Tag: intensifies

  • EU intensifies push for endorsement

    EU intensifies push for endorsement

    The last couple of months have been particularly busy for the EU. Following the barrage of opposition against the endorsement of the EPA deal, members of the economic bloc have stepped up their shuttle economic diplomacy in Nigeria with a view to addressing some of the issues and concerns raised by manufacturers over the agreement. For instance, in one of the numerous fora organised by the EU in Lagos, its Ambassador/Head of Delegation to Nigeria & ECOWAS, Ambassador Michel Arrion, maintained that the EU has no offensive economic agenda against Nigeria regarding the implementation of the EPA.

    Rather, the EU’s mission in Nigeria and West Africa, he said, was to ensure the advancement of the competitiveness of the sub-region’s economic segments. The envoy expressed regrets that most of the arguments against the EPA were wrong, and are based on emotions rather than facts.

    He explained that in pushing for EPA, investors from EU countries see Nigeria as investors’ haven and so have no hidden agenda whatsoever.

    “We have no offensive agenda in Nigeria because we believe that Nigeria and ECOWAS are very important places where European or other non-European businesses could invest because there is enough room for investment,” he said.

    Arrion, however, assured that by investing in Nigeria and other ECOWAS member states, the EU would not invade the West African market with products that could compete with local products in the region, pointing out that the EU has removed all its export subsidies to the West African market.

    At the fourth EU-Nigeria Business Forum (EUNBF) with “Unlocking opportunities for diversification” as its theme in Lagos, Mr. Arrion also said the EU was hoping to explore opportunities available in Nigeria to diversify exports, increase foreign exchange, and attract more FDIs.

    “The most obvious comparative advantage Nigeria has is agriculture. But this must evolve from exports of primary products to  add value,” he said, adding that the overall objective of the forum’s 2015 edition was to deepen understanding of the EPA can play in supporting the diversification of Nigeria’s economy.

    Also, the EPA, the envoy stated, will strengthen EU-Nigeria business relations through identification of opportunities of partnership and hopefully, address the bottlenecks related to the effective development of agric-business in Nigeria.

    The European Commissioner for Trade, Ms Cecelia Malmstrom, also said the EPA remains the pathway to diversification.

    “For an economy that’s trying to diversify, access to export markets means new companies in new sectors can think big right from the start,” she said, citing examples of diversification and development in Asian countries, which grew over the last decades by opening up to imports-not overnight, but gradually.

    Her words: “Today it’s almost impossible to make a product or deliver a service without some kind of international input. In Asia, the model often involved importing high-tech components in order to assembly them into finished products before re-exporting.”

    According to her, “imports help keep costs down,” adding that “besides, imports, like foreign investment, transmit ideas and innovation, which are essential for an economy that wants to break newground. The EPA that we have negotiated between the countries of West Africa and the EU is about bringing all of these benefits to Nigeria. Signing and implementing it is a clear win for companies, workers, consumers and government.”

    Ms. Malmstrom added that the EPA will provide duty-free and quota-free access to a market for Nigeria’s exports; not just any market, but EU’s single market of 500 million people, which is the world’s highest. She said the icing on the cake of the EPA was a €6.5 billion, about N1.4 trillion development funds for Nigeria and other West African countries to support infrastructure projects as well as capacity building in the private sector and civil society.

    She explained: “The fund will help companies here in Nigeria to meet international health, safety and environmental standards that are vital for access to world market. It will support the efforts of Customs authorities to streamline their procedures so that border crossings don’t hold back growth.”

    Despite dangling the proverbial carrot in the form of infrastructure projects support fund, it is doubtful if manufacturers are swayed.

    But, the critical question raised by Prof. Oyejide is: “If we say no to EPA, what are we going to do with ECOWAS CET? That is the dilemma, as the implementation of EPA and ECOWAS CET are supposed to go hand in hand and will mutually reinforce each other.

  • Group intensifies efforts to work with security agencies

    Group intensifies efforts to work with security agencies

    The Police Assistance Committee (PAC) has enjoined members nationwide to intensify efforts in working closely with security agencies throughout the country in the area of crime prevention and combating.

