Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • When blindness is no limitation

    President, National Association of Nigerian Visually Impaired Students, (NANVIS) University of Lagos (UNILAG) chapter, Osho Abiodun Sunday, does not believe in impossibilities. He told DAMOLA KOLA-DARE that visually-impaired people wear their challenge with pride.

    For Osho Abiodun Sunday, President, National Association of Nigerian Visually Impaired Students (NANVIS), University of Lagos (UNILAG) chapter, visual impairment is not a limitation and it does not diminish him in any way.

    Tall, lanky and soft-spoken, Sunday believes that being physically-challenged is not a disease and therefore he can compete effectively with those who are not physically challenged.

    Sunday, who comes across as an incurable optimist, noted that visually-impaired people have pain in their hearts but do not allow it to weigh them down.  Hence, he wants a society where visually-impaired people would be assisted and not treated as outcasts.

    He appealed to the government, corporate bodies, and well-meaning Nigerians to empower blind people.  He noted that poverty is the bane of those suffering visual impairment.   Further, he advised the government to borrow a leaf from advanced countries that have a fixed monthly allocation for their physically-challenged citizens.

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    “I am calling on the government, kind-hearted citizens and corporate establishments to help blind people.  Apart from job-creation, money should be made available.  In the Western world, there is a certain amount of money given to the physically-challenged every month. Government should look into that for blind people in the country not to be seen as beggars when help is not forthcoming from other avenues,” he said.

    The NANVIS President praised the management of (UNILAG for the yearly provision of endowment fund for every physically-challenged student.  For some of them, it is what they depend on it to cater for their needs.

    Despite being in need themselves, Sunday said the visually impaired also share with the less priviledged.

    He said the students demonstrated this when they visited Ikoyi Prisons in July.

    “We went to Ikoyi Prisons in July.  We came up with the prison visitation because people give to us and we decided that we would give back to the society to show that even in our current state, we have a loving heart,” he said.

    Always the optimist, Sunday sees hope on the horizon and declared that suicide was not an option even in the face of the stiffest odds.

    Sunday said: “We see hope in our lives. We believe the future will be good, and we remain strong. Though we might not be happy at times, it is very hard for us to contemplate suicide. In fact, if a blind person commits suicide, those in his environment should be questioned.

    He urged other visually-impaired people not to give up.

    “To my fellow visually-impaired brothers and sisters, even if your family is the poorest; do not lose hope and do not be discouraged,” he said.

  • Niger College of Agric, IBBUL sign MoU

    Niger State College of Agriculture, Mokwa (NSCAM), has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University, Lapai (IBBUL), in the areas of teaching, research and community development services.

    At the ceremony,Vice-Chancellor, IBBUL Prof Muhammad Nasir Maiturare, said the university appreciates and acknowledges the paramount role agriculture plays in the development of any nation; hence its determination to explore every opportunity towards facilitating the development of agricultural programmes being offered at the institution.

    Maiturare explained that the MoU would also cover staff training and exchange programme, together with the introduction of Postgraduate Diploma (PGD) programmes in crop science and production, as well as farm management.

    In his remarks NSCAM Provost Dr Aliyu Muhammad, said he was optimistic of fruitful collaborations between the two institutions. Muhammed is also upbeat the MoU would impact positively on the agricultural sector of the state, and the country, at large.

    Delivering the vote of thanks, Registrar, Alhaji Musa Abdullahi, appreciated the Faculty of Agriculture of IBBUL for initiating several partnerships and collaborations with reputable institutions.

    The climax of the occasion was the signing of MoU.

  • Lessons from El-Rufai

    Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State has been in the news this week for putting his money where his mouth is.  On Monday, he enrolled his six year old son, Abubakar, in the Capital School Malali, a public school in the state in fulfilment of a promise he made in 2017.

    He had promised back then to enrol his son in a public school in 2019.  He also said other public officers would be required to do same.  He said it was part of his plans to refurbish public schools and restore them to the standard he enjoyed attending public school as a child.

