Tag: minister

  • Minister to NFF: Ensure clubs pay players’ backloged salaries

    Minister to NFF: Ensure clubs pay players’ backloged salaries

      •Wants defaulters barred from competitions

    The Honourable Minister of Sports and Chairman of the National Sports Commission, NSC Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, yesterday directed the Nigerian

    Football Federation, NFF to ensure that all football clubs participating in various football leagues in the country pay the backlogs of salaries owed players.

    According to him, teams that are unable or unwilling to pay should be barred from participating in the leagues as from next season.

    This was one of the outcomes of the meeting the Minister had with the Board members of the NFF, the League Management Company (LMC) and the

    Nigerian Women League. The meeting focused on the state of the leagues.

    A visibly angry Abdullahi said at the meeting, “ this has to stop. We cannot behave as if we live in a jungle. Every kobo owed the players must be paid. Players must have proper contracts.”

    He made these comments against the background of a news report about

    the FCT Queen of Abuja players who are owed 18months salaries and who, according to the report, have resorted to begging to make ends meet.

    Dilichukwu Onyedinma, the Chairperson of the Nigerian Women League and who incidentally is also Chairperson the FCT Queen, explained while making a presentation at the meeting that the players had not been paid because of bureaucratic bottlenecks.

    She however stated that the FCT Minister, Bala Mohammed, had approved

    the salaries of the players but didn’t know why they had not been paid.

    Onyedinma disclosed that though the Nigerian Women League faced many challenges, it is making steady but slow progress. “ For the first time ever we have started the first Women Premier League in Nigeria,” she said.

    Nduka Irabor, the Chairman of the League Management Company, stated that the LMC is putting systems in place to ensure that clubs pay sufficient attention to the welfare of footballers. “ I have pictures of the living condition of some of our footballers, it is shameful and makes mockery of the professional league. It is no wonder that our players keep going overseas to seek greener pastures.”

    He however stated that the LMC was considering several measures to improve the welfare of footballers including implementing a minimum wage.

  • Minister hails Ajimobi for transforming Oyo

    The Minister of National Planning and Chairman, National Planning Commission, Dr. Samsudeen Usman, yesterday hailed Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi for transforming the state.

    The minister, who spoke during a visit to the governor in his office, also acknowledged the cordial relationship between his ministry and the Ajimobi administration. He said this was commendable.

    “Since I have got to Oyo State, I have seen visible signs of transformation. No doubt, the state has changed in terms of aesthetics and urban renewal. I congratulate you on the efforts you are putting in to change the face of the state,” Dr. Usman said.

    The minister, who said he was in the state to attend the annual conference of the Directors of Planning, Research and Statistics holding in Ibadan, said they had not made mistakes coming to the state for the programme.

    He said the state was chosen as one of the pilot states for the measurement of Gross Domestic Products (GDP) at the state level, given its age and size.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Boko Haram ceasefire plan soon, says minister

    Boko Haram ceasefire plan soon, says minister

    •DHQ team for Yobe

    The Minister of Special Duties, Alhaji Kabiru Turaki yesterday said the Federal Government is having a ceasefire understanding with the mainstream Boko Haram led by the late Mohammed Yusuf.

    He said the government wasworking on broader terms for the ceasefire and will unfold it soon.

    Turaki, who spoke with our correspondent, yesterday said no formal agreement had been signed with Boko Haram.

    He said: “We have reached an understanding with them (Boko Haram) for ceasefire, which they have already directed and which we have accepted.

    “We are working on the formal agreement which will follow in due course.”

    Asked about which of the factions of Boko Haram the government is discussing with, the Minister said: “It is with the mainstream Yusuf. We are working on the broader terms now and will announce to the world in due course.”

    A statement by the spokesman for Defence Headquarters, Brig-Gen. Chris Olukolade, said a delegation led by the Chief of Research and Development in the Defence Headquarters had been sent to Yobe to find out how no fewer than 22 pupils were killed.

