Tag: minister

  • We’re yet to confirm disease as monkey pox, says minister

    We’re yet to confirm disease as monkey pox, says minister

    With 33 suspected cases of “monkey pox infection” already recorded in seven states, the Federal Government is still trying to confirm exactly what health workers are dealing with.

    According to Minister of Health Prof. Isaac Adewole, many of the cases reported in Bayelsa, Rivers, Ekiti, Akwa Ibom, Lagos, Ogun and Cross River did not fit into the classic prototype of monkey pox.

    He spoke with State House correspondents at the end of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting chaired by President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Adewole was with Minister of Labour and Employment Chris Ngige and the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity Femi Adesina.

    The minister said: “Many of the cases so reported do not fit into the classic prototype of monkey pox. But we are trying to confirm and before the end of today or early tomorrow, we should be able to confirm exactly what we are dealing with. Is it truly monkey pox? But what is obvious is that we have a disease that is close to the pox family.

    “One of our scientists, Prof. Christian Appeh, is looking into it in the laboratory to confirm if it is truly monkey pox. We are also doing a double confirmation in Senegal because Senegal also has a public health laboratory that could make diagnosis.

    “We are looking at the two and hopefully in the next 24 or 48 hours, we should be able to make a diagnosis as to what we have.”

    According to him, there was no reported case of death from the decease.

    He said: “The other one which is less topical but less deadly is monkey pox and this actually started in Bayelsa and we have recorded 33 suspected cases in all from the states, Bayelsa, Rivers, Ekiti, Akwa Ibom, Lagos, Ogun and Cross River.

    In the interim, he urged Nigerians not to panic, but to continue to maintain high-level of hygiene and avoid contact with dead animals.

    He said: “Our advice to Nigerians will be not to panic, report all suspected cases to health facilities and to continue to maintain a high level of hygiene. Let’s wash our hands, let’s avoid contact with dead animals and clean our surroundings.

    “And as much as possible for health workers to maintain barrier nursing while managing people with suspected cases of monkey pox.

    “There are two types of monkey pox. There is the Central African type and the West African type. We suspect that if confirmed, we probably have the West African type, which is milder because so far we have not recorded any death from monkey pox.”

    Adewole added: “FEC received the usual report on public health situation in the country and that report dealt with our current tracking of several outbreaks in the country. We presented the status report on Lassa fever, and we reported that no new confirmed case of lassa fever has been reported in the country.

    “We also reported the declining case of cholera in Borno State and we are quite happy that no death has been reported from Borno State.

    “There is also an ongoing outbreak of yellow fever, which started in Kwara. So far, we have recorded four cases in Kwara, two in Kogi, two in Plateau, one in Abia and one in Edo, making 10 cases in all.

    “What we have decided to do is to start our reactive campaign in Kwara and Kogi starting from Friday.”

     

    Seven  victims discharged in Bayelsa

    It was, however, learnt yesterday that seven of the victims of monkey pox quarantined at the Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital (NDUTH), Okolobiri, Bayelsa State, have been treated and discharged from the facility.

    Commissioner for Information and Orientation Daniel Iworiso-Markson, who confirmed the development yesterday, said the victims had recovered from the infection.

    He said others were strictly under supervision and were responding to treatment.

    The commissioner added that they would soon be allowed to leave the hospital.

    He said so far, the government could beat its chest to say it had “been able to successfully contain the spread of the disease as no new case had been reported in the last few days”.

    Iworiso-Markson said: “With the way and manner the government deployed its machinery and with the team of dedicated health and medical personnel, Monkey pox will soon be fully kicked out of Bayelsa State.”

    He hailed the state government, especially the Ministry of Health and its officials as well as the National Center for Disease Control (NCDC) for their efforts in the fight against the disease.

     

    Poor living condition cause of spread

     

    Poor living condition of the citizenry has been blamed for the spread of monkey pox virus.

    The virus has spread to seven states barely 20 days of the outbreak in Bayelsa state on September 22.

    Other six affected states are Rivers, Ekiti, Akwa Ibom, Lagos, Ogun and Cross Rivers State

    In a statement yesterday, a charity group, Envision Global Care Foundation, observed that the less-privileged groups are more vulnerable to disease outbreaks due to their poor living condition, access to good medical care and other environmental hazards.

