Tag: minister

  • FG secures $500m for local funding of digital innovation, entrepreneurship – Minister

    FG secures $500m for local funding of digital innovation, entrepreneurship – Minister

    • As World Bank plans digital ID for 148m Nigeria by 2024

    The federal government has secured access to approximately half a billion dollars for local funding of innovation and entrepreneurship in the country’s digital sector, Communication, Innovation and Digital Economy Minister Bosun Tijani has disclosed.

    Tijani spoke at a dinner organised by the Tech community in Abuja on Friday night.

    “We’ve got access to about half a billion dollars to start local funding,” he told reporters.

     He said  the fund would target  “true, real Nigerian businesses.” 

    He added that by domiciling the funding in Nigeria, the government aims to foster the growth and development of homegrown enterprises, ultimately contributing to the country’s economic progress.

     He stressed that more investors would be brought on board, increasing the funds available to support Nigerian innovators.

     He added,” Part of my responsibilities is working with BOI (Bank of Industry) to ensure that we domicile that funding locally in Nigeria, work with firms who manage and invest in businesses to ensure that those businesses that will benefit are true, real Nigerian businesses.

     “And what we are going to see is that the funding is available locally and in the coming months it is going to become larger and as these funds become larger we want to leverage that money as well.

     “So the government is not just going to put half a billion and that’s it, it can actually bring more investors to heart as we have more money, more of our innovators can have access to resources,” he said.

    Read Also: Fresh storm over Tompolo’s N48b oil pipeline contract

     Also speaking to journalists at the event, World Bank’s Country Director to Nigeria, Shubham Chaudhuri, said the global financial institution had structured plans to collaborate with the National Identity Management Commission to ensure the successful rollout and registration of digital national IDs for all Nigerians.

     He said no fewer than 148 million people of working age would be issued  a digital national ID by the middle of next year, marking a significant step towards inclusion and accessibility.

     He further reaffirmed the organization’s commitment to eradicating poverty

    , improving lives, and creating job opportunities for the country’s youth.

    He said:” Our main mission here in Nigeria is to eliminate poverty, make lives better, create jobs, for all Nigerian youth. One of the areas that we think have the greatest potential is the area of using digital technologies to transform. Now to do that it begins with having this digital national ID.

    “So one of the main partnerships we have is working with NIMC to ensure the rollout of the registration so that all 213/220million Nigerians have a digital national ID, beginning of course with all people of working age and I think the target for that is at least 148 million people by the middle of next year.

    “The second is helping Nigeria lead the broadband infrastructure for broadband connectivity because without broadband connectivity digital technologies will lead to a digital divide. So their support has been for good kinds of policies and regulations that will help invite private investment into this space and then fibre optic cables.

    “One thing, for example, working with states to persuade states to reduce the right of way fees and fiber. Cable operators have to pay more when they’re getting the land to ray the cable, All that is like the foundations and real potential comes from once you have the national ID all the technologies that apps that can be built on the weather to bring services to people, to people where they get people access to finance that all of that needs skills.”

  • Nigeria’s strategic foreign policy paying off, says minister

    Nigeria’s strategic foreign policy paying off, says minister

    • Why we won’t join BRICS, by Tuggar

    The Federal Government has said Nigeria is gaining from its strategic foreign policy.

    It said the country is not under pressure to join the BRICS alliance.

    The government said Nigeria currently maintains very close relationships with each of the member-states in the alliance.

    The BRICS, an acronym for Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, is an economic alliance that has attracted interests from different parts of the world.

    Foreign Affairs Minister, Ambassador Yusuf Tuggar, said this while addressing reporters at the Presidential Villa yesterday in Abuja.

    The minister said Nigeria’s diplomatic policy, which he described as Strategic Autonomy, gives the country the advantage of positive outlook with all countries.

    He was responding to a question on why Nigeria was not among the six other countries, including Egypt, Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, United Arab Emirates, and Argentina, that have been invited to join BRICS.

    According to Tuggar, there is a process to responding to an invitation to join an alliance, like the BRICS.

    Read Also: President graduated in 1979, Chicago varsity replies Atiku

    “There’s a process. These things take time. If you look at the BRICS, we have very close relationships with all the BRICS countries. So, it’s just a matter of time. Some relationships are bilateral, some are multilateral, and there’s a process in place.” he said.

    Asked how Nigeria leans towards Western economic ideology and later swung towards the East, the minister cited the country’s adopted ideology of Non-Alignment in the past and to the current Strategic Autonomy.

