Tag: Gov. Willie Obiano

  • ‘Anambra reiterates promise to pay N30,000 new minimum wage’

    The Anambra Head of Service, Mr Harry Udu, has reaffirmed the state government’s commitment toward implementing the new minimum wage as promised.

    The head of service made the assertion in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Awka on Friday.

    He said the implementation would help motivate civil servants in the state to performing their duties optimally.

    Udu said Gov Willie Obiano had given matching orders to the Internally Generated Revenue agencies to redouble efforts in raising extra N1.4 billion that would ensure that the promise was kept.

    He said that Obiano’s pledge in his address to civil servants during the electioneering period to be the first to pay the wage once approved was not a political statement.

    Read also: New Minimum Wage Bill passes first reading in Senate

    “Gov Obiano remains irrevocably committed to fulfilling the promise of being the first governor that will pay the new wage once approved,” he said.

    Udu said that the governor had read the riot act to all its revenue agencies and pointed out the importance of maintaining its standards.

    “Government is focused on making arrangements to move to the new minimum wage without having challenges in the legacy of the governor.

    “Efforts are being made to get additional revenue to sustain the practice of workers receiving salaries on 25th of every month.” Udu said

    The head of service said the directive on the financial implication of the N30,000 minimum wage and other options being considered were being handled, so as to have a seamless transition.

    Udu said that since the Nigerian Senate had approved the wage increase, efforts are on top gear to ensure that the promise was actualised, once President Muhammadu Buhari gave assent to the bill.

    He said that the Salary and Wages Commission would issue a circular on its implementation indication chart, the grading.

    “Once all those processes were done, then the promise will be achieved after due calculations,” he said.

    The head of service disclosed that the government also had a program for the housing scheme for its civil servants adding that the area had been mapped out.

    He urged civil servants in the state to be more committed to their work and ensured that they discharged their duties professionally at all times so as to assist in making the state great. (NAN)

  • Complete Anambra Airport, APGA S/Africa urges Obiano

    Complete Anambra Airport, APGA S/Africa urges Obiano

    The All Progressives Grand Alliance ( APGA ), South Africa chapter, has urged Gov. Willie Obiano to complete the state Airport project at Umuleri to enhance commerce and trade.

    The Chairman of the party, Mr Henry Onyekumnaru, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Durban, Kwazulu Natal Province of South Africa on Thursday that when completed, the airport would generate revenue and employment for the state.

    “ As we congratulate Gov. Obiano on his re-election, we urge him to implement his legacy projects.

    “ The one that is important to us is the airport, located at Umuleri. We understand that a Chinese firm is handling it and it is expected to be completed in 36 months,” Onyekumnaru said.

    He said that with the state-owned Orient Refinery situated in Aguleri, the airport would become a major hub in West Africa.

    “ The airport is designed to handle cargo. Majority of the business community in the South-East are from Anambra.

    “It will encourage them to import cargo direct from any part of the world, instead of going through Lagos or Abuja.

    “ Besides, when the refinery is completed, it will produce aviation fuel. This will make easy for major airlines to refuel in Anambra instead of going to Ghana.

    “ The good news is that the refinery is not far from the airport, “ the chairman said.

    According to him, the airport will also serve as an export hub for the business community in the country.

    “ Our expectation is that in the next 36 months, Anambra will be a major business hub for aviation, oil and gas sectors.

    “Nigerians will certainly key into this venture for the development of the state and country, ” Onyekumnaru said.

  • Tinubu wants more power devolve to states

    Tinubu wants more power devolve to states

    …Says FG taking much power

     

     

    National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has said that for the nation to develop as a federation, the federal government must devolve powers to the states and relieve itself of the numerous burden it has placed on itself, saying there was too much concentration of power at the Centre.

    Tinubu said Nigeria was currently practicing what he called unitary federalism in total violation of the principles of federalism as practiced by other countries.

    Delivering a lecture entitled “Daily Times at 91: Building the future by respecting the past”, the former Lagos state governor also took a swipe at the nation’s budgetary system which is said lay too much emphasis on the intake of dollars, a system which he said had long been abandoned by other nations.

