Tag: Kano

  • Eid-el-kabir: Kano police beef up security, assure of hitch-free celebration

    The Kano State Police Command has assured residents of adequate security during the forthcoming Eid-El-Kabir celebration.

    In a statement, issued and signed by the Kano Police Command spokesman, DSP Magaji Musa Majiya, the command stated that it has put in place security measures to ensure a crime-free Eid-El-Kabir celebration.

    It said it has deployed adequate personnel at praying grounds, recreational centres, markets, entry and exit points of the state, including all other strategic places, to ensure a hitch-free celebration.

    The statement advised people heading to recreational centres, as well as places of gathering during the celebrations to be extra-vigilant, by taking good cognizance of people, as well as objects around them.

    Similarly, it advised Muslim faithful trooping to Eid praying grounds to be armed only with their praying mats.

    More importantly, it said vehicles must be parked about 200 metres away from Eid praying grounds, while all worshippers must be mandatorily screened with metal detectors before been allowed entry into the mosque premises.

    The Nation observed that the Police Command has embarked on motorised patrol of the metropolis, just as police presence is noticeable at strategic locations, within the metropolitans.

  • Dogara involved in money laundering, Jibrin alleges

    Dogara involved in money laundering, Jibrin alleges

    The ousted Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmumin Jibrin (APC, Kano ) has alleged the Speaker, Yakubu Dogara to have been involved in cases of money laundering since his (Dogara) Chairmanship of House Services Committee.

    Dogara was House Services Committee Chairman in the 6th and 7th House of Representatives while Jibrin, as a first timer was Finance Committee Chairman in the 7th House.

    Jibrin, in a statement yesterday also alleged the Speaker to have been involved in the car purchase scandals in the House .

    Dogara was Chairman, House Services Committee during the N2.3b car purchase scandal in the 6th House.

    Jibrin, who accused the Speaker  of not distributing the internal budget of the House to any member, said, “He operates the budget in secrecy and no member has a copy

    “Speaker Dogara has supervised the mismanagement of finances of the House through wasteful award of contracts on items already in members offices

    “Speaker Dogara introduced to members a fraudulent mortgage system in the House and proposed illegal deduction from members running costs

    “Speaker Dogara supervised the scandalous car purchase contract in the 7th Assembly where huge sums of money in bribe was alleged

    “Speaker Dogara was involved as Chairman House services in all cases of money laundering associated with the House since 2007.

    “Speaker Dogara in a clear case of conflict of interest has used his office to facilitate loans from an MDA and arrange “private” meetings with MDA’s.”

  • KSA @ 70: Ariya as Catharsis

    KSA @ 70: Ariya as Catharsis

    The reports few days ago that the acclaimed torch-bearer of Ariya culture chose a foreign soil – the United States – to commence his grand entry into the septuagenarian club must be troubling indeed for cultural sentinels back home. How ironic that the platinum milestone of the king of African beats, connoisseur of the good times, falls in a lean season that has imposed austerity harshly on the entire citizenry!

    True, economic recession is presently biting hard. But let no one blame the foregoing aberration on the economic crunch. Lest there be a tumult from the denizens of the high society. However depleted the saucer filled with baby toiletries and ointment becomes, they say, it never gets to the point where a nursing mother completely lacks what to rub on her suckling.

    Really, still stretching far ahead is the road to September 22, the birthday of Sunday Adeniyi, the undisputed monarch of juju music. But to his cult following in jollity forever occupying the forecourt of the juju music factory, the Ariya is obviously already jump-started in its full sybaritic splendor. In the coming days, the town will definitely shake as they toast the man who has come to embody a popular genre in Yoruba music in the last half century.

    That KSA would on the eve of his 70th birthday be on a road show in faraway North America (his last outing there being more than eight years ago) could not be in search of his next meal ticket. It is certainly borne out of an enduring passion for his vocation.

    True, he only inherited juju as an art form. But the identities of all the forerunners in history now seem totally eclipsed on account of the immensity of his redefinition of that inheritance and the prodigious stamina he has demonstrated since then.

