Tag: GOVT

  • Dockworkers urge govt to boost eastern ports

    The Nigerian Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN) has advised the Federal Government to boost operational activities at eastern ports.

    Its President, Shipping branch, Ekpeyong Etim Ekpeyong, told reporters in Lagos that Onne, Warri, Port Harcourt and Calabar ports should be made busy by the government through constant dredging of the channels to pave way for bigger vessels to call at the ports.

    Speaking on the advantages of the eastern ports, he said with the government’s support, several jobs would be created in the region.

    Besides, Ekpeyong said the resuscitation of the ports would further reduce youth unrest, noting that  pirate attacks on ships, kidnapping, unemployment and other social vices would also become a thing of the past.

    According to him, the fear of kidnappers and pirates are some of the factors responsible for importers’ low patronage of the eastern ports, hence, the government should rise to the occasion by providing adequate security along the corridors to foster confidence in importers that may want to use the ports.

    “The only thing is to make the ports busy, the more busy the ports are, the more activities will increase and when activities increase, there is prospect of more employment. There are no two ways about it because the advantages of those ports working outweigh the disadvantages,” he said, adding that there is also an urgent need to dredge the routes because the shallowness has made big vessels that have depth not to go there except the flat bottom vessels.

    Ekpeyong said the government has a responsibility to ensure that the ports are functioning well, because if ports in the East are doing well, Lagos ports would be decongested. For him, granting of tax rebate to importers who use the  ports just to encourage them should be considered because between  70 and 80 per cent of importers are from that axis.

    He maintained that good roads and railway lines should be constructed to link ports with cities, adding that by so doing, importers in Anambra, for instance, would not come to Lagos to clear their consignments.

    In a related development, MWUN said it was regrettable that five years after the expiration of the biometric identity cards for seafarers, the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) was yet to renew same for its members.

    Read also: ‘Nigeria’s maritime space porous’

    The union lamented that unregistered workers have been usurping jobs meant for legitimate dockworkers and that the union was no longer comfortable with such practice.

    Consequently, MWUN said it might have to address the issue through an operation codenamed “Option B” if the relevant government authority failed to yield to their demand.

    NIMASA, under its former Director-General Mr. Temi Omatseye, initiated the dock-workers biometric identity card project.

    MWUN President General Adewale Adeyanju, who disclosed this at the Dockworkers Branch Working Committee (BWC) of the union, in Lagos, said dockworkers were peace-loving people who always ensured industrial harmony; but they should not be taken for granted by any group of persons in the industry.

    Adeyanju accused some port concessionaires of engaging unregistered dockworkers, warning that the union would be forced to tour some of the culpable facilities to apply “Option B “. He described the engagement of unregistered workers as unprofessional, noting that the union will not hesitate to clampdown on such persons.

    “We want NIMASA to renew our biometric identity card because for over four years now, this has not been done. All dockworkers, including seafarers in Nigerian seaports were properly registered and we are appealing to them to renew the biometric card,”he said, adding that the union will further alert security agencies to ensure that the unregistered workers are apprehended.

  • Govt begins Port Harcourt Refinery rehabilitation

    The Federal Government has started the first phase of the rehabilitation of the 210,000 barrels per day (bpd) capacity Port Harcourt Refinery complex. It comprises the 60,000 bpd Old Refinery built in 1965 and the 150,000 bpd New Refinery, commissioned in 1989.

    The exercise, flagged–off by the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Maikanti Baru, in the premises of the refinery in Port Harcourt, is coming 19 years after the last Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) the plant.

    The project, according to a statement,  will be executed by Milan-based Maire Tecnimont S.p.A, in collaboration with its Nigerian affiliate, Tecnimont Nigeria.

    The statement said Maire Tecnimont S.p.A is listed on Milan Stock Exchange with interest in international engineering and construction, technology and licensing, and energy business development, adding that the Tecnimont group had operations in 40 different countries, numbering about 50 operative companies with a workforce of about 5,500 employees.

    The GMD was quoted as saying that at the end of the phase 1, the Refinery complex should be able to reach 60 per cent capacity utilisation.

