Tag: KOGI

  • Kogi Poly honours governor, three others

    The Kogi State Governor, Captain Idris Wada, was honoured with three others at the third convocation of the Kogi State Polytechnic, Lokoja, last Saturday.

    He was conferred with the fellowship of the institution along with the Executive Secretary of National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), Dr Masa’udu Adamu Kazaure; Senator Jonathan Tunde Ogbeha, and Dr Ismaila Isa, the institution’s pioneer rector.

    The polytechnic also graduated 9,880 students from the 2009/2010, 2010/2011, 2011/2012 and the 2012/2013 academic sessions.

    A breakdown of statistics of the graduating students who were awarded diplomas and certificates showed that 1,759 were from the 2009/2010 academic session; 2,050 from 2010/2011; 2,850 from 2011/2012 and 3,221 from the 2012/2013 academic session.

    Reeling out a list of achievements since inception, Chairman of the Governing Council, Fidel Gandy Ayegba, said the school at a point came under the threat of closure.

    “The National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) threatened to close down the polytechnic because of dominance of non-science and engineering-based programmes. Today, God has given us a ‘new song’ and our polytechnic has become a centre of international excellence in engineering and technological courses,” he said.

    On his part, the rector, Prof Mathew Idowu Ajibero, praised the state government, students and workers of the institution for the sustenance of peace, which he said afforded the polytechnic a near unbroken record of non-closure.

    “Your Excellency, I am happy to inform you today that Kogi State Polytechnic enjoys sustained peace and tranquility which equally manifested in the whole state under your dynamic and purposeful leadership. There is love, harmony and concord among staff and students. This peaceful atmosphere has resulted in the development that is taking place in the polytechnic.

    “I am happy to inform you that since 2006, except the ugly incident of April 19, 2013, carried out by enemies of progress, this polytechnic has not been closed down for one day as a result of strike or students’ crisis. In that incident, we lost our beloved colleague, Mr. Nathaniel Abimaje. May his soul rest in perfect peace. Amen,” he said.

  • Kogi teachers may return to school soon

    •Govt begins payment of arrears.

    Teachers in Kogi State public primary schools may resume at their duty posts following the payment of salary arrears by the state government.

    Interim Chairman of the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB), Mr. Stephen Akwu, said he is optimistic that striking teachers will soon return to work, since the board has cleared the arrears owed since September 2013 up to February.

    “We have almost completed payment of February salary and in the process, payment for January came up, and I don’t know how that can be, because we have finished with that.

    “But, I wish to say that within the last three weeks or so, thousands of teachers whose names were omitted have been paid. As I am talking to you, March salary is almost ready,” he said.

    Pupils have been out of school since last year because teachers refused to work.  However, Akwu absolved the government of being responsible for the situation.

    “We never stopped the children from going to classes, but teachers said they were not strong enough to teach because of non-payment of their salary. Some of them said that the pupils were stronger than they were,” he said.

    After settling the salaries, Akwu said the board would embark on a verification exercise to check the sharp practices of teachers who also receive their pay check elsewhere.

    “Teachers are supposed to be shining light and beam of hope, but unfortunately, like in other areas of the society, there are some bad eggs.  There are some teachers working in Abuja and collecting salary here. So, we are going to embark on verification. What you don’t have you can’t give; we are going to embark on verification of certificates,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the state government is yet to reach a decision on the discovery of 800 ghost schools it is funding.

    The sham was discovered by the old SUBEB board in 2012 after the state directed the office of the Accountant-General to set up of a committee to verify the number of schools in its care.

    Akwu declined comments, saying it does not have the Accountant-General’s report on the case.

     

  • Kogi grapples with unpaid teachers’ salary

    Kogi grapples with unpaid teachers’ salary

    For teachers in Kogi State, this is not their best moment as they are grappling with backlog of unpaid teachers’ salaries owed by various local governments.

    The development led to the sack of the Alhaji Usman Jibrin-led State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) by Governor Idris Wada.

    “They (SUBEB Board) were sacked because their cup was full. The unfortunate thing is that having given them enough time to sort things out they failed to do so. Quality education, especially at the basic level, is not possible without quality teachers, and you cannot get quality teachers without payment of teachers’ salary. What went on at SUBEB was not acceptable and hopefully those that will be put in place will reposition basic education in the state and move it forward,” he said.

    Perhaps when the new SUBEB board is inaugurated, there would be a solution to the problem which has made hundreds of primary school teachers to stay away from the classroom.

    Though Wada has assured the teachers the problem would soon be resolved, and the striking teachers agreed in principle to return to the classroom, The Nation found that they have kept away because money has not been lodged in their accounts.

    The state chapter of Basic Education Staff Association of Nigeria (BESAN) has appealed to the governor to appoint a seasoned educationist to replace the sacked SUBEB chairman.