    “Nigeria’s position has been that of non-alignment during the Cold War and subsequently. Now, it’s Strategic Autonomy. We intend to maintain that. We get along with everyone, all countries,” he said.

    Asked if this strategy would not lead to a loss for the country, Tuggar said: “On the contrary, we’re going to gain.”

  • FCT and the real burden of minister

    FCT and the real burden of minister

    • By Ikenna Emewu

    It is important to remind the new Federal Capital Territory (FTC) Minister, Nyesom Wike that the actual duty on his hands is not the threat to demolish buildings. He should not forget that the FCT also needs housing development for the lower people, especially the natives who live in squalor. No law decrees that their lives should not be made better. 

    The FCT is a mini-state with six Area Councils. One of them is the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC). All his threats of building demolition and master plan restoration are just targeted at the AMAC.

    It might shock many, but it is true, that within the AMAC, Nigeria has the largest volume of ghettos, unfit places for human habitation, and an alarming number of poor citizens clustered in the most shameful habitable places the world would ever know.

    The affluence in Abuja is superficial. Underneath is a decay and squalor that will shock you.

    The parts of AMAC that use tap water from the government water board are not up to 20 percent. The rest rely on their individual water boreholes.

    For the information of the minister, AMAC residents also need water from the government. The entire Gwarinpa, reputed to be the largest single housing facility in Africa, uses boreholes. Mr Minister, please, give them water before you demolish.

    For you to understand Abuja, even the flashy central area, just drive down to the Apo Legislative Quarters from the central area. Instead of turning left into the homes of the National Assembly members, turn right and see how the smooth roads abruptly end in less than 10 meters into what you can’t describe. Try the same behind the old federal secretariat at Area 1 or just away from the busy Life Camp junction, either towards EFAB Estate where there are thousands of flashy buildings on dusty roads, or towards CBN quarters on the Idu-Karmo Road, then you will understand Abuja better.

    While FCT ministers only demolish and go, when last did any of them develop a housing facility for the lower people? They crush structures built through the enervating sweat of commoners. The following day, the powerful take over the same spot and convert it to what they want.

    Wike also needs to find an answer to why about 60 percent of the wondrous living estates within Jabi, Utako, Garki, Wuse, Wuye, Goodluck Jonathan District, Kado, Gwarinpa, Jahi, Life Camp, Mabushi, Maitama, Asokoro, etc. have no occupants. Why couldn’t those buildings be taken over by the government and put to use? Why won’t the owners start paying property tax on them and stop the wasteful, extravagant property development whose rents are beyond the reach of intending tenants?

    Read Also: Lessons from Emefiele, Diezani travails

    There is a designated industrial area in Abuja’s Idu District, on the road to the train station. Let him work towards encouraging industries and factories to dot that entire landscape. He should also encourage a sane development of the FCT as against the prevailing insanity where aesthetics is no longer part of the plan. He has travelled the world and seen beautiful cities; let Wike replicate them in Abuja where within some 50-100 buildings, there must be a leisure park for the health and relaxation of the people. He should turn Abuja into a green city.

    If Dubai in the belly of the desert can be green, it’s no issue for Abuja. The city has already turned a jungle like Lagos, and all the green spots are for beer and pepper soup. It should not be so. There should be basic leisure built into cities in today’s world.

    The rest of the FCT – Gwagwalada, Abaji, Bwari, Kuje, Kwali never knew or heard of what is called a master plan, apart from maybe, Kubwa in the Bwari Area Council, which is an urban, concrete jungle. The other areas typify rejection and poverty. He has a duty to fix them also. There are terrible rundown quarters called Jikwoyi, Piwoyi, Kuchingworo, Duwoyi, Pape, Papei, Pate, all those inhuman locations between Giri Junction and Madola where abandoned Nigerians live should be taken care of too.

    I was the editor of a national newspaper in Abuja and in charge of the FCT for years, and with a sense of modesty, I commissioned over 100 reports about the shocking poverty in the FCT for the weekly metro magazine. I can with all respect say that I know where the dirt-poor Abuja bodies are buried. Anybody that knows the FCT well will know that the mandate of the FCT minister is one of the toughest with the poorest of the country staring him in the face.

    It is within the FCT that Nigeria has one of the worst levels of poverty just next door to the seat of power with all the opulence that swirls around their neighbourhood.

    Wike should stop this unnecessary swashbuckling and get down to the real task.