    He said Nigeria need to break away from the self-imposed dollarization of our fiscal space. The intake of dollars determines our budgets. We operate under an implicit dollar standard. However, the global dollar standard was formally abandoned over 40 years ago.

    Represented by the governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, the APC national leader said: “the Constitution declares Nigeria a federation of 36 states. However, we still grapple with the vestiges of our past under military rule. In many ways, we still function like a unitary state despite the constitution.

    “More powers and resources need to devolve to the states. The Federal Government is taking on too much. We cannot flourish with over concentration of powers at the centre. Some of the 68 items on the Exclusive Federal List should be transferred to the Residual List, as it was in most federal constitutions.

    “A notable feature of even our own 1963 Constitution was the extensive powers granted to the regions which enabled them to carry out their immense responsibilities as they best saw fit. This was because the regions inherently had a better sense and feel for the needs of their populations simply by virtue of the fact that they were closer to the people than was the centre.

    “Some items which ordinarily should be state matters like police, prisons, stamp duties, taxation of incomes, profits and capital gains, regulation of tourist traffic, registration of business names, incorporation of companies, traffic on federal truck roads passing through states, trade, commerce and census among others were transferred from the Concurrent to the Exclusive List.

    “I’m opposed to federalism operated as a unitary monster. As Lagos State governor, I challenged several Federal Government decisions for overreach and for violating the principles of federalism.

    We created additional local governments because the constitution empowers states to regulate local council affairs. Today, those 37 additional councils have helped Lagos significantly as development centres. We took the Federal Government to court on issues like the regulation of the hospitality industry, fiscal planning, and on who had the authority to issue Certificates of Occupancy.

    “Regarding electrical power, we must move beyond limiting states to generate, transmit and distribute electricity to areas not covered by the national grid. Our problem is a lack of power yet, we preclude states from helping to resolve this chronic problem that stabs at the very heart of economic development.

    “It is not right to say states can generate power but cannot sell it where they want. Without yielding any countervailing benefit, this policy suppresses the generation of needed power instead of enhancing.”

    The former Lagos state governor endorses the analysis of Lagos state Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode and others that current interest rate levels in the country bridle growth by making borrowing for long-term investment too costly.

    While saying that Government correctly seeks fiscal stimulus to energize the limping economy, he argued that efforts in this direction are perhaps too modest given the situation that confronts us.

    He said “Our monetary authorities have done better recently but they need to take additional steps to increase the fiscal space available to government and the private sector. I endorse analysis of Governor Ambode and others that current interest rate levels bridle growth by making borrowing for long-term investment too costly.

    “Monetary authorities appear to be more concerned with battling inflation than in sparking growth. However, the nature of our inflation – mainly cost driven – is beyond the purview of interest rate policy to contain. Instead of surrendering growth to curb inflation, current policy sacrifices both.

    “Also, the varying exchange rates distort economic and monetary signals. The vast rate differentials is fertile ground for currency arbitrage and speculation. This means that too much money will chase rentier opportunities in the financial sector instead being plowed into vital investment in the jobs and equipment needed for the production of actual goods.

    “More fundamentally, we need to break from the self-imposed dollarization of our fiscal space. The intake of dollars determines our budgets. We operate under an implicit dollar standard. However, the global dollar standard was formally abandoned over 40 years ago.

    “Instead of this outdated mechanism, we should base our budgetary calculations on the quantity of naira needed to foster the highest growth possible without pushing inflation too high. Such a change in perspective will remove the ideological blinders that thus far have impeded our ability to define our political economy and its path to growth.

    “It also will open the fiscal space so that government can undertake even greater steps to stimulate the real economy in ways that provides jobs and builds the infrastructure needed for sustained economic development.”

    Tinubu argued that no modern nation with a significant urban population has attained prosperity without an industrial base capable of employing larger numbers of people and of manufacturing goods for domestic consumption and export.

    According to him, “to one degree or another, English, American and Chinese governments employed industrial planning to lift their economies during their earlier stages of development. These nations represent the past, present and immediate future of economic achievement. Their success justifies their policies.