    In a statement signed by the PAC Director General, Dr. Martins John-Oni, the organisation specifically called on all its executive members comprising chairmen, secretaries and PROs of all trade unions and associations as well as all Chief Security Officers (CSOs) of industries/companies, hotels and guest houses, mega markets and local government councils in all states to link up with state Police Commands, Area Commands and DPO’s, Directorate of State Services (DSS), Military Commands, Zonal Offices of Para-Military establishments and ensure timely passage of information/intelligence gathering to the various agencies that could assist them in detecting and fighting crime in the country.

    The organisation stated that this new move was part of its strategies being put in place towards ensuring that their members team up more closely with security agencies and constantly share intelligence and other information with them, adding that their nation-wide seminars and workshops being organized to rob minds with security agencies and all other stakeholders have been in progress.

    The PAC also re-pledged its readiness to key into the security agenda of the President Buhari administration which aims at restoring confidence of Nigerians in our national security.

     

  • Manufacturers’ woes worsen as insurgency intensifies

    Manufacturers’ woes worsen as insurgency intensifies

    The specter of Boko Haram is haunting the manufacturing industry. From billions of dollars in financial losses by manufacturers to monumental  decline in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), loss of jobs and social dislocation, the upsurge in the bombing campaign of the militant Islamist group has left manufacturers, and by extension, the economy, gasping for breath. Assist Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports that unless President Muhammadu Buhari  makes good his promise to contain the group, more manufacturers, especially those in the Northeast, may become extinct.

    It would probably go down as the most challenging period in it’s over 50 year’s operation in Nigeria. Between November last year and April this year, a period of six months,Lafarge Africa incurred financial losses to the tune of N2.5 billion as a result of the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast. The company, which recently merged with Switzerlandbased Holcimto create the most advanced building materials group, incured the heavy losses because it could not meet its sales projections due to the insecurity in the region..

    Although, normalcy has since returned to the company’s operations, according to itsGroup Managing Director/CEO, Guillaume Roux, the N2.5 billion financial losses is not the company’s only worry.

    Lafarge Africa  is also worried about the threat Boko Haram poses on it’s over $100 billion business expansion drive, particularly in the northern region.

    Roux said: “Today we have up to 8.5 million tonnes in the country and we want to double that capacity in the next five years. We are expanding in Calabar and we want to expand in the north. So this project of $100 billion expansion in the north is key because there’s a market; its key because there’s growth and it’s been an essential project for us.”

    Roux, who spoke in Abuja shortly after a meeting with the Presidential Initiative on the North East (PINE) held to finalise discussions on the role the cement company will play in the long term economic development of the Northeast, said supporting the security, recovery and stability of the region had become critical to the future of its over $100 billion business expansion drive in the region.

    According to him, the assets and plants the company has in the north are very strong and competitive. “We want to make sure the right conditions are there. Security is essential-without security obviously we cannot invest. The economic development is essential, so we need to help,” he said.

    Roux further said the company had demonstrated its commitment to business expansion in the region through the ground breaking of an expansion project that was meant to grow Ashakacem capacity from the current one million metric tonnes to four million metric tonnes.

    His words: “Lafarge is a long term investor and this necessitates uninterrupted operations despite the insurgency that we have witnessed in recent times. Of course, we see security as a key ingredient for our continued oper ations and this is why we are a willing ally with PINE in restoring normalcy and rebuilding the region.”

    Incidentally, Lafarge Africa is only an addition to the long list of manufacturing firms in Nigeria desperately craving uninterrupted operations and is ready to give an arm literarily for the restoration of normalcy in the devastated region.Boko Haram’s insurgency is also taking a huge toll on Spectra Industries Limited, makers of Suco beverages.

    Its Managing Director, Mr. Duro Kuteyi, told The Nation that because his company’s distributors are in the Northeast and Northcentral – the epicenter of the sect’s activities – the fortunes of his company have dwindled.

