Tag: Nigerian news

  • UPDATED: Three feared killed as Police, Shi’ites clash in Kaduna

    There was pandemonium in Bakin Ruwa area of the Nnamdi Azikwe expressway, bypass of Kaduna State capital on Tuesday, as Police and members of the Sheikh Ibraheem El-Zakzaky led Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) clashed.

    The IMN group of the Shi’ite Islamic sect were gathering to proceed on Ashura Day procession when the incident happened in the early hours of Tuesday.

    The Nation gathered that Shi’ites had planned to come out as early as 6:00 am to beat the security agents to the plan to stop them from the procession.

    However, the police who relied on intelligence report quickly moved to the scene and dispersed the gathering of IMN members.

    The Shi’ites, however, claimed that three of their members were killed in the process.

    Read Also; PHOTOS: IMN Ashura procession in Yobe

    One of the IMN leaders, Alliyu Umar who spoke to The Nation said, the police attacked them while observing their religious right of Ashura mourning.

    According to him, “What happened to us this morning was not a clash. It was an attack on armless members of IMN. We were observing an event in Islamic calendar which is called Ashura mourning as a procession.

    “We were on our way to observe this procession. We were doing it peacefully as we were doing it before when Policemen attacked us, shooting live bullets at us where they killed three people and wounded so many others. I’m yet to confirm the number of those that are wounded.” Umar said.

    Meanwhile, Kaduna State Police Command said, the allegation of killing was false and mischievous.

    The Command’s Public Relations Officer, DSP Yakubu Sabo stated categorically that, the protesters were dispersed professionally, and that no one was killed.

  • BREAKING: Shi’ites bow to pressure hold 30-minute procession

    The Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), has held its annual Ashura procession in Abuja.

    According to a top member of the Shi’ites group, Abdulai Musa, the procession started in Wuse market and ended around Berger about from 8: oo am and ended by 8:30 am.

    Musa told our reporter that the procession was peaceful and well organised.

    IMN had on Monday petitioned the Human Rights Commission, United Nations and the European Union over Tuesday’s Ashura procession which it claimed that the police are preparing to disrupt and attack its members.

    Details shortly…..

  • NASS Election: we’ll appeal Ekweremadu’s victory, APC vows

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) says it will appeal the victory of former Deputy President of the Senate, Chief Ike Ekweremadu, at the State and National Assembly Elections Petitions Tribunal in Enugu.

    The Chairman of the party in Enugu State, Mr Ben Nwoye, this on Tuesday in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), while reacting to the judgment of the tribunal that affirmed the victory of the Senator.

    The candidate of the APC in Enugu West Senatorial Zone in the Feb. 23 general elections, Mrs Juliet Ibekaku-Nwagwu, had approached the tribunal following the return of Ekweremadu as the winner of the poll.

    In its judgement delivered on Sept. 9, 2019, the tribunal struck out the petition on the ground that the petitioners failed to prove their cases beyond all reasonable doubt and affirmed the victory of Ekweremadu.

    Nwoye, however, said that necessary steps had already been taken to appeal the decision of the tribunal which he described as a ‘template judgement’.

    He said that the party was disappointed at the decision of the tribunal after the party’s legal team had put up a formidable argument to prove their case.

    “We are shocked that the case turned out this way in spite of the overwhelming evidence we adduced,” he said.

    Read Also; NASS contractors begin multi-billion contracts execution this week

    Nwoye commended the petitioners’ legal team for putting up a good fight at the tribunal.

    Mr Patrick Luke, the petitioners’ counsel, said that his clients had instructed him to appeal the judgment.

    Luke said that the petitioners did all they could to prove their case, “but the trial court decided otherwise. We have an instruction from our clients to appeal the judgment.”

    “There are fundamental errors in the judgment. We shall study it and respond accordingly.”

  • Why I am yet to form my cabinet -Wike

    Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Ezenwo Wike has declared that he is yet to form his cabinet because he is seeking out people who will work with dedication and passion for the state.

