Tag: Nigerians

  • 90 million Nigerians living without electricity, says ex – minister

    Between 80 and 90 million Nigerians do not enjoy electricity supply, Former Minister of Power Dr Lanre Babalola has said.

    With a population of about 180 million, this means that over 50 per cent of the people are not connected to the national grid.

    Babalola spoke at the weekend, at the National Discourse organised by The Companion, an association of Muslim men in business and profession at the University of Lagos main auditorium in Akoka, Yaba.

    He attributed the inability to distribute electricity generated to shortage of gas, wondering why the government is selling the gas to foreign countries.

    “You know what, these foreign nations are using the gas purchased from us to boost their distribution of electricity and we deprive ourselves of its usage all in the name of getting more funds to finance our budgets,” he said.

    Another cause of epileptic power supply, according to Babalola, is that 25 per cent of the electricity produced does not get to customers because of technical losses.

    The Companion National President Alhaji Musibau Oyefeso said the theme: “Energy for sustainable economic development: What strategic options for Nigeria,” was chosen because it is an issue that concerns all.

    “The 21st century life we live today is power driven. Power or energy if you like, has become an indispensable factor in our daily life. We rely on it for virtually everything we do. It is perhaps no exaggeration to state that electric power is the backbone of the 21st century technology in all spheres of life whether at home or at work. Fortunately for us, Nigeria is blessed with virtually all known sources of power whether conventional or renewable ranging from hydro to gas, thermal, coal, solar, as well as wind and bio-mass among others. Yet it is ironical that we have not been able to convert these resources to power for the benefit of our people and the economy,” he said.

    According to him, electricity has been identified as  largely responsible for local industries’ inability to compete at the international level as it takes up to 20 per cent or more of the cost of production.

    “The significance of power to the economy is unquantifiable. Evidence shows that power has been a major resource in large shortage for our industries. The effort of government in increasing power generation has also yielded little or no positive result. The much needed private investment in the sector has also remained unfulfilled. The challenges seem enormous but not insurmountable,” he said.

    Chairman on the occasion Chief Gbadegesin Giwa said the power sector has become a nightmare for individuals, businesses and other organisations.

    Besides, Giwa said, it is having negative impact on the socio-economic development of the country.

    He said: “This impact is across all sectors from health to industry and manufacturing to commerce, governance, entertainment, and many more. Several billions of naira and foreign currency have been expended by different administrations on power supply.

    “In addition, some of our best minds have also been deployed as ministers and special assistants in the ministry to provide leadership and deliver power to the economy, yet they ended up achieving little or nothing. The challenges seem so enormous ranging from deliberate sabotage to inappropriate laws, regulations, funding, manpower, security and many more. The change of status from public/government driven sector to private sector driven alternative does not seem to be having any positive impact either. This, therefore, calls for a more robust approach to the seemingly intractable problem. Fortunately for us, power supply is taken for granted in other climes because all forms of challenges have been overcome and the technology to provide power is generally available and not rocket science. What is required is strong political will and the resolve of all stakeholders including the general public to join hands in tackling the challenges.”

  • Nigerians in U.S. hail Ogunlesi’s appointment by Trump

    Nigerians in U.S. hail Ogunlesi’s appointment by Trump

    The Nigerian community in the United States (U.S.) has hailed the appointment of Bayo Ogunlesi by President-elect Donald Trump into his Economic Advisory Team.

    The appointment, they said, could signal a positive trend for Africa.

    The Nigerians told the News Agency of Nigeria  (NAN) in New York  that Ogunlesi had been an excellent ambassador for Africa and Nigeria.

    Former  President of a Nigerian U.S.-based group, the Organisation for the Advancement of Nigerians Inc. (OAN Inc)Mr. Michael Adeniyi  told NAN that “Bayo Ogunlesi is an excellent and extraordinary Nigerian”.

    “He is very humble, brilliant and outstanding in every way you can think of. He has achieved outstanding success in Wall Street and he’s a proud ambassador of Africa, which he started in Kings College.