    Kuteyi who is also the National Vice Chairman of Nigeria Association of Small Scale Industrialists (NASSI), lamented: “Our core business is in the North, and our distributors complain of low sales as people are scared of visiting the markets or big malls; customers take their time to shop because of bomb scare.”

    Customers, he said, are skeptical about the safety of doing business or even doing their personal shopping, so the situation has affected his company’s profitability. “The security situation, especially the bombings and kidnappings are affecting our business,” he said, adding that as a result the distribution of locally manufactured goods has been hampered.

    For manufacturers, it does not only rain, it pours.The protracted armed insurrection in the country has ruined their businesses, and by extension, the national economy. Real sector operators especially manufacturers including members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) are agonising over the implications of the continuous erosion of investor’ confidence on the economy as a result of the sustained bombing campaigns of the militant group.

    President,  Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Alhaji Remi Bello, is one of those who are worried.

    Bello said at moment, itis extremely difficult to attract investors because the risk of long-term investments had become enormous. Hear him: “The tempo of economic activities in the North has declined; access to markets by companies in the south has reduced, resulting in loss of sales; while many enterprises have relocated.” While noting that security of lives and property is crucial to investment, he said investment growth is imperative for job creation, poverty reduction and social stability. Besides, persistent insecurity, he stated, impacts negatively on the economy, while declining private sector performance result in job losses, which in turn aggravate the state of insecurity.

    For real sector operators and indeed, government, the dry up of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) due to rising insurgency is a bitter pill to swallow. Since 2009 when the group emerged, FDI has been dropping sharply, sending shock waves down the spine of the authorities particularly since last year when declining price of oil in the international market caused serious fiscal upsets for Africa’s largest economy. For instance, the World Investment Report (WIR) 2013 says FDI flows into Nigeria dropped by 21 per cent in just one year — from $8.9 billion in 2011 to $7 billion in 2012. This translates to loss of $1.9 billion, a figure considered unacceptable for a country in dire need of shoring up its revenue.

    The drop in FDI, The Nation learnt, is not unconnected with the serious negative perception problem created for the country by the activities of the insurgents. The perception problem is said to be responsible for the dwindling fortunes of operators in the hospitality industry. Many branches of banks and insurance companies have also closed shop, even as sales representatives of many companies have fled the affected states in the north. Also, many company projects under construction in the North have either been abandoned or suspended. Many operators, especially Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) have also relocating to other states thus, putting more pressure on limited facilities in those states.

    Because many companies have relocated their employees to areas considered less volatile, while many Nigerians moved en-mass to states not impacted by the violence, a humanitarian crisis of unimaginable dimension has since set in. Many families resident in the South where fleeing victims of Boko Haram take refuge have had to contend with feeding more mouths than their income could carry. The unemployment rate in those states in the south also soared. The rush to escape from the northern part of the country that has been hard hit is already affecting the profitability of businesses in the region due to decrease of economic activities.

    A disturbing aspect of the humanitarian crisis now starring the country in the face as a result of the upsurge in the activities of the sect is the plight of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) Last year alone, about 16 million people, many of them children, were displaced, according to fugues from Federal Ministry of Special Duties and Intergovernmental Affairs.  Yet, Permanent Secretary in the Ministry, Dr. Jamila Shu’ara, at an event marking this year’s World Refugee Day in Abuja, this week, raised the alarm that the figure might triple this year if urgent steps were not taken to stop insurgency.

    With about 47,000 persons displaced daily, Shu’ara said: “The issue of refugees and displaced persons has become a major concern globally because of the negative effects on humanity.” She however, said her office was collaborating with the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and other stakeholders to provide succour for refugees and IDPs.

    “We all have a moral obligation and responsibility to lend a helping hand to people who want to flee as a result of conflict. The government is firmly committed to these principles while also seeking lasting and durable solutions to the challenge,” the Federal Commissioner for Refugees in the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and IDPs, Hadiza Kangiwa Sani, said, adding that because of the security challenge in the Northeast, hundreds of Nigerians now prefer to seek asylum in neighbouring countries.