    Making the call in Lokoja, the chairman of BESAN, Adomu Sule, said sacking Jibrin and other members of the board was a step in the right direction. He lamented that teachers were yet to receive their March and April salaries even though the money had been deducted from the local government allocation.

    He also said promotion was done without cash backing, leaving the teachers poorly motivated despite their willingness to give their best.

    Sule also urged the governor to appoint competent hands as education secretaries across the 21 local governments and end the politics associated with such appointments.

     

  • Students bemoan ‘double fee’ as varsity resumes

    Students bemoan ‘double fee’ as varsity resumes

    Kogi State University (KSU) in Ayingba has just resumed session but students are not happy with the fee regime introduced by the management.

    They describe it as anti-student. Some of them, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, said the new fee was not in the interest of students.

    A 300-Level student, who did not want his name in print, said management disappointed students with the increment, saying: “I think it is not a wise thing for the authorities to increase the fees at this period because things are not easy for us.”

    He urged the management to be considerate.

    A fresher said the management was ripping off students through “double charge” for one item.

    “I don’t know why this people decided to increase the fees at this critical time. I was told that the fees that fresh students used to pay was tN35, 500.  I don’t know how it became N57,500 for those of us that are indigenes. We are also paying departmental fees and association fees even after they have been included in the school’s fees.”

    However, a student, James Yusuf, said the fee increment was in order, noting the new fee was affordable compare to the fees being charged in Southwest universities.

    He said: “Look my brother, the increment is considerate enough, owing to the fact that if you look at it, other institutions are collecting even higher fees. Other universities collect as high as one hundred thousand and above, even for their students. Consider the Lagos State University, for instance and others in the West.”

    While some kicked against the fee increment, others commended the school for the upward review of fees, saying its in line with realities of the 21st century education.

    It was gathered that the Students’ Union Government (SUG) met with the school’s Visitor, Governor Idris Wada, following rumour that there would be fee hike, but the government said it was untrue.

  • Kogi: Opposition squares up to PDP

    Kogi: Opposition squares up to PDP

    Kogi State governor, Idris Wada has a testy battle ahead. It is the battle to retain his seat and win reelection. Wada has fought a long way to come this far. First was the battle within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for its governorship ticket. His challenger, Jibril Isah, popularly known as Echocho, won the initial ticket. But forces in the party led by immediate past governor, Ibrahim Idris, conducted a fresh primary won by Wada.

    Echocho, rich and popular, was irked. He took the case to court and fought tooth and nail. He pursued the case to the Supreme Court, which affirmed Wada’s candidacy on February 21. Though the governor won at the apex court, he has tougher battles ahead of his reelection bid in 2015.

    His main challenge will be galvanising every PDP member to support his ambition. His victory in 2011 at the poll and the Supreme Court’s affirmation of his candidacy has fragmented the party. The PDP in Kogi today has so many disgruntled and disenchanted members.

    The unending Echocho’s aura

    Leading the pack is Echocho, who won the January 9 2011 primary of the PDP at the Lokoja Township stadium. He was set to represent the party at the April 26, 2011 general election until the Appeal Court ruled that the tenure of five governors including Kogi had not expired. This forced the postponement of the gubernatorial election in the state and four others.

    Rather than sticking with its elected candidate, the PDP went ahead to conduct a fresh primary on December 3 2011, where Wada emerged. Echocho is particularly bitter he was ditched for Wada after winning the initial primary. Several reconciliation attempts from the National Secretariat of the PDP to assuage him have failed, fuelling talks that he might be bidding time to take his pound of flesh.

    He is popular at the grassroots and said to be generous, but fiercely independent-minded. Sources said his independent streak was a major reason why the godfathers dumped him for Wada. But his influence in the party has remained unwavering. Many members keep flooding to his side, a development said to have been so because of Wada’s inability to ‘empower’ them.

    Many party chieftains, it is learnt, are feeling alienated by Wada and have vowed to work against his second term bid. In contrast, they keep finding listening ears in Echocho and comforting shoulders from him. Aware of his unflinching supports within the PDP, the governor last February appealed to Echocho not to leave the party. He called on him and other disgruntled members to work with him in moving the state forward.

    The long judicial battle to affirm his candidacy, many said, has drained the governor’s armory. It also left the party bloodied and weakened. The perceived non-performance has further compounded his many battles on the road to reelection. Besides, sources said he has fallen out with his political godfather and predecessor, Ibrahim Idris. Without Idris’ support base and Echocho’s threat within the party, it is becoming increasingly difficult for Wada to wriggle his way in the PDP.

    APC’s house-cleaning

    While the PDP continues to battle with internal bickering, the All Progressive Congress (APC) keeps consolidating. The battle of wits that followed the merger of the former three parties has become a thing of the past in the party. Chieftains, stakeholders and members are closing ranks, determined to chase the PDP out of power come 2015.

