Tag: Nigerian Newspaper

  • Lambo: Time to end beauty contest in health sector

    Leveraging on his expertise and experience in the apex global and national health systems, former Minister of Health, at a Scientific Conference in Abuja, has called for an urgent end to the disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among the various professional groups in the nation’s health sector.

    The age-long issue of inter-professional disharmony in the Nigerian health sector resonated in the ornate Africa Hall of the International Conference Centre, Abuja recently as hundreds of health professionals and other stakeholders assembled for the 55th Annual Scientific Conference and Workshop of the Association of Medical Laboratory Scientists of Nigeria whose theme was “Global Health Security: the Medical Laboratory Agenda for sub-Saharan Africa”. Agenda (GHSA). The aim was to focus on how the lofty goals of GHSA could be advanced through an interconnected network of medical laboratories in both public and private clinical settings that are capacitated to rapidly detect and report disease outbreaks in Nigeria and other sub-Saharan African countries.

    Renowned Health Economist and former Minister of Health, Professor Eyitayo Lambo, had accepted the Association’s invitation to be the Chairman of the Opening Session of the Conference and the Guest Speaker at one of the plenary sessions on the topic: “Managing Inter-Professional Disharmony in Nigeria’s Health Sector for Health Security.” Lambo, who superintended over the nation’s health sector for four years of momentous developments, was on familiar terrain. For the four years he was on the saddle, not a single industrial action was witnessed in a sector that had built a reputation for being patently unstable.

    Prior to his appointment, debilitating industrial actions by workers were a regular fare in the sector, caused often by issues arising from disharmony and needless unhealthy rivalry among the professionals.

    Guided by a robust career as a University teacher, Health Economist with the World Health Organization and the peculiar advantage of not being a health professional who had to coordinate the activities of the various professional groups in the sector, Lambo, with no worries about who might take offence, tackled the subject with clinical detachment and spoke truth to those engaged in what he calls unnecessary “beauty contest” in the health sector as very few could do.

    Stressing that the process of providing healthcare was interdisciplinary and requiring many health professionals to work as a team or in teams, Lambo noted that effective team work among health professionals was an essential tool for patient-centred health service delivery system. He observed with regret that disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among professionals in the health sector was an age-long problem in Nigeria that had hitherto not been adequately and effectively dealt with by policy makers and the various governments.

    Such disharmony and unhealthy rivalry, he added, had become so pronounced that it had negatively impacted on: the quality and continuity of patient care; the confidence of patients and the general public in the nation’s healthcare delivery system; and even job satisfaction among some of the feuding groups of health professionals. He lamented that the ugly trend had also led to a further weakening of the national health system and poor health outcomes.

    Lambo, therefore, called on stakeholders, led by the government, to boldly confront the monster of disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among health professionals, and restore harmony, stop unnecessary conflicts among the various groups of health professionals and promote inter-professional collaboration rather than competition and confrontation. A united health workforce, he noted, was necessary for strengthening the national health system, which in itself is a prerequisite to achieving universal health coverage (UHC) and the goals of the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA).

    He examined the dimensions and drivers of disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among health professionals in Nigeria and identified some of them as the rivalry between the Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) and medical doctors/dentists. Issues in contention, he said, include: the supremacy and the alleged arrogance of doctors towards other health professionals; leadership of the health team; and the headship of health agencies and federal tertiary health institutions. Others are the appointment of Health Ministers, the structure of the Federal Ministry of Health/other health institutions, and the appointment of Directors of the Ministry.

    The groups, he said also bicker over salary structure and emoluments, especially as it pertains to the adjustment and harmonization of emoluments; special training programmes and expanded roles for allied health workers; the appointment of non-medical professionals as consultants in hospital settings; professional autonomy; membership of Boards of Federal Health Institutions; conditions of service as well as the advocacy for the creation of Office of  Surgeon-General.

    According to Lambo, the disregard for existing regulatory laws of the health professions, non-implementation and selective implementation of the scheme of service for health sector personnel, non-adherence to job definitions and descriptions and selfishness in the pursuit of health workers’ welfare are also among the alleged causes of bitter disagreements.

    The former Health Minister further identified other dimensions of clashes as between pharmacists and doctors, nurses and doctors, medical laboratory scientists and pathologists, radiographers/radiology technicians and radiologists, physiotherapists and doctors as well as optometrists and ophthalmologists.

    The needless dishonoring and unhealthy rivalry among the professionals, he said, was a major contributor to the incessant strikes by health workers with serious effects on patients, the health system and health outcomes. For patients, the negative effects he listed included increased deaths and worsening health conditions due to moving patients from one health facility to the other; discharge of patients from public health facilities without completion of care; treatment/recovery delays; prolonged suffering and irreversible damage to health.

    The unhealthy rivalry among the professions, according to him, also: promotes inequality in access to quality health care because most of the poor cannot afford to pay for private health care; increases morbidity and mortality, especially among the poor; leads to sub-optimal contribution by the various professional groups to the care of patients; encourages outbound medical tourism by those who can afford it; and contributes to job dissatisfaction and emigration of qualified health workers. The trend, Lambo said, also contributes to: further weakening of the national health system and the nation’s poor health outcomes; and client dissatisfaction with and loss of confidence in the public healthcare delivery system.

    To manage and resolve the disharmony and unhealthy rivalry among the health professionals, Lambo urged government to take the need to bring all stakeholders together seriously and adopt an impartial approach in order to effectively resolve most, if not all, of the outstanding causes of the trend. He also enjoined the leaders of the relevant professional groups to come to the table to resolve all outstanding issues with an open mind. In other words, he said, the round table conversation should enjoy the attendance and frank participation of all concerned with a spirit of no-victor-no-vanquished.

    Government and other relevant stakeholders, he said, should promote mutual respect and trust among the various professional groups as well as create a mechanism for ensuring adequate involvement of all groups in decision-making concerning the care of patients. They should also make industrial relations mechanisms and collective bargaining more effective and transparent as well as ensure the timely honouring of any collective bargaining agreements.

    The former Health Minister further called on government to: adopt a holistic approach in dealing with issues relating to health workers; establish open communication channels for groups of health professionals; review existing legislation concerning Federal Tertiary Health Institutions, taking into consideration the best practices from other countries with better health systems; and vigorously promote inter-professional collaboration in health care.