    While calls for all hands to be on deck in seeking lasting solutions to the challenge of IDPs intensify, manufacturers, widely acknowledged as catalysts for economic growth and development, are also seeking relief. Recently, Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), the apex manufacturing body in Nigeria, called on President Muhammadu Buhari to address all the issues agitating the minds of manufacturers especially the Boko Haram insurgency.

    Although, since his inauguration on May 29, Buhari had at various fora reiterated his administration’s commitment to halting the violent campaign of Boko Haram, the consensus of experts and operators in various sector is that government must work the talk to halt the most callous and violent radical Islamist groups in African history. This, they say has become necessary because the manufacturing sector in particular remains crucial to national development, given its potential for job creation, revenue generation, and contribution to national Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

  • Manhunt for DPO‘s killers intensifies

    •Community still deserted

    Many residents of Adekile in Ibadan North East Local Government Area of Oyo State spent the Easter break away from home in fear of police arrest.

    This followed the killing of a Divisional Police Officer (DPO) last Wednesday by some miscreants on the suspicion that the police were covering up an alleged  kidnappers’ den in the area.

    The said senior police officer was attached to the Agugu police station.

    There was heavy police presence in the area yesterday. Motorists were subjected to security checks.

    Christians, it was learnt, had been warned to stay away by their pastors.

    Most residents  put  up with relatives where they celebrated Easter.

    “We are peace loving people here in this community until now that bastards took over the community.

    “On many occasions, we invited security operatives to beam their searchlight on some of their hideouts because we believe in cooperation with the police.

    “The slain DPO was a very nice man, very gentle and dutiful and on many occasions he had advised us on how to continue to be security conscious. I know all those responsible for his murder will not go unpunished,” a resident, Pa Rafiu Adekola, said.

    Miscreants vandalised a house in the area on suspicion that kidnap victims were kept there.

    It was learnt that residents alerted the police after discovering three wells in a building. Tension rose after the police did not make any discovery.

    Police spokesperson Adekunle Ajisebutu said the policemen in the area were searching for the killers.

  • Ambode intensifies campaign, visits more Lagos councils

    Relentless and tenacious best describe the campaign strategy of the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, as he intensified his campaign rallies, town hall meetings and road shows across different areas of Lagos State during the week.

    Characteristic of his campaigns, tumultuous crowd, enthusiastic reception and a genuine interest to identify with the man who has come to embody the concept of continuity in the governance of Lagos State were evident throughout the week. Picking from the one million-man march of last Saturday in which he joined the National Leader of the party, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and the vice-presidential candidate of the party, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, among other party stalwarts on the walk from Maryland to the Teslim Balogun Stadium in Surrulere, Ambode resumed his campaign to be governor with a town hall meeting and a rally at Festac Town on Monday.

    It was an exceptionally great day for the former Accountant- General to be so accepted among the Igbo and other different ethnic groups in the Amuwo Odofin Local Government Area. Not only was the Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha present at both the town hall meeting and rally to lend his support to Ambode’s candidacy, he was also being prophetic when he formally welcomed the candidate into the fold of the APC Governors’ Forum. “I am only announcing now what will become a reality in a matter of few months,” says Okorocha, adding that Ambode is the choice of the Igbo in Lagos State because “he will protect their interest once he becomes governor.”

    Tuesday was dedicated to Eti Osa with a grand rally that had Governor Babatunde Fashola SAN in attendance as well as the deputy governor, Mrs. Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, and the former deputy governor of the state, Mr. Femi Pedro, while Wednesday was at Obalende where a town hall meeting that addressed concerns of the residents were raised and thrashed before a grand roadshow that affirmed the popularity and acceptance of the APC candidate. Same template of mass appeal and focused presentation was adopted on Thursday when the campaign train moved to the Kosofe Local Government Area.

    The central message from the Epe-born candidate in the last three weeks that his campaign has regained momentum after the postponement of the election is clear and unequivocal:  it is the need to use the next four years to consolidate on the remarkable progress being witnessed in Lagos State by retaining the state for APC in the governorship poll slated for Saturday, April 11.