    As his muse attained full maturity in the early 80s, he succeeded in welding western synthetic pop sound with African talking drums and electric guitar to birth a dense rhythm. Thus, he was able to reach a global audience, earning a Grammy nomination with “Odu” later in 1998. Other than Fela, no other Nigerian musician was as globally acclaimed at that time.

    Born in the artistically inspiring Osogbo in 1946, KSA served his apprenticeship in the early 60s under the tutelage of Moses Olaiya who would later rest his Federal Rhythms Dandies band to diversify into full-time comedy and soon become a household name as “Baba Sala”.

    It is a testimony to raw talent, sheer industry and unshakeable faith that KSA eventually outgrew such humble circumstances to become bigger than his tutor. For those who might be wondering the source of the dazzling athleticism he brings to dance on stage, he revealed that the now fallen highlife wizard of Kennery fame, Orlando Owoh, taught him boxing.

    In retrospect, beside Ebenezer Obey (his long-time competitor), no other practitioner could be said to have spoken with so much eloquence and broad appeal for the juju brand. Whereas Obey calls his Miliki, KSA’s is Ariya.

    As a sub-culture, Ariya captures the feel-good urban spirit of the Yoruba society. It is the distinctly louder, uninhibited version of Miliki propounded by Ebenezer Obey, the meditative darling of the aristocratic caste. Ariya and Miliki (corruption of milk) are taken as the social benefit of labour. He/she who has toiled hard is deserving of a moment of merriment, they say. With a rhythm defined by heavy percussion, the feet KSA’s Ariya lures to the dance-floor belong to the less inhibited among the jolly crowd.

    If in doubt, you only need to embark on a tour of neighborhoods of the average Yoruba town during the weekend at normal times. So much that some sociologists and anthropologists have mischievously gone ahead to list the Ariya culture among the chief incentives for the relative peace and tranquility prevalent in Yorubaland even when other sections of the country appear to totter under social or sectarian eruptions. Those eagerly counting down to the next Owambe date are less likely to be easily recruited into a mission to disrupt the social order.

    At the national level, such mindset is thought to also account for the lack of stamina for a sustained struggle and the general absence of will to endure pain with a view to changing the social disequilibrium. Ariya offers an escape; it plies the citizenry with opium against harsh realities. Once the people start counting the number of Ariya opportunities already lost, they soon begin to defect from the barricade, one after the other.

    Fela already identified this character flaw in his “Sorrow, Tears & Blood” released in 1973: “I no wan die, papa dey for house, mama dey for house, I wan enjoy, I no wan go.”

    Indeed, one of KSA’s earliest hits exuberantly declares “Ariya has no end, Ariya is unlimited”. Tired of “Shokoyokoto” (Fresh Fish), he next offered “Sweet Banana” while assessing “My Destiny” only to be pricked by “Conscience” (Eri Okan) to discover the “The Good Shepherd” and so decided to exult “Merciful God”. Perhaps the one single album that truly defined and established his authority as a national legend was “Let Them Say” in 1986. It is a bold statement of the art form balancing danceable sounds with enduring messages.

    Later in the 80s, he chose to tickle the nation’s imaginations by openly engaging Onyeka Onwenu of the “One Love” fame in a musical romance. That sired “Wait For Me”.

    But to say the KSA magic is regionalized in the South-West would be doing grave injustice to his enigma. His audience is indeed national and by far broader than his ancient Miliki rival. The secret partly lies in the cross appeal of his beat. And he carries all the credentials that fully define musicianship: composer, singer, master guitarist, consummate dancer and producer.

    His pioneering vision also led the industry into creating video for the audio. To bring life to songs, he began the experimentation in mid-80s by dramatizing new songs in short movie. It was instant commercial success. Expectedly, others began to copy him. Many consumers would thereafter not mind paying a little more for the video CD as value addition. Today, musical video has become a vibrant sub-sector in the industry with young lads like Clarence Peters infusing more creativity with cutting-edge technology.

