Tag: KOGI

  • Kogi and the end of politics

    It is quite hard to reconcile the plague currently engulfing Kogi’s political space and the memory that the province is also the cradle of the great Sunday Awoniyi. Or the colossal Silas Daniyan.

    Before he drew his last breath in November 2007, the Aro of Mopa, once private secretary to immortal Ahmadu Bello, was an embodiment of political accommodation, temperance and intellectual profundity.

    On the other hand, though a political rival to Awoniyi, Daniyan was cut from no less durable fabric. Serving as private secretary to monumental Nnamdi Azikiwe about the time his kinsman served the Arewa folk hero, Daniyan never really ever lost sight of the larger critical duty – deploying politics as tool to advance the community.

    Though preferring to invest most of his energies in the corporate world and philanthropy in the later years, he nonetheless provided what could then be termed a healthy ideological counter-foil to the Awoniyi tendency in the quest to push the development frontiers in their native Kogi State, until his death in 2011.

    But, apparently, harmony and balance prevail in the household only to the point when the political bastard has not yet come of age.

    Viewing the ongoing show of shame starring infantile Yahaya Bello and delinquent Dino Melaye, both Awoniyi and Daniyan must be turning in great discomfort in their graves indeed. The rich political heritage bequeathed by the two referenced Kogi patriarchs is now under grave assault.

    To say Kogi has been unraveling in the past few months will, therefore, be an understatement. A partnership forged between Governor Bello and Dino in sheer opportunism and perfidy has, alas, broken down irredeemably, exposing politics in its hideous form, the character flaw of man at its basest.

    With little or no inhibition, the parvenu from Ebiraland has, for instance, continued to demonstrate the grave danger a society faces when a small mind – an intellectual midget – finds himself in custody of the gubernatorial staff.

    Allowing himself to be hailed publicly as “White Lion” by barefoot sycophants, it is however clear only the metaphor of a rodent befits Bello’s ways. His ingrained infantilism was very much in evidence in a little drama at the Government House in March.

    Fresh from his habitual peregrination to Abuja, he announced the sack of the state cabinet and 21 local council administrators.

    But the ink with which the statement was written had barely dried when he had another brainwave. In less than an hour, he reversed himself.

    Maybe, that should be expected. The young man found himself in power only by the grace of perhaps the darkest political sorcery in recent memory. He ran away with the trophy earned by someone else who had suddenly dropped dead on the battlefield after slaying the enemy. The same way Dino’s victory in the Kogi West senatorial polls of 2015 was tainted by allegations of electoral heist.

    Obviously, the robe is oversize and the shoes too big for Bello’s pygmy feet ever since.

    Decked in one of his trademark gaudy apparels, this was how then groveling Master of Ceremonies Dino once introduced the governor at the Lokoja stadium: “The Almighty God voted Yahaya Bello!… May I also have the honour of introducing the youngest governor of the Federal Republic of Nigeria!!…intellectually mobile and sagacious!!!… indomitable and indefatigable!!!!… powerful and enterprising!!!!!… young but married!!!!!!… join your hands together (sic) for Yahaya Bello!!!!!!!”

    Predictably, disagreement over political spoils soon set them apart.

    Today, were a case to be made against entrusting leadership position to youthful players in contemporary Nigeria, Bello and Dino would undoubtedly furnish a robust exhibit. In the absence of ideas, filth has been elevated as the sole driver of government policies and programmes in Kogi.

    Nothing perhaps illustrates this shared seething psychosis by the duo more graphically than the very circumstances they both suffered physical handicap lately. It was not until tongues started wagging following Bello’s appearance on crutches for a crucial party meeting in Aso Rock with a leg cast in POP that his publicists admitted that it was all caused by a minor domestic incident.

    But unofficial accounts provided a clearer picture. Actually, the usually easily excitable governor was said to have lost his balance in a failed stunt after jumping off a moving bullet-proof SUV while throwing Naira notes at a crowd hailing him.

