Tag: House

  • Nigeria an agric power house, says don

    Nigeria has been described as an untapped potential agricultural power house.

    The Provost, Federal College of Agriculture, Akure, Ondo State, Dr. Samson Odedina, stated this during the lecture titled: Agricultural value chain job opportunities: Success stories among youths in Nigeria, at the investiture of the Award of Excellence in Food Sustainability, conferred on the Project Director, Cassava Adding Value for Africa (CAVA), Prof Kolawole Adebayo by the National Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN), Ogun State Chapter.

    He said there were investment opportunities for import substitution as Nigeria imports over $11 billion in wheat, rice, sugar and fish yearly.

    According to him, “import dependency is hurting farmers, displacing local production and creating rising unemployment”.

    On the targets for agricultural transformation in the country, he said 3.5 million jobs could be created within agricultural value chains.

    He said cassava, for example,  there are oportunities in stem production, weed control, root production, bulking agency, transport services, primary processing, and product development like starch, flour, confectioneries, bread, glue, beer as well as marketing.

    He added that there were opportunities, such as fingerlings production, feed production, processing, product development as well as marketing in aquatuture.

    In cocoa, seedling production, weed control, pest and diseases control services, bulking agency, processing, value addition, product development and marketing are areas the youth could exploit, he added.

    The Acting Vice-Chancellor, Prof Ololade Enikuomehin, said the event was laudable as it was meant to celebrate excellence and create a platform for motivation.

    “As a university, we believe in oneness. We believe in celebrating people that has made their mark and made it possible for others to be motivated. I want to thank the National Youth Council of Nigeria; Ogun State Chapter, for finding it fit to honour us as a university, as personified by Prof Kolawole Adebayo. He is a typical FUNAABite, having acquired all his relevant degrees in FUNAAB,”the Acting Vice-Chancellor added.

    Enikuomehin enjoined the youth to devote their energies to do well in whatever they to do, adding that when the youth spend quality time complaining about situations, they lose out on the opportunities around them.

    He urged them to take advantage of the opportunities in this country.

    He stressed that youths should channel their energies towards doing essential things.

  • House ’ll revisit decision on devolution of powers, says Gbajabiamila

    House ’ll revisit decision on devolution of powers, says Gbajabiamila

    THE House of Representatives will next month give the issue of devolution of power a second consideration, it was learnt yesterday.

    It followed public outrage over the rejection of its bill at the adoption of constitution review report.

    According to the Majority Leader of the House, Femi Gbajabiamila, the rejection of devolution of powers during the exercise caught many of the lawmakers unaware.

    He said members will, therefore, revisit it.

    Gbajabiamila, in a statement yesterday, was optimistic at the prospect since House rules provide mechanism to rescind matters that have already been concluded by the House.

    He said: “Many of us will be asking for the issue of devolution of powers to be revisited upon resumption in September.

    “The democratic process was played out as it should be during the voting exercise. However, the process is ongoing and not concluded.

    “Under our rules, we do have a mechanism, which allows for rescission of a decision when appropriate or when new unknown facts emerge.

    “For me, it was a mistake or oversight to have lumped all items for devolution under one umbrella or subhead, titled: ‘Devolution of powers’.

    “There were about nine items, including Railways, Pensions, Arbitration, Stamp Duties, Parks and others under the subhead and members should have voted on each rather than vote in one fell swoop.”

    He added: “A member may have agreed to certain items for devolution to states and not to others.

    “The way we voted one would never know how to pass judgment on each item.

    “I believe each item should stand or fall on its own merit.

    “It is important to note that devolution of powers is baby steps and the simplest form of reconstruction not a surgical dismemberment of our country.

    “We must feel the pulse of the nation in moments like this.”

    Speaker Yakubu Dogara described the rejection as “unfortunate” at the conclusion of the exercise last week.

  • My daughter never showed signs she could sell my house — 85-year-old who recently regained possession of her house after 20 years

    My daughter never showed signs she could sell my house — 85-year-old who recently regained possession of her house after 20 years

    Following the judgement by the Court of Appeal on May 3 2017, which saw Mrs Carol Eno Effiong’s duplex returned to her after 20 years, Medinat Kanabe sought audience with the octogenarian. Just how does it feel to be betrayed by one’s only daughter?.

