Tag: Nigeria

  • Ibinabo Fiberesima searches for Miss Earth Nigeria 2013

    Ibinabo Fiberesima searches for Miss Earth Nigeria 2013

    Beautiful actress, Ibinabo Fiberesima, is walking a familiar path as she has began spreading the message all around for her beauty pageant, Miss Earth Nigeria 2013.

    The actress, who has many sides, was once a beauty queen and this must have spurred her undying interest in consistently hosting the Miss Earth Nigeria pageant.

    According to her, the Miss Earth Nigeria beauty pageant is focused at preparing a brighter future for teenage girls who are interested sheltering the environment, catering for the environment as well as making a career in the fashion and beauty industry.

    The pageant, which has since been gathering momentum, is slated for the third quarter of 2013, where the eventual winner will represent Nigeria at the World Miss Earth Pageant in the United States later this year.

    When asked, Ibinabo said, “We are not leaving any stone unturned in ensuring that this year’s pageant becomes a success. We have been hosting this pageant for a while now and I can tell you that this year’s edition would be different because we are currently in talks with top dignitaries who are passionate about the environment and the earth at large. Furthermore, the Lagos State government have lend us a listening ear.”

    Ibinabo’s reputation as a workaholic has been putting the pageant on a firm stead and she has been busy travelling around to ensure it succeeds.

  • Nigeria can achieve greater integration, says US envoy

    Nigeria can achieve greater integration, says US envoy

    A United States envoy, Mr. Greg Lawless, has urged Nigerians to rededicate themselves to national unity and integration as the country prepares for the centenary celebrations.

    He noted the prediction by some foreign bodies that the country may break up next year. But the diplomat said that Nigeria can achieve greater integration and prevent disintegration, if the government and people show commitment to national unity and cohesion.

    Lawless, who is the Political Counselor, US Embassy, spoke in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, on the US-Nigeria Bi-National Commission. He also answerd questions from Lagos reporters during the tele-conference.

    The diplomat reiterated US commitment to security, transparency and good governance, peace in the Niger Delta, electoral reforms, and sanctity of the ballot box at the local government elections.

    Noting that Nigeria is passing through some challenges, he said the people can use the centenary celebrations to rededicate themselves to peaceful co-existence and unity.

    Reviewing the activities of the commission, he recalled that its five working groups have been meeting regularly to focus and depeen engagement on the core issues, including governance, energy, security, agriculture and the Niger Delta.

    The five groups are ‘Good Governance, Transparency, and Integrity’, ‘Regional Security Cooperation’, ‘Energy and Investment’, ‘Food Security and Agriculture’ and the ‘Niger Delta’.

    Sheding light on the ‘Good Governance, Transparency and Integrity Group, Lawless said that it has been brainstorming on how to curb corruption and improve sub-national governance among the three tiers of government.

    The diplomat promised US commitment to free and fair elections at the grassrrots. He recalled that the embassy has supported local electoral agencies during the recent grassroots elections in Abuja, adding that it would do the same in respect of the Kogi council elections.

    Lawless added: “The states are responsible for the local fgovernment elections. We will support the electoral bodies to ensure better elections in terms of giving technical support, but the agencies concerned will determine the technical support”.

     

  • APC’ll save Nigeria, says  Ribadu

    APC’ll save Nigeria, says Ribadu

    Former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Mallam Nuhu Ribadu has described the efforts of the Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun administration as a demonstration of quality leadership, “which should be emulated by all”.

    Ribadu spoke during his condolence visit to Amosun on the death of Chief Oluwole Awolowo.

    He said he was amazed by the development he saw in Abeokuta, the state capital.

    Ribadu said: “I was here two years ago and the transformation I have seen now is amazing and incredible. Ogun State has new roads. I can also see an overhead bridge and innovative ways of doing things.”

    On the merger of the opposition parties to form the All Progressives Congress (APC), Ribadu said it is in the nation’s best interest, going by the “retrogressive nature” of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led Federal Government.

    He said: “It is good to see all the progressives coming together to redefine the politics of Nigeria. The transformation we need as a nation belongs to APC and we believe that this is the party that will take us out of our problems.”

    Former Aviation Minister Chief Femi Fani-Kayode said the level of development in the Southwest is remarkable.

