Tag: hard times

  • Sailing through the hard times

    Sailing through the hard times

    Sir: Many households, weary from rising rent and stagnant income, are planning to return to their villages after the yuletide. For some, it is a temporary escape; for others, it is a permanent retreat. The truth is simple—Nigeria’s economic hardship has pressed heavily on the shoulders of her citizens.

    Young people, especially those unable to secure opportunities abroad, now fight daily battles against financial discouragement and emotional fatigue. Yet, paradoxically, the younger generation—the Gen Zs or Zoomers—also stand out with a new kind of hunger. They want steady progress, stable salaries, and real opportunities. They want dignity. They want a Nigeria that works—not for a few, but for all.

    Their voices, loud and unbroken, echo across social media platforms, workplaces, and political spaces. They are demanding the Nigeria their parents dreamed of but never fully saw. The Christmas and yuletide period, especially in Igbo and Southern Nigeria, is traditionally a time of celebration—family reunions, cultural festivals, weddings, dedications, and homecomings. But the festive season in 2025 carries a different tone. The harmattan has arrived earlier and harsher than usual. The dry winds bring not just cracked lips and dusty roads, but a fresh wave of expenses: skincare, warm clothing, more transport costs, and increased food prices.

    Sadly, many vulnerable Nigerians—sick elderly people, young men and women battling chronic illnesses, and families with little means—feel abandoned by a system collapsing under the weight of insecurity and inflation. Survival has replaced festivity. Kidnapping, killings, and banditry have become daily headlines. The recent abduction of 25 female students in Kebbi is a heartbreaking example of the insecurity tormenting the nation. Many religious leaders feel intimidated, while others press ahead, preparing grand end-of-year programs to rekindle hope.

    But in the middle of all this darkness, one truth remains: Nigeria has not reached her end. It is easy in times like this to point fingers—to blame the government, to blame leaders, to blame ourselves. But blame has never built a nation. Blame has never healed a wound. Blame has never lifted a man from poverty.

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    Nigeria’s history has always shown one pattern: when things get tough, Nigerians become tougher. This is not the first time we have walked through fire. This is not the first time we have seen gloom before glory. This is not the first season where the future looked blocked, yet the nation moved forward. What Nigeria needs now is not a nation-wide choir of self-accusation. What we need is a collective return to courage, innovation, unity, and strong faith. We need to believe again—believe that our hands can still build, that our voice can still matter, and that our votes in the 2027 General Elections can redirect the ship of this nation.

    We must also remember something profound: Nations rise when individuals stop waiting for rescue and start taking responsibility for the little corners they can influence. Hope may feel thin, but it is not absent. The Nigerian spirit is too rugged to be defeated by one cycle of hardship. Across cities, states, and local communities, the signs of a new awakening are emerging:  Nigerians now know that leadership matters—more than tribe, more than party, more than slogans. And because of this awareness, a new Nigeria is not just a dream—it is a growing possibility. Hope is not a feeling; it is a discipline. It is the daily decision to believe that your life, your family, and your country can still change for the better. Yes, 2025 has been difficult. Yes, the burden is heavy. But storms have never stopped Nigerians from rising again.

    Let us enter the yuletide season with renewed strength—not because things are perfect, but because Nigeria is still a land of possibilities. Let us prepare for 2026 with fresh vision—not fear. And let us move toward 2027 with courage—not despair.

    •Obiotika Wilfred Toochukwu, Nkono-Ekwulobia Anambra State.

  • Hard times are for learning

    Hard times are for learning

    There are events in the life of nations that transform them forever. While not suggesting that anything happening to Nigerians now approximates what Jews experienced during the Holocaust, after that harrowing experience they vowed ‘never again.’

    South African blacks suffered through the apartheid years and were scarred by their experiences. When Nelson Mandela got his chance to rule he rejected a new form of discrimination by the majority, choosing instead to build a ‘rainbow nation’ out of the ashes of racism.

    Nigeria had her civil war, a sufficiently traumatic event that would have changed another nation. Despite the fact that a generation that were witnesses to its grim fallout are still active in governance, they don’t appear to have learnt any lessons from it.

    Ethnic suspicion, hate, profligacy, lack of vision and extreme corruption – some factors that led to that dark chapter in our history are still alive and well today, as we try to make sense of troublous times more than half a century after the guns fell silent on the Eastern front.

    Perhaps, the excruciating nature of this season is to brand it on our psyche that as a nation we can’t continue business as usual. We have lived a lie for too long. We’ve been pampered and screened from truth about our true condition.

    Read Also: Govt committed to workers’ safety

    Sometime in the last ten years people were horrified when the dollar-to-naira rate breached the N200 barrier; they are shell-shocked now that the greenback is going for over N1,400. Inflation which in the last 20 years never crossed the 20% mark is almost hitting 30%. Although, that’s still a far cry from what prevailed between 1992 when the rate was 44.59% and 1995 when it reached an all-time high of 72.8% under General Sani Abacha.

    Nigeria is smack in the middle of an economic crisis and it’s a hurricane that has been brewing. It is trouble that many with insight had been predicting for years. But administrations that have come and gone chose to play ostrich, ignoring the obvious systemic distortions. This crisis wasn’t caused by the removal of fuel subsidy; that move simply blew away all pretences and exposed the tattered condition of our undergarments.

    Today, it is politically correct to lament about how people are suffering as a consequence of the double whammy of spiralling inflation and naira collapse. Everyone going on about general hardship is simply stating the obvious. Even if they say so a thousand times, it changes nothing. What is needed is the silver bullet that would bring inflation down to lower double figures and forex rates to affordable levels.

    Unfortunately, there are no quick fixes. That is the reason why the twisting and the turning by the Central Bank and all those managing the economy has not resulted in any dramatic improvement. The apex bank can do all the tweaking it wants, if there are no significant increases in dollar inflows, not much would change.

    Part of the problem with our country is living in denial, just kicking the ball down the road, hoping that magically we will emerge from the hole we’ve dug for ourselves.

    I believe that one of the first steps towards recovery is full disclosure. We need to know how bad things are so we can begin to make the necessary adjustments. For instance, Nigerians need to be reminded that up till last year, 95% of all our revenues were being spent on servicing debts!

    The World Bank’s Macro Poverty Outlook for Nigeria: April 2023 put the actual figure at 96.3%. That left less than four percent for funding government’s objectives. The report observed that while oil price booms previously supported the economy, all that changed in 2021.

    The cause for this, according to the World Bank, was macroeconomic stability weakening amidst declining oil production, costly fuel subsidies, exchange rate distortions, and monetisation of the fiscal deficit.

    Our economic reality has largely sustained by things that were not sustainable. Fuel subsidy was not sustainable and virtually everyone – from labour unions, to economists, to all the presidential candidates at the 2023 election agree it had to go.

    The exchange rate was make-believe – sustained by the CBN shelling out billions to defend it against major global currencies. While this allowed the populace to access forex at relatively affordable rates, it opened a thriving window for arbitrage that made overnight billionaires out of people with the right connections.

    The battering of the naira was collective work and we must all own it. Typically, most of those moaning delude themselves they had no hand in it. Those who were making hay round-tripping, government officials who spend billions to buy dollars for hoarding, politicians who have to be bribed to do their constitutional duties and would only receive their gratification in dollars, contributed.

    Most bureaux de change (BDCs) are owned by those who have the power to approve them and allocate forex. For years it was in their interest to sustain the system of multiple exchange rates – virtually placing their feet firmly on the neck of a prostrate naira.

