Tag: Nasarawa State

  • Distribute pre-paid meters to electricity customers, says Nasarawa Govt

    Distribute pre-paid meters to electricity customers, says Nasarawa Govt

    The Nasarawa State Government on Saturday called on the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) to distribute pre-paid meters to all electricity customers in the state.

    The State’s Deputy Governor, Mr Silas Agara, made the call at a Town Hall meeting organised by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) in Lafia.

    Agara, represented by Mr Mohammed Wada, the Commissioner for Works and Transports, said that customers were short-changed through overbilling, estimated billing, among others.

    “The only way the customers will be satisfied is when they have pre-paid meters and sure that they only pay for electricity consumed.

    “The state government has donated land and offered to facilitate the installation of a 3000 KVA transformer in Lafia.

    “If the transformer is installed, it will go a long way in addressing the poor electricity supply in the state,’’ he said.

    Also, Moses Arigu, the NERC Commissioner in charge of Consumers Affairs, assured electricity consumers of the commission’s determination to ensure that distribution companies adhere to the operational guidelines.

    “The commission has concluded plans to open an office in Lafia for the consumers to channel their complaints for redress,’’ he said.

    In his remarks, Christian Chime, the Acting Regional Manager of AEDC, apologised to electricity customers, for the problems they were going through due to poor electricity supply.

    Chime said that the company had taken their complaints and would soon address them to ensure improved electricity supply.

    He said that the company would embark on massive instillation of pre-paid meters in the state, urging the customers not to pay for its installation.

    Some of the customers, who spoke at the event, had complained about poor electricity supply in the state and total absence of electricity for more than three months in some areas.

  • Court grants divorce to woman abandoned for seven years

    Court grants divorce to woman abandoned for seven years

    A Grade 1 Area Court, Aso Pada, Mararaba in Nasarawa State, on Thursday dissolved the 14-year-old marriage between Maureen Eke, and her husband, Chukwunoye Emmanuel, over abandonment.

  • Nasarawa donates 500 mattresses, blankets, to prisoners

    Nasarawa donates 500 mattresses, blankets, to prisoners

    Nasarawa State Government has donated 500 mattresses and blankets to Nigeria Prison Service for prompt distribution to prisons across the state.

    Alhaji Abdullahi Mohammed, Secretary to the State Government (SSG) presented the items in Lafia on Wednesday to Mr Ekwere Ekanem, the Comptroller of Prisons in the state.

    Mohammed said the donation was in fulfillment of the state governor’s promise during his visit to the Lafia prison on Democracy Day.

    “Our caring governor has gladly given approval for the purchase of these products to be released to the prison service for distribution to prisoners across the state to alleviate hardship they face in the prisons.

    “I pray that it will prove useful to our prisons in the state, rehabilitate and mould the character of the prisoners in the near future to be responsible and law abiding Nigerians’’, he said.

    Responding, Ekanem expressed joy over the gesture, saying it would add value to the living condition of the inmates.

    “We are indeed very grateful for what we are witnessing this afternoon. When the governor made the pledge, we never anticipated it would be so soon.

    “ This shows the magnanimity and caring heart he posses and we are indeed grateful’’, he said.

    The controller revealed that some of the inmates sleep on bare floor or share bed with other inmates.

    “Some of these mattresses will immediately go to Lafia prisons for distribution and during the week, other prisons across the state will get their share.

    “As i am talking to you, some of these inmates are sleeping on bare floor or sharing; this is not what we want in our prisons,” he said.

  • Demolition: Breeze FM sues NASG, demands N1.5 billion

    Demolition: Breeze FM sues NASG, demands N1.5 billion

    The Management of Breeze 99.9 FM, Lafia has dragged the Nasarawa State Government to court over the demolition of the private radio station.

    In the suit filed at High Court 4, Lafia, the station is demanding N1.5 billion as compensation for damages it suffered following the demolition of the structures housing the outfit, and the communication equipment inside them.

    According to Mr Ocha Ulegede, Counsel to Breeze FM, the station is also praying the court to declare the action of the state government “illegal, unconstitutional, high-handed and vindictive”.

    “We are asking for public apology and monetary damages totaling  more than of N1.5 billion.

    “We also want the court to restrain the state government from carrying out further demolition of the property because we have it on good authority that they are planning to demolish other structures housing other facilities,” he said.

    The counsel said that the monetary demand of N1.5 billion was for general damages, while N17.8 million was in compensation for special damage for the unlawful act.