    THE story of how Mama Carol Eno Effiong lost possession of her semi-detached three-bedroom duplex in Festac Town, Lagos for 20 years is one that evokes deep emotion and pity. It also underlines the age-long adage of ‘trust nobody’, as it was her biological daughter that perpetrated the evil, in collaboration with some despicable lawyers, by selling the house and bolting away. Since the story went viral about three weeks ago, many have not ceased to wonder how a daughter could do such to her mother.

    Now 85, Mama Effiong, who worked as a nurse with the Federal Ministry of Health for 32 years, had purchased and paid for the duplex with deductions from her salary for years, ostensibly to secure her days in retirement. But as it turned out, over two decades of that stage of her life has been spent in penury and destitution, as she has had to squat in churches and scavenge whatever she could, to survive.

    Courtesy of human rights lawyer, Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, she recently got a judgment in her favour to take possession of her house at the Court of Appeal, eight long years after she first got a judgement at the High Court, which she said “the buyer appealed.”

    The Nation caught up with her at the Assemblies of God Church in Apapa, where she has been squatting.

    Her story

    “I was trained in Awka-Ibom but came to Lagos later and got employment with the Federal Health Management Board, where I worked for 32 years.

    I lost my husband in 1965 and decided not to remarry but faced my job as a nurse, so I could take care of my only child and daughter, Carol Effiong.

    During the Festac 77 period, the Federal Government published in the papers that there were houses available for allocation, so I went and took a form which I filled and my late nephew returned to the headquarters for me. By the Grace of God, I was one of the lucky winners of a house, a semi detached three bedroom duplex.

    I began a monthly payment to the Federal Housing Authority Headquarters, which I did until the payment was complete. I kept the document in a small box in the house and never bothered to lock because I was living in the house alone with my daughter and we were very free with each other.

    One day I was arranging things in the house and suddenly realised I couldn’t find the original document in the box. I started looking for it and when I couldn’t find it, I went to report at the Federal Housing Authority headquarters, where I was given some new documents. I also placed a caveat and loss of document report in Vanguard newspapers.

    I never knew that my daughter had sold the house through a forged power of attorney to a 419 and ran away. He sued me through the fake attorney and obtained judgment against me. I was thrown out of the house and my properties left to rot in the rains and sunshine because I didn’t have enough money to rent another house.

    It’s been 20 years now and I have been sleeping from one Assemblies of God church to another and surviving through the help of good Samaritans.

    During the early years, God sent someone who introduced me to the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi, who took interest in the matter and began to assist me. The case was first heard at the Apapa Magistrate Court; then it was transferred to Lagos High Court in 1997. Barrister Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa was assigned to continue the case in 1997, approved by Chief Fawehinmi. He is also a Good Samaritan. It has not been easy, but God used him to help me get a favourable judgement, delivered by Hon. Justice Candide Johnson in 2009. I was told to go and take over my house but the buyer filed another appeal against the judgment in 2009 and kept living in the property.

    It took another eight years before judgment was given, which dismissed the appeal as totally lacking in merit. The court of appeal affirmed the judgment of the trial court and ordered that I be given back my property.

    For the first time, I saw my lawyer cry. It was as if it just dawned on him that an old woman like me had to pass through so much. May God bless him. But I still want to thank the late Chief Fawehinmi for his empathy and caring heart even in death.”

    ‘My daughter’s action took me by surprise’

    Asked if her daughter ever betrayed any such attitude or needed money desperately at some point, she said ‘No.’

    “She didn’t mention anything suggestive of such to me. She was in her early 30s and was in the University of Benin. I tried my best to give her everything she needed. She had friends that used to visit her; some gave her good advice, others probably gave her bad advice. I don’t know the friend that advised her wrongly. I just know that I tried to please her because I had no other person to take care of. She was all I had. I don’t know whether she was satisfied or not.”

    On whether her daughter has called her since she executed the despicable act, she answered in the negative. “Since she left, she has never called me and I have also never called her. But some years ago, she sent some people to come and apologize to me at my church in Festac. She said she was very sorry for what she did to me and I have forgiven her. I guess she is also afraid of coming to me because she fears that people around will discipline her. She doesn’t have my phone number and I don’t have hers either.”

    Asked if Carol is married now, she said no but has a son for her boyfriend.

    On what she plans to do with the house when she finally takes possession, she said she will sell it, settle all her debts and relocate to her home town and prepare a place where she will live until her last day.

