Tag: Nigeria

  • Nigeria tops nations with out-of-school kids

    A new report by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) has placed Nigeria top on countries with children missing out of school.

    The global figure for the number of children without access to schools has fallen to 57 million.

    These figures are for 2011 and show a reduction from an estimated 61 million missing school in 2010.

    According to UNESCO, the countries with most children missing out of school are: Nigeria, Pakistan, Ethiopia, Indian, Philippines, Burkina Faso, Kenya, Niger, Yemen and Mali.

    The report also states that more than half of the children missing out on school are now in sub-Saharan Africa. The last annual report showed that in some countries, including Nigeria, the problem is getting worse rather than better.

  • 57 million children were out of school in 2011-UNESCO

    57 million children were out of school in 2011-UNESCO

    New figures from the UN Scientific, Educational and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) have shown that the number of children out of school dipped slightly last year over 2011.

    UNESCO said in a statement issued on Monday that 57 million children were out of school in 2011, down just two million from the previous year.

    It said the challenge of getting more children into school was being compounded by the fact that aid to basic education decreased for the first time in more than a decade.

    The statement quoted UNESCO’s Director-General Irina Bokova as saying “we are at a critical juncture, now is not the time for aid donors to back out.’’

    She said the world must move beyond simply helping children enter school to ensuring that they actually learn the basics literacy and numeracy skills when they are there.

    Bokova also said at least one out of every four children that do enrol stay in school, noting that “the figure has not changed since 2000.’’

    According to her, of some 137 million children who began primary school in 2011, at least 34 million are likely to drop out before reaching the last grade.

    “The figure drops to one out of three students in Sub-Saharan Africa, South and West Asia, which have the highest rate of early school dropout.

    “Our twin challenge is to get every child in school by understanding and acting on the multiple causes of exclusion and to ensure they learn with qualified teachers in healthy and safe environments.”

    According to UNESCO’s Education for All Global Monitoring Report, aid to basic education declined by six per cent between 2010 and 2011.

    The report said six of the top education donors that year cut funding, among them Canada, the Netherlands and the World Bank (IDA), leaving the UK as the largest bilateral donor to basic education.

    In addition, the report called on donors to prioritise countries and regions most in need.

    UNESCO said that only 1.9 billion dollars was allocated to low income countries in 2011, a reduction of nine per cent and significantly short of the 26 billion dollars needed to fill the finance gap for basic education.

    The agency also said that countries in sub-Saharan Africa account for more than half of all out-of-school children and have the highest out-of-school rate.

    “Aid to Nigeria, for example, the country that is home to the largest number of out of school children in the world, dropped by more than a quarter from 2010 to 2011,’’ it said.

    It disclosed that more than 20 per cent of African children have never attended primary school or have left school without completing primary education.

    “By contrast, countries in South and West Asia, which also have high drop-out rates, have made considerable gains over the past two decades, reducing the number of out-of-school children by two-thirds from 38 million in 1999 to 12 million in 2011.

    “Children in poor, remote areas, those affected by conflict, or those belonging to ethnic, racial and linguistic minorities are denied an opportunity for schooling,” UNESCO said.

    In addition, children from poor households are three times as likely to be out of school as children from rich households.

    Access to education is particularly difficult for girls from poor households in rural areas.

    The release of the figures comes ahead of Tuesday’s June 11’s high-level discussions at the UN headquarters in New York in support of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Global Education First Initiative and UN Special Envoy for Education, Mr Gordon Brown,s drive to put every child in school, improve the quality of learning and foster global citizenship by the end of 2015.

    In 2000, governments held a meeting in Dakar, Senegal, to set six education goals to be met by 2015.

    One of these, Universal Primary Education, was also set as one of the eight anti-poverty targets known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which are to be achieved by the same date.

    To accelerate progress towards universal education, the UN chief, in September, launched his Global Education First Initiative and which the UNESCO hosts it’s Secretariat.

  • How Nigeria can achieve people’s Constitution, by NBA

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has identified factors which will make the 1999 Constitution, undergoing amendment, more people-oriented.

    The factors, it said, include inclusivity, validity and transparency.

    The association backed the gradual amendment of the Constitution, saying it believes piecemeal approach is preferable to a wholesale alteration in which an existing constitution is totally jettisoned for a new one.

    The association condemned the divisions among governors with the Nigerian Governor’s Forum (NGF), which the association declared as unconstitutional.

    NBA President Okey Wali (SAN), who made NBA’s position known, spoke while welcoming delegates to the association’s just-concluded National Executive Committee (NEC) in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    “The Nigerian Bar Association supports the proposed review of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria by the National Assembly. It is the position of the Bar that more than anything else Nigeria needs amendment of some important aspect of the Constitution in the interest of democracy consolidation.

    “Since the amendment exercise started, the NBA has identified two crucial principles of Constitutional amendment. They are: timing and approach. Under timing, we suggest that Constitutional amendment should be an on-going exercise. As soon as an issue identified as germane for constitutional amendment arises, the process of a new amendment ought to be initiated at the National Assembly through a Bill.

    “On approach which has great linkage with timing, the NBA believes that piecemeal amendment is preferred to a wholesale amendment in which an existing Constitution is totally jettisoned for a new one.

    “The oldest federation, the United State of America, has had same Constitution for over 200 years and has made only 27 amendments to it. India has made 94 amendments to its Constitution in 60 years,” Wali said.

    The NBA President said the central issue is not only whether there is a constitution but whether or not the constitution is of the people.