    The statement said: “A fact-finding team of senior officers from the Defence Headquarters is in Yobe State for an on-the-spot assessment of the deployment of troops of the Joint Task Force in the State.

    “The team is to pay particular attention to the security circumstances around the incidence of the attack on the Government Secondary School, Mamudo near Potiskum during the weekend.

    “Led by the Chief of Research and Development in the Defence Headquarters, the team is visiting troops deployed in remote locations in Yobe State to verify the effectiveness of patrols and cordon and search operations directed at forestalling any further breach of security and tracking down perpetrators of the weekend attack.

    “The team is expected to brief the Chief of Defence Staff, Admiral Ibrahim Ola Sa’ad in respect of any requirement for additional troops and logistics for the operation in Yobe State.”

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has called on Boko Haram members to disarm totally and permanently in the spirit of the Ramadan fasting period, which begins among Muslim faithful in the country today.

    In a good will message to mark the beginning of the 30-day long Ramadan fasting by Muslims, the former Vice President appealed to the Boko Haram insurgents to permanently abandon any form of violence against innocent people.

    According to him, cold-blooded murder of innocent people is against the teachings of Islam and, therefore, advised the Boko Haram insurgents to embrace peace, using the Ramadan season as the beginning of the end of their violence against defenseless victims.

    Atiku Abubakar advised Boko Haram to embrace dialogue and disarmament to save the nation this needless violence against innocent people. He added: “deliberate violence against innocent people cannot be justified under whatever circumstances and it benefits nobody. The Boko Haram insurgents should take advantage of this Ramadan period to end all forms of violence once and for all, and save us from this endless trauma

     

  • EFCC appeals court’s decision on ex- Works Minister

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said yesterday that it has appealed last week’s decision by a Federal High Court in Abuja discharging ex-Works Minister Hassan Lawal of charges of money laundering.

    The commission is asking the Court of Appeal, Abuja to set aside the July 4 ruling of Justice Adamu Bello of the Federal High Court, Abuja.

    Justice Bello, had in his ruling upheld the no-case submission by Lawal and an official of the United Bank for Africa (UBA), Adesanye Adewale charged with the ex-Minister on the ground that the EFCC failed to establish a prima facie case against them.

    In the notice of appeal, EFCC is seeking a review of the ruling of the lower court on two grounds.

    On the first ground, the EFCC faulted the trial judge for delivering his ruling outside the 90 days period prescribed by the Constitution.

    Secondly, EFCC argued that the trial court erred by upholding and granting Lawal and Adewale’s application for a no-case submission in spite of the evidential materials, oral and documentary, before the court.

     

     

     

     

  • Mohammed ElBaradei  becomes Egypt’s prime minister

    Mohammed ElBaradei becomes Egypt’s prime minister

    Former United Nations nuclear agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei has been appointed Egypt’s interim prime minister, giving a liberal and secular direction to a country that until three days ago was led by Islamists.

    The appointment by interim President Adly Mansour gave Egypt a public face who will probably be viewed with unhappiness by members of the Muslim Brotherhood and others who believe religion should have a prominent role in Egypt’s political life. It appeared, however, to be a consensus pick among the coalition of Egyptian political parties and opposition movements that banded together to push for the ouster of Egypt’s first democratically elected leader, Mohamed Morsi, on Wednesday.

    With Mansour a virtual unknown in Egypt, ElBaradei is likely to take a leading role in the coming months as the nation comes up with a new constitution and system of governance.

    “Dr. Baradei has been named the new prime minister,” said Rania Azab, a senior ElBaradei aide, speaking by telephone.

    Just as the democratically elected Morsi experienced a remarkable fall from grace this week, ElBaradei’s unelected rise to the position of prime minister marked a remarkable turnaround for a politician who has struggled to find popular support outside Egypt’s urban, educated classes, in a country where roughly half the population lives on less than $2 a day.