    Speaking during the submission of report by the Committee for Accreditation and Approval of Private Schools in Rivers State at the Government House Port Harcourt on Monday evening,  Wike said he will not be moved by criticisms because he is committed to doing what is right for the state.

    He said: “I have not formed my cabinet because I am taking my time to monitor and look at people who would work with passion for Rivers State.

    “Politics is involved, but you must be ready to work for the state. That is why you see that there is a delay in the formation of the cabinet. No matter the criticism, I will do what is right”.

    He said all focus must be on working for the sustained development of Rivers State.

    “We must work to move Rivers State forward. In doing that, we must step on toes. We can’t allow the state to be the way it is.

    “I believe that with the calibre of persons who served in the committee, you have done a good job. I have confidence in the committee”, he said.

    Governor Wike explained that he established the Committee for Accreditation and Approval of Private Schools in Rivers State because of the urgent need to check the downward slide of private schools in the state.

    He said: “People have unnecessarily commercialised education. They have become traders in the field of education. We will not allow that to continue.

    “All those schools that you have denied accreditation, even the ones you have approved, I will look at them again. But specifically, the ones you have denied. They will not function in this state.

    “I hope you went to the churches to investigate their schools. We cannot allow what is going on to continue. Some schools are collecting fees and killing our children and say they giving them education. The 763 remaining, we will select a team to visit these schools. Any school that is not qualified to operate will not get our final approval”.

    The Governor stated that his administration remains committed to addressing the infrastructural and equipment needs of public schools in the state.

    Read Also; Why APC lost in Rivers, by Oshiomhole

    He said: “I will do everything to turn around the public schools. We are about to revive Enitonna High School, Borokiri, Western Ahoada County Grammar School, Government Secondary School, Obuama and others. We are committed to reviving all the great schools of the past”.

    “The Head of Service, Attorney-General, Chief of Staff and a committee of Permanent Secretaries will review the report and submit an implementation report. Your efforts shall not go in vain”, he said.

    Chairman, Committee for Accreditation and Approval of Private Schools in Rivers State, Prof Ozo-Mercury Ndimele informed that 2651 private schools registered for the exercise at the office of the Secretary to the Rivers State Government. He said the state has about 5000 private schools.

    According to him, out of the 2,651 registered at the office of the Secretary to the Rivers State Government, the committee inspected 1,888 schools while 763 schools were not inspected.

    Prof Ozo-Mercury Ndimele said the committee proposed 12 recommendations to the Rivers State Governor. He said that schools should only operate in line with their approvals, while those with interim accreditation are given two years to upgrade.

    He recommended that the State Government must act on the number of private schools in the state. He said during the exercise the committee visited one-third of such schools.

    The committee suggested the establishment of a commission for the regular assessment and accreditation of private schools.

  • BBNaija: Khafi, Tacha, Mike, Seyi up for eviction

    Housemates, Khafi Kareem, Mike Edwards, Tacha Akide and Seyi Awolowo are up for possible eviction.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the list was announced on Monday night in the ongoing BBNaija season four.

    For the 11th week, Biggie continued with the process of populating the eviction nomination list as housemates did the nominations.

    Seyi nominated Tacha and Khafi, Mercy nominated Omashola and Tacha while Frodd nominated Mike and Ike for Eviction.

    Also, Omashola nominated Mercy and Tacha, Khafi nominated Seyi and Mercy and Tacha nominated Seyi and Mike for Eviction.

    Mike Nominated Omashola and Tacha, Ike Nominated Diane and Khafi, and Elozonam put up Frodd and Tacha for Eviction.

    Finally, Diane nominated Omashola and Mike while Cindy nominated Diane and Ike for Eviction.

    Read Also; #BBNaija: Cindy emerges head of House

    At the end of nominations, Khafi, Mike, Tacha and Omashola were put up for possible eviction. However, Omashola used his veto power to replace himself with Seyi.

    Nominated housemates consist of two former heads of House, Seyi and Khafi. Also, Mike and Tacha have polled impressive votes when previously nominated.

