Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • ‘Saraki duly retired funds allocated to his office in May’

    Former Senate President Bukola Saraki on Tuesday said he retired all funds allocated to his office when he left the National Assembly in May.

    A statement by his Media Office said: “The attention of the  Media Office of the former President of the Senate, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki has been drawn to a news report (not The Nation) with the headline: “ 8th Assembly: Saraki, Ekweremadu, others failed to retire N73.5bn running cost”.

    “We deem it necessary to put the record straight and correct the wrong impression created by the  report, stating that before leaving office on June 6, 2019, Dr. Saraki duly retired all funds allocated as running cost to his office as President of the Senate between June 2015  and May 2019.

    Read Also: Kwara, Saraki trade blames over distribution of school materials

    “We also wish to state categorically and with emphasis that the National Assembly management equally issued a Certificate of Retirement in acknowledgement of the fact that Dr. Saraki has fully complied with relevant laws, rules and regulations in respect of the use and retirement of such funds.

    “We believe that if the  reporter had diligently investigated  the issue and raised the right questions in the right quarters,  he would have been availed the facts concerning the former Senate President.

    “It is therefore misleading and mischievous  to allege that Sen. Saraki has failed to retire the running cost allocated to his office as President of the eighth Senate.

    “We expect that such news story would have been properly investigated and full facts obtained  before rushing to press.

    “We will like to recall that the story under reference merely signify the negative, misleading,  unverified and inaccurate reporting by a section of the press  against Dr. Saraki, with the intention of portraying him and the 8th Senate in a negative way to the public. Fortunately the public is now better informed. Thus,  we advise that instead of carrying  on along these old lines, the medium should focus on the issues that affect the lives of the people and how to find solutions to the multifarious challenges facing the country.”

  • Dickson: APC not ready for poll

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has accused the All Progressives Congress (APC) of planning mayhem and manipulation in the November 16 governorship election.

    The governor, who spoke in a media chat in Yenagoa, said APC did not have what it takes to win election in a peaceful and democratic atmosphere.

    A statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Fidelis Soriwei, maintained that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) would beat its major opposition.

    He said the PDP candidate, Senator Douye Diri, had a robust history of productive public service driven by his passion and love for Bayelsa and the Ijaw nation.

    Read Also: Bayelsa polls: Who succeeds Dickson?

    He said the outcome of the APC primaries reflected the pitiable credentials of the party and its level of unpreparedness. Dickson called on the media to provide a platform for candidates to debate issues; party manifestoes, the polity and development.

    The statement reads: “This election is a very important one where you will either vote for stability or instability, security or insecurity, development or retrogression. But knowing the kind of people you are, I know the party you will vote for.

    “The candidates are all there. As a party, we are preparing to start our campaigns. I know the other side (APC) is not prepared for election; they are preparing to kill and maim. They are preparing for a fight and intimidate our people. As usual, they are also preparing to write and announce fake results. But my party will be going to all the nooks and crannies to talk to the people.

    “I urge you all to shun violence. Say no to those young men carrying arms and driving their brothers and sisters from their communities because of partisan differences.

    “I again call on security agencies to be alive to their responsibilities. I also call on the community leaders to rise to the occasion because communities are bigger than political parties. The historical, cultural and even the blood we share are more important than any partisan differences.”

  • Cokie Roberts: The voice (1943-2019)

    Cokie Roberts dies, Veteran broadcast journalist was 75, announced The New York Times on Tuesday, September 17, 2019. She has since been buried at Congressional Cemetery, Washington, DC.

    Her tart-tongued voice sounds in my ears as I write and I can visualize her, dissecting American politics and public policy on TV. She had such a professional poise and touch of class that not even President Donald Trump, ever disdainful of the press, could deny her professionalism: “She was a real professional. Never treated me well, but I certainly respect her as a professional”.

    She was the voice of radio and the voice of television. She was the voice of reason and the voice of truth. A legendary political journalist, Cokie Roberts started out as a reporter and then became an analyst, a commentator, and an anchor. She traversed four national networks—CBS, ABC, PBS, and National Public Radio. The print medium was also her terrain: She wrote a syndicated column and authored six books.

