Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • I was not kidnapped, says Edo ex-Speaker

    A former Speaker of the Edo State House of Assembly, Hon Elizabeth Ativie has denied report that she was kidnapped on Tuesday’s night.

    A report that went viral claimed Ativie was abducted while going home at Irhirhi road in Benin City.

    Hon Ativie who spoke to our reporter from the United States placed a curse on the purveyors of the story.

    Ativie said she has received hundreds of calls about the incident.

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    According to her, “My brother I am in New York. I was not kidnapped. It is the family of those carrying the rumours that will be kidnapped.

    “How could they wish people evil? I am not in kidnappers den. I am here talking.”

  • Four common misconceptions about device batteries

    There are many misconceptions about mobile device batteries, with some causing people to do outrageous things in the name of maintaining their device battery. Here are four common misconceptions about mobile device batteries.

    Don’t use your device while it’s charging

    Using a device while it charges is very unlikely to have a negative impact on your device. It has virtually no impact on the quality of charge the battery of your device gets, unless of course you’re using a low quality knock off charger (in that case, the bad charger is the one most likely to negatively impact the quality of charge your device’s battery gets).

    Turning off Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS will prolong battery life

    The only time these services drain your battery is when they are in use. Having your Bluetooth turned on when you’re not using a Bluetooth device, or having your Wi-Fi on when you’re not accessing the network or surfing the net, is hardly going to drain your battery. It just pulls an insignificant amount of energy from your device, which isn’t enough to drain it over the course of the day. One of the things that does help in prolonging your device battery is reducing your screen’s brightness.

    Read Also; Five mistakes you make while charging your phone

    Surfing the net will drain your battery faster than anything

    This isn’t the complete truth. Though surfing the net can, in fact, drain your battery over time especially if your internet activity involves watching online videos or doing graphic-intensive activities, gaming is actually what drains your device battery faster than anything else. The graphic engine for most games is a massive ‘energy drainer’ and if you play games on your device a lot, it’s advisable to dim the screen of your device.

    You should always charge your device till it is full before using it the first time

    When mobile phones and devices were still using NiMH and NiCd batteries, it was necessary to fully charge them before first using them (this was known as the memory effect). Modern batteries are Li-ion and actually perform better when they are not fully discharged (though you should avoid letting them deplete completely). As a result, the best percentage for your device battery is between 50 to 80 percent (which is considered the sweet spot for your battery’s charge cycle that helps to avoid high number of charge cycles, which can over time degrade battery performance). Most new devices are sold with battery percentages within this range, so it’s unnecessary to charge it till it’s full.

  • UPDATED: Gunmen kill butchers’ chairman in Bayelsa

    A former Chairman, Bayelsa State Butchers Association (BSBA), Mr. Chibuzor Nwachukwu, has been ambushed and assassinated by gunmen in Yenagoa, the state capital.

    The gunmen, suspected to be cultists, were said to have shot at Chibuzor on the head and shattered his brains in cold blood.

    It was learnt that the assassins laid an ambush for Chibuzor in front of his residence on Ogilo Street, an area notorious for cult activities in the state.

    He was reportedly returning home from the Swali Market at about 8pm on Tuesday when he ran into his killers.

    The 42-year-old Chibuzor, hailed from Nkanun Community in Enugu State and was married with four children.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said it was a case of assassination adding that the killers escaped with their victim’s shirt and his android phone.

    He said: “He was already at the door of his apartment when some boys, who were hiding in the area shot him. They aimed at his head and shattered his brains. He was killed in an execution-like style, raising suspicion that it wasn’t a robbery attack.

    Read Also:  Gunmen abduct PDP chieftain in Benue 

    “We don’t know the motive behind the killing. He was a former chairman of the butchers association and he left the office after some controversies. It has been long he left his office. So, we won’t say it was the dispute that led to his killing”.

    The Police Public Relations Officer, Bayelsa State Command, Asinim Butswat, confirmed the incident and said policemen visited the crime as part of ongoing investigations to unmask the identities of his killers.

    Butswat said: “On 25 September 2019, at about 20:00 hours, unknown gunmen shot and killed one Chibuzor Nwachukwu ‘m’ 42 years, at Ogilo Street, Yenagoa.”