    NAN reports that nominated housemates will learn their fates on Sunday, Sept. 15 as fans scramble to vote for them.

  • PHOTOS: Shi’ites hold Ashura procession in Abuja

    The Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), has held its annual Ashura procession in Abuja.

    According to a top member of the Shi’ites group, Abdulai Musa, the procession started in Wuse market and ended around Berger about from 8: oo am and ended by 8:30 am.

    Read More:  Shi’ites bow to pressure hold 30-minute procession

    PHOTOS: IMN

  • Timeline of killings in 2019

    • February 3: An unnamed Nigerian in his mid-20s was killed by the police
    • March 15: Another unidentified Nigerian, 44, was killed in a drive-by shooting in the in Troye Street, Sunnyside, Pretoria.
    • April 4: Clement Nwaogu in April, a father of two, was burnt to death
    • April 5: Goziem Akpenyi was stabbed to death at Bellville Stadium parking lot in Cape Town at about 1 pm. He was stabbed by three unidentified black South African men after an argument.
    • April 6: Bonny Iwuoha, 48, from Ihitte/Uboma in Imo State, was stabbed to death at about 11:45 pm in Johannesburg. He was trailed from 152 Hay Street Turffontein, and killed in front of his gate at Turf Road, Turffontein.
    • April 9: ThankGod Okoro was also reportedly shot dead in Hamburg, Florida West Rand, Johannesburg by the South African Police Flying Squad.
    • April 27: Samuel Nkennaya, 34, was killed because a mob claimed he kidnapped a six-year-old girl. He was mobbed with his friend Chinonso Nwudo outside a supermarket. Nwudo was left in a critical condition.
    • April 28: Ebuka Udugbo was allegedly killed by South African Police. The President of the Nigerian Citizens Association South Africa (NICASA), Ben Okoli, said: “The police took his car keys, left the car by the way and drove with him back to his house in the police car along with the girlfriend. He was severely beaten by the cops in his house and he fainted. At this point, the landlord’s son feared and told the police to take him to the hospital.”

    He was taken to the station instead where the beating continued and he died in the station. The police claimed he committed suicide

    • May 3: Okechukwu Henry, an indigene of Imo State and used car dealer, was stabbed to death by men who posed as customers in Mpumalanga.
    • June 13: Ndubisi-Chukwu, the Deputy Director-General, Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria (CIIN), was killed in her hotel room.
    • June 14: Maxwell Ikechukwu Okoye died in South Africa after the police invaded his house in Ladysmith in Kwazulu Natal Province. The police claimed he was foaming when they broke into his house. The Consul-General of the Nigerian Consulate in Johannesburg, Mr Godwin Adama, said Okoye’s home was turned upside down
    • July 6: Mr Ozumba Tochukwu-Lawrence was murdered by an unknown gunman at 10 Koppe, Middleburg, Mpumalanga, South Africa.
    • July 12: Mr. Martin Ebuzoeme was killed by unknown assailant. He was killed in Yeoville, Johannesburg around 7:30pm. The killing came barely 24 hours after South African President Cyril Ramaphosa visited Nigeria.
    • July 20: Chinonso Obiaju, 17, a Nigerian still in high school was shot dead in Johannesburg around 6.30pm.
    • August: A 46-year-old Nigerian businessman, Pius Ezekwem, was killed in South Africa’s eastern cape province allegedly by a group of eight policemen.
  • I will succeed Dickson, says Diri

    Senator Douye Diri is the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Bayelsa State. In this interview with Victor Oluwasegun, the lawmaker representing Bayelsa Central District speaks on the politics of succession, his plans for the state and preparations for the November 16 poll.

    Your slogan is: Prosperity 2020. Why did you chose the phrase?

    Yes, there is. Once upon a time, the state was ravaged by locusts.

    Real locusts or figuratively speaking?