    In recognition of her contributions for over four decades, she won numerous awards, including three Emmys; the Edward R. Murrow Award; the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism; and the Women Who Light The Way Award. She topped it with the Living Legends Award by the Library of Congress. She was also inducted into the Broadcasting and Cable Hall of Fame and named one of the 50 greatest women in the history of broadcasting.

    She left many enduring legacies. First, she was recognised across the United States for her trailblazing role as a Congressional Correspondent and as one of the Founding Mothers of public radio journalism in the country. She played this role for over forty years, sharing the honour with three compatriots on NPR, namely, Nina Totenberg, Linda Wertheimer, and Susan Stamberg. The four women changed the texture of news on public radio and shared space with men in interviewing powerful people and reporting on politics and public policy.

    In the course of her career, Cokie covered at least eight American Presidents and 22 Congresses. The distinction with which she served was echoed by Presidents and Congressional leaders. Former President Bill Clinton said it all: “I liked and respect Cokie Roberts very much. She understood people and politics. For nearly half a century, she was an institution in American journalism—tough but fair, insightful, and with a voice all her own”.

    In her eulogy at the memorial service, a long-time friend and current Speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, described Cokie as “an American icon, who will forever be in the pantheon of the greatest professionals of her field”.

    Second, Cokie was unique in traversing radio, television, and print. While remaining with NPR in one role or the other throughout her career, Cokie shared her role on radio as Congressional Corespondent and political analyst with “Newshour”, a PBS TV programme. She later joined ABC, where she also took on additional roles. Among others, she served as a political correspondent for “World News Tonight”, filled in for Ted Koppel on “Nightline”, and co-anchored, with Sam Donaldson, “This Week”, a Sunday morning political affairs programme.

    Third, although Cokie never wore feminism on her sleeves, she nevertheless mentored young women and highlighted the role of women in American history and politics in three bestselling books, namely, Founding Mothers: The Women Who Raised Our Nation (2004); Ladies of Liberty (2009); and Capital Dames: The Civil War and Women of Washington, 1848-1868).

    Her quest for gender balance was evident in the three companion books in which she explored the public and private role of the women who shaped the United States during the early stages. Pelosi foregrounded the significance of this contribution in her eulogy: “Because of Cokie, the women who helped build and strengthen our nation are now taking their rightful place in our history books”.

    Cokie’s interest in political journalism was rooted in her upbringing and supplemented with her degree in Political Science. Both of her parents were politicians, each of whom served for decades as a Democratic member of the House of Representatives from the state of Louisiana. She walked the halls of Congress as a young girl and the experience never left her. Nevertheless, unlike other members of her immediate family, who ran for Congress, she decided early on journalism and political analysis as her way of giving back to society.

    She acknowledged the impact of her childhood experiences on her views about America: “Because I spent time in the Capitol and particularly in the House of Representatives, I became deeply committed to the American system. And as close up and as personally as I saw it and saw all of the flaws, I understood all of the glories of it.”

    It was her deep understanding of the American political system that gave her an early insight into the danger of electing Trump. In an article co-authored with her husband, she called on “the rational wing” of the Republican party to stop his nomination. Their warning now appears prophetic: “If he is nominated by a major party—let alone elected—the reputation of the United States would suffer a devastating blow around the world”.

    A consummate professional journalist, she recognised the proclivity of journalists to blame politicians, while hardly acknowledging their achievements: “We are quick to criticize and slow to praise”, she said of journalists at a commencement address 25 years ago. She then invited the audience to join in holding their political representatives accountable.

    Finally, Cokie left a legacy of consistency. As Obama observed, she was “a constant over 40 years of a shifting media landscape and changing world”. She was also consistent at home as a wife and mother of two. Although she married early (at 20), she remained married for 53 years to Steven Roberts, also an American journalist, writer, and political commentator. The cream of the Washington establishment, including President Lyndon B Johnson and his wife, attended their wedding in 1966.