    “For him to be appointed into Trump’s Economic Advisory Team is a honour to Africa and especially to Nigeria. He will add value to the Trump’s team and he’s worthy of celebrating.”

    Another Nigerian, Prof. Yetunde Odugbesan-Omede, a professor of Global Affairs and Political Science at Rutgers University and Farmingdale State College, said Ogunlesi has all it takes to contribute to a positive American economic outlook

    “Mr. Ogunlesi has an impressive background and will be able to add his perspective and vast knowledge on how to move America forward that will yield positive economic outcomes.”

    Odugbesan-Omede, however, said it was too early to say if the appointment would have any impact on Nigeria.

    Spokesperson for the Permanent Mission of Nigeria to the UN Mr. Akinremi Bolaji said Ogunlesi’s appointment was a positive development for Nigeria and Africa.

    “I am not speaking for the Nigerian diplomatic community because I am not in the position to do so; it for the Embassy in Washington to do.

    “Speaking as a Nigerian, it is a good indication and positive development for Africa and Nigeria that we are among the best brains everywhere.

    “It is also to show you that one in every five Blacks is a Nigerian. It is a good indication for our economic and foreign policy.

    “It also shows that Africa and Nigeria have good ambassadors everywhere. Ogunlesi has to see himself as a representative of the Black race as the only Black man that made the list by further distinguishing himself.

    “I advise him to use his opportunity well and he should bring together people of integrity who will not smear his integrity.”

    Bolaji said the younger generation has a lot to learn from his distinction, adding “journalists have a lot to do to tell us how he was able to weather the storm and got recognised worldwide”.

    Ogunlesi, who is the chairman of Global Infrastructure Partners, a private equity firm and one of Fortune 500 companies, was named a member of an economic advisory forum to Trump.

    The 63-year-old Nigerian is the only African face in the 16-man team.

  • Presidency: 1.2m Nigerians to get single-digit loans

    Presidency: 1.2m Nigerians to get single-digit loans

    The Federal Government  on Sunday  said 1.2 million Nigerians would be given soft loans at two or three per cent interest rate as part of efforts to create jobs under its social investment programme.

    Mr Laolu Akande, the Senior Special Assistant to the Vice President on Media and Publicity, said this when he appeared on the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Forum in Abuja.

    He said the Federal Government was synergising with its enterprise agencies with the private sector to achieve the goal.

    He named the agencies as Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN), Bank of Industry (BOI), Bank of Agriculture and National Directorate of Employment (NDE), among others.

    ”About 1.2 million Nigerians are going to be given soft loans, may be at two or three per cent, loans of N20,000 to N50,000, N100,000; the traders, for people that have small businesses.

    “We are going to be using co-operatives, so all these groups mentioned will be working together because we believe small and medium enterprises are very critical to the recovery and rejuvenation of the economy.

    “So, we are working to design all kind of intervention financial facilities since we are not getting the kind of affordable loans in the main banking sector.

    “So, we are using the intervention funds to release money to small and medium scale enterprises so that they can trade with the money. with very little interest two or three or four per cent.’’

    He said that the Federal Government was hoping to do more for Nigerians using the intervention fund as part of its social investment programme.

    He said that the SMEDAN, BOI, Bank of Agriculture, NDE, others had been harnessed to provide such support.

    Akande said the government would continue to use resources from the agencies to actively boost social investment programmes.

    “We are working with these agencies to have that kind of glory of affordable loan to 1.2 million Nigerians to do trading of different kinds,’’ he added.

    He gave the assurance that the Federal Government would soon generate 7000 megawatts (MW) of power.

    Akande said that government was working assiduously to step up power generation from 5000 mw to 7000 mw.

    He said that the country began to experience low electricity supply due to pipeline vandalism and the bombings in the Niger Delta.

    ”When the administration came in as a matter of fact we were doing less than 300mw.

    He said that the Federal Government had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with companies that would supply gas that would ultimately increase the output to 5000 mw.

    Akande said that by rejuvenating some of the transmission facilities and infrastructure government was doing what is called “incremental power ‘’  to bring up the megawatt.