    ElBaradei had spent Saturday in meetings with other chiefs of Egypt’s new political order, including with Defence Minister Abdel Fattah al-Sisi at the Ministry of Defence, said Ahmed Said, an ally and leader of the Free Egyptians Party. Egyptian media reported yesterday evening that ElBaradei had been summoned to the presidential palace ahead of an announcement there.

    During Egypt’s 2011 revolution, ElBaradei – the 2005 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize – emerged as an early and harsh critic of former President Hosni Mubarak, who had led the country for three decades. But he always struggled to expand his support among the vast majority of Egyptians who had not prospered under Mubarak’s rule. ElBaradei spent much of his career outside Egypt, first as a diplomat within Egypt’s Foreign Ministry and then at the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna. He was director general of the agency from 1997 until 2009.

    ElBaradei’s Constitution Party, founded after the country’s parliamentary elections, sought to unite Egyptians around the secular principles of the revolution, and many see it intended as a counterweight to the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party, which led the country until a coup toppled it on Wednesday night after days of massive popular protests.

    Ahead of his appointment as interim prime minister, ElBaradei resigned from his position as party chief.

     

  • My Vision Is To Transform PTI Into World-Class, Says Minister

    THE Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Maduake, has said it is her vision to transform the Petroleum Training Institute (PTI), Effurun into a world-class training and research institute that can function like its counterparts, such as American Petroleum Institute (API), in the United States, and the Venezuela Petroleum Institute (VPI) in Venezuela.

    Mrs. Alison-Madueke, who spoke at Effurun in Delta State, during the graduation of the institution, said the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), before the National Assembly was to enable Nigeria, including the PTI, to gain optimally from oil and gas to maximise value for money earned through the resources.

    She said it was common knowledge that increased activities in the oil and gas sector were getting more complex, diversified and highly challenging, especially now that oil operations are moving to the downstream sector, emphasising the need to constantly train and re-train the work force in the industry, mostly when the ministry is envisaging that PTI can provide locally, the same quality training standards obtainable abroad.

    Speaking further, Mrs. Alison-Madueke said for PTI to key into the Federal Government transformation agenda in the oil and gas sector, she is challenging the institute to undertake studies on how to use local materials in providing solutions to the myriad of problems confronting oil exploration and production.

    The Acting Principal of the institution, Mrs Nnenna Dennar, said since the establishment of the institution, it had justified its 40 years experience with many achievements.

    Dennar since President Goodluck signed into law the Nigeria Content Act and established the Nigeria Content Development Monitoring Board (NCDMB) the Federal Government has demonstrated an uncommon will to push through the policy of increased indigenous participation in the Nigeria oil and gas industry.

    She reiterated that for forty years of the existence of the institution, it is on record that the Petroleum Training Institute has been consistent as the sole supplier of fit-for-purpose technical manpower to the Nigerian and other African countries’ oil and gas industry, advising the over 4,826 graduants to imbibe the institute’s culture of excellence through hard work and the fear of God.

    The highlight of the ceremony was the conferment of the Fellow of the Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) on the Delta State Governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Dieziani Alison-Maduake, former Chairman, PTI Governing Council/Director, DPR, Chief Mac Ofurhie and Mr. C. A. Pagano, Vice-Chairman and Managing Director of Eni companies in Nigeria.

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  • The unending row over  Unity Schools’ cut-off marks

    The unending row over Unity Schools’ cut-off marks

    hough the admissions policy of the 104 Federal Government Colleges (FGCs), also known as Unity Schools, has been in existence for over 40 years, concerns about the discriminatory cut-off marks for states have always been a contentious issue. Many parents find it difficult to believe that their children who did well in the National Common Entrance Examination (NCEE) may not be admitted because of where they come from, while those with “ridiculously” low marks are admitted because they are from “educationally disadvantaged” states.