    He said there would be a change at the federal level in 2015, adding that the PDP has nothing to offer Nigerians.

    Fani-Kayode said: “Most of us that have always been progressives found ourselves in a conservative party such as the PDP, but we are now moving towards a real progressive party in APC and we are determined to take the destiny of this nation in our hands.”

    Former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Mallam Aliyu Modibo said he was impressed with the development going on in Ogun State.

    He said: “If you see the latest debt profile of states that was released last week, Ogun has one of the lowest in the country and that is a sign that the state is working and Amosun is also working.”

  • Nigeria partners South Africa on tourism

    Nigeria partners South Africa on tourism

    Nigeria, in partnership with South Africa, has set up the Grand Tower Boutique Hotel in Abuja, said to be coming with a different concept and style of hotel management.

    The Chief Executive Officer, (CEO), Hon Nze Chidi Duru disclosed that the hotel is redefining hospitality, with staff knowing the names of guests and making them feel completely at home.

    Duru disclosed this during the opening ceremony of the hotel in Abuja.

    He stated that guests will be so at home that things they should ordinarily do in their house can be done in the hotel.

    On affordability, he said the price rate is not different from other hotels in town, with what is on the ground it is even cheaper than what Abuja residents expect.

    Managing Director, Mentiques Collection, Mr. Peter Shorten said Nigeria and South Africa are in a strong partnership on tourism.

    He said with the way Nigeria is going, it will definitely surpass South Africa in all aspects of the economy by 2014.

    It is obvious that in the whole of Africa, Nigeria is the fastest growing nation at the moment, he said.

    Mentiques collection is presently setting up hotels in other states of the country apart from Abuja and has come to Nigeria to stay, but the only challenge is that the country’s tourism is not as developed as other sectors of the economy.

     

  • Forensic expert wants Nigeria out of corrupt nations  

    Forensic expert, Mr Steven Powell, has urged accountants to work towards getting Nigeria out of the list of corrupt nations.

    Powell, who is the Managing Director of ENS Forensics Limited, South Africa, spoke at the Fifth Convocation Lecture of the Nigerian College of Accountancy (NCA), Jos, a Post Graduate Accountancy College established by the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN). “My challenge to you is to get Nigeria away from the list. Accountants have practical roles to play in the future of the country as Nigeria is being perceived as a highly-corrupt nation,” he said.

    Powell said the association is happy about the upcoming whistle blowing legislation in Nigeria. “In Nigeria, people are so scared to come forward and blow the whistle. Staff should be courageous to come forward with information without fear. When dealing with organised crime syndicates, if the whistle blower’s identity is disclosed, his life is in danger. But if the identity is not disclosed, it is hard to get the whistle blower and his life is safer,’’ the forensic expert said.

    He urged accountants to report fraudulent practices to the law enforcement agencies, adding that accountants should also be vigilant. “Make sure your organisation adopts the necessary control measures as an auditor. Do not look the other way, act with honesty and integrity. Nigeria is rated at the bottom by Transparency International. We want to see Nigeria scoring at least 50 per cent mark by Transparency International,’’ he said.

    The International Adviser to ANAN, David Hunt said the association had been a very ethical and professional.

     

     

  • State foreclosure in Nigeria

    State foreclosure in Nigeria

    Foreclosure stares the Nigerian state grimly in the face. It is a terrible irony that our endlessly squabbling politicians do not yet appreciate the dangers to the nation. Their attention is completely fixated on the elections coming next year and in 2015, even as the object of their fixation is slowly yielding to the forces of internal strangulation.

    At no point in its history, either colonial or post-colonial, and certainly not even during the civil war, has the Nigerian state appeared more fragile and vulnerable. Trapped between two extreme and extremist cultures of political violence, the Boko Haram insurgency in the north and the MEND insurrection in the Southern creeks, strafed by a thousand armed gangs bent on bringing to heel its remaining emblems of power and authority, the state appears powerless and paralysed.