    It said NNPC is engaging eni/NAOC as Technical Advisor to support the Rehabilitation of PHRC, saying NNPC/PHRC would leverage Eni’s extensive refinery supply chain network and warehouses to procure critical materials for the programme.

  • Govt mulls VAT increase

    NIGERIANS were yesterday told to brace for a possible increase in the Value Added Tax (VAT).

    VAT, now five per cent, is undergoing review, after which it may attract between 35 and 50 per cent increase, it was learnt.

    The Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Babatunde Fowler, broke the news yesterday.

    He told the Senate Committee on Finance on the Medium Term Expenditure and Fiscal Strategy Framework (MTEF) that the need to increase VAT was informed by the necessity to raise more revenue for the government to meet its obligations.

    “Nigerians should be ready for increase in VAT before the end of the year. VAT is higher in other countries, including Ghana and many others. There should be increase in rate but not immediately,” Fowler said.

    Noting that VAT collection rose by about 20 per cent last year, the FIRS boss, however, said that many companies collect VAT without remitting same to government coffers.

    Fowler told the committee that the government’s revenue projection from taxes for the 2019 fiscal year is N8 trillion, out of which N3 trillion is expected from VAT.

    The country’s chief tax officer put tax revenue for 2018 at N5.3 trillion; N4.03 trillion in 2017; and N3.31 trillion in 2016.

    The FIRS raked in N5.3 trillion  last year.

    Fowler said: “By the end of this year, we should be ready for increase in VAT. A lot of Nigerians travel to Ghana and other West African countries and they can see that theirs is much higher. And they pay when they go for those trips. We should be ready for an increase on VAT.

    “I can certainly see an increase in VAT of at least 35 percent to 50 per cent this year based on our enforcement activities. There certainly will be an increase in Company Income Tax (CIT) and also on Petroleum Profit Tax (PPT).”

    On the new minimum wage, Budget & National Planning Minister Udo Udoma said: “Let me speak on the issue of the minimum wage.

    But financial experts have cautioned the government so that the reason for raising the VAT will not be counter productive.

    To a former Executive Director at Keystone Bank, Richard Obire, raising VAT was not the problem but the application of its proceeds.

    He said raising VAT just to pay salary will not add any value to the economy, arguing that the people are better managers of funds than the government.

    According to Obire, VAT should be exempted on products that affect the poor as it will make them poorer and worsen their economic conditions with increased prices of goods and services.

    Chief Operating Officer, GTI Capital, Kehinde Hassan said: “The proposal to increase VAT may be equated to a counterproductive move. The just approved N30,000 minimum wage is a far cry from a standard remuneration package that can guarantee minimum standard of living in Nigeria. Increasing VAT rate to enhance non-oil revenue generation is synonymous to spicing a favourite delicacy with digestive pills.

    The Chief Executive Officer, Sofunix Investment and Communication, Sola Oni said: “The N30,000 minimum wage has been endorsed by the senate after protracted argument between the organized labour and the federal government . However, the proposed plan by the FIRS to increase Value Added Tax (VAT) is like carrot and stick. There is no doubt that VAT is more transparent to charge and it reduces tax evasion.”

    According to him, “it is an indirect way of taxing the new minimum wage in real term. Workers are consumers of products and services. Hence, part of their new minimum wage shall go for VAT.”

  • Govt, Stockbrkers should collaborate

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has called for collaboration between Chartered Institutes of Stockbrokers and the government to provide a platform for economic growth through opportunities by using capital, financial markets to address the country’s infrastructural deficit.

    In a statement by the Strategy and Communications Adviser to the Minister of Industry Trade and Investment, Bisi Daniels, Osinbajo said though the President Muhammadu Buhari administration met a weak economy when it came into power in 2015, it has set the country on a path of growth, industrialization and sound resource management.

    Read also: Boosting agriculture through improved financing

    The Vice President who was represented by the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Okechukwu Enelamah, the Vice President highlighted some of the challenges in 2015 as including rising inflation, declining reserves, exchange rate instability, and a sharp drop in oil revenues, all of which resulted in an economic recession.