    The foundation, therefore, called on the Federal Government to improve the living condition of the nation’s less privileged to prevent similar disease outbreak in the country.

    The statement, which was signed by Ndidi Chukwu, communication consultant to the group, urged the Federal Government to declare the virus a serious medical emergency.

     

    Osun establishes isolation centres

     

    Osun State has established three isolation centres following the alleged outbreak of the disease.

    However, for security reason, the state government did not reveal where the centres are located.

    Commissioner for Health Dr. Rafiu Isamotu at a news briefing in Osogbo, the state capital, said health workers across the state are already on red alert as part of preventive measure against spread of the disease.

    According to Isamotu, the move to curtail the spread of the disease was necessary to insulate the state against the outbreak.

    The commissioner explained that no case of monkey pox had been recorded in the state.

    He further explained that the state government has begun sensitisation of the public and would soon begin training of health personnel.

  • Minister urges governors to invest in health care

    WINISTER of Health Prof. Isaac Adewole has urged governors to give priority attention to the health care by deploying more resources to it, saying such steps will help to curb high rate of maternal mortality

    Adewole, who spoke yesterday at a reproductive, maternal, neonatal, child , adolescent health and nutrition meeting in Abuja with stakeholders organised by Future Assured, a non-governmental organisation owned by the President’s wife, Hajia Aisha Buhari, lamented the increasing rate of maternal mortality in Nigeria.

    The minister hailed the first lady for the initiative, saying: “This is the change we desire. Wives of leaders must, as of necessity, compliment their husbands by providing the much needed support to promote efficient delivery of electoral promises to Nigerians.

    “Health is a cardinal deliverable of this administration and it is, therefore, not surprising that the wife of Mr. President is focusing on health of the vulnerable groups – women and children – through her NGO, Future Assured.”

    He noted: “Every minute of every day, somewhere in the world, a pregnant woman dies as a result of complications arising during pregnancy or child birth and the majority of these deaths are avoidable in Nigeria.

    “Current statistics indicate that our Maternal Mortality Ratio is 576 per 100,000 live births (NDHS 2013). Maternal Mortality Ratio remains unacceptably high despite significant reduction in Maternal Mortality globally, in the past one and a half decade.”

    According to the minister, the major causes of maternal mortality in Nigeria are largely preventable if there are adequate resources.

    He added that one out of every four Nigerian women that died from pregnancy related complications are due to excessive bleeding after childbirth.

    “Other causes of death such as infections, hypertension, unsafe abortion and obstructed labour can be averted if there is a strong health system. For example, a significant proportion of state governments do not have up to 10 per cent of skilled birth attendants during delivery. This is probably the most important game changer, if we are to reverse maternal mortality trend in this state.

    “A strong advocacy by Your Excellencies to our governors to invest in health as they do to other physical infrastructure like roads will be desirable.”

  • Minister to SEC: set guidelines for SMEs rating

    The Minister of State, Industry, Trade and Investment, Aisha Abubakar has urged the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) to coordinate and set guidelines for licensing Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) rating of companies. He said the rating will help the nation know how SMEs are faring.

    The Minister disclosed this at the stakeholders roundtable on the proposed SMEs rating agency in Abuja, adding that this is the most trying period in Nigeria’s economic management history.

    She said: “Though we are out of recession, we all know that the MSMEs sub sector holds the key to hastening the economic recovery process. This government is interested in creating the appropriate environment that will turn Nigeria into investors’ preferred destination. All the capital requirements to achieve this are in abundance in this country.

    “What this government is doing is to connect all the broken lines. This may take time but it is achievable. A rating agency should design scoring solutions for SMEs, it should express its riskiness, by subjecting thm to the ratig criteria. Financial institutions will use this rating to decide the kind of relationship they will develop with the SME in granting loans such as the amount to be granted.”

  • Minister calls for sustainability in tourism

    Minister calls for sustainability in tourism

    Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed has said sustainability is necessary if tourism is to achieve its full potential, which include being a catalyst for economic growth and poverty eradication. He said member-states of the United Nations’ World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) had been encouraged to ensure that their policies and actions for tourism development and management embrace the principles of sustainability.

