Tag: Muhammadu Buhari

  • Nigeria to sign UN gas flaring 2030 deadline agreement

    Nigeria to sign UN gas flaring 2030 deadline agreement

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday said that Nigeria intends to sign the United Nations Agreement on Zero Routing Gas Flaring by 2030.

    This will be done with the support of the National Assembly.

    Buhari, who spoke through Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at the opening of the 6th African Petroleum Congress and Exhibition in Abuja, also disclosed that the federal government has set an earlier national target of 2020 to end gas flaring in the country.

    He said that ending gas flaring was an imperative for African oil producers considering the amount of waste involved.

    The President, in a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, also called on African countries to take advantage of the gas-to-power potentials.

    He observed that “there is also the gas-to-power challenge in many member-states and the paradox of much gas but precious little gas to fire power plants.”

    “It’s time to take a much further stand on gas flaring, both from environmental and a waste-of-needed-resources  perspectives,” he told the gathering composed of oil and energy ministers from several African countries and chieftains in the oil and gas sector.

    He explained that the incremental use of gas in Africa’s energy mix has become an imperative stressing that if Africa must meet her future energy needs, the issue of the development of a robust gas infrastructure must be jointly addressed.

    Of  the over 150 billion cubit metres of associated gas being flared annually in the world, he saud that  Africa flares an estimated 40 billion cubit metres, while about half of that is flared by Nigeria.

    He further observed that Nigeria has the 7th largest deposit of gas in the world with reserves estimated at over 185 trillion cubic feet (TCF) and also the highest quality.

    He said that with the present volatility in the industry, the coming years would be defining for African oil and gas producing countries.

    The President suggested that developing local content initiatives and policies would be very useful for the sector, while also adding that “a common approach to local content will ensure that the whole of Africa benefit from economy of scale associated with vast resources.”

    With the current oil prices and the challenges faced in the industry, he said that the relevance and creativity of the African Petroleum Producers Association “is being tested.”

    The President assured that the continent has all the resources needed to transform African countries stating that “there is no reason why the African oil and gas industry should remain attached to the apron springs of industries elsewhere.”

    Expressing the need for African oil producing countries to take their destiny in their hands, he challenged African Petroleum Producers Association (APPA) member-countries to recognize the latent and huge resources in Africa and develop the strategy for the development of domestic refining capacity in the oil and gas critical for sustainable economic growth.

    “We must explore mechanisms to expand regional refining capacities in an efficient and cost effective manner”, he said.

  • Maritime policy: Buhari leads security team to Guinea

    To achieve greater security of lives, resources and investments in all parts of the country and its sub-region, President Muhammadu Buhari will travel to Malabo on Monday for talks with President Obiang Nguema Mbasogo of Equatorial Guinea.

    The talks will centre on measures to protect the people and resources of the Niger Delta and Gulf of Guinea.

    The conclusion and signing of an agreement by Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea for the establishment of a combined maritime policing and security patrol committee on Tuesday is expected to be the major outcome of President Buhari’s talks with his host.

    A statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said that President Buhari and President Mbasogo are also expected to discuss and agree on other collaborative measures to combat crimes such as piracy, crude oil theft, attacks on oil rigs, arms smuggling and human trafficking in the Gulf of Guinea.

    Both leaders will also confer on the rescheduling of the joint summit of the Economic Community of West African States and the Economic Community of Central African States on additional cooperative measures to curb terrorism and violent extremism in West and Central Africa.

    The summit was to have been hosted by Equatorial Guinea last year but was postponed because of Nigeria’s general elections.

    In accordance with the main focus and agenda of the trip, President Buhari will be accompanied by the Minister of Defence, Brig.-Gen. Mansur Dan-Ali (rtd.), the National Security Adviser, Maj.-Gen. Babagana Monguno (rtd.) and other senior security officials.

    He is scheduled to return to Abuja on Tuesday.

  • MTN contributed to high Boko Haram casualties- Buhari

    MTN contributed to high Boko Haram casualties- Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday said that the slow registration of Nigerians on the MTN lines by the service providers contributed to  the  killing of at least 10, 000 innocent Nigerians by the insurgents, Boko Haram.

    He made the remark during a joint press conference after holding closed door meeting with South African President, Jacob Zuma at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    According to him, the concern of the Federal Government was purely security and not the fine imposed on MTN.

    Answering questions on Tuesday, Buhari said: “This is the first time I will be personally as a president  making a public comment about it. The concern of the federal government is basically on the security and not the fine imposed on MTN.

    “You know how the unregistered GSM are being used by terrorists. And between 2009 and today, at least 10,000 Nigerians were killed by Boko Haram.

    “That was why NCC asked MTN, Glo and the rest of them to register GSM. Unfortunately, MTN was very, very slow and contributed to the casualties,” he added.