    Precisely the same story we heard after the Kogi senator was stretchered into the Intensive Care Unit of an Abuja hospital.

    In what clearly belittles the exalted office he occupies, Dino had also reportedly jumped off a moving vehicle in an escape bid from police custody. This followed an earlier self-diminishing admission on what had transpired at the Abuja airport when the Immigration barricaded his way.

    He probably thought it cool to boast on Tweeter that, “I snatched my passport back after the Immigration snatched it from me.” But it did not seem to occur to the supposed distinguished senator that only cheap thugs act that way.

    The viral video of a senator sitting on bare asphalt of Abuja highway apparently battling to recover his breath after that suicidal jump was no less pathetic. The image of a subdued overweight adult bellowing “I can kill myself!” in that clip certainly contrasts the picture of a fearless superman Dino had tried to build for myself through relentless homemade musical videos poured into the social media in the past eighteen months.

    As for Bello, not done with the outlawry of double-registration for voter’s card, farting loudly at the communal feast and auctioning inherited state assets to pay debts and fund today’s ostentation, his political tomfoolery seems further exposed by the outcome of the recall verification exercise conducted last weekend by INEC.

    How pathetic that the governor and his fixers could not summon the rigor to finish what they started zealously with state might last year. Having dissipated much energy and resources in mobilizing locals to  append their signatures to the originating petition, Bello’s fumbling enablers apparently forgot that the verification exercise was even more critical.

    Not only was the turnout abysmally poor, of the 39,285 signatures eventually verified, only a miserly 18,762 were found to be genuine. Yet, a whopping 188,500 were earlier conjured to support the recall petition filed against Dino last year.

    In most locations last weekend, a grotesque pattern emerged. Signatures of constituents were either shabbily forged or the dead mindlessly impersonated in the farce.

    The dire implication of the foregoing is that the 5 percent turnout is a far cry from the 50 percent + 1 constitutionally required to set the stage for a referendum to seal Dino’s fate.The Kogi West senatorial district has a voting population of 351,140.

    Not surprising, comical Dino has seized the result as another platform to gloat, summing it a blanket endorsement of his performance at the Senate chamber, if not solidarity with him in his present ordeal.

    It is not only Bello’s political nudity thus invariably exposed; no less culpable is the INEC. That the voter’s registers displayed across Kogi West senatorial district on the verification day were mostly riddled with multiple name entries and forged signatures as widely reported by the media surely says a lot about the corporate integrity of the umpire. Otherwise, one would have thought such impurities would have been sorted administratively before INEC announced voting.

    As for Dino, if nothing at all, no one can deny him credits for creativity. Shortly after falling out with the governor in 2016, that ingenuity supervened. He had no difficulty in adapting a Yoruba folk song, “Ajeku Iya Nio Je…”. It translates roughly as “Woe betide an inferior who challenges his superior to a battle”.

    The skit was still topping the national chart of political mischief when Dino followed up with another blockbuster which literally prophesied that his political enemy in Lokoja was jail-bound at the expiration of his current gubernatorial mandate.

    But with the dramatic turn of events in Abuja last week, the maverick senator would now seem cast in a role reversal of sorts. For his current travails only mirror the unsavory ending he himself had predicted for Bello in the melange of caustic songs.

    One, even though the Kogi police have cited gun-running as the charge against Dino, not a few however believe his real trouble started the moment he challenged the Kogi Governor to a public duel.

    Meanwhile, while the poor turnout at the verification exercise for the recall process last weekend may have put paid to attempt by those bent on yanking him off the Senate chamber, it will however be premature to assume the sword of Damocles has thus vanished.

    Now, with the gravity of the charges preferred against him, Melaye’s supporters will indeed have to intensify their prayers, lest he be the first to don prison’s uniform long before the foe derided in his song.

    But by and large, the cruel joke is on Kogi State.