    “I would also love to give some money to my lawyer. For all these years, he has been helping me without collecting any money and I wish to pay him back if he will allow me. Other lawyers approached me, requesting to assist me for a fee but he never did.”

    Narrating the events that followed that harrowing eviction, she said, “I didn’t have anywhere to go; I used my entire gratuity to pursue this case. I started to squat in different branches of the Assemblies of God church until I found myself in Apapa. People who come around to the church help me with my feeding and I also use the money to take care of myself.”

    According to Mama Carol, the most painful day of her life was the day she was thrown out of the house with her properties without anywhere to go to. “My belongings were left lying there for years, with the rains and the sun beating them. Everything went bad. Even if I decide to go back to the house, I don’t have anything to move in there. I lived in the house between 1985 and 1997, when I was thrown out.”

    On her state of health, she said she falls sick from time to time and goes to the hospital. Her bills, she revealed are paid by ‘Good Samaritans’, who always rise up to assist her.

     

    Case should never have been appealed – judges

    When The Nation contacted her lawyer,  Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, he sent  information containing facts of the case.

    It reads as She was allocated the five bedroom apartment located at 21 Road, 2nd Avenue, E Close, House 22, Festac Town, Lagos, by the Federal Housing Authority.

    The Respondent claimed that he bought the house through Madam Effiong and her only daughter.

    Madam Effiong filed a case at the Lagos State High Court through Gani Fawehinmi Chambers in 1997. Mr. Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa prosecuted the case in the High Court and judgment was delivered in 2009 by Hon Justice Candide Johnson and the defendant was ordered to vacate the house for Madam Effiong to be restored into possession. The defendant appealed against the judgment to the Court of Appeal in March, 2009 and judgment was delivered by the Court of Appeal on 3rd May, 2017.

    The lead judgment of the Court of Appeal was delivered by Hon Justice Yargata Byenchit Nimpar, to which Hon Justice Mohammed Lawal Garba and Jamilu Yammama Tukur concurred.

    Per NIMPAR J.C.A.:

    There is nothing in this appeal that can ensure any benefit to the appellant. It is surprising that in spite of the record of proceedings and the judgment of the court below, the appellant still pushed on with the appeal. Where a case is bad, it is the duty of counsel to advice his client and thus save the time of the court. The appeal fails and it is dismissed.

    Per Garba, J.C.A.:

    In fact, from the record of appeal, one cannot avoid having the impression that the appeal was brought mainly to enable and allow the appellant who was forcefully and wrongly put into possession of the house of the respondent, to remain in the house for as long as possible, with the sole aim of frustrating the respondent’s efforts of recovering her deserved possession and ownership. This appeal was brought eight (8) years ago, on the 16th March, 2009 and the respondent has been kept out possession of her house for that period.

     

  • House rejects EFCC’s invitations to members

    House rejects EFCC’s invitations to members

    The House of Representatives has stated the condition under which its members would appear before the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) over the alleged padding of last year’s budget.

    The invitation of its members over the alleged N284 billion budget padding should be routed through Speaker Yakubu Dogara, it said in a letter to EFCC.

    It said its Minority Leader, Leo Ogor, would not appear before  EFCC if that condition is not met.

    But the commission is weighing its options on whether or not to accept the condition.

    One of the options is to write a fresh letter to the House, asking Ogor and 12 others, in the first batch of those to be interrogated, to report.

    It was however learnt that any member who fails to report to the EFCC might be arrested since representatives do not enjoy immunity.

    It was learnt that the House, in a letter through its Clerk to EFCC, said the proper process is to request for the release of Ogor or any member through the Speaker.

    About 50 members of the House have been short-listed for investigation.

    But 13 members, including four principal officers, are in the first batch of those already slated for questioning on the alleged budget padding.

    The principal officers are Dogara; Deputy Speaker, Lasun Yusuf; Ogor; and House Whip Alhassan Doguwa.

    Only Ogor has been invited for interrogation  by the EFCC.

    The probe followed a petition by former House Appropriation Committee Chairman Abdulmumin Jibrin, who detectives have discovered also has a case to answer.

    Jibrin appeared last week for a five-hour grilling on the allegations and issues isolated against him.

    He is expected back after the EFCC would have interrogated the initial set of 13 lawmakers.

    A source in the commission said: “We have received a letter from the Clerk to the House claiming that he was directed by the Speaker  to tell the EFCC that Ogor or any Representative be invited through the Speaker.