    Like a solitary schoolboy ambushed by bigger bullies, the state offers its drink to one and its victuals to the other, hoping that they will go away and leave it in peace. But they are not about to. Inflation is the natural law and logic of bullies. When you appease, you must be ready to yield more appeasement. This is because the more you try to give, the more they demand. Appeasement without a demonstration of strength and resolve, and without compelling evidence of your own minatory deterrence, is a voluntary suicide mission usually dead on arrival.

    This week even as the Boko Haram sect continues its routine devastation of the north despite the prospects of amnesty dangled before it, the MEND opened a new front by threatening and actually carrying out its threat despite the substantial economic and political pacification from the government. The decomposing bodies of 11 policemen must speak volumes for the dire straits in which the state has found itself..

    The powerful Nigerian military has battled valiantly and heroically to confront and contain these nation-destroying demons, but it is also beginning to show signs of weariness and demoralisation. As this column has repeatedly cautioned, this kind of well-heeled insurgency fired and inspired by ideological zealotry and operating in an economically blighted region suffering from political disorientation, is not in the conventional military manual.

    Without a conventional order of battle (ORBAT), the military will have to learn its lesson on the hoof, and as the war without defined fronts progresses. In addition, the military is hobbled by overriding political considerations and the inconsistency and feeble-minded opportunism of government policies. Saying one thing today and doing the very opposite the next day, Goodluck Jonathan himself comes across as a tragic comedian in a perplexing political tragicomedy.

    But it is not a funny matter when the state becomes a big joke despite its awesome powers of enforcement and coercion and when the bully finally becomes the bullied and the tormentor the tormented The problem of the post-colonial state in Nigeria is compounded by its vanishing legitimacy and authority even in the areas where it holds unchallenged sway.

    For many Nigerians, the state is seen as incapable of projecting itself as a true defender of national interests. It is so grotesquely corrupt and inefficient that its moral authority over its own citizens has evaporated. This is in addition to its military incapacitation in the face of armed critiques of its existence. Although this did not begin with Goodluck Jonathan, he seems bent and destined to drive the logic to its ultimate summit and summation.

    When a state loses its power of moral and ethical suasion over its citizens and when the power of its apparatus of coercion has dramatically diminished in addition, that is state failure looming. It is now too late in the day to begin to suggest measures to shore up the authority and legitimacy of the government. This will involve a drastic self-purgation, and with its eyes fixed on the election of 2015, the Jonathan administration cannot even afford to toy with these measures.

    Unfortunately, it is not a problem that can be wholly redressed or addressed by elections. As it has been demonstrated so many times in the history of post-colonial Africa and Nigeria, elections superimposed on seething national contradictions do not solve or resolve anything. In most cases, they worsen the contradictions and exacerbate the national fault lines.

    It is the business of recreating the Nigerian state and nation which the political elite shy away from that is the hardest task. Yet without this fundamental shift in the paradigm of state-making and nation-building, there is nothing to stop this embattled nation from eventually dissolving into anarchic bloodletting the like of which has never been seen before.

    The old African pre-colonial political elites seemed to have managed the contradictions of society-building and state-making very well. This was because the old African state was an organic outgrowth of pre-colonial African society and there was therefore a uniformity and homogeneity of political culture which allowed for faster consensus building, the odd tension and political dissonance notwithstanding.

    This is quite unlike what obtains in colonial and post-colonial Africa where the state largely remains an alien and alienating contraption forcibly grafted on disparate and often mutually contradictory political, economic and religious cultures which makes national consensus very difficult except when it comes to stealing which wears a universal mask and does not require any mental rigour or highfalutin ethics.

    Where the state-nation is lucky to have a visionary founding father who can skilfully weld and fuse the disparate ethnic strands together to achieve a homogeneous entity, it is easier to fashion and fabricate a national consensus. Unfortunately, most founding fathers in Africa left their nations writhing in the debris of political and economic chaos.

    In its classical incarnation, the state was the most powerful embodiment of national aspirations surfeit with mystical notions as the ultimate guarantor and protector of the sacred destiny of the people and the society. This is true of any pre-colonial society. In royalties, monarchies, empires and fiefdoms, state actors are carefully groomed and nurtured through a rigorous and painstaking selection process.

    When and where a mistake is made, it is left to other powerful countervailing institutions to correct the anomaly with speed and utmost discretion without destabilising the polity. This is unlike what obtains in post-colonial Africa where tyrannical and unjust rulers often manage to circumvent elections as the expression of the sovereign wish and will of the populace.