  • Police arraign lawyer for threatening to kill Sen. Kashamu, One other

    A 30-year-old lawyer, Bayo Adedokun, on Wednesday appeared in an Igbosere Magistrates’ Court, Lagos, for allegedly threatening to kill Sen. Buruji Kashamu and Alhaji Muniru Ogunleyetwo over land disagreement.

    Adedokun, whose address was not given, is charged with four counts of conspiracy, attempted murder and conduct likely to cause breach of the peace.

    He, however, pleaded not guilty.

    The Prosecution Counsel, Insp. Steven Molo, told the court that the defendant committed the offence in August at Ogombo village in Eti-Osa area of Lagos.

    Molo alleged that the defendant hired 10 thugs to kill the complainants claiming that a portion of land they were occupying belonged to his family.

    Read Also: Buruji Kashamu, Ben Murray-Bruce remain an issue on social circuit

    He said the defendant conducted himself in a manner likely to cause breach of the peace.

    The offence, he said, contravenes the provisions of sections 56(a), 168(d), 230(1) and 411 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    Magistrate O.O. Oshin admitted the defendant to bail on self recogintion and ordered him to deposit his certificate of Call to Bar to the court.

    Oshin adjourned the case until Nov. 14 for mention.

     

    (NAN)

  • We’re not probing Osinbajo, N-SIP-EFCC

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has said that it is not probing Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and the National Social Investment Programme (N-SIP).

    The commission said at no time did its spokesperson, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, make any reference to N-SIP as a programme or accused those who superintend it of corruption.

    It cautioned against reports which could project a false indictment and incite the Vice President against Chairman of the EFCC, Mr. Ibrahim Magu.

    A statement by the Head of Media and Publicity of EFCC, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, said Magu appreciates how N-SIP has lifted many Nigerians out of poverty.

    The statement said: “The attention of the EFCC has been drawn to a report captioned, “There is corruption in N-SIP programme- Magu”, which appeared in a newspaper on Wednesday September 25, 2019 and a few other newspapers, in which the acting Chairman of the Commission, Ibrahim Magu was quoted as saying that there is corruption in the National Social Investment Programme and the Anchor Borrower’s Programme.

    “The papers claim that Magu, who spoke through the Spokesperson of the agency, Wilson Uwujaren at the 15th Anti- Corruption Situation Room organised by the Human and Environmental Development Agenda in Kaduna on Tuesday September 24, 2019, asked the civil society organizations “to investigate the N-SIP”.

    “The commission wishes to disclaim the reports as false and a mischievous twist of the goodwill message presented by Mr. Uwujaren, on corruption and peace building in conflict communities.

    “In the presentation, the EFCC spokesperson observed that the agency had received complaints in some zones regarding the social investment programmes, citing an example in Gombe where the Commission investigated a case in the Anchor Borrower’s Scheme in which sand was bagged and passed off as fertilizer.

    ” He, therefore, warned that for the crises in these conflict zones not to degenerate, civil society organisations should play more active roles in monitoring the programmes to ensure that their benefits get to the people for which they are intended.

    Read Also: Nobody must maltreat Osinbajo – Northern youths

    “At no time in the presentation did Mr Uwujaren mention the N-SIP as a programme nor did he accuse those who superintend it of corruption. The specific case mentioned, the Anchor Borrower’s scheme, is not part of the N-SIP being supervised by the office of the Vice President.

    “This clarification becomes necessary to correct the wrong impression of a verdict of corruption on N-SIP by the EFCC which the purveyors of the false reports obviously want to create.

    The statement cautioned against reports which could project a false indictment and incite the Vice President against the person of the Chairman of the EFCC, Mr. Ibrahim Magu.

    The statement added: “All over the world, one of the core competences of civil society organizations is project monitoring. Calling on Nigerian civil societies to monitor social intervention programmes, was not a call to”investigation” as no one had been indicted. Investigation itself is not the job of civil society organisations.

    “The EFCC chairman recognizes the unprecedented impact of of the N-SIP intervention in not only lifting the poor out of poverty but also its potential for reconciling feuding communities across the country.

    “It is therefore shocking to read the unfounded insinuation of the reporters, aimed only at fanning the embers of disaffection that only exist in their imagination.

    “The sensational attempt to project a false indictment, and incite the Vice President against the person of the Chairman of the EFCC, is therefore condemnable.”

     

     

  • Senate moves to regulate inflow of aids to Nigeria

    The Senate on Wednesday directed its committees on National Planning, Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and Diaspora to come up with a legal framework to regulate the inflow of aids into the country.

