Tag: Nigerian news

  • Bauchi vows to tackle yellow fever

    Governor Bala Mohammed of Bauchi State has vowed to end yellow fever in the state.

    About 600 residents in Duguri district of Alkaleri Local Government were vaccinated following outbreak of yellow fever in the area.

    State Primary Healthcare Development Agency,  on  Thursday confirmed three cases of yellow fever in Alkaleri and Tafaw Balewa  local governments.

    Four students of the College of Education, Waka-Biu, in Biu Local Government of Borno State were  reportedly killed  while 12 were hospitalised after a trip to Yankari Game Reserve in Alkaleri.

    Read Also: Yellow Fever: Ebonyi to commence mass immunization of residents

    However, the governor who spoke during a media chat to mark his 100 days in office, said his government requested vaccines from the World Health Organisation.

    He said six million doses of vaccines were needed to stop yellow fever.

    The governor  said the outbreak followed the large population of monkeys around the Game Reserve, adding that government had procured vaccines.

    Mohammed said some partners had granted N6 billion support. “We are on top of the situation…

    The governor said N673 million had been disbursed  in health care, adding that  over N227 million had been spent.

  • Politicians ‘should speak with caution’

    Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister of State Dr. Ramatu Aliyu has advised politicians to guard their utterances and ensure a violent-free poll.

    Aliyu spoke in Abuja when members of the Kogi State House of Assembly visited her, saying although the primaries had been won, it was not yet time to rest.

    The minister of state noted that the All Progressives Congress (APC) would work for the continuity of Governor Yahaya Bello.

    In a statement by her Special Assistant Media, Austine Elemue, the minister said: “We came out successful during our primaries, but it is not yet Uhuru … The era of divide-and-rule in Kogi State is over because we are now one big family…

    “The governor should …trust us … we are now one family ready to work for the continuity of our governor. Legislators should go back home and talk to their people for them to win their trust…

    “But more importantly, guard your utterances…Prove to Nigerians that Kogi governorship election is …violent-free, just as we witnessed during the primaries. There will be no snatching of ballot boxes to prove a point to the opposition. I appeal to you to remain calm,” she said

    Assembly Speaker Matthew Kolawale observed that the state ought to have developed more than Lagos as the oldest capital city of Nigeria, just as he regretted that leadership failure had been a major drawback of the state.

    He hoped that with her appointment, she would change the narrative, and appealed to the Federal Government to site a seaport in Kogi.

  • 100 days: ‘How we defeated ex-Governor Abubakar’

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Bauchi State has said the people resolved to vote out ex-Governor Mohammed Abubakar, of the All Progressives Congress (APC), for non performance.

    State party Chairman Hamza Koshe Akuyam, who spoke  during a media chat organised by Governor Bala Mohammed to mark his 100 days in office at the weekend,  said besides non performance , the former governor was no indigene.

    The PDP  chairman added that non-imposition of a candidate allowed delegates to  choose freely among aspirants contesting the party’s ticket in the state.

    He said the party’s free and fair primaries led to the election of Mohammed as flag bearer.

    Read Also: N19.9b probe: Ex-Bauchi governor criticises commission

    Akuyam said the ability of PDP to select a credible candidate was also a factor.

    “Now, the people of Bauchi know that there is a difference between a tenant and the landlord. A tenant does not repair the house he is renting. The former governor was a tenant, so, he could not work for the progress of Bauchi because he was a tenant, so we brought in the son of the soil and drove him out so that the people of Bauchi will have relief,” he said.

    Speaking on the election of Mohammed as flag bearer, he said: “The first thing we did was we allowed delegates to freely choose among the contestants; the PDP did not impose any candidate …so the people were able to vote Bala Mohammed to be the candidate … going by his charisma and experience in politics.”

    Akuyam added  that the determination of Mohammed   made it easy to vote out the former governor.

    The chairman noted that the PDP-led government was  celebrating the governopr’s 100 days in office because the people had seen what the governor had been doing…

    He said PDP was highly impressed that Mohammed had not disappointed.

    Akuyam noted that Abubakar was the first governor to lose election after serving just a tenure in the history of Bauchi.

