Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • APC leaders drum up support for AbdulRazaq

    All Progressives Congress (APC) leaders in Kwara State at the weekend drummed up support for the administration of Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq.

    The stalwarts converged on Olooru in Moro Local Government to attend a prayer session organised by AA G13 Support Group.

    APC leader from Kwara North District Senator Ahmed Mohammed urged residents of the council and Kwarans as a whole to be patient with the AbdulRazaq administration.

    Read Also: APC to Kwarans: be patient with AbdulRazaq

    He admonished the people not to relent in praying for the success of the APC-led government.

    Another APC leader from Kwara South and a political associate of

    Governor AbdulRazaq, Prince Sunday Fagbemi, said the governor’s impressive performance in the first 100 days in office had earned him

    accolades and applause.

    Fagbemi, who was at the event to represent the governor, said: “The applause will continue as he will not renege on the good things he has been doing. He is prepared for governance. He has the heart to do good, he will continue to do good. Kwarans will be happier for everything that he will do.”

    Fagbemi, a former chairman of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), hailed the springing up of groups supporting the administration.

    He said: “There is always strength in unity, so we expect that all hands must be on deck to put Kwara forward, except for those that have ulterior motives. We want unity and cooperation of all, so that he can excel.”

  • Akume: my ministerial appointment a honour by God

    Minister of Special Duties and Inter-Governmental Affairs Sen. George Akume has described his appointment as a great honour by God that is worthy of appreciation.

    He spoke yesterday at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, Bua, Ameladu, Ipav, in Gboko Local Government Area of Benue State during a thanksgiving mass organised in his honour by members of the community.

    Represented by his wife, Regina, the minister said his appointment is a fulfilment of God’s words in Isaiah 61:7 where He assured his children that “instead of shame and dishonour, you will receive a double portion, and instead of disgrace, you will rejoice in your inheritance.”

    Mrs. Akume, who thanked God for using Father Emmanuel Asue for positive spiritual uplift of the community, hailed the decision of members of the host community to thank God on behalf of her husband, saying the excitement expressed by the people about his appointment indicates that like Joseph, Akume’s brothers shall see him in greater glory.

    Read Also: Akume inaugurates skills acquisition centre, water project in Benue towns

    Rev. Fr. Asue had enjoined Christians in a homily to turn away from sins, to avoid punishment of death as promised by God.

    He advised the minister’s associates and aides to pray for him and give him wise counsel. The cleric prayed God to enable the minister discharge his duties with the fear of God and for the good of humanity.

    The former Chairman of Gboko Local Government, Simon Abua Yajir, praised the Catholic Church for its discipline and for always upholding truth.

    Associates of the minister, including former members of the Benue State Executive Council, former council chairmen in the state, party leaders and others attended the thanksgiving mass.

  • Delta spends N377m on water reticulation

    Delta State government has spent N377 million to provide potable water for homes in Asaba and Ughelli.

    It built 5km water pipelines each in 10 urban areas of Issele-Uku, Patani, Ogharefe, Ozoro, Kwale, Koko, Orerokpe, Burutu, Obiarukwu and Ogwashi-Uku.

    Commissioner for Water Resources Martins Okonta, who spoke yesterday in Asaba, urged residents to consume water from the public water system.

    He said water from private boreholes were not as safe as that from public supply.

    Read Also: Free medical care for 700 in Delta communities

    “Most private boreholes do not have treatment plants; they don’t have quality control, they just put the boreholes, get water and start using it without treatment. But the government or public water sector has treatment plants and when treated you will see the difference – there will be no colour, no taste and no odour,’’ he said.

    “Water from the public sector has a lot of advantages because it goes through quality control, data control and is treated, unlike private boreholes that are usually sunk near cesspits, which amount to taking contaminated water into your system.

    Continuing, Okonta said:  “I will not subscribe to drinking water from private boreholes because they are not treated and the boreholes are cited close to cesspits. Even when your well is not close to a cesspit, your neighbour cites his cesspit close to the borehole.

    “The government has committed over N233 million into the Asaba Regional Water Scheme, while the Ughelli Regional Water Scheme has received N144 million.

    ‘’In a bid to get water distributed to homes, the government has also built 5km water pipelines in 10 urban areas – Issele-Uku, Patani, Ogharefe, Ozoro, Kwale, Koko, Orerokpe, Burutu, Obiarukwu and Ogwashi-Uku.”