    It equally lamented that 60 per cent of foreign aids are usually lost to transaction costs, wastage and capital flight back to the donor countries through the implementing contractors.

    The resolution followed the adoption of the prayers of a motion entitled: “The need to make development aids more effective to work for Nigerians” sponsored by Senator Yahaya Oloriegbe.

    The Senate also directed the National Planning Commission to develop a policy framework that would create mechanisms for development cooperation and aid effectiveness in Nigeria.
    It also mandated all its relevant standing committees – that oversee Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) – who are beneficiaries of development aids/grants to request for, analyze and consider such aid/grants in the appropriation of funds for the MDAs’ activities.
    The Senate further advised State Planning Commissions and Houses of Assembly to domesticate and implement federal policies and laws that would enable the states to achieve aids effectiveness.

    In his contribution, President of the Senate, Senator Ahmad Lawan, thanked his colleagues for their incisive interventions and described the issue of aids as an important item that would be part of the legislative agenda of the 9th Senate.

    Lawan said: “Let me say that this is one of those very important items to form our legislative agenda because aids to Nigeria particularly should not be treated like it is treated elsewhere in other countries that are less than Nigeria.

    “We must be able to know exactly what the aids are coming for, and then streamline them with our national developmental objectives.

    “So, the Chairman Diaspora and NGOs, you have the task of engaging the National Planning Commission together of course, with the Chairman of the Committee on National Planning to ensure that we know what the processes and procedures are and the regulations and guidelines.

    “If we are not satisfied, then we have to come up with the legal framework that will ensure that if there is any aids to us as a country, our people benefit from the aids.”

    In his lead debate, Senator Oloriegbe who represents Kwara Central Senatorial District, called on the Senate to be aware that Nigeria as a developing country receives aids from bilateral developed countries and multilateral organizations.

    He said that aids provisions to Nigeria are majorly in the social sectors such as health, education and water.

    He urged the Senate to note that Nigeria is not an aid dependent country “as the donor support to the country is about 5% of the National Budget. However, in real monetary terms, this is a large amount.”
    He reminded his colleagues that in the last few years, there had been increased humanitarian and emergency-related aids to Nigeria, “especially in the North East region.”

    “The number of agencies active in the provision of assistance has grown substantially,” he said.
    He said that on the global level, donor interest in coordination has also increased in recent years.

    “The recent examples are the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness (2005) and Accra High-Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness (2008) where partnership commitments with regard to harmonization, alignment, ownership, results and mutual accountability were further specified,” he said.
    He said that the country should be worried that the National Planning Commission “is not effectively performing one of its stewardship role of ensuring alignment of donor assistance with national priorities, strategies and effective coordination of donor efforts in all sectors of (the) Nigerian economy.”
    He noted that the absence of fundamental reforms to current management structures at the donor and country level, may lead to the risk of “continued inefficiencies, delivery failures, weak capacity of local institutions and ultimately, unnecessary delay in increasing employment, reduction in poverty, avoidable death and disease among the poor.”
    He added that the Senate is disturbed that the actual benefits to the country from these aids is only about 40-45 per cent, with 55-60 per cent being lost to transaction costs, wastage and capital flight back to the donor countries through the implementing contractors.

    He said that the non-consideration of aids/grants in budgets and appropriation do sometimes result in duplication, wastages and inefficiency in utilization of scarce resources.

    Read Also: Senate vows to pass PIB in 2020

    He described as worrisome a situation where several attempts at donor coordination in the country had been ineffective “due to inadequate capacity in the public sector, divergent donor procedures and the absence of commonly accepted framework for this coordination.”

    He further urged his colleagues to be alarmed that “detailed comparative data across states on donor agency staffing, location, business processes, and decision making is simply not available, which inevitably inhibits the depth of any discussion of ‘reforming the architecture’ or improving the efficiency of development assistance in Nigeria.”

    He also said that there is an “urgent need to review the current situation with a view of establishing an overarching donor harmonization, implementation and monitoring framework to enhance aids effectiveness in Nigeria.”

    Most Senators in their contributions supported the motion.

    The four prayers of the motion were unanimously approved when put to voice vote by the President of the Senate, Senator Ahmad Lawan.

  • Corps member donates 688 Sandals to primary school pupils in Lokoja

    A serving member of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) in Kogi, Miss Aderonke Adeoye, on Wednesday donated 688 sandals to less privileged primary school pupils in Lokoja to encourage them to go to school.