    All the distortion of the master plan he fumes about is in the AMAC region. Before fixing that, he should first give Abuja and the entire FTC the needed infrastructure that is lacking. There are places even inside the ‘elite’ AMAC that are not fit for human habitation. It is also his duty to give essence to the lives of those people. 

    The FCT is the worst poverty-infested part of Nigeria. He has an obligation to turn the decay around.  When these are done, he also would have reduced the crime rate in Abuja where car-jacking is a daily incident.

    The natives at Kutako (Utako) at the heart of the city, those at Jabi native spots around Jabi Upstairs, Dawaki, around the location of the Etsu of Dawaki, the Fulani herders’ kids who don’t go to school and they live at a place the government stacked thousands of huge pipes for water works in Dawaki inner reaches by the rocky mountains, the Gwarinpa villages near the Gwarinpa Market on Third Avenue, the huge poor settlements of Dutse Alhaji and Dutse Makaranta, the erosion ravaged areas of Dawaki, and many more, including an unfit place harbouring thousands of poor northern settlers in Life Camp where human beings live in bachas, hundreds of them built from spent Dangote cement bags as roofs and walls, and their kids running around naked and don’t go to school are also his jurisdiction to lift the people to a befitting life. 

    The minister should ask why the road from Life Camp fish market to Deidei mega market through Karmo and Gwagwa and Idu is in horrible shape. The people along that axis live literally out of this world. Let him bring them succour too. In fact, he has so much on his hands beyond the facade at the centre of the city.

  • ‘Our agenda for education Minister Mamman’

    ‘Our agenda for education Minister Mamman’

    Stakeholders in the sector have advised the new Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman, to put proactive strategies and innovative approach in place to rescue the sector from collapse, Assistant Editor Bola Olajuwon, Damola Kola-Dare, Victoria Amadi and Victoria Adewunmi-Oni report.

    For pupils, students, parents and unions in the education sector, this is not the best of times, owing to challenges bedeviling the sector. Therefore, stakeholders have stressed the need for proactive strategies and innovative approach to rescuing the sector from collapse.

    In a statement, National President of Congress of University Academics (CONUA) Dr. Niyi Sunmonu expects the minister, considering his solid academic and intellectual background, coupled with his vast administrative and political experience over an extended period, to ensure stability in university calendar and enhance the local and international profile of the Nigerian university system.

    Sunmonu urged him to create a greater level of cordial relationship between government and labour unions.

    The statement reads: “Considering the solid academic and intellectual background of Prof. Tahir Mamman coupled with his vast administrative and political experience over an extended period of time, CONUA is of the firm belief that the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces has made an excellent choice for the education portfolio.

    “The core value of CONUA is the promotion of academic excellence at all levels in Nigeria, and we are committed to ensuring stability in university calendar and the enhancement of the local and international profile of the university system. CONUA hopes the new Minister of Education will make this set of goals his priority.

    Read Also: Many feared dead, other trapped as storey building collapses in Abuja

    “CONUA is hopeful that during the tenure of this new Minister of Education, the relationship between the government and the Labour Unions in the tertiary education sector will be marked by a greater level of cordiality.

    “Furthermore, CONUA is looking forward to productive and mutually beneficial cooperation to achieve our respective noble goals which include, but are not limited to, improved welfare of academics in terms of improved remuneration, improved working conditions and uninterrupted academic calendar.”

    For Chairman of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), University of Lagos (UNILAG) branch, Prof. Kayode Adebayo,  Mamman  should revisit  the 2009 renegotiated agreement the union presented to the Federal Government to address the issues of welfare and  poor remuneration.He urged him to ensure that the salaries of members held during the nine-month strike were paid to restore hope and boost the morale of lecturers.

     In a telephone chat with The Nation, he said: “We hope that the new minister, considering his pedigree, will bring new hope to the education sector. We believe he will be able to understand the level of decay in the sector, especially the affront on public university system. And he will be able to put mechanisms in place to tackle all that. He should address the  2009 renegotiated agreement and poor remuneration of academic staff.  We hope he can go back to the 2009 agreement to bring hope back to the university system. A lot of our colleagues are leaving for advanced countries, especially young ones. Can you imagine a department losing 14 academic staff, PhD holders? Government should understand that ASUU is talking about what will benefit the nation; we are fighting for the system to survive.

      ‘’We hope that our salaries held during the strike will be paid to restore hope and boost the morale of lecturers. He should also address the IPPIS issue.”

     Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) President, Anderson Ezeibe wants the minister to take steps to address the issue of certification by reviewing the status of HND and its possible replacement with a Bachelor of Technology certification (for qualified polytechnics) while retaining the ND certification for skills and artisanal certification in the sector.

    In a statement, he said: “From our findings, the new minister is eminently qualified to head the Federal Ministry of Education. We see from his profile that he has significant experience at the highest level of tertiary education management.

    “The issues at the basic education level border on the issue of out of school children in the country. The numbers are not going to get better with the worsening economic situation in the country. Indeed he has a lot of work to do there.

     “At the tertiary level, issues bordering on sustainable funding, acceptable wage structure for staff, infrastructure deficit, violations of laws and extant regulations are all issues of urgent concern.

    “For the polytechnic system, it is important that he takes verifiable steps to address the issue of certification by reviewing the current status of HND and it’s possible replacement with a Bachelor of Technology certification (for qualified Polytechnics) while retaining the OND certification for skills and artisanal certification in the sector. This will put the HND/degree dichotomy issue to rest.

     The solution to the challenges in the education sector requires the different layers of stakeholders to commit to the restoration of proper values to the sector. Prudent management of scarce resources, appropriate and deserving wage structures, improvement in funding, respect for laws, statutes and regulations are the path to restoration of the education sector to its lost glory.”

     Deputy National President, National Parent-Teacher Association of Nigeria (NAPTAN), Chief Adeolu Ogunbanjo said: “We congratulate him. He is welcome on board to the education sector. We expect him to ensure all agencies and parastatals in the sector work effectively.  He should ensure TETFUND’s funds are used judiciously. Then education should be accessible to everyone. No increment should be allowed from Federal institutions. Education at all levels should be prioritised and made affordable to all. Regarding the student loan, he should ensure effective implementation of President Bola Tinubu directive on the loan for easy access. Then, once funds are well utilised, there won’t be agitations from industrial unions.”

    National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) National President, Yomi Otubela, in a telephone conversation with The Nation, appealed to Mamman to fix meetings with education stakeholders to keep him abreast of the challenges in the sector. He urged the minister to address the issue of lack of funding in the sector by establishing education banks to fund private institutions.

     His words: “Prof. Tahir Maman, being a seasoned administrator and a former Vice Chancellor of Baze University, is well qualified to hold a position as Minister of Education. I do not doubt that as a technocrat, he is going to move our education sector forward and reposition it to an enviable height.

     “There is need for policy formulation and implementation to take cognisance of the inputs of various education stakeholders.

     “The continuous increase in the number of out-of-school children in the country has reached a critical state and needs to be well addressed by the minister.

    “We,  however, expect the minister to look into the issue of the establishment of Education Bank, by helping to push for a proposal to the Federal Executive Council for a concessionary interest loan to education institutions to alleviate the challenges of funding faced by private schools owners who are left with no choice but to obtain loans at high interest from commercial banks.

    “The high interest on loans has become unbearable for school owners as private schools are not to be viewed as commercial ventures given the peculiarities of private education investments.

    “We also want the minister to push for the inclusion of the private education sector in the various Federal Government’s palliative programmes to support private school workers. And the issue of multiple taxation from the Federal Government and state governments should be looked into for possible harmonisation.”

     Setting up of cordial relationship between govt and unions

     National President, CONUA, Niyi Sunmonu, urged the minister to strengthen the relationship between government and labour unions.

    Sunmonu, on behalf of the academic body, urged the new minister to promote academic excellence, while ensuring stability in university calendar and the enhancement of the local and international profile of university system.

    He congratulated Mamman, SAN, on his appointment as the Minister of Education, on the basis of his academic and intellectual background, alongside his political prowess.

    He was confident that the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Bola Ahmed Tinubu made an excellent choice for the education portfolio.

    He said: “CONUA is hopeful that during the tenure of the new Minister of Education, the relationship between the government and the labour unions in the education (tertiary) sector will be marked by a greater level of cordiality.

    “Furthermore, CONUA is looking forward to productive mutual cooperation to achieve our respective noble goals, which include, but not limited to, improved welfare of academics in terms of improved remuneration, improved working conditions and uninterrupted academic calendars.”

     Address out-of-school children and outdated curriculum

     Describing the appointment as outstanding, President, Association for Formidable Educational Development (AFED), Mr. Emmanuel Orji, urged Mamman, to address the issue of out-of-school children as an emergency situation and convene a stakeholders meeting for a solution.