  • AIICO gets Executive Director

    The Board of Directors of AIICO Insurance Plc has appointed Mr. Olusola Ajayi as Executive Director, its Head, Strategic Marketing & Communications Department, Segun Olalandu, announced in Lagos.

    In a statement, he said it follows the approval of the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM).

    Olusola is an experienced business leader with over fifteen years’ leadership positions in management consulting and insurance in Nigeria and the United Kingdom. He joined AIICO in 2009 as head of the Business Strategy and Transformation teams.

    In 2013, ‘Sola assumed leadership of the retail life insurance business, and has led the transformation of the agency business, by deploying cutting-edge solutions and enabling capabilities which has resulted in significant growth in the company’s annual premiums and asset under management (AUM).

    Prior to joining AIICO, he worked at the prestigious consulting firm Accenture (Lagos) in the Financial Services market unit, before joining Deloitte Consulting (London, UK). As a business consultant in both firms, he supported/led business transformation initiatives in Strategy, Process Optimisation and Technology Deployments.

    In this new position, he will oversee the group retail division, with a mandate to drive growth across the group retail businesses and retaining AIICO as an industry leader.

    Mr. Olusola currently serves as Chairman of the Board of AIICO Multishield Limited, the Group’s Health Maintenance Organisation (HMO). He holds an MBA from INSEAD and obtained his first degree in Chemical Engineering from the University of Lagos. Sola is a certified Project Manager as well as a Senior Member of the Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria.

  • ‘Maritime reforms to encourage FDI’

    The Director-General, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has said the Federal Government’s policies in the maritime industry were targeted at encouraging Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) into the sector.

    While addressing delegates at the West African Shipping Summit, a side event of the ongoing London International Shipping Week, he said the country will set up an International Maritime Arbitration Centre in Lagos, to facilitate the timely resolution of disputes within the Gulf of Guinea area.

    This, according to him, will significantly reduce the current trend where maritime players in the region head to London, Dubai or Singapore for arbitration on maritime issues.

    He assured the key players in the global maritime industry that the reforms in the maritime sector were opening up opportunities and invited investors to take advantage of the opportunities.

    He said: “I believe that the Nigerian maritime environment has the largest potential. With a population of about 200 million, which represents over half of the entire population of West Africa, potentials in shipbuilding and ship repair are available.”

  • Event managers set to hold conference

    Association of Professional Party Organizers and Event Managers of Nigeria (APPOEMN) will hold The Event Industry Conference (TEIC) 2019 in Lagos from September 18th – 22nd.

    Its Vice President, Mrs Adefunke Kuyoro, who spoke at a press conference in Ikeja, Lagos, said the event will bring together key professionals from across the country, adding that there will be a spectrum of events service providers, to share experiences, perspectives, insights and latest developments in the events industry.
    According to her, the event with the theme ‘Stepping Up’ is full of technical sessions and poster sessions on cutting edge issues related to our industry.

    She added that there will be opportunities for networking and socializing with colleagues. “This event presents an opportunity to put company’s brand ahead if not at par with industry leaders and players in the event space, for all attendee.”

    She explained that APPOEMN is an association with a mix of seasoned events professionals that have been at the forefront of event planning and coordination in Nigeria, for the past 15 years.
    “The event industry contributes 55bn to GDP in budgets and beyond. There is so much we represent and add to our social living in the nation. The event industry which have always been a part of our culture, has received a sudden boost. There is a desire to mix international growing trends with existing traditions. ”
    She called on all vendors, decorators, planners and venue owners among other service providers in the event industry to step up their game in the industry, noting that the more excellent brands the better the event industry in the country.

    “At APPOEMN, we ensure the standards in the industry are maintained, including integrity, ensuring good job is done as paid for. We also discuss industry trends on how it advances our event industry in the country.”
    She urged government to work with the industry in putting some legislation in place to ensure safety measures in the industry, including those event halls must have fire extinguishers, entry and exit entrances as well as escape route in case of emergencies,” she said.

    APPOEMN Public Relations Officer, Bose Abisagboola, said the event will have seasoned speakers to speak on the event industry, saying it is geared towards stepping up all events brands in the country to enable them do their business in the best way.

    “The event will feature masterclass of which 250 participants are expected and it will be followed with after party. Second day will be for our corporate social responsibility, which is our best way to serve our country in a give back approach. We will be working with the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) to coordinate traffic from 7am-9am at the Allen junction in Ikeja on Lagos mainland and first roundabout at Lekki on the Lagos Island simultaneously.