    Former governor Abubakar Audu has jettisoned any governorship ambition, making it possible for a fresh breath of liberty to blow in the party. Audu, who confirmed this to reporters in his country home recently, said: “I have no ambition for 2015 or 2020, but I have ambition for the state to grow. I want to be a very relevant political leader to guide and support elected leaders to achieve good governance”.

    He explained he remained in politics not to look for money or contest for elective positions, but to be the mouthpiece of the less privileged, saying that as a father, he must give everybody the opportunity to develop.

    Dismissing any leadership tussle within APC in the state, Audu said: “As one of the founding fathers of APC, I am a natural leader of the party both at the state and national level and I am not contesting leadership of the party with anybody”.

    The APC was factionalised with one group said to be loyal to Audu. The arrowhead of Audu’s powerful group is the interim Chairman of the Kogi APC, Mr. Haddy Ameto. The other faction was led by a chieftain, Mr. James Ochile with Alhaji Muhammed Kassim said to be the arrowhead. But the party has been undergoing realignment, leading to dismantling of splinter groups.

    Speaking recently, Ameto said: “There is no faction again. I am the chairman of the party and I know that there is no faction. Whatever the kind of misgiving people may have, the congresses will settle it. That is for anybody who thinks that there are factions but to me, we do not have factions”.

    This new-found synergy, observers say, will stand the party in good stead to displace Wada come 2015. Thankfully, the governorship poll will take place several months after the State and National Assembly elections. Mindful of this, sources said the APC has mandated his governorship aspirants to ensure victory at their wards and constituencies to stand them in good stead.

    Feelers said Ochile is leading the party’s governorship race though many other candidates are expected to declare intention as the election draws closer. Some party chieftains, it was learnt, are also speaking with Echocho to consider working with the APC. Their thinking, it was argued, is with a formidable, popular candidate like him, it won’t be difficult to galvanise popular support for the APC.

    Ameto was in a confident mood when he spoke with reporters on  APC’s chances. He said: “We are strategising and we are going to defeat PDP roundly at all levels in 2015. They cannot defeat us in any election because PDP has not recorded any achievement in this state.

    “There were protests at the local government councils because of non-payment of staff salaries. In a local council they even boxed themselves. When APC comes on board, we would ensure that council funds are not tampered with”.

    Kogi State PDP Chairman, Hassan Salau, dismissed such talks as empty threats. According to him: “Aside from the bond that the state government recently took to be used for infrastructural development, I do not think that the state is owing. APC cannot defeat PDP because APC is not organised. An ‘iroko’ tree is superior to a mahogany tree. PDP is an iroko tree’’.

    For now, Wada seems to be facing high hurdles to his reelection. With a divided party, an estranged godfather and a united opposition, it is hard to see how he would work his way back to the State House.

  • ‘Yoruba in Kogi deserve better deal’

    ‘Yoruba in Kogi deserve better deal’

    Okun Development Association is the umbrella organisation articulating the interest of Okun and Oworo people in Kogi State. When its leaders recently paid a visit to Governor Idris Wada in Lokoja, the state capital, they protested the marginalisation of Yoruba in the state and offered suggestions on peaceful coexistence among the diverse ethnic groups, Their views on the national conference is contained in their memorandum to the governor. Excerpts:

    When Kogi State was created about 22 years ago, the Yoruba in the state had high hopes. Coming out the bitter experiences in the old Northern Region and Kwara State, and judging by its rich human and natural endowments, the state had very high potentials to be viable, if its human and natural resources were fully mobilised, deployed, distributed and exchanged, in the spirit of equity, fairness and justice.

    We have disturbing facts and figures about the way our state is going and as responsible stakeholders, we agreed among ourselves that we should, before anything else, meet with you and share the information with you. We came to Lokoja, believing strongly that: (a) Your Excellency wishes to promote the advancement and socio-economic uplift of the entire citizenry of the State in which the Okun people constitute an invaluable and principal actor. (b) Given the considerable level of frustration of our people, a forum like this would provide the Governor a veritable platform for a clearer perception of their feelings and accord our people their proper role that would engender patriotism in the interest of greater harmony and cohesion in the state.

    We wish to acquaint you with some of the sore concerns of our people and their present level of alienation and grave disadvantage, experienced perennially from manifest inequity, unfairness and marginalization in the scheme and skewed process of governance, especially from the aegis of the civilian administrations in the State since 1991 when Kogi State was created.

    Successive civilian governments in the state have compounded the trend of marginalization to a level that has become intolerable to the generality of our people. This is why we have decided to bring to the notice of the governor, the deplorable state of affairs meted out to our people by the state, with the hope that you will take urgent steps to reverse their fortunes positively. We have done this order to bring home palpably and unmistakably, the enormity of the inequity in the distribution of amenities, infrastructure, appointments and public goods suffered by our people relative to other pillars of the state and the East Senatorial District in particular.

    Our state is ailing and the ship of state is being assailed by a potentially disruptive storm. And we daresay that much of the adversity that afflicts the state is self-inflicted.