     Orji described school’s curriculum as outdated and out of purpose which needs to be fixed.

    He called for a review of the school feeding programme to include those who are deserving of it, especially those children in low cost schools.

    His words: “The Nigerian curriculum is not just out of fashion, it’s also out of purpose and a total overhaul.

     “How can you talk of a curriculum that have left Nigerians at the mercy of foreigners to tap her natural resources, like our crude oil, gold, among others. There is something that is not right here and should be tackled with all urgency.

     “There should be a review of the school feeding programme to include those who are deserving of it, especially, those children in low cost schools which are obviously an extension of what the public school system could not accommodate as a result of either of lack of space or distance.”

    AFED’s president advised the minister to reposition universities to serve majorly as centres for research and professional development and not just for certificate acquisition.

    “We know why countries like Singapore, Japan, China and even India, which were at the same economic level as Nigeria have moved up? It is purely because of the attention given to education in these countries. We cannot continue to major in minor.

     “He should press for funding for education of all deserving Nigerian children without bias. Teachers education should be prioritised. Colleges of education must be repositioned and equipped for the training of a 21st century local content teacher with global perspectives on national development needs.

    “We must approach the world from our tailor-made or home grown solutions and embrace modern technology for efficiency not the other way round of pursuing trends that cannot be applied,” advised.

     An educationist based in Sokoto, Dr. Mikailu Barau, said the new minister needs to engage in addressing the problem of out-of-school children through improved funding and deployment of adaptive strategies to ensure increased enrolment and retention of children in schools.

     He noted that the Federal Ministry of Education is one of the biggest in terms of number of parastatals such as: Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), National Universities Commission (NUC), National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), National Commission for College of Education (NCCE), Nigeria Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC), among others.

     Mr. Barau noted that the new minister of education needs to strengthen the coordination function of the ministry by ensuring harmony and synergy between agencies and the ministry.

    “The Ministerial Strategic Plan (MSP) 2018-2022 has exhausted its scope. A new strategic plan is required 2023-2026 to identify strategic priorities and targets of the ministry in key subsectors of its operations,” he said.

     Adequate funding of education sector

     An educationist, who craved anonymity, said the minister needs to look critically into the education financing model of the country. He added that the funding for education at the basic education level, needs some rethinking, both curriculum-wise and funding.

    “The higher education, I cannot say what I feel. But truly the Federal Government has no business there. There is politics in education funding between federal and states. As it is, the local governments that are in charge of primary education and after paying for teachers salary, absolutely nothing is left for school resourcing.”

    “And UBEC is merely an intervention that is barely capable of catering for more than five per cent of states’ primary schools’ needs. So what is free about poor education?

      Mamman, good omen for education, says rector

    Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH)  Dr. Ibraheem Abdul, Rector expressed high hopes that the minister would perform well.

    Abdul described Mamman’s appointment as a good omen for the sector.

    “Having once held public office as the Director-General of Nigeria Law School, and the current VC of Baze University, there is no doubt that he will perform and excel.

    “The appointment to superintend over this very important core sector is not only a welcome development but a breath of fresh air,” he said.

    The YABATECH Rector, however, said Mamman needed the support of tertiary institutions’ management and other education stakeholders, both the public and private, to deliver on the job.

    He said everyone must contribute his or her quota to move the sector forward.

    “This is the more reason our new minister needs the collective support of all of us, parents, school administrators, teachers, alumni, unions and corporate organisations.

    “Above all, his employer (the government), as the cooperation of these critical stakeholders will help him to succeed and deliver on this new task that has been bestowed on him.”

    Similarly, the President, National Union of Lagos State Students (NULASS), Shasanya Akinlola, said the incoming minister might need to review some policies in the sector, in order to meet current demands across the country.

    Akinlola also said there was need for inspection in tertiary institutions, by way of visits, to ascertain state of infrastructure across campuses.

    “It is a good development that we have a new minister and there is no doubt that expectations are high, we are hoping that he’ll bring new policies.

    “The state of infrastructure in some tertiary institutions needs attention, ranging from inadequate lecture theatre, hostel, school libraries amongst others, and these are very essential in learning environment.

    “The Lagos State Government has been doing well in bursary but the reverse is the case for fellow students in other states, and it’s an important area that calls for attention.”

    The NULASS president also called for increase in budget allocation to the sector to improve standards.