    Indeed, while the older generations reminisce on KSA’s exploits in the past decades, their hearts must be aching at the relative emptiness of the so-called stars of today. Unlike musicians of old who honed their skills diligently, priding themselves on being able to play at least a few instruments and tended to treasure their artistic expression more than monetary compensation, today’s creatures are mostly computer-generated stars obsessed with materialism. They hardly feel limited if all there is to their talent is merely chanting on a sound conjured synthetically to make music defined more by vulgarities and profanities.

    The shallowness of the typical hip-hop act of today is easily verifiable if, for instance, invited to a concert alongside his counterpart from the “old school”. The former will likely fret at any suggestion to perform with a live band, lest his inadequacies are exposed. Rather, he/she prefers to mime a medley of songs pre-recorded on the CD, possibly further embellished with the razzmatazz by the disc-jockey on the band-stand. Unlike the latter who forever craves opportunity to show off his craftsmanship and will painstakingly build the sound from the scratch by syncopating one instrument after the other until the crescendo. Not surprising, he ends up lasting longer on stage.

    Ironically, the new artiste rakes in more cash for less exertion. Feeding off a new national culture that glorifies shadow over substance, he/she somehow still manages to command higher fees than the far more industrious older colleague.

    With Obey’s later absence of more than a decade and lately occasional showing, it has therefore been KSA’s remit over the years to defend juju’s flanks against the merciless encroachment by new-generation hip-hop. It has not been an easy task, though. First, it took more than grit and sheer adaptation to survive the scare of Sir Shina Peter’s Afro Juju explosion in the twilight of the 80s.

    With the release of Ace in 1990 followed with Shinamania in 1991, juju’s old orthodoxy of message over beat was shattered into smithereens. A master guitarist of no less virtuosity, SSP’s novelty of non-stop dancehall beat literally set the entire nation dancing. As revelers bayed for more, it became clear that the old king needed to urgently reinvent himself lest his crown and jewel be swept away by the raging tornado.

    With the runaway success of Ace and Shinamania, a horde of SSP’s clones soon appeared. Enter Dayo Kujore, Dele Taiwo et al.

    In his fight-back entitled “Authority”, KSA could not but join the bullet-speed train, relying heavily on synthetic studio garnishments to achieve a fast-tempo beat. The old game-master was at his combative best, freely deploying innuendos against the “restless pretender to the throne unwilling to pay the customary dues.”

    Stanza after stanza, lyric by lyric, he let it be known point-blank he would not surrender the throne yet, famously declaring “Pounded yam is greater than yam tuber”. And to traducers already checking their wrist-watches, KSA’s follow-up song defiantly screamed “E ma fi enu retirement pe Sunny Ade mo” (Stop calling for Sunny Ade’s retirement).

    True to the bookmaker’s prophecy, the Afro Juju craze soon fizzled out. With that, KSA might have survived the stiffest challenge to his stool as juju monarch, but it obviously left him with deep scars. In subsequent offerings, he would seem to have given up on hunting for new audience. With a voice increasingly enfeebled by age, his recorded music soon began to showcase more of a dexterity on instruments, apparently only now desirous of keeping his old fans base. However, the appeal of his live concert remains undiminished. The magnetism of his live performance continues to draw forcefully, even from a distance.

    Overall, a critique of KSA’s catalogue is incomplete without recalling his dabbling in political commentary at some point. In a 25-minute epic The Way Forward (I & II) released in 1996, KSA would rally a galaxy of musical stars cutting across generations and ethnic/genre divides. When publicists began to hype the title ahead of its official presentation, many naturally shifted in their seats, apprehensive about the message at a time the nation had descended into funereal silence under Abacha’s bloody despotism. The expectation of something earth-shaking however turned out to be forlorn.