    “From the documents available to us, the government did not serve any notice to the management of the station as required by the law.

    “The radio station followed due process and met all requirements before it was given the licence to operate by the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC).

    “There is no law in Nasarawa State that specifically designated places for residential and commercials purposes; so, no law was breached,” he said.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the state government demolished the radio station on May 20, 2017, citing violation of land approval laws.

    Governor Umaru Al-Makura has said that the radio station would be made to pay a fine for violating the approved land laws.

    No date has been fixed for the hearing of the case.

  • Yam growers bemoan non-inclusion in FG’s yam export drive

    Yam growers bemoan non-inclusion in FG’s yam export drive

    The Yam Growers Association of Nigeria (YAGAN) has accused the Federal Government of neglecting the country’s yam farmers in its nascent yam export drive.

    Alhaji Shuaibu Idris, the President of the association, expressed the viewpoint on Tuesday in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

    He said that the government had failed to carry the association along in its yam export initiative.

    He underscored the need to involve YAGAN in all the processes of the yam export programme, saying that its contribution to the success of the initiative should not be underestimated.

    “We are the growers and the producers, we know where it pinches and what to do to fill the gaps; everything is not about research alone, we should be considered relevant to the project,’’ he said.

    Idris noted that the Technical Committee on Nigeria Yam Export Programme (TCNYEP), in its assignment, liaised with the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA), the National Root Crops Research Institute (NRCRI) and other relevant stakeholders.

    He then wondered why the committee failed to obtain the input of YAGAN in working out a framework.

    He described the yam export drive as a laudable policy which should be embraced as the yam exportation would boost the country’s economy.

    He, nonetheless, stressed that the association ought to have been contacted for its input and support to ensure adequate yam supplies for both exports and local consumption.

    “YAGAN is not against the government’s policy but since we are the yam producers; it is, therefore, not out of place for the government to call us for discussions on the processes of yam production and exports.

    “Does government farm? We are the farmers and our contribution will go a long way to sustain the venture,’’ he said.

    Idris, however, said that the venture would be successful if the government could support the development of commercial yam farms across the country.

    He said that government’s intervention was somewhat imperative, considering the huge investments involved in initiating successful commercial farming ventures.

    “Nigerian farmers are ageing, they are not strong enough to feed the nation; what they produce now is in small quantity, which is not enough to facilitate the development of commercial agriculture in the country and sustain produce exports.’’

    Idris noted that the country farmers were facing myriad challenges, even in producing the food for domestic consumption and particularly now when the food export was involved.

    He called on the government to provide the necessary incentives to attract more young men and women into agriculture, saying that farming should be considered as a means of livelihood.

    “The challenges cannot be shouldered by farmers or farmers’ associations alone; there is a need for government intervention; government should provide basic infrastructure such as irrigation systems and electricity to boost food security and internal security.

    “Government ought to develop access roads to farms, reduce tariffs on imported farm machinery, provide competitive agro-financial loans, while awakening Nigeria Agricultural Insurance Company to its responsibilities against disasters,’’ he said.

    Idris, however, said that even though farmers associations were striving to shoulder many responsibilities in order to contribute to the nation’s food security and development; yet the huge costs involved was weighing down their efforts.

    Also, Prince Uke Ubaka, a farmer and top official of the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), described the yam export initiative as a worthwhile policy that would boost the country’s foreign exchange earnings but warned about its sustainability.

    He said that that this was not the first time that Nigeria would be exporting yam to UK.

    “The first time was in 2003 when AFAN, in conjunction with the Nasarawa State Government, exported some tubers of yam to Britain after understudying Ghana.

    “The export led to the promotion of so many Nigerian foods at the farmers’ markets in UK and the Americas,’’ he said.

    Ubaka stressed that now that the programme had been revived, government should carry out market feasibility studies so as to ascertain the requirements of the consumers and ensure steady supply.

    He, however, warned against undue bureaucracy, insisting that the government should not drive the programme.

    “It is okay for the government to champion the programme but I suggest that government should refrain from driving it so that bureaucracy will not kill the laudable programme.

    “It is left for government to sustain the creation of markets internationally and adequately monitor the transactions so as to earn more revenue via tariffs,’’ he said.

    Ubaka also advised government to sanitise and improve the markets, so that they would not be saturated to become open markets and dumping grounds for all sorts of produce.