     Needed:’ Renewed hope’

     Speaking with The Nation, an educational administrator, Mr. Ogunbodede Adedeji David, said: “Education is pivotal to a country’s economic growth and development.” He added that there are some hindrances to the smooth running of the education sector, such as socio-economic factors.

     “The Minister of Education should bring a renewed hope for teachers across all educational institutions for both private and government owned schools, there should be quality education delivery through practicable curriculum especially for institutions of higher learning. In addition, the academic calendar should be stabilised, there must be an end to incessant strikes in our  institutions of higher learning. Scholarships should be appropriately awarded, as a means of promoting the value of education, special educational shows or programmes on radio and television stations.” He said these should be included in the agenda of the Minister of Education.

     The Project Manager of Starlab Academy,  Miss Stephanie Adesola, emphasised that more extra-curricular activities should be inculcated into the system, in order to educate the students all round.

     Another stakeholder, Mr. Lucky Isaiah-Okoli, said the Minister of Education should make necessary drastic changes to the educational system of the country. He said: “we need to learn what will make us survive in the real world. It is what you know that can give you a job, and not what you need to pass an examination. Distant learning should also be encouraged.”

     He added that the gap between B. Sc. and H.N.D. should be bridged. He said the Minister of Education should take the bull by the horn, to avoid brain drain. He also compared the situation of the country, with that abroad, saying that if nothing is done, people will leave the country to study abroad, because of the readily available facilities, the conducive environment, the good economic situation.

     Based on what the stakeholders have said, they require a co-operation with the minister to achieve these goals. They expect that the minister will consider their views, as he discharges his duty as the head of the sector.

  • NPFL: Minister enjoins referees to be fair, firm

    NPFL: Minister enjoins referees to be fair, firm

    Minister of Sport Development Senator John  Owan Enoh has enjoined Nigerian football referees  to equip  themselves with the currents rudiments , adding they must  be up to date  and fair in their activities in order to win back  the confidence of Nigerians.

    The Minister said as much yesterday when he made a whistle stop at the ongoing Referee Assessors’ Training in Abuja during his inspection tour of the Moshood Abiola Stadium in Abuja.

    Read Also: Amusan: I’m ready to defend my world title

     Speaking at the development programme for the referees, the Minister encouraged referees to constantly update themselves with the new knowledge of the game, and make positive impacts on the domestic leagues in Nigeria.

    “Over the years, referees in Nigeria have been heavily criticized over their performances in our leagues but I want to trust that we will build on the recent successes achieved and win the confidence of our people.”

    He added:  “Referees are critical stakeholders of the game, and we need them to be at their best at all times, for the growth of our football.”

    The minister was received by the chairperson of the referees committee, Faith Irabor, who thanked him for his prompt visit.

  • Moshood Abiola Stadium: Minister reaffirms commitment to infrastructural development

    Moshood Abiola Stadium: Minister reaffirms commitment to infrastructural development

    Minister of Sports Development, Senator John Owan Enoh, yesterday toured the Moshood Abiola National Stadium, Abuja to assess the state of facilities in the edifice.

    The minister, alongside the ministry’s permanent secretary, Alhaji Ismaila Abubakar was led by Director of Facilities and Stadium Management at the Federal Ministry of Sports Development, Engr. Alanamu Abolore, as he inspected all packages of the stadium.

    Enoh visited the main bowl of the stadium, the Velodrome, facility building, athletes’ hostel, Federation and Elite Athletes Department (FEAD), Power Technical Building, as well as other facilities in the edifice.

    Read Also: Amusan: I’m ready to defend my world title

    Addressing newsmen during the tour, the minister stated: “We embarked on this tour because whatever one wants to do, we have to do it from a standpoint of knowledge, and that is what I am doing.

    “Yesterday (Tuesday) was my first day at work and I had the opportunity to take reports and briefings from all the departments, after which I left the office at about 10pm. We are trying to be as systematic as we can, with the process.

    “Facilities and infrastructures are a key component of sports, as they are variables that drive both elite performance and grassroots development,” Enoh added.

     “It is therefore very important that we get it right. We must maintain the current infrastructures that we have, and look towards making them better, to match what we have across the world.”

    The minister stated that the Moshood Abiola National Stadium has the capacity to become one of the best multi-purpose stadium complexes in Africa, as he promised to give required attention to infrastructural development.

    “Amidst the so much that I have seen here, the positives and the negatives, this stadium is a very definitive national monument. There is about nothing that you will find elsewhere, that you cannot find here,” he said.