    Caught at similar crossroads eighteen years earlier in Jamaica, Bob Marley chose to act differently. His Caribbean homeland had been devastated by political storms involving the Jamaican Labour Party (JLP) and the People’s National Party (PNP). The reggae icon resolved to stage One Love Peace Concert in Kingston in April 1978. Drawing a record 32,000 capacity crowd including the sitting Prime Minister of PNP and the opposition leader on the D.Day, the hitherto gasping nation literally stopped breathing when Marley, with his hit track Jammin’ playing, invited leaders of both JLP and PNP, Edward Seaga and Prime Minister Michael Manley respectively, to the stage. Symbolically, the trio held up their hands to signify reconciliation. At the end of that historic night, the Jamaican nation left the concert reunited. Such was the depth of Marley’s intervention.

    But beyond the fast dancehall beat, the KSA-inspired peace song of 1996 offered nothing fresh, other than a rehash of the usual folksy appeal for communal unity. No mention was made of the legion of political captives languishing in the gulag then. At best, it could be described as an artistic statement without depth.

    Perhaps, we should have known that KSA is neither revolutionary Bob Marley nor caustic Fela. The poor outing of 1996 will however not diminish the weight of his legacy. Indeed, new kings will be born tomorrow. But it will certainly take another generation to see one as domineering as KSA.

     

     

    Kano & politics of love

    After iconic Gani Fawehinmi, only a few lawyers would come near Comrade Kanmi Osobu in terms of popularity vis-a-vis human rights advocacy from the idealistic 70s, through the turbulent 80s to the early divisive 90s. In all Afro Beat originator Fela’s brushes with the establishment during these epochs, Osobu constantly stood by him through thick and thin.

    An inexhaustible bag of yabis (humour) like Fela, Osobu was often a spectacle in and out of the court before his demise.

    Once, he reportedly returned from a frolicking to the United Kingdom to a little storm instigated by workers (fellow comrades, for sure) in his chambers unhappy that whereas they were left to rough it out at home for months without salaries, their comrade chose to travel out with a lady-friend to “enjoy”.

    After listening to the militant submission by the most senior among the lawyers flaying “this bourgeois indulgence utterly unbecoming of a true comrade”, Osobu reportedly quipped: “Well, comrades I heard all you have to say and cannot fault your argument, very brilliant, except on one point. When you pick quarrel with my traveling overseas with a lady friend, comrades I only wish to ask you just one simple question: is our struggle now against love?”

    Of course, the room erupted in delirious laughter.

    Well, we are tempted to pose this question also today as erstwhile governor of Kano State, Rabiu Kwankwaso, and his successor and now estranged political godson, Abdullahi Ganduje, appear to have carried their animosity to the province of love. Some weeks ago, Kwankwaso, the senator presently representing Kano Central, announced a plan to bankroll the mass wedding of 100 couples under the auspices of his non-governmental organization, the Kwankwasiyya Development Foundation.

    As governor between 2011 and 2015, Kwankwaso formed the habit of helping widows find love by underwriting the mass wedding as a way of promoting family values. Since the incumbent has not organized any since assuming office last year, the more politically astute Kwankwaso would seem to have seen a window to score a political point.

    But Ganduje apparently was not ready to allow that happen. To scuttle the plan, the state soon announced a youth empowerment programme to hold same day and same time. Determined not to be beaten, the Kwankwasiyya people announced a postponement of the mass wedding till the following day.

    It was at this point that Ganduje decided to flex some gubernatorial muscle. The police, allegedly at Ganduje’s prompting, directed that both the youth empowerment event and Kwankwasiyya’s mass wedding be postponed over adverse “security reports”.

    Things however took a bizarre twist Tuesday as heavily armed policemen sealed off Kwankwaso’s residence at Lodge Road that doubles as the headquarters of the Kwankwasiyya Movement. The action, according to the state police spokesman, DSP Magaji Musa Majia, was peremptory “because of an intelligence report that there is a plan to conduct mass wedding at the house.”

    Too bad, the police would appear to move in only after the proverbial horse had bolted out of the stable. For sources close to the Kwankwasiyya movement reportedly confided that the mass wedding had already been conducted on Monday secretly with “only brides and grooms’ next of kins, including some selected Islamic scholars” present.

