Tag: minister

  • Minister urges CSOs, media to remind Nigerians of treasury looters

    Minister urges CSOs, media to remind Nigerians of treasury looters

    •Anti-Corruption Situation Room (ACSR) launched in Abuja

    THE Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) and media practitioners have been urged to ensure that the citizenry do not forget the evil committed by those who looted the country’s treasury.

    Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed threw the challenge at the launch of the Anti-Corruption Situation Room (ACSR), which includes civil society organisations, media groups, government agencies and other stakeholders in Abuja yesterday.

    The minister asked the civil society to work with the media and other stakeholders to ensure that Nigerians never forget, for one moment, the damage done to the country by treasury looters.

    He said: “Those who turned our treasury to their piggy bank are once again presenting themselves as the saviours of the nation. They say the best time for Nigeria was when the proceeds of their corruption subsidised many and gave the illusion of economic boom. They are so emboldened as to say Nigerians are earnestly yearning for them. No contrition, no apologies and no shame. Just sheer bravado, unbridled arrogance and revisionism.

    “The civil society, the media and indeed all stakeholders owe it a duty not to allow Nigerians to forget, to say ‘Never Again’ to those who view Nigeria as nothing but a cash cow to be milked to death.”

    Mohammed said the formation of the ACSR could not have come at a better time, as the Buhari Administration’s fight against corruption is gaining momentum, “and the government is winning the war”.

    He said: “But there is a challenge: There seems to be a feeling of numbness among the citizens about the conduct of those whose actions brought us here, those who looted the national treasury dry. Suddenly, these same people are engaging in revisionist history and blaming everyone but themselves for the mess their actions put the country into.”

    Reeling out the cost of corruption to the nation, the minister listed the conversion to a slush fund of the 2.1 billion dollars meant to buy weapons for the Nigerian military to fight Boko Haram; the fact that the country could only generate 2,690 megawatts as at 29 May 2015 despite the billions of dollars spent on power and the failure of past governments to save for the rainy day, even when oil was selling above $100 a barrel for many years.

    He listed some of the gains of the anti-corruption fight as raising the country’s foreign reserves from $23 billion to $38 billion; stoppage of the payment of phantom subsidy of between N800 billion and N1.3 trillion; and the recovery of at least $43 million and 56 houses from just one official of the immediate past administration.

    Other gains of the fight against corruption, according to Mohammed, include the recovery of $2.9 billion from looters so far; the Whistle-blower policy which has led to the recovery of $151 million and N8 billion in looted funds from just three sources; the elimination of thousands of ghost workers, which saved the nation N120 billion and the elimination of the N108 billion in maintenance fees payable to banks pre-TSA.

    He hailed those behind the formation of the ACSR, a platform to build synergy among anti-corruption CSOs, the labour movement, the law enforcement agencies, the Parliament and the judiciary, as well as to ensure that Nigerians take ownership of the fight against corruption.

     

     

  • Minister lauds Sterling Bank’s intervention in transport sector

    Minister of Transport  Rotimi Amaechi has joined other stakeholders in the transport sector to commend the critical role being played by Sterling Bank Plc in the repositioning of the sector.

    Amaechi, who  spoke at the end of the 2017 National Conference organised by the Ministry of Transport, praised Sterling Bank Plc for its intervention in Nigeria’s transport sector, saying such intervention from the private sector would help to accelerate the desired transformation in the sector.

    He noted that Sterling Bank had established itself as the reference bank in transport finance as a result of its investment in the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) and LAGBUS initiatives of the Lagos State government.

    “I want to commend Sterling Bank for its support to the transport sector so far. I am aware that Sterling Bank financed both the LAGBUS buses and over 400 BRT buses plying various routes on Lagos roads. It is our hope that the bank would expand this experience beyond Lagos so that people living in other parts of Nigeria will also benefit from their benevolence,” he said.

    The General Manager of the bank, Emmanuel Emefienim, praised the ministry for hosting the conference, adding that the forum would provide a platform for exchange of ideas needed for the transformation of the sector.

  • Carnival platform for job creation, says minister

    Carnival platform for job creation, says minister

    The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has described the Calabar Carnival as a veritable platform for job creation and promotion of creativity.

    He spoke at the weekend in Calabar, Cross River State.

    Mohammed said the carnival has grown beyond being a mere street procession and dancing to a venture that is positively impacting on the economy and unity of the country.

