Tag: minister

  • Govt, Boko Haram in ceasefire talks

    The Federal government is in talks with Boko Haram about a possible ceasefire, Minister of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed said yesterday.

    According to him, the talks have been going on for some time.

    He told reporters in Lagos that ”unknown to many, we have been in wider cessation-of-hostility talks with the insurgents for some time now”.

    “The talks helped to secure the release of the police officers’ wives and the University of Maiduguri lecturers recently. The talks did not stop thereafter. Therefore, we were able to leverage the wider talks when the Dapchi girls were abducted,” Mohammed said.

    He did not give details of the talks. The popular thinking is that it is likely that the government has been discussing with the Al Banawi faction, which is believed to have abducted the Dapchi schoolgirls.

    The minister said the Federal Government would reinvigorate national security to prevent further abduction of school girls in the Northeast.

    He said efforts to bring back the remaining Dapchi and Chibok girls safely through negotiation and dialogue would be intensified to draw the curtains on the sad episode.

    Mohammed said the early release of abducted Dapchi girls had rekindled public belief in the government’s ability to rise to the occasion in the period of emergency.

    He said: “This Administration remains committed to the fight against terrorism and insurgency. The security services have since been directed to put in place further measures around all schools vulnerable to attacks to ensure the safety of pupils/students and teachers and school workers. The President has also tasked all the security agencies to work to ensure that we do not witness any recurrence of these incidents.

    “While the military efforts are necessarily ongoing, we are willing to continue engaging in a meaningful dialogue, which is not only about the release of hostages, but intended at a broader engagement on conflict mitigation, reduction of the violence, possibility of ceasefire, protection of civilians, and increased humanitarian access. Government is therefore willing to engage on measures which can lead to stopping the bloodshed and finding long-lasting solutions to the conflict.”

    The minister lamented what he described as the politicisation of security by the opposition, urging the media to refrain from disseminating materials that may sabotage efforts to end the insurgency and secure the release of remaining girls.

    He frowned at the fake news about an Army Sergeant, David Bako, who allegedly claimed that he was part of a conspiracy by the government to abduct the Dapchi girls.

    Mohammed said: “This is a classic example of disinformation and fake news. I can tell you categorically that this David Bako is fake. There is no such soldier in the Nigerian Army.

    “There was no conspiracy anywhere. The intention of those behind the disinformation and fake news is to cause disaffection between Christians and Muslims, and between Southerners and Northerners.”

    Shedding light on how the Dapchi girls were released, the minister said their release followed an “intense back-channel engagement”, adding that the feat was achieved through the cooperation of a friendly country, international organisation and trusted facilitators.

    He said 107 persons, comprising 105 Dapchi schoolgirls and two non-students, have been released by the insurgents, adding that six school girls were still with the abductors.

    Mohammed maintained that the government neither paid ransom nor swapped any Boko Haram member to secure the girls’ release of the girls.

    He added: “The insurgents brought the girls back to the location of the kidnapping themselves as an apparent gesture of goodwill, following relentless efforts by the government to find long-lasting solutions to the conflict.

    “The insurgents decided to return the girls to where they picked them from as a goodwill gesture. All they demanded was a ceasefire that will grant them a safe corridor to drop the girls.

    “Consequently, a week-long ceasefire was declared, starting from Monday, 19 March. That is why the insurgents were able to drop the girls. This counters the conspiracy theories being propounded in some quarters concerning why it was so easy for the insurgents to drop off the girls without being attacked by the military.”

    The minister emphasised that the girls were freed early, following prompt proactive actions, including fact-finding by a government delegation, presidential directive to Service Chiefs and the Police Inspector-General to take charge and aerial surveillance of the area by the Air Force.

    Mohammed chided the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for turning the national tragedy into a platform for dirty partisan politics, instead of forging unity in an atmosphere of sober reflection.

    He added: “A terror attack on any country is an attack on all countries. Perhaps we should ask the PDP what, indeed, the party knows about the abduction of the Dapchi girls, going by its statement that their abduction and release were stage-managed. The party made itself a laughing stock within and outside Nigeria with that statement.”

    “What called for non-partisan celebrations was rather thoughtlessly turned into politics, bad, despicable politics that has no place in any democracy.

    “At times of national tragedies, countries unite. This is the norm everywhere.

    “Indeed, there should be a new criterion for withdrawing the registration of a party like the PDP which has failed both as a ruling and an opposition party!

    “If a party cannot rule and cannot be in opposition, what else can it do?’’ he said.