    The minister, who issued a statement in London, to mark the 2017 World Tourism Day, said without sustainability, tourism could not generate benefits to stakeholders, solve serious problems such as extreme poverty, and preserve precious natural and man-made resources on which human prosperity is based.

    Theme of this year’s World Tourism Day was Sustainable tourism – tool for development

    ‘’The sustainability principles refer to the environmental, economic and socio-cultural aspects of tourism development, and a suitable balance must be established among these three dimensions to guarantee its long-term sustainability,’’ Mohammed said.

    He stated that in the context of the universal 2030 Agenda for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the United Nations General Assembly designated 2017 as the International Year of Sustainable Tourism for Development, underscoring its power to help eradicate poverty.

    ‘’Tourism was singled out in three of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals of sustainable economic growth and decent employment, sustainable production and consumption, and the conservation and sustainable use of oceans (Goals 8,12 & 14).

    ‘’Today, tourism generates 10 per cent of the world’s GDP, one in every 10 jobs, and 30 per cent of world trade in services. It is key to many countries’ economies and livelihoods. It has evolved from an industry engaged in and patronized only by the rich and elites of the society, to an industry enjoyed by all with significant impact on the nation’s economy.

    ‘’As an invisible export, tourism creates a flow of foreign currency into the economy of a nation through public revenue which comes in the form of taxes, duties, licenses etc; business revenue derived from services provided by restaurants, hotels, transport, shops etc and from local resident revenue which come in the form of wages, salaries, rent, interests in investments. Most of these revenues especially those that accrue to the business establishments and the local residents are usually ploughed back into the economy to create additional business thereby generating grater revenues and increasing employment opportunities,’’ the Minister said.

    He said while  the government will play its part in the development and management of tourism and in making it more sustainable, the real key to making Nigeria’s tourism industry flourish lies with the industry itself and the businesses and organisations at its heart.

    ‘’Governments use a number of mechanisms to encourage greater private-sector engagement, capturing its expertise in ways that will be beneficial to the companies themselves as well as population. The private sector, on the other hand, has an opportunity to work collaboratively with government to yield unprecedented returns in both economic and human capital, and fulfilling the promise of a more equitable, productive, and prosperous global community,’’ Alhaji Mohammed said.

    He stressed that sustainable tourism requires the informed participation of all relevant stakeholders, as well as strong political leadership to ensure wide participation and consensus building.

    The idea of World Tourism Day was initiated by a Nigerian, the late Mr. Ignatius Amaduwa Atigbi, the then Secretary-General of the Nigeria Tourism Association (NTA), now Nigeria Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC), and Chairman of Africa Travel Commission (ATC). It was adopted at the 22nd General Assembly of the International Union of Official Travel Organisations (IUOTO) in 1971.

    September 27 of every year is marked as the World Tourism Day to create awareness for tourism as a tool for economic growth and promotion of international peace and understanding.

  • Governors, minister for Adegbenro  lecture 

    Governors, minister for Adegbenro lecture 

    Top government officials and key players in the private sector will gather on Wednesday in Ibadan, the Oyo State ca-pital, for the third annual programme of Dauda Adegbenro Foundation to discuss transparency in the extractive industries.

    The theme of the event, which will hold at the University of Ibadan (UI), is: Transparency in the Extractive Industries: Driving Wealth Creation and Sustainable Revenue as Solution to Economic Recession.

    A statement at the weekend by organisers of the event said the occasion, to be chaired by the Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, has Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi as chief host and his Ogun State counterpart, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, as a special guest of honour.

    The Executive Secretary of Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI), Mr. Waziri Adio, will be the lead speaker at the annual lecture while Dr. Doyin Salami of Lagos Business School and Head of Geology Department of UI, Prof. Olugbenga Ajayi Ehinola, will join Adio as other members of the panel.

    Other important guests expected at the lecture are: Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed and former Managing Director of Guaranty Trust Bank, Mr. Fola Adeola.

    The Dauda Adegbenro Foundation was set up in 2013 by prominent Nigerians to immortalise the late Alhaji Dauda Adegbenro, former Premier of Western Region, during the turbulent First Republic.