    Now, what is unclear is whether charges would be entered against the sponsors of the mass wedding despite a subsisting restraining order by the police.

    Indeed, Ganduje and Kwankwasiya are free to continue to seek avenues to trade rough tackles. But it is doubtful if those who took advantage of the reported mass wedding would be amused. Like Kanmi Osobu, they must now be wondering if the battle between the godfather and his estranged godson is also against love.

  • Kano, Ogun shine in 2016 COWBELLPEDIA

    A pupil, Master Abdullahi Shuaibu Maje, representing Nigerian Turkish International College (NTIC) Boys High School, Kano State, has  excelled, reaching the semi-final stage in the on-going Cowbellpedia Mathematics Television Quiz show.

    The lad, after surviving the two preliminary rounds, picked a semi-final ticket for his school, and became the first from any state in the north in the competition.

    Maje, a 13-year-old JSS 3 pupil was up against Efosa Osagiede of Obafemi Awolowo University International School, Ile Ife; Nyemike Atoh of Loyola Jesuit College, Abuja; Glory Okoli of The Ambassadors College, Ota, Ogun State; Victor Mgbemena of Graceland International School, Port Harcourt, Rivers State; and Muhammad Hasimu of Government Junior Day Secondary School, Dangikka Bakaro, Bauchi, Bauchi State.

    He scored 97 per cent in the qualifying examination to represent his state, Kano, and he with Okoli made it to the semi-finals.

    Maje, a first timer in Lagos and in the competition, is optimistic about his chances in the competition.

    “I want to excel and win the ultimate prize. The competition is a good experience for me. Winning it will be a fantastic achievement for me and my school. My parents and my teacher will be very happy, even my state governor too,” he said.

    While Maje appeared as the star for his state, Ogun State also put up a star performance by picking up the remaining three semi-final tickets through Ambassadors College, Ota.

    Apart from Okoli, who qualified in the junior category, Blessing Udoh and Ayooluwa Oguntade are also in the semi-final.

    Udo and Oguntade dedicated their success to their teachers and promised to sustain the tempo.

    “We have gone past two stages; two more to go before the crown. It will be good for us to be in the finals and for one of us to win the ultimate prize,” Udo said.

    Oguntade added that he is looking forward to wining the competition and promised to work more on his speed before the next stage. “I pray I win. That will be lovely. My mummy will love it. She has been praying hard for me,” he said.

    The ultimate prize for this year’s edition is one million naira and an all-expense paid educational excursion outside the country. The teacher of the winning student will receive N400,000.

     

  • Police seal off Kwankwaso’s residence

    Police seal off Kwankwaso’s residence

    Heavily armed policemen on Tuesday in Kano sealed the residence of former Kano state Governor, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso.

    The residence, located at Lugard Road, is just a few minutes drive from Kano Government House.

    The state’s Commissioner of Police, Mr.  Rabiu Yusuf,  confirmed the development, saying:  “We have directed our men to seal the residence, following an intelligent report that there is plan to conduct mass wedding in the house “

    Rabiu, who spoke through the spokesman for the state police command, DSP Magaji Musa Majia, said police did not issue permit for any mass wedding at the residence.

     

     

  • JAMB assures of smooth 2016 admission process

    JAMB assures of smooth 2016 admission process

    The Registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, has assured that the 2016 admissions into the country’s tertiary institutions will be smooth.

    This is contained in a statement issued by JAMB on Tuesday.

    Oloyede spoke at the opening of the first technical committee meeting on the 2016 admissions to first choice institutions, which opened at the Bayero University, Kano, on Monday.

    He said that the only difference between 2016 admission process and what had been the practice was the policy that there should be no written Post-UTME test.

    The registrar said that all other processes would be the way they have always been.

    “It is more pleasant to me that in the almost four decades of JAMB, this is the first time that the technical meeting will hold in Kano.

    “Every year the board convenes meeting for placement of suitably qualified candidates into tertiary institutions, taking into consideration vacancies available.

