Tag: Muhammadu Buhari

  • APC chieftain lauds Buhari for reappointing Boss, Kyari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has been commended for reappointing the duo of Mr. Boss Mustapha and Abba Kyari as Secretary to the Federal Government and Chief of Staff respectively.

    Giving the commendation in a statement in Warri on Monday, a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the South-South, Hon. Tare Amatare, said the duo deserved the reappointment.

    According to Amatare, the duo had over the period they served in the same positions in the last administration, proven to be good administrators, who understood the jobs they were assigned to do and did them with conscience and devotion.

    Read Also: APC has unfinished business, says Osoba

    “Boss Mustapha and Abba Kyari are pan-Nigerianists, who always believe and place the interest of Nigeria first in the course of discharging their duties to their fatherland and above all great patriots who believe in unity, peace and progress of Nigeria.

    “While I commend President Buhari for deeming it fit reassigning them on these national assignments, I express the confidence that both men will always make Nigerians proud while discharging their duties.

    “I wish them well in the course of discharging their duties and urge all Nigerians to continue to give both men and President Buhari the needed support in order to move Nigeria to next the level”, he said.

     

  • Photos: Buhari holds bilateral meeting with UN Deputy Secretary General

    President Muhammadu Buhari holds bilateral meeting with the United Nations Deputy Secretary-General Ms Amina Mohammed, Head of Libya’s Government of National Accord Mr. Fayez Al-Sarraj on the sidelines of the 12th Extraordinary Session of the Assembly of African Union Heads of State and Government on The African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA), in Niger Republic.

     

     

  • Just in: Buhari challenges admissibility of form containing his biodata

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday challenged  admissibility of the form containing his bio-data at the presidential tribunal.

    The presidential election petition tribunal continued hearing in the petition filed by the PDP, it’s Presidential Candidate, Atiku Abubakar challenging Buhari’s victory.

    Details shortly…

     

  • Buhari pledges support for Libya’s stability

    President Muhammadu Buhari has pledged Nigeria’s continued support for Libya’s quest to regain political and security stability.

    Buhari spoke during a bilateral meeting with the Head of Libya’s Government of National Accord (GNA), Fayez Al-Sarraj, on the margins of the African Union Summit in Niamey, Niger Republic, on Sunday.

    He noted that there were over 6000 Nigerians in Libya, who see Libya as a gateway to Europe.

    ‘‘We will do our best to help Libya stabilise,’’ he stated in a statement issued by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina

    The President also discussed recent developments in the North African country as well as bilateral issues between Nigeria and Libya with Mr. Al-Sarraj.

    President Buhari said the humanitarian crisis arising from insurgency and the drying up of Lake Chad, which has affected over 30 million people in the region who depended on the Lake for farming, fishing and animal husbandry has forced some Nigerians to defy the desert to make perilous journeys across the Mediterranean and the Sahara Desert to Europe.

    Read Also: Buhari needs prayers, says TB Joshua

    Also, in a separate audience with UN Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, President Buhari stressed the role the international community needed to play in recharging the Lake, noting that the financial cost was beyond the affected countries.

    He decried the menace of terrorism in the Sahel countries, noting that the instability in Libya has been a negative force on the Sahel.

    The Head of Libya’s GNA told the President that there had been a lot of deaths and injuries in his country, pledging however that his government was determined to put an end to the situation.

    ‘‘The aggression must stop. The solution is not military alone we also believe in diplomacy. We are also victims of terrorism, just like Nigeria,’’ he said.

    Al-Sarraj declared that Libya contributed a lot to the establishment and survival of the AU, adding that it was now time for Africa to reciprocate.

    On her part, the Deputy Secretary-General told the President that growing security challenges in Africa were adversely affecting development and undermining the attainment of Sustaining Development Goals (SDGs).

    She said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will host the SDGs Summit during the high-level week of the 74th Session of the General Assembly in September, and will use the occasion to call for a road map for a decade of delivery of the sustainable development targets.

    The Deputy Secretary-General also congratulated President Buhari for signing the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Agreement at the AU Summit in Niamey, saying ‘‘the entire world was waiting for Nigeria.’’

  • AfCFTA: Free trade must be fair, says Buhari

    WITH the signing of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement by President Muhammadu Buhari at the opening of the African Union (AU) Summit yesterday in Miami, Niger, Nigeria has joined the AfCFTA.

    President Buhari signed the treaty at exactly 10: 47am in the presence of African Heads of States and Governments, delegates and representatives from the private sector, civil society and the media attending the 12th Extraordinary Summit of the AU Launch of the Operational Phase of the AfCFTA.