    El-Rufai has won my respect on this one.  I buy his argument that if public servants enrol their wards in public schools, then they would be more committed to ensuring the schools are good enough for the public.  It should become a standard nationwide.

    Recently, during the graduation season in UK and U.S., the social media was awash with pictures of our public officers and their children graduating from ivy-league universities.  We all know that they opted for greener pastures for their wards because of the rot in our own education system.  Starved of adequate funds, many of our schools do not measure up in terms of quality and infrastructure with those that our public officers send their wards to – enabled largely by funding from our commonwealth.

    Our leaders need to demonstrate faith in our public institutions once again.  They need to patronise local public schools and hospitals.  If their wards have to stay in classrooms with leaky roofs and broken walls; if they have to using a darkened wall as chalk board in an era of white and smart boards; if they have to use pit latrines without water instead of functional WCs; if they have to stay home for weeks or months on end because teachers are on strike agitating for unpaid salaries, perhaps they would pay the education sector the attention it needs.

    We do not seem to know how much we really need to prioritise education in this country.  It is practically the only option we have.  Natural resources are not taking us very far.  Already, Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II has warned that we do not benefit from oil price hike because we end up paying it all to import refined products.  However, we have a huge youth population that can become our biggest asset if only our government would make investment in Human Capital Development a priority.

    Various international agencies, including the World Bank, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and others have underscored the need for Nigeria and other countries lagging behind in development to make the right investment in the health and education of its people.

    Attending the 2018 Goalkeepers meeting in Johannesburg last December was an eye opener for me.  The 2018 Goalkeepers report warned that Nigeria and Congo would be home to about 40 per cent of the world’s poorest people by 2050.  We cannot sit easy and watch this prediction come true.  We need to fix our education system.  We should domesticate the quality our leaders are seeking abroad for their wards in this country.  Every school – even the ones on the highest hill or the remotest village – should be conducive to learning.  Every community should have a health facility that caters to the needs of all including young ones so they do not die of malnutrition or preventable diseases.  This can happen if we put our money where our mouth is.

    Government needs to cut spending in some areas – especially the huge emoluments of public officers – so it can allocate more resources to health and education.  Government needs to block loopholes used by corrupt officers and punish them while seeking creative ways to diversify our economy.  Nigerians need to learn to hold the government accountable.  Public office holders are in position for our sake, not theirs.  We have the right to ask what they are doing and demand change if they are not doing well.  I hope we start to exercise this right.

  • TCN, Eko Atlantic seal deal on 1000Mw power supply

    The Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) and the management of Eko Atlantic have sealed a deal for the supply of 1,000 megawatts (mw) of electricity from the national grid to Eko Atlantic City, under the Eligible Customers Arrangement.

    TCN Managing Director Dr. Usman Gur Mahammed stated this when he visited to the city on Victoria Island at the weekend.

    Mohammed told reporters that TCN had conducted a study for supply of power from the grid to Eko Atlantic City, adding that under such power supply, the DisCos were not eligible to undertake such supply because it comes from a much-higher voltage line.

    He said: “The study conducted showed that gradually the energy required by the city would be close to 1,000mw but it will take a long time before we reach there. Therefore, TCN will build a 330kva double circuit line from Lekki to the city, but we are going to step down and supply them at 132KV line so that when the need for 330kv line comes up in future, we don’t need to build a new line. We will only add the transformers, meaning that we will just build a substation at 330kv.’’

    Mohammed said TCN had earlier placed an advert for the prequalification of contractors for both lines and the substation.

    Read Also: DisCos blame TCN for interruptions despite $1.6b

    “We have already advertised for the prequalification of contractors for both lines and substation. We are working with the Lagos State Government and they have given us all the support we need and the ‘Right of Way’ has been established and we are working to ensure that we realise it.