     

  • NDLEA arrests seven suspects in Kogi for ‘dealing in illegal drugs’

    The Kogi State command of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has said it arrested seven suspects for allegedly dealing and possessing 23.94 kilogrammes of substance suspected to be Indian hemp and other psychotropic substances.

    Its state commander, Alhaji Idris Bello, told reporters that the suspects were arrested in various locations across the state.

    Bello said two of the suspects were arrested on Okene-Lokoja road with 66 bottles of Codeine syrup and 40 grammes of Rohypnol.

    The state commander said the suspects concealed the substances in bottles and packaged them in a popular noodles cartons in a luxury bus being conveyed from Enugu State to Abuja, the nation’s capital.

    He also said four other suspects were arrested in some flash points within Lokoja, the state capital.

    Bello warned peddlers of illicit drugs and psychotropic substances to stay away from the state, adding that the command would arrest and prosecute persons.

    He urged residents to always provide useful information that could help in ridding the state and the society of illegal drugs.

    According to him, most crimes are perpetrated under the influence of drugs.

    The state commander noted that once the use of illegal drugs is curtailed, the rate of crime will reduce drastically.

    Bello said the suspects would be charged to court as soon as investigation into the cases is concluded.

     

  • Flooding: Edo intensifies work at resettlement camps, safe havens

    The Edo State Government has said that work has intensified at designated resettlement camps across the state to receive residents, who are displaced by flooding.

    Persistent rainfall in the past few weeks dislodged some persons from their homes, as the state government announced the opening of resettlement camps for residents that were adversely affected by the heavy downpours.

    The state government issued flood alert in parts of the state last week, following new predictions that the state will experience flooding incidence with the persistent rainfall and the release of water from dams in neighbouring countries.

    Special Adviser to the Governor on Special Duties, Mr Yakubu Gowon, said that an inter-ministerial committee to oversee the relocation of affected persons and running of the resettlement camps and safe havens has been set up.

    He disclosed that the committee is made up of officials of the state Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), special assistants to the governor in the various wards, officials of ministries of infrastructure, environment and health, local council chairmen, members of the Red Cross, Fire Service and local government councillors, who are on standby to assist people in distress.

    He listed the areas earmarked as safe havens to include “the Internally Displaced Persons’ (IDP) camp in Oghomere in Etsako Central Local Government Area and the skills acquisition centre in Fugar.

    Read Also: Edo intensifies promotion of local languages

    “In Esan South East Local Government Area, the council hall and the hall of St. Benedict Catholic Church in Ubiaja will serve as safe haven.  In Ikpoba-Okha local council, Western Boys High School hall has been pencilled down to receive those displaced from their homes in the council area,” he added.

    He said that men and women will be separated in the camps to protect their rights and assured that effort is being made to procure more relief materials to be delivered when the camps are ready.

    “In Ovia North East, the local government chairman has donated a place in Okada while another place in Gelegele, in the same local council will provide succour to flood victims,” Gowon said.

    The governor’s aide maintained that the relevant ministries have desilted blocked drainages to ease the flow of water in the city.

    Two weeks ago, Edo State government donated relief materials to communities affected by windstorm in Esan West and Owan West local government areas of the state. Similar donation had been made in ten local councils where windstorm destroyed houses.

    Handing over the relief materials on behalf of the state government to chairmen of the two local councils in Benin City, the state capital, Gowon said “This is a continuous exercise, we have donated relief materials to communities in about 12 local government areas and we have been receiving letters of appreciation from the beneficiaries.

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the National Hydrological Services Agencies (NHISA) have warned that 12 states across the country would experience flooding due to torrential rain falls.

    The two agencies gave the warning during an emergency stakeholders’ meeting held with relevant stakeholders in Abuja.

    Mr Clem Nze, Director, Engineering Hydrology, NHISA, listed the states to include: Kogi, Kebbi, Niger, Kwara, Edo, Anambra, Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta states, from the River Niger axis.

