Tag: KOGI

  • Bailout fund: Labour directs Kogi’s workers to stay off work

    Public servants in Kogi State have been directed to stay off work to protest the non-release of bailout funds by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    The directive is contained in a statement issued by the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) last weekend.

    The statement, signed by NLC Secretary Mr John Faniyi and his TUC counterpart, Mr Joseph Kolawole expressed dissatisfaction over the non-release of the N50.8 billion bailout fund due to the state.

    “This directive is to serve as protest against the non-release of the money,’’ the statement said.

    The unions said they were surprised by the CBN’s/Federal Government’s  silence over the matter.

    Asking workers to comply with the order, the labour unions warned commissioners, permanent secretaries, directors and other categories of senior public officers not to report for work to avoid being embarrassed.

    In a related development, the Nigerian Association of Federal Civil Servants Co-operatives is set to acquire Kogi Micro Finance Bank to drive the process of easy access to Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) N220 billion for micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), and to meet the specific needs of cooperative societies in Nigeria.

  • INEC to distribute PVCs in Kogi, Bayelsa from Friday

    INEC to distribute PVCs in Kogi, Bayelsa from Friday

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) said it will begin the distribution of Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) to eligible voters in Kogi and Bayelsa states, from Friday.

    INEC’s Deputy Director of Publicity  Mr. Nick Dazang, who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday in Abuja, said the exercise would begin in Kogi on Friday and end on November 11 and run from November 13 to 19 in Bayelsa.

    He said the distribution would take place at the ward level  from 8am to 4pm daily.

    Dazang said: “The distribution of PVCs is for voters, whose biometric was captured during the just-concluded Continuous Voter Registration (CVR) by INEC in the two states.

    “It is also open to those who registered before, but are yet to collect their PVCs.”

    He urged registered voters, who were yet to collect their PVCs, to do so before the election date, stressing that nobody would be allowed to vote without PVCs.

     

  • battle for kogi, bayelsa: Change must come to Bayelsa, says Oyegun

    battle for kogi, bayelsa: Change must come to Bayelsa, says Oyegun

    •Oshiomhole leads six APC governors to campaign for Sylva

    All Progressives Congress (APC) National  Chairman Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, yesterday urged Edo State Governor  Adams Oshiomhole and six APC governors to deliver Bayelsa State to the party on December 5.

    Oyegun, who inaugurated a 38-member Bayelsa Governorship Campaign Council at the party’s secretariat in Abuja, said APC wanted to prove a point in Bayelsa, adding: “Change must arrive in the state.”

    Other APC governors asked to deliver the state are Sokoto State Governor Aminu Tambuwal, Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima, Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha, Kano State Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje and Zamfara State Governor Abdulaziz Yari.

    Other members of the council include the Deputy National Chairman (South), Segun Oni, National Secretary Mai Mala Buni, National Vice chairmen, Southwest, Southsouth, Southeast and Northwest, Chief Pius Oluwole Akinyelure, Prince Hilliard Etta, Emma Eneukwu and Inuwa Abdulkadir.

    Ex-Rivers, Lagos and Benue  Governors, Rotimi Amaechi, Brig.-Gen. Buba Marwa and Senator George Akume; National Organising Secretary Senator Osita Izunaso, National Youth Leader Ibrahim Dasuki Jallo, Mrs. Rachael Akpabio, Alhaji Nuhu Audu and Tunde Eseigbe are also members of the committee.

    The rest are Otunba Segun Runsewe, Alhaji Ubale Hashim, Matthew Omegara, Timi Frank, Preye Aganaba, Mrs. Sally William Chinedu, Prof. M.F.N. Abowri, Usani Uguru Usani, Olorogun Otega Emerhor, Maj.-Gen. Mohammed Ibrahim, Chief Ayeri Emani, Jasper Azutalam and Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, who will serve as the secretary.

    Oyegun said APC expected its 22 governors to be part of the campaign, adding: “What is important is that seven governors have volunteered to use their time and energy to serve as members of the campaign council. This has never happened before.