    He said that there were plans also by government to effect public, private partnership to ensure that Mambila project came on stream in power generation.

    On the issues of idle power plants Akande explained that the truth was that “a lot of those plants, facilities are just there and not being utilized.

    “The power plants are all disconnected and we are trying to fix them so that the plants will bring significant increment to the output.

    He said that rather than new taxes the government was expanding the coverage area in its Value Added Tax (VAT) drive to generate more income.

    ”Essentially, we are not increasing VAT at this time, but what we are trying to do is to increase the coverage of VAT.

    ”So, for instance now, if  VAT is only coverable for the 10 per cent that it should cover and you know the current rate is five per cent.

    ”We want to increase the coverage to 20 per cent because we believed that by just increasing the coverage, we are going to get in more revenue.

    Akande, however, said that the council was looking at a whole lot of things happening in the business environment to encourage people to invest and to promote their businesses.

    He said the government wanted to ensure that those who want to get   all kinds of approval for business purposes could visit only a one stop shop.

    According to him, we have installed one-stop-shop government policy approach.

    ”That is if you are a businessman and you have dealings with government.

    ”You do not have to go to Ministry of Finance today, Federal Inland Revenue Service or CAC tomorrow, among others you just have to go to one agent.

    ”Whatever you need from those agencies of government, the one stop shop will be the one that will do the running around.

    ”So, things like that are going on and we are actually trying to see that people do not suffer double taxation,’’ he said.

    He assured Nigerians that the government was doing its best to ensure a conducive environment for businesses to thrive

    According to him President Muhammadu Buhari’s economic team is composed of competent and tested people with significant private sector experiences.

    ”The major problem of Nigeria’s economy is a problem of vandalism of our oil installations and also the drop in the prices in the international oil market.

    “Look at what we have been able to do in spite of all these problems. In spite of the drop in revenue we have paid out almost N800 billion for infrastructure, for capital projects, more than what was budgeted for last year.”

  • Nigerians to pay VAT on international passports – FIRS

    Nigerians to pay VAT on international passports – FIRS

    The Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) on Monday said soon, Nigerians might begin to show evidence of tax payment before obtaining their passports.

    Mr Tunde Fowler said this at the 136th meeting of the Joint Tax Board which had the theme: “Increased Inter-Agency Co-operation to Enhance Tax Compliance and Optimise Revenue Collection’’ in Abuja.

    “We did take a position and I believe it would be implemented in the very near future that before you get any services from the immigration department: renewal of passports etc, you’d have to show that you are a tax payer.

    “These things are normal all over the world, In an effort to serve Nigerians and Nigeria better.

    “People believe that payment of tax is a burden and I’ll repeat that you only pay tax on income and profits.

    “So if you reside in Nigeria and you are benefiting from being a Nigerian resident, it is only fair that you contribute to the system that makes you enjoy that standard of living.’’

    He said the FIRS set a target to increase the individual taxpayer data base by 10 million by Dec. 31.

    “I’m glad with our co-operation; we’ve been able to attain 30 per cent of that. We’ve been able to get three million individual taxpayers across the nation.

    “I’d like to congratulate Kano State for leading the pack by increasing the database by 944,000 followed by Lagos with 306,000 then Kaduna and Plateau,’’ he said.

    The Corps Marshall of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Boboye Oyeyemi, lamented that the FRSC was being owed N700 million for number plates production.

    He also decried the high rate of fake documentation at ports, saying “if we can strengthen inter-agency collaboration, we’ll get more results now that the focus is on IGR’’.

    The Chairman of the Abia State Board of Internal Revenue, Mr Udochukwu Ogbonna, urged the revenue generating agencies to co-operate digitally to ensure success and curb corruption.

    Also, the Chairman of the Edo State Internal Revenue Service, Mr Oseni Elamah, said “the FIRS should have a digital one-stop-shop accessible to all partners’’.

    Some revenue generating agencies on Monday met in Abuja to curtail loss, stop corruption and increase proceeds to government coffers in 2017.

    The event brought together all states internal revenue service chairmen and the bosses of the Nigeria Customs Service, and the Nigeria Immigration Service.