    “Then we will continue with what we call ‘yardsale’. It will be an avenue to those already in the industry to sell off event industry items to those just starting at cheap prices. Day3. Will be the dinner and award night of which the industry best will be given the TEIC Award. There has been nomination of the industry best in various event category and online voting,” she said.

  • Agric revolution: Can high fertiliser cost force a reversal?

    The timely delivery of affordable and high-quality fertiliser in commercial quantity to farmers largely drove the revolution in the agricultural sector. It was an outcome of the Federal Government’s successful implementation of the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative (PFI) and other strategic initiatives to revitalise fertiliser blending plants across the country. But, the increase in the price of fertiliser, caused by insecurity, particularly in the Northeast, may have thrown spanner in the works. Will this threat reverse the gains of the agric revolution and hurt the drive for food self-sufficiency? Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA asks.

    The authorities in the agricultural sector may not admit it, at least, openly. But, by now, they must be covertly and deeply troubled that the impetus that came the way of Nigeria’s push for food self-sufficiency, following the widely acknowledged revolution in the agric sector, has come under severe threats.

    The increase in the price of fertiliser, which is, undoubtedly, one of the most critical farming input, has raised fears that the gains so far achieved in the agric sector by this administration, particularly in its first term in office, may be reversed, if nothing is done to check the price hike.

    The Nation learnt that the scarcity and skyrocketing price of fertiliser, which have thrown farmers, especially those in the insurgency-prone states of the Northeast, into panic, were caused by the restriction of sales of certain brands of fertiliser for security reasons.

    According to some farmers in the affected states, the security agencies, particularly the military, restricted the sale of some brands of fertiliser in some states, such as Yobe, Taraba, Bauchi, Adamawa, Gombe and Borno, citing the use of such brands for Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs).

    Since 2009, the Northeast has been the theatre of a bloody campaign by Boko Haram insurgents. Despite sustained efforts by the Federal Government to rein in the blood hounds, the indiscriminate bombing of mostly-soft targets, using IEDs, said to have been made from chemical components from some brands of fertiliser, has refused to abate.

    As part of efforts to halt the bombings, security agencies banned the use of Nitrogen, Phosphorus and Potassium (NPK) and Urea. However, the ban inadvertently made it difficult for farmers to secure fertilisers, particularly Urea, in the open market.

    The Chairman of Adamawa State chapter of Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN), Mr. Stephen Maduwa, confirmed this much when he said the scarcity and high cost of fertiliser in the state were as a result of the ban of NPK and Urea.

    He quoted the military authorities as saying the products were being used by insurgents to produce explosives. “The scarcity situation is worrisome because it is also affecting government’s Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) in the state,” Maduwa lamented.

    The National Vice Chairman, National Association of Agro-Chemicals and Allied Dealers, Alhaji Usman Bapullo, brought the disturbing reality nearer home. He said because of the restriction, the cost of the commodity increased by as much as 45 per cent.

    Consequently, a 50 kilogramme (kg) bag of NPK, which originally sold for N4,300, now goes for N6,500, while Urea, which sold for N5,000, is now N7,000. He, however, said there was liquid NPK and Urea, which had not been banned, but farmers were not familiar with the liquid one.

    The situation is the same in Yobe State, where the restriction on sales of fertiliser had created scarcity of the product. Yobe State Governor Mai Mala Buni, at a recent town hall meeting in Potiskum, said it took series of discussions between the state government and security organisations to lift the sanction on sales of NPK fertiliser.

    “As for Urea fertiliser, it is still banned for sale across the state for security reasons,” the governor said.

    The Nation learnt that in Yobe, a bag of NPK is sold for between N7,000 and N9,000, depending on distance and availability of the product.

    Most farmers in the state depended on liquid fertiliser, with five litres of the product sold for N25,000. The governor, however, said the state government had awarded a contract for the supply of NPK fertiliser to the state for onward distribution to farmers.

    Similarly, farmers in Borno State, the epicentre of Boko Haram insurgency, have also expressed concern over the high cost of fertiliser. For instance, a rice farmer at Zabalmari Village of Jere Local Government Area of the state, Hussaini Usman, said the high cost of fertiliser was affecting his production.