    Kogi State is built on three pillars of East, Central and West senatorial districts. These are like the three engines of a wide-bodied aircraft.

    Society thrives best if it upholds the time-tested principles of equity, justice and fairness. A man who has three wives, but chooses to fend for the needs of only one of them and her offspring would be deliberately inviting trouble into his own home.

    Based on repeated vicious circle of mistreatment, the average Okun citizen has become cynical, to the extent that he/she believes that there are positions in this State that he/she cannot and, indeed dare not, aspire to occupy simply by virtue of the place of his/her birth, curiously in a democratic/civilian government.

    No Okun person has ever been the Chief Executive of this state. No Okun citizen has been a substantive Accountant-General or the Permanent Secretary, Government House Administration. Our numerical strength in the work force has continued to acutely decline, even in the education sector where we undoubtedly excel above other groups in the state.

    We now, more concretely present illustrated profile of the state of unequal but conscious pattern of distribution of amenities, positions and offices in the state.

    Political Appointments: Of a weighted total of 293 political appointments by the Government of Kogi State, Kogi East carries the lion’s share of 166, Kogi Central has 51 and Kogi West takes 71. This amounts to 56.6 per cent for the East Senatorial District.

    Staff Disposition in the Civil Service: We are alarmed by the dwindling presence and influence of our people in the state civil service and unless urgent steps are taken to address the situation, the prospects are grim for us. At the creation of the state in August 1991, the size of the civil service stood at 19,806. Of this, Kogi East had 9,769 (about 49 per cent); Kogi West, 8,244 (about 41 per cent) while Kogi Central had 1,995 (about 10 per cent) members of staff. However, by 2013, the work force had ballooned to 35,209 (an increase of almost 78 per cent). Out of this, Kogi East has 24,621 (about 70 per cent); Kogi West, 6,519 (almost 19 per cent) while Kogi Central has 4,069 (almost 11 per cent). These figures show that while the relative share of the Igala/Bassa group has shot up consistently, that of the Okun/Lokoja/Kotonkarfe group stagnated for a while before it began to dwindle dangerously.

    Civil Service Appointments (Directorate Cadre): Out of 637 positions, Kogi East carts 318, Kogi Central takes 124 and Kogi West gets 195. Kogi East sweeps nearly 50 per cent of the total directorate level positions in the civil service.

    Kogi State University: Although its name suggests that this institution belongs to and is indeed funded with the resources of the entire state, the staffing at all levels seems to portray it as belonging to Kogi East alone. All the vice chancellors of the university so far have been Igala. The same goes for the Director of Works. The Registrar and Librarian of the institution are at present also from Kogi East. Of the total staff strength of 1,516 in the university, 1,118 or 73.7 per cent are from Kogi East, Kogi Central has 62 (4.09 percent), Kogi West has 115 or 7.6 per cent while non indigenes constitute15.2 per cent of the work force with 230. Of the total senior staff of 855, Kogi East with 486 takes the lion’s share of 56.7 per cent, Kogi Central has 43 (6.8 per cent), Kogi West, 105 or 16.6 per cent while non indigenes with 221 make up the balance of 25.9 per cent. The picture for junior staff is per haps benumbing to say the least. Kogi East takes up 632 (94 per cent) of the total of 661. Kogi Central has 19 (2.8 per cent); Kogi West has 10 (1.5 per cent) while non indigenes with nine make up the balance of 1.4 per cent.

    Of all the Secretaries to the State Government appointed in the life of the State, Kogi East has occupied the position seven times; Kogi Central, two times and Kogi West thrice.

    Accountant-General: All officers that have occupied this critical position, except for once by Kogi Central have been from Kogi East.

    Of the 18 Honourable Commissioners in the State, nine are from Kogi East, five from the West and four from Central Districts respectively. Kogi East takes 50 per cent of the allocation. Indeed, in clear departure from the letter and the spirit of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, one of our local government areas, Ijumu has no Commissioner in Your Excellency’s cabinet. This is a disturbing aberration, regardless of how it came about.

    Office of the Head of Service: Four of the most critical positions here are the Head of Service, the Permanent Secretary Administration, Director of Administration and the Director of Staff Welfare are all held by people from Kogi East! They determine posting, staff welfare and accommodation. Two of the other positions are held by Kogi Central and only one post is held by Kogi West.

    Government House: Even at the Government House here, there appears to be a deliberate and total lock-out of non-Kogi East persons in critical career and appointive positions. Indeed, the occupation of other ethnic groups except from Kogi East of the major offices has become a customary misnomer. We are aware that the positions of Chief of Staff to the Governor, Permanent Secretary, Administration and Director-General (Protocol) are held exclusively by people from the East senatorial district. The recent promotion of the erstwhile Director-General, Protocol to the position of Permanent Secretary and his subsequent transfer out of Government House presented an opportunity to give an Okun person who has been his deputy for years to assume the position. However, another officer of Kogi East extraction was hurriedly procured from another agency to take the position. Also the last time we checked, the Special Adviser, Special Duties (Government House), Special Adviser (Security) and the Special Adviser (Media) are all from the Igala/Bassa axis.