     

     

  • Govt accuses PDP of planning to scuttle poll

    THERE is a plot to orchestrate a crisis and trigger panic among the populace, the Federal Government alleged yesterday, accusing the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of planning the trouble.

    It said the plot is in furtherance of the opposition party’s plan to discredit the election and cause a constitutional crisis.

    The government, however, urged the international community to ignore the plot to discredit Saturday’s poll before it is conducted.

    The government, which made the claims in a statement in Abuja by the Minister of Information and Culture, Alh. Lai Mohammed, said PDP bigwigs, including its presidential candidate Atiku Abubakar, his running mate Peter Obi, PDP governors and others, were planning a world press conference to level frivolous and unfounded allegations against the government.

    The statement said: “With just a few days to the presidential and National Assembly elections, the Federal Government has alerted the nation to the last-minute desperate plot by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to orchestrate a crisis and trigger a sense of panic among the populace, in furtherance of their plan to discredit the election and cause a constitutional crisis.

    ”The plot confirms the alarm raised by the Federal Government on Jan. 21st and Feb. 3rd 2019 that the PDP is planning to scuttle the election and, where that fails, discredit it.

    “In the days ahead, PDP bigwigs, including its presidential candidate Atiku Abubakar, his running mate Peter Obi, PDP governors and others, are planning a world press conference in order to level frivolous and unfounded allegations against the Federal Government and the All Progressives Congress (APC).”

    The statement gave insights into the alleged plot by the opposition, including alleged connivance with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) by the Presidency.

    The statement added: “Part of the false allegations they plan to make is that the Presidency, in connivance with the APC, is planning to force the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to announce presidential election results that are favourable to the government in power, on the basis of the false premise that the APC’s intelligence team is worried that the ruling party would lose the elections.

    “The PDP bigwigs also plan to use their world press conference to further disparage the Buhari Administration as well as the ruling APC, with a view to painting an unfavourable image of both to Nigerians and the international community and to put the government on the defensive in the run-up to the polls.”

    The Minister said the “PDP’s last joker is a two-hour live press conference to be addressed by the PDP Publicity Secretary, Mr. Kola Ologbodiyan, on Feb. 14th, the last day of electioneering campaign, to chronicle all their concocted allegations and lies against the ruling government, cast aspersion on the government and the ruling party’s officials and throw innuendos here and there”.

    The statement added: ‘’As electioneering campaign winds down, the PDP has realised that it cannot possibly win a free, fair and credible polls. It has thus resorted to engaging in red herring, hauling insults and abuses at Federal Government and ruling party officials and making outlandish allegations with a view to creating a sense of panic and crisis.

    ‘’The truth is that President Muhammadu Buhari, a man respected globally for his integrity, has continuously assured that the elections will be free, fair, credible and peaceful. He has warmly welcomed observers, both local and foreign., because he has nothing to hide, and because he is sure that the achievements of his Administration will win him re-election.”

    Mohammed urged international community to ignore plot to discredit the poll.

    ‘’We are, therefore, calling on all Nigerians and the international community to disregard any attempt to scuttle or discredit the polls.

    “We urge observers to keep an open mind. There is no cause for alarm, except in the warped imagination of the PDP, which has entered the panic mode and is already ruing the loss of another general election even before it has been held,’’ he said.

  • Govt, stockbrokers to join hands for economic growth

    The Federal Government and stockbrokers have reiterated their commitment to work towards the development of the economy.

    At an interactive session in Lagos, key members of the government’s Economic Management Team and capital market operators agreed on the importance of the capital market in national economic growth and development.

    Representative of the Vice President and Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr Okechukwu Enelamah said the government was willing to partner the market operators to achieve growth.

    Outlining the government’s plans and achievements, Enelamah said the government has been making efforts to ensure sustainable economic growth.

    According to him, programmes, such as Ease of Doing Business in Nigeria, industrial policy and competitiveness, special economic zones, targeted sector policy reforms and trade agreements, among others, are aimed at providing enabling environment for sustained economic development.