    “We don’t know what informed such a notice but the Clerk was saying it is the norm. We are weighing options including exhausting all hurdles laid by the House.

    “We may write the House but at the end if Ogor and other lawmakers refuse to honour our invitation, we will effect  their arrest.

    “No member of the House has constitutional immunity from investigation and prosecution.”

    Another source said some members of the House were considering legal alternatives to stop the EFCC from investigating them.

    The source added: “Going to court might backfire for the lawmakers because the Supreme Court just delivered a judgment that no one can obtain injunctions against a criminal trial.

    “In the case of Olisa Metuh, the Supreme Court upheld the provisions of Section 306 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act and Section 40 of the EFCC (Establishment) Act, which prohibit courts in the country from granting stay of proceedings in criminal trials.”

  • House in turmoil over Southeast Bill

    House in turmoil over Southeast Bill

    Proceedings on the floor of the House of Representatives  came to an abrupt end yesterday with the defeat of a Bill seeking the establishment of a South East Development Commission.

    The bill was defeated in a voice vote taken twice by Speaker Yakubu Dogara, who said he had an idea of what the result would be with the trend of the first vote.

    After he ruled against the second reading of the bill, furious members from the South-East walked out of the chamber, even before the Speaker left proceedings to Deputy Speaker Yussuff Lasun.

    Signs of what awaited the bill were seen earlier when the proceedings were held for more than 20 minutes when the bill was stepped down  for the second time.

    The bill was first listed for second reading on Wednesday but was stepped down as the sponsors refused to present it.

    The sponsors were Chukwuka Onyema (PDP, Anambra), Uzoma Nkem-Abonta (PDP, Abia) and Henry Nwawuba (PDP, Imo).

    After calling for the bill to be presented, Dogara discovered that the lead sponsor, Onyema, who is also the Deputy Minority Leader, was not on the floor, like the previous day. He asked the Deputy Chairman, Rules and Business Committee, Bode Ayorinde (APC, Ondo), for the next line of action.

    Ayorinde asked that the bill be stepped down.

    As soon as the Speaker ruled, lawmakers from the Southeast sprang onto their feet, protesting.

    Jones Onyereri was shouting: “This is not fair; this is not fair!

    Groups broke out and other lawmakers were placating their agitated colleagues.

    Lasun and a few others went to confer with the Speaker, who, after normalcy returned, explained that there was no attempt to gag any member.

    The Speaker said he was told that the lead sponsor was not in the chamber, which was the reason behind the ruling.

    He, however, said if the sponsor still wanted the  bill presented, it would only take the suspension of the House rules to rescind the earlier ruling.

    Minority Leader Leo Ogor moved for the suspension of the rules but against the pattern of the voice vote, the Speaker ruled in favour of the bill to be taken.

    Onyema presented it and led the debate.

    The bill is seeking to address infrastructure deficit caused by the civil war and douse the Biafran agitation.

    Onyema said the South East States of Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo states fought a three-year  civil war that led to massive destruction of critical infrastructure, including roads,  houses, and environmental degradation.

    “The proposed bill is not intended to usurp the authority of any existing arm of government or indeed any government agency but rather it is being drafted to help in articulating specific interventions aimed at re-integrating the South East zone into the national discourse on development and growth in line with the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” he added.

    To address the challenges facing the region, Onyema listed some financial implications for the funding of the proposed Commission, including 15 per cent of the total monthly statutory allocations due to member states from the Federation Account.

    In addition, three  per cent of the total budget of any oil producing company operating in the South East states, including gas processing companies as well as  three per cent of the total annual budget of any solid mineral extracting mining company operating in the South East, should be for the proposed commission.

    Also, 50 per cent of monies due to member states of the commission from the Ecological Fund as well as such monies as may from time to time be granted or lent to or be deposited with the commission by the Federal Government or a state government,  any other body or institution whether local or foreign.

    According to the Minority Leader, Leo Ogor (PDP, Delta), the commission will make everyone look inwards. “The nation needs restructuring; we cannot continue like this. The journey of a thousand miles starts with the first steps. We have to restructure and move this country forward,” he said.

    Henry Nwawuba (PDP, Imo) said members should stop seeing Nigeria in terms of North and South, adding: “The South East has always had different types of challenges. We are presenting a legislative solution to the recurring agitation.