    “What we have seen today is an industry that is making use of the abundant talents of Nigerians, not just in dancing, but even in manufacturing and creativity. We have seen the shoes they are going to wear, they are made in Nigeria – the design and materials. So Calabar Carnival provides a platform to give vent to your creative energy,” he said.

    The minister highlighted the critical role of the themes of each band, which include “Climate Change”, “Bush Burning” and “Environmental Degradation”, describing them as topical issues in the global discourse on the ecosystem.

    He said the carnival has keyed into the vision of President Muhammadu Buhari towards promoting locally-made products in order to make the country self-reliant.

    “The President said until Nigeria produces what it consumes and grows what it eats, it cannot be economically independent… This is a very good example of made-in-Nigeria both in terms of materials, in terms of the labour force and creativity. So I am fulfilled coming here because I see how much the carnival is contributing not just to the economy, but to bringing individuals to self-reliance,” Mohammed said.

    He hailed the band managers, whom he described as patriots not driven by profit, but by the passion and commitment to grow the economy.

    The minister appealed to the private sector to show more interest in the carnival because of its huge impact on the economy.

  • FG has released N3bn  for East-West Road, says minister

    FG has released N3bn for East-West Road, says minister

    The Federal Government as so far paid a total of three billion naira to the contractors handling the five sections of the East-West roads, the Minister of Niger/Delta Affairs, Pastor Usani Uguru Usani, has said.

    Addressing newsmen in Abuja yesterday, the minister said there was no plan by the ministry to invite the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, to look into the books of the contractors handling the projects.

    He added that there was no truth in some publications that about 30 to 40 contractors would be handed over to the EFCC for failing to deliver on the jobs given to them.

    Pastor Usani said the clarification had become necessary given the apprehension created within the system by some media outfits.

    The minister said: “As I speak with you, we have not found any of our contractors culpable. And we have only three contractors handling the five sections of the East-West roads. We maintain that contractual agreements are being reviewed to ensure that they are in line with international best standards for our jobs.

    “We only warn that contractors who fail to do the jobs commensurate with the funds released to them would have to explain to the authorities. We are, however, aware that there are some mischief makers who are not comfortable with our resolve to ensure that due process is followed and they are planning some protests against the ministry on an empty can of worms.

    “We call on the media to be on guard against the activities of these mischief makers. They are government appointees who collude with fraudulent service providers and they are plotting against the minister, but they would not succeed”.

    He said the ministry had completed some projects, ranging from blocks of classrooms, health care centres and cassava processing plants in Imo, Rivers, Delta, Edo, Bayelsa, Abia, Ondo and Akwa Ibom states and would soon hand over the projects to the states and communities of their location.

  • Budget: Reps insist on Minister’s appearance

    Budget: Reps insist on Minister’s appearance

    The House of Representatives Committee on Commerce, has said it should not be held responsible for the late passage of the 2018 Appropriation Bill.

    The lawmakers said they are ready to accept the request of the Presidency for an expedited passage of the budget.

    The House however said for an early passage of the  money bill, heads of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) must respond swiftly to its invitation for budget sessions without undue excuses.

    The warning followed the refusal of the House Committee on Commerce to entertain question session with the Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment, Aisha Abubakar, who represented the Minister, Okechukwu Enalemah at the Committee’s budget session yesterday.

    Before the appearance of the Minister of State, Committee Chairman, Sylvester Ogbaga had warned that heads of MDAs that failed to appear for budget session risk his agency having to cope with zero allocation for the 2018 fiscal year.

  • Minister: implementation of innovation roadmap’ll save over N3tr

    The execution of the National Science, Technology and Innovation Roadmap (NSTIR) will save Nigeria over $11 billion (about N4 trillion) within five years, the Minister of Science and Technology, Dr. Ogbonaya Onu, has said.

    He spoke at the unveiling of the NSTIR 2030 document and interactive session of the Southwest sensitisation on the document.

    “NSTIR 2030 is a roadmap of all roadmaps. Other roadmaps have a life span of three to five years, but this roadmap of 13 years would outlive this  government and would also outlive my stay as minister,” Onu stressed.

    According to him, NSTIR is a development plan for the country, which will help the nation move away from over dependence on oil, and also from a commodity dependent economy to an intellectual based economy.