    He also listed Taraba, Benue and Adamawa as states to be affected from the River Benue axis.

    He said that the decision to raise the alarm was to ensure preparedness among stakeholders and residents of flood-prone communities.

    The NEMA and NHISA alert followed a similar alert issued by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMeT), warning of high floods in some identified states across the country including Edo.

  • Kogi Poly Rector resigns as deputy steps in

    The Rector of the Kogi State Polytechnic (KSP), Mr Isah Mohammed has finally resigned his appointment.

    This development was confirmed by the Public Relations Officer of the school, Luke Tijani in a press statement on Friday.

    “Mr Mohammed has officially handed over to his Deputy, Dr Attah Haruna. As I’m talking to you now, plans are already in place to appoint a substantive Rector by the visitor of the school. But for now, Dr Haruna will be on acting capacity before a substantive Rector is appointed.”

    The former Rector whose tenure expires on Friday, 7th September 2018, but seeking for a renewal of his tenure by the visitor of the Polytechnic did not also get the blessings of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnic (ASUP) and Non-Academic Staff Union of Polytechnic (NASUP) which earlier in the past accused him of anti-labour activities in the institution.

    Under his watch, according to some students in the institution who begged for anonymity,students were forced to look for accommodation elsewhere in the town since the school could not provide any in the last two years.

    They alleged that the academic performance in the school had dropped drastically compared to several years ago.

    However, all efforts by this reporter to reach the former Rector proved abortive.

  • Kogi: I will work for revival of Ajaokuta steel complex, says SDP aspirant

    An aspirant for the Kogi Central Senatorial district in the forthcoming general election, Natasha Hadiza Akpoti, has said that her major policy trust if elected would be the revitalisation of the Ajaokuta Steel complex and all other ailing steel plants across Nigeria.

    In a statement made available yesterday in Lokoja, after obtaining the Social Democratic Party (SDP) nomination form, Akpoti noted that a functioning Ajaokuta Steel complex holds the potential of generating huge employment opportunities, high revenue generation and technology transfer, among other benefits.

    She added that more needed to be achieved in the areas of steel laws, establishment of steel authority and ensuring that the necessary political will is engendered.

    Akpoti stated: “When I stood against the privatisation of the Ajaokuta Steel Company, I did so because of my firm belief that the company holds the future of our country. When I become a senator, I will not only work for the resuscitation of Ajaokuta Steel complex, but all other steel companies in Nigeria, that will use the product of Ajaokuta Steel as raw materials, and the country would be better for it.”

    She added that she decided to venture into politics, because her constituents have been marginalised from the necessities of government in terms of social justice and economic development.

     

  • Kogi: I will work for revival of Ajaokuta complex, says SDP Senate aspirant

    An aspirant for the Kogi Central Senatorial district in the forthcoming general election, Natasha Hadiza Akpoti, has said that her major policy trust if elected, would be the revitalization of the Ajaokuta Steel complex and all other ailing steel plants across Nigeria.
    In a statement made available on Saturday in Lokoja after obtaining the Social Democratic Party (SDP) nomination form, Akpoti noted that a functioning Ajaokuta Steel complex holds the potential of generating huge employment opportunities, high revenue generation and technology transfer among other benefits.
    She added that more needed to be achieved in the areas of steel laws, establishment of steel authority and ensuring that the necessary political will is engendered.
    She stated: “When I stood against the privatisation of the Ajaokuta Steel Company, I did so because of my firm belief  that the company holds the future of our country. When I become a senator, I will not only work for the resuscitation of Ajaokuta Steel complex, but all other steel companies in Nigeria, that will use the product of Ajaokuta Steel as raw materials, and the country would be better for it.”
    She added that she decided to venture into politics, because her constituents have been marginalized from the necessities of government in terms of social justice and economic development.
    She said that the people have been neglected in the scheme of things in the country.
    She however said that the people have now realized that government and governance is far away from them and there is the need for someone who is committed to their well-being to bridge the gap.
    “I am stepping into politics of the central senatorial district of Kogi State to bridge this gap, so that I can make the difference, be the voice of the voiceless, provide support for the weakest in the society and the most marginalized people of Nigeria,” she said.
  • Flood submerges 64 communities in Kogi