    “This is similar to that moved by the Speaker on the North East Commission. We have gone as far as saying look at the source of fundings.”

    Toby Okechukwu (PDP, Enugu) said the bill was intended for development. “It’s not for undue advantage or divisiveness in the country. Youths are not gainfully engaged, leading to Boko Haram, militancy and agitations. Cooperation may be difficult on infrastructure but a multipurpose vehicle like a commission can do it.

    “We must be our brother’s keeper. A commission can do infrastructure on a large scale manner. It will cure the division caused by the creation of states,” he said.

    To Kehinde Agboola (PDP, Ondo), the commission is a way of solving unemployment.

    He said: “History will not forgive us if we don’t pass this bill. More so that the funding will be coming from those states. The commission will solve the agitation in the South- East.”

    In the view of Mohammed Sanni Abdul (APC, Bauchi), the agitation for the North East and South East  Development Commissions is a result of the failure of governance.

    “There are fundamental flaws in the bill that must be looked at. The issue of the Biafra agitation and the timing of the bill has brought concern. Some of our colleagues have started bringing the issue of civil war,” he said, adding: “Why should we go back to that? There are convoluted issues within the body of the bill. To oppose it is wrong , but to swallow it is also wrong. The movers should be practical.”

    Sunday  Karimi ( Kogi, PDP) said passing the bill will be double taxation for the oil companies.

    “Looking through the the funding provision of 3 percent of the budget of the annual budget of oil companies. If you look at Niger Delta Development Commission, the commission extends to some Southeast and Southwest states.

    “Fund from oil companies and taxes are used to run the NDDC, and now, you are going to tax them again? This is double taxation,” he said.

    Sani Zorro (APC Jigawa) expreseed  fears that every zone would come up with commissions to address their challenges.

    After ruling against the second reading of the bill in the second voice vote, before the Speaker could vacate his seat for the Deputy Speaker to continue with proceedings, members of the South East caucus began to file  out.

    A few minutes later, the Deputy Speaker adjourned plenary till next Tusday, thereby bringing it to an abrupt end with eight motions and one report left unattended to.

    Outside the chamber some of the agitated South East lawmakers were discussing.

    However, when it became apparent that lawmakers from the region wanted to heap the blame of the defeat on the Speaker, Ehiozuwa Agbonayinma  (PDP, Edo) said the members of the Southeast caucus should rather have themselves to blame.

    He could not understand the reason behind the hesitation about the presentation in the first place.

    Besides, he questioned the absence of a greater number of the caucus on a day like that.

    “Don’t involve the Speaker in this matter he is not the problem; you people are not together.

    “Out of 42 members, only 18 of you are on the floor today, on a day a fundamental issue is to be debated, then what is the fault of the Speaker here?” he said.

  • Senate, House disagree over budget passage deadline

    Senate, House disagree over budget passage deadline

    NEXT weeks’ deadline given by the Senate to pass the Budget 2017 at the National Assembly and transmit the document to the Executive for President Muhammadu Buhari’s assent may not feasible after all.

    Senate Leader Ahmed Lawan said yesterday that the National Assembly would ensure that the budget is ready for next week, but the House of Representatives said it might take another two weeks to get N7.28 trillion Budget of Recovery and Growth to be ready.

    Speaking with reporters at the State House after meeting with Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Lawan explained that the Senate could not pass the budget in March as intended due to some parameters beyond its control.

     

    But it was a different story at the Green Chamber where House reiterated its stand on the passage of the 2017 Appropriation Bill.

    The lower chamber said it would take another two week.

    Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Abdulrazaq Namdas said the House has not changed its earlier decision, demanding for the release of the budget-related documents.