    We didn’t learn much in times of prosperity. Rather than investing proceeds of the 70s oil boom on building a future, the lack of leadership vision saw us squandering petrodollars on fiestas and jamborees.

    Between 2003 and 2019, crude oil rates were at record highs, yet not much was done to wean us from our appetite for imports, or to diversify the economy. While the world was preparing for change in the use of energy with a tilt away from fossil fuels, we carried on like the windfall would last forever.

    That’s the explanation for how we went from former President Olusegun Obasanjo paying off most of Nigeria’s debts at the time of Obasanjo’s exit to where we were at Muhammadu Buhari’s departure where over 96% of national revenue was being spent on debt serving.

    That we’ve not learnt any lessons or are not inclined to was evident in the recent controversy over the relocation of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) headquarters from Abuja to Lagos. Rather than being scandalised that over N500 million was being wasted on needless travel between cities by the agency’s officials, the argument was over regional political advantage.

    For most countries dealing with rampant inflation and forex scarcity it’s like going through hell. While are our challenges may not be as grave, there are certain aspects that are reminiscent of the Greek economic crisis between 2010 and 2018.

    At the height of its troubles Greece could not borrow. The populace was confronted with several reforms and austerity measures that led to impoverishment, loss of income and property, and a humanitarian crisis of sorts.

    There was massive political upheaval leading to the fall of government after government and the flight of hundreds of thousands of well-educated Greeks out of the country – their own version of japa.

    The government introduced round after round of tax increases, spending cuts, and reforms between 2010 and 2016, which caused riots and protests nationwide. In addition to these measures, the country still needed several bailouts from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and others.

    One lesson from the Greek experience is that getting this economy back to health might be a matter of years, not months. It is a bitter truth that we need to start getting used to. Another is that some of the remedies might be bitter medicine no one wants to take. It would be akin to economic chemotherapy which would be brutal to the one being treated.

    The government will need to do more to block leakages, break up age old practices where a privileged few have fed fat on government. These steps won’t be popular with vested interests and would be opposed. What is required is the iron will to press through.

    As citizens we have a responsibility to take pride in that which is produced locally. We must change our consumption habits, produce most of what we eat or drink or wear. Those in production must up their game such that the gap in quality between imports and local products is eliminated.

    One major source of dollar demand pressure is the importation of petroleum product. With the Dangote, NNPC’s Port Harcourt and Kaduna refineries as well as BUA’s facility, set to begin production in the near future, Nigeria could soon be in a position where it no longer needs to bring products.

    Things may look dire right now, but it is not hopeless for this country. What would really be sad is after making a massive effort to get out of the woods, we don’t learn our lessons. There may be hardship in the land, but we must keep reminding ourselves of the immediate and remote causes so that they are not repeated. 

  • Mbaka predicts hard times for Nigeria

    SPIRITUAL Director  of Adoration Ministry in Enugu, Nigeria (AMEN), Fr. Ejike Mbaka, has urged Nigerians to pray hard to overcome difficulty this year.

    Mbaka, in his New Year’s message, said the type of difficulty the country would face is such that had not been witnessed in its history.

    While praying for the country and its leaders, the fiery priest enjoined Nigerians to support President Muhammadu Buhari to continue to fight corruption.

    He said the Catholic Church supports the anti-graft war, and so created prayers against ‘bribery and corruption’.

    The cleric praised Enugu State Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuani, and solicited for his re-election.

    He said: “A President that is fighting corruption should be supported. I will not greet everyone without praying for our governor and friend, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi. We bless God for him. Enugu has never seen it like this. For the first time in the history of Enugu, the Black Axe and Vikings cult groups are not fighting, only a man like him can do it.

    “In his time, Chief Nwodo and Ken Nnamani are friends; Fed Okoro and Nwodo are not fighting. While he is developing Nsukka, he is developing Awgu, Udi, Nkanu; his impact is everywhere.

    “Enugu is in God’s hands and we have to hand the governor over to God because Enugu is in peace. There is no other state in this country that has this kind of peace. Generations will not forget you. Adoration Ministry will not forget you.

    “For such person who is doing well, we will tell him to continue. I pray for God’s protection in his life. If it is endorsement you call it, it is your word.

    “Those coming to contest know that Ugwuanyi is a good man, otherwise they should be imprisoned. I pray that Senator Ayogu Eze should go and rest, he should not contest for anything, he should not come to disorganise the state that has been rebuilt. As he is going to rest, let it be well with him in the name of Jesus Christ so that after the election, he will be given an appointment and he will go to Abuja.

    “You will not understand what Governor Ugwuanyi has done, he is a silent performer. A humble and God-fearing, and kind-hearted man, and nobody will stop the good work he has started so that nobody would be killed because of election. He should complete the work he started. Is it the man who did not built a road when he was a senator that you want to be governor now?

    “We pray for President Muhammadu Buhari; he is a man who understands the situation. Since Nigeria started, we have never experienced a President that has agricultural programmes like him. It’s like calling somebody thief in the media but you are not a thief.

    “For 16 years, the road from Anambra to Enugu was overgrown with weeds but within four years, the road is being rebuilt. For remembering us,  God will bless him. It shall be well with him. Four years doesn’t mean eight years; he has finished his four years and I pray for peaceful transition that he may complete his remaining four years.”

  • RAINS OF SORROW: Motorists face hard times as floods wash off bridges in Niger

    THE rainy season is often seen as a relief from heat and the dusty atmosphere that characterises the dry season. But too much of it can become a problem. It often results in flooding and rainstorm which in turn could wreak havocs like loss of lives, erosion and even collapsed buildings. For motorists in Niger State, the havoc has come in the form of collapsed bridges, which has literally turned life into a piece of hell.

    While the state has often been unfortunate in rainy seasons because of flooding, especially with the release of water from the various dams in the state, the disaster it is faced with this year has taken a different dimension. The floods appear to target the bridges that link its various communities such that the state had to admit this is the year it has recorded the highest number of collapsed bridges.

    At the last count, seven bridges linking prominent towns in the state have been washed off while there are unconfirmed reports of 10 others giving way to the hydrokinetic force. Numbered among them is the bridge in Dare Biyu village, which connects Mariga and Kontagora. Most motorists have had to resort to using another bridge on Kontagora -Tegina Road, but the difficulty faced by drivers on the road is now unbearable. While the bridge was a bit manageable in the past, it has not been able to stand the heavy downpour that the area has witnessed in the past three weeks. Its resultant collapse has left motorists and commuters stranded, causing travellers to trek for kilometres to get to the other side of the bridge and continue their journeys.

    Rafin Gora, another bridge on the Kontagora-Makera highway, is among the bridges recently washed away after two days of torrential rainfall. Only a small portion was opened at the side of the bridge, while the state government has banned heavy duty trucks from taking the route in order to avoid further deterioration in the road’s condition, while smaller vehicles are allowed to use the small portion.

    The Dangana Bridge, the only motorable road from Lapai to Gulu, Vatsa and Ebbo has also joined the queue of bridges washed off by flood. Since it is the only motorable route, cars and travellers have to cross the water with the aid of ferries in order to continue their journeys.

    Only recently, the state government had to move swiftly to repair the bridge linking Minna with Bida when it collapsed, because the road is one of the busiest in the state and the only one linking the north to the south. Although the road was closed down for a few days to effect repairs, it has now been opened as the bridge was repaired.