    Usman said a small size bag of Single Superphosphate (SSP) and NPK brand of fertiliser were sold at N2,500 and N3,000, as against the old price of N1,000 and N2,000, respectively.

    However, the Kaduna State Government said it has enough stock of fertiliser to be sold to farmers during the crop season in the state.

    Deputy Director and Desk Officer for fertiliser distribution in the state’s Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Mr. Bungwun Bege, said the state government had entered into an agreement with two firms, Flour Mills and TAK Fertiliser, as the major suppliers of the commodity to farmers.

    He said each of the firms had agreed to deliver 5,000 metric tons at the initial stage to farmers at government-approved rate of N5,500 per 50kg bag, “and so far, there is no price increment of the product by the suppliers.”

    Bege said there was no scarcity of the commodity in the state. His words: “Flour Mills has five trucks while TAK has two trucks of 600/50kg bags in State Government stores in each of the 23 local government areas in the state.

    “While farmers in some local governments have bought up to 19 trucks, others are yet to buy up two trucks, as they buy according to their needs,” he said.

    Bege added that so far, the ministry was yet to receive any complain of either scarcity or hike on the price of the commodity from farmers in any part of the state.

    Why government is jittery

    The Federal Government set off a major revolution in the agricsector when it came up with the PFI. Essentially, the PFI, which was inaugurated in December 2016, was aimed at delivering commercially-significant quantities of affordable and high-quality fertiliser at the right time to farmers.

    The initiative was borne out of the desire to end fertiliser importation and the attendant impact on the country’s foreign exchange reserves. It was designed to stimulate significant economic activities across the agriculture value chain and catalyse growth by meeting the fertiliser demand of farmers during the wet farming season.

    Before the strategic intervention, the non-availability of fertiliser was, arguably, one of the major obstacles to increased productivity in the agric sector. Its scarcity was a serious disincentive to farmers’ efforts to contribute to economic diversification through small, medium and large-scale agriculture.

    But, the Federal Government, through the PFI, changed the narrative. On the strength of the PFI, the fertiliser blending industry bounced back. The initiative, which involved a partnership with the Government of Morocco for the supply of phosphate to produce fertiliser locally, resulted in the revitalisation of several fertiliser blending plants.

    Nigeria, with its 11 fertiliser blending plants in bad shape in 2015, now has 22 approved plants, 18 of which are producing at installed capacity.

    As at 2017, a year after the introduction of the PFI, the initiative had delivered 10 million 50kg bags (500,000 Metric Tonnes (MT) of NPK 20:10:10 fertiliser at a price of N5, 500. That was down from the price of N9, 000 per 50kg bag in 2016, representing a 40 per cent reduction.

    The PFI, according to the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, also targeted the delivery of 20 million 50kg bags (1 million MT), which will double the 2017 figure. He recalled that before PFI, each imported fertiliser bag was subsidised to the tune of N6, 000 per bag.

    Noting that over six million bags of fertiliser had been sold to farmers at N5, 500 per bag, the Minister also said there had been a higher patronage for the country’s rail network due to movement of raw materials and finished goods.

    “Also, the bag-making sector of the economy was boosted, with over 10 million packaging bags produced exclusively for PFI. Sixty thousand direct jobs and even higher number of indirect jobs have been created,” Mohammed said.

    The Nation learnt that the changing fortunes of the fertiliser blending industry and by extension, the agricultural sector, where the government is pushing to achieve self-sufficiency in food production and consumption, was largely as a result of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) it signed with Morocco in 2016 to produce fertiliser locally.

    The deal with the Moroccan Government was for the supply of phosphate to ensure the production of one million tons of fertliser locally. The agreement was anchored by Fertiliser Producers and Suppliers of Nigeria (FEPSAN) and OCP, Morocco’s state-owned company and global leader in phosphate and its derivatives.

    The gradual, but steady revolution in the nation’s fertiliser blending industry following the deal, raised hopes of restoring Nigeria’s position as the food basket of the West African sub-region. This was because it reduced farmers’ overheads, boosted yield and encouraged more players to invest in the agric value chain.

    To consolidate on the gains of the PFI and, ultimately, achieve self-sufficiency in fertiliser production, the Federal Government, through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) also barred official foreign exchange (forex) allocation to fertiliser imports. The inclusion of fertiliser on the list of items not valid for forex took effect from Friday, December 7, last year.

    A reliable source close to FEPSAN told The Nation that the ban on the importation of fertiliser has started manifesting in the form of increased inflow of investments into the agric sector, massive job creation and conservation of foreign exchange.