     

  • Pro-Atiku comment: Minister urges Buhari to sack Alhassan

    Pro-Atiku comment: Minister urges Buhari to sack Alhassan

    Minister of Sports Solomon Dalung has asked President Muhammadu Buhari to as a matter of urgency sack his Women Affairs counterpart, Hajia Aisha Jummai Alhassan, over her comment supporting the candidacy of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for 2019 presidential election.

    Dalung spoke in an interview he granted the Hausa Service of the Voice of America.

    He said the minister ought to have resigned before working against President Muhammadu Buhari.

    According to the Sports Minister in the VOA Hausa Service interview, Mrs. Alhassan’s action is an attempt to sink the ship of Buhari’s administration with all the people on board.

    He, however, said the best thing to do at the moment was to drop Mrs. Alhassan to sink alone.

    “It is not possible for us to be selling fuel and somebody will now come and say she wants to fry ‘Akara’ in the same place. That means, the person is looking for inferno and we won’t allow that.

    “Her comments will certainly make every Nigerian suspect all of us the ministers in the Buhari government that we are betrayers, simply because Jummai Alhassan is one of us. If she had wanted to be just to herself, she should have resigned her position.

    “Now that she has refused to resign, her case is like someone in canoe and wants it to capsize. So, the best thing to do is to drop her in the river to sink alone, since that is her hope,” he said.

  • Flood: Health minister donates drugs to victims

    Flood: Health minister donates drugs to victims

    Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewale has donated drugs and relief materials  to  flood victims taking refuge at the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in Makurdi,  Benue State .

    Professor Adewale made the donation  during an assessment visit to the IDPs camps at the Makurdi International Market and the Presidential Task force compound  at Abagena, North Bank.

    According him, the health needs of the IDPs at the two camps were being met which is  a reflection of the combined efforts and commitment of the Benue State Government and the Nigerian Air Force Medical Outposts at the camps.

    He stated that during the visit  which was to donate relief materials, including drugs and insecticide-treated nets, he will further assess the health needs of the victims with a view to complementing the efforts of the State government and the Airforce.

    The Health Minister said more support from the federal government should be expected soon.

    In an interview after the visit, Executive Secretary, Benue State Emergency Management Agency, SEMA, Mr. Boniface Ortese said assessment  reports of flooded areas are being compiled from all the 21 local councils in the state which he said would be submitted to the United Nations in Abuja on Wednesday for necessary action.

    He said the uncompleted presidential compound at Abagena was inhabited by IDPs to avoid casualties that might be recorded as a result of rampant cases of building collapse in water logged areas.

    He refuted allegations that the agency had banned the media from covering activities at the camps.

    Mr. Ortese said as the fourth estate of the realm, the media, which he said had given adequate publicity about the floods to the international community could not be banned from doing follow up reports all of a sudden.
    >

  • It’ll take time to feel Buhari’s impact, says Minister

    It’ll take time to feel Buhari’s impact, says Minister

    Minister of Communication, Adebayo Shittu, was in his element when he spoke in Lagos with Sunday Oguntola on proposed reforms in his ministry, misconceptions about his person and his 2019 governorship ambition. Excerpts: 

    CLOSE to two years on the saddle as a Minister, how has it been?         We thank God because I came in as a complete novice in the ICT sector because I have been a lawyer and politician. I didn’t know anything about ICT. It is instructive also that the stakeholders in the industry actually protested my appointment because they felt the sector required someone who had knowledge about it and who could head the sector and provide leadership professionally and otherwise.

    But I thank God that the President had confidence in my ability and in the fact that I learn very fast. I started by convoking a retreat where about 400 specialists came to interact with me and reviewed where the sector was coming from and where we were and should be heading to.

    After a week, we got all the ideas and set up a committee to formulate them into what has become the Ministry of Communication’s ICT Roadmap 2017-2020. It’s a three-year plan that the Federal Executive Council has adopted. About two months ago, the same operators who protested my appointment gave me a fellowship of Nigeria Computer Society.

    What changed their minds?

    Of course, my performance within the period did. One, I have provided leadership in the right perspectives. I do attend all programmes of the sector within and outside the country. I can say that I have attended about 15 foreign conferences.

    Within the country, I have also initiated reforms. I have inaugurated the Broad Band Council. I have inaugurated the Digital Council. I have ensured that the Nigerian Communications Council (NCC) is put on its toes with regards to ensuring that the rights of subscribers in the telecommunications sector are protected so that the operators do not take undue advantage of them.