    “At present, we will connect them to about 30mw but will ramp it up to 1,000mw gradually as the city grows. All arrangements that will make it reach 1,000mw are what we are putting in place,” he added.

    The TCN chief said the city would be connected to the grid under the Eligible Customer Arrangement of former Minister of Power, Work and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN).

    “Under the Eligible Customer Arrangement, Eko Atlantic City is going to be connected directly to the grid. So, there is no distribution company’s requirement. At present, we have about eight companies under eligible customers’ arrangement and what we signed for them is closed to 200Mw.

    “But they are not taking up to 200Mw because some of them being steel companies are not operating at their optimum,” he said.

    The Utility Manager, South Energyx, for Eko Atlantic City, Mr Khaled Bader, said the company was committed to providing all the infrastructural facilities, including supply to their partners in the city.

    “With TCN, we will be able to realise this under the Eligible Customers arrangement. All facilities related to power distribution within the city are almost ready,” he said.

  • Sundry Misusages XXVIII: Of which. . . plus more

    Misusages are such that are often taken for granted, as though they do not matter. Yet, they matter. They matter because they can render your writing uneasy to read, digest, comprehend or use. In other words, misusages can impede your communication, which is why we cannot overemphasize the need for correct usage that we have described as the spirit, soul and life of any language. We therefore crave your indulgence to continue to highlight observed pitfalls in usage, such as examined and discussed below:

    Of which

    We posit that the use of this phrase in the sentence below is clumsy and very inelegant and that the message can be rendered more lucidly and fluently.

    The mediation committee of which the outcome is yet to be shared with the field office concluded work several months ago.

    So awkward-sounding has the string of words of which the outcome made the construction that we need to find substitute phrases to make it more readable and intelligible. As the construction is, it is bound to halt the cadence of the reader, whereas we should keep him reading, not jerking in fits and starts. So, let us substitute with either whose outcome or the outcome of which. Here is what we mean:

    The mediation committee, whose outcome is yet to be shared with the field office, concluded work several months ago.

    OR

    The mediation committee, the outcome of which is yet to be shared with the field office, concluded work several months ago.

    Note, however, that some colleagues in broadcasting and even some top-drawer columnists have stuck to something close to the phrasing we have described as clumsy above. They seem comfortable with constructions like: “The mediation committee which outcome is yet to be shared with the field office concluded work several months ago” – even when that sounds as clumsy as they come.” You are likely to mind such usage if you write for the ears!

    On the one hand … on the other hand

    These are adverbial phrases of contrast used mostly correlatively. This is not the case in the following sentence where only one of them has been used wantonly.

    Democracy is about participation and representation. Participation is the extent to which individual members of society take part or get involved in the activities in their societies. Representation, on the other hand, refers to the process by which people get chosen to act in the interest of the community or sectors thereof.

    According to “Pop” Errors, “Here is a new epidemic among many academics – the frequent misuse of the twin idioms on the one hand and on the other hand or just one of them as featured in this example. Following the writer’s sequencing of thoughts on democracy, participation and representation, you are bound to ask what he is using the idiom on the other hand to contrast. The truth is, there is nothing to contrast. It is okay taking one concept after another the way he has done, but without introducing the redundancy and verbosity inflicted by the unnecessary idiom. You do not just throw in such expressions because you need to take a breath at that point or just because you want to transit from one sentence to another elegantly. Yes, such expressions are elegant transition tools, but only when they serve a purpose other than mere elegance. You do not use any of them as applied in the sentence, because it has no purpose. We would do well to note, therefore, that the twin idioms (on the one hand and on the other hand) are “used to introduce different points of view, ideas, etc, especially when they are opposites” (OALD). None of the concepts democracy, participation and representation is the opposite of another. Because we are also sticklers for elegant writing, we suggest, as follows, ways to conclude the writer’s train of thoughts in that introductory part of his paper:

    “For its part, representation refers to the process by which people get chosen to act in the interest of the community or sectors thereof

    OR

    “The related concept representation refers to the process by which people get chosen to act in the interest of the community or sectors thereof.”