    “The pertinent questions are: does the constitution reflect the wishes of the people? How was it made? Were the processes involved in its making open and transparent? Were the processes inclusive?

    “It could be deciphered from the foregoing questions that these are the parameters for testing a people oriented constitution, the type we deserve for Nigeria. These are the basic elements of a good constitution and this revolves around the process of passage.

    “These basic standards include: Inclusivity: the constitution must be owned by the people. In effect it is in the spirit of the Rule of Law for the people to have a say in how they are governed. Ownership ensures credibility of the constitution. Validity: the constitution must be subject to a referendum. Transparency: Process must be transparent to ensure credibility.

    “It is only through a process as enunciated above that Nigeria, can have the type of constitution we truly deserve. I want to state unequivocally again that the only way to achieve a people’s constitution is through a referendum

    NBA also took a stand on the state of emergency declared by President Goodluck Jonathan in

    Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states.

    “It is because of the failure of law and order that necessitated the declaration of the state of emergency in the three aforementioned states. President Jonathan had unequivocally stated in his state of emergency speech that in view of the intelligence report available to him, it had become necessary to declare the state of emergency.

    “But the big lesson in this National security debacle is the urgent and important need to equip the Nigerian Police Force. It is not enough to always send the Armed Forces to places where our National Security is threatened all the time.

    “One may ask the question why not involve the Nigerian Police Force? But we must ask ourselves whether the Nigerian Police Force is well funded and equipped? The Bar calls for the urgent equipping of the Nigerian Police Force. From available statistic, the Nigerian Police Force has the required man power but lack the requisite training and equipment.

    “The Bar therefore calls for the urgent funding, training (capacity building), and equipping of the Nigerian Police Force. Without adequate funding, the Nigerian Police Force cannot function. That is why they are getting overpowered and killed every day. If we had a well trained and equipped Police, we never would have needed soldiers and the military.

    “The NBA calls on the Federal Government to declare a state of emergency on the Police Force, with a view to making them capable of functioning appropriately.”

    NBA called for the strengthening of the judiciary’s independence, adding that the problem of overloaded court dockets is indeed one that must be tackled head-on.

    It said: “Government must recognise that the judiciary is the Third Arm of Government in any civilized society. Accordingly, the independence of the Judiciary must be guaranteed and secured. To secure the independence of the judiciary, government must grant to it true financial autonomy, and a full self-accounting status.

    “The funds of the judiciary must be released to it as soon as the same is approved in the budgets of the Federal and State governments. The personal emoluments of judicial officers, together with their other conditions of service, should be enhanced to make them commensurate with that of their counterparts in England, from where Nigeria derived its Legal system.

    “Bayelsa State is the only State in Nigeria that has passed a law backing a self accounting judiciary vide its Judiciary Financial Autonomy Law 2012.

    “The NBA reiterates that Government must recognise that it is only the existence of a virile, fearless and independent Judiciary that can guarantee an enduring democratic government, and the maintenance of law and order.”

    On NGF, Wali said: “Let me say that the 1999 Constitution, as amended, does not provide for a body such as the Nigeria Governors Forum. I, however, agree that Nigerians have a constitutional right to form or belong to a body, group or association of their choice.

    “This Forum is modelled after the National Governors Association in the United States of America, but unlike their own Association in the U.S which is good governance and policy driven, ours is highly politicised and it is heating up the polity in Nigeria.”

    The NBA president confirmed to the NEC that the Building Committee would hit the site of the NBA House on June 21 when the ground breaking will be performed.

    It was also reported to the NEC that the NBA had gone to court to challenge the provision of the law on Money laundering which requires lawyers to report any transaction above $1,000 to law enforcement agencies.

     

  • Annulled election still haunts Nigeria, say activists

    The June 12 Coalition of Democratic Formations (J12CODEF) at the weekend said 20 years after the annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election, Nigeria is yet to recover from the injustice perpetrated by the military.

    The group said the annulled election would have set Nigeria on the path of credible elections and governance.

    It said years after, Nigeria is still living with its consequences.

    J12CODEF called for the convening of a Sovereign National Conference (SNC) to address the country’s problems.

    Speaking with reporters, the group’s Chairman, Mr. Baba Omojola and Secretary Nelson Ekujumi said: “J12CODEF is lending its voice to the patriotic call to our elected public officials at all levels that the way out of this state of war, in which we are potential victims, lies in the convocation of a SNC, where all ethnic nationalities would sit down unfettered, peacefully and fraternally at the round-table to discuss Nigeria.”

    They said consequent of the annulment, “the Nigerian state is manifesting all the symptoms of a failed state, such as mass unemployment, poverty, monumental corruption, high infant and maternal mortality rate, worsening insecurity, culture of violence, subversion of democratic principles by democratically elected public officials, irresponsible and irresponsive leadership, failed value system and a culture of impunity”.

    The group flayed the constitutional amendment process on the grounds that the 1999 Constitution was not a creation of the Nigerian people but a military document robed in civilian camouflage.

    It said it was on this basis that issues of outrageous remuneration of elected office holders, corruption, insecurity and other undemocratic tendencies still thrive with no end in sight.

    J12CODEF said: “Civilian rule has fast become cabalised in exploiting the masses for the economic interest of a few ruling elites. These cabals have turned democracy into the opposite of what it connotes as a government of the people, by the people and for the people.”

    To mark the 20th anniversary of the annulled election, the group said members of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO) and civil society groups will renew the MKO Abiola Epetedo Declaration seeking recognition of the late Abiola as a former president-elect of Nigeria.