    According to a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina, the President, after signing the agreement, declared that Nigeria’s commitment to trade and African integration had  never been in doubt nor was it ever under threat.

    He told the Summit that Nigeria will build on the event by proceeding expeditiously with the ratification of the AfCFTA.

    The statement reads: ‘‘Nigeria wishes to emphasise that free trade must also be fair trade. As African leaders, our attention should now focus on implementing the AfCFTA in a way that develops our economies and creates jobs for our young, dynamic and hardworking population.

    ‘‘I wish to assure you that Nigeria shall sustain its strong leadership role in Africa, in the implementation of the AfCFTA. We shall also continue to engage, constructively with all African countries to build the Africa that we want.’’

    Buhari also congratulated Ghana on being selected to host the Secretariat of the AfCFTA.

    President Buhari went on: “I have just had the honour of signing the agreement establishing the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), on behalf of my country, the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    ‘‘This is coming over a year since the AfCFTA Agreement was opened for signature in Kigali, Rwanda, at the 10th Extraordinary Summit of the AU, on 21st of March 2018.

    ‘‘In fact, you will recall that the treaty establishing the African Economic Community was signed in Abuja in 1991.

    ‘‘We fully understand the potential of the AfCFTA to transform trade in Africa and contribute towards solving some of the continent’s challenges, whether security, economic or corruption.

    ‘‘But it is also clear to us that for AfCFTA to succeed, we need the full support and buy-in of our private sector and civil society stakeholders and the public in general.

    ‘‘It is against this background that we embarked on an extensive nationwide consultation and sensitization programme of our domestic stakeholders on the AfCFTA.

    ‘‘Our consultations and assessments reaffirmed that the AfCFTA can be a platform for African manufacturers of goods and providers of service to construct regional value chains for made in Africa goods and services.

    ‘‘It was also obvious that we have a lot of work to do to prepare our nation to achieve our vision for intra-African trade which is the free movement of ‘made in Africa goods.

    Read Also: Free trade must be fair trade, says Buhari

    ‘‘Some of the critical challenges that we identified will require our collective action as a Union and we will be presenting them for consideration at the appropriate AfCFTA fora.

    ‘‘Examples are tackling injurious trade practices by third parties and attracting the investment we need to grow local manufacturing and service capacities.’’

    President Buhari noted that Nigeria’s signing of the AfCFTA and its Operational Launch at the 12th Extraordinary Summit was an additional major step forward on the AU’s Agenda 2063.

    With Nigeria and Benin Republic signing the Agreement at the Summit, 54 out of 55 African countries have signed the world’s largest free trade area deal, encompassing 55 countries and 1.2 billion people.

    Eritrea is the only country yet to sign the agreement.

    Twenty-six countries have deposited instruments of ratification, with Gabon being the latest after depositing hers during the Extraordinary Summit.

    The AfCFTA Agreement entered into force on May 30, 2019, 30 days after having received the 22nd instrument of ratification on 29 April, 2019 in conformity with legal provision.

     

    African leaders launch free-trade zone

     

    THE Continental Free-Trade Zone (CFTZ) launched yesterday by African leaders will create $3.4 trillion economic bloc, usher in a new era of development and unite 1.3 billion people.

    After four years of talks, an agreement to form a 55-nation trade bloc was reached in March, paving the way for yesterday’s African Union (AU) summit in Niger.

    Attendees are to unveil which nation will host the trade zone’s headquarters, when trading will start and discuss how exactly it will work, it was learnt yesterday.

    It is hoped that the AfCFTA – the largest since the creation of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 1994 – will help unlock Africa’s long-stymied economic potential by boosting intra-regional trade, strengthening supply chains and spreading expertise.

    Egyptian President and AU Chairman Abdel Fattah al-Sisi at the summit’s opening said: “The eyes of the world are turned to Africa.

    “AfCFTA will reinforce our negotiating position on the international stage. It will represent an important step.’’

    Africa has much to do: its intra-regional trade accounted for just 17 per cent of exports in 2017 as against 59 per cent in Asia and 69 per cent in Europe.

    The continent has missed out on the economic booms that other trade blocs have experienced in recent decades.

    Economists say significant challenges remain, including poor road and rail links, large areas of unrest, excessive border bureaucracy and petty corruption that have held back growth and integration.

    Members have committed to eliminating tariffs on most goods, which will increase trade in the region by between 15 per cent and 25 per cent in the medium term.

    But this would double if these other issues were dealt with, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates.