    “It also considers guidelines approved for each institution by their respective proprietors.

    “The meeting also looks at the preference expressed for the institutions and courses by the candidates,’’ Oloyede said.

    He said that the senates of each institution have the prerogative of admitting candidates to their respective schools subject only to national policies.

    The policies guidelines stipulated by the proprietors of the institutions must adhere to the 60:40 science/art ratios for conventional universities and 80:20 science/art ratios for non-conventional universities.

    He added that the guidelines also include 70:30 technology/non-technology ratios for national diploma awarding institutions, among others.

    “The institutions must adhere strictly to subject combinations of various courses as specified by the respective Senates and included in the 2016 UTME brochure.

    “Institutions are expected to adhere to the 2016 admissions quota as prescribed by the regulatory bodies like the National Universities Commission, National Board for Technical Education and the National Commission for Colleges of Education.

    “For federal universities, the criteria stipulated by the Federal Executive Council, concerning merit, catchment and educationally less developed states, should be complied with.’’
    Oloyede further said that in the discharge of this national assignment, it was important that stakeholders act with focus on what was beneficial to the largest number of Nigerians.

    “We must avoid adding to the burden of our people who rightly yearn for higher education as a veritable means of active participation in public life.

    “While urging us to work hard and exhibit commitment, synergy and cooperation between the board and the institutions, I assure you all that the hands of fellowship, which my predecessors have extended to the institutions, would be strengthened for the advancement of national goals.

    “My immediate past predecessor, Prof. ‘Dibu Ojerinde, in particular and others in general, have lifted the board to an enviable standard of international repute and we cannot afford to do less.

    “The task of JAMB is coordination and not substitution of the traditional responsibilities of the Senates of tertiary institutions.

    “Consequently, no candidate must emanate from any other source (JAMB inclusive) outside the list prepared and recommended by the institutions,’’ Oloyede added.

    He, however, said that JAMB had the right to reject candidates for non-compliance with extant rules and regulations but would not be allowed to substitute or originate any names without the prior concurrence of the institutions.

    The registrar tasked institutions to ensure that the admissions exercise was concluded before or by the approved deadline of Nov. 30.

  • Budget padding: Gbajabiamila offers self for investigation

    Budget padding: Gbajabiamila offers self for investigation

    The Majority Leader of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila (APC, Lagos) has offered himself for investigation by security and anti-corruption agencies over alleged padding of the 2016 budget.

    Former Chair of Appropriation Committee, Abdulmumin Jibrin (APC, Kano) had alleged Speaker Yakubu Dogara, Deputy Speaker Yusuf Lasun, Whip Alhassan Doguwa and Minority Leader Leo Ogor of illegally padding the budget with about N40b.

    Jibrin also accused nine Committee Chairmen of inserting 2000 fictitious projects amounting to N284b into the budget.

    Gbajabiamila, in a statement Friday however noted that though his name was not mentioned by Jibrin of padding the budget since the controversy began, there was a need for him  to clear his name.

    The Majority Leader, who contested the Speakership position with Dogara also affirmed the innocence of the entire body of Principal officers of the House on the budget padding scandal.

    He said: “I returned from the United States just yesterday after a three week break I called the Speaker a day before my return to urgently fix a Principal Officers meeting so we could address the several allegations made by Hon Jibrin.

    “At the meeting Speaker Dogara, Deputy Speaker Lasun , Chief Whip, Hon Ado Dogwa and Minority Leader, Hon Leo Ogor passionately and vigorously clearly stated their innocence.

    “A prepared text was read and we all agreed to sign. For me as the Leader of the House I felt it was important to give them the benefit of doubt which in any case is what our constitution says.

    “The decision to relieve Hon Jibrin was indeed a collective decision of which I was a part of.

    “However I gave a caveat before the press release was signed, I made it clear to my colleagues in the leadership that because somehow my name had been sullied in all of this and fake documents and publications had been put out there in traditional and social media which stated I was also involved in the so called padding of the budget, that I would need to clear my name and that even though no petition was filed against me by Hon Jibrin and no invitation was extended to me by the police, I would be submitting myself on my own volition to the police for investigation.