    He urged stockbrokers to continue to make input to government policies as well as specific requirements for the market, assuring that government will always consider such input.

    Nigeria Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC) Chief Executive Officer, Ms Yewande Sadiku outlined efforts being made by the Commission to attract investors across the globe into Nigeria through an array of incentives.

    She advised stockbrokers to visit the NIPC website regularly and make input on how to attract investors.

    The interactive session generated discussions on how taxation is impacting negatively on stockbrokers’operations and the way forward.

    At the event organised by the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS), stockbrokers urged the government to further take advantage of investment opportunities in the capital market to mobilise funds to execute development projects.

    Besides, they identified communication gap between the government and the market as one of the reasons for the government’s inability to put the market on the front burner of Nigeria’s economic revival strategy, urging the government to place the market on the same pedestal with money market without delay.

    Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS) President, Mr.Adedapo Adekoje said the government should use the market to fund this year’s  fiscal budget with ease.

    According to him, the government’s investment through savings bond and similar asset classes could not fully finance infrastructural deficit, hence, the urgent need to float revenue bonds in addition to general purpose bonds.

    He reiterated the need to re-constitute the board of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and accord the Commission a status of independence like the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in line with the global best practices.

    In his presentation on “Strategies to achieve double-digit growth for Nigeria: The capital market option”, Mr. Mike Itegboje noted that developed economies leveraged  the market for growth and development.

    He urged the government to borrow a leaf from countries, such as the United States and China, which  place premium on the use of their  markets for development.

    “The U.S. capital markets are the bedrock of the nation’s economy and the deepest and most liquid in the world. That depth and efficiency is evidenced by the size of the gross domestic product, the strength of the US commercial sector, the level of home ownership, and the vast national infrastructure across the fifty states in comparison to the rest of the world”, Itegboje, a former president of CIS, said.

    SEC Acting Direcctor-General Ms Mary Uduk called for privatisation of moribund government enterprises through the market.

    According to her, such move this would not only ensure revival of the companies, but also deepen the market after listing.

    Uduk said the essence of the Commission’s Ten-Year Development Plan was to make market competitive.

     

  • Govt, DFI sign deal to develop economic zones

    The Federal Government has signed investment agreements with three Development Finance Institutions- Afreximbank, Bank of Industry and the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) for the development of special economic zones in the country.

    A statement by the Strategy and Communications Adviser to the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Bisi Daniels, said President Mohummadu Buhari who presided over the signing ceremony, assured that the special economic zones will become operational soon.

    Daniels listed the projects in the pilot phase to include Enyimba Economic City, Funtua Cotton Cluster and Lekki Model Industrial Park, saying the three DFIs are among the five to partner with NSEZCO and the Ministry of Finance Incorporated. NSEZCO intends to raise at least $500million in equity over the first five years to execute the ambitious strategy of becoming a leading investor in special economic zones in the country. The other investment partners are African Development Bank (AfDB) and Africa Finance Corporation (AFC).

     

    Called Project MINE (Made in Nigeria for Exports) the development of special economic zones under the direct supervision of the President Muhammudu Buhari, is a Presidential special priority intervention aimed at using the zones to attract substantial foreign and domestic investment for the development of world-class facilities dedicated to export-oriented manufacturing in a range of industries across Nigeria.

     

    Project MINE seeks to position Nigeria as the pre-eminent manufacturing hub in sub-Saharan Africa and as a major exporter of made in Nigeria goods and services regionally and globally; as well as boosting manufacturing’s share of Gross Domestic Product to 20 per cent; generating $30bn in annual export earnings; and creating 1.5 million new jobs all by 2025.

  • Govt stops payment of GenCos’ shortfall

    The Federal Government yesterday said it had stopped paying for the shortfall for the 4000mega watts per hour (Mwh) to the Electricity Generation Companies (GenCos).

    The Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Power, Dr. Louis Edozien, told stakeholders at the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) workshop on Eligible Customer Regulation in Abuja,  that the Electric Power Sector Act does not make provision for the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Company (NBET) to pay for the shortfall to the GenCos.