    Figuratively. Locusts. The sitting governor now came in with restoration. All that the cankerworm and locusts had eaten were restored and moving further, after restoration, we’re talking about prosperity.

    It has a Biblical connotation …

    It’s biblical, and also due to the sequence of events that has happened in our state, that’s why we have tagged our own prosperity; moving from the restoration that has already been done. So, we want to move beyond that to a prosperous Bayelsa.

    You were a teacher, National Organising Secretary of Ijaw National Congress, Youth and Sports Commissioner, member of the House of Representatives and Senate. Now, your want to governor. What is the driving force?

    Service. That’s why you cannot associate me with hundreds of millions and billions being stolen. And so, it has been service, service, service. In fact, when I was in the Ijaw National Congress. There was nothing like salary. Then, we worked assiduously to make sure that Bayelsa State was created. So, for me, the driving force is the environment I find myself and how to change that environment  so that we can bequeath a better environment to our children. That’s the driving force.

    So, what distinguishes you from the others?

    Well, you just enumerated my rise and how I’ve served over the years. I have also been a follower over the years, because for you to be a good leader, you must also be a good follower. I’ve followed and I’ve served and I believe that, out of all of them, just a few of us have the experience of the executive arm of government and the legislative arm of government. Today, the governor of Bayelsa has done so well and stabilised the rampant impeachments that were  going on in the  Bayelsa House of Assembly because of his background of being in the legislature and the executive. He is a former commissioner also. I believe these are selling points for me. I also believe that my involvement in the development of the  Ijaw race and the issues of the environmental despoliation of the Ijaw territory vis-a-vis the international oil companies, IOCs, had also opened me up to go in there and see what we can do to bring back our environment and ensure that poverty is reduced. Because we’re like the people inside water and yet soap is getting into our eyes and we cannot get the water to wash our eyes. Some other people are receiving all that is coming out from our land.

    Would you say you’re one of those people canvassing for the restructuring of the country?

    I’m one of the people canvassing for the restructuring. I was a member of the Constitutional Amendment Committee, while I was serving in the House of Representatives, representing Bayelsa State on that committee. And part of what we pushed then, was to ensure that the Land Use Act was amended, because that is robbing Peter to pay Paul. Taking our resources to the federal and then, giving us peanuts. And then, they will ask us why we’re not satisfied with the peanuts that has been given to us. You take one hundred percent of our resources and give us 13 percent. It happens only in Nigeria, not anywhere in the world.

    So, what were you angling for then?

    We were pushing for the amendment of the Land Use Act, together with the Amendment of the year The other two went through, the NYSC Act and the Securities Act went through, but the Land Use Act never saw the light of the day. We did that at our committee level. It went through, but by the time we came to the National Assembly to vote, we were voted out. And that is the reason we’re fighting for the restructuring of this country.

    You were the Commissioner for Youths and Sports. What were your achievements?

    I didn’t start it from being commissioner, I was he Organising Secretary of the Ijaw National Congress. And as a youth, we mobilised our people towards resource control and  the stark realities of our land. And from there, I moved on to be the Executive Secretary, Centre for Youth Development, before I became the Commissioner for Youths and Sports. So, it’s been a lot, mostly to mobilise our youths towards the stark realities that are facing us and to overcome them. On resource control, there is no federalism where resource are taken from one place and then brought to the centre to be shared on monthly basis. And so, I would say that we have been able to motivate and mobilize our people to the realities of our situation and see what we can do to overcome them.

    I don’t know what the position of Bayelsa state is on Ruga…

    The position is a total no! The present governor has said  it over and over, times without number  that there is no land in Bayelsa. You know we’re an amphibious  people. Our land is criss-crossed by rivers and rivulets, and of course, were by the Atlantic Ocean. So, where would we have land to go and do Ruga. So, that is totally out of the question.

    I wanted to speak on the issue of security. Recently, a deputy governor’s convoy was attacked and four policemen were killed. What does that say on he state of insecurity in the country, and the response of the federal government to it.