    “I think it underscores the importance the party attaches to the Bayelsa election. The time is short. This, we understand, but the circumstances and situation are upbeat and promising for eventual victory. Just as I was confident about  the general election, I’m confident of the Bayelsa poll because we have a good product.

    “Secondly, we have a non- performing governor in the state. Thirdly, the ruling party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has crumbled. Lastly, we have a crack campaign council team.”

    Responding on behalf of the committee members, Governor Tambuwal, the deputy chairman of the committee, assured the party that they would deliver Bayelsa State.

    He said: “Our task is clear to us. It has been defined and blessed by God Almighty. We shall do everything possible within the confines of the law to ensure victory for Timipreye Sylva on December 5.”

     

  • Activists: Kogi workers ‘must’ support Audu

    Activists: Kogi workers ‘must’ support Audu

    A Kogi group, the Movement for Democracy and Good Governance, has urged workers and civil servants to ensure that true change comes to the state.

    It advised them to vote for Prince Abubakar Audu of the All Progressives Congress (APC) on November 21.

    The body enjoined workers to take their destinies in their hands, by voting out the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) candidate, Governor Idris Wada, because he failed to perform.

    The group, in a statement by Jibril O. Yusuf and Habuh-Rajan Suleiman, chairman and secretary, said it was not unaware of the huge liability incurred by the PDP government.

    It vowed that it would join others in monitoring the disbursement of the bailout fund granted to the state to ensure that not a kobo was misappropriated.

    The body said: “A great change has taken place in the politics of our country, which dislodged the PDP government at the federal level and in many states.

    “The role of workers in the realisation of this feat is immeasurable. This movement will not fail to recognise your gallant efforts in this process and therefore wish to hail workers and civil servants in Kogi State.

    “In many states of the federation, this change has occurred, with many of them now being governed by the APC. Five of the six states in the Northcentral are being ruled by the APC. Only our dear state, Kogi, is still being ruled by the decadent PDP.

    “It is our hope that on November 21, the state will join the league of progressives states to enable the workers and other people enjoy the dividends of democracy, which President Muhammadu Buhari promised the masses.

    “To achieve this, federal, state civil servants and other workers have a role to play, because you always bear the burden of governance; good or bad. Vote for Audu on November 21.”

     

  • INEC clears 42 for Kogi, Bayelsa elections

    INEC clears 42 for Kogi, Bayelsa elections

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has cleared 42 candidates for the governorship elections in Kogi and Bayelsa states.

    The final list published by INEC and signed by its Acting Secretary, U.F. Usman, shows that 22 candidates are to contest the governorship seat in Kogi State and 20 in Bayelsa State.

     

  • NGO founder  grooms Kogi youths

    NGO founder grooms Kogi youths

    Founder of an entrepreneurship and leadership non-governmental organisation, Inspire the Future, Chiedozie Igweonu has been training Kogi State youths in skills and leadership.

    Spurred by a passion to make an impact on the society, Dozie, as he is better known, started his pet project aged 27, while undergoing the compulsory national youth service in 2013. Today, the Inspire the Future Project is gradually growing into a full-fledged NGO which he believes in a few years’ time will be Africa’s premier social entrepreneurship project.

    Born in Maiduguri, Borno State, Dozie had his primary and secondary school education in Abuja, where his parents who are both from Anambra State lived and his first degree in Human Anatomy at the University of Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    He described himself as an avid reader who is fairly active on the social media.

    “I love working with young people,” he enthused.

    According to him: “I enjoy working with young people especially if it will have a positive impact on society. In the last ten years I have served in the teams responsible for projects like “The Undergraduate Business Conference”, “The Catalyst Youth Development Platform”, “Vote

    or Shut-up Electoral Education Initiative and Youth Advance and Development”, in some states which has impacted more than 15, 000 youth in the last two years.