  • Businessman ‘sues Amuwo Odofin Council

    Lagos businessman Chief Vincent Obianodo (The Young Shall Grow) has taken the Chairman of Amuwo Odofin Local Government, Valentine Buraimoh, to court for the illegal and forceful seizure of a parcel of land belonging to his company, ‘Vinee Oil Nigeria Limited.’

    He complained that the local government authorities illegally trespassed on the land at Second Avenue, Opposite Old NEPA Office, a stone throw from 22 Road junction, FESTAC Town.

    In the suit the 73 year-old transporter is praying the Lagos State High Court, Lagos Division, for an interlocutory injunction retraining further action on the land by the council, pending the determination of the case. He is also seeking N100 million damages for the alleged trespass.

    Crisis had broken out between the prominent businessman and the council, following the illegal seizure of the land near Agboju Market, and its conversion into the proposed ‘Ope-Oluwa Market’ by the council.

    Read Also: Businessman issues creditor N5m dud cheque

    Obianodo, who is still recuperating from the gun shots he received from suspected kidnappers in Lagos, urged Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu and the House of Assembly to prevail on the council chairman to stop the illegal acquisition of his land.

    His counsel, Kennedy Okwara, said the council trespassed on the land in violation of the Lagos State Properties Protection Law (2016), which forbids forceful takeover of another person’s property.

    He recalled that, following the acquisition of the expansive FESTAC/Amuwo Odofin land from Oluwa, Alado, Alamuwo and Onitire families in 1976, the land was vested in the Federal Housing Authority, which allocated it to Chief Obianodo in 1992.

    Okwara stressed: “As a registered petroleum, oil and associated products’ dealership company, upon application, our client was formally allotted the parcel in 1992 by the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), and following its acceptance of the offer of allocation and compliance with all stipulated conditions, it was let into exclusive and undisturbed possession thereof.”

    The lawyer said the allotted parcel, which was overgrown by wild bushes, marshy, water lodges and unattractive asset, was sand filled at the cost of N10 million between 1995 and 1996.

    Okwara lamented that around May 25, the council chairman, accompanied by his agents, security men, contractor, together with bulldozers, pay loaders, graders and other heavy equipment, supervised the destruction of the concrete structures on the land and the dispersal of indigent petty traders on the land.

    Decrying what he described as an “indiscriminate, reckless, irresponsible, mindless, criminal, trespassorial and illegal destruction,” he said the chairman resisted efforts to reach him and ignored the “stop work orders” and written cautions served on him by the FHA, which is the allocating and supervising federal agency in charge of Festac Town.

    Okwara urged Sanwo-Olu to prevail on the council chairman to desist from the “sustained provocative and illegal activities of the chairman,” thereby preventing the temptation to resort to self-help.

    He added: “We hereby implore you, as governor and chief security officer of Lagos State, to step in, not only to call the chairman of Amuwo Odofin Council to order, but also direct him to vacate our client’s parcel.”

    Also urging the House of Assembly Speaker, Mudashiru Obasa, to wade into the crisis, Okwara said: “The council chairman has violated the Lagos State Properties Protection Law 2016, which was conceived and midwifed into operations by the House under your leadership. We urge you to urgently intervene in this matter, investigate it and of found liable, the culprit should be subjected to punishment or penalty.”

    Efforts to get the reaction of the council chairman were unsuccessful as he did not respond to repeated phone calls to him.

  • APC to Kwarans: be patient with AbdulRazaq

    All Progressives Congress (APC) Publicity Secretary Mallam Lanre Onilu, at the weekend, urged the people of Kwara State to be patient with the Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq administration.

    He said although 100 days were not enough to assess the administration, he added that the government had not disappointed Kwarans with his actions, decisions and policies.

    Mallam Onilu spoke in Ilorin at a prayer organised for the governor, Minister of State for Transportation Senator Gbemisola Saraki and himself by the AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq Progressive Platform (AAPP).

    The spokesman dispelled rumours that the three of them had a sour relationship.