    Last week, Hon Afam Ogene, who represents Anambra State in the House of Representatives, Abuja, drew the attention of his colleagues to this anomaly during plenary.

    To gain admission into the Unity Schools, the cut-off mark system requires candidates from states in the Southeast, Southwest to score significantly higher marks than their counterparts from the North or those states tagged “educationally-less-developed states (ELDS) in the NCEE conducted by the National Examinations Council (NECO).

    For instance, while candidates from Anambra State must score at least 139, which is the highest for any state, those from Jigawa need 44 marks to qualify for admission into the colleges. Yobe has the lowest cut-off, two. Other states with low cut-off marks are: Taraba (3), Zamfara (4), Kebbi (9) and Sokoto (9).

    To be representational of Nigeria as conceived by Gen Yakubu Gowon when the Unity Schools were started in the 60s, each college admits based on the following criteria: 30 per cent on merit; 30 per cent, state quota; 30 per cent, environment; and 10 per cent exigency.

    Explaining the quota policy, the Principal of King’s College, Lagos, Otunba Dele Olapeju, said the 30 per cent admitted on merit can gain admission into the colleges of their choice, irrespective of their states of origin if they excel well above the cut-off mark of their states. He said the state quota criterion requires the colleges to select 30 per cent of their candidates from each state of the federation; while the environment criterion is reserved for candidates from the host state/community of the college. The 10 per cent criterion is based on exigencies.

    Nigerians are divided on the propriety of the discriminatory cut-off marks policy. While many told The Nation that the policy should be abolished because it does not allow for a level-playing field, others favour it because of the opportunity it provides for children from educationally backward states.

    Olapeju said contrary to belief, candidates from the North with poor scores are not admitted into the college.

    “What we do in selecting candidates admitted on state and environmental bases is to pick those with the best scores that applied from each state. None of the candidates scored zero,” he said.

     

    Unused slots

     

    Though the state admissions criterion stipulates that pupils be admitted from every state, this is not always the case. Many pupils no longer travel a far distance to attend Unity Schools. Many favour schools nearby. As a result, some states do not fill their quota.

    Dr. Ahmaad Rufai of the Faculty of Education, Lagost State University (LASU) describes the unused slots as ‘educational wastage.’

    “How could you just allocate slots which are hardly utilised to some sections of the country where there are others who are eligible but can’t just fill them because of the prevailing quota system? It is simply a way of compromising standards and giving room to mediocres,” he said.

    Despite the cut-off marks favouring northerners, a group, Tambarin Arewa Development Association in Lagos, is complaining that pupils from the North are denied access to the Unity Schools as their quotas are given to southerners. In a statement signed by Mustapha Ibrahim Mai-Gandi, the group said: “The merit quota is usually taken by up candidates of southern states due to their educational advantage. However, northern states are equally short- changed under the state quota criterion that is supposed to be shared among the 36 states based on their cut-off marks. It is discovered that most of the students admitted under this criterion are from the South.

    “It is very common and amazing to see Ikechukwu or Adewunmi or Esther taking up the Sokoto or Yobe State slots whereas the said candidates have no link whatsoever with those states. An example of this anomaly can be seen in the admission list of Queen’s College and King’s College, Lagos over the last six or seven years. In fact, this year’s admission into the two schools both at JS & SS levels points to the same direction.

    “As regards the issue of merit quota, we equally discovered that some candidates from the North are equally shortchanged under this criterion after meeting the merit quota requirement. A typical example is the case of a JS1 candidate from Kebbi State (Nasiru Munira Aisha) who scored 165 marks out of 200 in the Common Entrance Examination.

    “With this result, such candidate clearly qualifies for the merit list, but instead she was offered admission under Kebbi State quota slot at Queen’s College. This clearly stops other qualified candidates from Kebbi to make the state quota. In fact, we have candidates from the same Kebbi State that met the State Quota requirement but were not offered admission as a result of this.