  • ‘My experience  in Nigeria has  changed me’

    ‘My experience in Nigeria has changed me’

    She talks about hopping on buses to Lekki, Obalende, Ajegunle, Ikeja, and Ogudu. No big deal. She preaches a message of an alternative to violence and deploys environmental education to youths in Lagos State. Still no big deal. But, when the person in question is a white American woman on a nine-month Fulbright Scholarship grant, it raises eyebrows. Enter the world of Erica Licht. Joe Agbro Jr. had an encounter with her recently.

     

    THE media has a lot of negative stories about Nigeria,” Erica Licht says. “I choose to ignore them. I want to come to a place and create my own understanding of a place. My friends and family can think what they want but they support me though. They are happy for me that I’m pursuing the work I’m doing.”

    Licht also dismisses the hardship of moving about in Lagos and the ‘danger’ it portends to foreigners. Development of youths is what keeps her rocking. The Africana Studies graduate of Vassar College, New York, who works independently as a researcher, youth development professional, applied for the Fulbright Scholarship specifically with Lagos, Nigeria in mind.

    She says studying Africana Studies was due to a need to fill a gap “that I felt was left out of my education as an American growing up. And the other key part of my work and study is with criminal justice, looking at criminal justice reform using alternative methods.”

    Speaking on how she settled on Nigeria as we nestled in the library of the Centre for Contemporary Arts, in Yaba, Lagos, she says, “I had never been to Nigeria before, although I had studied it a lot in school both in Urban Studies and in Africana Studies and in Geography. I have been to Uganda in 2007 on a community project. But I have lived in Kingston, Jamaica for a year from 2010 to 2011. And there is a lot of interesting connections between Jamaica and Nigeria that have propelled my interest in coming here.”

    “A lot of Jamaicans look to Nigeria as the source of their heritage. Politically, socially, Nigeria has really set the stage for the rest of the continent. And it is Lagos that really interests me. I’m interested in cities where there is a large population of youths.”

    She says: “I’m interested in what strategies are taken to address youth and violence. What’s working and what’s not working. And my interest is in bringing the environment composition to see what that can do.”

    Previously, she worked in Kingston, Jamaica, and in Bronx, New York where she taught environmental education to urban youths.

    The title of her Fulbright project which she designed is called Outdoor education as an alternative to incarceration for urban youths. The name of the youth group is You and I Teach Each Other or simply UNITE. Arriving Nigeria in September 2012, she hit the ground running. “I got to see a lot of Nigeria,” she says. “I went to Enugu the second week after I came to Nigeria to lead a workshop for the Alternative to Violence Project which was one of the co-partners. My two partners in bringing me here are the Lagos State University (LASU) and the Alternative to Violence Project.”

    The same work took her to Kaduna where she led a workshop for the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) on setting up a community resilient network. She did the same workshop in Abeokuta, Ogun State. From Kaduna, she also visited Jos, Plateau State to see a friend.

    Describing her visit to Enugu and later on Calabar by bus in which Nollywood movies were shown throughout as fun, Licht says, “the whole bus became a community for a day.”

    But her pet project of working with Lagos youths would only commence about five months later. In her head, the programme was done before reaching Nigeria. But, due to cultural differences and advice from her partners and friends, it took about five months to make her programme Lagos-specific. Initially, she had planned to make environmental educational have more focus, but, one of her partners, Onyinye Onyemobi at Alternative to Violence Project (AVP), convinced her to include the criminal justice bit and have the youths interact with police officers directly.

    “That was a huge influence on the programme,” Licht discloses.

    Simultaneously, she was also designing a weekly radio programme on Unilag FM called Justified Nature which she started in the first week of January. On the radio show, her major challenge was on the need to play and the type of music to be played. The director of the station reminded her that she had to play music to appeal to their audience. “It really made me think,” Licht enthuses, “not only about the music. But, I changed the name of my website, www.justifiedoutdoors.com to www.justifiednature.com.” According to her, the word outdoors does not specifically refer to nature which is what it’s referred to in the US. And she adds, “I tried to speak more clearly on the show so people can understand me.”

    By February, UNITE kicked off by having weekly meetings with about 90 youths at three centres: Ogudu, Ajegunle, and Lagos Island, in Lagos. At Ajegunle, she worked with an existing youth NGO, National Youth Council in Awodi-Ora Estate. At Ogudu, it was with students of the Ogudu Senior Secondary School, while at Lagos Island, the meetings held at the Adeniji Adele Police Station and consisted police officers and youths in the area.”

    At the meetings were semi-formal exercises and yoga which sought to create a leveller. Each person even gets a nickname to correspond with their names. In those circles, she is known as Eclectic Erica. No doubt, it is a fitting name because of the many things she is; youth development activist, radio show host, jewellery designer, and spoken word poet.

    “Each group is fundamentally different,” Licht intones. “In Ogudu, there are secondary school students and are 14 to 18 years old. It’s mostly girls but there are three boys. At Ajegunle, they are about 18 to 25 years old, split about 50-50 gender-wise. In Lagos Island, it’s a mix, some are younger, in their 20s, some are in their 30s, but all identify as youths. So, each group has a different effect on me.”

    The Lagos Island group held each session with the Divisional Police Officer (DPO), Monday Agbonika, in attendance while she led the other two groups to visit police stations in their neighbourhood. This was to ensure interaction between the youths and the police. Describing the experience of the Ajegunle group, she says, “that was a huge triumph. No youth group had ever visited the police station in Ajegunle. The DPO didn’t know how to deal with us. But, in the end of the day it was great.”