    •5,000 homes hit in Sokoto, Kebbi, Zamfara
    •More states to experience flooding

    No fewer than 64 communities have been submerged by flood in the Kogi/Kotonkarfe Local Government Area of Kogi State.

    Director of Relief and Rehabilitation, Kogi State Emergency Management Agency, James Ahmadu stated this yesterday when he visited an Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp in Edeha.

    According to him, more than 150 households had been trapped by flood in the last three days. A man, popularly known as “Ibrahim Barrister” died while trying to move upland.

    He said: “We are here for on-the-spot assessment of the flood situation in Kotonkarfe. Everywhere is flooded and over 64 communities were submerged.

    “The state has set up five temporary camps for the victims, in collaboration with the local government, and that is why NEMA is here to assess the situation.

    “We thank God that NEMA is here and is cooperating with the state government to ensure that necessary arrangement is made.”

    Head of Operations at NEMA headquarters Bitrus Samuel, represented by Reubean Babatunde of the Abuja Operations Office, said NEMA was in Kogi to assess the extent of damage caused by the flooding.

    “We were told there are five IDPs Camps in Kotokarfe. We are in the first camp in Edeha to see the displaced persons and get their data, take it back to Abuja so that NEMA can assist them.

    “The local government official said about 30 communities were submerged on September 3, and another 34 on September 4, making 64 villages submerged as at now.

    “This is a natural disaster but NEMA would do its best to respond as fast quick to rescue those who are trapped.

    “We are doing on-the-spot assessments, but we are still appealing to people living in flood-prone areas to relocate to the upland,” Samuel said.

    The spokesman/Desk Officer on Ecology of Kotonkarfe council, Yakubu Mohammed, said residents started experiencing flooding a few days ago.

    He said: “We want NEMA to come to our aid. Many of our people are finding it difficult to move out of their communities because some are still trapped there.

    “We lost one person three days ago. Our farms and property are submerged; we want the Federal Government to come to our rescue. We need facilities in the camps.”

    He named some of the submerged communities as Akpaku, Akpo, Ajara, Banda, Kpakpasu, Ozale, Opkakere, Agbawu and Adabode, among others.

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has said over 5,000 homes in 16 local government areas of Sokoto, Kebbi and Zamfara States have been affected by flood.

    The Coordinator in charge of Sokoto Operations’ Office, Sulaiman Muhammad, spoke yesterday in Gusau at the opening of a three-day in-house staff training.

    The theme of the training was: “Repositioning, Restructuring and Re-orientation of NEMA Staff and Operations”.

    Muhammad identified the affected councils as Sabon-Birni, Kebbe, Tangaza, Goronyo, Wamakko and Illela in Sokoto State; and Argungu, Maiyama, Birnin-Kebbi, Shanga, Bunza and Danko Wasagu in Kebbi State.

    Maru, Tsafe and some parts of Gusau Local Government Area were affected in Zamfara State.

    He said: “We have already conducted an assessment of over 5,000 houses that were affected by the disaster in these councils and we have forwarded the record to our headquarters in Abuja for relief assistance.”

    The coordinator urged the public to always adhere to signals, warnings and predictions on flood given by the Nigerian Metrological Agency (NIMET).

    “NIMET issues annual rainfall predictions and give information on likely flood-prone areas every March. It also sensitises stakeholders, particularly the states and local governments.

    “We call on the public to comply with the information, warnings and signals to prevent flood disasters,” he added.

    Muhammad said the training was part of policies introduced by NEMA’s Director-General, Mustapha Yunusa-Maihaja, to restructure the agency.