    Well, I’m not a social critic, I’m a legislator, and if you follow us, from the 8th Assembly, you’ll know that that was one of the selling points that the 8th assembly had drawn the attention of the whole country, drawn the attention of the executive to the level of insecurity in Nigeria. The security Chiefs were invited severally. In fact, the House at a point spoke of firing all the security chiefs. So, we’re all feeling the level of insecurity.  I feel that the only way is to restructure this country. You cannot call a governor the chief security officer of a state. He’s not in control of the police or the army. He’s not in control of anything. He’s a security officer nominally. Just a nominal security officer. And the only way is to restructure it. Let the governors in their own domain, at their own level, appropriate some powers on security. So that you can actually hold them responsible when there is a level of insecurity. But, as of today, every bit of insecurity, the blame is on the federal government.

    People say for you to have an accelerated rise in politics, you need to have a godfather. Do you believe that?

    Well, you see, it depends on how you look at it. There is no politician that is an island. Every politician develops and as you’re growing, there are those on top to pull you up. So, if such people are described as godfathers, so be it. And then, there are those who don’t understand the terrain of politics. They’re just outside criticising politicians. I invite them to come in and take over leadership. There are some of them that criticise destructively, but there are also those who constructively criticise. While I don’t succumb to somebody being a godfather to cause underdevelopment, I also will not agree to those that say in politics, you’re totally on your own. Because it’s more of a teamwork. For instance, I want to go be the governor of Bayelsa State. Alone, how do I do that. So, you need the good, the bad and the ugly.

  • As Lagos tinkers with okada policy

    The plan by Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to unveil a new policy for okada operators is generating mixed reactions from experts. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE reports.

    For many reasons, it seemed the only exciting news for Lagosians, as Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu reeled out his achievements last Friday, was his willingness to enforce the restriction law on commercial motorcyclists, popularly known as Okada riders.

    At a ceremony marking the first 100 days of his administration at Agidingbi, Ikeja, Sanwo-Olu said the review became necessary to enable the government control commercial motor cycle operations and assure residents of safety.

    “It has become imperative for us as a government to map out new policies that would guide how okada riders operate in Lagos State. This would stem the tide of accidents and indiscriminate use of okada on Lagos roads,” Sanwo-Olu had said.

    The Ban/ Restriction

    Since the Lagos State Traffic Law came into effect on August 22, 2012, Okada operators have operated as outlaws.

    Citing safety issues, the government had embarked on massive clampdown, which has over the years, impounded eight million motor cycles and sent them to the state’s scrap yards.

    Section 3 (1) of the law had restricted Okada operators from 475 roads, highways and bridges. Though the government never totally banned them from all her roads, it restricted motorcycles with lower than 200cc to the inner city roads.

    Factors ranging from dangerous road attitudes, armed robbery, stealing to flouting of traffic laws were some of the reasons for the restriction.

    But for a megacity like Lagos, what constitutes inner city roads? Though the annexure of the law was clear on the roads on which commercial motorcycles were banned, the lacuna and ignorance soon gave way to extortion by security operatives who go on random raiding just to “get some quick dough”.

    Some Okada riders accused policemen of  harassment even when they plied routes not listed by the law. “Even on the inside roads, dem dey catch us,” said John Abaji said.

    But was there a compelling need to take the okada operators like Abaji off major roads? Indicators showed several reasons.

    At the Igbobi Orthopedic Hospital, a ward, prior to 2012, was dedicated to okada accident victims. Same goes for the government hospitals as well as private and trado-medical facilities, which are usually crammed.

    The Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) statistics as at 2012 showed that no fewer than 107 persons died of okada accidents every day, while 512 persons sustained various  injuries. According to the statistics, 442 okada accidents were recorded daily in the state in 2012 alone.

    Insecurity compounded the growing accident ratio. The then Lagos State Police Commissioner, Umaru Manko, accused Okada operators of robbery. For him, it was either they are the criminals or they collude with criminals for quick get-away.