    “We are of the opinion that even if those states affected did not fill any candidate for such examination or do not meet the admission requirement, their slots could be filled by other qualified candidates from their zone or other means of filling their slots other than quota will be found,” it said.

    Reacting to the group’s claims, Olapeju said parents from other parts of the country fill in northern states for their children to take advantage of the low cut-off marks and gain admission. He said the issue is tricky and requires the school to be careful because of constitutional provisions that allow them to claim a state where they were born as theirs.

    “This issue can be very tricky because of the constitutional provision that if someone has lived in a state for long and had all his children there, he can claim the place as the state of origin.

    “Some parents use this trick. They claim other states for their children because of the low cut-off marks,” he said.

    However, he said efforts are made to determine whether the pupils are really from the states they claim.

    Proponents of cut-off mark policy

    Chairman of the King’s College Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) Mr Emmanuel Oriakhi said the cut-off mark issue is exaggerated. Like Olapeju, he said nobody is admitted from educationally-disadvantaged states with poor scores. He said the number admitted on this basis is negligible and should not be made an issue.

    He said the Federal Character principle has to exist for the schools to fulfil the purpose of admitting pupils from all states. This notwithstanding, he said, it does not affect merit.

    “This idea of the cut-off mark is being misrepresented. People are now looking at the extremes – like comparing a candidate who scored 130 to one who scored zero. There is nothing like a candidate with two marks. There has to be differential grades because of the Federal Character principle. That does not mean that merit is being jeopardised. The number of those admitted from these zones is insignificant. For instance, nobody that scores less than 100 from any state is admitted at King’s College. Nobody can be admitted on the cut-off mark of two. The cut-off mark for any state is about 160 and above. But there is usually concession for those from educationally-less developed states,” he said.

    If the goal of admitting pupils from all over Nigeria is to be achieved, Olapeju said merit cannot be the sole criterion as performance in the NCEE has consistently shown that candidates from some states outperformed others.

    “For instance, in the last examination, out of 6,000 candidates that made the national cut-off, Anambra State had the lion’s share. Between Imo and Anambra, they took a sixth of the national merit. You cannot blame them for being brilliant. However, if all Anambra candidates are admitted, there will be no Unity Colleges,” he said.

    The renewed interest in the policy after so many years came as a surprise to some people. At the Federal Government Girls College (FGGC) in Abuloma, Rivers State, the principal refused to speak on the issue. However, a worker said: “These press people are always looking for someone to sack from work. Is it today that that policy came up? I wonder why they are just realising that that policy is very discriminatory. It has been there and if our people have been tolerating it all these years why are they agitating against it now.”

    Mrs Pat Kodu, who retired from one of the colleges, also wondered at the interest.

    She asked: “Why are our people just raising eyebrows against this policy now? It was put in place when the Unity Schools were established and nobody carried placards against it then. Why now?”

    Many parents, teachers and stakeholders are satisfied with the discriminatory cutoff arrangement as they believe it allows those who would ordinarily not have entered the colleges to gain admission.

    A parent who refused to be named and whose child attends one of the schools in Sokoto, said what favoured his child for admission was the environmental factor.

    “I am from Edo State by origin and I happen to give birth to all my children in Sokoto where I have stayed for over 30 years. This is what qualified my child to secure admission, despite the cut off marks of my state,” he said.

    Hon Ogene may be miffed that Anambra candidates have to work harder, but to Governor Peter Obi, it is evidence that the state is doing well educationally.

    Speaking at the distribution of N2.53 billion rehabilitation grant to all public schools, Obi said the good performance was evidence that reforms in public and missionary schools as well as private schools made Anambra pupils come tops in the NCEE.

    Chief Abdulsalam Suleiman, Chairman, FGC, Sokoto Parent-Teacher Association (PTA), believes that the policy is not meant to discriminate but to correct the inequality in the standard of education as well as discourage the existing gap nationwide.