    “I have always wanted to be a positive drive to change the African narration and honestly I believe that we as a nation cannot go far with the current structure of our educational sector. Then, I saw the UNICEF report where they alluded that there are more than 10 million out of school kids in Nigeria alone. I was angry at the failure of the system that was responsible for this ill but I needed to channel my anger to a more positive venture hence “Inspire the Future” was born.

    Prior to this I had written down the goals, mission and vision on how to intervene in the quagmire facing the education sector in Nigeria but the analysis of that report was the fire I needed to act immediately”.

    Speaking on what the project is about, he said it started as a tour of primary and secondary schools and was aimed at promoting academic excellence using the models in a popular book titled: “17 secrets of high flying students”, written by Fela Durotoye.

    He continued, “In our first year, we succeeded in visiting 10 schools situated in Kogi State and we impacted an average of 1,000 per pupils. By the second year we expanded by providing a platform for these pupils to connect to exemplary people who served as mentors to them.

    We also provided after school mentorship training for a select few. In our third year we had reached more than 20,000 young people. As our impact increased over the years, we did some major restructuring and reassessed some of our short and long term goals which includes

    getting at least 500 underprivileged kids, especially in educationally less developed states in the North back to school. We are also overhauling our model to a more sustainable social entrepreneurship structure, meaning that in the nearest future we will be less dependent on donations but we would have the capacity to generate the necessary resources required to carry out our programs”.

    He listed the biggest challenge confronting the initiative as knowledge gap.

     

  • Kogi govt, APC trade words over bailout cash

    Kogi govt, APC trade words over bailout cash

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said the Kogi State government is yet to apply for the bailout funds initiated by the Federal Government.

    The Head of Media, Abubakar Audu Governorship Campaign Organsation, Dr Tom Ohikere, at a news conference in Lokoja said Governor Idris Wada “tactfully refused to apply for the fund because of the heavy loan arrears the state was already enmeshed in.”

    He said records at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) showed that 27 states applied for the bailout funds as at September 18, adding that the records showed that 24 of the states had received N222 billion as bailout loans.

    According to him, the documents showed that only Bayelsa, Borno and Cross Rivers states were yet to receive theirs.

    The Chief Communication Manager to Governor Wada, Mr. Phrank Shaibu, however, called for the discountenance of the claim, asserting that the Kogi State government applied for the bailout fund, which was approved by the CBN.

    He said: “If Kogi State did not apply, how come the CBN published the name of the state and the approval of N50.8 billion?

    “Kogi is among the three states to fulfil the requirements, which include but not limited to submission of payroll of civil servants, BVN and full list of biometric verification of workers.”

    Shaibu said the state applied for N80 billion as bailout fund to offset salary arrears of state and local government workers and gratuity of retired workers, while the CBN approved N50.8 billion.

    He said the debt profile of the state stood at N872 million, adding that the Debt Management Office (DMO) had the facts.

    Shaibu described the stance of APC as sheer ignorance, saying its position was a confirmation of the belief that Audu and the leaders of APC were behind the non- release of the fund.

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) in the state had directed workers to stay off work today to protest the delay in the release of the fund.

  • Why Kogi must be rescued

    Why Kogi must be rescued

    It was a Tuesday morning on November 12, 2013 when the sad news of the death of a former President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) Professor Festus Iyayi went viral.

    Like a retired General specially deployed to combat a difficult war situation, Iyayi had been invited to help broker peace between the Union and the Federal Government in a face-off between ASUU and the adamant Federal Government under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at the time.

    About 500 kilometres to Kano where he was supposed to deliver on the clarion call at ASUU congress, his vehicle was rammed into by the convoy of Governor of Kogi State, Idris Wada near Lokoja.

    Described by Wikipedia as a writer known for his radical and sometimes tough stance on social and political issues who employed a realistic style of writing, depicting the social, political and moral environment and system both the rich and poor live and work in, Iyayi died on the spot. Thus, Nigeria lost one of her finest to the carelessness of a reckless Governor.