    He itemized the possible benefits of harmony among health professionals and inter-professional collaboration to include the enhancement of patients’ satisfaction with care, enhancement of the co-ordination of health services, improvement of patients’ care and outcomes and the enhancement of patients’ safety.

    To health professionals he said, they would reap the benefits of improved job satisfaction, reduced job- related stress, lower staff turnover, maximized utilization of the skills and expertise of health professional, improved understanding of roles and improved coordination among care givers.

    Lambo, who said it would be a win-win situation for all, added that health care organizations stand to gain the benefits of improved effectiveness and responsiveness, improved health outcomes, increased capacity to serve a variety of healthcare needs, and reduced medical errors.

    Reflecting on his tenure as Health Minister between 2003-2007, Lambo attributed his widely acclaimed success and the industrial peace experienced in the health sector during the period to: the grace and mercy of God; his not being a member of any of the health professions which enabled him to deal with issues dispassionately and impartially without bias in favour or against any group; and his leadership style and skills which encouraged most of the professional groups to work closely with him Other factors were his vision for the sector which was shared by most members of each professional group and the development/implementation of the nation’s first comprehensive health sector reform program to attain the vision. That, he noted, was a major unifying factor.

    Other factors that contributed to industrial peace during his tenure were: the maturity exhibited by the leadership of most of the professional groups; the open door policy adopted which encouraged the various groups to approach him for necessary consultations, even at short notice, on any relevant issues; commitment to transparency in the appointment of heads of federal tertiary health institutions; and the strategic support he got from President Olusegun Obasanjo and the Finance Minister to make money available to settle outstanding payments to health workers.

    Lambo said there were no “sacred cows” under him when there were known infractions while the leadership of the unions were regularly updated, especially when monies and dues were involved. They were also informed of releases and cash backing as and when due.

    He said no personal demands were placed on federal tertiary health institutions and their management by the Minister beyond the line of duty, which he said gave no opportunity for the unions to accuse him of putting pressure on the finances of the institutions, thereby creating conflict.

    Lambo also spoke extensively on the appointment of Ministers of Health, which has been a major sore point in the relationship among the various groups in the health sector. As against the popular trend and agitation by some for medical doctors to always be named ministers, he was emphatic that what was required of a Health Minister is not the knowledge of medicine per se, since a Health Minister is not required to perform surgeries or attend to patients in health facilities. Rather, the most pertinent requirements for an ideal Health Minister, according to Lambo, include: a very sound knowledge of the national health system (which has health service delivery as just one of its six major pillars or building blocks); strong management and leadership skills  including being visionary and a strategic thinker; ability to make economic and political arguments with the President, Finance Minister and the leadership of National Assembly for financial resources and elicit high level support for health system changes; skills required to effectively engage the Ministries and Departments of Government that oversee the key determinants of health that are beyond Health Ministry’s purview as well as engage with non-state actors which have expertise and vested interests in health, including private providers of health services, special interest groups, advocacy organizations and donors; and ability to ensure the provision of essential health functions directly or indirectly through the agencies and private sector parties.

    To support his position that Health Ministers do not necessarily have to be medical doctors, Lambo presented the profiles of the current Health Ministers in 80 of the Member-States of World Health Organization (WHO) of which almost half are non-medical doctors. Among the countries with non-medical persons as Health Ministers currently are the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Denmark, Norway, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, Ireland, China and The Netherlands. In Africa, he said Ghana, Zimbabwe, Cameroon, Sierra Leone, Lesotho, Mali and Kenya are among countries that have Health Ministers who are not medical doctors.

    The audience gave Lambo rapt attention as he waded through the fairly long presentation and rewarded him with a resounding standing ovation at the end of the engagement, which some of those who made comment on the occasion said was sure to elicit a change of thinking in the nation’s health sector.

  • Olojo festival begins in Ife

    One of the greatest festivals for which the ancient town of Ile-Ife is known is the Olojo festival.  Every year a whole month is devoted to it.  It is time to reflect on the socio-cultural lives of the people of the old Ife who constitute the kingdom and have also contributed immensely to the historic values of the Yoruba heritage.  This year’s Olojo began three weeks ago and the grand finale will be celebrated on the 27th and 28th of this month.

    In a statement made available to The Nation, Mr. Akin Adejuwon, one of the directors of the festival said that on 21st, there will be a street carnival.  Entitled Gbajure, the carnival will take the people round designated routes and streets within the precincts of Ife town.  Some of the important sons and daughters of the ancient historic town will be in attendance.  This is essentially to give clout and credence to the glorious outing.  Usually it is the glow of the people that add vibes and colours to the carnival.  Already some of these important personalities have begun to arrive Ife in readiness for the grandiose epic gathering.

    On 25th there will be a colloquium.  This colloquium became an important segment of this show to enable scholars, culture technocrats, administrators, activists and advocates to brainstorm and determine how best to ensure that Olojo and other related cultural festivals do not lose focus.  The contributions of these eggheads will add more values to the ideas already on ground and then proffer more ingredients to be added to the festival to make it richer, bigger and more attractive.

    Adejuwon, a former Director of the National Troupe of Nigeria is of the opinion that the outcome of the colloquium will be documented for further references for future use.  Ideas germinate.  Ideas propel an issue and ignite new moves to help civilization.  Therefore all ideas to be tabled and discussed there will be totally taken into cognizance for the sake of culture in Nigeria.  Olojo needs to go places.  It needs to lead while others follow.  That is the basic concept and idea.

    On 27th and 28th, the main events will then happen.  On these days the Ooni, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi will be in place to receive the people.  The whole town will be in special mood to welcome visitors, tourists and culture enthusiasts from all over the world.  It will be colourful and magnificent, bringing the town to the full attention of the world.

    The festival is one of the many traditional celebrations from time immemorial by the people of Ife.  They do not treat it with levity.  It is part of the town as the cradle of the Yoruba race, a place where customs hold sway.  Indeed, a place where the Ooni does not joke with the heritages bestowed on the people by their great ancestors and progenitors.

  • Anambra community warns trouble makers, say culprits risk life ban

    Elders of Umunya community in Oyi local government area of Anambra State have frowned at the spate of attacks on the traditional ruler of the community, Igwe Kris Onyekwuluje.

    They warning those behind the attacks to desist or risk banishment, insisting they would no longer tolerate trouble makers in the area.