  • Reforms will ease pensioners’ hardship, says Buhari

    Reforms will ease pensioners’ hardship, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday assured that his administration’s reforms will ensure that Nigerians who spent the productive years of their lives serving the nation will not experience difficulties in getting their pensions.

    He gave the assurance at a meeting with Barrister Sharon Ikeazor, the Executive Secretary, Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) at the State House, Abuja.

    He directed a speedy completion of the ongoing nationwide verification of pensioners.

    Buhari, in a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, stressed that the exercise was necessary because the success of the administration’s goal of putting in place an efficient pension scheme hinged on the availability of a reliable database.

    In a presentation to the President, Barrister Ikeazor said the PTAD management was determined to restore dignity to pensioners by protecting their funds and paying their entitlements promptly.

    The Executive Secretary also said that in line with the anti-corruption posture of the current administration, the PTAD has put measures in place to ensure accountability, compliance with regulations and zero-tolerance for corruption.

  • Apologise to Nigerians rather than  cast aspersions, Timi Frank tells Anenih

    Apologise to Nigerians rather than cast aspersions, Timi Frank tells Anenih

    The suspended Deputy National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Timi Frank said yesterday that the former Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party’s Board of Trustees, Tony Anenih should apologise to Nigerians for the damage he and other did the Nigerians  rather than casting aspersions on  Nigerians.

    Frank said in a statement in Abuja that Chief Anenih should tell Nigerians one good thing he will be remembered for as a politician, adding that he also helped to destroy his own party, the PDP.

    Chief Anenih, who served as the Minister of Works and Housing between 1999 and 2002, had said in his book, titled ‘My Life and Nigerian Politics,’ which was presented in Abuja, at weekend, that Atiku became too ambitious during the build-up to the 2003 presidential election in which Obasanjo was seeking a second term.

    He said Chief Anenih lied on his 2003 account, adding that more than 22 PDP governors were strongly behind Atiku to contest the Presidency but choose to stepped down for his boss because of his loyalty.

    He said it was out of place for Chief Anenih to described the former Vice-president Alhaji Atiku Abubakar as a ambitious politician “when he himself was more desperate than Atiku who had opportunity to become President in the past but remained loyal to his boss. “

    He said: “it is high time Chief Anenih should also tell the world the kind of legacy he is leaving behind in all his years in politics. Baba Anenih’s desperation to remain in the corridor of power made him to force former Goodluck Jonathan to run again in 2015 when he knew he (Jonathan) couldn’t win.

    “Chief Tony Anenih has lost the moral right to talk about  former Vice President Atiku Abubarkar or any other Nigerian for that matter seeing that he is one of the reasons Nigeria and especially the Niger Delta region  is where we are today.

    “What has Anenih done for the Niger Delta where he comes from? Instead of using his position to help the Niger delta and Nigeria at large to find lasting solutions to its numerous challenges, he choosed to support third term agenda.

    “Under his watch as Minister of Works, 300 Billion Naira disappeared into thin air. As NPA chairman, what positive contribution did he make for the benefit of Nigeria? Even in the South-South where Anenih comes from, Atiku a Northerner has touched people’s lives positively in terms of job employment more than Anenih will ever do in his life time. Anenih is not called Mr fixer for no reason, he helped put Nigeria and Nigerians in the fix we find ourselves today.

  • Nigerians need not panic over Donald Trump’s presidency — Ministry

    Nigerians need not panic over Donald Trump’s presidency — Ministry

    The new Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Sola Enikanolaiye, on Sunday assured Nigerians that Donald Trump’s presidency would not disrupt the U. S. and Nigeria’s long-existing relations.

    Enikanolaiye told the News Agency of Nigeria(NAN) in Lagos that there was no need for Nigerians to be agitated over Trump’s presidency.

    The permanent secretary expressed optimism that the long existing relations between Nigeria and the U. S. would be strengthened in the years ahead.

    “We do not think that Donald Trump’s presidency would lead to a disruption in the relations between Nigeria and the United States.

    “The United States and Nigeria have had excellent relations since the attainment of Nigeria’s Independence.