    “However from 2003 till date, the facility has gone through a lot. The ministry under my leadership will do all that it can, to get every part of the stadium functional, including the athletes hostel, because athletes must have the best, to be the best.”

    He  added that he will visit other facilities across the country, to assess their state and take definitive actions on their development.

  • Minister urges coastal area residents to relocate

    Minister urges coastal area residents to relocate

    The Minister of Niger Delta Development, Abubakar Momoh, has urged those living in coastal areas to relocate to the hinterland, to avoid disaster. 

    He said he would meet the Minister of Water Resources to see how the government could find a permanent solution to the yearly flooding due to the opening of Lado Dam in Cameroon. 

    Read Also: NADDC, Coscharis, Stallion, others back NAJA workshop

    The minister made this known yesterday while addressing reporters on his vision for the ministry. 

    He said: “ I think what is important is that our people in the riverine areas should know that during this period when the rain is at its peak, we must also find a way to get ourselves properly settled in the upland areas so that we avoid those calamitous situations, when flood sweeps away our belongings.” 

  • ‘I didn’t expect to be minister’

    ‘I didn’t expect to be minister’

    Niger Delta Affairs Minister, Abubakar Momoh, has said he was not expecting to be minister from Edo State.

    He thanked a former National Chairman of All Progressives Congress (APC), Adams Oshiomhole, for recommending him to President Bola Tinubu.

    Read Also: NADDC, Coscharis, Stallion, others back NAJA workshop

    The minister, who spoke at a reception in his honour yesterday in Abuja, appreciated Tinubu for honouring him with the appointment.

    Momoh said: “I appreciate the President for appointing me. Not only did he appoint me as a minister in his cabinet, he re-designated me from Youth Development to Minister of Niger Delta. This is indication our President is a man who listens to people.

  • Minister gives eight-month ultimatum for Abuja light rail completion

    Minister gives eight-month ultimatum for Abuja light rail completion

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has frowned at the dysfunctional state of the Abuja light rail project.

    He directed the permanent secretary in the ministry to complete payment to the Chinese concession company handling the project to complete the rehabilitation of the rails within eight months.

    Wike gave the ultimatum during an inspection of the Abuja Metro Station in Idu and at the Airport Station on his first assignment outside the office, less than 48 hours after the swearing-in of the 45 new ministers.

    The FCT minister noted that the task of restoring the Abuja metro line had become crucially fundamental as part of President Bola Tinubu’s promise to alleviate the suffering of Nigerians within the shortest possible time.

    At the main terminal of the metro station, Wike, who was accompanied by the Minister of State for FCT, Hajiya Mairiga Mahmud, and other government officials, addressed the contractors, questioning the quality of work.

    Read Also: Tinubu celebrates Sultan of Sokoto on 67th birthday

    Proceeding the tour, the FCT minister took the train ride from the metro station through Idu Station and to the Airport Station.

    The rails, originally developed in six phases, were funded with loans from the China EXIM Bank. After the vandalisation of the vital rail infrastructure, the FCT Administration awarded a fresh N5 billion contract for its rehabilitation within 12 months.

    The Abuja light rail opened for business in 2018 and operated for about two years before the train service folded up, following vandalism.

    Wike, who is the first southerner to become FCT minister, hoped to present a rehabilitated rail system to the President for commissioning by April 2024.

  • FCT and the real burden of minister

    FCT and the real burden of minister

    • By Ikenna Emewu

    It is important to remind the new Federal Capital Territory (FTC) Minister, Nyesom Wike that the actual duty on his hands is not the threat to demolish buildings. He should not forget that the FCT also needs housing development for the lower people, especially the natives who live in squalor. No law decrees that their lives should not be made better. 

    The FCT is a mini-state with six Area Councils. One of them is the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC). All his threats of building demolition and master plan restoration are just targeted at the AMAC.

    It might shock many, but it is true, that within the AMAC, Nigeria has the largest volume of ghettos, unfit places for human habitation, and an alarming number of poor citizens clustered in the most shameful habitable places the world would ever know.

    The affluence in Abuja is superficial. Underneath is a decay and squalor that will shock you.

    The parts of AMAC that use tap water from the government water board are not up to 20 percent. The rest rely on their individual water boreholes.

    For the information of the minister, AMAC residents also need water from the government. The entire Gwarinpa, reputed to be the largest single housing facility in Africa, uses boreholes. Mr Minister, please, give them water before you demolish.