    On trial

    In an increasingly litigious and criminal world where, at any time, thousands of people are being prosecuted in law courts, you would expect writers, particularly journalists, to use the phrase on trial correctly all the time. Not so in the following:

    Lawal and 11 others were under trial for stealing.

    Prepositions have forever hobbled many a writer. This explains the distortion of the expression on trial in this example. You are on trial, not under trial. When you are being tried in a court of law, you are said to be on trial. You could also be facing or standing trial. So, we correct the specimen error thus:

    Lawal and 11 others were on trial for stealing.

    Overall

    It is incredible how bizarre the mishandling of simple adverbs such as the above can get. Could it be that what you do not know, you don’t just know, no matter how simple. What to do? Understand them and master their correct usage, to avoid comical pitfalls as the following:

    In the overall, the election processes are continuing at the 20 polling stations.

    You must hasten to proclaim overall as the correct usage here, NOT in the overall! Correctly applied, overall is a sentence adverb, meaning, in the context, “generally; or everything considered” (OALD). So, accordingly, we say:

    Overall, the election processes are continuing at the 20 polling stations.

  • Agric export: NAHCO’s infrastructure to the rescue

    The Nigerian Aviation Handling Company Plc (NAHCO Aviance), as part of the expansion of its agricultural export business, is supporting the government’s transition to a non-oil economy through the provision of infrastructure to boost food export businesses. This could be the tonic to galvanise other private sector operators to key into the Federal Government’s ongoing economic diversification agenda. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports

    A fresh impetus has come the way of the Federal Government’s ongoing diversification campaign.

    By expanding its agric export business, backed by top-of-the-range infrastructure, the Nigerian Aviation Handling Company Plc (NAHCO Aviance) may have set the stage for other private sector operators to provide the much-needed infrastructure to boost food export business and drive diversification.

    Essentially, NAHCO, a cargo ramp and passenger handling firm in the air transport value chain, is providing facilities that will encourage cold storage management.

    Its Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Mrs. Tokunbo Fagbemi, said the company was creating cold storage hub for  existing and potential clients, including its new clients that want to trans-ship their goods through Nigeria with a bit of packaging.

    Fagbemi, who spoke to reporters during the week, said: “Our findings from the airlines revealed that a lot of agricultural products exported are destroyed by the time they get to their destinations, which is largely caused by inadequate storage facilities.

    “We just got an approval to develop a facility in our packaging warehouse, which will tackle that challenge because it will help exporters to package their products at a particular temperature rate to reduce the incidence of rejection in the international markets.”

    The NAHCO boss, who said the company’s agric export business, has a huge potential as it is one of the pet projects of the new management, stated that the company wants to provide a CEIV Pharma, which, according to her, is a project designed by International Air Transport Association (IATA) to support the movement of pharmaceutical products via air.

    “What that means is that at every point of the movement of the goods, whether vaccines or drugs, the temperature is maintained,” Fagbemi.

    That is not all. NAHCO, she said, is also expanding its processing area. “Most of our processes are governed by treaties signed by security regulations. So, what we do is go back, look at all these processes and run our warehouse the best way we can,” she added.

    Fagbemi agreed with the Federal Government that agriculture must be seen as a business and haven for investment. She, however, said there was the need to integrate food production, storage, food processing and industrial manufacturing to establish the linkage necessary in the agricultural commodity value chain.

    According to her, the value chain must consider the role of players from food production to consumption and design to empower the small holder producers to ensure that processors have good quality products for consumption.

    “Our new equipment and technology would enable us to improve on its offerings to its clients, as NAHCO had recently invested about N1.9 billion in equipment. The overhaul would help to replace ageing equipment, which had increased maintenance cost due to high utilisation of fuel,” Mrs Fagbemi said.