    Other bridges including the one on Kuta-Gwada Road in Shiroro Local Government Area, the bridge in Doba community in Lapai Local Government Area and the one along Kafinkoro/Adunu and Ishau in Paiko Local Government Area are not left out as they have also been washed away by flood. Concerns

    The washed off bridges have been a cause for concern not just among travellers but also farmers, since the state is mostly agrarian. Most of the farmers in the affected areas have not been able to take their produce to markets, while other travellers are either stranded or spend long hours on journeys that should take a short time to accomplish. Drivers have been forced to consider alternative routes which are usually longer because of the collapsed bridges.

    A commercial driver, Danladi Ndagi, who takes his passengers through the Dangana Bridge, lamented the inability of the state government to effect the repairs of the bridge to make the journey easier for people.

    Ndagi said: “Government is playing politics with the bridge, and the failure to complete it is causing untold hardship for the people. How can you be travelling and when you get to a section of the road, you have to come down to cross water in order to get to the other side to continue your journey? It is not reasonable. ”

    Another motorist, Adamu Lapai, said the government was being insensitive to the plight of the people using the road. “Government is extremely insensitive to the plight and the sufferings of the people. Now that elections are around the corner, they are pretending that they have resumed work on the bridge. It is unfortunate,” he said.

    Lapai, who spent more than four hours at the bridge, added: “There was no financial commitment on the side of government, and that was what made the work to stop, making those who use of the bridge to suffer on a daily basis.

    “Even though we heard that the state government has released N77 million for the completion of the bridge, they were doing it now to satisfy their selfish political goal. Otherwise, why delaying that bridge that linked us with other communities and Kogi State?”

    Community in pains

    The village head of Dangana community, Yanusa Abdullahi, said that motorists and commuters are passing through hell at the bridge.

    He said: “The people of my community and those who pass through the bridge are suffering a lot. Most of the time, they find it difficult to take their farm produce to nearby villages or town to sell due to the collapse of the bridge.”

    Abdullahi lamented that farmers in his community cannot go to the market to sell their farm produce as a result of the collapsed bridge in the area.

    He said: “Without the bridge, farmers cannot go to the market to sell their farm products. We are appealing to the state government to speed up the construction of the bridge to ameliorate the sufferings of the local farmers of Dangana.”

    He said the temporary diversion created by the construction company was not helping matters as vehicles continued to get stuck inside the river, just as he disclosed that the contractor assured them that work on the bridge would soon finish if adequate fund was provided.

    When contacted, the project Manager of Suject Company, Milad Jarbanda, said that work on the bridge would be completed soon. “We have started work already and government has fulfilled its financial commitment. We are on top of it. Very soon, motorists and commuters will have a cause to smile.”

    There is no doubting the fact that the collapsed bridges are causing the state government untold headache. The Commissioner for Works, Alhaji Ibrahim Balarabe, lamented that most of the washed away roads being experienced in the rainy season were federal roads, adding that efforts were being made to ensure that the damaged portions were fixed while efforts towards ensuring lasting solution were also being explored.

    Balarabe lamented that this year’s rainy season has been most challenging in the state as it poses a serious threat to roads in the state.

    However, the Federal Controller of Works in Niger State, Engineer Iheanacho Felix, said work would commence on the collapsed roads in the state as soon as the rains subside while he appealed for patience and support from the communities and government.

  • Hard times ahead for criminals in Lagos

    Hard times ahead for criminals in Lagos

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, aside hosting a state dinner to mark Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s 65th birthday, also honoured the former governor with brand new roads and bridge. Two days before, he also rebranded a project dear to Tinubu’s heart, the Neigbourhood Watch, writes WALE AJETUNMOBI

    •Ambode’s birthday gifts to Tinubu

    Aboru and Abesan communities in Alimosho, popular as Tinubu’s Country, in Lagos came alive five days ago.  A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and former Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, was there to inaugurate Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s projects to mark his 65th birthday.

    Two days before the Aboru event, Ambode was at the Agege Stadium to unveil the rebranded Neighourhood Watch, which is now equipped to give criminals the challenge of their lives.

    At the Aboru event, people trouped out to receive Tinubu and other eminent Nigerians, including Osun Governor Rauf Aregbesola; Senator Isiaka Adeleke; Deputy Governor Idiat Adebule; former Deputy Governor Femi Pedro; Senator representing Lagos West, Solomon n Adeola; Senator Ibrahim Kazaure from Jigawa State; Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Mudashiru Obasa; and members of the Lagos State Executive Council.

    Ambode described the event as a historic day in the life of the people of Alimosho and the state. He recalled his visit to the Aboru  in March 2016, saying that aside the state of the road, which was totally unacceptable, there were reports of series of deaths and fatal accidents caused by the presence of a valley, adding that he immediately directed that work should commence in the area.

    He said: “Exactly one year after, we are here to keep our promise to the good people of Aboru, Abesan and other communities and reaffirm our commitment that no community or area will be left behind. Every Lagosian counts. We are a government of inclusion.”

    PIX 7956

    He said the 480 metres bridge linking Aboru to Abesan, both in the Agbado Oke-Odo Local Council of Alimosho Local Government Area would significantly ease the burden of travel between the two communities by reducing travel time.

    The governor said aside the bridge, additional adjoining inner roads to create an efficient road network that will aid connectivity permanently were also constructed.

    Ambode listed the roads to include Church Street, Giwa Street, Victor Fagbemi Road, Ogunfayo Road, Ogundare Street, Salami Kazeem, all totalling 5.5km with drainage, walkways and street lights, adding that the road network would ease the pressure on the Abeokuta Expressway and links residents with Iyana Ipaja, LASU-Iba Expressway.

    Night life is gradually returning to the area as the road and the Link Bridge have been connected to the ‘Light Up Lagos’ Project, an initiative of  the Ambode’s administration.

    The governor also flagged off the turning of sod for the construction of a network of roads within the boundaries of Lagos and Ogun States, saying that it was in honour of Tinubu, whom he described as the brain behind the 21st century Lagos.

    He expressed optimism that the roads which have been identified for immediate construction and rehabilitation would complete the new face of Alimosho constituency, saying that work would commence in one week.

    He listed the roads to include Ikola Road with Odo Obasanjo Bridge – 6.4km (from Ipaja/Command to Ilo River); Ogunseye Road – 1.75km (from Ajasa/Command to Ikola Road);Oko Filling Road – 1.5km (from AIT to Ilo River); Osenatu Ilo road – 620m (from Ibari Road to Ilo River); Amikanle road – 3.1km (from AIT to Ogunseye Road); Aina Aladi road – 1.9km (from AIT to Ilo River) and Aiyetoro Road with a bridge– 1.4km (from New Market/Ishefun Road intersection to Ilo River).

    He appealed to the residents of the communities to cooperate with the contractors so as to enable them deliver the network of roads not later than the scheduled completion date.

    Mosan Okunola Community Development Association (CDA) Chairman Pastor Gbenga Adanri used the opportunity of the occasion to debunk insinuation that the people of the area were not happy with the government and even protested, saying there was nothing of such.

    “I like to debunk the untrue impression that we are not happy with Governor Ambode. There is no truth in it. I don’t know where that is coming from and I must say here that we the people are very happy with him. We are happy because our roads have been put in proper shape and we now have a bridge to travel seamlessly within Aboru and Abesan.

    “Before now, if your wife is pregnant and wants to deliver, to cross to the other side was always a big issue and we always indulged in prayer that nothing untoward should happen but today, we can move freely,” Adanri said.

    Tinubu poured accolades on Ambode over his sterling performance in the last 22 months, saying that the Governor has made him proud. He said the achievements of Ambode were a reflection of a Governor who is not only a thinker but a doer, and expressed satisfaction that he was delivering on the promises to the people.