    NAN recalls that in fulfilment of the economic diversification policy of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration, Nigeria officially kick-started the yam export initiative by exporting 72 tonnes of yam to Europe on June 29.

    The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, launched the yam export at Lillypond Container Terminal in Ijora, Lagos.

  • Gridlock returns to Abuja-Keffi expressway

    Motorists and commuters have expressed frustration over the persistent gridlock on the Abuja-Keffi road which has continued to cause pain to commuters who pass through the road on daily basis.

    Some of them who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Mararaba, Nasarawa State, on Friday expressed dismay over the persistent gridlock.

    They described the road as “being in a state of complete mess’’.

    Mr Afolayan Oladiran, a Civil Servant said that the bad road was as a result of negligence of the appropriate authorities to fix it before the rainy season.

    Oladiran said that the authorities, both at the state and federal level had not paid any attention to the road because those in the helms of affairs were not plying it.

    “It is an established fact that most of these government officials who should be concerned about the road are not concerned.

    “Most of them live in Abuja, so whatever is happening to the masses in this area does not touch them.

    “Most civil servants that work in the Abuja metropolis live on this axis, so they encounter heavy traffic in the morning and in the evening at the close of work.

    “We will continue to appeal to Nasarawa State and the Federal Government to come to our aid as most of the man hour that should be used for productive work is wasted on the road,’’ Oladiran said.

    Also, Mrs Chinenye Onuora, a trader, who lives in New-Nyanya, a suburb of Mararaba, decried the neglect of the road, adding that the government was not sensitive to the plight of commuters.

    According to her, during the rainy season, citizens living in this area continue to suffer the neglect of this road in spite of the fact that the road is of economic importance.

    “The Mararaba/Keffi expressway is a major highway that links the country’s capital with other states like Benue, Kaduna and Plateau among others.

    “We are appealing to the government to intervene so that the people on this axis will have relief from the stress they are undergoing daily due to the gridlocks.

    Accordingly, a driver, Mr Isah Yinusa, called on the Federal Government to come to the aid of the motorists to ease the stress of driving along the road.

    Yinusa explained that the road had now become a nightmare for those coming to the FCT, as many road users spent hours before getting to their destinations.

    However, Miss Caroline Attah, a trader, said that the deplorable state of the road had helped to improve her sales of Bambara Nut (Okpa).

    “When the road is good, those of us who sell on the road do not have good sales but now that the gridlock is there, we are making good sales on daily basis.

    “Though, I will not say that the gridlock should continue because of my business, the government can help us to do something about the road to ease our movement,’’ she said.

  • Nasarawa earmarks N1.7bn for erosion control

    Nasarawa earmarks N1.7bn for erosion control

    The Nasarawa state government has earmarked N1.7 billion for the control of gully erosion in Lafia, the state capital and its environs.

    Gov. Umaru Al-Makura said this on Thursday while inspecting the devastation caused by flood and gully erosion at Tudun-Kauri and Angwan-Sha’u communities within Lafia metropolis.

    He said that part of government’s effort to curb the menace of flooding gully erosion was the construction of canals and 60 by 60 drainage, which work had been scheduled to start in August this year.

    Al-Makura said that the policy thrust of the administration since the beginning of the year was to embark on the physical planning of urban cities across the state, adding that government would not relent in that direction.

    He described the erosion devastation in the communities as worrisome that required urgent intervention, adding that so many households had been rendered homeless.

    Al-Makura said that given the enormity of the disaster, the state government had already made far reaching agreements with some agencies responsible for ecological issues to effect quick intervention.

    He charged residents, especially those in flood prone areas to desist from indiscriminate waste disposal capable of blocking water channels.

  • Court jails two men for smoking cannabis sativa

    Court jails two men for smoking cannabis sativa

    A Mararaba Upper Area Court, Nasarawa State, on Thursday sentenced two men – Kabiru Ibrahim and Yusuf Danjuma, to two months imprisonment each for smoking cannabis sativa (a.k.a.Indian hemp).

    The judge, Ibrahim Shekarau, said he convicted the defendants as they admitted committing the offence.

    He, however, gave the convicts N2, 000 option of fine each, and warned them to desist from committing crime.

    The convicts, who had no definite addresses, were arraigned on a three-count charge bordering on conspiracy, constituting public nuisance and making the atmosphere noxious for human health.

    They admitted to the crime and pleaded for mercy.