    He told the stakeholders that in line with the contractual agreements, it is the consumers who should pay for the power they consume.

    He said: “In addition to that 2,000Mw,  the 4,000Mwh that is consistently being delivered is not fully paid for. Government through the nation’s insurance programme is paying the generation companies for any shortfall payment from NBET.

    “Clearly that is not what the Act intends the industry to be. And ultimately government has to exit from this role.

    “So, it is this regulation that will ensure that not just stranded power, but that generated power is delivered to consumers who are contractually bound to pay for it and  if they do not pay for it, they do not enjoy the service.”

    Dr. Edozien said it was obvious that there is more generation than the consumers can pay for, stating that the solution is for the stakeholders to look for the customers that are not well served under the Eligible Customers Regulation to take it and pay for it for their benefits.

    He said if “we do this aggressively, the 2,000Mw of so-called stranded generation will quickly evaporate,”saying  stakeholders should look for customers to buy the stranded power because it was in appropriate for government to continue to pay for the power.

    He argued that government cannot perpetually pay for customers’ power consumption.

    Edozien pointedly told the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) to stop complaining about non-increase of tariff to the NERC, saying it should work with the GenCos to get willing customers to buy the available power.

    He said: “I have a message also for TCN: stop complaining to NERC about your tariff. Your job is to satisfy your own customers, that is GenCos and DisCos.

    “Work with them as you have the money to find all customers using this policy who will take the power GenCos have, contract with GenCos at a tariff that you, the GenCos and customers agreed to transmit the power close to the customers. That is the way you will raise your revenue.”

    He urged the DisCos  to satisfy their customers in order to encourage them to pay for the service.

    Edozien said the reason  customers would want to take advantage of the eligible customer regulation, is when they are not satisfied with the services rendered to them by the DisCos.

    “This is your opportunity to service your customers better. Listen to them when there is infrastructure challenge in getting the product to them,” Edozien said.

    There was however a mild drama as the Deputy Managing Director, Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company, John Ayodele countered the Permanent Secretary on stranded 2,000Mw.

    He told the stakeholders that there is no stranded 2,000Mw any where in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI), but the Executive Director, Mainstream Energy Solution Limited, Siraj Abdullahi, insisted that his company, Kainji Power Hydro habours some stranded power.

    He challenged the stakeholders to visiting the plant to see things for themselves.

     

  • Govt launches campaign to boost troops’ morale

    Nigerians got a call yesterday – support the military’s war against Boko Haram, the terrorist group troubling the Northeast.

    The Federal Government launched a campaign in support of the war against Boko Haram and Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

    The campaign is to:

    • tell Nigerians that Boko Haram has grown beyond homegrown insurgency;
    • warn against the publication of doctored videos and pictures to deride troops in the Northeast;
    • urge the media to uphold professionalism in reporting the insurgency, seeking official clarification before reporting casualty figures; and to
    • boost the morale of Nigerian soldiers who are making the supreme sacrifice.

    Information, Culture & Tourism Minister Lai Mohammed, who unveiled the campaign in Abuja, said ISIS has a strong foothold in West Africa – with Nigeria at the forefront of the battle against the group.

    He urged Nigerians to support troops in the Northwest.

    Mohammed said: “Recall that on January 8, 2019, we announced that we would soon launch a campaign to seek the support of the citizens for our troops, especially in the fight against insurgency. Today marks the fulfillment of that promise as we are here to formally launch the NATIONAL CAMPAIGN IN SUPPORT OF THE MILITARY.

    “It is a follow-up to the hugely-successful National Campaign Against Insecurity, which we launched on February 16th, 2016, with the punch line: ‘If you see something, say something’.

    “Why are we launching this campaign? Because we believe that the men and women in uniform who are risking all, including making the supreme sacrifice, to keep us safe deserve the support and prayers of all Nigerians, not vilification, insults and other acts that are capable of dampening their morale.”

    The minister also said the campaign became necessary because Boko Haram had grown beyond homegrown insurgency.