    Ministry of Finance: Only the Commissioner of Finance and the Accountant-General attend federation account allocation meetings and they alone can ascertain State allocations from that account. The two of them are from Kogi East. Not only that, the Auditor-General is also from Kogi East.

    Ministry of Local Government: All of the seven officers here are from Kogi East, including the Commissioner and Permanent Secretary as well as the Chairman, Local Government Service Commission.

    Distribution of Permanent Secretaries in Kogi State Civil Service: Of the 36 Permanent Secretaries in the Civil Service, 18 are from Kogi East, eleven from Kogi West and seven from Kogi Central. Kogi East takes 50 per cent of the allocation.

    The above statistics suffice to establish from these appointment and positional structures that Kogi East controls, firmly, all the administrative and financial machinery of the State. It is obvious that staff posting carried out by the office of the Head of Service is determined by ethnic imperative rather than by merit.

    The general picture graphically presented here is skewed toward Kogi East in pattern and structure of appointment scale. This reveals that Kogi East maintains a drowning dominance over and above the two other Districts put together. Kogi East produces, generally over almost 70 per cent of the State’s work-force. This runs grossly foul of the quantity and quality of the productivity scale of the populace. This grave imbalance bespeaks inequity and gross injustice such that provides a recipe for social discontent, citizen alienation and insecurity, if not promptly addressed by a responsive government as we believe your administration is poised to be portrayed before the citizens of the state across board and before the national spectrum.

    Security

    Your Excellency, a critical index of good governance, globally, is the state of security of lives and property. Today, Okunland is the most insecure segment of the State. Armed robbers are on perennial prowl on all the roads that lead to Okunland from Lokoja (through Obajana and Okene) and from Ilorin (through Eruku/Egbe). People commute these roads with the greatest trepidation and justifiable fear, at all times of the day. In the towns and villages in Okunland, there is no guarantee of security of lives and property. Banks are incessantly robbed with numerous lives lost and money looted by gun-running persons to the extent that, virtually all banks are shut to customers on a near-permanent basis and transactions are hardly possible.Our findings from the Army and Police authorities confirmed that they lack adequate vehicles and appropriate logistics to carryout regular patrols in the area.

    Unemployment

    Okunland faces a very grave unemployment crisis, particularly among the youth.

    Your Excellency is well aware of the communicational and economic importance of road access in the lives of people. It not only enhances social interaction and exchange, it enhances economic growth, especially in economies like ours whose mainstay is agriculture. There is a crucial road infrastructure deficit in Okunland. All roads linking the various communities and all roads linking the people to the rest of Kogi State and its borders are virtually impassable. From Lokoja to Kabba, from Omuooke in Ekiti State to Kabba, from Ondo State via Ajowa and Ayere to Kabba, and from Ilorin via Egbe to Kabba, all the road networks are in acute stage of disrepair. Though some of the roads are said to be federal roads, yet we all know that it is not the federal government that plies those roads.

    While available records show that 70 per cent of the state’s internally generated revenue is derived from Central and West senatorial districts, 80 per cent of capital projects are sited in East senatorial district. In many of our communities, people struggle daily with livestock to bail water from the streams that had been abandoned when, courtesy of the military administrations in Kwara State, potable water was available to them through boreholes.

    Education

    Today, there is no functioning tertiary institution, state or federal owned in Okunland. The College of Education (Technical) purportedly located in Kabba exists only in name. It has no structures, no teachers and no budgetary allocation. There is a sign board somewhere in Kabba announcing its presence but that is all there is to it.

    Pension

    The disarray in the administration of pension in the state deserves to be urgently remedied. There is a general feeling that the state has adopted the policy of non-payment of gratuity to retiring civil servants. For people to serve their state for 35 years and are thereafter thrown into the streets empty handed does not speak well of us as a people. The reward for service to the state should not be utter impoverishment.

    Our prayers

    Bold and urgent steps are taken to correct the patent lopsidedness in the distribution of political offices such that all parts of the state are made to have a sense of belonging. In particular, we demand that a Commissioner from Ijumu Local Government Area be appointed without further delay.

    •The administration should take steps to halt the continued decimation of Okun and Oworo people in the civil service and that qualified and competent Okun and Oworo indigenes in the service are appointed into positions commensurate with their training and experience.

    •Equal attention is given to the revival of decayed infrastructure in all parts of the state.

    • Rather than the present approach of allocating political offices, we would like to recommend that all available positions be put in a basket and shared based on the principles of equity and fairness. In this regard, for instance, it should be possible to correct the misnomer in having both the Commissioners of Works and Finance come from the same district.

    •Urgent steps are taken to reduce the current large number of Special Advisers, Senior Special Assistants and Special Assistants to the Governor.