    “If China with over one billion population could do it, Nigeria will. Our problem is not the population, but to harness the intellectual potentials and the talents of the populace. Our generation must do better than the previous generations,” Onu said.

    The Minister said it was the priority of the administration to harness the raw materials and products that are abundant in the country so as to stop their importation and the huge foreign exchange spent on them.

    He added that governors, commissioners of science and technology, universities and polytechnics, the organised private sector and research institutes as well as Nigerians in Diaspora contributed to the development of the science road map.

    The minister commended the Federal Institute for Industrial Research Oshodi (FIIRO) for its contributions towards the development of the NSTIR.

    FIIRO Director-General, Prof. Gloria Elemo, promised that the institute would continue to support the ministry’s programmes in pursuit of government’s vision on the diversification and growth of the economy using the tools of science, technology and innovation.

    Elemo assured the minister of the Institute’s unalloyed support of his campaign of using the instrument of science, technology and innovation to drive the national economy as seen in the ‘Change Agenda’ through economic diversification programme of the present administration.

    “But this cannot happen without a roadmap, which is what the Federal Ministry of Science and Technology under the leadership of the Minister of Science and Technology has put together.

    “The event is a Sensitisation Programme on the National Science, Technology and Innovation Roadmap at the Southwest geo-political zone’, she stated.

    Science and Technology Promotion Director, Mr. Ekanem Udoh, said the road map is for the private sector to see what the government has put in place, acquire it and build industries to generate jobs for the teeming unemployed youths.

    “This provides framework to promote science and technology and provide catalyst to move science and technology forward in Nigeria. It is also to create platform for Nigerians to key into science, technology and innovation in every sector of the economy,” he explained.

  • FG’s support for  creative industry  paying off – Minister

    FG’s support for creative industry paying off – Minister

    The increased attention and support being given the creative industry by the Buhari Administration has started yielding fruits, the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has said.

    Speaking at the premiere of the movie ‘’Wedding Party 2’’ in Lagos on Sunday, the Minister listed the pioneer status granted to the Industry, the stepped-up anti-piracy campaign and the decision to seek stimulus capital for the Industry from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as some of the positive results.

    He recalled that shortly after the creative industry Financing Conference in Lagos earlier in the year, he led a delegation of the film industry stakeholders to the Inspector General of Police, which resulted in the formation of anti-piracy units in all the 36 states of the federation

    “The subsequent extensive piracy raids have now resulted in the confiscation of pirated films worth hundreds of millions of Naira. In fact, criminal prosecutions of culprits have now started,” Alhaji Mohammed said.

    He also recalled how, shortly after the Conference, the federal government granted pioneer status to the creative industry to reduce financial burdens on new investments and encourage both foreign and local investments into the film industry.

    The Minister congratulated Ms. Mo Abudu and all those involved in the production of ‘Wedding Party 2’, saying with the blockbusters being churned out by Nigerian film producers, “we can formally announce to the world that a true film industry has arrived in our Nollywood.”

    Meanwhile, Alhaji Mohammed has declared the arrival of a new dawn in the nation’s creative industry

    “I am totally encouraged that Nigeria is indeed on track with all the capabilities to diversify our economy in order to create jobs and boost our Gross Domestic Product. It’s great to note that the Creative sector is taking the lead to achieve this,” he said at the opening of the musical ‘Fela and the Kalakuta Queens’ at Terra Kulture, also in Lagos on Sunday.

    He said the vibrancy in the sector is largely due to the collaborative efforts of the Public and Private sectors, which the likes of Ms. Bolanle Austen Peters, founder of Terra Kulture, have leveraged with impressive results

    The Minister congratulated Ms. Austen Peters, her management team and all the creative talent involved in the making ‘Fela and the Kalakuta Queens’, saying: “This production will no doubt take us to another level in our achievements and I want to assure you that this government is with the Creative sector all the way.”

     

  • 2,000MW wasting away, says minister

    2,000MW wasting away, says minister

    ABOUT 2,000 Megawatts (MW) of the 7,000MW of electricity generated in the country are unable to be distributed due to weak transmission, Minister of Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola said yesterday.

    He said it was important to devise means of taking the unutilised 2,000MW to Nigerians, who needed power, noting that “we cannot afford to keep power; that is not good for business, especially those who invested in it.

    “One of the steps we are taking with the Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPH) is to try and complete some of the distribution projects under the Nigerian National Integrated Power Project (NIPP) projects,” Fashola said.