    Read Also: AbdulRazaq to spend N14b to improve facilities in primary schools

    Represented by one of his aides Sarafadeen Onilu, he said: “…Governor AbdulRazaq, Senator Gbemisola Saraki and Lanre Onilu are on the same page.

    “I urge you …to relay the message to our people at home. I also want you to appeal to them to exercise patience with …Governor AbdulRazaq as 100 days are not enough to judge his performance…”

    Earlier, Coordinator of AAPP Alhaji AbdulWaheed Aduagba urged the people to be patience with the governor as he takes “practical measures to right the wrongs of the past government…’’

    “Our people should not expect the old ways of doing things like giving handouts; but should be more concerned with the provision of the democratic dividends for the generality of our beloved people of the state.

    “The delay in the constitution of his cabinet is to avoid the mistake of the past administrations and to accommodate the interest of all necessary stakeholders in order to ensure the right people are given the right position.”

  • Terrorists killed in clearance operation

    Many terrorists have been killed in a battle between troops of 22 Brigade/Super Camp Dikwa and terrorists, the Army said on Sunday.

    It added that the troops were supported by the Civilian Joint Task Force, local vigilantes and hunters.

    The Army said six AK47 rifles and 66 7.62mm ammunition were recovered in the clearance operation at Gworege village in Dikwa Local Government,  which left a hunter injured.

    A statement by Army spokesman Col. Sagir Musa said the troops had received information from locals about the presence of terrorists.

    Read Also: Air Force jets kill scores of Boko Haram terrorists in Borno

    He said a raid and clearance operation was conducted, adding that the terrorists retreated following superior fire power.

    He said: “The terrorists engaged the troops in a fire fight but had to flee as a result of superior fire power from the troops. Consequently, troops cordoned and searched the village and recovered  six AK47 rifles, 66 7.62mm ammunition.

    “No soldier was killed, wounded or missing in action. Unfortunately, a hunter was wounded. He is receiving treatment at the 22 Brigade Medical Centre in Dikwa and he has been stabilised.

    “Many terrorists reportedly met their waterloo during the encounter, while others escaped with various degrees of injuries,” Musa said.

  • Benue pensioners stay put at Govt House

    Protesting Benue State pensioners on Sunday held a prayer session at the Government House’s gate, Markurdi, over unpaid N25 billion pension arrears and gratuities. A correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), who monitored the prayer session organised by Concerned Pensioners, reports that the senior citizens had since Sept. 4 been sleeping under rain and sunshine at the gate to drive home their demand.

    NAN reports that the pensioners are demanding payment of over 20 months’ pension arrears and gratuity, amounting to N25 billion, owed them by the state government.

    Reading from the Bible in the book of 1st Kings, Chapter 12, Verses 3 to 10, while preaching a sermon, Pastor John Awaodi urged the pensioners not to give up hope.

    Read Also: Benue pensioners protest unpaid 24-month entitlements

    He said that God was with them since they were demanding their legitimate income.

    Addressing the pensioners at the prayer session, their Leader, Mr Peter Ikyado, said that they were not tired and would continue to sleep at the gate until paid.

    Ikyado urged them to be steadfast and pray fervently.

    He earlier told newsmen that over 500 pensioners in the state had died due to lack of food and proper medication.

    “We are senior citizens of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Our motto says, “Enjoyment after Retirement”, but in this case, it is suffering after retirement,” he said.

    Gov. Samuel Ortom had while addressing them on Friday said that his administration would have to seek for an overdraft of N611 million to be able to complete the shortfalls from the April 2018 and May 2018 unpaid pension arrears.

    He gave the assurance that the money would be paid by Sept. 10.

    Ortom said that his administration inherited unpaid pension arrears of over N34 billion, with outstanding gratuities of over N17 billion.

    He said that although his administration was able to make significant efforts in the payment of the arrears of pensions and gratuities, the government was still owing over N20 billion.

    (NAN)

  • Parents, proprietors battle tuition fee headache as schools reopen

    Primary and secondary schools resume from this week for the 2019/2020 academic session. The fees in many public schools are fixed. So, the managers have less headache.  However, private schools’ proprietors struggle to recover arrears of fees from parents, some of who owed from last session.  KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE reports.