    The law establishing Kogi State University should be revised to facilitate decentralization of the institution to enable it fulfill the dreams of its founding fathers.

    •This administration should commence payment without delay, of gratuity to civil servants who retired in the last two years and also sustain payment to those who retire forthwith. In addition, government should intensify steps to source funds to clear the backlog of gratuity to those who left service before the inception of this administration.

  • HIV/AIDS prevalence drops in Kogi – Agency

    Kogi State Agency for the Control of AIDS says the prevalence of HIV and AIDS in the state has dropped from 5.8 per cent in 2010 to 1.4 per cent in 2012.

    Hajia Rahinatu Bala, the Executive Secretary of the agency, made this known while on fact finding visit to Lokoja.

    Bala also lauded the coordinators of HIV and AIDS in the state for their contributions toward achieving the feat.

    She urged the coordinators not to relent in their efforts, saying that the agency’s target was to achieve zero prevalence as soon as possible.

    Bala also commended Gov. Idris Wada for his interest and support to the agency since his assumption of office.

    In his remark, Mr Henry Ukwubile, the Special Adviser to the Governor on HIV and AIDS, urged the coordinators to prepare for sustainability of the programme.

    Ukwubile said that plan by some partners to withdraw support for the programme in 2015 should not lead to its collapse.

    He urged other stakeholders to brace up for the challenge of reducing the spread of the scourge.

  • Kogi to spend N200m on projects

    Kogi to spend N200m on projects

    Kogi State Governor Idris Wada said yesterday the state will spend N200 million to execute projects under the first phase of the Kogi State government and UN- Habitat/UNEP cooperation.

    The governor spoke at the inception workshop on Kogi State government and UN-Habitat/UNEP Projects in Ogori, Ogori-Magongo Local Government Area.

    Wada said he would develop cities in the state, following the campaign promises he made to the people.

    The governor called on the people to change their attitude towards culture and historical tradition that hindered development in the state.

    Wada called on the UN-Habitat team to attract funds for the development of a city structure plan for the state.

    Deputy Governor Yomi Awoniyi, who chaired the Workshop Technical Sessions, said Lokoja was one of the cities selected for by the UN-Habitat.

    He said the state was working in tandem with the UNEP group for an urban renewal programme.

  • I’m crazy  about  wristwatches

    I’m crazy about wristwatches

    Nollywood actress, Halima Abubakar, is one of Nigeria’s finest acting talents. Having spent over a decade in the industry, she has grown a large fan base over the years and has received national and international recognition for her work. The Kogi State-born actress shares her passion with Adetutu Audu

    YOU hugged stardom with a picture baring your cleavages. How do you feel, looking back now?

    It was just an advert, a picture I took for a laundry company advert. It was just an audition picture where I was wearing a bikini. Back then, it was big deal in our society, but, nowadays, it’s a common thing, because ladies put pictures like that on their DP (Display Picture) and nothing happens. I actually did not know the press was aware of the picture in Lagos because I spent most of my time in Kano then and those magazines hardly circulate in Kano. It was my father who saw the write-ups and you can guess what that would have meant for me. Funny enough, I ended up not getting the job for which I snapped the picture because of the controversy that surrounded it. It got to the level that people were using the opportunity to ask me to do nude scenes in movies. Many producers were now writing scripts based on nudeness for me but I refused. I knew if I started that trend at that point in time, I won’t go back. I have seen one or two movies that people are becoming daring and all that. I just look back and laugh when I think about all the things I have gone through in life.

    Would you say it affected your career?

    Oh, yes it did. A lot of producers didn’t want to work with me. They used to see me as a very decent, quiet girl. For them to see those pictures, it was very shocking to them. It took me some years to convince them that I can act very well. I am not all about snapping pictures and modelling. I am still trying to convince some of them. I refused to quit the industry like I told you before. That consistency sort of helped me out. I have built relationships again.

    Where did you develop your passion for acting, knowing that most people from your religious background would not?

    I started acting when I was in my teens. The awareness then was not that much. People didn’t really know much about movies up north then. It was after the millennium that people started taking note of the movie industry. In short, when I started, I didn’t have a problem until people started making a big issue out of nothing. Even things that should not elicit any reaction, but because of the way those things were blown out of proportion, people were forced to take note and that brought controversies and bad comments from people. Basically, I don’t think it is a problem. When you are given a job to do, I guess you are supposed to do it very well.

    You have really had your fair share of controversies; people would have expected you to go under, going by all the scandals.

    Some people would have built ten houses out of those controversies. Well, I don’t know if I am controversial. I am a very good girl. I don’t set out to bring controversy to myself. I just go about my life in a normal way. If you think that is controversial, I don’t have anything to say to that.

    You are also crazy about tattoos. Apart from your chest region, where else do you have the tattoo?

    A couple of places. I am sure you don’t want to find out.

    How lucky have you been with your relationships?