    The police had profiled Okada as the single most dangerous phenomenon in the state then. Security reports showed that most cases of mugging and burgling are carried out with okada.

    The restriction brought sanity on these two major areas, as a drastic reduction in accidents, injuries and deaths as well as cases of their involvement in crime has been recorded year on year.

    The mop up itself has sprung two schools of thought in the transportation sector. While some scholars agreed with the government that okada operation, being a circumstantial phenomenon, has no place in the state’s transportation architecture, another school of thought canvassed  their recognition.

    According to the first school, to which the immediate past Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Transportation Dr Taiwo Salaam belongs, the state had no record of Okada as a form of transportation business until the dawn of the Fourth Republic. They argued that the operators must be muzzled by the force of law and replaced by public buses.

    The second school of thought, however, insisted that the okada operators must continued to be accommodated in transportation planning by the government.

    They argued that denying their existence or their activity and planning a policy without them is akin to the government hiding its head in sand like the ostrich.

    While for seven years the first school of thought seemed to have its way and hold sway, continued degeneration of state’s infrastructure have remained the single most potent trigger fueling its continued existence.

    The worsening and road crisis inherited by Sanwo-Olu, not only nullified arguments to stamp out Okada operators, it made it the preferred option by commuters desirous of moving about in the state.

    Nothing made the case for a revisit of the law more compelling than the arrest, penultimate Friday, of a truck load of 135 youths and 45 Okada by the Police at Agege. The truck from Jigawa, had brought the men into Lagos to “eke out a living on okada business”.

    New operators

    But even more significant is that the state’s transportation ecosystem has significant transformation since 2012.

    While motorcycles with engine capacity of about 100 or lower held sway up until 2012, a new set of entrepreneurs driven by technology, have taken the sub-sector by storm, setting up tech-driven hailing app companies round okada operations.

    From 2015, when Adetayo Bamiduro and Chinedu Azodoh co-founded Max.ng, and pushed MaxOkada, they have revolutionised okada transportation business, opening the eyes of youths to the huge potential in a sub-sector written off by the state.

    In an interview with, Azodoh disclosed that within three and a half years, Maxokada has completed one million trips and emerged as the leading logistics partner with Jumia, Nigeria’s leading online retail outlet.

    The Maxokada success story has also berthed several operators, such as Gokada, the latest being ORide, all promising commuters an opportunity to reduce their travel time by half.

    Azodoh said the operators were not breaking any laws. For him, Maxokada should be commended for taking hundreds of youths out of poverty. On the average, its riders receive between N50,000 and N80,000 monthly, and testimonies abound of how many were finding a rhythm by opting to operate their okada.

    He stated the company invests on top of the rate engines and crash helmets, with none of its machines being anything lower than 200cc. It embarks on aggressive training and re-training to drum its no-accident policy down the hearts of operators. Overall, Anazodoh said okada hailing firms had contributed to unlocking the economy that was almost prostrate as many roads became impassable in the last five years.

    Anazodoh ’s position was re-echoed by Gokada, which only in July, at a meeting with Sanwo-Olu had expressed its readiness to invest in the state’s waterways.

    Dean of the Lagos State University School of Transportation (LASU-SOT) Prof Samuel Odewunmi said transportation planning would continue to fail in the state if the government refused to acknowledge the role okada operators, especially the tech-driven ones, were playing in the business of transportation.

    Odewunmi said though the inclusion of Okadas as a recognised means of transportation may look demeaning, acknowledging their role is admitting the problem from where planning its mitigation and eradication becomes realisable.

    He said study has showed that okada has become ubiquitous as a means of transportation that no family in Lagos can ever say he has never ridden one before.

    According to him, okada, especially now that we have a more modern and comfortable ones operated by those who saw it as a business, would continue to throve if the roads remain deplorable.

    He praised the Transportation Commissioner Dr Frederic Oladeinde, for returning the okada issue to the round table. If properly harnessed, he said, the subsector could be a money spinner.