    In addition to that, she organised a field trip for each of the groups to the Lekki Conservation Centre. “They loved it,” she enthuses. “The youths loved it, the police loved it. Each group had different and similar reactions.” She says the trip spurred some of the participants to wanting to recreate what they saw there in their own community. “Those things,” she says, “included the clean air, the co-existence they saw of things living together in balance and in harmony, how trees and animals are living together, and then the freedom the animals had to move around.”

    She informs that the youths and police also liked the way the guides at the centre took them and showed them around. “There were things they couldn’t have known and the guide needed to show them and tell them about the place. That was how they wanted their communal leaders to be.”

    The trip was a leveler, according to Licht. “It had nothing to do with nature,” she emphasises, “but just being on the trip, we were all equal. We all sat together at the same picnic table. And we all ate the same meal.”

    Building trust

    According to her, trust is very important in dealing with different classes of people. “It’s not just Oyinbos that don’t go into Ajegunle.” Also, every upper-class Nigerians from Ikoyi, Yaba, VI, Ikeja; no one is going into Ajegunle for any reason. They (Ajegunle) don’t have attention like the rest of Lagos.”

    Hence, she says part of what she hopes her work will do is about building such relationships.

    To her, Ajegunle in Lagos is like the Bronx in New York. “It’s in the context of a big city but it’s on the side. The only reason you’ll go there is if it’s your destination.”

    Living in Brooklyn but working in South Bronx, Licht made a long and hectic commuting which saw her pass Manhattan, one of the wealthiest places in New York. The commute would prepare her for own initiative, UNITE, in Lagos.

    And while some foreigners may think Lagos is dangerous, she thinks otherwise. “It’s not dangerous,” she states. “It’s stress. Like getting on the bus, dealing with bus conductors, arguing over N10.”

    Having been in such situations, she says, “I want to be taken seriously. I want them (bus conductors) to know I know the price. And it’s my N10.”

    She adds; “One of the reasons it is easy to lose it here (in Lagos) is that you’re so stressed, hot, and tired. And there is little personal space.”

    However, she believes her overall experience in the country has been incredible. “This experience in Nigeria has completely changed who I am,” she states. She likes amala and gbegiri soup, moin-moin, roasted plantain, and corn and coconut. On the music scene, the Fullbright scholar likes Naija hip-hop and declares she likes P-square, Sunny Ade and that she’s also a big fan of Omawumi. And being a spoken word artiste, she also engaged with two groups; Freedom Hall, which is an open mic session, and Word Up.

    Organising the whole workshop which had assistance from various organisations including the Lagos State Security Trust Fund, Erica describes it as an intense period. She says, “I played the role of the curriculum developer, facilitator, organiser, planner, plus the secretary and the finance person, I handled every single letter for this programme. And you know how much work that is!”

    Speaking at a presentation at the United States Consulate General in Lagos, to signal an end to her programme, participants were full of praise for her work. According to Kehinde Balogun, a participant at the Lagos Island group, “the training on alternative to violence changed my thinking regarding physical confrontations and fight. I knew I would have engaged in many fights if not for the training I had.”

    While Licht would be sorely missed by her friends and those people she has touched, she hopes that through her partners, such as Monday Agbonika, the DPO at Adeniji Adele Police Station, UNITE continues.

  • Ribadu to youths: Save Nigeria

    FORMER Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, yesterday asked youths to rise to the challenge of rescuing the nation from those he described as retrogressive elements.

    Ribadu, who contested the 2011 presidential election on the platform of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), said contrary to the belief in several quarters, the nation cannot break despite the campaign by some unpatriotic politicians and ethnic jingoists to dismember the country.

    The former EFCC boss spoke at a public lecture organised by the Students Representative Council (SRC) of the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria.

    According to him: “We are doomed as a nation the moment the youth get hoodwinked by the bickering of bitter politicians who ride to relevance on sentiments that only inspire distrust among citizens.

    “My experience so far in politics has taught me that age does not guarantee maturity to responsibly play the role of a patriot in an atmosphere of tensed political antagonisms.”

    In his paper entitled: “A New Approach…Youth: The fulcrum of every Society”, Ribadu canvassed for change that would lead to a functional nation.

     

  • Nigeria’s debt position

    Nigeria’s debt position

    There has recently been a lot of misinformation and misconception in our
    public debate on debt. My goal in this article is to shed some light on the
    public debt, to clarify the real state of Nigeria’s debt position, and
    hopefully, provide a knowledge platform for constructive debate.
    
    Let me say at the outset that no one in government is supportive of a
    Nigeria that returns to a high state of indebtedness. On a personal note,
    having gone through tremendous stress during the quest for Paris Club debt
    relief, I am committed to a Nigerian economy that is fiscally prudent,
    balances its books and remains at a low state of indebtedness.
    
    To begin, Nigeria’s overall debt is comprised of external and domestic
    debts. The external debt is typically owed to foreign creditors such as
    multilateral agencies (for example, the Africa Development Bank, the World
    Bank, or the Islamic Development Bank), to bilateral sources (such as the
    China Exim Bank, the French Development Bank or the Japanese Aid Agency),
    or to private creditors such as investors in our Eurobonds. The domestic
    debt, however, is contracted within Nigerian borders, usually through bond
    issues which are then purchased by Nigerian banks, local pension funds, and
    other domestic and foreign investors. The resources raised typically go to
    help fund the budget or other domestic expenditures, such as infrastructure
    projects. We also have some contractor arrears, and other local liabilities
    which are normally handled through the budget.
    