    The company’s Chief Operating Officer, Mr. Herbert Odika, pointed out that NAHCO’s strict adherence to global standards stands it out in its operations.

    He said: “We have a duty as the leading ground handler in the West Africa sub-region to set standards. We won’t shy away from playing this leadership role in all our operations, including the way we process our exports.”

    The NAHCO infrastructure intervention in its food export business bodes well for the Federal Government’s transition to a non-oil economy anchored on export of agric products.

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo recently urged stakeholders to be involved in the agriculture sector as it is one of the cardinal points of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) of the Federal Government with an emphasis on developing an export-led economy.

    Osinbajo said: “Our agenda is to guarantee the vibrancy of the agric sector…,” adding that the value chain must consider the role of players from food production to consumption and design to empower the small holder producers to ensure that processors have good quality products for consumption.’’

  • Proposed VAT hike: Weak manufacturing base puts OPS on edge

    The Federal Government, Organised Private Sector (OPS) members and Labour have agreed on the need for a diversification strategy to halt the economy’s high dependence on oil. However, achieving this via fiscal diversification, which involves increasing the tax revenue, such as the proposed upward review of the Value Added Tax (VAT), has never gone down well with the OPS and Labour. Their grouse is that the nation’s weak manufacturing base has rendered the economy unproductive and can’t support VAT or any tax increase. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA examines the fears of the private sector and their push for increasing the tax net, instead

    It’s a fiscal policy whose time has come. Though still in the works, the Federal Government’s proposed upward review of the Value Added Tax (VAT), from five to 7.5 per cent, came at a time the payment of more taxes has become imperative to mitigate the country’s  fiscal challenges and generate enough cash to finance her capital and recurrent expenditures.

    Indeed, this has been the case, particularly, since the economic downturn triggered by the crippling impacts of revenue drop caused by crashing oil prices in the international market.The sharp revenue drop from the Federation Account has since forced a strategic rethink in favour of fiscal diversification, which involves increasing tax revenues, including an upward review of the VAT.

    Besides, Nigeria’s VAT rate, according to experts, is not only among the lowest in the world, but also well below VAT rates in other countries of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). The International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director, Ms. Christine Lagarde, who drew attention to this in 2016, therefore, advocated a boost of the country’s revenue base by increasing the VAT on goods and services.

    Lagarde’s counsel may have hit the right chord with the country’s economic managers and tax authorities. For instance, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, said the proposed VAT increase to 7.5 per cent is low compared to other countries. In fact, he said with this increase, Nigeria still has the lowest VAT rate in the world.

    Emefiele, who spoke to reporters after the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting held in Abuja, said: “If the government can meet its obligation through this increment, it should be supported.”

    He appealed to Nigerians to show understanding and support the government’s policies, as it had the responsibility to fend for its citizens by providing basic infrastructure like roads, electricity and hospitals, among others.

    However, the Federal Government’s latest push to bring Nigeria’s VAT rate at par with its peers has been met with stiff resistance by members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS), the Labour movement and, indeed, some Nigerians critical of the administration’s fiscal reforms.

    The OPS, including Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA), Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), National Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA) and even the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), among others, have continued to kick their heels, insisting that the move would not be in the interest of the economy and Nigerians.

    At the core of the agitation by the OPS is the weak or fragile manufacturing base, which, according to them, has continued to render the economy unproductive and can’t support increasing the VAT or any form of tax.

    Labour, on its part, fears that if and when implemented, an increased VAT will erode the gains of the new N30,000 National Minimum Wage. The payment of the new wage earlier approved by the National Assembly has begun, according to Minister of Labour and Productivity Chris Ngige. But, Labour fears that a VAT increase will hurt workers, particularly the low income ones.

    The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, explained that the proposed VAT increase followed the recommendation of the Presidential Technical Advisory Committee. She said the increase would possibly take effect in 2020 after consultations with states and local government areas, other stakeholders and the approval of the National Assembly and amendment of the VAT Act.