  • Fed Govt finalising plans on toll gates’ return, says minister

    The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, has  said the Federal Government will standardise the operation and management of toll gates before reintroduction.

    He spoke yesterday in Abuja when he appeared on the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) flagship programme, NAN Forum.

    Fashola said the standardisation was to overcome some of the problems encountered in the past in the operation and management of the plazas.

    He said: “We are also working to overcome some of the problems of the past, accountability and transparency in the operations and management.

    “We think technology gives us an opportunity to overcome these problems.

    “So we want to standardise all of that, then we have sent our officers out because we have revolved the design actually, what we want the toll plazas to look like.

    “In terms of design, quality of materials, cost, because we want to issue bids for people to come and bid for them.

    “So that when we are evaluating the bids, there can be proper evaluation because we are standardised.”

    The minister said the Federal Government had recorded progress in road construction and rehabilitation, considering the poor state of the roads at the inception of the current administration.

    “We have momentum in terms of team work, project delivery and problem solving and I think we should be seeing more cascading of results in more places.

    “In areas where our contractors are back to site, what we hear is that the journey is getting better; their travel time has been reduced and we will continue to reduce that.

    “Those that used to go through bush paths now see that they can drive through the roads even though it is not finished.

    “Contractors on the road sites who were laid off are back to work. So, that is a good news for them and their families to earn income,” he said.

    Fashola said the Federal Government was also making efforts to recover and protect its rights of way on highways to address the challenges of abuses on federal roads.

    According to him, the government on each highway has a right of way of 45.75 metres from the centre line on either sides of the road.

    He said the right of way of the government had over the years been encroached on by unapproved structures, trading, illegal parking of vehicles and vehicular repairs.

    Fashola said the Federal Government would not renew temporary occupant of its right of way.

     

     

  • Governor, minister bicker over naming of street after Buhari

    Plateau State Governor Simon Lalong has expressed disappointment about the comments credited to the Minister of Youths and Sports, Solomon Dalung, on the renaming of Jos-Maraba Jamaa road as Muhammadu Buhari road.

    The comments were made during the two-day visit of the President to the state last week.

    A statement yesterday in Jos by the Senior Special Assistant to Governor Lalong on Media and Publicity said the governor considered the statement as uncomplimentary, as the minister opposed the naming of a federal road after President Buhari.

    The statement said: “Dalung falsely claimed that it was the Yakubu Gowon Way, Jos, which stretches from the Plateau State Specialist Hospital roundabout, terminating at TAEN OIL junction on the Jos-Bukuru Expressway that was renamed the new Muhammadu Buhari Way.

    “On the contrary, the new Muhammadu Buhari Way actually starts from TAEN OIL junction and terminates at Mararaban Jema’a roundabout on the way to Yakubu Gowon Airport, Heipang.

    “Dalung took to his Facebook wall on March 12 to disparage Governor Lalong for honouring Buhari, thus stirring the hornets’ nest and precipitating controversy by lying that it was the road named after Gowon, a Plateau State indigene that has been renamed after Buhari!

    “Last Friday when the President was inaugurating 400 tractors for Plateau State Tractor Borrowing Scheme, Dalung was absent. He, instead, ‘smuggled his way’ to a radio station in Jos at the same time, castigating the governor and disparaging the presidential visit.”

    The statement accused the minister of nursing political ambition in 2019 and chose to antagonise the incumbent governor, to gain relevance.

    But the minister said: “I am not opposed to Lalong’s second tenure because it will be determined by the people, but I will not fail in my responsibility as a social critic to speak the truth, which is my trademark because I am involved. I’m a founding member of All Progressives Congress (APC), but I will not condone injustice, which was the basis of change. I opposed Dariye and Jang. If I will be silent now, it means I am a hypocrite.

    “I still insist that the blunder committed by Governor Lalong during the President’s visit was the renaming of Yakubu Gowon way to Muhammadu Buhari way. To say the least, it is embarrassing. Gowon was the President’s boss. How can he be stripped of a 40-year-old privilege and honour in his home state? This is the worst thing that can happen to a man like the elder statesman. I believe General Gowon is feeling betrayed and abandoned by his people.

    “This is a political decision by Lalong desperately taken to secure 2019 ambition, but not the decision of Plateau people. We condemn this act with all sense of love for Yakubu Gowon as a father, while advising Governor Lalong to rescind this unpatriotic decision and publicly apologise to Yakubu Gowon and the President for embarrassing them. If the visit of the president was intended to secure 2019 for Lalong, it has exposed his ambition to risk and multiply his opponents. While re-election is the primary concern of Governor Lalong, fighting, killing and maiming of innocent people continue unabated. No doubt, Plateau is under siege. History is on the verge of repeating itself. We must rise against injustice or else we will all be consumed.”