    True, Cokie was a child of privilege but she used her position to acquire as much knowledge as possible about the American political system and to share her opinion, views, and stories with the public across major media platforms. Her burial at Congressional Cemetery was a befitting reward for over four decades of diligent reporting on Congress and American politics.

  • 2023 can wait!

    I was at a forum during the week where 20 years of uninterrupted democracy in Nigeria was reviewed. Most people came expecting it to be all gloom and doom: they were not disappointed.

    Not even the deliberate efforts of some speakers to shine light on positives from the last two decades, lightened the mood significantly.

    One speaker said he had given up on discussing Nigeria because public discourse had degenerated to the extent where what you had to say is irrelevant, because you are automatically profiled on the basis of ethnicity and faith.

    A middle-aged lady spoke about an all-night conversation she had with her brother 20 years ago. The question they wrestled with was whether this nation could be salvaged. Her brother decided it was impossible and emigrated to the United States.

    Ever the sunny optimist, she stayed back believing she and like-minds could join hands to turn things around. The woman who spoke that morning had become disillusioned with what the country had become.

    Unfortunately, the people and politicians appear to live in a parallel universe. Those in government are quick to dredge up stats that suggest a massive improvement in our collective lot. For the average man, they might as well be speaking Greek.

    Barely four months after governments at federal and state levels were inaugurated for fresh terms, and a clear three years plus to the next polls, trending discussion isn’t about decaying infrastructure or the economy, but about scheming for the 2023 presidential contest.

    This is a country where politicking never stops and governing hardly ever gets done. Perhaps, I exaggerate, but not much.

    The convention in most places is that once an election is done, the new administration settles down to govern. In countries with fixed four or five year election cycles, serious politicking doesn’t get going until 18 months or two years to the next round of voting.

    That is not to suggest that ambitious politicians would not be quietly working to actualise their dreams.

    But they recognise that an election gives a political party the mandate to deliver on its promises. At least 75% of the tenure of the administration would be dedicated to making the slate they sold to the people reality.

    The current feverish discussion of the 2023 prospects of certain individuals and regions, simply confirm what a growing number of our people are have come to believe; that their voices don’t matter in a supposedly democratic setting.

    Politicians and the shadowy figures that hover around the powerful, are only focused on who next gets to sit on the driving seat. The question, however, is to what end, because once the 2023 election is done, the buzz immediately shifts to who wants to be what in 2027.

    In the last couple of weeks this pattern of discussion became accentuated after Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, suggested that at some point in our political journey we might need to discard zoning as our preferred method for power sharing.

    Although he didn’t say this should begin with the next polls, the comments played into the narrative that a powerful tendency in the North was bent on retaining power in the region after President Muhammadu Buhari’s full two-term run.

    Last week, the debate became even more animated against the backdrop of two government actions that appeared to significantly whittle down Vice President Yemi Osinbajo’s clout within the administration.

    No matter how it is dressed, a publicised presidential memo asking the VP to always seek Buhari’s approval for contracts and other matters concerning agencies under his office, amounted to some sort of rebuke – no matter how gentle. It suggested that, in the past, he may not always have done so.

    Osinbajo’s comeback that he had always followed the law in running the agencies, showed that he recognised the subtle censure.

    Coming almost in the same 24-hour cycle when the Economic Management Team he used to head was suddenly dissolved and a new advisory council that reports to the president empanelled, it was grist to the mill of conspiracy theorists.

    Many commentators have since concluded that the one-two punch handed the VP, was a brutal tackle to take him down a peg in the 2023 stakes.

    I am not saying it is, neither am I saying it isn’t. But this relentless intriguing and speculation is a distraction from the compelling governance issues that confront this country.

    The level of misery and poverty is mindboggling. In many cities, the major sources of employment today aren’t manufacturing or some IT start-up, but motorcycle and tricycle taxis that are multiplying like germ culture.