    Both federal and state governments borrow domestically and externally.
    However, no state government can borrow externally unless guaranteed by the
    Federal Government. Similarly, state governments’ domestic borrowing is
    subject to federal government analysis and confirmation – based on clear
    criteria and guidelines that a state can repay based on their monthly FAAC
    allocations and internally generated revenues (IGR).
    
    As a nation, we have had a difficult history with debt. As such, no one can
    forget the challenging times we went through from 2003 to 2005 trying, in
    the end, successfully to get relief on our large external debt. Neither the
    government nor any Nigerian wants a repeat of the country’s past history of
    large debts. That is why the current President Goodluck Jonathan
    administration, the Legislature, the Ministry of Finance, and the Debt
    Management Office, are very focused on a conservative and prudent approach
    to managing the national debt. Our current approach balances Nigeria’s
    needs for investment in physical and human infrastructure with a strong
    policy to limit overall indebtedness in relation to our ability to pay.
    Above all, any debts incurred must go for directly productive purposes
    which yield results that Nigerians can see.
    
    *First the numbers:*
    
    a. In 2004, prior to the Paris Club debt relief, Nigeria’s overall debt
    stock was very high. External debt stood at US$35.9 billion while the stock
    of the domestic debt amounted to US$10.3 billion resulting in a total of
    about US$46.2 billion or 64.3% of GDP excluding contractor and pension
    arrears.
    
    b. After the successful debt relief initiative, Nigeria’s stock of foreign
    debt declined dramatically. Indeed, in August 2006, when I left office,
    Nigeria’s foreign and domestic debts amounted to US$3.5 billion and US$13.8
    billion respectively – a total of US$17.3 billion or 11.8% of GDP.
    
    c. By August 2011, when I resumed for the second time as Finance Minister,
    the domestic debt stock had grown substantially to US$42.23 billion, while
    the external debt was still a modest US$5.67 billion. This implied a total
    debt stock of US$47.9 billion or 21% of GDP. Note that while the debt stock
    grew, our national income also grew so that debt to GDP ratio (the
    parameter used globally to measure a country’s debt sustainability) remains
    modest and manageable.
    
    d. Thus, the key noticeable change in Nigeria’s indebtedness in recent
    years has been the growth of domestic debt. There were two main reasons
    which resulted in this outcome. First, the initial growth of the domestic
    debt stock was because the federal government wanted to deepen the domestic
    debt markets and generate a yield curve for Nigeria which ultimately could
    help our corporate bodies to access the capital markets and borrow funds at
    more affordable rates. The DMO through its work has been successful in
    doing this.
    
    Nigerian corporates can now raise money at reasonable rates at home and
    abroad, helping them secure resources to invest in the economy. Secondly,
    however, domestic debt was also raised to finance increased budget
    expenditures including consumption. For example, in 2010, the 53% salary
    increase for civil servants was financed by raising domestic bonds.
    Borrowing for recurrent expenditure or consumption, as was the case here is
    a practice that is less than ideal and one that we should endeavour not to
    repeat. We must learn that domestic debt should be incurred sparingly at
    modest and manageable rates so that government is able to service it and
    pay back domestic creditors. Failure to do so would severely undermine the
    finances of our private and institutional creditors to the detriment of the
    economy.
    
    It is with this background in mind that we have put in place several
    measures to limit and manage the national debt. There are a number of
    specific policies we have introduced in the current administration to slow
    down the increase in our overall debt stock.
    
    a. First, we have brought expenditures and revenues much more in line,
    through a low fiscal deficit of 1.81% GDP, to reduce the need for domestic
    borrowing. For example, we reduced annual domestic borrowing from N852
    billion in 2011, to N744 billion in 2012, and to N577 billion in 2013. Our
    objective is to reduce government’s domestic borrowing to below N500
    billion in the 2014 budget.
    
    b. Second, for the first time, we have paid down part of our domestic debt
    rather than rolling all of it over. Beginning in February 2013, we
    successfully retired N75 billion worth of maturing domestic bonds. And we
    will continue with this practice in the coming years.
    
    c. Third, we have established a sinking fund with an initial capitalisation
    of N25 billion. This fund will enable the government to retire maturing
    bond obligations in the future.
    
    d. Fourth, we are working increasingly with states to get a clearer picture
    of domestic debts acquired by state governments, thanks to the
    comprehensive review recently completed by the DMO. Our particular concern
    is that state governments limit borrowings in line with their incomes and
    put any borrowings made to work on specific projects and programmes that
    bring direct beneficial results to their citizens.
        [Please find attached the Debt-to-GDP ratio of selected economies]
    
         e. Fifth, instead of the previous practice of contracting foreign
    loans in an ad hoc manner, we have streamlined the process for federal and
    state governments and made it transparent through the Medium Term Rolling
    External Borrowing Plan, which is reviewed and approved by the National
    Assembly. This plan presents the anticipated loans to be contracted by the
    government over a three-year time window, so that we can target funds to
    priority projects, and also make trade-offs where necessary. Notice that
    this covers planned foreign borrowing by both the federal and state
    governments for projects that will yield results in infrastructure,
    education, health, etc. Most loans contracted are on concessional or very
    favourable terms. For example, many of the multilateral loans are at zero
    interests, 40-year maturity, and 10 years grace. Others are at less than
    three per cent rate of interest.
    
    f. And finally, we have put forward a Medium-Term Debt Strategy with a mix
    of limited external and domestic borrowing that is appropriate for the
    economy.
    