    I have also initiated reforms in Nigeria Communication Satellite (NICOMSAT), which is one of the agencies under the Ministry. NICOMSAT had just one satellite orbit but we have made efforts to ensure we have two or three more. With that, we would be able to ensure that no Nigerian companies patronize foreign satellite firms in the storage of their data.

    We are working on cable laying across the country to connect all Federal Government’s agencies in the project. As at now, the project is 80 percent completed. I have ensured FEC approved the second phase to cover the entire country. I have also initiated an ICT University aimed at providing a skilled gap assessment and training facility for Nigerians. As of today because of the inadequacies in the training of computer science students, when people graduate from our universities, they go to India to retrain and get professional certifications and correct skills.

    ICT changes by the day but most of what our universities have as syllabus are 20-30 years old. They don’t meet with the ever-changing nature of the ICT sector. So, the ICT University will stop our graduates from going to India, Korea or China for retraining.

    How soon will the university take off?

    We are hoping the university takes off before the end of September in six campuses across the country. There would be one in each of the six geo-political zones.

    On NIPOST, we have a number of reforms that will introduce five new companies to the activities of NIPOST. Remember that the NIPOST is known for transmitting postal materials within and outside the country. It is as old as Nigeria itself. But with the coming of GSM, emails and other ICT, people didn’t need NIPOST again.

    Yet, the facilities, personnel and infrastructure are still there unused and untapped. So, I thought that we could use the inadequacies of NIPOST to resolve the problem of financial non-inclusiveness for the rural dwellers. Banks exist in less than 50 percent of the 774 local governments in the country.

    Majority of Nigerians live in rural areas, meaning they are financially excluded from services. They cannot save money, take credit and transfer financially. So, we are introducing what we call the NIPOST Bank using the existing postal agencies and infrastructure across the nation.

    We would also have NIPOST Property and Development Company aimed at ensuring that all the excess lands in post offices across the nation are leased out to private developers for office complexes, shopping malls and residential apartments as well as garages. That will bring in a lot of monies for government.

    We are also working on establishment of a NIPOST Transport and Logistics Company. Currently, we have fleet of vehicles used to transmit postal materials which are either grounded or wasting away. So, we think we can commercialise this fleet of vehicles to provide transport services.

    If you live in Saki, where I come from and you need to come to Lagos to buy merchandise. You come to the post office and they are transported to your village for settlement with ease. We would have NIPOST e-commerce services because if you live in Ibadan and need something in Kano, you just communicate online and the merchandise is sent to you wherever you are.

    Also, we are bringing reforms for NIPOST e-government services. Today, we know international passports are acquired in Immigration offices only in capital cities. What it means is if you leave 200metres away from the capital, you have to travel down. The transport costs, risks of armed robberies, accidents waste of real-time are too much to bear.

    With NIPOST e-government services, you simply go to the nearest post office and process your passport application online, pay online and it will be transmitted through the post to you. You don’t need to appear physically because everything is online. It is the same with driving license, financial passports and others.

    We are working on the establishment of an ICT Development Bank. You will recall we have Bank of Industry (BOI), Bank of Agriculture (BOA) and all others not any to cater for the ICT sector. There is no bank for the specialized ICT sector, which has become the latest enabler of life, businesses and governments. If you are a software developer, you need time and resources for it to mature. The current banking interest regime is not suitable for the growth and development of ICT sector.

    So, we have decided to have a specialized bank to help the sector grow without the current banking challenges we have. We are establishing technological hubs across the nation and encouraging private investors to be part of it.

    Generally, my role is to provide leadership for the industry and make enabling environment available. I am happy to note that for the first time in the history of this country, telecoms alone has provided more than 10 percent to the GDP. It has never happened before.

    In the area of Foreign Direct Investments (FDI), we have attracted more than $40billion. As at today, the ICT sector engages more Nigerians than the oil sector, which has been hit by economic recession over the years.

    How were you able to acquaint yourself so quickly with the industry in less than two years?

    The paramount thing is to have a universal education and I am proud to say that I am a product of the then University of Ife now Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife. I read Law and have always been in practice and politics. I have a worldview of life and I mix very well with people. I am not boxed in one corner and I read extensively.