    Tinubu also inaugurated a primary healthcare centre named after him and donated to Aboru Community by the contractor who handled the projects.

    The former governor said: “Akinwunmi Ambode has reflected that he is clearly a thinker and doer. I want to say thank you because experience is a great teacher and I am experienced. I am on the spot and I have watched things in Lagos since my tenure ended.

    “I was worried hell when you (Ambode) took over, not about your credibility, character or capacity, but because however wise or smart a man is, if there is no resources to back the ideas, production would be zero, progress would be zero.

    “When you (Ambode) took over, I know you inherited a burden of debt. The debt profile of Lagos was high, I was wondering how you will re-engineer and face the challenges to make progress.

    “Today, I can see your report card, you have scored well, and you have shown prudency especially in the judicious use of resources of the State.

    “You didn’t disappoint us. Ambode is silently achieving, meticulously planning, religiously executing and brilliantly giving results for Lagos State,” the former Lagos governor said.

    Tinubu said all over Lagos, the results of good governance was being felt by the people, and wished Ambode sound health and wisdom to continue to lead the State.

    “All over Lagos, we are seeing the results. At Oshodi, on our way down here, you can see what is happening there, that place is a construction site. It used to be a den of robbers but what is going on here now is developmental activities for the benefit of the entire country. Ambode is very quiet, very peaceful, not a noise maker, but he is delivering on the job.

    “Today, you (Ambode) have given me a good birthday present. This is a great opportunity for me to be very proud again. Therefore, if we can continue in this direction of infrastructural development in the manner Governor Ambode is moving, Lagos will soon match international states or country anywhere in the world.”

    Nathaniel Ajayi, a resident of Abesan community, described succinctly Ambode’s interventions when he said: “I was born in 1993 here in Abesan, I had always dreamt that one day the kind of development I see in Victoria Island, Lekki and Ikeja will take place here. Today our governor has made my dream come true.”

    Aregbesola and Senator representing Lagos West at the Senate, Solomon Olamilekan Adeola said it was obvious that Ambode started well and is doing well, and solicited the cooperation of the people to engender further dividends of democracy.

    At the launch of the Neighbourhood Safety Corps, 177 cars and vehicles equipped with communication gadgets, 377 motorcycles, 377 helmets, 4,000 bicycles and metal detectors were released to the Corp to ensure that illegal weapons are not smuggled into public places.

    Ambode said the move was another giant step towards enhancing security and a vital part of the ongoing efforts of his administration to reform the security and justice sector.

    The governor, who on August 15, 2016 assented to the law that created the Neighbourhood Safety Corps, said the Corps had been designed to provide a second layer of policing in order to ensure that the State and communities are more secure.

    He acknowledged the fact that the Nigerian Police had been very supportive to the State Government especially in fighting crime, but that the need for the Neighbourhood Corps arose from the identified security challenges confronting the State due to huge population, adding that the members of the Corps would complement police especially in areas of community policing.

    “Let me, however, make it abundantly clear that the Neighbourhood Safety Corps is not in any way in competition with the regular Police Force.

    “In actual fact, they are expected to assist and complement the Police by providing useful intelligence for crime prevention and to facilitate the arrest of perpetrators of criminal activities in our communities,” governor Ambode said.

    He added that in realization of the fact that nothing can be more important in law enforcement than educating the people in charge of enforcing the law, the rebranded Neighbourhood Corps have been trained and equipped with the requisite knowledge and skills to complement the good work of the Nigerian Police.

    He said in addition to the induction on orthodox community policing techniques, the Corps were also trained on how to mediate disputes and the art of negotiating for peaceful resolution; balancing communal interest in resolving disputes and proactive policing engagement instead of reactive policing.

    “Special hotlines have also been created direct to the Executive Secretary and senior management of the Neighbourhood Safety Corps Agency for easy communication with our communities in the event of any crime.

    “Any valuable information given to the Corps will attract handsome rewards from the state government. I therefore call on all Lagosians to join hands with us to say a final no to crime in our state.

    “All these equipment have been made possible through the judicious use of tax payers’ money and funds from the State Lottery Fund for good causes. Please continue to pay your taxes for a better Lagos.

    “I am very happy to state that through this Safety Corps initiative the State Government has created over 7,000 jobs for officers of the Corps, artisans and other support staff. Job creation is at the heart of economic prosperity and we remain fully committed to a more prosperous Lagos for our citizens,” the governor said.

    Ambode urged the Corps not to indulge in brutalizing citizens, but that they should exercise lot of restraint, patience, understanding and maturity while carrying out their duties.

    He added that to further strengthen security, a new executive bill to regulate employment of domestic workers and security guards would soon be forwarded to the State House of Assembly, explaining that the bill, among others, will prescribe regulations for the set of workers and other details to monitor their activities.

    Ambode said there was no longer any room for child abuse or under aged workers, adding that it had been discovered that domestic workers were largely undocumented and pose a grave security threat in the State.

    He also said the recruiting agencies, under the bill, would be licensed and regulated to ensure safety.

    Ambode also handed over four vans fitted with Close Circuit Television Cameras (CCTVs) to the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) of the State Police Command.

    The Corp’s rebranding and the roads and bridge inaugurated mean economic activities would witness a boom in the coming months, while motorists would have better stories to tell – with criminals singing dirge.

  • Oyedepo urges prayers to tackle hard times

    Oyedepo urges prayers to tackle hard times

    Living Faith Church (Winners Chapel) General Overseer Bishop David Oyedepo  has said Nigeria will still experience gross darkness for some time to come and called for special prayers to overcome the difficulties.

    Oyedepo, who was quoted in a live streaming broadcast, described the economic downturn in the country as a holocaust.

    He spoke at Canaan Land in Ota, Ogun, during the annual Winners Chapel prayer convention, Shiloh 2016, tagged “My Case is Different’’, taken from Genesis Chapter 47 Verses 15 to 27.

    The annual programme, which ended at the weekend, was a mountain of divine encounter for salvation, healing and deliverance as well as a time of astounding miracles.

    The yearly programme was also a time for testimonies of liberation.

    The cleric encouraged Christians in the aspect of giving, adding that anyone who keys into kingdom investment covenant would overcome hardship.

    “Anyone who keys into the kingdom investments covenant will overcome the gross darkness that awaits the world.

    “As Christians, you should understand and have the spirit of giving, no matter what it takes to give,’’ Oyedepo said.

    Some FCT residents expressed joy and fulfilment from Shiloh, saying they had a lot to be grateful to God for.

    Mrs. Deborah Peters, a member s, described Shiloh as a refreshing programme that was meant to make every Christian to experience divine breakthrough and increase in their lives.

    Peters advised Christians to be open-minded with their concerns at this period and all times so that they would encounter God’s visitation.

    “We have to make sacrifices of giving, like Papa pointed out,  so that we will encounter increase, breakthrough, unending grace, protection and even deliverance.

    “For us to gain all of these, we have to, with the help of the theme of Shiloh, open up to God to have his way in us.”

    Mrs. Rose Benjamin, who attended the programme from Kaduna, urged Christians not to take their encounter with God for granted for it must be followed with testimonies.

  • Hard times will be over, Buhari assures Nigerians

    Hard times will be over, Buhari assures Nigerians

    President urges Edo to vote APC

    PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari yesterday gave Nigerians some hope – that the economic hardship will be over.

    “I assure you that we are going to get out of our economic problems. We are almost out of our security problem and we are going to make Nigeria great again. We are going to be very proud of our country once again. Our size, our resources will not be for nothing. We will continue to grow,” President Buhari said.