    But let me repeat that we shall never be complacent about our national
    debt. We need to be constantly vigilant to limit the amount of debt and
    create room for the private sector instead to borrow. As such, we need to
    stay focused on three main priorities.
    First, we should continue to monitor our external borrowing and ensure that
    we do not slip back to our high indebtedness prior to the debt relief
    programme. As I mentioned earlier, the External Borrowing Plan, helps to
    address this concern by ensuring that we always have a comprehensive,
    transparent view of our foreign borrowing. As at now, our external
    indebtedness is low at $6.67 billion or about three per cent of GDP.
    
    Second, we should closely continue to monitor and limit our domestic debt,
    and ensure that it stays within a prudent and conservative range. We should
    pay off debt that is due to the extent of our ability.
    And third, we should also continue to closely monitor borrowing by states
    to ensure that the debt burdens of our state governments remain within
    manageable levels and that borrowings are applied to specific projects that
    yield results for citizens of the state. In that regard, we enjoin banks
    and other lenders to be careful and prudent when lending to ensure that
    this is done within the existing rules, regulations and guidelines.
    
    Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan once said: “Information and
    knowledge are central to democracy – and they are the conditions for
    development.” That is precisely why I have gone to some length to throw
    light on the real facts and the real issues regarding our debt situation
    and what the federal government is doing to address them. We need to create
    the basis to have a healthy and constructive public conversation on this
    issue, not a distorted and partisan battle.
    
    *• Dr. Okonjo-Iweala is Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister
    of Finance.*

     

  • U.S issues travel alert on Nigeria

    U.S issues travel alert on Nigeria

    The United States has issued a travel alert on Nigeria, warning its citizens against travelling to Adamawa, Borno and Yobe, the areas under state of emergency.

    President Goodluck Jonathan on May 14 declared a state of emergency in the three states to restore public order, safety and security due to the spate of terrorist activities in the area.

    An updated statement released by the U.S. State Department dated June 3 said “the ability of the U.S. Mission in Nigeria to provide assistance to its citizens in those states remains severely limited’’.

    It said the department had continued to recommend that citizens avoid all but essential travels to some states in the country due to the risk of kidnappings, robberies and other armed attacks.

    The statement listed the states as Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Delta, Edo, Gombe, Imo, Jigawa, Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Niger, Plateau, Rivers, Sokoto and Zamfara.

    “The Department also warns against travel to the Gulf of Guinea because of the threat of piracy.

    “Based on safety and security risk assessments, the Embassy maintains restrictions for travel by U.S. officials to all northern Nigerian states in addition to those listed above.

    “Officials must receive advance clearance by the U.S. Mission for any travel deemed as mission-essentia,’’ the statement said.

    The alert also cautioned U.S. citizens to be aware that extremists could expand their operations beyond northern Nigeria to the country’s middle and southern states.

    It noted that the latest travel warning replaces the travel warning for Nigeria dated Dec. 21, 2012.

  • Ghana varsity promotes e-learning in Nigeria

    To bridge the space for admission into the university and to increase the number of people who will have access to higher education, the Ghana Technology University (GTU), has held a conference on campus automation, e-learning and faculty development in higher education.

    The event, which was held at the GTUC Campus Lekki, Lagos was focused on how to promote the effective use of technology in education and research.

    Speaking at the event, Dr Josephine Larbi-Apau, the head COLT-GTUC said Africa is behind in online education and we must follow the trends of technology like schools in the US that are fully going online so that many people can have access to higher education.

    She said the centre for online learning and teaching is a new project designed to move forward GTU’s e-learning agenda in partnership with Nigeria institutions.

    “People can study from home not necessarily from the classrooms, this will make the number people who have access to education more than what we have at present.”

    She also stated that they want to extend their services and programmes beyond borders, promote effective institutional collaboration in Ghana and abroad.

    She said one of the problems we have in Africa is that we teach only about computers and don’t make use of it. “They will continue to classify us as developing if we don’t do something about it because they will think that our education is low,” she added.

  • Lawyers to Jonathan: let Nigerians judge

    Lawyers to Jonathan: let Nigerians judge

    In his mid-term report presented last week, President Goodluck Jonathan gave his administration a pass mark.“We have done well,” he said. But some lawyers disagree, saying the administration must buckle up to meet the people’s expectations in the remaining two years of its tenure. Adebisi Onanuga reports.

    HOW has the Jonathan administration fared in the past two years? It has done well, says President Goodluck Jonathan in his mid-term report to mark the Democracy Day last Wednesday. Some lawyers disagree with this verdict, urging the administration to do more to better the people’s lot in its remaining time in office. For the President, the Democracy Day was an auspicious time to give an account of his administration. He told a gathering at the International Conference Centre, Abuja that his administration had performed “excellently” in the last two years.

    Jonathan launched a document on the performance of his administration at the ceremony. At the event, were former Head of State Gen. Yakubu Gowon; Second Republic President Shehu Shagari and former Head of Interim National Government Chief Ernest Shonekan, among others.

    Jonathan said: “Today, we are marking the end of the first 24 months, which is our mid-term review and my duty is to formally present a document that all Nigerians will be able to read and assess us.”

    He said the gathering was the perfect platform to formally present the document to all Nigerians on the activities of government in the past two years.

    “I plead with all of us, especially those who want to assess and write about it, to develop criteria because without a marking scheme, you cannot mark any student’s paper. Two years of a government, this is what we have done; develop your marking scheme and score us”, he said.