    This week’s campaign had built on the talk-of-the-town rallies of last week which recorded a major success when the campaign train reached the Seme border/Badagry and Ibeju-Lekki respectively. Last week Wednesday’s roadshow, which mesmerized the whole stretch of the Mile 2–Badagry Expressway, was perhaps the first by any candidate to reach the border town of Seme.

    And what a spectacle it was!

    From the Topa Road and its environs, people —young, old and the physically-challenged—trooped out to welcome Ambode, who had worked for three years in the late 1990s at the Badagry Local Government. Chants of “Sai Buhari, Sai Ambode” rent the air. And the APC standard-bearer did not disappoint them, promising that not only would his administration complete the multi-billion naira Mile 2-Badagry Expressway and the light rail project, but will also ensure that the Badagry division, which is one of the five divisions that make up  Lagos State, will be empowered to witness rapid development, especially in the areas of infrastructural development and job creation. “The future of tourism in Lagos State is here. This is also an important base for agro-economic development. Our administration will pay a lot of attention to these areas to ensure that the Badagry Local Government Area and every area around here experience a new layer in the type of development they are already witnessing,” Ambode told the crowd.

    And with people like Chief Sunny Ajose, a former Head of Service in the state, leading other party stalwarts to welcome and take Ambode’s train, which included his running mate, Dr. (Mrs) Oluranti Adebule, on a door-to-door campaign throughout the nooks and crannies of the local government area, it was not in doubt that this University of Lagos-trained accountant is the preferred candidate of the people.

    As if the Badagry/Seme border crowd was not enough, several thousands more welcomed the APC candidate the next day, Thursday, at Ibeju-Lekki where he had yet another opportunity to urge the people of Lagos State to allow the “progressive governance that the APC is known for” to continue in Lagos.

    For Ambode, who had a 27-year meritorious career as a civil servant in Lagos State before venturing into the private sector as an entrepreneur and public finance consultant, the reason why continuity is sought for the ruling party in Lagos State and change at the federal level is simple: “while the whole world acknowledges the giant strides of the last 16 years in Lagos, due to the people-oriented programmes and creating management of resources, which are succeeding in making Lagos a true mega city-state, the international community, like most Nigerians at home and abroad, are unanimous in rejecting the current maladministration that is going on in Abuja.” To this Fulbright scholar, therefore, while Lagos is working and deserves continuity, the government at the centre needs the type of change that a Buhari-Osinbajo ticket promises in order to redirect the affairs of the nation that is rapidly falling apart.

    According to Ambode, with the freefall that the Nigerian economy is witnessing, Nigeria would be said to have failed, if it were a company. Lagos State, he stated, could not afford to let a candidate of the party that has failed Nigerians at the centre inflict the state with the same type of incompetence and inexperience. His good news for the people of Ibeju-Lekki was that his administration will provide a new airport and seaport in Epe in order to bring development and prosperity to more people in the state.

    Earlier that week, it was Surulere that had first welcomed this consummate technocrat and grassroot mobiliser, first with a town hall meeting at Aguda, where Ambode reiterated his promise to establish an Office of Civic Engagement when elected. Born out of the conviction that artisans and people in the lower middle class constitute the majority in the state, the office, he explained, would serve as an effective liaison between the governor’s office and the people. He added that just the way indigent students are rewarded with scholarships when they display excellence, skilful artisans should also be able to benefit from the state government in the area of honing their skills, either at home or abroad, in addition to having access to the proposed N25bn Employment Trust Fund.

    The previous week had seen Ambode’s campaign train stopping at Ajeromi-Ifelodun, Apapa, Ifako-Ijaye and Epe. Each town-hall meeting entertained more than 20 questions because Ambode believes that it is the people’s needs that will shape his programmes and policies, when elected, hence the need to give as many people as possible the opportunity to air their views.  And at the local government areas and towns visited, there were royal blessings in abundance for the Ambode-Adebule team that has demonstrated its firm belief in consultations and government of inclusion.