    He spoke in Benin City, the Edo State capital, at the final campaign rally of the All Progressives Congress (APC) ahead of Saturday’s governorship election. The Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium venue of the rally was packed with crowds hailing Buhari who walked briskly into the podium.

    The President promised to make Nigerians proud of their country again.

    He paid tribute to the late Benin monarch, Oba Erediauwa, who he described as “forthright” and “a man of foremost integrity”.

    The rally was attended by leaders of the APC, including National Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, Governor Adams Oshiomhole and Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, who is the chair of the campaign council.

    The President told the huge crowd of APC supporters at the rally that “Oshiomhole has reminded you what we have gone through since 1999-2015. We have seen development more than what it used to be when Edo State was created. It was at that time that I met with the Oba who has joined his ancestors, and I saw a man with great integrity and there is no doubt that there is hardly any traditional ruler which is foremost and forthright like him.”

    “Edo people are lucky because as long as Nigeria exists, we will continue to play our role in stabilising Nigeria. We are a nation of great human and material resources, especially the youth. Please sit down and reflect and remember what I said years ago that there is no other nation like Nigeria. We will remain one together because no matter where you go, the colour of your skin will be a problem for you.

    “I congratulate Obaseki and I recommend him to you. He is a seasoned man so that you will continue to grow in Edo State. You have a credible team; you better hold them tight and ensure that Obaseki succeeds.”

    The President visited Crown Prince Eheneden Erediauwa shortly after his arrival in Benin. They met for about 40 minutes at the palace of Erediauwa, who is also the Edaiken Uselu.

    Buhari’s plane touched down at 10.20 a.m.

    Members of his entourage included Odigie-Oyegun, Ambode and Minister of Labour and Employment Senator Chris Ngige, among others.

    Security was heavy around the Benin Airport and on Stadium Road as well as adjoining streets.

    Ambode, who spoke on behalf of APC governors, said Edo State could be like Lagos State  if the people voted for continuity just like Lagos had done since 1999.

    Ambode noted that Obaseki has the financial expertise to make Edo become like Lagos State as well as continue on the foundation laid by Oshiomhole.

    “Edo has witnessed more development in the past eight years. Oshiomhole has laid a solid foundation. Continuity is the way to go by people. Lagos has voted continuity since 1999 and the result is there for everybody to see. Edo can be like Lagos. Obaseki has the financial expertise to make it happen. Edo cannot and should not throw away the the success bearer. Edo must vote APC on Saturday.”

    He said: “Lagosians voted for continuity last year and we are all witnesses to the progress we are recording in Lagos. We have been voting for continuity since 1999 in Lagos and the results are very clear for everyone to see. Edo State can be another Lagos. The state has all the potentials to be great. It is in the heart of commerce and economic greatness.

    “You all need Godwin Obaseki now. He will bring his financial expertise to turn Edo State around for the better. People ask me what is the secret of our progressive governance in Lagos and I tell them it is very simple, in the last 16 years till May 2015, we were in opposition whereby we had PDP at the centre and Lagos in APC.”

    Oshiomhole said the country will never produce billionaires and millionaires without office address under President Buhari who he described as a thief catcher.

    Oshiomhole, who said Saturday’s election is between two candidates urged the people to vote for the APC that did government business differently and not the party whose candidate participated in government that failed to invest in roads, education, hospital and water.

    He explained that the Bendel Brewery was owing N2bn at the time he came into office and that the N2bn was borrowed and shared by principal actors in the then PDP government.

    “No candidate of worth voting for in the PDP. Edo cannot return to that era of sharing the money.”

    On the Esan Water Project, the governor told the crowd that President Buhari  promised to complete it.

    He said the PDP government approved the project and did not execute the job but invited then Vice President Namadi Sambo to inaugurate it.

    He said it was an investigation by the Department of State Service (DSS) that informed Sambo that the job was not executed as only an overhead tank in place without any water was at the site.

    Odigie-Oyegun said the people at every ward could point to a project put in place by the APC during the party’s campaign tours.

    He said it was for the people to decide between two periods of 10 years before Oshiomhole and eight years after Oshiomhole.

    “This is not a matter of sentiments. The face of Edo has changed dramatically under Oshiomhole,” the party chairman said.

    Obaseki said the previous PDP government said the state was poor and, therefore, did nothing in all sectors of the economy.

    “Before Oshiomhole, we were told Edo was poor. We have shown that government can work. Vote for continuity. What Oshiomhole has done is part one of our plan. There will be youths and women empowerment. We will create 200,000 jobs in the first four years,” the candidate said.

     

  • Hard times hit missions abroad

    They were established as Nigeria’s seat of government in their host countries but many of the embassies are finding it difficult to fulfil their statutory obligations to Nigerians in the Diaspora and foreigners willing to visit the country, writes BUNMI OGUNMODEDE.

    NIGERIA has more than 100 missions abroad but they  are groaning under paucity of funds and finding it very difficult to meet their obligations.

    Besides protecting the interest of Nigerians in other countries, the missions have the responsibility of issuing travel documents to foreigners who intend to visit Nigeria for official, business, academic and other reasons.

    But not a few of the diplomatic missions are faced with challenges, ranging from inability to pay staff; visa and travelling passport  issuance delay; dearth of stationery for efficient and effective operations and mounting accommodation bills.

    Besides the identified headaches, the Nigerian Mission in New York, United States (U.S.) is reported to have been hit by some operational problems that could dent the country’s image if not addressed with urgency.

    An official of the Foreign Affairs Ministry told The Nation yesterday that only the Minister could talk on the state of the missions.

    It was learnt last night that the Minister, Mr Geoffrey Onyeama, will be addressing a news conference today. It was however unclear if he will unveil government’s plans on the ‘not-too-decent’ conditions of the missions abroad.

    Even before the demise of Nigeria’s former envoy to the U.S., Ambassador Ade Adefuye, the mission had always been cash-strapped.

    The Nigerian Embassy in Washington D.C. was said to be operating on credit. Reason: the embassy hardly got reimbursements by the Federal Government as at when due.

    Not a few Nigerians accuse most of the missions of lacking the capacity to address their problems and offer Nigerians in the Diaspora the expected protection. They also accused officials at the embassies of incompetence.

    To them, it is always harrowing getting visa and passport appointments, alleging that only those who are ready to grease the palms of officials have their requests treated without stress.

    Mr. Onyema is believed to have what it takes in experience and capacity to resolve the problems confronting the missions with the necessary institutional backings and support from Nigerians in the Diaspora.

    About four months into his administration, President Muhammadu Buhari ordered a review of the country’s missions overseas.

    It was believed that the President gave the directive in September, last year with the aim trimming the number of missions and improving on the quality of services they render.

    According to the President, it would be difficult for his administration to fund 119 foreign missions with the prevailing economic challenges.

    Buhari gave the directive after the ministerial briefing by the Permanent Secretary in the Foreign Affairs Ministry, Ambassador Bulus Lolo.

    He said it would be counter-productive operating missions all over the world “with dilapidated facilities and demoralised staff”, especially, when the need for some of the missions was questionable.

    The financial crunch notwithstanding, some former envoys kicked against the President’s to prune the number of Nigeria’s missions. They counselled the Federal Government to roll back its decision and keep all the 119 missions, pushing for a structural review to save cost and improve efficiency.

    Though speaking separately, a former Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Martin Uhomoibhi; Nigeria’s former Permanent Representative to the United Nations (UN), Ambassador Umunna Humphrey Orjiako; and Ambassador Joe Keshi, all urged the government not to close any of the missions but to adopt some cost-saving measures.