    So, for me, it has become something within my DNA to understand what is involved and provide the right leadership. Of course, I must also thank officials of my ministry for giving me the support to learn very quickly and provide the right leadership.

    At first, the Oyo State Government protested your appointment and stakeholders in the ICT industry joined when you were assigned your portfolio. What’s it about you that makes people fight you everywhere?

    I think there are two different perspectives. One is political and the other is professional. Protest against my nomination was politically motivated perhaps some people felt if I distinguish myself, they would be in trouble. But God has had his ways and I am happy that I have the opportunity to serve as Minister.

    For me, it is more of a training ground for higher political office. As regards the protest by the stakeholders, I would say it was an innocent protest because they could not have been mischievous. They feared the industry would require appropriate leadership and enabling environment for advancement. I am happy that they have seen what I can do and God has performed wonders in my life.

    One of the earliest controversies that faced you was the fine brouhaha of MTN Nigeria. Nigerians still believe the firm was not appropriately sanctioned…

    … I am surprised that Nigerians still feel that way. There is no arbitrariness in governance. The issue of MTN was something that the law had made provisions for. MTN committed an infraction and all government had to do was to look at what the law said.

    Of course, it became clear to MTN that if it had to pay that fine in its totality, it was most likely going to go bankrupt. So, it appealed to the Presidency for leniency. Even in the court process, if you are fined and it becomes impossible for you to pay, you can apply for review, which is akin to what MTN did to Mr. President.

    Mr. President, in the interest of this country, because if he had stood his ground that he was going to have his pound of flesh, there was the possibility that MTN would have packed out of Nigeria.

    The wrong signals would have been sent to the international investing community and banks would have collapsed because all their investments in the sector would have been withdrawn. Thirdly, Nigerians working there would have suffered directly and indirectly. They would have been thrown to the labour market and where are the jobs you want to give to these people?

    These were the issues the Federal Government considered and decided to reduce the fine. We also agreed to spread the remaining balance for payment over a period of three years as they requested. Recall that the first thing they had to do was payment of N50 billion. I call this free money because it was not an anticipated income. We didn’t work for it but it added a lot of value to our ability to provide services for Nigerians.

    So far, I am aware they have paid up to N80 billion and over the next two years, they will pay up the entire N330billion.

    In Oyo State where you hail from, people have said it is the turn of Oyo North to produce the next governor. Do you align with that?

    First, let me say that I am a very objective person. I want to look at it from various perspectives. Oyo has linguistically speaking about four zones. It has the Ibadan, Ogbomoso, Oyo and Oke-Ogun with the Ibarapa as the fifth. Ibadan has 11 local government areas. Oke-Ogun has 10, Ogbomoso has five, Oyo has four while Ibarapa has three.

    Over the years, particularly after the late Bola Ige, most governors have come from Ibadan. It was by accident of fate that an Ogbomoso became governor once. So, a lot of people feel that there must rotation and since the Ibadan have done it about three times, it should go to the next zone in terms of size of the number of local government areas.

    Of course, you must also realise that in terms of quantum of votes, Ibadan has always produced 52 percent. Oke-Ogun produces 18 percent and you see the wide difference. But it is a good argument, which got a lot of fillips recently because the Ibadan didn’t vote for APC candidate only but also Ladoja of Accord Party.

    It was the votes of Oke-Ogun that saved the day for APC and Governor Abiola Ajimobi. That is why even the governor said, for once, it should be the turn of Oke-Ogun because of what the zone did.

    But some people believe the governor is just talking tongue-in-cheek…

    … Well, the fact is that he said it and it can be referred to. Whether it is true or not does not matter. But the truth also is, for me, as a person since I am one of the front-liners from the zone, I don’t want to become governor only for Oke-Ogun.

    That would be demeaning to my status as the most experienced and connected among the aspirants. I am also the oldest politician among the aspirants. For me, I feel that for once Oke-Ogun now has somebody who is more capable and qualified than any other person. I believe I will easily beat others during the primaries.

    So, for me it is not about where I hail from but bridges one has built over the years. I have always boasted about my robust relationship with the Ibadan people over the last 38 years.