    Rather than slow down, Ambode’s campaign has regained momentum, totally refusing to lose steam, in spite of the six-week postponement of the general elections from the original February 14 and 28 to March 28 and April 11 for the presidential and gubernatorial elections. “It is about the message and the method,” says Steve Ayorinde, the Director of Media and Communications for the Ambode Campaign Organisation. According to him, 24 hours is sometimes not enough to further push out the message of continuity and Ambode’s though-out plans that aim at empowering the 20 million citizens of the state in the next four years. The busy campaign schedule, he says, simply confirms the strength and popularity of the APC and the candidate and the team’s position not to take anything for granted.

    The renewed campaign, he explains, is an everyday affair that is broken down into mega rallies, town hall meetings, roadshows and door-to-door campaigns and strategic consultations.  “Mr. Ambode is on a familiar ground. He was the only aspirant that toured every local government area in the run-up to the primary election last year. And his promise then was that he would knock on every door and campaign on every street. This is why the party’s rallies took him round all the five divisions and local government areas before the elections were postponed.

    “We are already one month into the six-weeks of the election postponement and the whole state has seen that Mr. Ambode wasted no time in hitting the road again, getting acquainted with the people all over and the massive turnout and acceptance confirm the obvious that this is the man of the people who is destined to serve,” Ayorinde said.

    He added that the rallies and town hall meetings, which will run till April 9, perfectly complement the world-class communications campaign by the APC candidate that is widely acknowledged as arguably the most impactful in this electioneering process.

  • IOSCO intensifies efforts to strengthen capital markets

    IOSCO intensifies efforts to strengthen capital markets

    The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) has set up a work agenda to strengthen and foster the roles of capital markets as trusted sources of capital with a view to encouraging greater use of capital markets as financing channels for transactions.

    The board of IOSCO, which met in Madrid, discussed progress on a number of key initiatives to support the G20-FSB efforts to restore stability in the global financial system and build economic growth.

    The board, which included Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), also looked into methodologies for identifying non-bank global systemically important financial institutions or activities in the areas of asset management and market intermediaries.

    IOSCO also discussed the role capital markets and securities regulators can play in supporting long-term finance, including infrastructure investment and small and medium enterprises (SME )financing.

    The meeting also considered the implementation of IOSCO Principles on Financial Benchmarks, the IOSCO Principles for Oil Price Reporting Agencies and the IOSCO Principles for the Regulation and Supervision of Commodity Derivatives Markets.

    Chairman, International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), Greg Medcraft said capital markets are emerging as a key source of the finance needed across the globe to drive economic growth.

    “Through a work agenda focused on fostering markets as a trusted source of capital, IOSCO is playing an important role in supporting that growth,” Medcraft noted.

    The IOSCO board also discussed audit quality and important initiatives to build confidence in global securities markets and to reduce the reliance of asset managers and market intermediaries on credit ratings as well as promote effective credible deterrence as a key element in improving investor protection and confidence in markets.

    Members discussed the results of the IOSCO research department´s latest market survey on market trends, which emphasizes the growing leverage in securities markets, the impact of cross-border capital flows on emerging markets, financial risk disclosure, collateral management, and potential counterparty risk in central clearing houses.

    Board members also examined policy measures aimed at building capacity in emerging markets and supporting the creation of strong regulatory frameworks for sustaining growth in both emerging and developed markets.

    The meeting also discussed possible capacity building projects and agreed to a proposal for a one-off fee from permanent Board members next year to start off the program.

    IOSCO also agreed to move forward on an IOSCO Global Certificate Programme for securities regulators.

    The meeting was preceded by a round table attended by the board and four external experts on corporate governance from the financial industry and academia. Participants discussed the need for regulators to work towards restoring the social legitimacy of financial institutions, as a key step to safer financial markets and renewed trust in the financial system. The discussion highlighted the benefits to IOSCO and its members of co-operation and engagement with its members and industry.

    In another related development, the Comisión Nacional de Valores of Argentina became the 103rd signatory of the Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding on cooperation and exchange of information, during a signing ceremony in Madrid.

    IOSCO is the leading international policy forum for securities regulators and is recognised as the global standard setter for securities regulation.