    The closure of the missions, they reasoned, could be diplomatically misinterpreted by host countries. The former envoys reminded the President Nigeria’s critical position in Africa and in the global community.

    But in a chat with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Onyema allayed the envoy’s concerns. He said the government was only planning to “rationalise” foreign missions and not to reduce them.

    According to him, the rationalisation of the foreign offices would be with a view to maximising the use of resources, adding that the government was planning to establish a “one-stop shop” for Nigerian businessmen in 119 countries where the country has foreign missions.

    He said: “Reducing our foreign missions abroad, it is not a total contradiction of our ambitions outside… I think rather than reducing, I will say rationalising.

    “You know it is how we use our resources to optimum levels… That is really what we are going to be much more engaged with rather than a reduction in missions.”

    He disclosed that the government was going to target the few missions that “are really not serving a great purpose at the moment”, noting that there were few that might be targeted for rationalisation.

    “But there will not be any sort of large scale reduction of our missions and embassies abroad,” he said.

    Ambassador Lolo told State House reporters after briefing the President the likely approach to be adopted for the reduction in the number of the foreign missions. He said the planned reduction arose from “a function of interest and capacity”.

  • Echoes of Hard times

    The times are hard and the pains appear to cut across the entire spectrum of the Nigerian society. From civil and public servants to those who are engaged in private business, the mantra on every lip is that “life is tough,” as Buhari government is grappling with turning around the wobbling economy inherited from the Jonathan administration.

    In most homes, the culture of waste has suddenly become a taboo. Only recently, a mother was reported to have beaten her daughter into coma for “wasting” the little garri she had reserved for the whole family. It took the quick intervention of neighbours, who rushed the little girl to the hospital, to save her life.

    From Lagos to Maiduguri and Katsina to Port Harcourt, it is tales of lamentation. The picture of how awful life has become for many Nigerians was captured in a mild drama that played out in Igede-Ekiti, headquarters of Irepodun/Ifelodun Local Government Area, Ekiti State, where a secondary school teacher allegedly stole a pot of amala (a yam flour delicacy) from a neighbour’s apartment.

    But rather than make a show of the incident, the owner of the amala delicacy demonstrated perfect understanding. When she discovered that the woman and her children were eating the stolen amala with ordinary palm oil, she went quietly into the house and fetched the alleged thief the soup with which she and her hunger-stricken children ate the amala.

    A neighbour who witnessed the incident, said: “It all happened at about 1.30 pm on Sunday when majority of the residents had arrived from their various churches. The poor teacher had been unable to go to church because of her economic condition.”

    For the woman and indeed most civil servants in Ekiti State, the non-payment of salaries for months has exposed them to serious hardship. The problem, which started in December 2015 when most of the civil servants could not celebrate Christmas with their families, has worsened as most families are now enmeshed in misery.

    Before the Igede incident, a primary school teacher had committed suicide in Aramoko-Ekiti because the non-payment of salaries stalled the repayment of a loan he had taken while the interest on the loan piled up.

    Apart from workers who are in active service, retirees in the state are also owed a backlog of gratuities and monthly pension. Many workers in the state are “dying by installment” while there is yet to be any positive signal from the government as to when the crisis would end.

    Less than two years after Ayodele Fayose returned as the governor of Ekiti State, the workers’ hopes have given way to despair as salaries are no longer regular. The government is said to have found itself in a position where it has to combine the state’s allocation from the federal purse for two months to pay salaries for one month.

    By the beginning of the year, the situation had grown so bad that workers were finding it difficult to pay their bills. Many of them have since resorted to boycotting office as a result of frustration. Some have had to sell their cars and landed property to pay their children’s school fees.

    The foregoing situation has forced many workers in the state to adopt various measures by which they can survive the harsh economic climate. These include some of the workers trekking from home to office early in the morning purposely to pluck mangoes that would serve as breakfast.

    There is the story of another worker who went to the blood transfusion centre to sell his blood in order to raise money for the food the family would eat. A teacher in a public school reportedly collapsed, and when she was revived, she said her problem was nothing but hunger.

    Many of the workers in Ekiti are heavily indebted because they have had to buy many things on credit, while some of them are on the verge of being thrown out by their landlords. Others have had to withdraw their children from private schools to enroll them in public schools. There are yet some who have hit on the idea of using the lean period to learn trades that could guarantee steady income.

    A good number of male civil servants in the state have relocated to their villages to do farming as the strike afforded them time to manage such farms. While many of them are doing farming at subsistence level, others have gone into commercial farming. One of our reporters learnt that some of the workers are into poultry, while others are rearing pigs, rabbits, goats and other animals. They believe that apart from selling such animals, their eggs, meat and milk are also good sources of income.

    Some vocations the civil servants are now learning include tailoring, carpentry, painting, auto mechanic, shoemaking, panel beating, barbing, hairdressing and bricklaying, among others.

    There are others who have turned their private cars to taxis popularly called kabu-kabu. Some female workers now sell sachet water popularly called pure water, fruits and roast corns to survive the harsh economic climate. Some who had been involved in church works on part-time basis are now fully into ministry.

    Many female workers now make money serving as anchors of wedding engagements, while others have simply attached themselves to shop owners and market women to understudy them with a view to learning their trades.

    Many people were shocked recently to learn that a middle-aged man in Kano, identified as Mallam Yusuf Bala decided to forfeit his five-year-old son for a bag of rice. According to reports, the man took his son to a rice merchant at Singer Market, Fagge Local Government Area of Kano State, pretending that he wanted to buy a bag of rice. He was said to have told the rice dealer, one Alhaji Suleiman Bagudu, that he forgot the money for the rice at home, offering to leave his son behind while he would go back home to get the N14,000 for the 50kg bag of rice.

    It turned out that Bala failed to show up to pick his son more than six hours after he left. The rice dealer became suspicious and decided to interrogate the little boy who later led him to his father’s house in the Abattoir area of Koki, Dala Local Government Area of the state. Regretting his action, Bala said he decided on the option of trading his son for a bag of rice because he was financially handicapped.

    But the game ended on a happy note for father and son because the rice dealer decided to forgive Bala, while at the same time offering to donate the bag of rice to his family.

    In Ondo State, public servants are in distress. The last time they received a salary was in November 2015. For them and their families, the last Christmas and Easter celebrations were nothing but bleak. In May, the workers were forced to embark on strike to press home their demands for the payment of their salary arrears.

    For a people whose large chunk of income is dependent on the salaries of civil servants, no one is left out of the pain and anguish as traders, farmers and other residents are feeling the impact of the hard times. To survive, more and more people in the state are now resorting to farming and other petty vocations.

    A resident, Shola Adeyemi, told our correspondent that civil servants in the state are going through very rough times. Adeyemi, himself a civil servant, said the non-payment of more than six months salary has turned most civil servants in the state into beggars.

    “Most civil servants in Ondo now live from hand to mouth. As a matter of fact, they are now beggars, as they now go round to source for foodstuff for survival,” Adeyemi said, shaking his head.

    A trader at the popular Oja Oba market in Akure, Madam Atinuke, said that sales in the market have been affected badly, lamenting that most traders can no longer cope with the high cost of foodstuff and other goods.

    “Nobody is spared the suffering. Market women and other people are suffering because the state government has refused to pay the civil servants. I know of some market women who have stopped selling at the market because they can no longer cope with the high cost of goods,” she said.

    A contractor in the state, who pleaded anonymity, lamented the state of the economy. He said it is pathetic that most men can no longer play their roles at home.