    Donating some of the sandals to the pupils of Lokongoma Primary School, Lokoja, Adeoye said the gesture was to make the children happy and encourage them to always go to school, as well as to enable them to realise the importance of education in life.

    Adeoye, who is an indigene of Ekiti State, said a total of six different primary schools in Lokoja would get the shoes.

    “Some of the children wear slippers to school while some wear spoilt sandals which make them to look very rough and dirty.

    “I want to make the children happy and encourage them to always go to school and to let them realise the importance of education in life,” she said.

    She enjoined fellow corps members to make impact on the lives of the less privileged children, saying, “it is part of what we were taught in our orientation camp – to serve our father land wholeheartedly”.

    She thanked the Kogi State Board of Internal Revenue for its support as well as other philanthropists in the state for their financial and moral support.

    Read Also: ‘I won NYSC award for catching thieves in camp’

    Speaking at the occasion, the state Commissioner for Education and Science, Rosemary Osikoya, advised the pupils to make good use of the sandals by wearing them to school.

    Osikoya, who was represented by Mr Femi Sunday, the Director, Education Support Service (ESS), advised parents not to sell the sandals but use them for the benefit of their children.

    He further urged the parents to pray for the corps member for putting smile on the faces of the children.

    “Giving to the less privileged is what I love doing and God is the only one that can reward givers,” she said.

    The benefiting schools are: Kabawa Nursery and Primary school 1and 2, Serikinoma Nursery and Primary school; Maadi Nursery and Primary school; Liwaul-HAMDI Nursery and Primary School; St. Mary’s L.G.E.A Nursery/Primary School 1, and Lokongoma L.G.E.A Nursery/Primary School, Lokoja.

    (NAN)

  • Niger unveils retirement plans for civil servants

    The Niger state government has disclosed that there are plans in place for civil servants who are close to their retirement age to go into farming.

    The Permanent Secretary of the State Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Garba Musa Ibrahim disclosed this in Minna at the Value Chain Development Programme Additional Financing (VCDP-AF) Sensitization and Mobilization Visit at the state Ministry of Agriculture.

    He said that the retirement plan is to encourage civil servants who are about to retire to go into farming so that they can have a soft landing after retirement.

    According to him, this would also help in decongesting the civil service and allow new ones to be recruited.

    “We are encouraging civil servants that are about to retire to go into farming si that they will have a soft landing even before they retire.

    “The Niger state civil service has become bloated and cannot hold everyone. We are encouraging the old hands to go into farming so that new ones can come in.”

    Ibrahim said that little incentives would be given to the civil servants who indicate interest in going into farming.

    “We will train and teach them into how they can key into some of the projects so that they can enjoy the benefits of farming. And if possible, if they are satisfied with what they are gaining, they can disengage from the service before their retirement and go into farming. This will go a long way to reduce the burden on the civil service.

    “We are also into talks with some financial institutions to give loans to the civil servants who want to turn into farming.”

    The IFAD-VCDP Coordinator in Niger state, Dr. Mathew Ahmed said that the Value Chain Development Programme (VCDP) Additional Financing project has been extended for three more years.

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    He added that the additional financing program would focus on empowering and training over 30,000 women and youths and is targeted at addressing dry season farming, provision of tube weeks, provision of irrigation facilities, common users infrastructures, roads, and support processing activities to ensure that the rice processed in Niger stage meet international standards.

    Ahmed further said that there additional local government areas have been added in the new program which would bring the number of beneficiaries local government areas to eight.

  • Book series published to show China’s achievements in past 70 years

    A book series on China’s development and achievements in the past 70 years was on Wednesday published to mark its 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

    According to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), the first batch of 13 books has been made public by the China Social Sciences Press to embody the results of China’s research in multiple fields.

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    The books also include Marxism, the law, journalism, communication and finance.

    According to vice president of CASS, Cai Fang, the book series is expected to provide a detailed and accurate review and summary of the country’s achievements in politics, economy, and ecology in the past 70 years.

    (Xinhua/NAN)

  • BREAKING: Butchers’ chair assassinated in Bayelsa

    Chairman of Bayelsa State Butchers’ Association Chairman, Mr. Chibuzor Nwachukwu, has been assassinated by gunmen in Yenagoa, the state capital.

    Details shortly…