    The elders spoke during oath taking ceremony of indigenes of the community, including its town union branches in various parts of the country, convened by the monarch, Igwe Kris Onyekwuluje.

    Moving a motion for peaceful coexistence among the people of the area, Chief Reuben Jephat said anyone involved in fomenting trouble in the community would be ostracised.

    Read Also: Anambra lawmaker to community: Let’s give peace a chance

    The motion was seconded by Nze Emma Nweke.

    Chief priest of the community, Ichie Sunday Anaeze who presented the community’s ‘offor’, the Igbo symbol of truth and justice at the meeting, instructed all respondents to make their oath barefooted.

    He warned that anyone who lied would die after seven days.

    Earlier, the monarch, Igwe Kris Onyekwuje, said he was compelled to call the meeting following lingering crises rocking the area which had led to series of protests.

    Onyekwuje, while pardoning his detractors, pledged continued pursuance of peace in the community, just as he called on the gods of the land to go after whoever that would henceforth tarnish his throne after the resolution.

    Meanwhile, the governor of the state, Chief Willie Obiano, has reassured his commitment to ensuring relative peace was restored in the community.

    Obiano, represented by the senior special adviser to the governor on traditional institution and community matters, Mr. Benjamin Umerah, said there was need to seek peace in the community to ensure speedy development.

  • ARA THUNDER: Meeting President Macron inspired me greatly

    Janet Chiwendu Ofurum, known by the sobriquet Ara Thunder, is making waves after she fell in love with drums. In this interview with Yetunde Oladeinde, she talks about her passion for drums, presenting the talking drum to French President Emmanuel Macron, inspiration and more.

    How did you fall for the drums?

    I have always had love for music and I always wanted to be different. So, the spoken drum was what I was entrusted to. It could talk and communicate while making different melodies.

    How was it like at the beginning?

    It was difficult at the beginning. But since it was something that I really wanted to do, I had to persevere.

    What messages do you usually deliver when you play bata?

    For me, the message that I try to communicate is very important and it inspires change in the listener. At the centre of the message usually are African unity, love and happiness. Inspiring others as I do my thing, I try to entertain and bring some African feel to it.

    How did you learn all these since you are not a Yoruba lady?

    Music is a general language. I never thought that being an Igbo lady could stop me from playing the talking drum.

    How have your fans been able to decode the message coded in your drumming?

    Some don’t, while others do. While some don’t understand the message, I actually try to entertain because of the energy that I bring to the stage. So, if they are entertained and leave, they would naturally want to research and understand the message.

    Outside Nigeria, what has the reception been like?

    It’s been amazing; the reception has been really amazing. Even though sometimes they do not know what the talking drum is saying, they still move their feet and their heads.

    Tell us about your experience during the display of drums when Macron visited Nigeria

    I never expected it to be that awesome. And the idea of me presenting the talking drum to President Macron was carefully thought out by my boss in Atunda Entertainment. And it would have been unfair of me not to teach him one or two drum lines to take back to France.

    What were you doing before this?

    I was a back-up singer in Atunda Entertainment and in the process of doing this, my talent shone out and that was how they decided to make me a brand. So, they groomed me and taught me all of the things that I know and do now, thus making me a better artist. Let’s talk about some memorable moments as a drummer

    The first on my list would be playing for President Macron and the second would be when I went to Turkey for trophy victories.

    How about the challenges?

    One of the top challenges that I faced is the gender issue about women playing the talking drum. And it has been restricted to just the male folk in the past. Secondly, would be the tribe. Most people are turned away the moment they hear that I am an Igbo lady. I have to convince them, play it for them for them to know that I am good enough.

    When was the turning point in your career?

    I have had some great outings and on top of the list would be the event where I played for President Macron of France.

    Who or what do you consider as the greatest influence in your life and career?

    My greatest influence would be God first. Some people like Ambassador Wanle Akinboboye and Atunda Entertainment.

    Let’s compare when you started drumming and now, what has changed?

    My understanding of music has changed dramatically. It has changed from me infusing my drum lines, my dance moves into my repertoires. It has been a turn around because when I started, I didn’t really do that. So, it is amazing. It has made me a better person and creative. I would also say that with the talking drum, I can keep fit. When I perform, I give a top notch performance.

    What are some of the changes you would want to see in the entertainment sector?

    Women need to be given more opportunities and also it is important for African music to be taken to the rest of the world in a creative way.

    Any lessons learnt?

    I would tell them that hard work pays and if you want something you must be determined and go get it, regardless of what anyone says.

    Who are people you admire and role models?

    It would be Ambassador Wanle Akinboboye. He is my mentor, the founder of Ara Thunder Initiative and Atunda Entertainment. He is the owner of one of the biggest and award-winning resorts, La Campaigner Tropicana. He is an activist, a philanthropist and a continent builder. He is the man that has endeared himself to my heart because of what he represents. He has given the platform to young talents to shine. I am a testament to that. Others include Fela Anikulapo Kuti; what is left to be said about the Abami eda himself? Fela took our music beyond the shores of Africa to the world. Fela was a prophet; he predicted what is happening in our country today. And he was not afraid of speaking out about it. Angelina Kidjo is a woman first and foremost and she has motivated me to be more of myself beyond song writing. She is an activist, a voice for the people and herself. We all grew up listening to her wonderful voice.

    Tell us about your style. What do you wear and what image do you portray?

    My style is unique. My style represents Africa in all sense of the word and because of my talking drum and stage act. My music is afro pop and high life

    So, I just released a new single titled bojuboju, it’s an all musical platform and it can be down loaded. I have a unique brand here which is red in color, it is always red. If it is not red, I am not putting it on. And it is always in a braided form and long. My brand color is red and silver which is also my best color. I portray Africa in a positive way. I portray Africa to the world at large. What I wear is African and most time it is classical. My style is basically my own style. It is just for me and African in all ramification of the world.

    Lets talk about some of the things you would not do in the name of fashion?

    The things that I won’t do in the name of fashion is dressing semi-nude. That naturally is something that I am not comfortable with. No matter how pretty or how trendy it is, I won’t put it on. Also my first rule of fashion is to be comfortable first and foremost. So, if I am not comfortable with it I won’t wear it. I can’t wear it. I can’t come out in nudity just to show some style of fashion. It is just not my thing

    How did you get into music?

