Tag: Nigeria

  • EU seeks end to corruption,  impunity in Nigeria

    EU seeks end to corruption, impunity in Nigeria

    The European Union is concerned about the level of corruption in Nigeria. It called for adequate measures to halt the impunity.

    The outgoing Ambassador/Head of European Union (EU) Delegation to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Dr David MacRea, stated the position of the EU yesterday in Abuja. He spoke to reporters in a valedictory session.

    MacRae said: “Nigeria has to deal seriously with what is known as the immunity clause. It seems just few offenders are being punished while the real people who commit the offences get away.

    “It is regrettable that corruption in Nigeria is not going down and it is affecting the entire country. I am not saying that Nigeria is the worst country; you still find so many good things in Nigeria.

    “I am also happy that the government is taking very serious steps to deal with the issue of corruption”.

    The outgoing envoy said he expected better funding for states and local governments “Simply because I want to see that money should be better spent. To make it to be better, it requires other things to be in place and I think we need to make a special effort to ensure that the judiciary is functioning correctly so that court cases can be done speedily and effectively.”

    He said too much time is spent on appeals in the courts adding.

    MacRea said it would be wrong for anyone to think that all will be perfect with democracy within the short period of 14 years when civil rule returned.

    “If we expect to find in Nigeria, everything in a good state as far as governance is concerned, we are not obviously facing the reality.”

    He spoke about the diversity and beauty of Nigeria as some of the memories he would be taking away with him.

    “I am saying that because there are diversities of people; they say 250 different ethnic groups, languages are quite different, customs are different. You get off the plane in Anambra and you see one situation, it is nothing like when you go to Kano or Jigawa and when you go to Lagos you will see this incredible city. And if you look at the construction taking place around Abuja, it is such an incredible range in Nigeria and it is tremendous in rich culture and it is such dynamism in the business community and these are things that I treasure and will take away with me from Nigeria. I think it is a tremendous country and I know what it takes to be a Nigerian and I can understand why Nigerians are proud to be Nigerians because of all these things.

    “The good thing about Nigeria is that despite all these things I have talked about earlier about how people can be very mean-minded, there is also pride in being a Nigerian and that is a good thing and that is what we should build on.

    “When I go round the country, some of the states are progressing very well and are very mindful of their responsibility for safe delivery at state level.”

    MacRae criticised the early kick off of the 2015 campaign which he decribed as “regrettable.”

    “I think it is regrettable that already in 2012, we are talking about the next election which is to be done in 2015. I think may be in the last six or eight months we can start talking about who we want to run but to do it at this time is a little bit of distraction because now is the time when the effort should go into making things happen like delivery services, putting in place infrastructure. We are good people and are making good efforts.

    He also decried the lack of internal democracy in the political parties in the country.

    MacRae also expressed concern over delay in the execution of EU projects in the country. He said “many projects take too long to execute, because this does not go down well with some of these villagers whom these projects are being targeted for end up waiting for too long.

    He described Nigeria’s population as a selling point.

     

  • US to partner Nigeria in intelligence sharing

    The United States Consul-General in Lagos, Mr. Jeffery Hawkins, has described Nigeria as a great partner of the United States of America in drug control.

    The US envoy, who spoke when presenting technical equipment to the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) in Lagos, said the equipment would be used in the establishment of a Centre for Intelligence Sharing between the two countries.

    “NDLEA is a great partner for the United States in drug control. The United States embarks on a serious war against narcotics and we are proud to contribute in developing the capacity of the NDLEA through the establishment of a Centre for Intelligence Sharing,” Hawkins said.

    The Chairman/Chief Executive of NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade, who received the items, said the country’s partnership with the United States has been very fruitful.

    “The relationship between the United States Government and the Government of Nigeria has been characterised by similar gestures in the area of technical support. “It is important to acknowledge your sustained determination to support Nigeria in winning the fight against notorious drug trafficking syndicates. This assistance to the agency is highly treasured,” Giade said.

    The NDLEA boss attributed the high performance of the agency to the growing support and partnership it has with the United States.

    His words: “Our collaboration in the area of intelligence gathering and joint operations has led to high profile seizures and arrests.

    “Training remains vital to the success of any intelligence-driven task like drug control. Your training programmes for operatives as well as high level seminars and workshops have helped to enhance the capacity of personnel. We are appreciative of your support and motivated by your continued determination to extend our frontiers of success in the drug war.”

