

    He said he had plans to use his non-governmental charity organisation to do more for the people in other areas.

    A beneficiary, Mrs Esther Ukpodeyi, praised saying, she had long grappled with diabetes without the financial wherewithal to tackle it. “May he (Osinbajo) never suffer any ailment,” she prayed.

    Another resident, who preferred anonymity, said: “I know one thing about the Osinbajos – they have the spirit of giving. The family has a school at Obanikoro, where tuition is free.”