    But there are indications that the consultations ahead of the take off of a new VAT rate may not enjoy a smooth sail. For instance, even before the consultations begin, MAN had described the timing of the proposed VAT increase as inappropriate. It added that it would also spur spontaneous increase in inflation rate occasioned by increased prices of goods and services.

    MAN said although it appreciates the need for the government to generate more revenue to fund its developmental initiatives amid declining revenue from oil, increasing VAT at this time was inappropriate, especially when the minimum wage of N30,000 was just agreed upon.

    MAN Director-General Segun Ajayi-Kadir put the association’s grouse in perspective when he said the increase could send a wrong signal that the government is not sensitive to the plight of the low- and middle-income earners, who are clearly in the majority.  He said it is a typical case of government taking back what was given with the right hand through the National Minimum Wage with the left hand through the increase in VAT.

    More importantly, perhaps, the implications of the economy’s fragility for the proposed VAT increase are not lost on MAN, with Ajayi-Kadir noting, for instance, that the economy just recently exited a debilitating recession, with a fragile growth rate of less than two per cent recorded  last year, which should be delicately managed.

    He pointed out that Nigeria’s precarious macro-economic condition requires palliatives that would improve investment and not higher tax burden. “The prevailing high lending rate, double digit inflation, low per capita income, high unemployment rate and a low 1.91 per cent growth rate amid 2.6 per cent population growth rate that are already cumulatively limiting competitiveness could be further worsened,” he warned.

    The MAN DG said, undoubtedly, the burden of the VAT increase, when implemented, would be shifted to consumers who ware struggling, and the economy will certainly experience demand crunch, while inventory of unsold items would soar. The profitability of manufacturing concerns will also be negatively impacted, while many factories will witness serious downturn or wind down operations.

    “This will also worsen the already high unemployment position of the country, which is above 23 per cent, as Nigerians employed by manufacturing concerns and other businesses may join the reserved army of unemployed and further bloat the unemployment rate in the country,” Ajayi-Kadir warned.

    The MAN DG recommended that rather than increase the VAT rate, government should widen the tax net to meet the growing need for more revenue to address the development objective of the country.

    “There is also the need to harmonise taxes/levies/fees payable by businesses in the country  to attract more investment that would translate to higher productivity and more tax revenue for the government in the medium and long term,” he also counselled.

    NECA also threw its weight behind the need to increase the tax net instead jerking up VAT, which, according to it, would definitely lead to an increase in the cost of doing business, and would likely be passed to the consumers whose purchasing power, is already weak.

    Its Director-General, Mr. Timothy Olawale, recommended that the government should widen the tax net to generate more revenue and ensure effective collection of taxes from non-compliant citizens or defaulters.

    He said more individual and corporate entities should be captured in the tax net paying VAT, adding that if the government must increase VAT against the will of the people, “It should be limited to luxury or ostentatious goods only.”

    The NECA DG also faulted the comparison of VAT rates with other countries, describing it as irrelevant. According to him, business operating conditions in those climes are more clement than what obtains in Nigeria.

    Ajayi-Kadir aligns with him, noting that an ideal tax policy should be such that takes into cognizance the status of the economy. His words: “An ideal VAT policy for Nigeria should take into account the current profiles of Nigeria’s Per Capita Income (PCI), National Minimum Wage (NMW); and Global Competitiveness.

    “PCI and NMW will help highlight what will be the implication of upward review of VAT on the already depleted wellbeing of majority of Nigerians, while global competitiveness will present insight on the impact of such review on the real sector, particularly the manufacturing sector.”

    Although the MAN chief admitted that “There is no doubt that VAT is an important revenue source to the government,” he, however, said “The principle of a good tax system is predicated on payment convenience, otherwise it could boomerang, leading to crowding out of businesses; more misery to the citizens and even lesser revenue to the government.”