  • $17bn stolen crude: Issues before House committee’s probe panel

    $17bn stolen crude: Issues before House committee’s probe panel

    It smacks on the impossible: The House of Representatives has set up an ad hoc committee to probe revenue losses in crude oil and gas sales. The House even gave a time span: 2011 to 2014. And who is saddled with this seemingly herculean task? It’s Abdulrasak Namdas, the Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public Affairs. He is the one chairing the Ad Hoc committee meant to unravel what only men with links to the fourth dimension can probably accomplish. And without wasting much time, the lawmaker swung into action, inviting all concerned stakeholders. The media was always fully represented at the hearings, after all, by virtue of his position as the spokesman of the House, he is in their constituency. Now, the issue of who carted away what is being investigated, but the most important issue is not starting the journey but completing it. Many are wont to wager that strategic land mines will be strewn along the part of the committee with intent to derail, mislead, delay or totally destroy its mandate. It has happened before, and may likely happen again. It will be a surprise if the committee members had not considered that. Essentially, the purpose of the investigation is to unearth who benefitted from undeclared crude oil and liquefied natural gas exports from 2011-2014 estimated at $17 billion. There had been tales of collusion by government agencies and many had posited that it would take patience, perseverance, long-suffering, prayers and possibly fasting, all rolled into one, to come up with anything meaningful from the whole exercise. Already, Namdas is screaming himself hoarse that government agencies are scuttling the $17bn stolen crude/gas exports probe. Are Nigerians listening? At the last session of the committee, those invited that did not appear included the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation NNPC, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency NIMASA, Nigeria Customs Service, Nigerian Navy, Nigerian Ports Authority. Others were the National Petroleum Investment Management Services NAPIMS, Accountant General of the Federation, Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI), the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    Recall that this is not the first time such probe is being done. Let’s rewind to 11th of December, 2013 in Conference Room 028. Seated before reporters was the Chairman of the ad hoc Committee probing Oil theft and pipeline vandalism in the Niger Delta; his name is Hon. Bashir Adamu. The mandate of his committee at that time included ” to determine how deep pipelines are buried and if they are accessible to oil thieves; determine how stolen crude oil is transported; identify the owners of illegal vessels; ascertain the status of impounded vessels and recommend the confiscation of vessels used for illegal bunkering; determine the roles of various organization’s tackling illegal bunkering; determine the countries aiding and abetting the crude oil criminals” and finally, “recommend preventive measures and lasting solutions to the menace.”

    Bashir Adamu’s briefing began at 11: 18 am that day and lasted for exactly six minutes. And for the benefit of Hon. Namdas, I will like to reproduce a sizeable portion of that briefing:

    Adamu said: “illegal oil bunkering is a specialized and mechanized crime issue and several attempts have been made by the federal government to tackle the challenge to no avail. The level of oil theft is alarming and of great concern to stakeholders. The oil and gas industry account for about two- third of government revenue and more than 90 percent of export earnings in Nigeria. Illegal bunkering has caused Nigeria to lose an estimated $5 billion, about N780 billion annually amounting to about $400 billion since independence.

    “Statistics show that about 350,000 barrels per day was lost to illegal bunkering in 2012, representing an increase of about 20 percent over the figures of 2011 and 67 percent over that of 2010, while the trend of 2013 is even more alarming. Unless the government summons the will to fight the menace, the situation will further worsen the country’s economic woes.

    “The rising level of crude oil theft and pipeline vandalization, particularly in the Niger Delta region has reached high dimension. The ugly development has made the operators in the Nigerian oil and gas industry one of the most expensive in the world.

    “In April 2013, oil giant, Shell Petroleum Development Company, shut down the 150,000 Nembe crude oil pipeline due to urgent need to clear away illegal connections.”

    The lawmaker said the ugly phenomenon of oil theft and its global support system has continued to be a clog in the wheels of the nation’s high economic growth trajectory. “Government should beam its searchlight on all security agencies in the country in a bid to fish out those who perpetuate this illicit trade,” Adamu said.

    The adhoc committee in the 7th House, according to Adamu intended to have a 5- day public hearing. It didn’t hold. “At the end of the hearing, the committee hopes to put in place a legislation that will ensure improved monitoring of onshore and offshore areas in order to discourage vandalism and oil theft in the nation and propose adequate prosecution of criminals,” the ad hoc committee chairman said. That also did not happen. Suffice to say that the six minutes briefing of 11th December, 2013 in Conference Room 028 was the only activity carried out by the committee known to House of Representatives Press Corps till this day.

    Back to the present: Recall that the resolution of the Green Chamber on the $17 billion probe was sequel to the adoption of a motion sponsored by Johnson Agbonayinma and titled “Urgent Need to Investigate over $17 billion Stolen from Undeclared Crude Oil and Liquefied Natural Gas Exports to Global Destinations.” The House thereafter set up an adhoc committee to investigate 20 companies, two law firms, two Federal Government agencies, and a technical consultant contracted by the Jonathan administration amongst other mandates.