    The 2019/2020 academic session begins in some states today for pupils in primary and secondary schools after a vacation that lasted about eight weeks.

    In Lagos, Jigawa, and Delta states, the pupils will resume for a fresh session today; while in Ogun, Kano, Enugu, Kaduna, Anambra and others, school resumes next week.

    Many private school owners have done renovations to welcome old and new pupils back to a better learning environment.

    They would depend on prompt payment of fees to recover the money spent on the makeover. However, with the economic downturn, prompt payment remains in the realm of a wish for many school owners.

    Some proprietors, who spoke with The Nation, said less than 50 per cent of their parents had paid in full ahead of resumption. Others expect full or part payment to be completed in the first two weeks or before midterm in six weeks.

    Administrator of Grace Schools, Gbagada, Mrs. Iyiola Edun, said defaulting or inconsistence in school fee payment started being a problem almost a decade ago.  She said in an interview that many schools, including hers, have had to become flexible to allow payment in instalments.

    “This trend of not being able to pay school fees on time has been on now for close to 10 years because of the economic downturn.  Some pay by instalment; some pay outright.  But we always insist that all fees have to be in before the children resume.  Some have been paying before resumption, but mostly new parents.  A lot will pay when school resumes.  others prefer to pay for the whole year.  But we give at most up to half-term before we stop the children from coming to school,” she said.

    Mrs. Edun said that quite not a few parents default on fees payment at the school – though she refused to say how much the school charges for nursery and primary education at Grace Children’s School; and secondary education at Grace High School.  However, a school search website, schoolscompass.com.ng, puts the fee range per term at N301, 000 – N500, 000 for Grace Children’s School.

    Chairman of Mind Builders School, Ikeja, Mr. Bosun Falore, said only 25 per cent of parents in his school had paid in full before resumption.

    The school runs three primary schools located in Omole Phase 1 Estate, Omole Phase 2 Estate, and the Central Business District (CBD), Agidingbi, which also houses its secondary school, Mind Builders High School.

    Tuition fees for Nursery pupils N80,070, excluding  books, uniforms and other costs; primary pupils pay between N107,000 and N122,000; while secondary pupils pay N160,000 (for junior secondary) and N190,000 (for senior secondary school).

    He said: “In spite of our policy of 100 per cent payment of fees due before resumption date, only about 25 per cent of our parents have complied. This is capable of putting strain on our liquidity position as so much has been spent to renovate the premises and improve some infrastructure, pay for uniforms in advance among other expenses.

    “We are hoping that most of the 75 per cent will pay within the first week of resumption or they will come up with a request concession which we can consider for only our old parents.”

    Falore claimed that the wards of some parents, who still owed last session’s fees, would not be allowed in school should they come in. He said the directive worked as five of the 11 parents with outstanding fees paid up.

    Mr. Emmanuel Orji, proprietor of Rock Ford Schools, Ikorodu, said with his school serving low income earners, he and other low-cost schools are forced to be flexible.

    Orji, who is the national president of the Association for Formidable Educational Development (AFED), the umbrella group for over 6,000 low-cost private schools in Lagos, said less than two per cent of parents in his school had paid fees ahead of resumption.  Orji said nursery pupils in his school pay N15,000 per term; primary pay between N16,000 and N17,000, while secondary school pupils pay N22,000 (for JSS) and N25,000 for (SSS).

    The AFED boss said he cannot afford to insist on 100 per cent pre-payment so as not to drive parents away.  To cover renovation costs, he said many AFED schools depend on loans from Microfinance and commercial banks.

    “The school has been painted, renovated.  We get loans from EDFIN (an American bank that came to Nigeria solely because of AFED to advance loans to education), Axiom Micro Finance Bank to beautify the school.  Sterling Bank, Ecobank also give loans – even Polaris has joined. EDFIN and Axiom give us loans with interest of 2.4 to four per cent monthly; while Sterling, Ecobank and Polaris give us at 18-25 per cent per annum,” he said.

    Despite charging low fees, Orji said parents default on payment. He also said parents with more than two children pay only for two; while some others even negotiate for lower fees than charged by the schools.