  • Fayemi’s wife intensifies campaign for husband’s re-election

    Wife of the Ekiti State Governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, has advised the electorate against allowing politicians to brainwash them into selling their voters cards or disclosing their Voter Identification Number (VIN).

    Erelu Fayemi gave the advice when she led the women wing of the All Progressives Congress on election campaign to Gbonyin, Ekiti East and Ikole Local Governments, at the weekend, to enhance the support base of Governor Kayode Fayemi.

    The governor is the APC candidate for the forthcoming poll.

    Meanwhile, the only female governorship aspirant that scaled the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) screening hurdle and who was also a former State Women Leader of the party, Chief Modupe Ogundipe, has swelled the ranks of new defectors to the APC.

    She was in company of the APC women campaign train, which gave her the opportunity to tell the people why she believed that only Fayemi had the magic wand to take the state to the enviable position among the leading contenders.

    Besides, it was bumper harvest for traders in select markets in the three councils visited, as Fayemi’s wife also took the APC women campaign to markets where she bought commodities at prices far higher than what obtained before her arrival.

  • World intensifies pressure for Gaza ceasefire

    World intensifies pressure for Gaza ceasefire

    The UN secretary-general called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza yesterday as US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton headed to the region with a message that escalation of the conflict was in nobody’s interest.

    Nevertheless, Israeli air strikes and Palestinian rocket fire continued for a seventh day.

    For the second time since the fighting began, a rocket was launched at Jerusalem, triggering warning sirens. Police said it fell in an open area in the occupied West Bank and did not cause any casualties. Hamas’ armed wing said in Gaza it fired the projectile.

    Egypt was trying to broker a truce between Israel and Gaza’s ruling Hamas movement.

    An Egyptian intelligence source said: “There is still no breakthrough and Egypt is working to find middle ground.”

    Israel’s military yesterday targeted about 100 sites in Gaza, including ammunition stores and the Gaza headquarters of the National Islamic Bank. Gaza’s health ministry said six Palestinians were killed.

    Israeli police said more than 60 rockets were fired from Gaza by midday and 25 of the projectiles were intercepted by Israel’s Iron Dome system. The military said an officer was wounded.

    About 115 Palestinians have died in a week of fighting, the majority of them civilians, including 27 children, hospital officials said. Three Israelis died last week when a rocket from Gaza struck their house.

    In Cairo, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called for an immediate ceasefire and said an Israeli ground operation in Gaza would be a “dangerous escalation” that must be avoided.

    He held talks in Cairo with Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Elaraby and Egyptian Prime Minister Hisham Kandil, before traveling to Israel for discussions with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Ban plans to return to Egypt today to see Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, who was unavailable due to the death of his sister.

    Israel’s leaders weighed the benefits and risks of sending tanks and infantry into the densely populated coastal enclave two months before an Israeli election, and indicated they would prefer a diplomatic path backed by world powers.

    Clinton was going to the Middle East for talks in Jerusalem, Ramallah and Cairo to try to calm the conflict. An Israeli source said she was expected to meet Netanyahu today.

    “Her visits will build on American engagement with regional leaders over the past days — including intensive engagement by [US] President [Barack] Obama with Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Morsi — to support de-escalation of violence and a durable outcome that ends the rocket attacks on Israeli cities and towns, and restores a broader calm,” a US Department of State official said.

    Netanyahu and his top ministers debated their next moves in a meeting that lasted into the early hours of yesterday morning.

    “Before deciding on a ground invasion, the prime minister intends to exhaust the diplomatic move in order to see if a long-term ceasefire can be achieved,” a senior Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said after the meeting.

    A delegation of nine Arab ministers, led by the Egyptian foreign minister, visited Gaza in a further signal of heightened Arab solidarity.

    Morsi, whose Muslim Brotherhood was mentor to the founders of Hamas, on Monday took a call from Obama, who told him Hamas must stop rocket fire into Israel — effectively endorsing Israel’s stated aim in launching the offensive last week. Obama also said he regretted civilian deaths — which have been predominantly among the Palestinians.