    Closing eyes to reality

    Oladeinde said: “You cannot close your eyes to them. It is only a government that is not ready to govern that would say it won’t recognise them. Whether you recognise them or not, they are here and will continue to exist because people are patronising them massively.”

    He said the government was right in going back to the drawing board to rework the traffic law and to come up with an outcome that will be binding on all stakeholders be it okada, bus, truck or private or other road users.

    “We need, for instance, to critically study the okada system, we need to understand it to enable us plan adequately. Understanding them will reveal why they continued to be patronized and how we can squeeze them out. For example, nobody will ply okada when you have an air-conditioned bus. It is because all other things have failed that we have them in operation. I think it is thriving because it is the last option for our people. A student going for exams will hop on okada if he is stuck in traffic. If he is to obey you and avoid okada, what options does he have? What magic would take him closer to the exam hall?

    Mathew Akinola, a planner said, it is ironic that a government that impounds okada is not only according okada unions recognition, but also collects revenue from them.

    Akinola, who praised the governor for his “willingness to reappraise the okada issue”, said the first thing the government needed to do was to know the quantum of the problem, i.e. the number of okada operators.

    He, like Odewunmi, believes that knowing them would help weed out faceless operators. “One of the several questions transportation planners must answer in coming up with new regulations is, ‘how many are they?’ Part of the regulations should be to ensure that operators are registered with their unions. This will ensure that you sanitise them and prevent the various abuses associated with their operation i.e., robbery, kidnapping, accidents etc,” he said.

    But Odewunmi urged Lagosians not to be too hasty, until they do not know what the government is up to. “The devil is in the details,” he said, so we must interrogate to know what the government wants to do.

    He counselled against the civil servants turning the exercise into another money-making exercise. The idea is to help sanitise the sector. The idea is to regulate the operators.

    “To do this, you must ensure they are carried along. That way you not only get their buy-in, but also be assured of their total compliance. That is the only way they would also be able to pay any fee charged by the government, believing that the policy is in their own interest,” Odewunmi stressed.

  • Inside Africa’s largest solar plant

    Power supply is a major problem in Nigeria, which the Federal Government has battled unsuccessfully. But, solar power is coming to rescue. Bayero University, Kano (BUK) is now home to Africa’s largest off-grid solar hybrid power plant (7.1MW), writes CHINAKA OKORO

    Things are not the same again at the Bayero University, Kano. Poor electricity supply to the campus has made students unable to study seamlessly.

    The Muhammadu Buhari-led administration is struggling with power supply. One of its ways out is the Rural Electrification Agency (REA) through which electricity is provided to universities and rural communities. BUK is the latest beneficiary.

    Last Tuesday, BUK became home to the largest off-grid solar hybrid power plant (7.1MW) in Africa. Residents, as well as students, were jubilant at the inauguration. Now, 55,815 students and 3,077 members of staff of the institution have access to electricity supply from the university’s 7.1MW solar hybrid power project.

    The project at Bayero University, Kano is the second to be inaugurated under Phase 1 of the Energising Education Programme (EEP) that will deliver clean and sustainable energy, using solar hybrid and/or gas-fired captive power plants. The inauguration at Bayero University, Kano included the launch of 11.41KM of street lighting as well as a world-class renewable training centre.

    To realise the policy of training students in renewable energy, the rural electrification agency established what it called the Female Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) Students Internship Programme where female students were trained in renewable energy.

    At the inauguration of the BUK off-grid solar hybrid power plant, 20 female students who participated in the internship programme graduated. The female students, who received practical training during the course of the project construction, were awarded certificates of completion.

    Vice-President  Yemi Osinbajo  noted that the programme aligned with the Buhari administration’s Next Level Roadmap and upholds the Federal Government’s adherence to global best practice in the provision of cleaner sources of energy.

    He reiterated that “the Energising Education Programme is strategic to fulfilling Nigeria’s commitment to the Paris Agreement on Climate Change as it aims at reducing Nigeria’s carbon footprint using renewable energy technologies, in line with the Federal Government’s mandate and efforts to increase renewable energy.”