    According to Giade, “the agency’s investigative capacity at the airports has been enhanced by the provision of scanners by the United States Government. The agency will justify the confidence you repose in us.”

    Appreciating the removal of Nigeria from the Drug Majors List by the US, he urged the envoy to assist the agency in advocacy campaign.

    “The prompt and objective assessment by the United States Government, which led to the removal of Nigeria from the Drug Majors List, has further increased the tempo of our campaign. We hope we can count on your advocacy support to ensure that more attention and resources are devoted to the all-important war against drug abuse and illicit drug trafficking,” Giade said.

  • OPERATION CRUSH MALAWI: Mikel, Moses, Enyeama commited to Nigeria

    OPERATION CRUSH MALAWI: Mikel, Moses, Enyeama commited to Nigeria

     •Ready for the battle of Calabar

    Super Eagles trio of Vincent Enyeama, Mikel Obi and Victor Moses have pledged their loyalty to the country, and will remain very focused towards ensuring that the country’s flag is hoisted at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

    Revealing this to Sportinglife on Monday, the Head Coach of the team, Stephen Keshi said he is constantly in touch with the players and they have vowed to put in their best to ensure that the team qualifies for the Mundial.

    The Big Boss said: “I spoke to Vincent Enyeama, Mikel Obi, and Victor Moses. They have all given their commitment to ensuring that we qualify for the World Cup. They promised to remain focused to the service of their fatherland and will put in everything to the remaining matches to ensure we get to the World Cup.”

    He also confirmed of speaking to other players who have vowed to crush the Flames of Malawi in Calabar.

     

     

  • Suntai: Impunity, greed killing Nigeria

    SIR: Circumstances surrounding the health situation of Governor Danbaba Suntai, of Taraba State Nigeria have been deliberately shrouded in secrecy in the last 10 months after an air crash that left him hospitalized in the United States. I thank God that Suntai is still alive today. It could have been worse.

    But impunity, hide and seek game, greed, lies, deceit, dishonesty, breach of contract etc have been the hallmark of the leadership in Taraba. Associates of Suntai including his wife have been deceiving Nigerians and the people of Taraba State for 10 months now and this must be stopped. The Suntai I saw on TV on Sunday cannot continue to remain governor of Taraba State until he gets back his health.

    I am not a lawyer but the 1999 constitution 191 (1) gave five grounds under which a deputy can become a governor. These are on the ground of death, resignation, impeachment, permanent incapacity or removal of Governor from office for any other reason in accordance with section 188 or 189 of the constitution. The Deputy Governor could become a governor if the state executive council decided to give effect to section 189 of the 1999 Constitution as amended. That section says the governor or deputy governor of a state shall cease to hold office if by a resolution passed by two-thirds majority of all members of the executive council of the state (i.e. the body of commissioners of the Government of the State) it is declared that the governor or deputy governors is incapable of discharging the functions of his office. This declaration has to, however, be verified by a medical panel of five (one of who must be the personal physician of the holder of the office concerned) to be appointed by the Speaker of the State House of Assembly.

    The arrival of governor Suntai at Abuja Airport spoke volumes about the state of the governor’s health. His looks suggest that he is far from recovering. His eyes are something else and it tells a bigger story that all is not well with him

    The carriage of his handlers suggests a despicable desperation to remain in power by all means. The idea of bringing a sick man home even when it is obvious to the world that all is not well suggests the way we are. Because of greed we have all become a slave to public office. I guess some people are feeding on the governor’s predicament. I guess that billions would have been stolen using his name and his fake signatures. This is a shame! But we have seen it before in the days of late President Yar’Adua of the blessed memory.

    The late former president of United States, Ronald Reagan had cause to undergo a surgical operation few years back. What did he do? He signed off his office as the President of the United States, went into the hospital for the operation. After a successful operation and recovery he took back his office. This is what civilized people do.

    Governor Suntai’s case has become an embarrassment to Nigerians and democracy. Handlers of governor Suntai have mismanaged the man’s recovery plans and Taraba State House of Assembly must do its work. The Deputy Governor of Taraba is now going through what President GEJ went through in the hands of Yar’Adua’s men. They have kept the man in the dark for fear of losing power.

    Let the law makers of Taraba State raise a team of five competent medical doctors to honestly ascertain the true state of the governor’s health and have the courage and the political will to do what needs to be done in the overall interest of the entire people of Taraba State.