    He added: “And why are we launching the campaign now? Because, as our gallant men and women in uniform clear the remnants of the home-grown insurgency called Boko Haram, they are confronting a fresh crisis, a global insurgency.

    “A faction of Boko Haram has aligned with the global terror group, ISIS, to form ISWAP, the Islamic State’s West African Province. In other words, ISIS now has a strong foothold in West Africa – with Nigeria in the forefront of the battle against them.

    “With ISIS largely dislodged from Iraq and Syria, there is undoubtedly a flush of fresh fighters and weapons to ISWAP.

    “Therefore, our military is fighting a global insurgency, without the kind of global coalition, including the United States that battled ISIS in Syria and Iraq.”

    Mohammed said it was unfortunate that some Nigerians indulge in spreading false information against troops who are laying down their lives to protect the country.

    He expressed regrets that doctored videos and pictures were being circulated in order to spite gallant troops in the Northeast.

    The minister said: “Those who do not understand the fresh threat facing our nation, nor appreciate the sacrifice of our troops, have now made it their past-time to wage a campaign of disinformation against the military, especially in the social media. Doctored videos and pictures purporting to show massive military casualties are willfully circulated online. Such unpatriotic acts are discouraging and demoralising our troops, and must stop forthwith.

    “Let me state that those who engage in this act of disinformation are few, and do not represent the majority of Nigerians who appreciate the patriotism and the sacrifice of our gallant troops. That’s why we are launching this campaign to mobilise the majority of the good people of Nigerians, irrespective of their political, religious or ethnic leanings, to show support for our military.

    “It is high time that everybody joined in supporting this global war (against insurgency). It’s not unusual, as a matter of fact it’s usually the practice, that when a country is faced with this kind of challenge, people will sink their differences and work together.”

    Mohammed gave insights into the latest campaign, including massive radio, television and social media interventions.

    He said: “The National Campaign in Support of the military will be multi-faceted. It will include the production and airing of special jingles on radio and television, social media intervention and advocacy. In fact, the jingles are ready, and will be airing on radio and television starting this week. Also, the materials for newspaper and social media are ready.

    “We also want to enlist the support of the media for this campaign. The media should indeed play the lead role in the campaign. We are happy to note that some television stations have already started airing their self-produced Television Commercials (TVCs) in support of the military. We thank them for this and we urge others to join them.”

    The minister cautioned the media against reporting casualty figures in the Northeast without official clarification.

    “We also want to appeal to the media to show utmost professionalism in reporting the insurgency. They must seek official clarification before reporting casualty figures, and must realize that the military will not release the identities of soldiers who have paid the ultimate price without first notifying their families.

    “They must also not reveal national security as well as military plans, since such acts can put our troops in harm’s way,” Mohammed said.

  • No dictatorship here, says govt

    The Federal Government yesterday rejected the allegation that Nigeria is sliding into dictatorship because of the filing of charges against Chief Justice of Nigeria Walter Onnoghen at the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT).

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration “stands firm on the Rule of Law”, the government said.

    It insisted that Justice Onnoghen has a case to answer on the alleged breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers.

    Besides, it maintained that the only body statutorily empowered to deal with this is the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), adding that the CCT was right to have directed Justice Onnoghen’s suspension. The President, said the government, did the right thing by acting on the orders of the tribunal.

    The government said it was “unfortunate that the talk about due process has overshadowed the talk about the substance”.

    It accused the leading opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), of engaging in “hysteria and theatre of the absurd to overheat the polity”.

    It said that Onnoghen’s trial is not about the forthcoming elections.

    Minister of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed stated the government’s position at a crowded briefing in Abuja, where he pointed out that said the CJN had been given fair hearing.

    But he expressed regrets that Justice Onnoghen had been abusing his position and dodging service of legal papers.

    Mohammed said: “As you would recollect, President Buhari last Friday complied with the order of the CCT, directing the suspension of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Hon Justice Walter Onnoghen, pending the determination of the cases against him at the Code of Conduct Tribunal and several fora relating to his alleged breach of the Code of Conduct for public officers.