    Agbonayinma said the establishments were identified by Molecular Power System Limited in a report on shipment of oil and gas exports from 2011-2014. He expressed the need for a thorough investigation adding that the report based on data from the Nigeria National Petroleum Company (NNPC) and figures from pre-shipment inspection reports from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) indicates undeclared crude oil export shortfalls translating to $12 billion, $3 billion and over $800 million to the US, China and Norway respectively. According to the lawmaker, the report showed a $461 million shortfall from a total of 727, 460 metric ton export of natural liquefied gas from Nigeria to seven countries.

    Well, everyone is waiting to see how this investigation goes down. Namdas has everyone’s goodwill and prayers, we hope that will suffice.

    Even the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, while speaking at the opening of the Namdas hearing said the $40.266 billion and N196.3 billion revenue loss in the Nigeria’s oil and gas industry over the past few years was worrisome. According to him, the Green Chamber will leave no stone unturned in its effort to tackle corruption in the oil and gas sector.

    Now that the 4- day investigative hearing is over, Nigerians are salivating to see the profound revelations that may be served in the Namdas committee’s report. For sure, this won’t be another exercise in futility.

  • YOU REPORT: How my mother was rendered homeless

    YOU REPORT: How my mother was rendered homeless

    I hereby write regarding an incident which took place in Aguleri on Sunday the 19th of February 2017, between some families from Umu-Anaezunu and Isiokwe Aguleri in Anambra east LGA of Anambra State ( Anambra state governor’s town)

    The aforementioned families are having land issues and they had an encounter and the house that I built for my lovely mother was set ablaze during the clash.

    This act was painful to me because my land was bought genuinely and the disputed land is far away.

    My own land which I bought from another family entirely and that house was built by me out of love for my dear mother.

    Now my mum has lost her precious house and all properties therein, as the fight begun immediately she’s came back from her usual church services.

    I have complained this to the high authorities like the adviser to the governor on political matters and all the traditional rulers in the town and no one is capable to stand up probably because it hasn’t turn out to be a fight involving life.

    I am holding up my kins men to make peace and never to retaliate back as two persons can’t be mad at a time.

    But the fact that my mother is homeless and I’m cashless as I recently got married before this incident.

    I am stressed up  as I can’t think straight as a young and newly married man.

     

    Boniface Nnalue

    Whatsapp/Cell: +229-6676-1069

     

    YOU REPORT is a readers generated content on our website. If you have any report you want to draw the attention of our readers to please send to info@thenationonlineng.net

  • DESMOND ELLIOT  IN THE HOUSE!

    DESMOND ELLIOT IN THE HOUSE!

    AFTER the workout sessions on Wednesday, the door opened and Nollywood actor and member of Lagos State House of Assembly, Desmond Elliot walked in.

    The ONE Africa ambassador was accompanied by ONE Africa Director Nachilala Nkombo.

    The Housemates were presented with goody bags that contained their individual name branded ONE t-shirts and fact folders with all the information about the One AFRICA campaign, and they all sat in the lounge to elaborate further on the #GirlsCount campaign.

    Coincidentally, this visit is happening on the International Women’s Day and the Housemates all took time to celebrate great women who have impacted their communities and Nigeria as a whole. With 130 million girls around the world suffering from deprivation of basic education and other social ailments, it was very essential that the plight of the girl child and women as a whole be emphasised.

    Before the visit was done, the ONE AFRICA ambassadors not only encouraged the Housemates to celebrate the girl child and women more, but they also tasked them to read through their materials and come up with a presentation defending the rights of the girl child in lieu to sensitising the world even more and ultimately alleviate the plights of the girl child and women in general.

  • Death in the house

    Death in the house

    •Exit of ex-DTN MDs

    In its heyday, the Daily Times of Nigeria (DTN) Plc was larger than life. Its pride of the pack, Daily Times, was a newspaper which swallowed other newspapers. It had a niche, which it carved for itself through the efforts of its founding fathers and a newspaper legend, the late Alhaji Babatunde Jose, who came after them. The Daily Times’ glorious years coincided with the period that the country was finding its feet politically and in the comity of nations.

    It will be an understatement to say that the Daily Times played a vital role in the political growth of Nigeria. Though it was not the only paper in the land, it more or less determined how the others were viewed. The belief then was that once you have seen the Daily Times, you have seen all the papers. It was a paper among papers. Its portals were a place of learning for many who cut their journalism teeth in that great institution. It was a pride to work in the Daily Times then and it would have still remained a pride to work there today if the paper’s fortunes did not nosedive.