    Let no one play politics with this man’s health and life.

     

    •Joe Igbokwe

    Lagos

  • Bayelsa’s gifts to Nigeria

    In the comity of minority groups in Nigeria, Bayelsa can be considered the least of them. Whereas it is the only homogenous Ijaw state – the home base of all Ijaw people and the epicentre of Ijaw civilization and culture, yet it is the least in terms of land mass and population. The entire state covering the land, vegetation, creeks, rivers and ocean is 21,110 km2 (8,150 sq mi). Going by the last census, the population is put at 1,998,349.

    The state was carved in 1996 out of the old Rivers State and is thus one of the newest states of the Nigerian federation.

    This is the state where crude oil was first discovered in Nigeria in commercial quantity. In fact it is on record that Bayelsa has one of the largest crude oil and natural gas deposits in the whole country. Aside from its natural endowments, Bayelsa also enjoys the rare privilege of producing the first President to emerge from a minority ethnic group.

    The discovery of oil in Oloibiri in 1956, according to Wikipedia, ended almost 50 years of unsuccessful oil exploration in the country by various companies. Indeed, the discovery launched Nigeria into global reckoning as a major oil-producing nation, considering the fact that over 5,000 barrels were pumped per day from the swampy oilfield of OML 29, measuring about 13.75 square kilometres.

    No doubt, the enormous wealth that came from the discovery of oil, ultimately accounted for the substantial investment in infrastructure by the then federal government in building the capital cities of Lagos and Abuja. It is, however, sad to note that the developments were done at the expense of the land from whose womb the wealth came. The oil wells in Oloibiri have since dried up. The land and its inhabitants lie desolate. The community is a shadow of itself, stripped of all its virtues and today it has become a clear metaphor. What a shame!

    In shame we have forged on as a people, carrying with us the deep scars of injustice, neglect and deprivation even as we take solace in the divine intervention that miraculously brought about the emergence of a President from among us.

    We also take solace in the contributions of our heroes to the Nigerian state, sons of the soil, whose giant strides have brought great honour and pride to our nation at different times and space. Today, we pay glowing tributes to men like Prof. Lawrence B. Ekpebu, from Okoloba, a once picturesque village in Bayelsa, now ravaged by the harsh consequence of exploitation of oil in the Niger Delta. From a destitute background where there was hardly opportunity to attend primary school, he went on to become the first African to bag a Harvard degree, graduating with Honours in Government with specialization in International Law and Relations. He won one of Harvard’s most coveted prizes for graduating seniors, the Francis H. Burr (1909) Prize Scholarship and broke an all- time record as the only black person to ever achieve this feat in the history of Harvard till date. Indeed, his achievement prompted the institution to grant scholarships to not just Nigerians but Africans and the Caribbeans. As a result, the scheme produced additional 200 professors from Nigeria alone and several others across the African continent among whom are Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi, Kalu Idika Kalu and His Excellency, President Quattara of Cote Ivoire. Prof. Ekpebu went on to bag Masters from Princeton University and later PhD from Harvard.

    There is also Ernest Sissei Ikoli of blessed memory (1893–1960), a nationalist and pioneering journalist, a native of Sangana, Akassa, in Brass Local Government Area of present day Bayelsa State. Ernest Ikoli was very prominent in pre-Independence Nigerian politics and remains the first man from present day Bayelsa State to have made as much significant foray into national politics. As a journalist, he was the first editor of the famous Daily Times in Lagos in its formative era in 1926 and as a politician, he was the President of the Nigerian Youth Movement. In 1942, Ikoli even represented Lagos in the Legislative Council. Another significant first by all standards in the history of Nigerian politics!

    Many will remember Melford Obiene Okilo, (November 30, 1933 – July 5, 2008), a proud Ijaw politician of Ogbia extraction from Emakalakala in Bayelsa State. He had a long and distinguished career as a politician from pre-Independence Nigeria, but his career as a politician gained tremendous prominence in post- independence times until his untimely demise in 2008. He was a Member of Parliament from 1956 to 1964 and minister in the First Republic. He was Governor of old Rivers State between 1979 and 1983 during the Second Republic and Senator representing Bayelsa East between 1999 and 2003.