    “Yet we depart from what has proven the most effective avenue to prosperity for a large developing nation”, adding that as a nation, “We must press forward with a national industrial policy fostering strategic industries that create jobs and spur growth.  Tax credits, subsidies and the insulation from the negative impact of imports for critical sectors should be integral to this plan. We must remember a national economy cannot grow beyond the capacity of the infrastructural that serves it.

    “Thus, we need a national infrastructure plan closely linked to the industrial plan.  New infrastructure is needed where the new industrial work will take place. We must conquer the political and bureaucratic bottlenecks preventing affordable, reliable electrical power. This impediment places us literally and figuratively in the dark regarding our economic condition.

    “The problems are not technical in nature as reliable electricity is a staple of economic life in nations less endowed than Nigeria. We must persuade and convince those factors that currently impede our national quest for reliable power to move aside so that we can achieve this crucial precursor to economic vitality.

    “Our farmers need a reprieve. We need to increase farm productivity by taking a few critical steps. For example, commodity exchange boards and futures markets to ensure minimum farm incomes and encourage production must become part of our rural economies.”

    He maintained that the Nigeria nation “stand at a moment where history will be made for better or worse.  Other nations have faced tough times. Those which overcame their challenges did so by using creative insight to accurately assess their shortcomings and to identify solutions that would serve them into the future.

    “Nigeria must act in similar fashion. Nothing that any other nation has done is beyond our grasp if we commit ourselves to the task. We have much work to do to create the Nigeria we seek so that the Daily Times may continue to report on the progress of this nation for another 91 years or more.  In doing so, let it chronicle the rebirth of Nigeria as a nation much more prosperous and great than when it was first conceived.”

    The APC leader who went down memory lane to chronicle the contribution of the Daily Times to Nigeria’s political development said “In less than a decade, the Daily Times shall celebrate its centennial.  By God’s grace, we all shall gather again to mark that occasion. But we must ask, what type of Nigeria will Nigeria be ten years hence? If we want to render a good and pleasant answer, we must begin to shape that reply today.

    “Thus, I am here as a Nigerian to speak of what we must do as Nigerians to construct a better land. To some degree or another, our successes and failures belong to all of us. Therefore, this is not the time nor the place to apportion blame or accolade.

    “Instead, I present a vision that I hope can be embraced by all Nigerians regardless of creed, place of birth, social station and political affiliation. Nigeria is at a juncture where it must redefine itself or forever forfeit the right of way to a better future.

    “The primary challenge of our time is our political economy.  The slump in oil prices exposed the weakness of our economy for even the blind to see.  The truth be told, we always knew this weakness existed.

    “Yet we did nothing to cure it when fixing the gap would have been less painful and less urgent. Through indifference, selfishness or ignorance we failed to forge a consensus on how to resolve the collective problem. This failure speaks to a problem of our politics because the decision on how to structure the economy is essentially political in nature.

    “For all the energy invested in politics, the output has been minimal. In short, our politics has been directed at the wrong things. Because of this, Nigeria has too long travelled a self-defeating economic road.

    “Dare not think that we can afford to sit idly and outwait the low oil prices. We cannot fool ourselves into believing that the prices will rebound to prior levels and things will return to normal. That normal many of us pine for was never good enough. It was simply the prelude to the troubles of today and the challenges of tomorrow.

    “To merely wait as if waiting is all we can do is to be like the wishful man who does nothing although he knows a great storm approaches and he has a gaping hole in the roof of the house he just bought.

    “He concludes the rain will not enter his house because such a thing would be unfair since the hole was caused by the mischief of the former owner and not by his own hand. Some might call this man’s belief one of undue optimism. Others might deem it foolhardy. Either way, it is costly, perhaps fatal.

    “The impersonal forces of the economy owe us nothing that we do not doubly owe ourselves. We must break from the inertia that has characterized our approach to major national problems.

    “We need to summon a greater love of our fellow Nigerians.  Such empathy will compel us to embrace ideas to reform the political economy in a manner that lends greater justice and prosperity to all Nigerians.