    I don’t think I got into music, music actually got into me. Basically music found me. I have always been all out for music, ever since I was little. It was so obvious even back then, from my primary to secondary school days. I was a music lover from way back. It has always been music all the way. It has always been entertainment all my life. It wasn’t difficult to know that this was what I wanted in life and what I want to do for the rest of my life. So, it has always been my music and I.

    What are the other things that you are passionate about?

    I love to draw, I am a collector of art. I love painting. I actually love anything artistic and immensely. I also love to cook, majorly I enjoy cooking just soup, any kind of soup at all. I can do with just eating only soup for a whole month and I would be fine. So, when I am not playing the talking drum I am busy cooking soup. One other thing that really occupies my time is drawing, it gives me great inspiration all the time

    Tell us about your encounter with president Macron of France?

    I was nervous at the beginning but interestingly I was happy at the same time. I was also scared because I didn’t think he was going to accept my talking drum. Also when I started performing I was very very observant. At that point, I was watching and when I started performing I could see how happy he was and how well he accepted my performance by shifting his head to my rhythm. It was a great inspiration for me.

    That alone really made my heart skip a bit. And when I reached out to present the drum to president Macron of France, the way he stretched out his hands to accept the drum from my hand was mind blowing. The experience was really awesome. I could feel tears running down my eyes and cheeks. It is actually the height in my career right now. It has helped me drastically and it is still helping and paving way for me.

  • Thunder kills 36 cows on Ondo sacred hill

    Thirty six cows were reportedly struck dead late Saturday by thunder bolt on top of a sacred hill at Ijare town in Ifedore Local Government Area of Ondo State.

    The dreadful hill known as ‘Oke Owa’ was located on the outskirts of the sleepy community.

    Sources said only the town’s monarch(Olujare,)and some chiefs normally visit the town once in a year.

    This is usually during the celebration of the new yam festival to perform some rituals.

    An indigene of the town ,whose house was on the way to the hilltop said the incessant striking of thunder bolts accompanied the evening rain made them suspecting the strange occurence.

    It was learnt that nobody knew that the thunder had actually caused havoc until a hunter came in the morning to reveal that during his hunting expedition, he saw some dead cows on the hilltop.

    This development gingered the traditional ruler of the town, the Olujare of Ijare, Oba Adebamigbe Oluwagbemigun Kokotiri 11 to send delegation of chiefs to report to the police and visited the scene to assess what actually happened.

    The incident consequently attracted several people in the community especially youths who trooped to the hill to see wonders.

    At the hilltop, there were 36 dead cows lying flatly on the ground without any mark on their bodies.

    Speaking with reporters, the Olujare of Ijare, who spoke through his second in command, Chief Wemimo Olaniran, the Sapetu of Ijare, it was an act of God.

    The Sapetu of Ijare said the herdsmen had been destroying their farmland for a very long time which had led to confrontation on many occasions.

    He said it was surprising to them when they heard five days ago that some Fulanis were ascending the sacred hill to settle after they had destroyed many farmlands and created fears in the minds of the people.

    His words”We were there this morning and we saw about 36 cows dead apart from the one inside the bush. It has happened and there is nothing we can do, we regards it as the act of God which nobody can be query.

    “There had been occasions like that but not as massive we are having it now, to some individuals who desecrated the land. In the past we did witnessed thunderbolt attack, when you desecrated any part of Ijare particularly the sacred places.

    READ ALSO: Thunder kills 23 cows in Ekiti, Fulani owner laments loss

    “The dead cows will be there for ever it is part of the history in our land for people to see as testimony in future that such a things happens, a whole Oba buried there live and heaven did not fall talk less of ordinary cows.

    “Oke-Owa is a sacred hill where the Oba and some of his chiefs visited once a year during new yam festival to offer sacrifices on behalf of the community.

    ” Even those chiefs accompanying the Oba must not go to the inner part of the hill because there is a particular place where only the Oba have to enter and spend a night.

    “This is a hill that the herdsmen wanted to desecrate with their herds. It is a taboo. When we heard about the incident, we invited the herdsmen and they confirmed that it was thunder that struck the cows.

    ” We went to the police station to report the matter and the Divisional Police Officer was contacted before chiefs including myself went there.

    “Those cows would remain there and rotten because nobody must touch them otherwise there would be problem”

    When contacted, the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) for Ondo State Command, Mr Femi Joseph confirmed that the matter was reported at Ijare Police Station.

    Joseph described the incident as a natural disaster that is unfortunate and which nobody can do anything about.

  • Ijaw council demands end to fuel importation

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) Worldwide, has appealed to the federal government to take practical measures to end importation of petroleum products into the country.

    The Ijaw youths said it was disheartening that the government spent whooping N19trillion on importation of refined petroleum products into the country.

    Describing it as capital flight and the sum of money involved in the transactions as heartbreaking, IYC said it remained an economic blunder for the government to continue lacking capacity to refine crude oil.

    The IYC in a statement signed by its Secretary-General, Alfred Kemepado, said the body wept after reading the revelation contained in a publication of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

    Read Also: New NDDC director visits key Ijaw leaders, promises changes

    Kemepado said the publication disclosed that the federal government spent about $54.6bn that is N19trn, importing refined petroleum products into the country.

    He said the Niger Delta was the biggest loser in the transactions following failures by the government to set up modular refineries in the region.

    Kemepado said if the federal government had lived up to its promise of setting up modular refineries, it would have helped to retain the money in the economy of the Niger Delta and the country.

    Speaking in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State capital, the activist expressed his displeasure over what he described as the financial recklessness of the federal government, adding that the lost money would have created many jobs and repositioned the battered economy.

    He said it smacked of insincerity on the part of the government to continue to play politics with key decisions required to grow and develop the Niger Delta and the country.

  • Mixed reactions trail proposed 7.2% VAT rate

    The planned increase of the Value Added Tax rate from the current 5 per cent to 7.2 per cent is already generating rumpus in different quarters with concerned stakeholders expressing fears that the new policy regime on VAT would further impoverish Nigerians, report Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf, Charles Okonji and Medinat Kanabe

    To say that the proposed new 7.2 per cent Value Added Tax rate for the country, up from the current 5 per cent is already a hotly debated issue, is simply stating the obvious. Truth is, fears are being expressed by a lot of people who hold the view and very strongly too that the new policy regime, to all intent and purpose, was not well thought out.