  • Naysayers distorting truth about Nigeria, says minister

    Minister of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed, has said naysayers are spending huge amount of money to distort the situation in Nigeria.

    The minister spoke at a mini town hall meeting which he organised for members of staff of the Nigerian Embassy in Berlin, Germany and a cross-section of Nigerians residing in the European country.

    Mohammed was in Berlin to attend a meeting of African Tourism Ministers, on the sidelines of the International Travel Trade Fair in the German capital.

    A statement issued on the mini town hall meeting in Berlin was made available to reporters in Abuja by the Mr Segun Adeyemi, the Special Adviser to the minister.

    The minister said the naysayers, who were hoping to override the string of achievements by the present administration in the country, were spending huge amounts of money to spread fake news about Nigeria.

    He said: “Contrary to the fake news being peddled in the Social Media by the naysayers, President Muhammadu Buhari is putting Nigeria back on its feet.

    “That is why Nigerians at home and abroad must ensure they have access to authentic information.

    “One way is to download the FGNiAPP on their hand-held devices. It is free. The economy is on a steady growth, as attested to be by the latest report from the National Bureau of Statistics: The economy attracted 12.2 billion dollars in foreign investments in 2017, up from $5.38 billion in 2016.

    “That represents 138 per cent increase. The economy further consolidated its recovery from recession with GDP growing by 1.92 per cent in Q4 2017,compared to 1.40 per cent in Q3 2017 and a contraction of -1.73 per cent in Q4 2016;.

    “This means the economy ended 2017 with a growth of 0.82 per cent compared to a contraction of -1.58 per cent in 2016.

    “GDP growth in Q4 2017 was driven by growth in crop production, crude production and natural gas, metal ores, construction, transportation and storage, trade, electricity and gas production,.

    “These are indications that the administration’s diversification effort is working.”

    Mohammed blamed the incessant clashes between farmers and herdsmen on environmental, rather than ethnic or religious issues.

    He noted that contrary to the narrative being pushed in certain quarters that gave ethnic and religious coloration to the clashes, they were caused by purely environmental issues.

    Mohammed said whereas, Nigeria’s population in 1963 was about 48 million, ‘’it is now about 180 million with the country’s land mass remaining the same.’’

    He said the implication was that, there were more people per square kilometre, adding that this development raised the chances of clashes over dwindling resources.

    The minister also said that Lake Chad that which used to provide water and other resources to more than 30 million people in four countries, including Nigeria in the early 1960s had shrunk by about 90 per cent.

    He said the lake which had shrunk from 25,000 square kilometres to 2,500 square kilometres, forced those affected to move south in search of resources.

    ”These and other reasons, like desertification, have altered the resource landscape, heightened competition for dwindling resources and raised the possibility of clashes between farmers and herders.”

    Mohammed, who assured of the Federal Government’s commitment to finding lasting solution to the clashes, noted that the establishment of ranches was one sure way of reducing such clashes.

    He, however, said that in resolving the crisis, both the farmers and the herders must be willing to shift slightly from their positions grounded in their way of life over centuries.

    Nigeria’s Ambassador to Germany Alhaji Yusuf Tuggar, commended the patriotism and dedication of the Nigerians in Diaspora, especially those in Germany.

    ”There is a burgeoning Nigerian community (in Germany), committed to

    the prosperity of Nigeria.

    “They are well in tune with the policies of the Nigerian government and they are accomplished men and women and worthy ambassadors,” he said.

    Some leaders of the Nigerian Diaspora commended the government for the progress being made in lifting up the country.

    They stressed the need to step up efforts to ensure the security of life and property in order to attract more foreign investors to the country.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Minister, Reps’ panel on warpath over N200b sugar waiver

    The House of Representatives has warned the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Okechukwu Enalamah not to allow it invoke the constitution for his arrest for failing to honour its invitation to an investigative hearing on concession on sugar backward integration between 2013 and 2016.

    Speaking at a one-day public hearing on the local concessionary tariff given by the federal government for raw sugar importation into the country from 2013 to 2016 as contained in the National Sugar Road Map (NSRM), Chairman of the ad hoc committee, Abiodun Olasupo (APC, Oyo) said the attitude of the Minister was unfortunate considering the importance of the subject matter to the economy of the country.