    He said: “You can imagine a situation where you, as the man in the house, can no longer perform your roles because you have no money. The situation is even worse in cases where both husband and wife are civil servants. Where do you expect such family to go for help?”

    Some residents of Port Harcourt who spoke to The Nation said the hardship is biting hard in Rivers State as a result of the sense of insecurity and lack of cash. Some of them said the economic condition in the state had forced them to adjust to a lifestyle they had previously never imagined.

    Mr. Emmanuel Arume, a trader at the Mile 3 Market in Port Harcourt, said his business had nosedived because he was being owed by many of his customers. He recalled that some people do come to him to beg for one cup of rice which they would eat together with their children, stressing that many people were finding it difficult to feed.

    Arume said: “It is unfortunate that prices of food items in the market have increased beyond the pockets of many poor families. Today, a cup of rice is N100. A woman came to my shop last week crying and begging me to give her three cups of rice, promising to pay later.

    “A lot of people are owing me at the moment. Some rice dealers who I also supply came with different stories that I should supply them. Till today, they have not paid. But I had to consider them because I know what they are passing through. This is the worst period I have seen since I started doing business in Port Harcourt.”

    Mrs. Ijeoma Salas, a widow with three children, said she has relocated from her one-room apartment to a makeshift hut at Iwofi village in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of the state.

    “I am now looking for any part-time job to help me to take care of my family. I don’t mind even if it is a cleaning job. Before now, I sold roasted yam and plantain, but my business money finished when I needed to take care of my son who was sick, while the remainder was spent to feed my family.

    “I had to relocate because I could no longer afford the N3, 500 I was paying for my apartment monthly. I pay N1,000 where I live now. Although it is a wooden house, it is better for me, considering the present economic situation.”

    In Kwara State, leaving your pot of soup on fire and turning your back for a few minutes could prove a grievous mistake. Cases of mystery thieves absconding with smoking pots of soup has become a daily occurrence.

    A victim, who resides in Sango area of the state, lamented the trend, saying that such cases have reached alarming stage, such that residents now have to keep vigil whenever they are cooking.

    “It is very troubling now because you don’t know when somebody would sneak in to steal your pot of soup. People now stay with whatever they are cooking until it is ready,” she said.

    For Lagos resident, Mrs. Ajike Abiodun, the economic condition has compelled her to make some changes at home.

    She said: “Before now, whenever I went to Mile 12 to buy pepper and tomatoes, I usually hired load carriers to help me carry the goods to my shop. Now, I if I go to the same market with the same amount, I am only able to get two BAGCO bags worth of goods.”

    The high cost of goods, she said, had made it impossible for her and her family to eat their choice meals. But more painful for her is the decision to enroll her daughter for training in fashion design because she can no longer afford to send her to school.

    She said: “These days, we cannot even eat what we want. Business is slow and the high cost of goods has made it practically impossible for us to make profit. I had to send my daughter to go and learn tailoring because I cannot even afford to send her to school. It pains me because she is a brilliant girl and she has the potential to do great things if she is educated.

    “I still have four other children to cater for and our house rent is due. The landlord has just issued us a quit notice, but I am sure if we can get the money to pay, the notice will be withdrawn.

    “I am not a widow, neither am I a single mother. But my husband has been complaining that his work has not been going on well. In fact, it is already affecting the way we relate with each other.

    “I just want to beg the government of the day to have mercy on us. This suffering is too much. We are working hard but the result is not showing in the manner we live our lives.”

    Her story is not different from that of Ms Aminat Quadri. In the recent past, her food stall at the Ayilara area of Lagos was usually besieged with customers who struggle to catch her attention. During the good days, her supplies would have run dry by noon. But that is old story now. These days, the warming flasks she uses for storing the cooked food are still half-filled as late as 4 pm.

    “My sister, I don’t understand any longer,” she told the reporter who asked her what the problem could be. “You needed to see how school children and adults used to surround me in the morning to buy food a few months ago. But now, things have changed. More people now buy food on credit and some who used to buy both breakfast and lunch would wait till 11 am before coming to buy, so that the food can sustain them till evening time.”

    She explained further: “A bag of Semovita which sold for N2,700 last week has now increased to N3,500. A bowl of garri is now N700. So how do I even wrap it for sale?

    “Things are tough for everybody. A woman in my compound has just left her husband to marry another man because her former husband could not meet her needs. Now, you need to see how their children are suffering. They have turned to errand boys and girls for other people in the compound because of the crumbs they stand to get.

    “You may want to blame the woman for lacking patience, but how far would patience last if one continues to suffer?

    “My appeal to our rulers is that they should do something to reduce the high cost of foodstuff. We can cope with bad roads and lack of electricity, but if there is no food in our stomach, we cannot survive.”

    In Abia State, the biting economic hardship has turned many of the residents to emergency farmers. The fad among the people these days is to cultivate any available piece of land within their vicinity as part of their survival strategies.

    The situation is even worse with civil servants who have not received their salaries in the last three months. For them, it is not only about feeding; their children have been sent out of schools because of their inability to pay their fees, while many have resorted to self-medication because they lack the money to go to hospitals.

    A civil servant who spoke on the condition of anonymity said he had resorted to cultivating the small piece of land near his house to make ends meet, stressing that he has planted okro, vegetables, pepper and other things that he could gather to make small soup for his family.

    “We are in the rainy season, and I wonder how we are going to survive if the situation fails to improve during the dry season,” he said.

    A trader at the Ubani Ibeku main market, who gave his name as Ibu Ibe, said his sales had been badly affected by the economic crunch. Ibe said he has had to withdraw his children from private schools because he could no longer afford to pay their fees.

    “If the situation continues like this, I bet you, many people will be looking for food from the dustbins of the rich, just like late Umaru Dikko said in the  80s.

    “At the moment, I have stopped going to my village as often as I used to do because I can no longer afford to give money to those I normally give to whenever I am in the village. Unfortunately, these people won’t understand that things are no longer the same.”

    Residents of Calabar, the Cross River State capital, are not exempted from the anguish imposed by cash crunch as they are groaning under the weight of the sharp rise in the cost of living.

    Investigations revealed that prices of goods and services have risen astronomically, with the dollar being fingered as the culprit.

    Before now in Calabar, taxies charged N50 per drop. But for several months now, the fare has gone up to N100. Also, the bus fare from 8 Miles, a settlement on the outskirts of the city, which was N100, is now between N150 and N200.

    Findings in markets around Calabar also revealed the following: Five cups of garri, which previously sold for N100 now sell for N200; an egg now sells for N40 instead of N30; a crate of eggs which was selling for N750 is now N900; a cup of rice which was N50 before now sells for N90; local rice which was N45 is now N70; beans which was N40 before is now N60; tin tomatoes of N35 is now N50; groundnut oil which was N200 a bottle is now N350; polythene bag of N10 now goes for N20; a cup of pepper which before was N150 is now N300; palm oil which was N120 a litre is now N200; vegetable oil that was N500 a litre before is now N550 to N600; plantain flour has risen from N500 to N600; wheat which was three cups for N100 is now two cups for N100 and chicken, which sold for N900 is now N1500, among other items.

    A civil servant, Mr Emmanuel Edem, who is a father of four, said the situation had made him miserable.

    According to him, “When things were a bit better, it used to be a battle to take care of my family. Running my home from day to day was always a struggle and I barely managed it.

    “Right now, I just feel sick thinking about how difficult things have become. Every morning one wakes up to uncertainty. Our pay has not been increased and we have to deal with this new problem. Something urgent should be done about it before it drives us mad.”