    Three officials gave a glimpse of what the report card looks like. They are Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Anyim Pius Anyim; Minister of Finance Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and Minister of National Planning, Dr Shamsudeen Usman, who gave the government a pass mark.

    Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said remarkable progress had been made in the economy. According to her,Nigeria’s economy was strong and growing, and that foreign reserve is $50 billion, up from $32.08 billion in May 2011. She said due to the level of foreign reserve, foreign exchange had remained stable in the past two years. Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is one of the fastest growing in the world. The GDP growth in 2013 is expected to be at 6.5 per cent (NBS) or 7.2 per cent (IMF).

    Inflation rate, she said, has slowed down to 9.1 per cent per cent from 12.4 per cent in May 2011. She said the focus of the government was to complete ongoing projects. Stressing the determination of the government to reduce the country’s debt, she said the government had begun retiring existing debts.

    “We want to keep our debts at a very manageable level.”

    The minister said the cost of government was reducing due to a policy to lower recurrent expenditure and complete unfinished capital projects. Recurrent expenditure dropped from 74.4 per cent of total budget in 2011 to 68.7 per cent in 2013 while annual borrowing has reduced from N852 billion in 2011 to N588 billion this year.

    On expenditure, Dr Okonjo-Iweala said Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) have resulted in N118.9 billion savings on the payroll cost, and that 58 per cent of the budget was being executed through the introduction of the Government Integrated Financial Management and Information System (GIFMIS). Through the Treasury Single Account (TSA), she said the government’s overdrawn position has dropped from N102 billion in 2011 to N19 billion in 2012.

    To prevent corruption in the various pension schemes, she said: “All the pension schemes are now coming under one roof to check abuses.”

    On the Subsidy Re-Investment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P), she said last years, the Federal Government got N180 billion, states – N154 billion and local governments – N76 billion for various projects. Speaking on investment climate, the Finance minister said  Nigeria had become the highest destination for investment in view of the improvement in the  power sector, adding that the on-going privatisation would boost the power sector.

    Usman, who gave an overview of the Transformation Agenda of the government, said: “Mr. President is actually setting a record in Nigeria. He is raising the bar.”

    According to him, about eight of the 14 key objectives set by the administration in 2011 have been achieved by the government.

    Anyim said the government should not only be assessed by the physical infrasructure in place now but that there are many intangible achievements that have been recorded in the past two years.

    To Anyim, there have been stability and no interference with the legislature. He pointed out that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has been receiving more funds towards procuring electoral materials, like permanent voters’ cards, among other things.

    “We have recorded some progress, but a lot is yet to be achieved,” he said.

    Much as the ministers spoke glowingly about the achievements of the administration of Goodluck Jonathnan, many Nigerians and lawyers have a contrary view of his administration, especially against the background of the unending killing of innocent Nigerians by the Islamic sect, Boko Haram, high level corruption, the increasing rate of kidnappings and armed robberies, the reckless spending in government, all which appeared to have defied solution.

    They also believe that determining whether a government had done well in office is better left to the people.

    Speaking at the opening of the first Jigawa State Economic and Investment Summit at the Sir Ahmadu Bello Hall in Dutse, former President Olusegun Obasanjo said  leadership was another cankerworm facing the country.

    “You know you can help somebody to get the job, but you cannot help him to do it. If somebody cannot do the job, we have Sule Lamido who we are confident can do the job,” he told a crowd of would-be investors, dignitaries and ordinary folks.

    He described  the Boko Haram insurgency and the growing unemployment as a time bomb waiting to explode. Obasanjo said the government should have approached the Boko Haram insurgency the way he (Obasanjo) handled Odi (Bayelsa State) and Zaki Biam (Benue State) communities when he was the president.

    Lagos lawyer Bamidele Aturu said the government had not lived up to the expectations of Nigerians.

    His words:“People must understand that democracy is for us to stand up and demand what is right. This mid-term report that Jonathan has given is his own idea of setting the exam and giving himself marks.

    “It is only a very funny student that would set exams for himself and give himself marks. To even give a mid-term report today is a sign of unseriousness from the Federal Government, you don’t mark yourself, let the people asses you. When you begin to asses yourself, then there is a fundamental problem.

    “I am not saying this for Jonathan alone; I say it for all the leaders, even down to the local governments. Our leaders have failed us. My take on this is this: If you say you have achieved and Nigerians are not seeing your achievements who are you achieving for? This is a made up achievement, there is no doubt there are no achievements here. If he says he will shock us with his achievements we cannot be shocked again. What I want to say is this; our leaders have failed us, not just the President but leadership at all level. There is no development,” he added.

    A lawyer, Ikechukwu Ikeji, said there could be no better marking scheme for performance than what one sees. Performance indicators or indices do not exist on the pages of a book or in the mouth of the person being assessed.

    “Let’s take electricity, corruption, education, manufacturing, roads, to mention a few, as marking scheme. What existed before the present administration came to power and what exists now? Do we have a substantially improved electricity supply? The answer is no. We hear that they are struggling to achieve a meagre 10,000 megawatts by December 2014. What a shame, when South Africa has a reserve of more than 135,000 megawatts. Why can’t they work out a structured plan of getting the cities lit one after the other, for example, give Lagos, Port Harcourt and Abuja 24 hours supply, them move to other cities one after the other.