    Iyayi’s tragic death was one of the careless habits of Wada. It was not long before he carelessly tumbled his own convoy again and broke his legs in yet another fatal accident. Since then, the state of Idris Wada has been shrouded in secrecy for fear that it might affect his second term bid as Governor of Kogi State. Any search on the internet basically has no viable result about a Governor that is willing to spend another four years.

    It is worrisome that a state that possesses several natural resources like coal, steel and other mineral deposits can remain in a terrible economic situation as it is today. Just one among the many natural resources of Kogi was mainstay of economy of some countries elsewhere. Kogi connects the South to the North with trade and tourism potentials added to agriculture, which is predominant among the hardworking people of the state. But none of these opportunities were tapped into by the PDP government since 2003.

    From 2012 to 2014 under Wada administration, the state earned N240billion as revenues from both the Federation Account and Internally Generated Revenue. The state gets N80 billion as monthly allocation and still borrowed, yet the Government of Kogi is unable to meet both infrastructural development and servicing of the recurrent expenditures adequately.

    As we speak, for poor management under the current government of Kogi, civil servants in the state queue to collect only 20 per cent of their total monthly income. Yes, you get N20, 000  if you earn N100, 000 monthly. If you are lucky enough to be on the scale of N50, 000 monthly salary, you walk home with only N10, 000; that is how bad it is.

    It leaves one to wonder on the defence of Kogi government that it uses 80 to 90 per cent of its revenue on recurrent expenditures. Despite the huge sum, Kogi continues to wallow in underdevelopment and poverty while the governor calls for N210billion intervention fund for its overall development.

    A state like Kogi does not need extraordinary hand to become great. It is a state that has set itself on the footing of economic prosperity provided a good manager is on board. The battle for the soul of Kogi is not just to be left as a political contest. Kogi itself is the soul of Nigeria considering all indices. The stakeholders of the All Progressives Congress (APC), in my opinion, must help Kogi out of its current predicament of leadership deficit.

    Kogi State under Governor Wada has experienced negative development with nothing to show despite the huge sums received monthly from the Federation Account and the share in oil ‘windfalls’ courtesy of the Excess Crude Account.

    If you consider the unusual turn-around and developments in am state like Ekiti which is also among the states with the least federal allocation, you will but agree that Governor Wada has no reason to continue to hold the people of Kogi to ransom for leadership quest. A walk around Kogi will leave you wondering that all facilities put in place by the administration of Abubakar Audu (the Lugard House, Stadium, Hospitals and more) still remain the infrastructures Kogi can boast of.

    As my comrade in the state, Yahaya Wada puts it, “the forthcoming governorship election in Kogi State has presented the platform for us to re-write our future and that of the children yet unborn. This is the time to judge people by their words and actions not only by mere promises even when their past actions are antithetical to their words and promises.”

    Sadly, it is not unusual to see civil servants waiting at popular stop-points en-route Abuja to approach you calmly for momentary stomach infrastructure bail out. On spotting any vehicle suspected to be carrying an affluent personality who had stopped over to eat, the gentlemen would calmly approach you and reveal the critical state of their personal needs, asking for a little token to keep body and soul together. It is that bad in Kogi that many youth have no means of livelihood, a situation that has increased level of violence and criminality across the state.

    Beyond politics and struggle for political powers, the people must not be put in perpetual state of unhappiness. When families cannot access basic needs of life, the family institution begins to break down; accordingly, the social security system comes under threat. Every citizen deserves the right to fair treatment by the people entrusted with political and leadership powers. If leadership is not fixed, the secondary effect of such situation is that passing through Kogi to Abuja will continue to remain a nightmare and no one will confidently recommend historic confluence for a tourist outside Nigeria.

    The time to make all changes is now. The nation cannot wait. The people want change like yesterday. Carryover of depressions emanating from the misrule of yesteryear still has traces on the faces of our people.

    That Kogi must be salvaged and rescued is not an issue for debate. Let fresh air coming from the waterfront blow peace and tranquillity that will not be saturated by bad policies from the Lugard House. Let the ‘Confluence State’ remain a meeting point for good economy, world class tourism and safe travel passage.