    “We actually have very flexible payment plan.  We don’t stick to pay before resumption.  I have had occasion where one man’s debt accrued to almost N500, 000 because he barely paid for the education of his boys throughout.  We let them stay because the children were very brilliant. They are now in the university and doing very well.

    “Parents that have up to two or three children, we ask them to pay for only two.  Even the fees I have listed, some parents come to renegotiate it.  You see those meant to pay N15, 000 end up paying N10, 000.  But we tell them not to tell anybody we reduced the fees for them.

    “We tell parents to pay within the first two weeks of resumption.  But it has never worked.  By mid-term, they must have paid 50 per cent.  After mid-term, we drive the children because if you don’t drive them you won’t be able to repay the loans you took,” he said.

    Orji said that some AFED schools charge as low as N3, 000 and N5, 000 per term, yet parents default on fees.

    Founder of Concerned Parents and Educators’ Network, a Facebook group, Mrs. Yinka Ogunde, said her group raised over N900, 000 to pay fees of notorious defaulters in such low-cost schools serving the very poor in the society this term.   Mrs. Ogunde announced the fee drive on the group of over 100,000 members on August 27 with the target of raising enough funds to pay for the fees of 300 children.

    As at yesterday, she said the group have raised over N939, 689, which it plans to disburse to 30 schools.

    “At the moment, on our school fees drive for low income schools, we have N939, 689. We are dealing with those schools that charge N5, 000 and below.  That amount is already able to pay for almost 80 kids.

    “From the beginning of this week, we want to do 10 poor children per school, which is 30 schools.  We are working with AFED to come up with the list.  We will visit the schools to verify they are really low-income schools.  We will be the ones to make the payment.  We want to ensure the pupils selected are those who habitually fail to pay.  We will invite the parents too so they know the fees have been paid,” she said.

    Mrs. Ogunde, who also runs an education branding and training firm, Edumark, said many parents in schools charging higher fee bands were also struggling to pay.

    She said: “If you move into even a slightly higher fee category, you will also notice the problem.  Not too many parents can afford to pay all fees at a go. Except for young parents with one child, many others have to pay for two or three children.

    “A lot of schools are also introducing the gradual payment methods; a lot of them are showing special consideration for parents.  If they do not, some children will be unable to resume.”

    With many private schools facing hardship getting parents to pay fees, Mrs. Edun accused the government of insensitivity to their plight because of the many taxes and levies schools have to pay.

    “We pay a lot of bills – Federal Government will take; Lagos State will take their own – all sorts of bills.  They see the schools as money-making places forgetting that we have high expenses. We produce our light ourselves.  Every five days, we have to pay N500, 000 for diesel to run generators. The government forgets we receive nine months of payment spread across 12 months. For one school bus, you need 15 documentations. For parents to park outside our school, we are paying government over N300, 000. If we don’t pay, they tow the vehicles.

    “If you have 10 school buses, you will pay radio/TV license on each one.  You also pay Emission License on each bus.

    “The government audits our account.  One civil servant came and asked why we paid so much to buy pepper one particular year and asked if we paid withholding tax for the pepper. Civil servants are the problem.

    “In a good country, they give private educators a subvention because we are doing a social service that ought to have been done by the government,” she lamented.

    On their part, some parents said they had found a way around raising fees of their wards.

    For Mrs. Stella Oduwaiye (not real names), it is ajo (local thrift saving scheme) to the rescue.

    “For me, I know how September has always been.  So I saved and collected my ajo (contibution) in August, which is just enough to pay part and the balance is structured.  For my fresher just entering secondary school, Uber returns are diverted.

    “Most schools allow structured payment with initial deposit of 50 per cent. As a teacher in one of the leading schools in Nigeria, some of these parents also owe school fees. For some, it is the economy; for some, follow follow,” she said.

    Another parent stated that her children’s school allows parents to pay on installments bits. Regardless, she said some still owe.

    A parent, who does not wish to be named, said she is able to pay based on the structure laid by the school.  She also said her family was investing in insurance to pay for university education of her two children.