    Africans must find some redemptive resources from the pre-colonial past. African elites, unlike the Chinese, the Indians, the Japanese and the Arabs, do not consider themselves modish and sophisticated until they have started casting aspersions on their pre-colonial culture. Yet as we demonstrated in this column last week, the continuing virility and potency of some of these institutions long after the subversion of their political and material base ought to serve as a cautionary reminder.

    In a famous passage on Greek Art, Karl Marx, the grim materialist and patriarch of periodisation, wondered aloud why artistic products from ancient Greece have continued to please and intrigue us long after the superannuation of the material culture that supported them. “The difficulty is not that they pleased us but that they continue to do so”, Marx rued. It was surely an affront to materialist logic.

    The same logic should now be extended to post-traditional societies. Why do certain institutions, rituals, emblems, sacred totems and tropes from the pre-colonial order have a lingering efficacy and potency long after the colonial amputation of the political and material basis of their existence? These are powerful ideological apparatuses of the old pre-colonial state and they will continue to be for a long time until they are overtaken by a combination of events. The death of material base does not automatically translate into the demise of superstructure.

    However that may be, all of this must indicate to us why the Nigerian state faces grave problems. It is a state that has been unable to grow any authentic national institution with the possible exception of the military which has also had its misadventures. It is a stunted state suffering from pedological leprosy. Nothing will grow on nothing. The political elite are riven by primordial fissures. The national psyche is centrally fractured. The state preys and predates on the nation directly leading to armed objections to its existence. .

    We have been careful to distinguish between state foreclosure and total state failure. Let no one at this point come up with the bogey, the blackmail and the buncombe that all this may lead to military intervention. In any case, military rule is preferable to the apocalyptic meltdown and the genocidal bloodletting looming. If the Boko Haram sect had succeeded in bringing down the Third Mainland Bridge, it would have taken some extra constitutional measure to restore parity to the nation. The mere threat, which is not over yet, brings the national tragedy to sharp relief.

    Whereas state failure compels a drastic and radical re-composition of the state and reconfiguration of the nation, state foreclosure, like a foreclosed property, demands immediate change of ownership and perhaps ownership restructure. The revolutionary turmoil in the land ought to tell the PDP that it has nothing left to offer the nation. Despite payment rescheduling and mortgage modification, the ruling party has failed to meet its obligation to the nation. Urgent repossession is the only solution.

    Since it has proved incapable of internally reforming itself, not to talk of coming up with the visionary policies to move the nation forward beyond the initial demilitarisation, all Nigerians, including patriotic members of the PDP driven by enlightened self interest, must rise up in one guise and under whatever national platform to see off this pernicious party before it sees off the nation.

    When compared with other grave possibilities facing the nation at the moment, this is the equivalent of mild surgery and a compromise in favour liberal democracy. Otherwise, state failure will accelerate at full throttle. The hazy outlines of radical anarchy are already with us.

  • In Nigeria, the Lord is (truly) our shepherd

    In Nigeria, the Lord is (truly) our shepherd

    Its seems govt is merely paying lip service to improving police force

    If God cannot go on strike, Nigeria must be one strong reason why. Indeed, if God goes on strike, then we are doomed in this country. What I am saying is that if the Lord has not been for us, the country’s security situation would have been worse. I said this because, in spite of pious statements of commitment to improving our police force by the Federal Government, these statements, unlike effective demand, do not seemed backed by the required action, given the unsavoury reports coming out about the force in recent times; from the Channels expose on the Police College in Ikeja, Lagos, to the ridiculous posting of police personnel to far-flung places without making any provision for them in those stations.

    But, a report in Daily Trust of April 8, merely confirmed why all these are happening. Headlined “Police stations run on less than N2,000 daily’ – Senator. According to the report, quoting Senator Gyang Pwajok (PDP, Plateau North), the police force remains grossly underfunded such that some police stations and divisions do not even get as much as N2,000 a day. Let’s hear him: “In the 2013 budget, for instance, the police force has a total vote of N300billion. Of that amount, N293billion is for recurrent expenditure like salaries for the more than 400,000 police personnel. It is from the balance of N8 billion that the 1,115 police divisions, 5,515 police stations and 5,000 police posts are run”. Before President Goodluck Jonathan characteristically wonders how Senator Pwajok ‘penetrated’ the force to get these figures, it is pertinent to say that what the senator did was simply to divide the N8 billion among these police formations; and it is this that translates to about N2,000 per day or less.