    According to him, the training is to enlighten workers under the Sokoto Operations Office on accountability, finance, punctuality and record keeping.

    The Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA) yesterday issued another warning of likely floods in states close to Rivers Niger and Benue.

    The agency said in its latest flood alert that there had been a steady rise in the water level of both rivers. The alert was issued by NIHSA’s Director, Engineering Hydrology, Clement Nze, in Abuja yesterday.

    According to Nze, records from the agency’s measuring stations in Lokoja and Makurdi showed an increase in water level from both rivers.

    The statement reads: “The Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA) wishes to update the public, especially the riparian states and communities by the banks of Rivers Niger and Benue, and their floodplains, that there has been systematic daily rise in the water levels on both rivers.

    “Records from our measuring stations in Lokoja (River Niger) and Makurdi (River Benue) clearly show this. This situation calls for watchfulness on the part of the riparian states as there is still likelihood of flooding.

    “Shiroro Dam has already joined Kainji and Jebba Dams in spilling water. This has contributed to the steady rise in the water level. As at today (yesterday), our hydrological measuring station downstream the confluence in Lokoja recorded a stage height of 9.89m and a discharge value of 21,326 cubic metres/second as against lower values of 9.43m and 19,762 cubic metres/second recorded on the corresponding yesterday.”

    Nze said all indices available pointed to the likelihood of a repeat of the 2012 flooding, adding that more rains were expected in the north in the next three weeks according to the Seasonal Rainfall Prediction (SRP) of Nigerian Meteorological Agency.

    He urged states and local government to clear structures built within the floodplains, clear blocked drainages, culverts and other waterways.

  • Automatic ticket divides Kogi PDP

    The proposal to give automatic tickets to returning National Assembly members of the People’s Democratic Party, PDP, ahead of the 2019 general election has ruptured the party in Kogi. The development has resulted in serious intra-party dispute.

    Many of the senatorial aspirants and other stakeholders are kicking against it. This has led to uncertainty and threats of mass defection.

    One of the groups kicking against the declaration is the PDP Youths and Masses Advocacy Group, which has declared the decision as impunity.

    Addressing pressmen yesterday in Lokoja, the state coordinator of the group, Mallam Ahmed Suleiman, warned that failure to adhere to a level playing ground in the state primaries will not only lead to mass exodus but will kill the party in Kogi.

    His words: “As a group with a firm belief in the ideals and manifestoes of our great party, the Peoples Democratic Party, we stand to condemn any act of impunity that will likely give rise to imposition.

    “The idea of an automatic ticket to representatives whose state the party is not having a governor is clearly and totally unacceptable. Any attempt at enforcing such will surely lead to mass exodus and the eventual collapse of the party at all level.

    “Also, a kangaroo primary in whatever form would be vehemently resisted. Let the people decide; the people own the party and not those leading the party.

    “The stand of the majority of people in the party supersedes all. The founding fathers of the party never contemplated automatic slot, if so, they would not have named it “people’s” party.

    “We are a party trying to bounce back from an electoral defeat at the national level, an appraisal shows that impunity was a major factor that led to our failure, that impunity we would never tolerate any more, we shall resist it with the blood flowing in our veins.

    “We maintain that a level playing ground be enabled, let the popularity of all the aspirants guarantee them victory, equally too, those incumbents seeking for a return ticket, let their scorecard or stewardship endear them to the people and not shifting the goal post in a manner to favour one aspirant or the other.

    “We must pick a lesson from the past and make the necessary adjustments.”

     

  • Buhari to Theresa May: 2019 Election will be free, fair, credible

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday in Abuja assured the United Kingdom (UK) Prime Minister, Theresa May of his commitment to conducting free, fair and credible elections in 2019.

    He made the remark during a bilateral meeting with the visiting Prime Minister at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    President Buhari, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina, welcomed UK’s support at strengthening democratic institutions in the country.