    “I have two kids in separate schools.  One school you must pay fees before first day of resumption so the school fees have been paid.  School two has a more flexible payment which is pay half at resumption and the balance at resumption of half-term.

    “We also have the school fees plan with an Insurance company but it is for university education,” she said.

  • Rice smugglers’ gain, federal government’s pain

    To push back the importation of rice, which has been gulping an estimated N365 billion annually, the Federal Government encouraged private investors to invest massively in local rice production. The ultimate target was to achieve a total rice import replacement by 2020. But, smuggled foreign rice, primarily sourced from Thailand and India, has continued to flood Nigeria, through her borders with Benin, Niger and Cameroon. The lower landing cost for the foreign brands is crippling local producers and frustrating the government’s rice self-sufficiency target. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports

    President Muhammadu Buhari and his Beninois counterpart Patrice Talon met in Japan. The meeting held during the partial closure of Nigeria’s border with the Republic of Benin. Clips of the meeting showed a calm Buhari. But, behind the composure and diplomatic finesse was a president deeply troubled by developments back home, where the gains made by his administration in the rice segment of the agricultural sector are being threatened by the activities of cross-border rice smugglers, particularly from the Benin Republic axis.

    The president sure has justifiable reasons to be troubled. The revolution in the rice segment of the sector has been widely acknowledged as one of the visible achievements of his administration.

    For instance, in two years, September 2015-September 2017, rice importation from Thailand fell from 644,131 Metric Tons (MT) to 20, 000 MT, representing over 90 per cent drop.

    Also, while Nigeria’s current rice consumption is put at between six and seven million MT of milled rice, the country produced 2.5m MT of milled rice in 2015. By 2017, it rose to 4m MT (US Department of Agriculture, World markets and Trade put it at 3.7m MT), leaving a gap of 2m MT.

    Also, from only 13 integrated rice mills in the country in 2015, the number rose to 21 by 2017. Similarly, from five million rice farmers in Nigeria in 2015, the number has gone up to 11 million.

    Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed put the total investment of members of the Rice Millers, Importers and Distributors Association of Nigeria (RIMIDAN) into the economy at over N300 billion, while upcoming investments were expected to reach N250 billion.

    The minister announced that the new investments would add 5, 000 jobs and additional 1,775,000 MT of integrated rice milling capacity while saving $300 million foreign exchange from import substitution through local processing. These were the basis on which the administration anchored its hope of closing the nation’s 2m MT of rice gap by 2020 by boosting domestic production.

    So, when Buhari rode on the back of the just-concluded Seventh Tokyo International Conference for African Development (TICAD7) in Yokohama, Japan, where he granted audience to Talon, to express serious concern over the smuggling of rice into Nigeria, he wanted to pull the breaks on what he, and perhaps, other concerned stakeholders perceive as deliberate sabotage.

    Buhari, who could not stand any attempt to reverse the gains of his achievements in local rice production, pointedly told his Beninois counterpart that the activities of smugglers in that corridor were threatening the attainment of his administration’s rice self-sufficiency.

    “Now, our people in the rural areas are going back to their farms, and the country has saved huge sums of money, which would otherwise have been expended on importing rice using our scarce foreign reserves.

    “We cannot allow smuggling of the product at such alarming proportions to continue,” Presidential Spokesman Femi Adesina quoted Buhari as saying. This was in response to concerns raised by President Talon on the magnitude of suffering foisted on his people by the border’s closure.

    Although Buhari said the partial closure of the western border was to allow Nigeria’s security forces develop a strategy on how to stem the dangerous trend and its wider ramifications, operators and industry stakeholders fear that such strategy, if, and when developed and implemented, might be belated.

    Already, the activities of smugglers around that axis, The Nation learnt, may have put Nigeria’s achievement of a total rice import replacement by 2020 in jeopardy. This, according to reliable industry sources, was why Buhari, who could no longer hide his worry, was forced to bare his fangs through the border closure.

    Rice Processors Association of Nigeria (RIPAN) Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar Maifata brought this disturbing reality nearer home when he said about half a million metric tonnes of rice have been booked in Thailand for shipment to Nigeria preparatory to the Christmas season.