    For you to understand Abuja, even the flashy central area, just drive down to the Apo Legislative Quarters from the central area. Instead of turning left into the homes of the National Assembly members, turn right and see how the smooth roads abruptly end in less than 10 meters into what you can’t describe. Try the same behind the old federal secretariat at Area 1 or just away from the busy Life Camp junction, either towards EFAB Estate where there are thousands of flashy buildings on dusty roads, or towards CBN quarters on the Idu-Karmo Road, then you will understand Abuja better.

    While FCT ministers only demolish and go, when last did any of them develop a housing facility for the lower people? They crush structures built through the enervating sweat of commoners. The following day, the powerful take over the same spot and convert it to what they want.

    Wike also needs to find an answer to why about 60 percent of the wondrous living estates within Jabi, Utako, Garki, Wuse, Wuye, Goodluck Jonathan District, Kado, Gwarinpa, Jahi, Life Camp, Mabushi, Maitama, Asokoro, etc. have no occupants. Why couldn’t those buildings be taken over by the government and put to use? Why won’t the owners start paying property tax on them and stop the wasteful, extravagant property development whose rents are beyond the reach of intending tenants?

    Read Also: Nigerien coup and President Tinubu’s challenges

    There is a designated industrial area in Abuja’s Idu District, on the road to the train station. Let him work towards encouraging industries and factories to dot that entire landscape. He should also encourage a sane development of the FCT as against the prevailing insanity where aesthetics is no longer part of the plan. He has travelled the world and seen beautiful cities; let Wike replicate them in Abuja where within some 50-100 buildings, there must be a leisure park for the health and relaxation of the people. He should turn Abuja into a green city.

    If Dubai in the belly of the desert can be green, it’s no issue for Abuja. The city has already turned a jungle like Lagos, and all the green spots are for beer and pepper soup. It should not be so. There should be basic leisure built into cities in today’s world.

    The rest of the FCT – Gwagwalada, Abaji, Bwari, Kuje, Kwali never knew or heard of what is called a master plan, apart from maybe, Kubwa in the Bwari Area Council, which is an urban, concrete jungle. The other areas typify rejection and poverty. He has a duty to fix them also. There are terrible rundown quarters called Jikwoyi, Piwoyi, Kuchingworo, Duwoyi, Pape, Papei, Pate, all those inhuman locations between Giri Junction and Madola where abandoned Nigerians live should be taken care of too.

    I was the editor of a national newspaper in Abuja and in charge of the FCT for years, and with a sense of modesty, I commissioned over 100 reports about the shocking poverty in the FCT for the weekly metro magazine. I can with all respect say that I know where the dirt-poor Abuja bodies are buried. Anybody that knows the FCT well will know that the mandate of the FCT minister is one of the toughest with the poorest of the country staring him in the face.

    It is within the FCT that Nigeria has one of the worst levels of poverty just next door to the seat of power with all the opulence that swirls around their neighbourhood.

    Wike should stop this unnecessary swashbuckling and get down to the real task.

    All the distortion of the master plan he fumes about is in the AMAC region. Before fixing that, he should first give Abuja and the entire FTC the needed infrastructure that is lacking. There are places even inside the ‘elite’ AMAC that are not fit for human habitation. It is also his duty to give essence to the lives of those people. 

    The FCT is the worst poverty-infested part of Nigeria. He has an obligation to turn the decay around.  When these are done, he also would have reduced the crime rate in Abuja where car-jacking is a daily incident.

    The natives at Kutako (Utako) at the heart of the city, those at Jabi native spots around Jabi Upstairs, Dawaki, around the location of the Etsu of Dawaki, the Fulani herders’ kids who don’t go to school and they live at a place the government stacked thousands of huge pipes for water works in Dawaki inner reaches by the rocky mountains, the Gwarinpa villages near the Gwarinpa Market on Third Avenue, the huge poor settlements of Dutse Alhaji and Dutse Makaranta, the erosion ravaged areas of Dawaki, and many more, including an unfit place harbouring thousands of poor northern settlers in Life Camp where human beings live in bachas, hundreds of them built from spent Dangote cement bags as roofs and walls, and their kids running around naked and don’t go to school are also his jurisdiction to lift the people to a befitting life. 

    The minister should ask why the road from Life Camp fish market to Deidei mega market through Karmo and Gwagwa and Idu is in horrible shape. The people along that axis live literally out of this world. Let him bring them succour too. In fact, he has so much on his hands beyond the facade at the centre of the city.