    The LCCI also said the new increase in VAT would put more pressure on businesses and could also affect consumer purchasing power. Its President, Mr. Babatunde Ruwase, who spoke during the weekend, at the fifth Presidential Policy Dialogue, organised by the LCCI, said Nigerians had been paying so much money without getting value.

    “There are so many levies, but no accountability of such levies. That is why the average Nigerian does not believe he should pay more. If we can see result, see what the government is doing with the money, Nigerians would be ready to pay. But the situation is that there is mistrust by Nigerians. We are not ready to pay more because the one we paid we can’t see what it was used for,” Ruwase said.

    Indeed, past attempts by the authorities to turn to tax sources to broaden the nation’s revenue base were often met with stiff resistance by not a few Nigerians.

    Many of them cite entrenched corruption in Nigeria’s tax administration, which makes it  difficult for successive governments at various levels to make judicious use of tax revenue to improve on social and physical infrastructure. As a result, many of them shun payment of taxes.

    The Nation learnt that the underlying factor responsible for the groundswell of opposition against the proposed VAT increase is that the economy is unproductive. The thinking is that raising VAT to cushion the crippling effects of the revenue shortfall caused by sliding oil prices would not work because the masses are already impoverished by the economy’s unproductiveness.

    The harsh environment caused by the nation’s huge infrastructure gap, particularly electricity supply, has also not helped matters. The situation has rendered the real sector, including manufacturing and agriculture, unproductive and uncompetitive.

    Apart from economic reasons, which, according to experts, pose serious hurdles to the use of tax revenue to revamp the economy, alleged corruption in the tax administration system remains a sore point.

    The truth is that most Nigerians are unwilling to pay tax unless they are compelled. And they hinge their refusal on the belief that government’s officials will embezzle any money they pay.

    The thinking, and rightly so, is that Nigeria’s tax system allows for compromises, which tax officials have exploited to defraud the government of its revenue. This is why despite the fact that tax is the most reliable source of revenue for government all over the world, the rate of tax evasion in Nigeria is very high.

    While such public perception of the nation’s tax system may take time to change, experts say that it is important to work on the economy’s unproductiveness, which is believed to be largely responsible for the nation’s narrow tax base.

  • Group to Buhari: curb loss in steel sector

    A Non-Governmental Organisation, Social Integrity Network (SINET), has advised President Muhammadu Buhari to devise an effective monitoring policy to reduce the loss in the iron and steel sector.

    The group lamented that Nigeria has lost about one million tonnes of steel manufacturing products and about 30,000 jobs, from 2017 to date due to high rates of smuggling and importation of substandard products.

    Other reasons it adduced to the losses include alleged high conspiracy and connivance among Customs officers, perpetrators of illegal acts, as well as wrong declarations of goods.

    SINET, however, advised the president to issue an Executive Order compelling the Comptroller-General of the Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) to fish out corrupt officers who have been allegedly assisting importers to clear goods illegally.

    The group’s National Coordinator, Mallam Ibrahim Isah, stated this in a statement on Tuesday. He noted that the remark of President Buhari on border closure being a blessing to Nigeria was commendable.

    The president made the remark last week when he received a delegation of the Nigerian Association for Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), Federation of West African Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FEWACCI) and representatives of the Organised Private Sector (OPS).

    He said: “We cannot fold our arms and allow smuggling to take over our economy thereby subjecting us to high economic risk and massive downsizing of industrial workers.

    “Many local industries have collapsed due to high rate of importation of substandard products such as coloured corrugated roofing sheets, aluminium roofing sheets as well as galvanised corrugated roofing sheets.

    “It is saddening to note that while the nation is gradually winning the war against smuggling through the closure of inland borders, no attention is given to seaports where containers are checked into the country without adequate inspection thereby paving ways for substandard goods as well as dangerous weapons into the nation.