    Maifata, who made this known to reporters in Abuja, last week, after the association’s intensive border and port survey, warned that Nigeria risks losing over $400 million to rice smuggling if the over one million metric tonnes of the commodity is allowed to enter the country from the Benin Republic.

    He also said the impending illegal rice importation would, no doubt, have a ripple effect on local rice processors, as their activities would be hampered. Although he said RIPAN supports the border closure, Maifata said it would go a long way in curbing the menace of rice smuggling, while giving local producers a breather.

    Why local producers are screaming blue murder?

    Indeed, breather came the way of local rice producers since 2015 when the Federal Government banned the importation of rice into the country.

    It also went a notch higher, providing N82 billion in funding to farmers of rice, wheat, maize, cotton, cassava, poultry, soybeans and groundnut via the Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)

    But the succour that came the way of rice farmers on the strength of these strategic interventions appears to have been short-lived, no thanks to the activities of cross-border rice smugglers.

    Today, over 70 per cent of rice in Nigerian markets are said to be foreign or imported into the country through any of the numerous porous borders. Foreign brands such as Mama Gold, Royal Stallion, Rice Master, Caprice, Falcon Rice and Basmati are competing for patronage with local rice.

    Price difference a disincentive

    In the Benin Republic, for instance, the total demand for white rice, which is consumed in that country, against parboiled rice in Nigeria, was 400, 000 MT, as at 2017. Yet, Benin, with a population of about 11 million, imports between one million and 1.2m MT of rice annually.

    Most of the imports by Benin are allegedly for Nigerians. As Nigeria’s rice import falls, Benin’s rice import increases. Most of the parboiled rice imported by Benin eventually lands in Nigeria through smuggling.

    It is easy to see why this is so. For one, the difference in the price of the local and foreign rice as a result of the influx of smuggled rice has been a major discouraging factor for rice farmers, as people prefer to buy the foreign rice because of the price difference.

    For instance, The Nation learnt that at present, smuggled foreign rice costs between N17, 000 and N18, 000 per 50kg bag, while Nigerian processed rice sells for between N14, 500 and N15, 000 per 50kg bag, depending on the brand.

    Although the price of foreign rice is slightly higher than local rice, most local producers consider the price margin to little to encourage local production. They blame this on Cameroon and Benin Republics, which lowered tariff payable on rice to 0 and five per cent, respectively, to encourage importation and subsequent smuggling into Nigeria.

    As if this is not enough discouragement, Thailand and India where the smuggled rice is sourced also gave a high level of subsidies to rice farmers and rice processors, local rice producers in Nigeria are struggling to compete favourably in terms of pricing with the heavily subsidised imported rice.

    A United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Foreign Agricultural Service and Global Agricultural Information Network (GAIN) report said Nigeria is Africa’s largest producer of rice and among the top 15 producers globally.

    The 2019 report, which was accessed by The Nation, however, said the high cost of rough, paddy rice, as well as high operational costs, constrain large-scale/integrated rice mills from producing at more competitive prices.

    The report stated that although, Thailand and India rice shipments to Nigeria have dropped off in recent years, there have been large, officially reported increases in rice exports to Nigeria’s neighbours namely, Benin, Cameroun, Niger and Togo, with populations of 11.3 million, 25.6 million, 19.8 million, and 8.1 million, respectively.

    “These are countries with lower import tariffs and porous borders, creating conditions favourable for transshipments, the report said, adding that Thai and Indian-origin rice (long-grain varieties) dominate imports into Nigeria, which largely comprise parboiled rice (also known as converted rice and easy cook rice).

    A catalogue of missed rice targets

    The dynamics of the Nigerian rice market, which is skewed in favour of foreign brands, at the detriment of local producers and investors, is believed to be responsible for Nigeria missing several targets earlier fixed to curb importation of the product and ultimately, achieve rice self-sufficiency.

    Recall that before the current administration came on board, the then Federal Government under President Goodluck Jonathan had initiated a new rice policy and set a 2015 target for the realisation of self-sufficiency in rice production.