    The IMF, in its May report, described a free-trade zone as a potential “economic game-changer” of the kind that has boosted growth in Europe and North America, but it added a note of caution, saying: “Reducing tariffs alone is not sufficient.’’

    Africa already has an alphabet soup of competing and overlapping trade zones – ECOWAS in the west, EAC in the east, SADC in the south and COMESA in the east and south.

    But only the EAC, driven mainly by Kenya, has made significant progress toward a common market in goods and services.

    These Regional Economic Communities (REC) will continue to trade among themselves as they do now.

    AfCFTA has a mandate to liberalise trade among those member states that are not currently in the same REC, said Trudi Hartzenberg, Director at Tralac, a South Africa-based trade law organisation.

  • Reps restate commitment to cordial relationship with Executive

    The House of Representatives has reiterated its commitment to work harmoniously with the Executive as President Muhammadu Buhari confirmed the reappointment of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Boss Mustapha, and the Chief of Staff (COS) to the President, Mallam Abba Kyari.

    Deputy Speaker Idris Wase made the promise at the weekend while congratulating the two for their re-appointment.

    In a statement by his Chief Press Secretary (CPS), Umar Puma, the lawmaker said the reappointment was timely, appropriate and deserving.

    Read Also: Setting the agenda for Abba Kyari’s second coming

    According to him, the duo contributed significantly to the Change Agenda of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “He (Wase) enjoined them to build on the policies that have defined them as good administrators while sustaining the programmes and developmental agenda of President Buhari’s administration.

    “Wase also commended the President for the re-appointment and expressed National Assembly’s redness to continue to work with the them in order to turn around the fortunes of our beloved nation Nigeria,” the statement added.

  • A settlement isn’t a ranch

    IS it true that the implementation of the controversial herders’ settlement project, called Ruga settlements, had started in some states before the Federal Government suspended the scheme?

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, had said: “Federal Executive Council (FEC) had approved the establishment of Ruga settlements in any state that is willing to have it. The pilot scheme has already taken off in about 12 states; there is no imposition on any state.” It is unclear which states were involved as no state was mentioned.

    According to Shehu, “Ruga Settlement” that seeks to settle migrant pastoral families simply means rural settlement in which animal farmers, not just cattle herders, will be settled in an organised place with provision of necessary and adequate basic amenities such as schools, hospitals, road networks, vet clinics, markets and manufacturing entities that will process and add value to meats and animal products.” He added: “The overall benefit to the nation includes a drastic reduction in conflicts between herders and farmers…”

    The Presidency suspended the project after declaring that there’s no going back. The reasons given for the suspension of the project exposed untidy planning as well as untidy monitoring. It was discovered that the Ruga Project contradicted the National Livestock Transformation Programme (NLTP) adopted by the National Economic Council (NEC).  The Ruga settlements were said to have created a wrong impression that the Federal Government was trying to take over land belonging to states and the people in those states.

    Read Also: Don’t revisit Ruga, Bishop warns Buhari

    Corruption was involved. “It was also discovered that the contract sums allocated for various aspects of the programme were heavily overpriced,” a report said. “For instance, purchases of solar panels were put at tens of millions of naira each, while boreholes were also to be procured at an average cost of N20 million each.”

    It is alarming that corruption was a factor. It suggests that the Buhari administration’s war against corruption has not been effective enough to serve as a deterrent. Corruption continues to corrupt the war on terror and the running of the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps, for instance.

    The Federal Government isn’t giving up on finding a solution to the perennial herders/farmers clashes. A new implementation committee is expected to start work soon.

    However, a Ruga settlement, as described by the presidential spokesman, is not the same thing as a ranch. The Ruga Project, as described, places emphasis on herders, rather than cattle. In other words, the Ruga concept creates exclusive spaces for herders with public funds, at the expense of others.  That is objectionable.

  • Manufacturers to cut 20,000 jobs over steel importation

    NO fewer than 20,000 jobs would be axed in the iron and steel sector if the Federal Government fails to address the influx of substandard galvanised roofing sheets into the country.

    The umbrella body in the sector, the Galvanised Iron and Steel Manufacturers’ Association  (GISMA), which gave the warning at the weekend in Lagos, accused the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) of not doing enough to checkmate the importation of substandard roofing sheets into the country.

    In a chat with The Nation,  GISMA spokesman, Mr. Lateef Bello, warned that if urgent steps are not taken in the next 30 days, his members may be forced to offload about 20, 000 workforce into the labour market.

    He advised the SON to complement President Muhammadu Buhari’s efforts in the anti-graft fight and comply with the Industrial Roadmap Revolution (IPR).