    Only recently, the nation had cause to mourn the painful demise of General Andrew OwoyeAzazi, who died in an ill-fated helicopter crash last year. He had a distinguished military career and was arguably one of the finest in the history of the Nigerian Military, who rose to the pinnacle of the force. A Chief of Army Staff and later Chief of Defence Staff, Azazi, a native of Peretorugbene in Ekeremor LGA, Bayelsa State, was appointed National Security Adviser by President Goodluck Jonathan on October 4, 2010 and died on December 15, 2012.

    We also remember with fondness the great Major Isaac Jasper Adaka Boro (September 10, 1938 – May 9, 1968), better known as “Boro”, was a celebrated Niger Delta nationalist and Nigerian Civil War hero. He was one of the pioneers of minority rights activism in Nigeria and perhaps the very first to take up arms against the Nigerian State to agitate for the rights of the oil producing minorities of South- south. His legacies remain true to us even to this day.

    What’s the idea behind the reeling out of the profiles of these proud Ijaw sons of Bayelsa extraction? It is to draw attention to the fact that we have as a people over the years, in spite of the negative classification and distorted perceptive lenses, have done more perhaps more than most people will readily want to admit, to project the ideals of a united and egalitarian Nigeria. Undeniably, Bayelsa State is a blessing to the nation.

    It is in keeping with these ideals and to further push the frontiers of our collective interest as a nation, irrespective of the fault lines upon which our so- called unity in diversity was etched, that another great Bayelsan, the Governor of Bayelsa State, Henry Seriake Dickson chose to serve as chairman of the PDP National Reconciliation Committee.

    Those who criticized his appointment did not take long to realise that the man they presumed was inexperienced and “infantile” to chair the reconciliation committee was the brain behind the negotiation that ensured the suit stopping the party’s convention slated for August 31 was withdrawn. It also didn’t take long to prove to the skeptics and cynics that Governor Dickson’s persuasive and consensus building skills, not just as politician, but as a brilliant lawyer with years of outstanding records of achievements at the bar ensured that peace was restored to the feuding parties in PDP Ekiti and Anambra states.

    At a time like this when our nation’s unity is under severe threat, we must be able to draw a clear line between rendering service and playing politics. We should all take pride to work for the unity and development of our country and by so doing stand together to resist those exploiting our diversity to harp on those things that easily pull us apart. We must emulate the personalities whose remarkable profiles, who at different times rose beyond pettiness as gallant patriots and gave their all to render service to the nation by embracing and envisioning an all-inclusive approach to achieve national cohesion and unity.

     

    • Iworiso-Markson sent this piece from Yenagoa.

  • Nigeria beyond oil

    Nigeria beyond oil

    When an idea is planted and it grows, it does not necessarily generate joy. Since my days in the University of Ife, now known as the Obafemi Awolowo university, I had always contemplated our prosperity with fear.

    In the early 1980’s I began to understand the fragility of oil. It gave us the Lagos high rises, erected our phallic flyovers, emboldened a civil war, but embossed on our psyche a suicidal hubris. Oil did not only glisten, it served as our insurance against inferiority complex. It gave General Gowon the vanity to proclaim that Nigeria’s problem was how to spend its huge tranche of oil cash.

    General Murtala Muhammed meant Nigeria when he announced that Africa had come of age. For him, Nigeria that was the part of Africa had become the whole of Africa. Oil meant other things had to shrink. The pyramidal swagger of our groundnut did not, however, shrink. It disappeared. The palm oil produce, rubber, cocoa, and other examples of salutary pride, shrank. So did methodical approach to governance. So did morality, so did conscience. So did our obeisance to the dignity of democracy.

    We became a prodigal nation beholden to the spell of having, in spite of the threat that having could impose on us the wretchedness of having nothing.

    That was the motif of the conference held last week by the Nigerian Guild of Editors. The theme, Nigeria Beyond Oil, revived my fear. It gave me the sort of sensation Caribbean author George Lamming referred to when he said, “something startles where I thought I was safest.”

    In spite of the fact that we had always spoken of a post-oil Armageddon for our economy, we have not articulated it in a language as succinct and penetrating. That was why I wrote that when an idea is planted, it does not necessarily generate joy. Nigeria Beyond Oil draws from the concept of Delta Beyond Oil as initiated by the Governor of Delta State, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan.

    But what does it mean? Many have spoken of it as though it is a call to the hoe, to return to our arched backs and humus soil. That accounted for why speaker after speaker at the NGE conference reified agriculture as though once everyone turned into a harbinger of food, our problems would recede into memory.