    Isah said there can’t be significant success without paying attention to the seaports and the creeks. “Despite the hues and cries of Nigerians on the influx of smuggled goods, the NCS is yet to make any public arrest of economic saboteurs thereby confirming the fact that there is strong conspiracy within the system,” he said.

    He said although the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has played significant role of shutting down some warehouses with substandard roofing sheets in Imo and Anambra states, “We want the President to set ‘Eagle Eyes’ on the seaports for effective monitoring.”

    Isah appealed to the Federal Government to enact a strong national policy that would further protect the economic interest of the local manufacturers as well as reduce revenue evasion rate, which has made Nigerian Customs to be losing a minimum of N1bilion to smugglers weekly.

    “If Buhari must triumph in his fight against corruption and insurgency, he must take bold steps towards sanitising the NCS and prevent the persisting massive smuggling activities. This is to further demonstrate his strong political will of promoting local content and safeguarding the future of over 200 million Nigerians,” SINET stated.

  • Delta stops new approvals of private schools

    Delta State Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education, Patrick Ukah, has banned granting of provisional approvals to persons who want to establish private schools.

    Ukah said that the decision was based on the abuse of process by proprietors.

    Speaking when leaders of the National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS), Delta State chapter, visited him, the Commissioner bemoaned a situation where private school owners do nothing to improve their facilities.

    According to him, the Inspectorate Department of the ministry would clampdown on private schools that have not completed the processes of getting their full approval and those that are not approved at all.

    Ukah said that the exercise should not be seen as a revenue drive of sthe state government, but an exercise aimed at ensuring that approved standards are met in all private schools.

    He told the leaders of the body to encourage their members to complete the approval process to avoid having their schools shut.

    The Commissioner reminded proprietors that sports is now compulsory in all primary and secondary schools in the state and urged them to key into the policy that part of Thursdays should become a sports day.

    Ukah reminded them of the need to register for the 2019/2020 Zenith Bank Delta Principals’ Cup Football Competition billed to kick off on September 30, as mouthwatering prizes would be won at various stages of the competition.

    Earlier in his address, the Delta State NAPPS Chairman, Monday Ifoghere, appealed to the Commissioner to look into some of the problems facing members, especially the issue of multiple taxation by different departments and agencies of the state government.

  • UNILORIN wins N120m equipment grant

    The Department of Chemistry, University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) has attracted N120 million worth of seeding laboratory equipment from a US-based non-governmental organisation.

    Secretary of the Seeding Labs Grant Committee, Dr. O. Atolani of the Department of Chemistry, said the equipment include a Mass Spectrometer, Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM), High-Pressure Liquid Chromatography (HPLC), consumables and some others.

    He said it would improve the quality of research output from the university.

    “The equipment will improve the department’s research productivity while enhancing the training of both our undergraduate and postgraduate students,” he said.

    Principal Investigator, Prof. E.O. Odebunmi, said the department won the grant based on two research proposals on Cancer and Cosmeceuticals it submitted to the organisation, Seeding Labs, which helps scientists make discoveries that improve life and the planet. The grant was funded under Seeding Labs’ instrumental access programme, which is focused on removing barriers to research and science teaching by making laboratory equipment available to universities in low and middle-income countries.

    Atolani said the university was inspired to apply for the grant when it learnt that a private university, Redeemer’s University, got the grant.

    However, he said the department’s first application for the grant in 2016 was unsuccessful.

    The lessons learnt from the attempt, as well as the support from the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Sulyman Age Abdulkareem, Dean and others helped the team get the grant this time around.

    “The first trial was a lost out but lessons and experiences were gathered. We then reapplied in the 2017/2018 session. Adjustment of the previous application was improved and looked into,” he said.

    Atolani, a Medical Chemist, said the equipment had already arrived the Lagos Sea Port.

    With the equipment, he said researchers, postgraduate and undergraduate students would no longer need to send their samples outside for analysis at a great cost.