    While they provide short term transportation relief, they are no substitute for proper mass transit. They contribute to the general air of chaos because many governments are overwhelmed by their rapid growth rate and lack the capacity to regulate them. Rather than being a sign of empowerment, they have become emblems of decline and poverty.

    Nigeria’s problems are urgent and can’t wait till tomorrow. They can’t wait for our ‘distinguished’ National Assembly members to return from their leisurely holidays. Neither can they abide much longer the president’s famed deliberate style.

    That’s why it is obscene at this point in our history, to be inflaming discussions about 2023 when the promises of 2015 and 2019 haven’t been made good.

    Nigerians truly need for their leaders to, for a change, deliver some genuine ‘dividends of democracy’. In recent times we have been sold the lie that bridges and roads built represent some kind of return for voters.

    But as some have pointed out, we don’t need elected officials to build roads. Some of Nigeria’s most enduring public infrastructure were built by military dictators like Yakubu Gowon, Olusegun Obasanjo, Ibrahim Babangida, Muhammadu Buhari, Sani Abacha and others.

    We need to demand much more from those we invested our time to vote for. In addition to building roads, we should see improved healthcare, greater freedom of expression and association, more participation in the process, respect for the rule of law and better security across the land.

    If the media and politicians persist in enabling this cynical system where politicking never takes a break, the result would be the sort of disillusionment that has seen voter turnout drop by a consistent 10% in the succeeding elections of 2011, 2015 and 2019.

  • Why I can’t settle Makinde, ZLP’s rift, by Ladoja

    A FORMER governor of Oyo State and chieftain of the Zenith Labour Party (ZLP), Sen. Rashidi Ladoja, has said that other leaders of his party restrained him from intervening to resolve the disagreement between Governor Seyi Makinde and the ZLP in the state.

    Ladoja stated this while addressing reporters on the occasion of his 75th birthday in Ibadan, the state capital.

    The former governor chaired the formation of the alliance of political parties that worked for Makinde’s victory in the March 9 election. While Makinde is of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Ladoja is of the ZLP. The African Democratic Congress (ADC) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP) were part of the alliance.

    But ZLP leaders have been at loggerheads with Makinde over the sharing of political appointments since he was sworn in on May 29.

    The party’s governorship candidate, Sharafadeen Alli, had indicated his interest in the position of the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), but the governor did not oblige him, The Nation learnt.

    Read Also: Makinde, wife to receive special recognition award

    Instead, Makinde appointed Alli as a member of the Governor’s Advisory Council, the ZLP candidate never turned up for the inauguration or activities of the council.

    Since then, the party has been in a silent tussle with the governor, believing that Makinde had turned his back on its members and abandoned the gentleman agreement of giving 15 per cent of all positions to members of ZLP.

    Ladoja said ZLP as a party, asked him to stay clear of the tussle, adding that it vowed to handle it in its own way.

    The former governor said Makinde had been treating him as an individual political leader, stressing that he respects the governor’s decisions and those of the ZLP.

    Reflecting on his 75 years of living, Ladoja explained that his experience had been enriched with several successes and disappointments in all spheres of life.

    But he expressed satisfaction with the contributions he has made to both the private and public sectors.

  • Buhari appoints Ladan as NIALS D-G

    President Muhammadu Buhari has appointed Prof Muhammed Tawfiq Ladan as the Director-General of the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS).

    He succeeds Prof Deji Adekunle.

    Read Also: Buhari mourns Amb. Chiedu Osakwe

    A letter from the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha reads: “I am pleased to inform you that President Muhammadu Buhari has approved your appointment as Director-General Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies for an initial term of four years.

    “This appointment is with effect from 9th September 2019…Please accept my congratulations and best wishes on your appointment.”

  • Nigerian Navy gives conditions for promotions

    The Central Naval Command (CNC) of the Nigerian Navy on Tuesday said physical and mental health status of its officers and ratings were conditions for their promotions.  Attendance of courses and operations, according to the command, are also key.