    We forget that food is wealth just as health is wealth just as the infrastructure and education of a people is wealth. Secretary to the Government of the Federation Pius Anyim set an important tone by showing to those who did not know that while oil is on its way out as the world’s supreme fluid, it is suffering a fall in value because of the many countries, especially in Africa, that are discovering it in huge quantities. The United States, in its ever-ready impulse to disrupt technology, had come up with shale oil and gas.

    But it took the voice of Governor Uduaghan to articulate it as an integrated idea. So, when he is constructing a road between Asaba and Ughelli, or providing scholarship to PHD levels to all indigenes with first class anywhere in the world, when he valorises healthcare for the vulnerable, young and old, it is because all of them have to work together to give us what economist John Kenneth Galbraith calls the affluent society. When did Germany discover oil? Never. What country holds the EU’s economic jugular? Germany. Those with oil act as though they don’t have them. Example? New Zealand. Such countries and even parts of countries like Alaska, put away the oil money aside so that the lean cow cannot swallow the large one.

    Nigeria Beyond Oil, like Delta Beyond Oil, does not vitiate the power of the farm. It actually elevates. It tells us to use it to grow food, but it is not to grow food alone, but know the value in the context of other things we do. Renewable energy comes in many manifestations. It comes from corn, comes as wind energy, as solar power, etc.

    But we cannot do anything without shedding the prodigal son syndrome. It abhors extravagance and the absence of discipline. It does not accept the irresponsibility of a minister who spends, because she can sign the cheques, the sum of N2 billion jacketing around the world in private jets.

    It is part of the Gowon legacy that our problem is how to spend the money. When Gowon said it, we were still a poor nation, if we are poorer today. The rich are richer than the former rich though. In the early 1970’s, the Mideast crisis shot up oil prices and our current accounts fattened like the Biblical cow. Nigeria became flush with money but we did not flush out poverty. The peacock class acquired a new vanity of squander-mania. We learned that a federal minister who did not care for champagne unless it cost N1 million at that time, and we applauded. Just as a president took it upon himself to visit countries all over the world as a sign of diplomatic finesse and bonhomie, or when clothes evoked subaltern smallness unless they were called wonyosi.

    The prodigal son had become us, and before our eyes, education standards fell, groundnut pyramid flattened, the naira plummeted from its pride to four to a Naira. Today, it is about 160, but we all know we are holding the money at that point artificially with oil money. Now that oil price is on its way down, we shall progressively have little power to prop the Naira. Its crash will have consequences that will make Nigeria so nervous that our devotion to God would make the evangelical fever of today look like the righteousness of the Pharisees.

    The Russian poet, Nekrasov, once described his country as “wretched and abundant.” He probably had Nigeria in mind with its huge oil reserve, agricultural plenty with produce rotting daily, with copper, gold, coal, etc. Yet the agriculture minister with bow tie keeps talking a big game with little evidence while we have a huge reserve of poverty.

  • Aganga: How Nigeria can be among global top ten

    For the economy to be number one in Africa, among the top ten globally, there is need to create an agency for industrial development, Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment Olusegun Aganga has said.

    The minister said the Federal Government would soon release the Nigeria Industrial Revolution.

    He spoke yesterday during a visit to Bio-Organics Nutrients Systems Limited, Lagos.

    Aganga said: “One of the reasons we have suffered as a country for decades is that we do not have one agency to sponsor industrial development. And yet we want to industrialise. You have for investment, export promotion and none for industrial development. So, it was completely wrong. There is an institution to drive this. That is what we are doing; that is the plan we have. We have started it, we are incorporating them already and we will implement them.

    “There is no way we are to diversify our economy without focusing on industrialisation. No country has managed through that. The country cannot rely on the export of raw materials if we don’t have the industrial services sector. So, this plan focuses on strategic areas to drive great revenue, where Nigeria can be number one in Africa and top ten globally.”

  • Nigeria leads Africa with $16.6b FDI

    Nigeria is leading Africa in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) with $16.5 billion recorded in the last two years, the Minister of State, Industry,Trade & Investment Dr. Samuel Ortom has said.

    He told The Nation that an additional $1 billion in equipment and accessories manufacturing was coming from General Electric (GE), adding that the deal is expected to create 2,300 jobs.

    He said another investment worth $520million for household consumables plant, and Gulf Warehouse costing $390 million is coming from Procter & Gamble.

    He said for the first time, the nation developed a strategy for domestic, regional and international trade, established a Diaspora Export Programme, as well six trans-National border markets with Okerete in Oyo State.