    He said rather than dwell on the discriminatory policy, stakeholders should fast-track development in disadvantaged states by providing adequate and necessary facilities and qualified manpower in schools to make the system more attractive and competitive.

    “I believe a committee was set up to advise the government before the policy was enforced. It is not meant to punish others. We are all Nigerians and no section of the country will want to remain at a disadvantage. It is for the good of the country”, he said.

    Alhaji Muhammed Ahmed, Chairman, School-Based Management Committee, FGGC, Bakori, Kaduna State, and a retired Director of Education, described the policy as logical, considering the North/South education development divide.

    “We have several FGCs across the country. As you know, Nigeria is a federal structure with differences in educational attainment. I think it is logical based on Federal Character to relate the performance of say Kwara State with that of Borno State. For example, western education started in Badagry in 1841, while in the North here, western education started in 1907. Study the difference. So, that cut off mark is logical and fair. You cannot compare the performance of a child in Katsina or Jigawa state with a child in Lagos. There is a big difference and so, I think it is fair to reduce the cut off mark. The student who is coming with a low performance should strive to catch up with others when he gets to school and ask many questions while trying to identify the intelligence in him,” he said.

    Though not a fan of the Federal Character principle, Vice-Chancellor of the Sokoto State University Prof Nuhu Yaqub said the admissions policy should remain to help the goal of unifying Nigeria.

    Opponents of the cut-off mark policy

    For those who dislike the policy, they argue that it promotes mediocrity. They said despite favouring ELDS for decades, those states are yet to develop educationally.

    Former Commissioner for Justice and Attorney-General of Edo State Dr. Osagie Obayuwana said the cut-off mark policy, like the federal character principle, only complicates Nigeria’s problems.

    He said: “We must not throw merit overboard in attaining federal character. We cannot continue to use federal character to assure people of access. The incentive must be provided for people to strive and excel. The system suffers when mediocrity turns out to be the product of our educational processes. Those who are given preferential consideration as far as admission is concerned ought to appreciate they are going to meet challenges and they have some catching up to do so that we are not faced with a situation when somebody gets admission on a quota basis, they will be among the first to get appointment on quota basis. There is no doubt that part of the challenges Nigeria faces at the moment is mediocrity rule traceable to quota and federal character business.”

    For Njom Nyambi, Chairman, Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) Cross River State wing, ELDS do not exist, so, the cut-off should be jettisoned.

    “The people are just trying to be funny. There is no educationally disadvantaged state. All these pupils are the same. The situation is just like depriving some people of their rights and if the Unity schools should have an admissions policy it should be uniform throughout the country. They should not give priority to some people and some other people are treated as if they are second class citizens. I feel it is not fair on some pupils who have to study so hard to score high marks to gain admission while some other pupils elsewhere just get through for scoring very low marks. Today, there are so many professors in the North and they are still calling them disadvantaged states. It is not correct. Everyone should be treated on the same pedestal for the sake of unity,” he said.

    The FGC, Sokoto PTA Chairman, Chief Suleiman, also pointed out that there is no scientific proof to the term “educationally disadvantaged”, describing the term as derogatory. The issue, he said, had been given political status rather then academic, arguing that many northerners have performed well academically.

    “It is to a large extent derogatory to peg a cut off mark as low as nine for a state against others with 130 as entry mark into Unity Schools. Even in the North, Sokoto in particular has produced the world’s best automobile designer, Jelani Aliyu, who went through the conventional public school. People like Prof Ardo, a Special Adviser to Governor Wamakko attended University of Benin (UNIBEN); Prof Jibril Aminu won almost all prizes as a mathematician during his days in the university. It is just like the hierarchy of social or class status where we have the rich, middle and the lower classes. The last two categories will want to strive through available means to belong to the top for development”, he said.

    Constance Meju, a journalist, who once taught in a Unity School, said the policy should be scrapped because if all these years the people from the North and other educationally-disadvantaged states have not been able to catch up, it means they do not appreciate the gesture.