    The prosecutor, Cpl. Hamen Donald, had told the court that the convicts committed the offence on June 16, at about 12.30 p.m.

    He said that a team of police surveillance team, led by Insp. Lawal Usman, attached to ‘A’ Division, Mararaba Police Station raided a ‘black spot’ at Orange Market.

    According to Donald, in the course of the surveillance, the two convicts were arrested while smoking Indian hemp.

    The prosecutor also said that the offences contravened Sections 97, 192 and 198 of the Penal Code.

  • Bi-cameral legislature too expensive – NNPP

    Bi-cameral legislature too expensive – NNPP

    Mr Shakirudeen Olofin, Lagos State Chairman, New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP), says the the bicameral legislature the country operates is too expensive.

    Olofin spoke in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in Lagos.

    He said the party aligned with the view expressed by Gov. Tanko Al-Makura of Nasarawa State on Monday that Nigeria would save costs with a unicameral legislature.

    Al-Makura had made the suggestion while hosting some Alumni members of Ahmadu Bello University at Government House, Lafia.

    The NNPP Chairman said the Senate and the House of Representatives were merely duplicating functions and the country would be better with just one chamber.

    Olofin, however, said that only the people could decide which of the systems they preferred, and asked that the issue be subjected to public debate.

    “The current system of two chambers of National Assembly, for us, is not cost effective as it is a drain of resources.

    “The two chambers are duplicating functions, and we don’t think we need that in the country.

    “However, we suggest Nigerians should decide on the issue. The should decide whether to keep the current system or do away with one,’’ he said.

    The State Secretary of the Labour Party, Mr Bolaji Oshinowo, who also spoke on the matter, described the two-chamber National Assembly as “a burden on the country’s resources.’’

    Oshinowo said the contributions of the two houses to national assembly are not commensurate with the huge annual budgetary spending on them.

    He suggested either the scrapping of one of the arms or adoption of part-time legislators, in which representatives held sessions when they had serious deliberations.

  • Mother demands N800,000 damages for 14-year-old daughter’s pregnancy

    Mother demands N800,000 damages for 14-year-old daughter’s pregnancy

    A mother, Rhoda Joshua of Karu, has asked a Grade 1 Area Court, Karu, Abuja, to order John Okechukwu, 27, of Nasarawa State to pay her N800,000 damages for allegedly impregnating her 14-year-old daughter.

    Joshua told the court on Wednesday that her daughter, who was a Secondary School 1 student in a school in Nasarawa State, had been in sexual relationship with Okechukwu since 2016.

    “My Lord, my daughter has been seeing this guy since last year when she was 13 and as a mother I noticed she had started having sex with him.

    “I warned her and even beat her to stop it but instead of bringing home a result of flying colours home she brought this pregnancy home nine months ago.

    “I kept cautioning my daughter against the relationship and advised her to face her studies because I am a widow but she told me the guy said he wanted to marry her.

    “He impregnated her while she was still in school so she had to drop out and since she took in till now that she will give birth he has never given her even one naira for her or the coming baby.

    “I have been the one taking care of her, the pregnancy and her younger one and I have no support from anywhere.

    “So, I am pleading with this court to order him to pay me the sum of N 800, 000 in damages for allowing her to drop out of school because of the pregnancy and for not taking any responsibility since my daughter became pregnant and for refusing to marry her.

    “He promised to marry her but since she became pregnant till now that she will soon put to bed, he has refused to even take us to his family members, keep to his promise or take any form of responsibility,’’ Joshua said.

    In his response, Okechukwu said he was not ready to get married but would be giving a little sum for the upkeep of the girl.

    “My Lord, she will have my baby and that is my responsibility and I will be giving a token toward that.

    “Even if I don’t marry her that baby will make our relationship everlasting.

    “I am also a student and cannot get married now but I will try and be giving a token for the upkeep of the baby.  I am not sure of the future itself,’’ he said.

    While responding to a question from the court if she was ready to get married to the respondent, the victim said she was not willing to get married to him.

    “I cannot marry him because he did not keep to his words of getting married to me and taking good care of me since I became pregnant rather he denied me and said he can’t marry me.’’

    After listening to all involved, the judge, Abdullahi Baba, said the case could only be heard in a customary court.

    “The issue brought by the plaintiff before this court is centred on marriage and this can only be determined by a customary court of law.

    “So, let this case be transferred to the Customary Court in Karu for proper trial,’’ Baba said.