    The policy was part of the administration’s Backward Integration Policy (BIP) and economic diversification agenda, which President Buhari retained and pursued in the hope of encouraging local production of rice and offering investors in the rice sub-sector incentives to invest.

    Immediate past Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Chief Audu Ogbeh assured that Nigeria will be self-sufficient in rice production by the end of 2017.

    Although Ogbeh later said rice production had improved tremendously across the country as a result of the CBN’s Anchor Borrowers’ Programme, the government failed to meet the target, due largely to rice smuggling.

    The Federal Government again shifted the deadline, with Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo saying that Nigeria will stop rice importation by the end of 2018. But as it turned out, the pronouncement was made without recourse to realities on the ground.

    There was no political will on the part of the authorities to halt the booming rice smuggling trade across the borders especially from the Western axis. The result: 2018 had come and gone without meeting the target.

    Now, a new date has been set for 2020. Will the authorities do the needful and halt the upswing in smuggling of rice across the borders? What is the level of commitment to addressing the huge infrastructural deficit that has been responsible for pushing up the cost of production for local rice producers and rendering them uncompetitive?

    Although the Federal Government put the right foot forward when it partially closed the borders, the question is, is this strategic move enough to halt the illicit rice trade that has been hurting local producers and frustrating government’s efforts to cut the humongous foreign exchange spent on rice importation?

    While answers to these remain a matter of conjecture, the preponderance of opinion is that the Federal Government decision to close the borders was a step in the right direction. Operators and other industry stakeholders, however, say that a strong political will is needed to effectively police the borders.

    To do this, the Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA) urged the Federal Government to embrace the use of technology such as drones and Close Circuit Television (CCTV) to effectively address the challenges of smuggling and security at the nation’s land borders.

    ANLCA Publicity Secretary Joe Sanni said in as much as the security of the nation’s land borders remained important to check smuggling and other security challenges, it was also important to employ smart strategies that would ensure continuity in legal trade without undue hindrances.

    Experts also say that government should go beyond border closure and address other issues around price instability, quality and harvesting/processing of rice, as well as the provision of supportive infrastructure to help local producer who has made huge investments in local rice production reduce cost.

  • Buhari’s Special Envoy, Ramaphosa, pledge peace

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s Special Envoy to South Africa Ambassador Ahmed Abubakar expressed “concern at recent events in South Africa” during a meeting with President Cyril Ramaphosa, the latter’s spokesperson has said.

    Khusela Diko, the spokesperson to the South African President, also said in a statement that President Buhari’s state visit would reinforce the bond between both countries.

    Diko stated that Buhari’s visit to South Africa, billed for next month, would further strengthen the bond between both countries and jointly develop responses to challenges affecting people and businesses in South Africa and Nigeria.

    Read Also: Xenophobia: Amnesty berates South Africa, Ramaphosa’s poor handling of obligations to foreigners

    According to him, President Ramaphosa held discussions, on September 6, with Ambassador Abubakar on violence in South Africa and developments in Nigeria around South African businesses.

    Diko said:  “The visit to Pretoria by the Special Envoy followed a recent meeting between Presidents Ramaphosa and Buhari in Yokohama, Japan, on sidelines of the Tokyo International Conference on African Development.

    “In their discussion, the Special Envoy conveyed President Buhari’s concern at recent events in South Africa, in context of the strong and cordial relations that characterise the interaction between the two countries.

    “President Buhari conveyed his commitment to the values of prosperity and the advancement of Africa that are shared by South Africa and Nigeria.

    “Nigeria stands ready to assist South Africa in establishing the root causes of and developing sustainable solutions to the challenges concerned.

    “President Buhari has undertaken that where challenges emerge in Nigeria, the Nigerian government will act against lawlessness and the targeting of South African assets in Nigeria.”

    According to him, President Ramaphosa also reaffirmed South Africa-Nigeria relations to be firm.

    He stated that both partners remained resolute in a shared commitment to building Africa at peace with itself and others.

    Also, the South African Acting High Commissioner to Nigeria, Bobby Moroe, said his country remained committed to strengthening bilateral ties with Nigeria.

    Mr. Moroe told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Sunday in Abuja that the relationship between Nigeria and South Africa would remain strong and on course.