    He lamented that despite the presence of state coordinators of the agency in the nooks and crannies of the country, the markets are flooded with substandard roofing sheets.

    He said: “We are aware that the SON held a press conference recently  and unveiled its successful seizure of substandard aluminium sheets worth over N200 million from various aluminium companies in Uyo.

    “SON in its address, further confirmed that the minimum thickness of aluminium roofing sheets is 0.4mm. The substandard products with the quality of 0.25mm were, however, imported into Nigeria at the detriment of unsuspecting members of the public.”

    He condemned SON over its attempt to divert the attention away from its core responsibility of providing the atmosphere for steel and iron manufacturers, stressing that aluminium roofing sheet is a smaller fraction of the total market.

    He said: “SON has been silent about the illegalities going on in the endemic smuggling of galvanised plain and coloured roofing sheets in Nigeria. We are categorically requesting that names of perpetrators of such unpatriotic acts be made public in order to reflect transparency and accountability in their operation.

    “It is our expectation that SON should censor some of its officials suspected to be collaborating with smugglers of substandard products by mounting surveillance and detective operational techniques across its branches nationwide.

    “Importation of substandard products is tantamount to waging war against the Federal Government’s policies of discouraging the supply of illicit items capable of causing havoc and short-charging the citizenry.

    “Sparing anyone involved in this dastard acts amounts to aiding and abetting corruption and exposing the nation to ill-infrastructural deficit and challenges.

    “There is need for the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment and SON should investigate if the fine imposed on the offenders is commensurate with the weight of the offence committed.

  • I never criticized Buhari’s appointment – Sen. Sani

    Senator representing Kaduna Central, Uba Sani has ascribed his alleged criticism of President Muhammadu Buhari’s reappointment of Malam Abba Kyari as handiwork of mischief makers bent on portraying him in bad light, noting that such is not in his character.

    Senator Uba Sani stated categorically that, he never criticized President Buhari’s appointment

    In a statement signed by his Chief Constituency Officer, Arch. Abubakar Abubakar, the Senator said, that the posts on the social media by one Shehu Dan Takara and his cohorts is coming from a senatorial candidate who lost to him in the last general elections.

    According to Senator Sani, “The attention of Distinguished Senator Uba Sani has been drawn to posts on Facebook and WhatsApp chat groups by one Shehu Dan Takara and his accomplices. In the said posts, Senator Sani was alleged to have blasted our dear President over his reappointment of Abba Kyari as Chief of Staff.

    “This is mischief taken too far. Investigation has revealed that the posts were fabricated and ascribed to the Distinguished Senator by an aide of a defeated senatorial candidate in the 2019 Kaduna Central Senatorial elections to bring the Distinguished Senator to public ridicule and odium and portray him as disloyal to the President and the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Read Also: Free trade must be fair trade, says Buhari

    “‘The defeated senatorial candidate hopes that through this subterfuge he will warm himself back to the heart of Mr. President and possibly make a return from the political wilderness.

    “We wish to state emphatically that the evil machination is dead on arrival. Distinguished Senator Uba Sani is a key loyalist of President Muhammadu Buhari. He holds the President in the highest esteem and would never do anything to demean our iconic leader.

    “We call on the security agencies to investigate this criminal act by Shehu Dan Takara and his accomplices. Instead of using the social media to receive and share information, the likes of Shehu Dan Takara, on the prompting of desperate politicians, are turning the online platforms into spaces for character assassination and dissemination of falsehoods.

    “Distinguished Senator Uba Sani urges the general public to disregard both the Facebook posts and the one shared to WhatsApp chat groups by Shehu Dan Takara and his cohorts. They are hatchet jobs. They are lies from the pit of hell,” Senator Uba Sani added.

     

  • Breaking: Buhari signs AfCFTA agreement

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Sunday signed the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement.

    He gave the endorsement in Niamey, Niger Republic, making Nigeria the 53rd state on the continent to append its signature to the document.

    Buhari signed the agreement around 10.48 am local time, as the first event at the opening of the 12th Extra Ordinary Summit of the African Union on launch of the Operational Phase of the AfCFTA.

    Read also: AfCFTA: Nigeria shouldn’t lead from behind

    The President had delayed in signing the agreement to give room for extensive consultations with stakeholders.

    The Presidential Committee on Assessment Impact and Readiness had submitted its report last week.

    The committee had recommended that Nigeria should sign the agreement.

    Twenty four countries have already ratified the AfCFTA which is expected to be the world’s largest free trade area since the formation of the World Trade Organization with a potential market of 1.2 billion people and a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of $2 5 trillion, across all 55 member states of the African Union.

    Details shortly…