    Nigerians from different walks of life have expressed their misgivings over the planned increase of the Value Added Tax (VAT) rate from the current 5 per cent to 7.2 per cent by the federal government.

    The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, had last Wednesday after the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting in Abuja, said government had agreed to increase the VAT rate from five per cent to 7.2 per cent.

    In the view of Omooba Olumuyiwa Sosanya, renowned accountant said the new policy regime on VAT was not a popular decision.

    According to the technocrat, he would rather the government follow a new paradigm shift in its quest for revenue drive through VAT.

    Sosanya, who is the founding father of the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN), the second widely acclaimed national accounting body in the country, said, the VAT collection needs to be decentralised.

    He reiterated that if the VAT collection is decentralised, the country stands the chance to generate about N1trillion through VAT on a monthly basis and N12trillion annually as against the projected N2.2 trillion yearly based on the new rate.

    Echoing similar sentiments, Dr. Olukunle Iyanda, an accountant, said, there is nothing wrong with increasing taxes, what is wrong is if the increase pushes people further into poverty.

    In the opinion of Afam Mallinson Ukatu, a manufacturer, “There has been a long battle between tax authorities and manufacturers in the country over multiple taxation of our businesses and if the issue of multiple taxation is not urgently addressed by government, more manufacturing companies are likely to exit the economy.”

    The new policy regime on VAT

    It may be recalled that the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, had last Wednesday after the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting in Abuja, said, “We are proposing and council has agreed to increase in the VAT rate from five per cent to 7.2 per cent. This is important because the federal government only retains 15 per cent of the VAT; 85 per cent is actually for the states and local governments. The states need additional revenue to be able to meet the obligations of the minimum wage.”

    According to the minister, although there is no effective date when the new rate will take off as stakeholders, including the National Assembly and the states, would have to agree on the date, she, however, said that could be sometime in 2020 after the VAT Act has been amended by the National Assembly even as she hinted that about N2.09tn will be accruing to the Federation Account and the VAT respectively.

    A value-added tax (VAT) is a consumption tax placed on a product whenever value is added at each stage of the supply chain, from production to the point of sale. The amount of VAT that the user pays is on the cost of the product, less any of the costs of materials used in the product that have already been taxed.

    Countries with VAT

    From available information, as of 2018, 166 of the 193 countries with full UN membership employ a VAT, including all OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development is an intergovernmental economic organisation with 36 member countries, founded in 1961 to stimulate economic progress and world trade) members except the United States, which uses a sales tax system instead.

    The acceptability of VAT worldwide

    In a study titled, ‘How VAT took over the tax world’ and commissioned by Ernst & Young Global Limited, under EY Tax Insights, recently, the report observed that VAT is continuing to evolve and expand as new systems roll out and existing ones adapt to digital disruption and other forces.

    In the six decades since the VAT first made its debut in France, this broad-based consumption tax has spread rapidly across the globe, the study stated.

    Besides, it said, “Governments are fond of VAT and its cousin, the goods and services tax (GST), for many reasons. The levies are considered one of the least harmful taxes for economic growth and can raise large amounts of revenue because they apply to a significant proportion of economic activity.

    “One of the biggest issues we had was businesses that did not prepare early enough in terms of systems testing and training.”

    Today, VAT and GST continue to expand and evolve as new systems roll out and existing ones adapt to the implications of digital disruption and other forces. This transformation has consequences for businesses, which must adequately prepare for new VAT and GST rules and procedures, and update their technology to comply with new e-filing requirements.

    Countries planning to introduce a new VAT or GST system should keep in mind that a well-planned transition is important. The introduction of such a tax requires adequate administrative capacity, training and technology on the part of both businesses and the government.

    Groundswell of support for proposed VAT

    According to Olajide Abiola, a public affairs commentator, “the VAT increase does not adversely affect the common man as some have falsely peddled. Like it has been stated, it is a consumption tax and the greater benefit goes to the states. It is now left to us to either vote the right governors or hold them as accountable as we do the federal.”

    Discordant tunes over new VAT rate

    One individual who has spoken dispassionately about the importance of the VAT template as a veritable tool for socioeconomic development is Omooba Olumuyiwa Sosanya, renowned accountant.

    Speaking with our correspondent at the weekend on the merits and demerits of the proposed new VAT rate, Omooba Sosanya, who is the founding father of the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN), the second widely acclaimed national accounting body in the country, said, the new policy regime, is simply a knee jerk approach to issues of national development.

    In his own view, the federal government is simply shooting itself on the foot if it thinks that the N2.2 trillion being projected as VAT receipts in the proposed new rate would solve the myriads of problems bedeviling the country’s economy.

    According to the technocrat, he would rather the government follow a new paradigm shift in its quest for revenue drive through VAT.

    Specifically, he said, “The problem of taxation in Nigeria, VAT in particular is not a question of rate but has to do with the poor and inefficient tax administration. For instance, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and many other countries still charge 5 per cent VAT rate and they are doing well in terms of generating adequate revenue.

    “In Nigeria, it is not a matter of rate. Tax administration in Nigeria is ineffective and inefficient and the administration is over whelming the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS). What we need to generate more revenue through taxes, including VAT, is to bring more taxable persons who would be paying tax. The whole idea of allowing the FIRS alone to be collecting the VAT is counterproductive. We need to decentralise VAT collection, where by all the states would be able to administer the VAT so you can bring in more people into the tax net including the informant sector.”

    He reiterated that if the VAT collection is decentralised, the country stands the chance to generate about N1trillion through VAT on a monthly basis and N12trillion annually as against the projected N2.2 trillion yearly based on the new rate.

    Echoing similar sentiments, Dr. Olukunle Iyanda, an accountant, said, there is nothing wrong with increasing taxes, what is wrong is if the increase pushes people further into poverty.

    Besides, Dr. Iyanda said, another fundamentally wrong thing is if there is no corresponding strategy to boost the economy, increase income and alleviate people’s pain.

    “Yes the government announced that VAT will increase from 5% to 7.2% however where this will only compound the situation of the citizen, it will push more people into poverty, don’t forget that the minimum wage is still actively N18000 ($50) a month even at this most state government are unable to pay, the minimum wage is increased to NGN30,000 ($84) a month yet government has not being able to implement it therefore if the VAT rate is raised without the corresponding increase in the living wage, government has only further eroded the purchasing power of the people.”