    “Since then, there have been widespread reactions from within and outside the country. In particular, the opposition has latched on to it, threatening fire and brimstone and concocting all sorts of imaginary scenarios and generally muddying the waters.

    “In what I will call the theater of the absurd, the main opposition party, the PDP, even suspended its electioneering campaign for 72 hours! Of course, you must have seen my reaction to that. I said there is nothing to suspend in a campaign that never took off in the first instance! So much for the opposition’s hysteria.

    “Today, I have called this press conference to set the records straight and redirect the discourse. Contrary to what the opposition and their ilk have been saying, this is not about the forthcoming elections; neither does the suspension of the CJN signal the beginning of dictatorship. President Buhari is an avowed democrat, and this he has proven time and time again. This administration stands firm on the rule of law!”

    Mohammed said the charges against Justice Onnoghen border only on the alleged breach of the Code of Conduct for public officers.

    He added: “This whole issue is about the country’s highest judicial officer, the Chief Justice of Nigeria, being accused of a breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers, and the legal and moral conundrum surrounding that.

    “It is about the suspicious transactions running into millions of dollars to the suspended CJN’s personal accounts, all undeclared or improperly declared as required by law. It is about the Hon. Justice Onnoghen himself admitting to the charges that he indeed failed to follow the spirit and letter of the law in declaring his assets, calling it a ‘mistake’. And it is about him refusing to take responsibility, instead opting to put the entire judiciary on trial.

    “Please remember that Justice Onnoghen has been given the opportunity of fair hearing, but he has been abusing his position and the judicial process by filing frivolous applications and even dodging service of process.”

    Mohammed highlighted what he termed as the big picture on Justice Onnoghen’s case.

    He said: “What is the big picture? In the words of The Right Honourable Sir Alfred Denning, or Lord Denning, then Lord Justice of the British Court of Appeal, a judge should in his own character be beyond reproach, or at any rate should have so disciplined himself that he is not himself a breaker of the law.

    “Still talking of the big picture, some have suggested that the suspension of Justice Onnoghen is a threat to our democracy or even the country’s very existence. They are wrong. Again, Lord Denning, himself quoting the words of Sydney Smith, said: ‘Nations fall when judges are unjust, because there is nothing which the multitudes think worth defending.’’

    “Had the section of the media that I referred to earlier understood the big picture, they would have framed the debate differently, rather than work to inflame passion and help those seeking to muddy the waters.”

    The Minister insisted that the only statutory body which can try Justice Onnoghen is the CCT and not the National Judicial Council (NJC).

    He said the allegations against the CJN were beyond professional misconduct.

    Citing some judgments delivered by Justice Onnoghen, the Federal Government said the CJN had severally asserted the powers of the CCT to try any breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers.

    The Minister said: “It is unfortunate that in the ensuing debate, the talk about due process has overshadowed the talk about the substance. Procedure cannot or should not trounce substance.

    “That brings me to the role of the National Judicial Council (NJC). Some have argued that the Justice Onnoghen’s issue should have been referred to the NJC to handle. They would have been right if Justice Onnoghen had been accused of professional misconduct, which is what is within the purview of the NJC.

    “The allegations against Justice Onnoghen go beyond professional misconduct. It is the alleged breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers. And only one body is statutorily empowered to deal with this: The Code of Conduct Tribunal.

    “Interestingly, Justice Onnoghen himself has elucidated on this. In various judgments, he upheld the provisions of the law concerning the CCT. In one particular judgment he delivered on July 12, 2013, Justice Onnoghen held that the CCT had EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION (emphasis mine) to deal with all violations contravening any of the provisions of the Code of Conduct Bureau.

    “Let me put this in a layman’s language: All breaches of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers must be handled by the Code of Conduct Tribunal. Pure and simple. In other words, Justice Onnoghen’s judgment held that the provisions “expressly ousted the powers of ordinary regular courts in respect of such violations”.