    “Then we must have the courage not only to envision the beautiful thing, we must have the bravery to embark on the hard work and progressive reforms needed to turn the fine dream into a living and material reality.

    “Our economy has been one where too many people and resources were left idle and thus made poor by virtue of this static predicament. Joblessness or poverty became the byword describing the lives of most people. The industrial base we were developing vanished under a torrent of imported goods.

    “Agricultural production was insufficient to satisfy our needs. Even then, much local produce was allowed to rot on the vine or in transit due to poor farm-to-market physical and financial infrastructure. The harder a farmer worked, the poorer he became. The more a city resident looked for a job, the more frustration overlook him for not finding one.

    “The businessman who wanted to invest in a factory to create jobs and goods found that interest rates and high production costs due to erratic power would turn his balance sheet crimson and were foes too strong for him to overcome. While the productive sectors of the economy floundered, the rentier and financial sector flourished.

    “Those fortunate enough to have access to high finance, made windfall profits merely by virtue of being in the so-called right place at the right time. They did nothing of true economic value. They simply funneled money from one hand to the other. At the expense of the rest of the nation, they profited handsomely from this financial juggling act.

    “The economy became an ungainly and unbalanced albatross. Any growth in the economy only compounded the distorting instead of curing them. The fall in oil prices exposed this economic model for the lie that it was. Now we must fashion a new political economy.

    “In due course, the present recession will end. This should come as some relief. In itself, however, it is not cause for celebration. Far from it. The end of recession does not mean the beginning of prosperity. If we conflate the two, we will shun the labor required to properly reform the political economy. Things will remain as they are. Repeated downdraft and contraction will chase us as surely as night chases day and day chases night.”

    Those in attendance include former Senate President, Adolphus Wabara, senator Bala Ibn Na’allah, Senator John’s Lidani, Senator Sanusi Dagash, Prince Tony Momoh, Sam Amuka, Pete Edochie, senator Moa Ohuabunwa, Senator Enyinaya Abaribe, senator Shehu Sani, Prof. Tunde Adeniran, Hon Ado Doguwa, Senator Gbenga Ashafa, Senator T.A. Orin, Gov. Willie Obiano and his deputy, Gov. Yahaya Bello and his deputy, Ibrahim Shehu Shema, Gov. Ibrahim Hassan Dankwambo, Patrick Dele Cole, Senator John Danboyi, Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu, Gov. Raul Aregbesola, Kabiru Tanumi Turaki who represented former President Goodluck Jonathan, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina and a host of others.

     

  • Anambra: NDLEA arrested 273 suspects in 2016

    Anambra: NDLEA arrested 273 suspects in 2016

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) in Anambra said it arrested 273 drug suspects including 13 females in 2016.

    The figure was 16 lower than the 289 suspects arrested in 2015 in the state.

    The NDLEA Commander, Mr Sule Momodu, made the disclosure to newsmen in Awka on Wednesday.

    Momodu said that it secured 49 conviction during the year under review as against 30 people convicted in 2015.

    He said that 85 people were rehabilitated in 2016 as against 55 in 2015.

    The commander said that the agency made 1,126.33kg drug seizure in 2016.

    The drugs were Cannabis Sativa, 1,099.95kg; Cocaine, 338.5gm; Heroine, 310.9gm; and Methamphetamine, 25.73kg.

    According to him, arrest and prosecution by the agency has immensely contributed to the improved security in the state.

    Momodu stressed the importance of a modern rehabilitation centre in the state, while commending Gov. Willie Obiano for giving approval for a land for the construction which had yet to commence.

    “We need a rehabilitation centre to cut off the increase of the drug users. Without rehabilitation, other people can lure them to go back into the business.

    “But with a rehabilitation centre the governor would have gone the full circle on drug remand reduction,’’ he said.

    Momodu said that the governor had also made valuable contributions to the command in the fight against illicit drug.

    He said that the state government procured two vehicles last year and gave approval for five motorcycles for the command in 2017.