    While noting the fact that government needs to generate revenue to run the economy and taxes is the most effective way of generating further income for the government, Iyanda, who is strategy and innovation consultant and CEO at BROOT Consulting Nigeria Limited, “We need to move from the current tax-paying population of 6% to double-digit, this will, however, happen if there is a strong sense of transparency, accountability and judicious use of the revenue so corrected.”

    Currently, he says, the system is opaque and shrouded with corruption. Raising some posers, he queried, “How confident are we as a citizen to point to how our taxes are being used? Tax should not be used for the flamboyant lifestyle of public officials. The option that is open to the government before a further increase in tax rate is to drastically reduce extravagance and irresponsibility in governance and come up with an effective tax system where more people are made to fulfil the civic duty.”

    Government, he stressed, need to rejig the economy and bring more people out of poverty, there has to be a drastic strategy to grow the economy and empower the people of Nigeria. Conversely, the former university don, said, the endemic poverty if left unchecked will make it impossible to lift people out of poverty neither will it allow the government to use the taxpayers’ money judiciously.

    Unintended consequences of the new policy regime

    The view in some quarters is that the new policy regime if implemented will have far-reaching socioeconomic implication on different sectors, including housing, manufacturing, services, employment, amongst other sectors.

    In the opinion of Afam Mallinson Ukatu, a manufacturer, “There has been a long battle between tax authorities and manufacturers in the country over multiple taxation of our businesses and if the issue of multiple taxation is not urgently addressed by government, more manufacturing companies are likely to exit the economy.”

    Ukatu, while noting that the lamentations about all sorts of taxes are not yet addressed, now the government has come up with increase in VAT. The implication of this is that manufacturers would further be impoverished while most SME’s would be forced out of business because it cannot compete favourably with the imported goods that find their way into the nation’s market.

    Expatiating, Ukatu, who is the Executive Chairman and Founder of Mallinson & Partners Limited, said government should look into multiple taxations and VAT. “I have always argued that taxes should be paid on your turnover, but what of a situation where a manufacturer is losing money. It is obvious that a manufacturer produces and still losses money and you are still expected to pay your tax.”

    According to him, “There should be a system whereby you are evaluated by the tax authorities just like China, USA and other countries. There is what they keep as special rebate for manufacturing companies, because this is what encourages people to go into manufacturing. Without manufacturing, there wouldn’t be any way to for high rate of unemployment to reduce. Government can only provide about 10 percent of the total job requirement of the population, manufacturing can generate over 60–70 percent of the needed employment.”

    Comparing tax regimes in other climes

    Also raising his voice over the din, Dr. John Isemede, an expert in export and international markets, said, countries like Nigeria, Malaysia, United Kingdom, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, Canada and others have the lowest VAT in the world which is just 5% tax. “Unlike other countries, the situation in Nigeria is sad because it is not properly collected. The contribution of all taxes to GDP in Nigeria is just 6%.”

    Going down memory lane, Isemede, former Director-General, Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), who recalled that VAT was introduced in Nigeria 25 years ago, however, regretted that it has not had much of an impact.

    “What is 5% compared with our neighboring countries, where VAT in Benin Republic is 20%, even if I am carrying a truck from here to Ghana, I will pay all different taxes. Benin Republic is 20%, Ghana started with 12%, and now 17.2%, and if you look at it, you said we just recovered back from recession; the economy is still very difficult.”

    Expatiating, Isemede said, “The question we should ask ourselves is what is the value of 5% VAT to the national budget? If we now have to increase it from 7.2% to 7.5%, which is only 0.2 or 0.3, what can that shift do to Nigerian budget or economy rather?”

    While noting that the new VAT rate is not the solution to the nation’s problem as it would place more burdens on Nigerians, including small businesses, Isemede advised that there must be protective taxes so as not to wipe out the entire SMEs.

    While Nigerians await the effective date of implementation of the new VAT, indications are that during the public hearing to be held at the National Assembly where critical stakeholders would ventilate their views on the matter, the idea could be totally jettison as it was done in the recent past.

  • I won’t resign, Bayelsa Speaker dares Dickson, others

    Speaker of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly, Tonye Isenah, has vowed not to resign his position contrary to the directive of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leaders including the state Governor, Seriake Dickson.

    Isenah came under intense pressure to relinquish his office in the House of Assembly to enable his party balance political equations ahead of the November 16 governorship election.

    The speaker was said to have reached an agreement with Dickson and other PDP leaders to vacate his office in the event that Senator Douye Diri, who hails from his Kolokuma-Opokuma Local Government Area, emerged the candidate of the PDP for the election.

    Following the emergence of Diri, PDP leaders were said to have asked Isenah to surrender his position to another lawmaker from Southern Ijaw to enable the party garner votes from the council.

    But Isenah was said to have insisted that he would not let go of his position before the governorship poll.

    The speaker in a statement signed by his Special Adviser on Media, Aotendeike Boloigha, said he had served the PDP faithfully and had yet to see how his resignation would help the party in the forthcoming poll.

    He also denied the insinuations that Dickson was after him because he failed to carry out the governor’s request to initiate an impeachment proceeding against his Deputy, Rear Admiral John Jonah (retd).

    Isenah was compelled to officially react on the matter following a social media post by his Senior Special Assistant on New Media, Mr. Dickson Didi Opuene, that the speaker was undergoing the travails for refusing the governor’s request.

    Read Also: PDP denies reported romance between Dickson, Petroleum minister

    Opuene in the post that went viral wrote: “First they asked him to impeach the deputy governor for no just reason and he refused, now they want him to resign just to perfect their aim and plan. No way, he will not resign, they should come and impeach him and let’s see.

    “Rt. Hon. Tonye Emmanuel Isenah remains the Speaker of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly and he has not resigned or will ever contemplate of doing so, please disregard any rumour of his resignation”.

    Debunking Opuene’s claims, Isenah described the posts as generated and authored by over-ambitious politicians taking advantage of the present situation in the assembly.

    Isenah said the claims were not only untrue but misleading and aimed at heating up the system.

    He said at no time had the governor imagined anything relating to impeachment of his deputy, whom he constantly described as a dependable ally adding that Dickson had never given such directive to the assembly.

    He said: “My stand on the issue of resignation has been that I have served the party PDP and Governor Seriake Dickson faithfully and with unflinching loyalty and I will not resign as doing so at this time will not in any way help the party succeed in the November 16, governorship elections.