    The minister said on completion of ongoing projects next year,

    an additional 1,129MW will be generated to add to the present 7,000MW.

    He explained that he had contacted the President of Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) to discuss how its members could key into the undistributed power.

    Fashola said: “Director Generator, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and other chambers of commerce had been contacted on how to take up the 2000 unused megawatts.

    “We are also working on how Distribution Companies (Discos) could benefit from the entire process.”

    The minister, who said the sector had made progress on power generation and transmission, added that distribution issues would also be cleared soon.

    The minister spoke at the 22nd monthly meeting of stakeholders in the power sector at Geregu, Kogi State.

    He said: “The Azura power plant will give us another 450MW; I know that we will also get 10MW of wind power from Katsina State.

    “I know that we will get 115MW from Gbari and 30MW from Kashimbila.

    “From Afam III, we will give 240MW of power in 2018, while Gurara is working to deliver 30MW, as Dadinkowa in Gombe will provide 29MM and Kaduna will generate 215 MW.

    “All these power plants do not involve the mini grids and solar systems that are coming.”

    “In Kogi, the distribution project that will affect the people positively are the ones in Okene, Igba, which will be completed in the first quarter of 2018.”

    Fashola said the narrative must change from not enough power to how unutilised power could be distributed.

    He attributed the success recorded in the sector so far to government policies, “especially the provision of N701 billion assurance guarantee fund that enabled the payment to gas suppliers by Generating Companies (Gencos)”.

    “The assurance guarantee brought confidence to power production business, which resulted to increased power production which took us to all-time high of 7,000MW power availability.”

    “As at December 5, 2017, power supply stood at 5,019MW, which was below the 5,074 MW achieved in January 2016.

    “However, grid supplied power peaked at all-time high of 5,155 MW on December 8, an increase over the January 2016 figure of 5,074 MW.”

    He said the success was due to teamwork and leadership provided by President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice-President Yemi Osinbanjo and other stakeholders.

    He then urged stakeholders to join hands in solving the problems in the sector.

    The Managing Director of Geregu Power Plant Plc, Mr. Aderemi Adenuga, said owners of the company injected $94 million to overhaul and upgrade the plant.

    He said the company was comfortably running the three turbines in the plant and thanked Nigeria Bulk Electricity Trader (NBET) for payment of the electricity generated to the company.

     

  • Osinbajo, minister, others to Nigerians: change your corruption perception

    Osinbajo, minister, others to Nigerians: change your corruption perception

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has urged Nigerians to change their perception about corruption toward developing a positive nation.

    Osinbajo spoke at the launch of Corruption Busters by Creative Youth Initiative Against Corruption (CYIAC), a non-governmental organisation (NGO) in Lekki, Lagos State.

    The event, according to a report by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), was organised by the civil society group to commemorate the 2017 International Anti-Corruption day.

    The Vice President shared the same view with Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed; Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) acting Chairman Ibrahim Magu, diplomats and civil society organisations at the event.

    Osinbajo said: “We should re-examine ourselves  and move toward changing our perception and our country will one day, overcome this menace known as corruption.’’

    According to him, the president has always reinstated severally that, “if we don’t kill corruption, corruption will definitely kill us”, which is why he had given strict instructions on tackling corruption.

    He said no nation could survive with the presence of corruption in its system, adding: “Corruption is one thing that will kill us if we don’t fight it hard indeed”.

    “We need strong willed men and women who are  committed to fighting corruption, though we have had notable committed persons but we need more people who are crusaders and zealous,” he said.

    Osinbajo said one of the very important resources in tackling corruption was not just arresting victims and detaining them, but having to reform them.

    The Vice President lauded the CYIAC group for taking a bold step in complimenting the efforts of the government by reaching out to the youths to join in the fight against corruption.

    “I have not lost my zeal in this commitment to fight corruption, especially with the involvement of the young people who are vulnerable targets in building or losing integrity,” he said.

    Mohammed hailed Foluke Michael, the project director, CYIAC and her team, for focusing their attention on the youths.

    The minister said the move was the best step in tackling corruption.

    “Targeting the youths is the best way to fight corruption because they are the future hope of our country and that is why the CYIAC group must be commended for taking this right step.

    “The fight against corruption is the toughest task but can be much easier if we have the Nigerian youths because they represent a large chunk of the society,” he said.