    Former Commissioner for Education in Kaduna State Matamaki Tom Maiyashi believes that the segregation in cut-off point for entry into the colleges is just a way of scoring cheap political points by politicians and those saddled with the responsibility of running the educational system. Maiyasho believes that the policy will erode the principle surrounding the establishment of the Unity Schools.

    “The concept of Unity Schools emerged post Nigeria civil war. At that time, the question of unity was paramount because we were seeking ways of uniting the country and the school socialisation system was considered vital in that regard. It was thought that if you bring youths from across the country, their interaction as they grow together, they will look at Nigeria from a broader perspective. That was the cardinal principle of establishing Unity Schools. At that time, the standard was quite high and if you go back and look at the first and second generation products of those schools, you will understand. What has happened over time is deliberate. The unity of Nigeria is paramount and that should guide your principle of maintaining standard. Right now, the standard has fallen and you are even dealing with a mess and even if you segregate, you are really pushing these children into a mess because the standard is not there,” he said.

    A teacher, Johnson Kalu, who teaches in Umuahia, the Abia State capital, described the policy as one of the ways the North is trying to destroy the education system, adding that they can never catch up with other parts of the country educationally through this means.

    Kalu said when other states were busy educating their children and building schools, the people of the North were busy doing other things. “What this means is that people from the South will go to the North and fill up their quota for them, you cannot stop the people from the south from going to school under any guise,” he said.

    He condemned Tambuwal for not agreeing to Ogene’s suggestion that the Federal Ministry of Education should be asked to suspend the obnoxious admission policy which is not in the best interest of the country.

    A parent from Abia State, Mr Uka Isaac, knows his child who took the examination would have it tough given the high cut-off. He said the policy will not stop the South from outperforming the North.

    “There is nothing they will do that would make them to stop the people from the southern part of the country from going to school; the least they will do is to make us to put our children in private schools. You do not expect me to ask my child to sit at home for another year just because of one stupid government policy, which is designed to make us wait for people who will never catch up with us educationally, even if we wait for another 10 years for them to catch up.”

    A parent in Akwa Ibom State, Mrs. Uduak Effiong, whose daughter, Blessing, is seeking admission into FGC, Ikot Ekpene, is also angry about the disparity cut-off marks.

    “For instance, how could the Federal Ministry of Education apportion 123 cut-off marks to male and female pupils from Akwa Ibom State while Zamfara State is given four marks for males and two for females? It is an injustice and it must be corrected by federal lawmakers,” she said.

    In his reaction, the Programme Director of Centre for Environment, Human Rights and Development, Rivers State, Mr Steve Obodoekwe, said the policy encourages disunity.

    “The people who made that policy should bury their faces in shame because how can you justify the fact that a pupil from Anambra State is supposed to score as high as 139 to gain admission while his or her counterpart from Yobe State only has to score two marks to get the same admission.

    “The policy was put in place to enable the so-called educationally disadvantaged states to catch up with the Igbo who are considered naturally sharp and hardworking. But over the years, these educationally disadvantaged states instead of catching up are retrogressing and so the best thing is for the government to scrap it and let us have a uniform admission policy. “

    What does the future hold?

    Last week, Tambuwal directed the House Committee on Education, chaired by Hon Aminu Suleiman, to investigate the cut-off and quota system used for admission of pupils into the colleges.

    When The Nation asked Hon Suleiman about the investigation when he visited Lagos for the stakeholders’ forum organised by NECO, last Friday, he declined comments on the committee’s findings.

    “What the House did was to raise an observation based on complaints received from members of the general public. And I have been mandated to go and find out and report back to the House; therefore, I am handicapped now. I cannot discuss on this issue since I am basically responsible for the investigation. I won’t let the cat out of the bag yet,” he said.