    A trader at Watt Market, Mrs. Ebere Okoro, complained that the situation was causing “bad market” for traders at the market.

    Recently, angry employees in the Bayelsa State local government areas rejected a proposal to pay them one-month salary out of the over 10-month salary arrears owed by the councils.

    The workers, who insisted that they had been suffering, owing bank loans and school fees, said one month’s salary was unacceptable and unthinkable.

  • Bloody love in hard times

    Bloody love in hard times

    Does anybody care about this terrible trend?

    People committing murder with ease. Many threatening to commit suicide and some actually committing suicide or attempting to end it all when they can no longer bend it.

    There are also many cases of husbands killing their wives and wives killing their husbands in a macabre reversal of deep and psychic spousal affection. The Sophocles era all over again?

    Why do people kill their loved ones? The reasons are as many as the stars in the sky, but how many of them are rational? Psychologists, psychoanalysts and psychiatrists really have their jobs cut out for them. But does anybody care?

    The other day in Ibadan, a lawyer reportedly pounced on her sleeping husband and knifed him to death. A court is sitting over the matter, even as the man’s family is crying for justice.

    In Benue State, a 17-year-old boy killed his mother for, according to him, being the architect of his libidinal problem “in the last few years”. It doesn’t get more tragic. He shot his mother after accusing her of witchcraft, the police said.

    I wonder what the Lagos dockworker whose wife’s body was found in their home after a row will be telling the police now. According to his friends, Mr  Lekan Shonde had accused his wife of infidelity before the light suddenly went out on her life . “He has never been violent. I have known him for the past 33 years and I can tell you he is a gentleman,” Mr Sunday Nwobi said of the suspect who is now in police custody.

    After learning of his wife’s death, Shonde reportedly decided to commit suicide, but his friends prevailed on him to surrender to the police so that justice could take its course. The authorities will have to rely on scientific clues to determine the cause of Ronke Shonde’s death , which her husband insists he did not cause.

    Why did Shonde contemplate suicide if he was damn sure he didn’t do it? Is it true he called the man with whom his wife had an affair? Will the police question the suspected philanderer? Shonde said he called his mother-in-law to say that he had decided not to kill himself and the woman said she had forgiven him.

    At what point do people decide to commit suicide? When do they try to give up? And why? Cowardice? Isn’t thinking about suicide an element of cowardice? Should a man be hopeless? Is suicide a symbol of bravery? How will the victim know what the world thinks about him? Is the “final solution” a sign of honour and ultimate defence of integrity? This is neither here nor there.

    Songster Tiwa Savage should be gathering the pieces of her shattered marriage now. First we learnt of her husband  Tunji “Tee Billz” Balogun’s attempted suicide. He chose a fantastic site – the top of the bridge that links Lekki and Ikoyi, where the rich and powerful move in exotic cars; not on Eko Bridge with all those funny passenger vans. Set to jump into the water, he decided to make some last calls –in place of a suicide note? – and, as if it was all planned, his pals stormed the place to dissuade him from jumping. He obliged them.

    In the manner of the kiss-and-tell stories that usually swirl around  celebrities, the budding entertainment impresario accused his wife of infidelity, ingratitude and betrayal. Besides, he said her mother was behind his fate – an allusion to some unstated and unproven psychic forces Tee Billz believes the woman possesses.

    Tiwa picked up the gauntlet. She painted a mesmerising picture of her former manager and estranged husband’s life. A rock star’s champagne life – of drug, wine and women. She said Tee Billz had put her in debt and she needed to salvage her career.

    Trust Nigerians, these love-turn- sour stories- some of them are major calamities, no doubt – have revved into action the remarkable fecundity of the Nigerian mind. It is all in an attempt to explain that some of the situations that propel couples to end it all are not as harmful as they seem if we are patient. Consider this sent to me by a friend:

    “One day oga decided to give his wife a surprise package. He moulded a big heart cake, with the assistance of the house help. The project took almost a whole day. Madam returned from work to meet the house help snoring. She was fast asleep.

    “Madam: ‘Silly girl, will you get up now! What have you been doing since morning?

    “House help: ‘Welcome ma. A beg; no vex. Me and Oga dey make love since morning. Na now we finish. Na im I sey make I lie down small …”

    There is also this that tries to define love, that seemingly phantasmagoric and gripping feeling to which men and women ascribe some of their behaviours, and death – the end of all. It says: “What is love? Love is when your husband catches you in bed with another man and says, ‘baby, dress up; let’s go home’. What is death? Death is when you follow him.”

    In other words, when a couple begin to hurl at each other allegations of infidelity, it is time to watch it. They need not wait for the “final solution” for the resolution of their differences. Once suspicion elbows trust out of a relationship, what is left?

    Tee Billz was lucky to have got people to dissuade him from taking that fatally final plunge into the dark, murky river to cool off in the hereafter. So was Senator Kashamu Buruji. Remember the other day how drug law enforcement agents laid a siege to his home in a controversial bid to seize and ferry him to the United States where they insist he is wanted for drug offences. The distinguished senator said he had no case to answer in America. When it was obvious the operatives were set to storm the house and ferret him out, Kashamu threatened to commit suicide rather than being bound and bundled onto a flight to uncertainty.

    Then th e courts supervened. Now the senator is sitting pretty in the National Assembly, making laws for good governance and well being of the country. He even finds time, despite the mental exertion that lawmaking demands, to occasionally issue press statements commending the Muhammadu Buhari administration’s anti-corruption battle, urging Nigerians to back it. Ah! If only truth could talk.

    There are people who commit suicide or threaten to wave the final farewell to the world for the hardship they face.  An Abia State civil servant has just hung himself because he had not been paid for four months. De Nwakwo had a family of four. He couldn’t feed them, according to reports on the incident. He left a suicide note for his family, which said he couldn’t foot his children’s education bill and could not afford to buy a dress for his wife to wear on Mother’s Day. “I have no other place to go ; no hope, nothing to give to my children to eat and no salary for the past four months. I am sorry I have to do this,” Nwakwo wrote. Poor fellow.

    Last Thursday in Lekki, a Cameroonian, Frederick Gino, climbed an electric pole and threatened to kill himself. A report said it was all to avoid a mob that pursued him after he was suspected to have burgled an apartment. Another quoted him as telling the crowd that had gathered to rescue him: “Give me N5million or I jump!” He was brought down and taken to the hospital.

    Was it all a stunt? As many asked, if Gino wanted to end it all, he needed not have taken the trouble of looking for a ladder to climb the pole  and causing a nuisance. Why didn’t he just take a stroll to a humming transformer and just give the hot machine a bear hug?

    Is the law that bars a man from taking his own life still alive?

     

    Cameron’s cameo

    British Prime Minister David Cameron has been under attack since the news broke of his description of Nigeria as “fantastically corrupt” during a discussion with the Queen and the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Right Rev. Justin Welby.

    Mr Cameron has not said anything new. What he has failed to say is that the Muhammadu Buhari administration is waging a war against corruption. He is forging ahead despite criticisms in some quarters of the style of fighting the war and what to his opponents is the utter neglect of other areas.

    Besides the fact that Cameron’s statement is undiplomatic and impolite, it is hypocritical. Most of those who stole Nigeria’s wealth live in Britain, their loot is kept in Britain, their kids school in Britain, their investments – mostly in property and stocks- are in Britain.  When Great Britain stops being a haven for looters, the greedy would have lost a great ally. And the time to do that is now. Cameron should lead the way instead of insulting Nigerians, most of who are living honest and clean lives.