    I am going to quote the senator extensively, not for lack of a better way to paraphrase what he said, but because sometimes, it is better to hear from the horse’s mouth Senator Pwajok should know, as a member of the country’s upper legislative chamber. From his statements, Nigerians can now understand why policemen in some stations ask them to bring their biros and paper to write statements in the police stations. So, when next you have the (mis)fortune of going to a police station and the policemen there behave in an unfriendly manner (despite the fact that they are said to be our friend), you have to bear with them. The fault is probably not in them; but in the system that we are all guilty of not being in a hurry to change.

    Senator Pwajok added : “I think we have the qualified personnel to do the job, but the Nigerian system has failed the force because we do not give them what they require to excel…. A police station is expected to source intelligence report and ensure effective communication between teams on the field and those in the offices’. ‘The station officer is also expected to get informants and fund them. He is also expected to ensure the smooth and speedy movement of men and materials from one point of need to the other. No one can do that on N2, 000’.

    ’It is the least funded of the security outfits. The office of the National Security Adviser has about 100 advisory officers, but it has a vote of N100billion in the 2013 budget. The police force is wider but is not considered for such effective funding’. Senator Pwajok is not done, ‘From the 2013 budget, the nation spends an average of N1.6million annually on a soldier, N9.8million on a sailor and N7.1million on the air force man or woman; but spends N0.078million per police personnel… In effect, the running cost of each naval staff is equal to that of 12 policemen, while each airman is nine times as important as a policeman’. How can we sleep with our two eyes closed in this kind of situation?

    I hear the Police College in Ikeja is now wearing a new look, barely weeks after the damning Channels Television story that depicts the rot in the place. Now, the questions: has the government released new funds to refurbish the college? Or, were those supposed to act woken up from inertia by the story? Where has the money now being spent on the college been stuck all this while? Could it be that some people would have ‘chopped’ it if Channels had not spilled the beans? These are questions that would be making the rounds in saner countries where people are shocked when the issue is fraud or corruption.

    Be that as it may, what is needed most is not necessarily the rending of the clothes but rending of the heart. The environment has to look good, no doubt; but beyond that is the welfare of the police officers undergoing training in those colleges. How many policemen and women in training now share one fish head? Water is a basic necessity; are the young men and women on training still going across the Mobolaji Bank-Anthony Way in Ikeja to fetch water? I feel somehow seeing them dash across the popular road, which also leads to the local airport, in their green shorts and white vests, with buckets of water on their heads. This in Lagos; and in the twenty-first century!

    For me, Pwajok’s revelations have opened more cans of worms than the several seminars and symposiums that have been held on the police force. What they simply tell us is that we have been deceiving ourselves about improving police welfare. We know what the problem is yet we have been beating about the bush, wasting money on seminars and workshops ostensibly to improve the force.

    David, the psalmist, must have had Nigerians in mind when he composed Psalms like 27, 46 and 91. And it is these I recommend to our people whenever they are going to bed at night. And, when they wake up in the morning in one piece, they should not forget to read Psalm 23 before venturing out of their homes. The Lord, indeed, is our shepherd.

  • Cynthia Osokogu was asphyxiated – Pathologist

    Cynthia Osokogu was asphyxiated – Pathologist

    A Consultant Pathologist, Prof. John Obafunwa, on Friday said that Cynthia Osokogu, who was murdered in a Lagos hotel on July 22, 2012, died of asphyxiation.

    Obafunwa, who is the Chief Medical Examiner of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Ikeja, made the statement while testifying before Justice Olabisi Akinlade of an Ikeja High Court.

    The News Agency of Niigeria (NAN) reports that Obafunwa gave evidence at the resumed trial of four men charged with the alleged murder of the 25-year old lady.