     

  • Minister decries attack on Olokuta Prison

    Minister of Interior, Comrade Abba Moro, yesterday decried the attack by ‘hoodlums’ on the Olokuta Prison in Akure, Ondo State, where about 175 inmates were set freed.

    Moro, in a statement by his Special Assistant on Media, Mr. Geoge Udoh, described the attack as unreasonable, perpetrated by the people he described as the enemies of progress.

    He said about 48 freed inmates have been re-arrested and security men are working to re-arrest others.

    The minister added that government would do everything to bring to book the perpetrators of the attack.

    He urged the people of Ondo State to go about their activities without fear, saying government has deployed more security personnel in the area.

    The Comptroller- General of the Nigeria Prisons Service (NPS), Mr. Zakari Ibrahim, has reportedly expressed displeasure on the jailbreak.

    He was said to have spoken yesterday when he visited Akure prison to ascertain the level of damage to the facility.

    At press time, the Prisons spokesman, Mr. Ope Fatuminu, who accompanied the NPS boss, could not be reached for comments.

    A prison source said efforts are being made to ensure that the remaining escapees are re-arrested.

     

  • Minister visits victims of derailed train

    •Plans inventory of illegal train tracks

    The Minister of Transport, Senator Idris Umar, has unfolded plans to take inventory of all illegal rail track crossings across the country.

    He spoke during a visit to four victims of the derailed Kano-Lagos in Kaduna.

    Umar said there were moves to prevent re-ccurence of the accident.

    The minister, who also visited Kakau village, site of the derailed passenger train, added that the ministry will soon commence public enlightenment campaign on the need to avoid trading on rail tracks.

    He was accompanied by the Permanent Secretary, Engineer Nebolisa Emodi; Director, Rail and Mass Transit Department, Engineer Bature Gaffai and Managing Director, Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC), Engineer Seyi Sijuwade, among others.

    A statement by the ministry’s Deputy Director, Press and Public Relations, Mrs. Yetunde Sonaike, yesterday in Abuja, stated that the minister assured rail services will commence tomorrow as efforts are made to remove the derailed locomotive and relay the tracks.

    Sijuwade restated plans to design permanent solutions that will involve the blocking of illegal rail track crossings in the country.

    He added that the jingles being produced in local dialects will be relayed on local and national radio stations.

    The team proceeded to Gerard Catholic Hospital Kaduna to commiserate with passengers that were injured.

    He assured the patients and management of the hospital that government will pick the hospital bills.

     

  • Fed Govt registers 10m farmers, says Minister

    Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, said yesterday that 10 million farmers have been registered this year under the Growth Enhancement Support scheme (GES).

    Speaking during a visit to Katsina State Governor Ibrahim Shema, Adesina said in Katsina State alone, 196, 000 farmers were registered.

    He said the Federal Government was determined to give the registered farmers fertilisers, chemicals and improved seeds.

    “Government will also provide crop insurance to them in case of drought. In Katsina State, 196,000 farmers have registered for the 2013 cropping season.”

    The minister also said farmers produced nine million tonnes of food between 2011 and 2012, representing 85 per cent above the targeted five million tonnes.

    According to him, the achievement has reduced the proportion of poor people in the country from 19.3 per cent in 1992 to 8.5 per cent in 2012.

    Dr. Adesina also told Governor Shema that Nigeria had met the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 1 target on reducing the number of hungry people in the country by half, three years ahead of the targeted date.

    “By 2015, the Federal Government is expecting that 3.2 million tonnes of rice will be cultivated; 1.1 million tonnes was cultivated in 2012 in 10 states.

    “The Federal Government is also sure that by 2015, over 3.5 million jobs will be created by the sector; 2.2 million jobs were created in 2012.”

    Governor Shema said the state had cultivated 15,000 hectares through irrigation farming, adding that Nigeria would soon become an exporter rather than an importer of food.

    He pledged the support of the government toward enhancing agricultural productivity.