  • Corruption war: Woman donates pension to Buhari

    A pensioner, Mrs. Rose Arabameh Julius, has donated her monthly pension of Ten thousand naira (N10,000) to support the Buhari administration’s war against corruption.

    Mrs. Julius,  who retired as a cleaner from the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, also promised to contribute N1,000 every month out of her pension towards the rehabilitation of Internally Displaced Persons.

    She said that she was making the donation because she was convinced that President Muhammadu Buhari is a tested man of integrity who can  be trusted to restore the lost glory of Nigeria and drastically curb corruption in the country.

    According to a statement signed by Abiodun Oladunjoye on behalf of the Special Adviser to the President Media & Publicity, Femi Adesina, the pensioner also commended the President’s efforts to end the Boko Haram insurgency and rehabilitate internally displaced persons.

    Receiving the donation on behalf of President Buhari, the Special Adviser to the President (Media & Publicity), Mr. Femi Adesina thanked Mrs.  Julius for her faith in the Buhari administration.

    “We have a pact with Nigerians to change things for the better and we are on the right track. President Buhari and his team are working tirelessly to  revamp the economy, combat terrorism and curb corruption,” Adesina said.

  • Buhari appoints ex- Lagos Deputy Governor SSA on SDGs

    Buhari appoints ex- Lagos Deputy Governor SSA on SDGs

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday approved the appointment of Mrs. Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire as his Senior Special Assistant on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    Mrs. Orelope-Adefulire, who served as Deputy-Governor of Lagos State in the administration of Babatunde Fashola, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, is an accomplished politician with many years of experience in public service.

    She has also served as Commissioner for Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation in Lagos State.

  • Nigeria joins Islamic coalition against terror

    Nigeria joins Islamic coalition against terror

    President Muhammadu Buhari has admitted that Nigeria has joined the Islamic Coalition against terrorism being championed by Saudi Arabia.

    Buhari made the disclosure during an interview with Aljareeza, which was broadcast at the weekend.

    When asked whether Nigeria was part of the coalition, Buhari said: “We are part of it because we’ve got terrorists in Nigeria that everybody knows which claim that they are Islamic.

    “So, if there’s an Islamic coalition to fight terrorism, Nigeria will be part of it because we are casualties of Islamic terrorism,” he added.

    On whether Nigeria became a member of the coalition during his meeting with King Salman Bin Abdul-Aziz in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia recently, Buhari said “yes.”

    He said that he could not disclose the details of how such coalition would work for Nigeria when asked during the interview.

    But he said: “Well, that we mentioned under Lake Chad Basin Commission, our regional grouping compromising Cameroon, Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Benin and we dedicated a certain number of troops to be deployed in our own sub-region and I don’t think we have to tell the press the details of that.”

    On whether joining the Islamic coalition will serve Nigerian security interest, he said: “Certainly. I’ve just told you it is the Boko Haram itself that declared loyalty to ISIS.

    “ISIS is basically based in Islamic countries. Now, if there’s a coalition to fight Islamic terrorism, why can’t Nigeria be part of it, while those that are fighting in Nigeria as Boko Haram claim to be Muslims. But the way they are doing it is anti-Islamic, he said.

    When his interviewer pointed out that since Nigeria was roughly evenly divided among Christians and Muslims and that some Christians were complaining that he was giving Islamic identity to Nigeria, Buhari wondered why such Christians had not gone to fight Boko Haram in the North or militants sabotaging installations in the South.

    “Why can’t those Christians that complained go and fight terrorism in Nigeria or fight the militancy in the South. It’s Nigeria that matters, not the opinion of some religious bigots,” he stated.

    On whether he was trying to change the religious identity of the country, Buhari noted: “How can I change the religious identity of Nigeria?

    “No religion advocates hurting the innocent and just because the Muslims are the ones that claim to be Boko Haram and they are killing innocent people whether in the church, in the bus or in the market place, then I will just sit and look at them because I too am a Muslim? Islam is against injustice in any form.”

    Buhari’s admission of Nigeria’s membership of the Islamic coalition came barely two weeks after an official Presidency statement seemed to suggest that Buhari had turned down the invitation to be part of the coalition.

    A statement issued by the Senior Special Adviser to the President (Media and Publicity), Garba Shehu, during the president’s trip to Saudi Arabia had said that Buhari had pledged Nigeria’s support for the coalition even if it would not be part of it.

    The statement had said that two leaders who engaged in extensive discussions on regional and global issues also agreed that terrorism posed a common threat to their states and would require close cooperation to prevail over the threats.

    It observed that President Buhari who was making his first pronouncement on the invitation to join the coalition of Islamic states against terror spearheaded by the Saudis congratulated the Kingdom on its formation.