    But they never voted for you in the last two attempts to govern the state

    Well, the fact that they didn’t vote for me then is not conclusive they won’t vote for me now. I mean people change a lot. Initially people were saying Omo Ibadan ni e je o se (Only an Ibadan indigene should govern) but now in Ibadan they are saying Ajumobi o’kan tanu (Kindness has nothing to do with kinship).

    But the aspirants from Oke-Ogun appear to be many. Don’t you think that will affect the region?

    It is not a strange thing because everybody wants something good. There are always aspirants, claimants, pretenders and all that but then when the chips are down; we would separate the chaffs from the wheat. There are so many people that have never held any political post or office yet they want to be governors. They have never been council chairmen, member of the State Assembly, Commissioner or Minister yet they are laying claims to the governor’s seat.

    You won’t deny them the freedom to make claims to that which they may not have the competence or capacity to do. That is why we would have a primary election at the appropriate time and people would be allowed to choose the most competent person as candidate.

    At the last Oke-Ogun Youth summit, one of the prominent monarchs from the region said he would neither vote nor support a stingy politician who is a religious fundamentalist. Most people believe he was referring to you. Can you react to that?

    Of course, I knew he was referring to me, which was why I replied appropriately. Two, we have since reconciled. We are mutual friends and have reconciled. But most importantly, I am not stingy. But I am not a stupid spender to satisfy anybody.

    I believe in sustainable projects, which is why when I became a Minister, I took the decision to construct three boreholes in each of the 33 local government areas. It is my money. I don’t have security votes or constituency allowance.

    So far, of the 99 boreholes, I have only done 12. A stingy man would not put his money in such project that would not give him anything in return. I have also purchased two buses for the State Executives of the party with the plan to purchase, as money comes in, a bus for each local government branch of our party.

    I cannot say how many people I support financially for school fees, medical bills, house rents and so on. So we have reconciled and I am not stingy at all.

    As for the case of fundamentalism, it is a case of calling a dog a bad name to hang it. When I was being screened in the Senate this same allegation came up. And I challenged the Upper Chamber to bring evidence of one single action of mine that amounts to religious fundamentalism in the last 38 years of my life in politics. Till tomorrow, nobody has been able to provide one.

    A lot of people cannot believe that you could be as educated as I am and yet as religious I am. That I don’t do some of the funny things that some other people who are not serious with their God do makes people look at me with amazement. So, they turn around to say I am a fanatic.

    So, you believe it’s your turn to win Oyo 2019 governorship poll?

    In fact, when people ask me if I am contesting, I get pissed off. If you have a child that went to Primary School and did so well, move to Secondary school and did so well, will you ask if he will go to the University? Among all the aspirants, I am the only one who qualified as a lawyer in 1979. I became a member of the Oyo House of Assembly from 1979-1983 where I was the most dynamic and visible.

    In 1983, I became Commissioner for Home Affairs, Information and Culture. In 2007, I became Attorney General for the State. In 2011 and 2015, I contested the governorship and today I am a Minister. Who other person has one quarter of what I have?

    So I don’t see how the competition will be a tough one really by the grace of God.

    Are you in support of agitations for the creation of Oke-Ogun State?

    Honestly, I don’t want to waste time on calls for creation of Oke-Ogun State because I know that no civilian administration is capable of doing that. And I don’t believe in deceiving myself. If you are talking of state creation, only a military regime can do it by unilateral actions, not through the democratic process.

    That is because easily if you leave it to the vagaries of democratic process, you are going to have more than 100 States in the Federation. We have 36 States, most of which are insolvent. India with a population of 1.3 billion has only 22 States. In the Western Region days, the cry then was the Ijebu were marginalizing us. So, they created Ogun, Oyo and Osun. When we were in the Old Oyo State, the cry became the Ijesha were shortchanging us. When Osun left, it became the Ibadan are cheating us. If you create Oke-Ogun, it would be Saki or Oyo are cheating us.

    So, I don’t believe in state creation but offering right leadership. And I want to believe, if by the grace of God, I become governor people would forget about marginalization because I would be governor of all and be fair to all.

    There are many Nigerians feeling the pang of hunger and saying they don’t have as much money as before…

    …Well they won’t have because the era of profligacy ended with the Jonathan’s administration.