    He said ‘‘I assure you that I’m all out for free, fair and credible elections. I’m very pleased that my party is doing very well. The High Commissioner will brief you more. The recent successes in polls in Katsina, Bauchi, and Kogi have boosted our morale greatly.

    ‘‘Nigeria has accepted multiparty democracy and that is putting politicians on their toes, forcing them to work harder,’’ he said.

    On the anti-corruption campaign, the President applauded the British support to the country, noting that the success of the fight was very important to ordinary people in the country.

    He went on “We had great opportunities and resources between 1999 and 2014, due to high oil prices. But when we came in 2015, oil prices plunged to as low as 37 dollars per barrel.

    ‘‘What we have been doing since 2015 is to focus on infrastructure development, despite low earnings. Work is ongoing in roads, rail, power, and many others.”

    On Brexit, President Buhari noted that it provides an opportunity to strengthen the historic ties between Nigeria and the United Kingdom.

    Read Also: Buhari visits Theresa May in London

    ‘‘We are nervously watching the development about Brexit because we know that the relationship had been on for a long time.  I assure you that I am prepared to strengthen the relationship between our two countries.’’

    The President also thanked the UK government for the support on security and the fight against insurgency in the North Eastern part of Nigeria, and the improved trade relations between both countries.

    ‘‘I am very grateful to the British government under you leadership for the help in security, particularly your training team that is in our institution in Kaduna,’’ he said.

    Speaking earlier before the bilateral meeting, the Nigerian leader underscored the need for UK support on reviving of Lake Chad, which is a means of livelihood for millions of people.

    The President told the visiting Prime Minister that Europe and China were already conducting an in-depth study on recharging the Lake through inter-basin transfer from the Central African Republic.

    In her remarks, Prime Minister Theresa May, who welcomed the assurance by the Nigerian government on credible elections in 2019, said she was pleased to be in Abuja to continue the ‘‘excellent discussions’’ she started with President Buhari in London in April, this year, particularly on security, trade, asset recovery and the fight against corruption.

    ‘‘Security and defence cooperation are very important steps to address Boko Haram and Islamic State in West Africa,’’ May said.

    On asset recovery, the Prime Minister told President Buhari: ‘‘We do not want to hold anything that belongs to Nigeria people, but we follow the judicial process, which can be slow.’’

    The Prime Minister appealed to President Buhari to use his position as ECOWAS Chair to keep the issue of human trafficking on the front burner in the sub-region.

    President Buhari and Prime Minister May witnessed the signing of two agreements: Security and Defence Partnership and Economic Development Forum Agreement.

     

  • Kogi advises residents to relocate from flood-prone areas

    The Kogi Government on Monday advised residents of flood-prone communities in the state to relocate to a safer place, to avoid loss of lives and property.

    Mr Sanusi Yahaya, the Commissioner for Environment and Natural Resources, made the announcement in a statement in Lokoja.

    “The Kogi Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources wishes to announce to members of the public, especially those in the nine flood-prone local government areas to relocate.

    “In view of the heavy rainfall recorded so far this year due to climate change, as well as the high volume of water from tributaries of Rivers Niger and Benue, which has led to steady rise in water level of the rivers, as confirmed by our monitoring team.

    “This development may likely cause flooding in some flood-prone LGAs: Omala, Bassa, Kogi/Kotonkarfe, Lokoja, Ajaokuta, Ofu, Idah, Ibaji, and Igalamela/Odolu.

    “The Ministry, therefore, strongly appeal and request the people living in these flood-prone LGAs, particularly those living close to river banks, to start moving to safer ground, to avoid loss of lives and property in the event of flood,” Yahaya said.

    He said that the state government had started preparing temporary shelters for flood victims in the event of emergencies.

    Yahaya assured the people that the protection of their lives and property would continue to be given utmost attention by the New Direction Administration of Gov. Yahaya Bello.