    Although there is still a paper called Daily Times on the newsstand today, but many can bear me witness that it is not the same as the Daily Times that they used to know in the days of the late Adeyemo Alakijas, one of the 10 founding fathers of the Daily Times, and the late Jose under whom the institution grew in leaps and bounds. What we have today is painfully, with due respect to its present managers,  a caricature of the Daily Times. The paper that we see today lacks the bite and authority for which the Daily Times was known those days.

    The Daily Times found itself where it is today because of the Federal Government’s undue interference in its affairs. The paper was doing well before the government wielded the big stick against the conglomerate in order to settle what could have been resolved through internal mechanism. Every organisation has its ups and downs and for the Daily Times the 1975 crisis, which led to the government’s acquisition of 60 percent of its equity  was its greatest test. It was neither a boardroom nor a management crisis but what some have called  a revolt against the late Jose’s leadership style. This is not the history of the Daily Times, but a background to my tribute to two men who were opportune to lead the conglomerate when things were no longer rosy for it.

    The Daily Times that the late Innocent Oparadike and the late Onukaba Adinoyi Ojo managed during their respective tenure was a shadow of the old Daily Times. By the time these men came on board, the law of diminishing returns had set in for the Daily Times. It could hardly meet staff and contractual obligations. The paper which set the pace for others to follow had become a giant with clay feet. It was living on its old glory, courtesy of the foundation laid by the late Jose. Despite its mouthwatering assets across the country and overseas, it was hard to believe that the Daily Times could run into hard times. But it did. What happened?

    By the time, the late Oparadike became managing director in 1995, the Daily Times had lost its preeminent position in the industry. It was trailing behind papers that came many years after it to which readers shifted loyalty. The Daily Times lost its loyal readers because they perceived it as government’s mouth organ. Every story was slanted to protect the military government, which had promised while acquiring 60 percent of its shares not to tamper with its independence. ‘’The Federal Military Government wants to state that its acquisition of the total ownership of the New Nigerian and 60 percent equity of the Daily Times of Nigeria will in no manner curtail the independence of the newspapers published by the two establishments. Government wants to underline its policy of full support for press freedom at all times’’. That was the government’s promise. But, it never kept the promise and we can all see the result today. Where is the Daily Times and the New Nigerian?

    Those days, editors thought twice before running any story against the government. They ran it at the risk of their job. When Ken Saro-Wiwa was executed on November 10, 1995, the Daily Times lacked the courage to carry the story like other papers because there was no confirmation of the execution from the government. Tell me, who will confirm what was secretly done in order  to avoid the global uproar which the government knew will follow. The managing directors and editors walked a tight rope (which incidentally is the title of the late Jose’s book on the Daily Times crisis) in the discharge of their duties and credit must be given to them for trying to bring sanity into an otherwise chaotic situation. As managing director, the late Oparadike ran helter-skelter to keep the paper afloat because the government was not ready to come to its aid and at the same it was not allowed to function the way it should.

    The situation was more or less the same when the late Ojo came on board in 1999, three years after the late Oparadike’s exit. With the coming of the late Ojo, there was some hope that things may be better because the military was no longer in power. Moreover, many thought former President Olusegun Obasanjo may want to right the wrong of the past. The Murtala/Obasanjo administration had acquired the Daily Times shares in 1975; so, hopes were high that he may return the equity to shareholders so that the first Nigerian newspaper to be quoted on the stock exchange can bounce back. It was a misplaced hope.  As much as the late Ojo tried, Obasanjo did not return those shares. The best he could do for the company, he told the late Ojo was to privatise it.

    This  was how the Daily Times ended up in the hands of Folio Holdings Group, which acquired the conglomerate in 2004. The late Ojo may have foreseen what is today happening to the Daily Times and that perhaps, may have been why he favoured a management buy out (MBO) to the privatisation of the Daily Times. He counted on his closeness to Obasanjo to win the argument for a MBO, but the former president thought otherwise. It is painful that the Daily Times is in the doldrums today. But it is more painful that we of the Daily Times family (those who passed through its portals) have lost yet again, some of the men that made the place tick. The late Oparadike and the late Ojo were not one of the boys; they were our bosses. Oparadike died on January 23; Ojo passed away last Sunday. May they find rest in the Lord’s bosom.