    The defendants, Okwumo Nwabufo (33), Olisaeloka Ezike (23), Orji Osita (33) and Ezike Nonso (25), are facing a six-count charge of conspiracy, murder, stealing, reckless negligence and possession of stolen goods.

    Led in evidence by the Lagos State Attorney General, Mr Ade Ipaye, the pathologist said the post-mortem report showed that Osokogu was choked and gagged by her killers.

    He said: “From our findings, the deceased was asphyxiated, which means absence of oxygen supply to the body.

    “That was the immediate cause of death. It was as a result of the blockage of her upper respiratory airways.

    “This blockage was caused by the deceased being gagged and choked.”

    Obafunwa said there were also multiple bruises and abrasions on Osokogu’s body.

    “There were bruises on her arms, back and what appears to be bite marks on the front of her two thighs,” he said.

    The witness told the court that the injuries on the body of the deceased could not have been self-inflicted.

    Also, the court admitted as exhibits, 15 photographs of the crime scene, which were taken at Room C1 of Cosmilla Hotel, Lakeview Estate, FESTAC Town, Lagos, where Osokogu was allegedly murdered.

    The photographer, Mr Lucky Enimelo, told the court that policemen from Area `E` Police Command in FESTAC, had asked him to take the pictures.

    “After snapping the pictures with my digital camera, we went to a laboratory to print them. The police instructed me to delete them from my memory card and also from the laboratory’s computer,” Enimelo said.

    NAN reports that the manager of the hotel, Mr Victor Ugweke, also testified before the court.

    Ugweke said after he was notified by the hotel’s receptionist that there was a body in one of its rooms, he went to report the matter at FESTAC Police Station.

    He said he accompanied the police to the General Hospital in Ikeja, where they took Osokogu’s body.

    “When we got there, they said she was dead and the police took her body to the mortuary,” Ugweke said.

    Nwabufo and Ezike are standing trial for allegedly murdering Osokogu, whom they had met through Facebook, a social networking site.

    Osita, a pharmacist, is being prosecuted for negligently selling Rohypnol Flunitrazepan tablets to Ezike, which were allegedly used to drug Osokogu before she was allegedly killed.

    The fourth defendant, Nonso, was charged with being in possession of three Blackberry mobile phones belonging to the deceased.

    The matter was adjourned till May 24 for continuation of trial.

  • NCC lifts ban on promotions on Airtel, Globacom, Etisalat

    NCC lifts ban on promotions on Airtel, Globacom, Etisalat

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has lifted the ban placed on promotions on Airtel, Globacom and Etisalat networks, Mr Tony Ojobo, the NCC Director of Public Affairs, has said.

    He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos on Friday that the lifting of the ban was because the three service providers met the regulatory body’s December 2012 Key Performance Indicators (KPIs).

    Ojobo, however, said that the ban placed on promotions on MTN network was still in force.

    ”The ban on MTN still remains in force until the KPIs are met.

    “We expect that the networks will all continue to provide good Quality of Service (QoS),” he said.

    NAN recalls that the NCC, on Nov. 12, 2012, placed the ban on all promotions by telecom operators as well as lotteries on the GSM networks.

    Ojobo then said that the ban, which took immediate effect, would remain in force until the commission decided otherwise.

    He said the ban was introduced because NCC was inundated with many complaints from consumers and stakeholders against the various promotions offered by the operators.

    Ojobo said that the commission carefully evaluated the complaints  to sustain the integrity of the networks.

    He said that the complaints were also evaluated in the general interest of consumers and socio-economic impact.

  • Task Force kills gunmen, loses soldier

    Task Force kills gunmen, loses soldier

    The Joint Task Force on Friday said it killed six gunmen but lost a soldier during a raid of a hideout at Sheka in Kumbotso Local Government Area of Kano State.

    JTF spokesman Capt Ikedichi Iweha told newsmen in Kano that the incident occurred in an early morning raid on Friday.

    He said the operation followed the arrest of a suspected gunman at Mariri in Kano on Thursday.

    He said the suspect who revealed the hideout, had earlier planned to attack the popular Kantin Kwari Textile Market, Kano.

    Two AK-47 rifles were recovered, while five women and three children were evacuated from the house during the three-hour operation, he said.

    He called on residents to continue to cooperate with security agencies for peace to be restored in the state.