    The statement quoted Buhari thus: “Even if we are not a part of it, we support you. I must thank the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for the recent creation of a coalition to address the menace of international terrorism. Nigeria will support your efforts in keeping peace and stopping the spread of terror in your region. This is in consonance with our own commitment and on-going efforts in seeking to stamp out Boko Haram terrorists from the West African sub-region and Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC).”

  • Buhari seeks OPEC members’ cooperation to stabilize oil market

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Sunday in Doha emphasised the need for member states of Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and non-OPEC members to cooperate and find a common ground to stabilize crude oil prices.

    Speaking at a bilateral meeting with the Sheikh Tamim Bin Hammad Al-Thani, the Emir of the State of Qatar, President Buhari described the current market situation in the industry, which has seen oil prices plummet by 70 per cent since mid-2014, as ‘totally unacceptable’.

    Buhari, in a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said: “As members of OPEC and Gas Exporting Countries Forum (GECF), our relations in the areas of oil and gas, which our two nations heavily rely on, need to be enhanced and coordinated for the benefit of our people.”

    “The current market situation in the oil industry is unsustainable and totally unacceptable.

    “We must cooperate both within and outside our respective organisations to find a common ground to stabilize the market, which will be beneficial to our nations,’’ the President said on the second day of his state visit to Qatar. ”

    He used the occasion of his address to the Emir to commend the existing cordial bilateral relations between both countries and invited prospective Qatari investors to take advantage of the abundant opportunities in Nigeria and invest in the key areas of energy, agriculture, real estate development, banking and finance.

    The President also assured prospective investors of government protection of their persons and investment, noting that in the course of his visit, the delegations from Nigeria and Qatar would formalize at least two bilateral agreements to boost economic cooperation between both countries.

    He also weighed-in on the situation in the Middle East, commending the role Qatar is playing in resolving the present Syrian crisis, the Palestinian cause and efforts in reconstructing Gaza.

    He said: “The conflicts in Yemen and Syria with their attendant humanitarian crisis need genuine international effort to solve. Nigeria as a peace loving country identifies with the State of Qatar in all her peace efforts in the world to end terrorist activities.

    “Nigeria is a victim of terrorism. It is with heavy heart that I stand before you and say activities of Boko Haram have led to loss of many lives and displacement of innocent people in our dear nation.

    “We, however, take pride to inform you that since our coming to power, Boko Haram has been systematically decimated and are in no position to cause serious threat to our development programs.

    “I wish to reiterate that Nigeria rejects violence and extremism in all their ramifications, and assure your Highness that we are with the State of Qatar in your efforts to fight terrorism and injustice in your region and in the world at large.’’

    President Buhari also called for a lasting solution to the Israeli – Palestinian conflict , saying “we in Nigeria, like the State of Qatar, favour a ‘Two State’ solution, with the State of Palestine living side by side with the State of Israel.

    “I want to assure you that we will stand side by side with you, until our brothers and sisters in Palestine achieve their desired objectives.

    “Our support for various Security Council resolutions restoring and respecting 1967 boundaries with Jerusalem as capital of Palestine is firm and unshaken,’’ he said.

  • Buhari to visit Saudi Arabia, Qatar

    Buhari to visit Saudi Arabia, Qatar

    President Muhammadu Buhari will begin a week-long official visit to Saudi Arabia and Qatar from Monday.

    Buhari, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, will be accompanied by a high-powered Federal Government delegation, including the Minister of State (Petroleum) and Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, (NNPC), Dr. Ibe Kachikwu.

    The President will first fly to Riyadyh for talks on Tuesday with King Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud and senior officials of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

    The statement said that ongoing efforts by Nigeria and other members of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to achieve greater stability in the price of crude oil exports are expected to be high on the agenda of discussions between President Buhari and the Saudi Monarch.

    Crude oil prices and market stability will also be top when President Buhari goes on to Doha on Saturday for talks on Sunday with the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.

    The President is also scheduled to meet with leading Saudi and Qatari businessmen in Riyadh and Doha, and invite them to support his administration’s efforts to revamp the Nigerian economy by taking advantage of the great investment opportunities currently available in Nigeria’s mining, agriculture, power supply, infrastructure, transportation, communications and other sectors.

    President Buhari’s other engagements in Saudi Arabia include meetings with heads of international financial organisations and multilateral associations.

    Before going on to Doha, the President will also visit Medina and Mecca to pray for greater peace, prosperity and progress in Nigeria.

  • ‘Why Niger Delta must support Buhari’s anti-graft war’

    ‘Why Niger Delta must support Buhari’s anti-graft war’

    A member of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly, Mr. Israel Sunny- Goli of the All Progressives Congress ( APC), Saturday, warned youths in the Niger Delta region against sabotaging oil facilities.

    Sunny-Goli who represents Brass Constituency I said all efforts should be geared towards supporting the efforts of the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu and President Muhammadu Buhari to reposition the oil industry.

    He said the current administration was waging war against corruption that had afflicted the oil industry over the years.