    While regretting that the Minister also failed to send a representative to the hearing, Olasupo said the Minister’s absence was a breach of Section 88 of the constitution.

    “We are hoping that the Minister will not allow us to resort to the issuance of bench warrant to have him before the Committee,” he said.

    Olasupo however said the House’s intervention on the issue was due to the avalanche of complaints on violations of the National Sugar Road Map (NSRM) by three sugar refineries.

    “Within three years from 2009 and 2011, Nigeria expended a whopping sum of N228.8b on sugar importation.

    “This amounts to hermorrhage on the Nigeria’s foreign exchange earnings and a loss of hundreds and thousands of employment opportunities for skilled and semi skilled labour as well as contributing hugely to food insecurity arising from sugar importation dependence,” he said.

    The Committee however emphasised that being determined to unravel the alleged corruption due to violation of the roadmap, the National Sugar Development Council (NSDC), the Ministry of Finance, Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) must provide comprehensive information to the Committee during the investigation.

    While noting that none of the three operators met the set targets as contained in the road map, the Committee asked the NSDC that since 2013, with all the violations, what efforts were made by its management to address the alleged corruption.

    Raising some posers, Olasupo asked, “Was there no penalty as prescribed by the law for operators of the road map that violated it, citing two operators that failed to wait for benchmark?  “In addition, what is the prescribed punishment for violators of the backward integration of the plan?

    However, in his presentation, NSDC Executive Secretary, Abdulateef Busari said loss from waivers granted the three operators should not be considered as a loss to the country, while blaming natural disasters for their failure to meet the various set targets by the NSRM.

    Rather the operators should be further encouraged to be able to meet the target of local production and sufficiency, he noted.

    “Dangote Sugar Refinery enjoyed a total tariff concession during the year under review of N240.90b and committed N121.20b representing 50.3 percent to its various backward integration project.

    “BUA Sugar Refinery enjoyed a total tariff concession of N88.10b as tariff concession and plough back N38.80b representing 44 percent, while Golden Sugar Refinery tariff concession during the period under review was N106.30b out of which the company committed N51.60b representing 48.6 percent.”

     

  • Oil spill: Minister challenges NOSDRA to sanction erring companies

    Minister of State for Environment Ibrahim Jibril has directed the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) to sanction oil companies polluting the environment and flouting the environmental law.

    The Minister made the call while inaugurating boards of the six agencies and parastatals under supervision of the ministry at the weekend in Abuja.

    The agencies include National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), National Park Service (NPS), NOSDRA, Forestry Research Institute on Nigeria (FRIN), National Agency for Great Green Wall (NAGGW) and National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA).

    Jibril, who emphasised needs to protect the ecosystem for better healthy living and future generation, directed the newly inaugurated board members to partner with management of the agency to achieve mandates of the respective agencies.

    He advised the board members to stay away from any form of malpractice that could jeopardise national interest and adhere by the rules guiding their appointments.

    While inaugurating the boards, the Minister canvassed their support in implementing various treaties signed by the country at international conferences.

    On the Nigerian National Parks, he lamented that the Parks are not well protected, necessitating the creation of the National Park Service, adding that it was important for the board to support the vision.

    He lamented while Nigerians make pepper soup with its wildlife such as Gorillas, a single gorilla in Rwanda could attract $1m annually through tourism.

    He said the FRIN has the mandate among others to increase the nation’s forest cover.

    However, the Minister lamented that the country has only 25 per cent of forest coverage, which he said was lower compared to what is obtainable in terms of international standards.

    Ben Owaobase was appointed board Chairman of the NPS with Joko Pelumi, Surveyor General of the Federation, NESREA, Nigeria Conservation are board members.

    NOSDRA has Senator Ayo Akinyedure as chairman while representatives from Ministry of Communication, Aviation, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD), and National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) were among the board members.

    Barrister Iyiola Oladokun was appointed NESREA Board Chairman with Peter Ako, Mr. Aleshinloye, Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and Manufacturing Association of Nigeria (MAN) as members.

    NAGGW has Barrister Gbadegesin Adedeji as chairman while Tosin Ayoade, Ayuba Bello, Mrs. Salome Jalome, Abubakar Gada, FMENV, Federal Ministry of Sport, Federal Ministry of Water Resources, FMARD, Permanent Secretary, Ecological Firm and Director General NAGGW are members.

  • Minister inaugurates QC IoT Centre

    Minister inaugurates QC IoT Centre

    Last Friday, Queen’s College Lagos became the third Unity school to launch the Internet of Things (IoT) Innovation Centre, which is being powered by the Unites Cisco Networking Academy.