    He said the Ministry is working with the Nigeria Export-Import Bank (NEXIM) to establish Sealink Coastal Ferry services for goods and human transport to reduce travel time from six weeks to less than one week.

    He said: “The administration is committed to driving export and adding value to locally produced raw materials, in order to lift the local economy into a productive one that will earn exchange for the country.”

    He addeed that the on-going privatisation of Abuja Securities and Commodities Exchange, including the introduction of Warehouse Receipt System, represents new lines of business with great benefits for both farmers and other businesses.

  • Nigeria footballers to honour  Gov. Akpabio

    Nigeria footballers to honour Gov. Akpabio

    THE Association of Professional Footballers of Nigeria, the official Nigeria Players Union recognised by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF)and affiliated to the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC), as the exclusive representatives and collective bargaining agent of all Nigeria Professional Footballers will partner the organisers of the Chief Godswill Akpabio under 18 Boys international unity Football tournament to honour His Excellency Chief Godswill Akpabio, the executive Governor of Akwa Ibom State with a special merit award for his outstanding contributions to the development of sports in Nigeria. The Nigeria Players Union Special Merit Award {NPUSMA} will be bestowed on Chief Akpabio during the finals of the 7th edition of the Godswill Akpabio Under 18 Boys International Unity Football tournament scheduled to hold from September 14th to 22nd in Uyo, capital of Akwa Ibom State. The

    Nigeria Players Union commended Governor Akpabio for his unconfined and untiring commitment to the promotion of unity through the continuous sponsorship of the unity tournament for the past six years, thus resulting to the discovery of hundreds of budding football talents across Nigeria and their subsequent development and engagement by professional football clubs within and outside Nigeria.

  • Nigeria to get a national carrier, 30 years after NNSL

    Nigeria to get a national carrier, 30 years after NNSL

    The Chief of Naval Staff, Rear Admiral Dele Ezeoba, on Friday in Warri, Delta State inaugurated two brand new seafaring tankers, MT Abiola and MT Igbinosa, acquired by an indigenous maritime company, Ocean Marine Tankers Limited.

    The tankers, which were commissioned at the NPA dockyard, have combine capacity of 450,000 metric tonnes.

    Maritime experts at the event said the event was unique because they could become Nigeria’s first national carrier in about 30 years since the demise of the NNSL.

    President Goodluck Jonathan, who was represented by his Special Assistant on Maritime, Mr. Olugbenga Oluwole, said the tankers would save funds usually earned by foreign freighters as well as help train Nigerian youths.

    He urged the ministries of Petroleum Resources and Transport to provide the company with the needed assistance to succeed as well as help other local businesses to acquire large and ultra-large crude carriers.

    Earlier in his welcome address, the Chairman of OMT, Capt Idahosa Wells Okunbor, said the feat was the result of unbroken stream of successes recorded by the company and its partner PPPFM and the Nigerian Navy in transporting crude oil to local refineries.

    He said the partnership ensures that the Warri Refining and Petrochemical Company (WRPC) and Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company have access to crude for operation in spite of attacks on crude oil pipelines in the Escravos areas of Delta State.

    In her address, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Deziani Alison-Madueke, commended the initiative of OMT, stressing that it was in line with President Goodluck Jonathan’s effort to develop local content for the industry.

    She said OMT’s achievement has justified the Local Content Law and the Cabotage Act, adding that the Federal Government would do everything possible to assist indigenous companies that are willing to take advantage of the acts.

    On the Petroleum Industry Bill, she said it recognises that all stakeholders must cooperate to grow the Nigerian capacity.

    She therefore advised communities in the Niger Delta region and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) to support OMT and its partners to ensure the success of the company, which has already employed about 1,000 persons.

    On his part, the Director General of Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency NIMASA, Dr. Patrick Akpobolokemi, said the agency would pull out all stops to ensure that OMT gets accredited as Nigeria’s national carrier.

    He said, “We will vigorously pursue cabotage regime. Nigerians should lift at least 50% of our crude oil. We are not going to rest until we achieve that.”

    The Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, Mr Ernest Nwapa, said the event was a realisation of the transformation agenda of the President.

    The CNS, who later flagged off the vessel, advised the captains to ensure strict adherence to the tenets of safe navigation and ensuring that the vessels never run aground or into adverse circumstances.

    “You must ensure safety of the ship, crew and cargoes,” he admonished.