    Osinbajo expressed his happiness over the unveiling of the largest off-grid solar hybrid power plant in Africa.

    Enumerating the benefits of the project, he said: “The installed 7.1MW decentralised solar hybrid power plant funded by the Federal Government’s green bond will supply over 58,000 students and members of staff with clean, safe and reliable electricity. I am sure that the entire student body, management and members of staff of the Bayero University are proud to be beneficiaries of this, most especially as the only Federal University in Kano State and one of the longest-standing ones.

    “As a result, students can now focus on their academics and vocational training in a safer and illuminated environment.

    “This significant initiative upholds the Federal Government’s adherence to global best practice, as we transit to cleaner sources of energy in line with the Paris Agreement on Climate Change. These projects being implemented by the Rural Electrification Agency (REA) are strategic to fulfilling our commitments to the Agreement as they strive to reduce Nigeria’s carbon footprint.

    “The leveraging of renewable energy technologies is in line with the Federal Government’s mandate and related activities. Nigeria’s plans to reduce carbon emissions by 20 per cent unconditionally and 45 per cent with international support by 2030 aim at limiting the damaging effects of climate change.

    “Our policies and objectives under the Energising Education Programme in this administration’s Next Level roadmap remains the same. The ultimate goal is to increase access to modern technical education in safe and illuminated learning environments, empower the girl child and create jobs in the power sector value chain, among others.

    “Thus far, this project created 182 energy-related jobs from power system engineers to electricians as well as trained 20 young female STEM students with the skills to contribute to strengthening our energy sector. It is initiatives such as this that creates an impact on Nigeria’s socio-economic growth.”

    Osinbajo commended ministries of Power and Environment, METKA, the Managing Director of Rural Electrification Agency, Damilola Ogunbiyi and her team.

    Minister of Power Sale Mammansaid he was delighted to be part of the historic moment.

    Mamman commended the 20 participants of the Female STEM Internship Programme as they graduate, even as he implored them to be focused as Nigeria needs their skills to develop.

    Ogunbiyi expressed her delight that the agency was able to inaugurate another university project, under Phase 1 of the Energising Education Programme at the Bayero University, Kano (BUK).

    “The EEP project at BUK is the second to be inaugurated. The first was the 2.8MW solar hybrid plant at Alex Ekwueme Federal University, Ndufu-Alike Ikwo Ebonyi State on August 2, 2019, It is noteworthy that Bayero University project with an installed capacity of 7.1MW, is the largest off-grid solar hybrid power plant in Africa.

    “Another important component of this project is the Female STEM Internship Programme, where 20 BUK female students received training in the design and construction of the solar hybrid power plant. Under the tutelage of the solar developer, these women received hands-on field and classroom training through the course of this project’s implementation.”

    Kano State Governor Abdullahi Umar  Ganduje said Kano State is committed to fostering technical and practical training. Therefore, the EEP programme is strategically aligned to the state level job creation and capacity building objectives.

    “Now our students can study without ceasing without fear of power failure or insecurity on the university campus, thanks to the reliable electricity and installation of 11.4Km of streetlights across the campus.”

    BUK Vice-Chancellor Prof. Muhammad Yahuza Bello said he was delighted about the history made by his institution.

    “The Federal Government’s EEP project could not have been implemented at a better time for BUK, where over 55,000 students and 3,000 members of staff will now experience teaching, learning and research in an environment that is safer with access to clean and reliable electricity..”

    The Managing Director, METKA West Africa Limited, the EPC contractor, Mr. Evangelos Kamari said: “The state-of-the-art solar hybrid power plant will result in carbon dioxide savings of 108,875,120Ibs, a feat we as green contractors are proud of.”

    Dignitaries present at the landmark occasion were Mr. Goddy Jeddy-Agba, Mallam Adamu Adamu, Alhaji Nasiru Gawuna, Dr. Mohammad Mahmoud, Alhaji Sabo Nanono and Mrs. Nike Giwa.