    It joined the Federal Science and Technical College (FSTC), Yaba and the Federal Government Girls’ College (FGGC), Bwari, as the three schools with centres where pupils can use Information Communication Technology (ICT) and other digital tools to create a smart environment and solve problems.

    At last Friday’s launch, Education Minister, Malam Adamu Adamu, said three more IoT centres would open in unity schools in other geo-political zones to expose more pupils to ICT-enhanced education, enhance their competitiveness as well as boost socio-economic development.

    “Our goal is to see the education sector as a whole, embrace the use of new technologies to meet the human resource requirements of the nation for attaining sustainable socio-economic development, global competitiveness as well as the individual’s ability to survive in the contemporary society,” said Adamu, who was represented by the Director of ICT at the Federal Ministry of Education, Mr Ifeagwu Orji.

    He listed other schools to get centres this session as: Federal Government College (FGC) Kano; FGC Bauchi; FGC Enugu; and FGGC Benin, adding that the government had approved “the establishment of the Cisco Network Academy in all FUCs under Cisco’s Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in the education sector and other Cisco long-term CSR programmes”.

    Also, Mr Sonny Echono, the ministry’s Permanent Secretary, who was represented by the Director, Basic and Secondary Education, Mr Karaje Mohammed, counselled the 20 pupils selected as ambassadors of the IoT Centre to make the best of the opportunity.

    “I want to say you are very lucky to be part of the programme.  I want to congratulate and urge you to keep it up. If these skills are positively developed right from now as you go on, the skills will be enhanced and you will be recognised for what you can do,” he said.

    Cisco Nigeria Programme Manager, Mr Imoh Akpan, expressed the hope that the IoT Centre at Queen’s College would achieve major breakthrough.

    “The IoT is one of the ways that we can leverage in creating new technology. We have been training our students to become global problem solvers.  I hope this centre will produce great minds that will make a difference in the society,” he said.

    Principal of the college, Mrs Bola Abe, thanked Unites Cisco Networking Academy for its work in the college

    After the minister inaugurated the centre, the IoT ambassadors demonstrated what they could achieve using the centre. Some of the pupils showcased various projects they were working on, including the motion detection project by SS1 pupils, Aramide Sadiq and Olamide Alade. They showed how the school could enhance security through the configuration of ICT equipment that detect movement.

    The centre’s Lead Instruction, Ita Isaiah, told The Nation that there were projects in the pipeline to address waste management, transition the sickbay from analog to digital health management information system, school payment processes, among others.

     

  • Fed Govt has data on Nigerians with hidden assets, says minister

    Fed Govt has data on Nigerians with hidden assets, says minister

    Minister of Finance Mrs. Kemi Adeosun has declared that the Voluntary Assets and Income Declaration Scheme (VAIDS) has given the Federal Government access to data of Nigerians with hidden assets.

    Mrs. Adeosun made this known while speaking on Good Morning Nigeria, a Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) interview programme.

    According to the minister, the ease with which people evade taxes and get away with it is no longer possible because of the huge data on property ownership.

    The data, she said, were obtained from land registries, especially on properties in highbrow neighborhoods of Lagos and Abuja.

    “We have cases whereby people live somewhere else other than where their properties are located. For example, you own a property in Lagos but reside in Rivers. In the past, we relied on the honesty of such person to make his asset declaration or income made therefrom. But now, we don’t have to because we have gathered data. Now, all such a person needs to do is to declare that rent earned and pay the right tax on it,” the minister said.

    Mrs. Adeosun explained that through data collected, the Federal Government has detected many people whose lifestyle do not justify the tax they pay or who do not pay any at all.

    She assured the citizens such people would not be prosecuted or made to pay their tax arrears if they file the proper returns and regularise their tax payment before the VAIDS deadline on March 31.

    For those with assets abroad, the minister said the Automatic Exchange of Information (AEoI), to which Nigeria is signatory, will deliver data on such with or without a formal request.

    “VAIDS is a very simple formula. It takes you through a process where you look at your assets and your lifestyle and if there is a disconnect, that means your tax status is irregular,” she said.

    Asked about companies, the minister said: “Companies are also included. Using our data, we found, for example, lots of companies, which even got contracts from the Federal Government but didn’t declare those contracts or didn’t pay any tax on what they made. Or people who would prepare an invoice and add VAT but never remit the VAT to the FIRS.  So, those are the areas of non-compliance that people are correcting through VAID Scheme,” she said.