    “In a case between Ismaeel Ahmed and Nasiru Ahmed, Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), Chairman of the Kano State chapter of the party, and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which has been reported by the media, Onnoghen, while interpreting Paragraph 12 of the Fifth Schedule of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) as regards CCT’s jurisdiction held that, “…the said paragraph 12 provides as follows: ‘Any allegation that a public officer has committed a breach of or has not complied with the provisions of this Code shall be made to the Code of Conduct Bureau.”

    “The judgment, which was delivered at the Supreme Court with suit number ‘SC.279/2012’ before Justices Onnoghen and others, also held that the provisions of the law are clearly unambiguous. Justice Onnoghen said that the provisions are, “so construed literally meaning that any breaches of any provisions of the said 5th schedule or matters of noncompliance with any provisions of the Code shall be made to the Code of Conduct Bureau that has established its Tribunal with the exclusive jurisdiction to deal with any violations of any provisions under the Code.’’

    “Is anyone still in doubt that the CCT is the right court to try the alleged breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers levied against Justice Onnoghen? Is it not clear that challenging the jurisdiction of the CCT to try him is an abuse of court process by Justice Onnoghen?

    “As for those who argued that the CCT is wrong in ordering Justice Onnoghen’s suspension, are they aware that Justice Onnoghen himself disagreed with them? In the judgment I referred to earlier, he wrote: ‘The Tribunal to the exclusion of other courts is also empowered to impose any punishments as specified under sub-paragraphs (2) (a), (b) & (c) of paragraph 18 as provided in sub-paragraphs 3 and 4 of paragraph 18 while appeals shall lie as of right from such decisions to the Court of Appeal Justice.

    “In essence, the CCT is right to have directed Justice Onnoghen’s suspension, and the President did the right thing by acting on the orders of the CCT. Needless to say that in many of the cases of professional misconduct against judges that Justice Onnoghen has presided over at the NJC; judges have been suspended while still undergoing trial!

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    The Minister listed some other issues surrounding Justice Onnoghen’s matter.

    ”Gentlemen, from the foregoing, it is clear that:

    • Contrary to the cacophony of voices that have been muddying the waters, the CCT was acting within its powers in ordering the suspension of Justice Onnoghen as Chief Justice of Nigeria, and President Muhammadu Buhari was right in carrying out the order.
    • The suspension of Justice Onnoghen is a consequence of his breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers and has nothing to do with the forthcoming elections, neither does it signify the onset of dictatorship or tyranny as some have insinuated. It amounts to irresponsible extrapolation to say that the suspension of Justice Onnoghen is the onset of dictatorship.
    • A section of the media shirked their agenda-setting role by failing to objectively lead the discourse on the issue of the allegation facing Justice Onnoghen and his subsequent suspension. Certain editorials crossed the acceptable limit of decent discourse, and did little or nothing to enlighten the public on the issue at stake.

    The Minister faulted the opposition for engaging in hysteria and for overheating the polity.

    He said: “The opposition, in its reaction, is guilty of engaging in hysteria and for overheating the polity. Conveniently, they have anchored their failed campaign for the 2019 election on an issue that is totally unrelated to the election.

    “By their reaction, they have made their tattered umbrella available for shielding alleged corrupt persons. Their leopard can never change its spots: The PDP is corruption personified and it’s only reason for seeking a return to office is to complete their looting of the national treasury.

    “The attack dogs unleashed by the opposition have been engaging in incitement and other actions that can threaten law and order. There is no cause for alarm, as the law enforcement agencies are alive to their responsibilities

    “The threat of mass action by some groups cannot undermine the course of justice. More Nigerians are with us than are with them on this issue, going by the feelers that we are getting from across the country. Those who want to protest against the suspension of the CJN should feel free to exercise their rights within the limits of the law.”

    Mohammed cautioned the media against hasty conclusions on Justice Onnoghen’s case which had led to some ill-informed editorial comments.

    “It is regrettable to note that the media, which should have led the discourse, has not done so. In fact, a section of the media has taken sides.

    “Several newspapers have written editorials on this issue. Some newspapers have employed rather crude and obnoxious language to push forth their opinions while others have been more tempered.

    “But, curiously, none has written from a perspective that shows that they understand the big picture,” the minister added.