    The fish should also cost less in Kogi while seriousness of the state’s Chief Security Officer should see a speedy conclusion of Lokoja-Abuja expressway with an international model. Above all, Kogi needs not be in opposition in time of CHANGE!

    Comrade Yahya made revelation which I quote directly below:

    “We may have waited for a long time to bring back Audu to rescue us, but it is better late than never. We may also have suffered various degrees of agony, penury and all forms of degradation since the inception of PDP led government in the state in 2003, but we now have a golden opportunity in our hands come November, 21, 2015.

    “There is no doubt that the forthcoming governorship election in the state is a two-man race between the incumbent Wada and the Prince of the Niger, the man I regarded as the face of modern Kogi State. It is one thing to make promises and another to fulfil them.”

    He said further: “From the foregoing, it is evidently clear that Prince Audu kept to his promises by developing the state during his time as the then Governor of my beloved state. Today after 12 years of his exit as the Governor of the state, the successive governments have failed to take up from where Audu left.”

    Leadership is about delivering on promises. Words are powerful; our words are the mirror of our character and integrity.

    Well, the current situation does not leave the Kogites without a choice. A walk on the streets of Kogi leaves you cracking your head as to why no significant development has been recorded since exit of the Kogi Prince in 2003. Just wondering… Wada, under the PDP as the ruling party, had all equations in his favour to transform Kogi. Nigerians don’t have ample time for experimental leadership anymore as far as I know. A state going bankrupt with social-economic amenities on their knees can hardly survive under cluelessness.

    Right now, the spotlight is on Kogi State. Without mincing words, that Audu/Faleke ticket will bring Kogi back to glory under the incorruptible Buhari government is a settled matter. Kogi must be delivered by Kogi because the state has sufficient men who have capacity to deliver this cause. In four years, Kogi must be playing host to all national interests and a hub for peoples’ confluence needs across the country.

    Olulade is a member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, representing Epe Constituency II

  • 22 candidates to contest Kogi poll

    22 candidates to contest Kogi poll

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has released the names of the 22 candidates and their running mates, who will contest the November 21 Kogi State governorship election.

    An INEC document, entitled: ‘Kogi Governorship 2015 Final List’, listed the candidates and their running mates.

    The document, signed by U. F. Usman, acting secretary of the commission, is dated October 9, 2015.

    Leading the list is Isah Yakubu Kamaldeen- Action Alliance (AA), Dickson Fred- Accord, Ukwenya Musa- ACD, Michael Abdullahi- AD and Usman Zainab- ADC.

    Others include Prince Abubakar Audu- All Progressives Congress (APC), Akwu Umar Goodman- (APGA), Yinka Cherry Oloruntoba- (CPP), Raji Ogirima -(KOWA), Phillips Omeiza Salawu -(LP), Capt. Idris Ichalla Wada -(PDP) and Sa’ad Mukailu Yaro- (UDP).

  • 22 candidates for  Kogi guber election

    22 candidates for  Kogi guber election

    The Independent National Electoral Commission has released the names of the 22 candidates and their running mates that will contest in the November 21 Kogi State governorship election and their respective parties.

    An INEC document titled: “Kogi Governorship 2015 Final List”, a copy of which was obtained by our correspondent listed the 22 candidates and their running mates according to their parties in alphabetic order.

    The document which was signed bu U. F. Usman, Acting Secretary to the commission was dated 9th. October, 2015.

    Leading the pack on the list is Isah Yakubu Kamaldeen- Action Alliance (AA), Dickson Fred- Accord, Ukwenya Musa- ACD, Michael Abdullahi- AD and Usman Zainab- ADC.

    Others include Prince Abubakar Audu- All Progressives Congress (APC), Akwu Umar Goodman (APGA), Yinka Cherry Oloruntoba- (CPP), Raji Ogirima (KOWA), Phillips Omeiza Salawu (LP), Capt. Idris Ichalla Wada (PDP) and Sa’ad Mukailu Yaro (UDP).