    Mrs. Adeosun also restated the determination of the Federal Government to draw the curtains on the scheme on March 31.

    She warned that there will be no extension.

    On the scale of compliance, the minister said many individuals and corporate entities have expressed the willingness to declare, adding that a lot of people will come forward as the deadline draws really close.

    This, she said, was the experience in five of the countries where tax amnesty programmes had been implemented.

     

  • Minister orders relocation of security chief, deployment in schools

    Minister orders relocation of security chief, deployment in schools

    Minister of Interior Abdulrahman Dambazau yesterday directed Inspector General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) boss Abdullahi Gana to relocate to the Northeast and liaise with the Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole and  governors of Yobe, Borno and Adamawa states.

    Dambazau said they should also ensure the deployment of their personnel in all schools in the liberated areas.

    The minister’s spokesman, Ehisienmen Osaigbovo, said the directive became necessary to forestall a re-occurrence of attacks on innocent school children.

    He said the government was making efforts at rescuing the Dapchi schoolgirls and other Boko Haram captives, with the commencement of 24 hours air surveillance by the Nigerian Air Force (NAF).

    The minister also condemned recent clashes that resulted in loss of lives and property in Kajuru Local Government Areas of Kaduna State and urged security operatives to ensure that the perpetrators were brought to justice.

    Also yesterday, Senate Leader Ahmed Lawan urged parents not to withdraw their girls from schools as a result of the abduction.

    Lawan told reporters in Damaturu that parents needed to trust that the government was doing everything to secure all schools for a conducive learning environment.

    Acccording to him, a state like Yobe needed to double its efforts to encourage more of girl-child education both in western and Islamic education.

    “Parents should continue to trust us that we mean business.  That we are always thinking of how to ensure   that there is security for the schools, especially in states like ours where girl-child education needs to be promoted and encouraged.  We  have to do a lot more to secure the  schools,  especially the girls’ schools, so that parents have some comfort and sense of satisfaction that their children are properly protected. They shouldn’t withdraw their children from school or become discouraged and start developing lukewarm attitude towards education. Our girls need to be educated both in Islamic and western education. In fact, it’s a challenge for us to encourage these girls to be in school,” Lawan said.

    Yobe State Commissioner for Education Mohammed Alamin accused the media of sowing fear in the minds of parents with their reports on the Dapchi attack.

    Mohammed Lamin was quoted as saying in an  interview with BBC Hausa Service: “You, the media people, are responsible for this fear. You are scaring the parents with your reports; that is why some of them are even thinking of not sending their children to school again, not even about relocating them to other places.”

    The Senate leader gave a pass mark on the response of the Federal Government so far in trying to rescue the girls, but faulted the security arrangement at Dapchi before the attack.

    ”I want to say that I am satisfied with the attention given at the moment, but I wasn’t  satisfied with the security arrangement before the incident. After the Chibok girls’ abduction where over 200 girls were abducted and we are still struggling  to get some of them back, we should have had a better security arrangement around our schools especially the girls schools.

    “The President responded promptly and gave leadership by asking the military to move in and, of course, by sending a high-powered  delegation to the state.

  • Nigeria needs $14b to save Lake Chad —Minister

    About $14 billion is needed to carry out an inter basin transfer of water to save the receding Lake Chad basin, Minister of Water Resources, Suleiman Adamu, has said.

    He said this during an interview with reporters in Abuja ahead of next week’s international conference to save the drying lake.

    The minister explained that members of the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC) have agreed to come up with solutions on how to save the Lake.

    He said a study carried out by a Chinese firm in 2012 showed that it was possible to conduct an inter basin transfer of water from the Congo River Basin to the Lake Chad.

    According to him, the current situation of the Lake posed a serious security risk to member countries.

    Specifically, he noted that lack of activities around the Lake had fueled Boko Haram activities in the region.

    He said: “I met this situation and I now engaged with the Lake Chad Basin Commission and at some point we came up, we stumbled into a company that showed an interest, a Chinese company that has been involved in the transfer of water.

    “They had done this feasibility study but they were not fully satisfied but the good thing about that study is that it confirmed that technically, it is possible to draw water from Congo Basin into Lake Chad.

    “At least it is technically feasible. And they came up with a rough estimate of $14 billion dollars. It could be more or less but there is still a lot of work that needs to be done.

    “This problem of Lake Chad have created a huge security risk for all the member countries of Lake Chad Basin Commission. And that is why the time has come for us to really take the bull by the horn.