    Expressing his disappointment, the minister said the resources which would have been used to take care of the youths had been stolen by the “fat cats”.

    “It is so unfortunate that billions and trillions of dollars that would have been used in providing good and necessary amenities were stolen by looters.

    “But I want to reassure everyone that we are already driving corruption under the table by recovering billions of naira monthly, saving monies from ghost workers and raising our foreign reserve,” he said.

    The minister said the Buhari administration would take the initiative to every nook and cranny of the country, stressing: “If we don’t fight it, it will overwhelm us.”

    Also, United Nations Project Director Mr. Glen Prichard said the success of tackling corruption was to have a coalition of all arms in the struggle.

    Consul-General of the Federal Republic of Germany Mr. Ingo Herbert hailed the Federal Government for waging war against corruption.

    Herbert, however, said it existed everywhere in the world.

    “Corruption is like a disease which exists everywhere but it becomes epidemic when it is too high and so should be vaccinated through anti-corruption groups as CYIAC,” he said.

    Magu said the present administration had zero-tolerance to corruption because it was a setback to growth.

    “The best strategy is to have all organs, young and old, coming together to fight corruption.

    “It is a major force for underdevelopment and we are almost chasing it out,” he said.

    A civil rights activist, Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin, said if Nigerians did not kill corruption, corruption would kill them.

    The CYIAC group, comprising of school children and adults, displayed art exhibitions and animated clips on corruption busters in musical slides.

  • Minister to media: don’t mock anti-graft war

    Minister to media: don’t mock anti-graft war

    Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed has appealed to the media not to mock the Federal Government’s anti-corruption war, urging media practitioners to support the administration’s fight against the menace.

    He stressed that as the fourth estate of the realm, the media cannot afford to sit on the fence in the battle to rid the nation of corruption.

    He spoke yesterday in Abuja while opening the 68th General Assembly of the Broadcasting Organisations of Nigeria (BON).

    The minister said while the media should not hesitate to criticise the government’s strategy on the war against corruption, when necessary, it should do so without mocking the government.

    “In recent times, it is not unusual to read such headlines as ‘Buhari’s government losing anti-corruption war’, ‘Buhari’s anti-corruption war is failing’, ‘Arewa youths knock President Buhari over failing anti-corruption war’. This is sheer mockery. And this war is not Buhari’s war. It is our war,” he said.

    On why all hands must be on deck to fight corruption, Mohammed said corruption was responsible for the many ills being experienced in the country, including erratic power supply, poorly-equipped hospitals, lack of motorable roads, poor quality of life, poor economy, lack of jobs and insecurity.

    “After previous administrations spent billions of dollars on power, all we inherited – when we took over on  May 29, 2015 – was 2,690 megawatts. That is due to corruption. After previous governments budgeted billions for roads over the years, what we inherited are death traps. That is due to corruption. Why did Boko Haram thrive for so long? The answer is corruption, because money meant for the purchase of weapons for the military were simply diverted. Why did we inherit an economy in dire straits? It is corruption. For a country that sold oil at over 100 dollars per barrel for years, we simply failed to save for the rainy day, and when the rain came, it beat us silly,” he said.

    The minister said the war against corruption was the toughest of the three broad issues that the Buhari administration campaigned with, “because fighting corruption anywhere is like walking a lonely road”.

    Mohammed said the war against corruption becomes tougher when the media is not on board.

    He said because of the courageous leadership provided by the President, “despite the fact that corruption is fighting back furiously, the administration is winning the war”.

    “For our efforts so far, we have so much to showcase: Because we are tackling corruption, we have succeeded in raising power generation from 2,690 to an all-time high of 7,001MW. Because we are tackling corruption, we are saving N25 billion monthly by cutting unnecessary allowances of officials. Because we are tackling corruption, we have added 500 million dollars to our Sovereign Wealth Fund that stagnated at the $1 billion that was used to set it up. We have raised our foreign reserves from $23 billion to $35 billion dollars. We stopped the payment of phantom subsidy of between N800 billion and N1.3 trillion annually, yet petroleum products are available at competitive prices.

    “We recovered at least $43 million and 56 houses from just one former government official. We have recovered $2.9 billion from looters so far. Our Whistle-blower policy has led to the recovery of $151 million and N8 billion in looted funds from just three sources,” the minister said.