    “Are we winning the fight against corruption? The answer is an emphatic  no. In point of fact, there is presently no war against corruption, which has become institutionalised in Nigeria. What happened to the Ribadu report on petroleum income? Are our industries growing? The obvious answer is no. What has happened to the different steel industries? The only area of manufacturing that seems to have some level of relative sanity appears to be the cement industry with the Dangotes, the Lafarges and the Ibetos calling the shots. How about our refineries? They are moribund. What about our roads? We hear so much noise about plans to open up the rail lines but these exist more on paper than on geound. Opening up working rail lines will greatly boost the economy. Railway towns have historically been known as centres of development.”

    Ikeji went on: “Of what use is government policy if the ordinary man on the street does not feel the impart, if it does not help in putting food on the table or providing employment or profitable business environment? he asked

    Ikeji said what Jonathan presented surely do not measure up as dividends of democracy.

    “In terms of doing well, I would say that the present state of emergency going on in three states is a plus. But beyond that, security challenges still remain a real threat”.

    He said the government has continued to deceive the masses “and we are all suffering and smiling and the beat goes on. The few who find themselves in government become massively rich and mediocrity becomes a virtue while excellence is thrown aboard… Corruption remains endemic, it remains the rule rather than the exception. Culture of impunity thrives in the land while the poor citizens behold their leaders in overwhelming affluence”, he said.

    To him, the President is just going through the motions like other past leaders without really impacting on the Nigerian situation and so the status quo remains and the problems mount.

    As a way out, Ikeji suggested that the fight against corruption must take the front seat in all government activities. We should aim at building strong institutions and not strong personalities. If the President is not ready to step on toes, especially those of powerful interests, we should forget about redemption. We will continue to decay as a society, he noted.

    Constitutional lawyer Ike Ofuokwu described the mid-term report as an economic abracadabra, that is: the more you look the less you see. The only thing glowing in the report is the audience and the language of the report. Any report that does not translate into putting food on the table of Nigerians is only worth the piece of paper on which it was written, he said.

    “We want to see escalating issues of unemployment and insecurity addressed. We want to see all the billions expended on thepower sector translate into lights beyond Aso Rock. Nigerians want electricity in their homes and not lamps. We want the issues of decaying infrastructures particularly Federal roads properly addressed. We want to see a mid term report that de-emphasises swagger of Government Officials and highlights on their role as servants out to serve the people. We want a Government that will see to quality delivery of our  health services instead of expending public funds in treating headaches overseas.

    “Honestly, I sympathise with this administration because from what is on ground the next two years portrays a situation of hopelessness. The only meaningful expectation from them is a ‘do or die affair’ for 2015 election since all the permutations and activities in Government swings only towards that course,” Ofoukwu said.

    Former Publicity Secretary, NBA Ikeja Branch, Samson Omodara, said: “There is virtually nothing to showcase other than weak governance that has permeated the entire national life accentuated by corruption and insecurity that is threatening our corporate existence.”

    Managing Partner of TC Akanwa and Co., Mr Theophilus Akanwa, said: “What more do you expect from a politician than to blow his trumpet himself even when he knows within himself that he has done nothing, despite the huge financial resources at his beck and call.

    “This administration has performed below expectation of the good people Nigeria. What is mid term report that tends to portray excellence in a paper work without physical realities?” he asked.

    “The reality on ground is that corruption is not been fought. There is no security hence bokoharam, kidnapping of people even relations of those in the same govt. Imagine a Supreme Court justice’s wife and relatives being kidnapped. It is a shame!

    “Cost of running business is so high because there is no electricity. We only hear of the drop of megawatts despite d huge resources. The roads are still death traps. Unemployment is on the rise and criminality springs up. Hunger is on the land. Nigerians are suffering.

    “Let this government allow Nigerian masses to assess them by what we can see and not to venture into paper works”, he said.

    Abuja based lawyer, Dr. Ahmed Sanusi remarked that one could be tempted to think that not much has been achieved under this administration in the last two years. This is so, when viewed on the scale of general insecurity in the land, growing unemployment, rising poverty level, poor infrastructure, among others.

    He believes that the government has done well in upholding rule of law and human rights and dignity.

    “People are no longer being killed unnecessarily by state agents because they share opposing views or are seen as threat to government in any form. You can remember what it was under Abacha and Obasanjo. The murder of Bola Ige and others have not been resolved till date. People are also not being arrested and detained arbitrarily for no just cause”, he said.

    Sanusi noted that there is less interference in judicial proceedings, unlike what obtained under Obasanjo, where court decisions were subjected to Executive interpretation.   In this instance, the Supreme Court decision in the case between the Lagos and the Federal Government over the withholding of the state’s local government allocation comes to mind.  There also the Obasanjo government’s reluctance in obeying court judgment on the voiding of the impeachment of Ladoja as Oyo state governor.

    He argued that to an extent, there is less federal government’s interference in electoral process. We have seen instances where the ruling PDP has lost election and the Federal Government did not make effort to influence it.

    “So, in those areas, the government could be given a pass mark. But there is a lot to be done, particularly in the areas of power, security, employment, provision of social amenities, among others.

    It is my hope that the government should be more tolerance of criticism, indulge in less of politics and focus more of delivering on its electoral promises in the next two years”, he advised.

    ANPP National Financial Secretary, Alhaja Fatima Muhammed said that she does not know what is giving President Jonathan the confidence that he has performed in the last two years.

    According to her, “things have gotten worse compared to when Jonathan got into power. I am not saying that he should be impeached, all I know is that by 2015, the country will be singing another song of victory. The PDP government has ruled for 14 years without improvement in the lives of the people. Nigerians are not enjoying the dividends of democracy.”