    But they say they are also hungry…

    …Again they would be hungry because we have had 16 years of mismanagement of our economy. In the last years of Jonathan, petrol which is the main stay of our economy was selling for $140 per barrel. By the time Buhari came on board, it dropped to $38. That is more than 70 percent loss.

    If in the era of $140 per barrel, the administration then utilised the money to invest in capital infrastructure such as roads, railways, schools and saved for the rainy days, we would not be in economic quagmire that we are.

    Is it true you and Governor Ajimobi are not on good terms?

    I know that Governor Ajimobi and I have come a long way since 2007. We have been brothers and will remain so. Of course, in every relationship, there would be conflicts.

    I think appeared like a case of our discordance is the fact that we are coming from two different political backgrounds. He is from defunct ACN while I came from the defunct CPC. So, we had disagreements as to the composition of the party’s state executives then.

    For me, I don’t hold grudges against anybody. He is my governor and leader of our party in the state. I am expecting to take over from him. So, we cannot afford not to be friends.

  • Buhari not travelling to US, says Minister

    Buhari not travelling to US, says Minister

    MINISTER of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed has urged “Nigerians to disregard the fake news being circulated via a parody Twitter account and an old Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) news video that President Muhammadu Buhari is travelling or has travelled to the United States (U.S.)”.

    A statement issued in Lagos yesterday by his Special Adviser Segun Adeyemi quoted the minister as saying one of the numerous parody Twitter accounts in his name, @MohammedLai, was used to disseminate the fake and ludicrous news that claims that the President is due to leave Nigeria for the U.S. on Monday “to condole with President Trump over the floods in Houston”.

    Also, he said an old NTA News video being circulated on the Social Media claims that Buhari had already left for the United Nations (UN) General Assembly in New York.

    “This is a 2015 NTA News video that was repackaged to look current and to give the impression that the President left Daura, where he is celebrating Eid-el-Kabir, directly for New York,” Mohammed said.

    Mohammed urged Nigerians to disregard any news credited to any account in his name, either on Twitter or Facebook, adding: “Numerous parody accounts have been opened in my name on the two platforms, when indeed I have no Twitter or Facebook accounts.”

    The minister recalled how the same parody Twitter account used to disseminate the fake news about the President’s purported trip was employed to circulate a fake report that he sharply criticised Senator Dino Melaye for attending the Notting Hill Carnival in the UK.

    He said these two instances highlight the dangers posed to the polity by the purveyors of fake news and disinformation, and vowed that the Federal Government would soon fish out those behind the shenanigans.

     “Fake news, disinformation and hate speech are the antics of the naysayers, those who are pathologically opposed to this administration. That is why we are urging Nigerians to be more discerning and to double check any information emanating from the social media,” Mohammed said.

  • Minister: Nigeria’ll be self-sufficient in rice by end of 2017

    Minister: Nigeria’ll be self-sufficient in rice by end of 2017

    Nigeria will be self-sufficient in rice production by the end of this year, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Chief Audu Ogbeh has said.

    Ogbeh, who gave the assurance at the First International Cocoa Summit, organised by the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investment, in collaboration with Cocoa Farmers Association of Nigeria (CAN), in Abuja, noted that rice production had improved tremendously across the country as a result of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP).

    According to him, the programme has supported farmers through inputs distribution and loans to boost rice production across the country. While pointing out that rice is one major staple food consuned by almost every Nigerian, Ogbeh said the move was in line with President Muhammadu Buhari’s agenda to diversify the economy through the agric sector. He, however, advised rice farmers to reduce the price of a tonne of paddy rice from N150,000 to N120,000 to make it affordable for millers and discourage smuggling. ”By the end of this year, we can tell you that we are self-sufficient in rice,” Ogbeh declared, expressing regrets on the increasing number of malnourished children across the country.

    He hinted that the Federal Government, through his ministry, would encourage land clearing, fertiliser application through extension workers to promote cocoa production. He said:“We are planning a re-launch of cocoa to draw national attention to its strategic importance, but the big thing is to help processors at home and increase consumption. Everything is not about export; nowadays, the export market is choked, forcing prices down while farmers are losing money.”

    He promised that the ministry will help with land clearing, fertiliser improvement, especially the inclusion of boron to revive old cocoa plantation and encourage new ones.