    “This is important to me as insinuations have been made from many quarters that I along with others were sponsoring Hon Jibrin. I have just this afternoon met with the police authorities for a proper and thorough investigation of my role if any in this whole bizzare episode.”

     

  • BDCs in Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, others await forex disbursements

    Bureaux De Change (BDCs) in Abuja, Kano, Port Harcourt, Benin, among others are expecting the disbursements of their Diaspora remittances this week.

    No fewer than 350 BDCs in the Lagos on Friday got $30,000 weekly allocations from four lenders – First Bank of Nigeria Limited, United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc, Fidelity Bank Plc and Ecobank Nigeria Limited, it was gathered.

    About $10.5 million was disbursed to beneficiaries at the interbank rate.

    To ensure stability of the exchange rate and encourage participation of critical stakeholders in the foreign exchange market, the CBN directed through a circular to authorised dealers that all agents to approved International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) sell foreign currency accruing from inward money remittances to licensed BDCs.

    The foreign currency proceeds of IMTOs sold to BDC operators shall be retailed to end users in accordance to CBN regulation. Only BDCs that have been cleared by the compliance department of the banks as fully compliant with the KYC requirement were allowed to buy.

    The CBN issued a follow-up circular to all the banks, asking them to sell dollar to BDCs.

    In the circular titled:  Re: Sales of Foreign Currency Proceeds of International Money Transfers to Bureaux De Change Operators, CBN Acting Director, Trade and Exchange, W.D. Goting, said   he authorised dealers should sell foreign exchange cash to BDCs subject to a maximum of $30,000 to a BDC per week.

    He explained that a BDC shall nominate its preferred authorised dealer, a commercial bank, and can only procure the said amount from only that bank of its choice in a week. The CBN warned that any breach of this condition will attract appropriate sanction.

    The commercial banks, which are the authorised dealers have been giving stringent conditions to the BDCs finally bowed to pressure from both the CBN to disburse the first set of cash. Nearly 2,600 BDCs are yet to get their alloocations, and are at various stages of documentation.

    The banks also obtained com-pliance set guidelines commitment from the BDCs before selling to them. Part of the commitment were that the BDCs would not purchase forex from any other bank, except its bank of choice; foreign currency cash purchased by the BDCs shall be sold to forex end-users at a rate not exceeding two per cent margin above the buying rate.

    The BDCs also pledged to ensure that purchased funds would be disbursed to end users and for eligible transactions only and shall render weekly returns on purchases from the banks to Trade and Exchange Department of the CBN.

    The BDCs further promised to ensure strict compliance to the provisions of the anti-money laundering laws observance of appropriate KYC principles in the handling of foreign exchange transactions.

  • Buhari inaugurates N100 million intensive care facility in Kano

    Buhari inaugurates N100 million intensive care facility in Kano

    •Govt okays School of Nursing and Midwifery for Nguru in Yobe 

    President Muhammadu Buhari has inaugurated the Intensive Care Unit at Dala Orthopaedic Hospital, Kano.

    The N100 million facility was donated by Alhaji Aminu Dantata, a businessman.

    The President, who was represented by the Minister of State for Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, recalled that in 2007, Alhaji Dantata also donated two  projects to the hospital – General Ward and Amenity Suite.

    Ehanire also praised Amasco, Minjirya Health Services and Pedmic Nigeria Limited for their donations  to the Spinal Centre in the hospital.

    He said the government was committed to improving the health of Nigerians, calling on healthcare professionals to set targets for themselves to ensure the healthcare system becomes one of the best in the world.

    The Minister later visited Dantata to thank him for his contributions to the sector and prayed that God would give him the ability to do more.

    Dantata said he always felt elated whenever he contributed to the development of humanity, adding that such contributions are rewarded by the Almighty Allah.

    He reiterated that he would continue to support the sector in the state and other parts of the country,   urging the government to provide drugs and equipment to hospitals.