    Speaking at the maiden edition of a wellness lecture entitled: harnessing good health through prescribed medical lifestyle, which held at the naval headquarters, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, the Flag Officer Commanding (FOC), CNC, Rear Admiral Saidu Suleiman Garba, said health was important to the navy.

    Reae Admiral Garba insisted that the Nigerian Navy placed a lot of emphasis on the physical and mental health of its personnel, a development he said, led to the lecture series.

    He said the programme was a welfare package to enable personnel understand the need to be medically and mentally fit to undertake every operation expected of them.

    Read Also: Navy nabs 12 rice ‘smugglers’

    He also said that the Navy introduced the Body Mass Index scale as a measure of fitness to be sure that everyone was fit to undertake normal routine operations and activities.

    He said: “This will serve as a criteria for promotion, availability for courses and operations. In order for personnel to know their status we introduced this lecture. It will be quarterly so that we can reach other who are on the field so that we can also enhance their health.

    “Our annual programmes shows we have to undertake series of event like swimming, football championship, the thug of war games and so many others we concluded few days ago”.

    The health expert, Dr. Susan Adam, said the programme was designed to encourage all participants to be more conscious of their health status and appealed to them to embrace nature.

    He said: “We recognise that a lot has been done and already put in place for them to be proactive but we think something could be done extra to enhance their health. They have to deliberately prevent some things, watch their BMI and what to eat, and how to wake.

    “The vegetable drinks is all about going to nature, because it has so much to offer and heal us, by running away from nature is running from natural medicines. First they should be awareness that there’s something called healthy living, it will be a learned habit and it doesn’t happen overnight”.

  • Navy nabs 12 rice ‘smugglers’

    The Nigerian Navy, Forward Operating Base, Ibaka, Mbo Local Government Area, Akwa Ibom State, has nabbed 12 suspected rice smugglers.

    According to the Commanding Officer (FOB), Captain Peter Yiime, 1,072 bags of 50kg smuggled rice, and two wooden boats were seized from the suspects.

    Yilme said the arrests were made in two operations, and that the Navy is determined to end smuggling on the waterways.

    Speaking on Tuesday in Ibaka during the handover of the items to the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Yilme said the Navy will sustain  the anti-smuggling fight.

    He urged the communities in the state to liaise with the Navy to fish out the perpetrators before they venture into the sea for the illegal trade.

    Read Also: One killed in Customs-smugglers clash in Katsina

    Yilme who was represented at the handover by Lieutenant Commander Kabiru Yusuf, Base Operations Officer, FOB, said the two arrests involved eight suspects with 536 bags of rice, and four suspects with another 536 bags of rice.

    “I hereby hand over two medium-sized wooden boats laden with 536 bags of rice each arrested around Effiat waterways and Mbo river to the Nigera Customs Service.

    “The wooden boats along with its 12 crew were arrested at about 0345 and 2230 hours on Saturday, 21 September 2019 during a routine patrol by the Navy gunboats,” he said.

    Receiving the 12 suspects and 1,072 bags of rice from the Nigerian Navy, Deputy Superintendent of Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Alabi, Adedokun commended the Navy for the cooperation existing between them.

    “On behalf of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), I Alabi, Adedokun take over the 12 defendants and 1,072 bags of foreign parboiled rice. On behalf of the Nigeria Customs Service, we thank you very much.”

    Two of the suspects, a Cameroonian pastor, Samuel Gregory with Hope of Assurance in Christ Ministry International, and a Malian, Amadu Bello Jalo said they were innocent of the crime as they were only passengers on the boats.

    Samuel Gregory said, “I came from Cameroon to attend a programme in Nigeria organised by Prophet Omotola Jeremiah in Owerri. I never knew the boat I was entering carried some illegal goods. I only found out when we landed off shore that the boat was carrying some illegal goods. This is my first time of coming to Nigeria,” he said.

  • Illegal gas plants shut in A’Ibom

    The Eket Field Office of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) has shut down three illegal gas plants in Ikot Ekpene Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State.