    I have had very few relationships; I had a boyfriend that died in 2003, and after that I think I have been in two solid relationships, people might say that it is a lie, but if anybody knows of any other one, he or she should come out and say it. I have had only two relationships, and I realise that these days people are getting headaches over when I will marry and all that, are they going to live with me when I get married? Are they going to put food on my table when I get married? Will they come and live with us? So, I won’t get married because of what people are saying. Some of them don’t even have a relationship. They just hate us because we are actresses, is it our fault? So you don’t bring your frustrations into my own name. Most of the rumours on the Internet are all lies. Some don’t even read the interviews before they comment, when they just see someone’s name, they just scroll down to the comment, and they don’t even know what you are saying on the Internet.

    Do these things get to you?

    No, there are things that I do that I would appreciate a commendation, but people don’t do that. You find out that the good things you do, people don’t read about it, what they want to read about is an actress dating this and that, an actress smoking. When you say this person is doing charity, they don’t get to highlight that. They highlight the rumours they hear, and not what they see or know. If they don’t see pictures, they complain; when they see, they say you are advertising what you are doing. So I have given up on trying to convince people, I’ll keep on doing what I want to do and forget about what people think. I see a lot of people fighting over my age, and it is silly, because at this time people don’t lie about age. How old was I, when I came in, how old am I now? People say Halima should keep quiet; she is older than she is claiming.

    Having been in the industry for this long, you must have broken new grounds. Can you sharewith us?

    I made my debut as an Executive Producer in a recent movie, Mistresses, which starred myself and Ghanain actress Yvonne Nelson.

    Can you tell us more about it?

    It’s about a group of friends who all have individual private lives. It is basically the stress that goes through every normal relationship that we put together as a movie for entertainment and to learn one or two things about the other side of relationships. And to the people that relationship is meant to be private in nature and fulfilling; so the story is just meant to teach us lessons about relationship, basically.

    How impactful would you say you have been in the industry?

    Of course I am treasured; my contribution is highly felt. You can ask my president and my fans can tell. I have contributed in discovering a lot of stars; we don’t need to go into the details because we all know. And I don’t need to be the highest paid actress to know that you have touched lives but knowing that you have is a joy you have within, I can’t share it.

    You are passionate about charity. Why?

    Halima Abubakar Foundation for the Poor. Actually, it focuses on people that don’t have food. My concern is that a lot of people are hungry, so aside from giving them money, we can buy a bag of rice and share it to them. Food and water generally are my interest because I was hungry once, so I know a lot of people are hungry too.

    Your family were affected by the Boko Haram insurgency recently. How do you feel?

    I do not support any crisis from any angle at all. They have business with the government, not the individuals, so I think they lost focus of what they were doing. I am still pained, my business and family were affected. We are just going to pray to God to keep guiding and protecting everyone.

    What is your most expensive fashion item?

    My wristwatches. I love wristwatches. And rings; I love rings. It’s amazing when you hear the amount some of these rings cost. I love accessories a lot.

    What dictates your dressing?

    I like being different. I want people to look at me and say, “yes, she has a style,” even if it’s weird. I don’t have to come out wearing a mini-skirt like every other person. I can’t come out wearing something that won’t allow me breath well in order for people to look at me and say “oh, she’s a fashion icon.” I’d wear 16 colours if I choose to as long as I’m happy about it. I love colours. Look around, there are always colours. See, I painted my house purple. I was almost going to paint the gate red but then people stopped me.

  • Kogi after 2012 floods

    Kogi after 2012 floods

    Never in history has there been such a great number of internally-displaced people (IDP) in Kogi State as a result of natural disaster.

    The flood ravaged many parts of the country in 2012, but drew great attention to Kogi which was heavily devastated. A total of 623,690 displaced people were accommodated in 87 camps across the state during the period.

    Months after the flood, several clean-up measures have been taken by the Kogi State government in order to address the people’s gory experience during the period and after.

    Some of those who have since returned to their homes are still in utmost confusion with regard to coping with life, as many of them are yet to recover from the upset.

    Judged from the level of damage and destruction caused by the flood, the people have expressed their joy that there was no similar experience last year as it would have been one disaster too many.

    The natural disaster of 2012 brought with it great flooding of the roads which made them impassable. Many school buildings became refugee camps. Houses were submerged. Properties and infrastructures were badly affected. Farm lands, crops and animals were washed away.

    The disaster was said to have destroyed property worth billions of Naira. It was one disaster that the people and the Kogi State government are still struggling to come to terms with considering the monumental destruction it caused.

    As a result of this, there were several donations from governments, good-spirited individuals and corporate organisations. The state received the sum of N753,092,704 with major donations of N500 million, N150 million, N50 million and N10 million,N10 million coming from the Federal Government, Dangote, Jide Omokore, Alhaji Isa Kutepa and Kano State Government respectively.

    Despite these donations, there have been strong complaints by the people, particularly victims of the flood that nothing tangible has been done to lessen the suffering they are going through after the flood that sacked them from their ancestral homes.