    For instance, the fertiliser sector, according to the source, who declined to be mentioned, churned out over 100, 000 jobs in 2018 alone. The size of investment in urea production also swelled to over $9 billion, with Dangote Fertiliser and Indorama Eleme Petrochemicals Limited in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, exporting about 800, 000 metric tons of urea.

    He also said under the PFI, Nigeria recorded the highest fertiliser consumption figure ever. “In 2017, our local consumption was 1.56 million tonnes of fertiliser. In 2018, Nigeria recorded 1.4 million tones. The highest consumption we had previously was 1.2 million tones, and that was in 2014,” the source told The Nation.

    He also pointed out that as a result of the increased capacity of local producers, NPK fertilisers are now available to farmers at affordable rates of about N5, 500 per bag, adding that “the icing on the cake” for farmers was the blending of soil-specific and crop-specific fertiliser.

    However, the scarcity and high cost of fertiliser may havedeflated members of FEPSAN, farmers and indeed, the authorities and industry stakeholders. Many of them now fear that the gains of the agric revolution, especially the fertiliser segment, may be reversed, with Nigeria’s hope of reclaiming her position as the sub-region’s food basket hanging in the balance.

    Rising food prices justify fears

    So far, the Boko Haram insurgency is limited to the Northeast region. But, like wildfire, the ripple effects of the activities of the dreaded group have spread to all parts of the country, resulting in acute shortage of food items and, of course, increase in the price of available supply.

    Professor of Plant Protection and Improvement, Department of Crop Science & Biotechnology, Imo State University, Owerri, Onuh Martin, put the situation in perspective when he said the pervasive insecurity foisted on the country by insurgency and other  criminalities have driven most farmers away from their farms.

    Today, few farmers have the courage to go to their farms, as fear of recurring herdsmen/farmer clashes, kidnappings, rape and armed robbery, among others, have become the beginning of wisdom.

    The result, predictably, has been low agricultural production, and of course, increase in prices of the few items that manage to get to the markets.

    Indeed, in the last few weeks, prices of most staple food items have gone up, raising fears that these staples may soon disappear from the menu tables of many Nigerians who may no longer afford them. Some of the staples affected include rice, beans, garri, semovita, tomato, pepper, and frozen foods, among others.

    The Nation’s random checks in some major markets in Lagos, showed, for instance, that a bag of 50 kilogrammes of foreign rice, which hitherto sold for between N13, 300 and N13, 800, has gone up to as much as N16, 000.

    Prices of other food items such as yam, beans, tomato, onion and pepper, as well as frozen foods such as Turkey and chicken, have also gone up.While some experts blame this on seasonal shortage in supply, the displacement of most farmers across the country by rising insecurity is also a major factor.

    Is food security threatened?

    The Country Manager, OCP Africa, Caleb Usoh, emphasised that in addition to input, such as better seed, and farming practices, fertiliser could be a game changer in food security among smallholder farmers battling falling harvests and unproductive soils.

    Usoh, who spoke at the recently-concluded African Farming Second Edition Agribusiness Summit in Abuja, urged the government to pay attention to the fertiliser industry because the future growth of agriculture lay in efficient utilisation of plant nutrients.

    According to him, OCP has been playing a major part in assisting Nigeria and other African countries to feed themselves by ensuring that smallholder farmers are able to use fertiliser optimally to boost their yields.

    Noting that improved access to fertiliser is key to food security, Usoh said by using more fertiliser correctly, farmers could grow more nutritious food, achieve household food security, create jobs, increase incomes and boost rural development.

    Impliedly, the high cost of this critical farming input, could impinge on Nigeria’s quest to achieve food security, if urgent steps are not taken to rein in insurgents and other criminal activities hurting food production.

    This is so considering the fact that most of the food items such as yam, beans, tomato, onion and pepper come from the north, where insurgency and other shades of criminality are evidently more pronounced.

    AfDB, AFAP $5.4m grant to the rescue

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) and the African Fertiliser and Agribusiness Partnership (AFAP), last week, signed two grant agreements to implement trade credit guarantees worth $5.4 million to support fertiliser value chains in Nigeria and Tanzania.

    Both parties signed the grant agreements, which hold the potential to benefit hundreds of thousands of smallholder farmers, at the African Green Revolution Forum in Accra, Ghana on September 5, this year.