    “I call on my teeming supporters to distance themselves from making unnecessary statements and posts in the social media. When the need arises, I will make official statements on his stand”.

  • If APC is to survive

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) cannot pretend not to know that its future and survival are on the line. Like their predecessors, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), they will continue to live in denial until it is perhaps too late. Having won the elections in 2015, obviously against the run of play and in a spectacular fashion, and repeated the feat a second time in 2019 rather very unscrupulously, the APC is throwing caution to the wind, and enacting probably the most undemocratic practices the country has seen since 1999. But somehow, and incredibly, they seem blissfully unaware of the dangers they face, not to talk of being troubled by the contradictions they themselves have managed to trigger when the democrats among them helped them win the elections only for the disbelieving antidemocratic forces waiting in the wings to seize the reins of government.

    No, it was not always clear that the APC had a critical mass of democrats in their midst, enough to project and sustain their ideals and philosophies, at least the ideals and philosophies they have noisily pretended to. But by some incredible display of political sorcery on their part, Nigerians in 2015 believed the lie that the then opposition party boasted enough democrats in their midst to propel Nigeria to great democratic heights and also possessed the capacity to neutralise and reform the Goodluck Jonathan government’s undisciplined approach to governance. APC leaders and their spokesmen were avid political salesmen, and Muhammadu Buhari, their champion at the time, had been recast as a repentant military autocrat and budding democrat. His natural reticence and his inability to frame his new status in persuasive logic surprisingly worried only a few people.

    But barely five years into their ironclad rule, the APC has begun to feel invincible, careless and conceited. Like their predecessor PDP, they imagine they will be in office for decades, or even for eons. They were never good at translating their manifestos into actions, and had even become expert at repudiating many of their promises, yet they think they have enthroned an unassailable lead to render the opposition party disoriented and discouraged. Projecting power viciously and remorselessly, they are blinded to their own weaknesses and can’t see how anyone or party or group can unseat them. For, in their view, even the very act of trying to unseat them democratically has now been equated with treason. Their first four years ought to be about reframing their core existential logic and redefining the identity and ambitions of their country. Instead, they have redefined their weaknesses as inconsequential and portrayed their strengths as insurmountable.

    More than 90 percent of their leaders are antidemocratic, and their followers have become indistinguishable from the rabble that flattered the PDP into self-destruction. Yet, they have remained unruffled by the chaos around them. In internecine battles and sycophantic dribbles, the party’s leaders and members have also turned intra-party and partisan politics into a needless re-enactment of cultural and sectarian wars and bitter struggles. Right before their eyes, their party, despite the best efforts of their flawed chairman and other patriots, is resembling less and less the party they idealised at their founding in February 2013. They planned to run a more cohesive and disciplined party, far better than the PDP ever contemplated. That ambition has remained unrealised, and may probably be unrealisable. They plotted to disgrace the Jonathan government’s democratic image, describing it as shameful and unbecoming of the country and the largest political party in Africa. Increasingly, they have instead become even more unrepentantly authoritarian.

    So, in effect, there is no adroitness evident in running the ruling party, little adherence to intra-party rules and regulations, no commitment to democratic principles, no idolisation of inspiring philosophies, and not even a scintilla of attachment to the kind of enduring reforms that would stand the country in better stead now and in the future. Apart from its sane early days, a higher degree of charlatanry appears to be taking over the party. Once in office, they have become intolerant of criticism, despise the constitution and the rule of law, and a few of their elected and appointed leaders have elevated themselves above the country and its laws. If the APC is to survive, however, they must imbibe the right values and do things properly and differently. They have ruled for less than five years, but the country has become tired of them because neither the economic lot of the people nor their democratic rights have improved in such a way as to endear them to the party. There is a chance of course that the economy might become less unstable and even more amenable to the laws of economics. In spite of them, however, especially given their sometimes contradictory and desultory policies, the standard of living of Nigerians may improve. But it will not be by the margins they have dreamt of or romanticised in their frequent statements to the media, regardless of the untidy and unprincipled reshuffle of their economic teams in a manner destined both to choke an already ponderous presidency and to mystify a president whose grasp of economic issues are at best rudimentary.

    Despite the complaints against the PDP, Nigerians were reluctant to see the former ruling party suffer the electoral tragedy that befell them. They brought the tragedy on themselves. Equally, it is in the interest of Nigerians that the APC should do well, help remould the country, and establish the solid foundations for democracy which the PDP failed to lay in its inglorious 16 years in office. The APC seems a little distracted by the politics of 2023, given the way the presidency and a few governors have been jostling for influence and power and positioning one another for the near future. If they are capable of eschewing the partisanship that is undermining both their resolve and the modicum of principles they still clutch to, they must find ways of returning themselves to the founding principles they clumsily projected at birth and which many Nigerians unconsciously but too trustingly embraced.

    They imagine that building roads and elongating rail networks, or even growing the economy by a healthy percentage, will help them reposition the party in the minds of the people. This is a futile assumption. Growth may attract accolades in the short run, but it will not entrench the party or even stabilise the country, let alone position it for lasting greatness. No party and no leader in history has achieved the milestones the APC dreams of without engaging the fundamental ideas that conduce to nation or empire building. Without a guiding philosophy, which takes into cognisance the country’s identity and ambitions, no country or empire can achieve greatness — not even the Roman Empire, Greek Empire, Babylonian Empire, Ottoman Empire, and a host of others. They simply must stand for something great, noble and inspiring. And they must possess the discipline to remain faithful to the ideas and philosophies that shape their founding and existence. That is the only way to make a lasting impression. The APC, however, wants to buck that trend despite history’s massive examples. Indeed, more and more, the party seems to be embracing the ignoble principles and distorted ideas that led to the collapse of empires than the noble principles and ideas that led to their rise.

    At the moment, there is nothing in the Buhari presidency and the APC that indicates any hunger for a great and ennobling idea or philosophy. There was a whiff of it when the party was founded; but there was no whiff of it when the Buhari presidency was inaugurated. Between 2015 and now, both the presidency and the ruling party have dealt with the issue of ideas and philosophies contemptuously. They will, however, need to deal with them not with the grossness that pollutes the air in the government and the party but with the finesse and enlightenment that energise and inspire a thinking and farsighted government. It is not clear whether they can; all that is known is that they must find a way to do it, to understand and respect the rule of law no matter how painful or injurious to their interest in the short run, and to obey the constitution unreservedly without the chicaneries and subterfuges that have become their lodestar.