    The lawmaker pledged to mobilize the people of his constituency and the Niger Delta to support Buhari’s efforts to sanitize the oil industry.

    He said his team would provide information that would expose economic saboteurs in the coastal communities of the region.

    Sunny-Goli who is the Minority leader and House Committee Chairman on Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) spoke in Yenagoa, the state capital.

    He said Kachikwu had demonstrated commitment in reforming the oil sector since his appointment as the Group Managing Director of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and Minister of State for Petroleum.

    He insisted that the people of the region would be the greatest beneficiaries of a reformed oil sector in terms of development and empowerment.

    He said: “President Muhammadu Buhari has provided another opportunity to re-position the oil industry through Dr Ibe Kachikwu and we the people of the Niger Delta especially in Bayelsa must support the efforts of the current administration.

    “The recent decision to build mega filling station in each senatorial district is a welcome development. Aside the fact that it would ensure efficient distribution and country-wide penetration of petroleum products, for us in coastal communities of Bayelsa state it is a welcome development as we would now have access to petroleum products.

    “Also the decision to discuss and negotiate with international oil companies and banks to raise capital for new drilling which would raise Nigeria’s output to 2.5 million barrels per day is a laudable idea which the people of the region must support.

    “The discussions with oil majors on how to revamp oil assets like refineries and decisions to advertise for concessions for pipelines and depots are progressive ideas which the people of the Niger Delta have yearned for over the years.

    “More importantly the discussions with the National Assembly on the need to speed up the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) which oil communities would benefit from is what every Niger Deltan should support.”

    On pipeline vandalism and attack on oil facilities, Sunny- Goli commended the recent moves by the Federal Government to mobilize the military to prevent sabotage.

    He stressed that other security agencies should collaborate with the military to rid the Niger Delta region of economic saboteurs.

  • Nigeria lost momentum with Murtala’s demise, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday said that the demise of former Head of State, Late General Murtala Mohammad made Nigeria to lose momentum on its stride to greatness.

    Murtala Muhammed was assassinated in a military coup on Feb. 13, 1976.

    Speaking at the Murtala Muhammed 40th Memorial Lecture in Abuja, President Buhari said that Late Murtala Muhammed was loyal and dedicated to one Nigeria.

    He challenged Nigerians to always demonstrate the virtues of loyalty, honesty and determination like Muhammad rather than mourn his death.

    Imbibing these virtues, he said will make Nigeria better.

    He said that Nigerians mourned the death of Murtala because he was on his way to putting Nigeria back to the path of order and discipline, after years of drift, corruption and near despair.

    According to him, Murtala’s motto was to get the job done as quickly as possible, stressing that no one could doubt his inspirational qualities or call into question his love and dedication in the service of Nigeria.

    Buhari also listed two major developments among Murtala Muhammed’s legacies to include movement of the capital to Abuja from Lagos and the creations of seven new States.

    Pointing out that Muhammed was his senior in the Army, he said that he developed a great liking and respect for him on account of his professional excellence, competence, straight forwardness and genuine interest and concern for up-and-coming officers like him.

    But he said: “Of course, no one is without flaws. He was a man in a hurry, and sometimes this could make him appear abrupt or even moody.

    “But what he could not tolerate was incompetence and idleness. By the time Murtala was given Command during the Civil War, the Federal side was on the defensive.

    “The rebels had over-ran the then Mid-West, and reached as far as Ore, just 100 miles from Lagos.

    “By dint of sheer bravery, improvisation and resourcefulness, he mustered a rag-tag group of soldiers, integrated them into an entirely new division, knocked them into fighting shape, recovered Mid-West and ventured across the Niger.”

    The Vice President of the Board of Trustees of the Murtala Muhammed Foundation, Lt. Gen. Theophilus Danjuma (Rtd.), expressed great joy for being associated with the late Murtala Muhammed early in life.

    He commended the efforts of the foundation and advised its leadership to embark on aggressive media campaign with a view to educating members of the public on its activities and achievements so far.

    The guest speaker at the event, Mr David Richards, who spoke on the topic, ‘Regional Security and State Building: Portents and prospects.’, noted that inter-state and intra-states rivalries had continued to make the world unstable for mankind.

    Richards, who is a former Chief of Staff and professional head of the British Armed Forces, therefore challenged leaders to find lasting solutions to socio-political crises across the world.

    The Chief Executive officer of the Murtala Muhammed Foundation, Mrs Aisha Muhammed-Oyebode, saluted President Muhammadu Buhari for embarking on the crusade against corruption in the country.

    Muhammed-Oyebode also commended the efforts of the Buhari-led administration towards the fight against Boko Haram insurgency in the North Eastern states of the federation.

    She was hopeful that the abducted Chibok schoolgirls would soon be rescued in view of the successes being recorded by the Nigeria Army and other security agencies in the country.