    Operations Controller of the Department, Mr Tamunoiminabo Kingskey-Sundaye, who disclosed this to journalists yesterday, said the three facilities shutdown exercise took place last week.

    “Last week in the course of our surveillance activities, we noticed three illegal gas plants within Ikot Ekpene axis.

    “These are gas plants…they just brought gas vessels and  planted them just to do business in spite of the dangers posed to people’s property, environment and  to life,” he said.

    Read Also: Gold Rush: Illegal miners invade lands and farms in Minna

    He said that those illegal gas plants lack and does not have standard facilities like engineering, safety, earth and environment.

    “Before the DPR will give you an approval or licence, there are certain engineering and standards you must achieve. You just don’t come and run a facility, you must have an international standard and they are businesses that are governed with same code and same standard,” he said.

    Kingsley-Sundaye said the department had written to the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) to enforce law and order to the illegal gas plants if operational.

    He explained that any illegal gas plants owners that do not comply with international standard would be arrested and possibly prosecuted in the state.

    He advised gas plants owners to ensure that their plants meet up the minimum standard and guidelines of doing business in the state.

  • Oyetola tips Akande’s, Adewole’s sons, Omisore’s deputy as commissioners

    THE LIST

    Adebisi Obawale

    Oluremi Omowaiye

    Ibitoye Felix

    Sola Oladepo

    Bola Oyebamiji

    Ajisefini Abiodun

    Muminu Adekunle

    Ogunfolaju Sola Oyehan

    Oladimeji Olanubi Segun

    Agunbiade Nathaniel

    Folorunsho Bamisayemi

    Akeju Taiwo

    Lawal Yemi Azeez

    Olaonipekun Henry

    Adeleke Adebayo

    Olamiju Olasiji

    Yinusa Olalekan

    IsamotuRafiu Olasunkanmi

    Jamiu Olawumi

    Akande Oluwafemi

    Olumide Babatunde Olawale

    Olaniyan Hussein

    Adeosun Rasaq

    Badmus Rahmon Lekan

    Bakare Akande

    Giwa Lateefat

    Tadese Raheem

    Adewole Adedayo

    Lawal Tajudeen

    Babalola Idiat

    Kolajo Aderemi

    Egbemode Funke

    Kareem Akande

    Oyegbile Rufus

    Olaboopo Olubukola

     

    SONS of Chief Bisi Akande, former Minister of Health Isaac Adewole, traditional ruler the Akinrun of Ikirun and Osogbo Industrialist Alhaji Tunde Badmus, made the list of 35 commissioners and Special Advisers nominees sent for screening by Osun State Governor Adegboyega Oyetola.

    Also on the list read on the floor of the House of Assembly yesterday is running mate to Chief Iyiola Omisore during the 2018 governorship election and President of the Nigerian Guild of Editors Mrs Funke Egbemode.

    Those who served as commissioners in the Aregbesola Administration that made the list are Mr. Remi Omowaiye, Alhaji Bola Oyebanmiji, Dr. Olalekan Yinusa, Dr. Adebisi Obawale, Idiat Babalola, Prof. Rafiu Isamotu and Alhaja Lateefat Giwa.

    Also nominated are a former Special Adviser on Agriculture, Mr. Remi Kolajo, former House of Assembly member Folorunso Bamisayemi, a defeated House of Representatives candidate and pharmacist, Siji Olamiju and leaders of the Ileri Oluwa Organisation that championed Governor Oyetola’s campaign, Sola Oladepo and Jamiu Olawunmi.

    Speaker Timothy Owoeye urged the nominees to submit 25 copies of their Curriculum Vitae to the House not later than Friday adding that screening would begin on Monday.

    During the sitting, te speaker announced the setting up of an ad hoc committee of five lawmakers to consult with traditional rulers and victims of kidnapping in the state, in order to fashion out how to curb the menace.

    Owoeye said it was pertinent for the committee to move quickly into action, on the backdrop of recent upsurge in kidnappings in the state, saying the house was equally working on a law to address high rate of kidnapping in the state.