    Indeed, their legacy and reputation are hinged on their ability to appreciate the factors that predispose a country to greatness and long-term stability. Here the structure of the country is paramount. It is hoped that the Buhari presidency possesses the education to know that a building could not stand if the foundation is weak or inappropriate, or if the structure of the building itself is flawed. Can the Buhari presidency boldly say Nigeria’s structure is sound, and that the problem is just the people’s attitude, as it has often argued? Even the Value Added Tax (VAT) controversy must tell a thinking government that it is misguided in its assumptions and destructive in its conclusions. Raising VAT at this point shows lack of depth and purpose. Much more, however, it also shows how iniquitous the country’s so-called federal structure is — that is assuming the APC and the Buhari presidency still believe in federalism — that they force states which produce and therefore pay VAT to underwrite the slothfulness and inefficiency of states which do not produce goods and indeed specialise in erecting strictures inimical to production.

    If the APC and the Buhari presidency can find the discipline and wisdom to get the country’s structure right and learn to obey the laws of the land, they must then find a way to turn their attention to restructuring their party to make it more responsive to the needs of members and the country, away from the grovelling before presidents and governors that shames Nigeria’s democracy. It is a fact that nearly all APC governors are not democrats, as amplified by the atrocious manner they interact with their Houses of Assembly and the judiciary. The president has little interest in democracy and probably can’t even conceptualise it. But they will need to define who they are, what they believe in, and how to find a connection between their identity and beliefs on the one hand and the aspirations and identity of the country on the other hand. The party has always made laws to regulate themselves. But they have often needlessly tinkered with those laws to serve short-term and sometimes nefarious goals. Altogether, increasingly, they have emptied their party of its soul and brutally subordinated its carcass at the federal and state levels to the president and the governors. The APC, like the PDP before it, is now proudly empty of soul and purpose.

    To therefore ask the APC to rediscover itself, assuming it ever had a personality that reflects purpose and ideology, may be asking for too much. But except it embarks on that noble search, it will also flounder like the PDP. Indeed, this is the time for the APC to carry out that exercise of self-examination and rediscovery, a time when antidemocratic politicians and officials have virtually swept the party and the presidency off their feet, a time when the constitution is now held in abeyance and tyranny is knocking at the nation’s door, a time when the sectionalists in government and party think only in terms of private, pecuniary and aggrandizing ideas, not national, altruistic ideas. The Buhari presidency will of course not last beyond its constitutional limits, even if it manages to achieve something. But the party will outlive him, just like the critics whom both the party and the presidency detest will outlive them.

    The tragedy enveloping the APC is the same tragedy that undid the PDP. When the PDP took office in 1999, it had the misfortune of antidemocratic politicians swiftly taking and occupying the commanding heights of government, and with time, swallowing the party too. Lightning has struck twice, alas, unconventionally in the same place. When President Buhari and his APC won the 2015 elections, they immediately turned over the reins of government to antidemocratic players who are doing horrendously with the country as they please, recriminating and criminalising critics who point out the folly of their ways. Neither Chief Olusegun Obasanjo nor Mallam Umaru Yar’Adua nor Goodluck Jonathan is writing the history of Nigeria under the PDP. Critics and historians are doing the writing. No matter how badly they are badmouthed and hauled before judges for treason and other silly crimes, critics and historians will also write the history of Nigeria under the APC. It is up to the APC to reform or die physically and figuratively.

    That death would be inevitable as long as they keep confusing the scaffolding for the building, reshuffling their economic teams in the false hope that brilliant technocrats could atone for the lack of depth and industry assailing the presidency, overlooking the timidity and complicity of the National Assembly as they impotently beg the president to mediate between them and intransigent presidential appointees, and tolerating and refusing to punish bureaucratic perverseness such as was experienced when the secret service invaded the legislature and the executive branch deployed judicial caricatures to overthrow the chief justice. Chief Obasanjo and Dr Jonathan ruled as if there was no future, or that when that future catches up with them they would not be hoist with their own petard. Now the APC and its leaders are displaying the same short-sightedness, believing that the fiefdom they have created will preclude them from paying for the laxity and anarchy they are engendering.

    If the country is too timid to ask the APC and the dispirited and distraught PDP what visions of the country they have, and though Nigerians think they voted their government into office but are too deferential to take the presidency to task on their imperious and angry approach to governance, the ruling party itself must try to assemble men and women who, after studying the histories of great empires and kingdoms, can help the party and country envision tomorrow. The party has less than two or three years to remedy the confusion they have enthroned. Few trust them to do anything imaginative, however, especially seeing the way its leading functionaries have talked about and begun to scheme for 2023; but the country has an obligation to hope that the immense damage they have caused the nation can still be addressed, especially considering the manner the PDP imploded after its deserved loss of the presidency.

  • Oyetola asks varsities to ensure stable academic calendar

    The Osun State governor, Mr. Adegboyega Oyetola, has advised university managements, other stakeholders to ensure there is no disruption in the academic calendar year.

    Speaking at the Osun State University 8th Convocation ceremony yesterday in Osogbo, Oyetola, who is the  visitor to the university,  called for the overhauling of the nation’s education sector, particularly the tertiary education.

    He said the university education system has the capacity to rescue the country from her present socio-economic predicaments.

    Read Also: Oyetola inaugurates governing boards for Osun health insurance agency, primary healthcare

    Assuring that his government would continue to support and invest in education and use the sector as a template and bedrock to impact on the lives of the people and advance the economy of the state, he said that the state government has so far demonstrated its commitment to rebuilding and repositioning education in the state.

    The governor, who harped on merit in the award of academic excellence and accolade, admonished the rank and file in the education sector on the need for them to pursue the lofty ideals of education that emphasise learning and character.

    His words: “As you are all aware, the certificates that you will receive from this university are awarded to you on the basis of character and learning. In the order of importance, character comes before learning. It is character that opened the door to knowledge and kept it open until you completed your courses and earned a degree.”

    Congratulating the graduates, the governor tasked them to pursue things that could help to effect change and bring about positive impacts on the nation’s economy.  He said: “I congratulate the graduands here today for the successful completion of their programmes and graduation.”