    AfDB Vice President for Agriculture, Human and Social Development, Dr. Jennifer Blanke, said the agreements would provide the input needed for Africa to have “the productivity that we hope for”.

    “We are just thrilled to be getting together with our partners in order to expand the efforts to make sure that we are financing the development of manufacturing and blending of fertiliser,” Blanke said. “This is an African effort, led by Africans, for Africa,” she added.

    The grants are designed by the Bank’s Africa Fertiliser Financing Mechanism (AFFM) to provide sustainable financing solutions to boost the fertiliser value chain in Africa.

    AFAP CEO Jason Scarpone signed the agreements on behalf of the continental body, emphasising the importance of value chain financing – bringing fertiliser financing from manufacturer, to distributor, to retailer to farmer. “Few succeed in doing it. This project will be successful,” he said.

    The two deals are the first agreements signed by AFFM, which is hosted by the AfDB, since it became fully functional last year; they pave the way for the first implementation of trade credit guarantee projects for fertiliser financing led by AFFM in Nigeria and Tanzania. The AFAP will be the implementing partner operating in the two countries on behalf of the AFFM. The Partnership has substantial experience in supporting the agricultural value chain across the continent.

    Scheduled for implementation over a two-year period, the projects will lead to the enhancement of fertiliser value chains in the two countries. The Nation learnt that the project will target 10 importers, five blenders/manufacturers, and 37 hub agro-dealers as direct beneficiaries, 520 retail agro-dealers as indirect beneficiaries and 700,000 smallholder farmers as final beneficiaries.

    It remains to be seen how Nigeria plans to leverage on this fresh window of opportunity to make fertliser affordable to farmers and by so doing, consolidate on the gains of the agric revolution while starve off an impending food crisis.

  • No vuvuzela for the president!

    South African Nigerians now returning from the home of vuvuzela are coming back with a mixed reaction. They are meeting a nation whose president has just been ‘vindicated’ by a competent tribunal over claims by the opposition that he wasn’t eligible for the office. Their old hosts are used to taking up the local instrument as both a weapon of intimidation and celebration.

    South Africans reach out for their 2 to 3-feet long plastic horn to celebrate, to make raucous noise at football matches in support of their national teams. It was popularized during the World Cup in South Africa in 2010. The myth is that its beastly emission—some 120 decibels— can conjure victory for their club or national side. Or it can cudgel opposition to concede goals for their players to win the day. To their grief, these didn’t happen nine years ago. Rather, vuvuzela drew gross global glare. A newspaper writer called the trumpet ‘’an instrument from hell’. And because it nearly ruined the first-ever World Cup in Africa on account of its noisome dispatch, FIFA, the world’s soccer administrator, banned vuvuzela from the tournament in Brazil in 2014. The BBC has also been calling for ‘’vuvuzela-free broadcast’’.

    But our fleeing compatriots from the former apartheid cave can’t find any room for joy, whether for being back home alive or for witnessing an admirable run of democracy as expressed by the Nigerian judiciary. Their trip can’t be celebrated with the infamous vuvuzela. They were stampeded home; leaving behind prized property and enterprise it took them years of hard work to build. Here at home, the condition of the state they ran away from years ago is the same, if not worse. It makes the future somehow uncertain. They are home as strangers in their own ancestral community. Where do they start, after what appears to be a pyrrhic triumph? There’s been escape from the xenophobic hell of South Africa alright; but it is inflicting a long-term fatal toll that disallows and disavows riotous vuvuzela celebrations. Not a mood for mourning. But not a mood for music either!

    Ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo once found himself in that quandary but missed the chance to be a statesman. He didn’t quite decode what was written between the lines when he secured his back-to-back second term mandate in 2003. Muhammadu Buhari and the other losers, Buhari notably, were grieving and crying foul at what they perceived as a ‘’flagrant and wanton conduct of the election’’ that returned Obasanjo to power. They threatened they would have nothing to do with his ‘’illegitimate’’ government. That led many patriotic voices to call on Obasanjo to form a coalition government at the centre. They also pleaded with him and his party men and women to don a subdued mien as they staged victory parties nationwide. Unfortunately, the nation was locked in wasteful orgies beamed on national TV. Obasanjo and his party loyalists danced lustily in the face of those mourning their electoral disasters.