    But the Kogi State Deputy Governor Yomi Awoniyi who also doubles as Chairman, State Emergency Management Agency said through his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Abu Michael that the state was and has been very sensitive to the plight of victims of the flood.

    So much, according to Abu, was and is still being done to alleviate the sticky-situation of genuine flood victims in the state.

    “Genuine victims of the flood disaster in the state” Abu explained, “can testify that the state has taken the issues of rehabilitation and post-flood management for which the state received some grants very seriously.”

    Aside the disbursement of N139 million to victims of the disaster in the nine affected local government areas, the government, he said, built 272 houses with another 300 to commence ‘this month.

    Many people have criticised the housing scheme in terms of its location as nine local government areas were gravely affected.

    Abu said: “Those completed in Lokoja are among the first phase of housing scheme for majority of its citizens, with special emphasis on relocating those affected and living by the shoreline. The feat of relocating affected persons to houses built by government will be replicated in other affected local government areas as soon as funds are available.”

    The modalities for giving out the already completed houses, he said, are being worked out by relevant agencies.

    Kogi State, investigations revealed, remains the only state that operated relief camps for flood victims six months after the flood had receded. Provision of food stuffs, medicines and clothing for those in the camp was given serious attention.

    While winding up the camps in February last year, each of the victims received N50, 000 and foodstuffs to assist them resettle in their new homes.

    However, there were complaints by some people who were given between N3, 000 and N5, 000. This, according to Usman Isah, a resident of Gadumo, was insulting to the psyche of those who lost all they had.

    Currently, the state government has almost completed the renovation of most schools where victims of the flood disaster were camped. The renovation exercise cost the government N81million.

    Similarly, all roads that were affected by the flood, Abu Michael, Chief Press Secretary to Awoniyi explained, was constructed at the cost of N423m. To cushion the effects of washed farmlands, a 6, 500 hectares rice plantation was established along the flood plains of affected local government areas where lots of youths and women are gainfully employed. This has currently placed the state on the world map as major rice producer.

    This initiative, Abu noted, cost the state N200 million. The produce of last harvest was publicly and, through a 60:40 ratio shared between the government and buyers. After the harvest the state government out rightly bought the produce from farmers and issued out cheques to them.

    Some others who claimed to have worked on the farms recently protested that they were never paid. This, Abu described as untrue and said everyone who worked in the farm had received their wages in spite of support in clearing and other logistic assistance they farmers received from government.

    Since after the flood, the government has spent much money in the areas of education, housing, transport and health.

    For instance, six of the primary schools that were used as relief camps are being renovated at the cost of N81, 376,464.55.

    The post-flood housing estate in the first phase of the scheme which comprised 272 units of one-bedroom and two-bedroom units cost government N504 million.

    Contracts for fixing badly affected roads were awarded at the cost of N423million.

    The government, as part of proactive measures, opened alternative east and west routes to avoid the sufferings encountered by commuters during the natural disaster.

    Government’s effort in the area of dry season farming to make up for the huge loss of farmlands, Abu said, is also most commendable as over 6,500 hectares of cluster rice farmlands under the Fadama programme, an initiative that has cost the government N200 million.

    He said claims of neglect by some of the victims were unfair; adding that within the resources available, government has continuously addressed the challenges caused by the flood. He restated that donations received by the state during the flood disaster were judiciously used for the purposes for which they were made.

    Abu said: “The assistance to farmers and fishermen whose farm lands, crops and fish ponds were washed away had been wholesome. I would want the people to appreciate the efforts of government and not play politics with the seriousness government attaches to the rehabilitation of lives of its citizenry.

    “The process leading to rehabilitation of people and places affected by the flood is an ongoing and continuous exercise.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The Nation gathered that majority of the flood victims whose houses were flooded, had since gone back to their various homes.

    The Commissioner for Environment and Physical Development, Hon. Abdulrahaman Wuya, told our correspondent that the envisaged flood of 2013 was averted through the proactive measure taken by the government, saying the 2012 flood came unexpectedly.

    Wuya, however, insisted that people dwelling around the river banks should consider seeking an alternative place of abode.

    Also, the Special Adviser to Kogi State Governor on Environment, Mr Ladi Ahmed Jato, in the same manner advised those who reside at river banks to always be mindful of the fact that they are living in a dangerous terrain.

    A Retired civil servant and a house owner at Gadumo River Bank in Lokoja, Joseph Ibrahim told our correspondent that he was able to build his three bedroom apartment through savings he made when he was in service.

    “Where do they expect us to go? Are they praying for another flood? Anyway, I can never leave my house for any flood. If there is flood today, I will temporarily leave and come back once it receded,” he said.

    Meanwhile, there have been calls and agitations that government should, as a matter of urgency, propose to the State House of Assembly to declare all river bank areas as green zones. The move, they believe, would make the people move away from flood-prone areas.