    The Medical Director, Dr. Muhammed Musa, while praising Dantata for the gesture, acknowledged that the hospital provides care not only to people of the state but to others from neighbouring states.

    Meanwhile, to solve the manpower needs in the sector, especially in the Northeast, the Federal Government has approved the establishment of School of Nursing and Midwifery in Nguru Local Government of Yobe State.

    The Chief Medical Director of the Federal Medical Centre, Nguru, Dr. Abubakar Musa, made this known during Ehanire’s tour of the hospital.

    Musa said: “The Federal Medical Centre, Nguru, in its efforts to fulfil one of its mandates of health manpower training, got the approval of its then Board of Management, the Federal Ministry of Health and the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria to establish a School of Midwifery. This is in order to address the growing shortage and imbalance in the availability of skilled manpower that is prevalent in the North -East and most especially in Yobe State, which is viewed as among the worst in the country.”

    The school is to be situated at the former Federal Medical Centre old site, as the Medical Centre has moved to its permanent site.

    Ehanire expressed optimism that the school, when in full operation, would reduce the manpower challenge, not only within the catchment areas but the entire state.

    Ehanire said: “I fully approve and support the efforts to develop human resources based staff, especially the School of Nursing and Midwifery to start as quickly as possible because we need those resources based officers urgently.”

    He urged the people living in the area to avail themselves of the school’s programmes and use the skills acquired to assist the sick in their communities.

    The Minister urged the hospital’staff to put in at least, 40 hours weekly.

    “While we are struggling to ensure that FMC Nguru gets its fair share from the Federal Government, you should also work with dedication and humility for at least the number of hours expected of you per day,” he added.

    The Minister noted that with the Federal Government’s policy of revitalising 10,000 Primary Healthcare Centres across the country, and with the launch of saving one million lives programme, which Federal Government has disbursed $1.5million  to  the states to improve primary health care centres, the pressure on the Federal Medical Centre would be reduced.

    He added that the Primary Healthcare Centre would be handling basic health care services while the Federal Medical Centre would only serve as referral centre.

  • ‎Budget padding not possible without executive-Na’Abba

    ‎Budget padding not possible without executive-Na’Abba

    A former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr Ghali Na’Abba, has called for proper investigation of the role played by officials in the executive arm in the current budget padding controversy.

    Na’Abba made the call while answering questions from Energy Correspondents, at a workshop organised by Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company (KRPC) in Kano.

    He said it was impossible for the budget to be padded without the connivance of government officials.

    “This stealing of funds cannot be possible without active connivance with some members of the executive arm,” he said.

    On calls for the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara to resign, Na’Abba said that the call was “unwarranted” as there was no formal indictment of the speaker.

    “According to my understanding, where the issue being referred to as padding comes into play, is a situation where some members go behind and add items of expenditure to what has already been agreed upon.

    “For either stealing the funds or doing whatever they feel like doing with it.

    “So far, accusations are being traded amongst members of the house, but no investigation has been conducted.

    “On the call for the resignation of the Speaker, the question is, what has the Speaker done to warrant his resignation?”

    He called for full investigation to ascertain the level of involvement of members of the House mentioned in the allegation before calling on anyone to resign.

    “I expect that for 16 years of return to democracy, Nigerians would have understood the responsibilities of the National Assembly.

    “For some weeks now, there has been controversy over what is called padding.

    ‘As far as I am concerned, the National Assembly has the responsibility to pass the budget, approve it and allow the executive arm to execute it.”

    On whether padding constituted an offence, Na’Abba said, “It all depends on what angle you look at it, I just told you that the responsibility of appropriation belongs to the national assembly.

    “If padding is seen as an offence, then it is when some members of the national assembly decide to add items of expenditure through the back door after the bill has been passed by the two legislative arms.

    “It therefore behooves on Nigerians to decide who represent them in the national assembly.”

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that 30 selected Journalists from the Kaduna Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) attended the three-day workshop, designed sharpen their skills in reporting the Oil and Gas sector.