    Today, nearly 20 years later, we are back to where we were then. What will make a difference is how we rejoice when others, our opponents, are lamenting and hurting. We drive our crying friends and neighbours into more agony when we don’t moderate our wild festivities on V-day. No doubt, there will always be losers and winners in any contest. But the winner in politics must not contemn the loser through injuring his self-esteem in mindless jubilation. A loser is already in the mud, as it were. He has enough to battle with. We can’t saddle him with more, unless our goal is to break him into smithereens, out of existence!

    But Buhari himself has been there before. He was the butt of ridicules that once made him decide that he would no longer vie for the highest political office in the land. He wept and claimed he had been robbed over and over again at the poll. If he has now been given the elusive mandate at the ballot, with unanimous judicial endorsement at the court of first instance, I think all he needs to do is to ignore the hawks around him and walk the talk that his victory isn’t personal, but for democracy and for all Nigerians.

    I don’t think we should be asking the opposition PDP to ‘’apologise’’ to Nigerians for ‘’ wilfully distracting the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari with a frivolous election petition.’’ Litigations of a political nature enlarge the borders of the process of nation-building; they don’t constrict them. All the years Buhari was walking the length and breadth of the courts with his lawyers to seek justice couldn’t have been reckoned as frivolous. Those who understood the dynamics of the rule of law and its link to democracy and development of nations and their citizens hailed him. Those cases have benefited the legal history of the nation. That he didn’t win in the courts then does not dismiss the judiciary as inept and corrupt as Buhari has erroneously believed for many years.

    We should remember there’s still the hurdle of the Supreme Court adjudication, if PDP makes good its plan go the whole length of the judicial journey. The party must not be discouraged. We have learned much from the proceedings at the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal to guide us in future electoral engagements. How else would we have known that there is no perjury if you fail to deposit what you claim to have in a sworn affidavit? How would the nation have known that assumptions can sometimes be promoted to the exalted pedestal of the law? How would Nigerians have known that contrary to what many citizens subscribe to, their president doesn’t believe in his party’s winner-takes-all philosophy? Which is why he has nobly stretched his hand of fellowship to his political foes to join him in running the country, regardless of your politics.

    Before now, I did recommend to him the likes of Kingsley Moghalu, Tope Fasua, Omoyele Sowore etc. who contested against him, to be part of his team. These are illustrious Nigerians who can help engender the all-round breakthrough we need. I stand by my counsel as Buhari shops for assistance in his next level mission.

  • UPDATED: Two feared dead, Three injured in Lagos accident

    Two people have been confirmed dead while three other persons have sustained injuries after a container fell on a truck along Ikorodu Road.

    It was gathered that the accident occurred around 8:30pm at Agric, Ikorodu.

    The truck which was inbound Ikorodu was alleged to have carried unleashed container.

    Read Also: 5,181 died in road accidents in 2018, says FRSC

    As at 9pm, many persons were trapped underneath the container.

    Director General of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) Dr. Femi Oke-Osayintolu confirmed the accident but said he was yet to ascertain the number of casualties.

    “We have deployed our men there. I do not know the number of casualties. We are there to move the container and safe lives,” he said.

  • NASU to Obiano: call Ojukwu Varsity to order to avoid Strike

    The Non -Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions NASU, in Anambra State, has called on the state Governor, Chief Willie Obiano to wade into the activities of Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu University to order to avoid industrial action.

    The labour Union disclosed on Saturday that the management of the Institution was heating up the polity by deducting check-off dues of its members which had risen to 13 months

    The call was made by the state Chairman of NASU, Comrade Humphrey E Okafor, during the 7th Quadrennial delegates Conference of Schools and colleges Trade Group Council in Awka, Anambra state, at the weekend .

    According to Okafor, ” it is painful and disheartening to inform His Excellency that the management of Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu University, Igbariam is heating the polity at the Varsity by deducting the check off dues of our members ”

    “And the institution has bluntly refused to remit same to the Union, we urge the state government to urgently wield into the matter to avert likely industrial disquiet in the institution ”

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    Again, the Union called on the Federal government to live up to the expectations of the people by fighting headlong corruption and insecurity in the country.

    NASU, said people were being killed on a daily basis and the economy was nose-diving without hope of redress, adding that corruption and insurgency were twin destructive agents that deter developments and progress of any nation.

    However, NASU, appealed to Obiano to assist it by donating a land and a bus to enable it function effectively like other Unions with similar strength, while commending it’s national leadership for a job well done.