    “And under every government in the U. S, whether Republican or Democrat, we have always had cordial relations.

    “So, we do not think that this already existing relations between Nigeria and the U. S. would necessarily be altered under the U. S. President-Elect Donald Trump,’’ he said.

    The permanent secretary, however, said that Nigeria would not be naive to be caught unawares by any future eventualities.

    Enikanolaiye said that ahead of eventualities, his Ministry would on Monday, Nov. 28, hold a special retreat in Abuja, to deliberate on some of Trump’s rhetorics during his campaigns.

    “Given the President-elect’s rhetorics during his campaigns and election, we would not be naive not to prepare for these eventualities.

    “We have, therefore, decided to organise a special retreat on Monday, Nov. 28, in Abuja.

    “This retreat would give major foreign policy stakeholders the opportunity to deliberate on what Trump has said and advise government on how best to respond to this,’’ he said.

    Enikanolaiye recalled that Nigeria had excellent relations with the administration of the outgoing president Barack Obama in different areas, including economic ties, deepening of Nigeria’s democracy and other areas.

  • Trump’s election: Nigerians need caution

    Ever since Donald Trump won the United States presidential election, most Nigerian commentators have gone out to paint an incendiary picture of him. Most are raising fears about the kind of government he is likely to give to this most powerful country in the world. Most raise fears, in particular, about the probable impact of his immigration policies on the millions of Nigerians now resident in the United States, and even on Nigeria itself at home.

    Of course, most of these negative responses to him by Nigerians are justified. The ideas he has ventilated in the past many months about further immigration into America, about “undocumented immigrants” already in America, about the very large number of Nigerian immigrants in America, about further Nigerian immigration into America, and even about Nigeria as a country, are alarming. All over Nigeria now, many families who have members in America are fearfully wondering what will happen to their people at the hands of a Trump presidency.

    Still, I think that we Nigerians need to handle the situation with caution. It is possible that we Nigerians could generate among us at home and abroad such intense hostility towards Donald Trump and a Trump presidency that the Trump presidency’s policy makers may come to feel the need to focus specially on Nigerians.

    It is not that I am afraid for most Nigerians resident in America. Until I returned home to Nigeria about a year ago, I had lived for nearly 25 years continuously as a professor in America, and among the students I taught and mentored (at undergraduate and graduate levels), I can count thousands of Nigerians. I know for sure that most Nigerians in America are there legally. It has never been really easy for Nigerians to enter America illegally, or to reside in America illegally – far less easy than for persons from Mexico and other Latin American countries, and even persons from countries of the Middle East and Asia.  Many Nigerians do come legally to America with visas that allow them to come for short visits only, or for few years as students in American colleges and universities. Many of these usually leave at the expiration of their visas or at the end of their studies. The few among these who decide to stay are typically diligent about pursuing legal permission to stay – and many of these may even become, legally, citizens of America. In short, it is not easy to find a Nigerian who is truly illegally residing in America. An overwhelming majority of Nigerians who reside in America are residing there legally. And if a person is in America legally, there is nothing that American officials, or the American legal system, can do to their residence – especially if they do not involve themselves in crimes.

    And I also know that Nigerian residents in America are, on the aggregate, among the most law-abiding people in America. I am not saying that no Nigerians in America have crime records there or that none of them gets involved in crimes. Every human group in the world has its own crop of criminally inclined and criminally active members. But it is my assessment, based on very close and long contacts and observations in the Nigeria community in various parts of America, that the criminally inclined and criminally active tend to be fewer among Nigerians in America than one would find among most non-Nigerian groups in that country. On some occasions, we hear some hoopla about “Nigerian crime rings”, but I insist that, even with these, Nigerian youths in America are among the most serious students and hardest workers in that country, and are significantly less likely to lapse into a life of crime. Most Nigerian students come without any scholarship from home, and without sufficient, or any, financial support by parents. But almost all come with a peculiarly Nigerian resolve to succeed, and almost all succeed in the American educational system. Many earn scholarships with their high quality performances in their studies; most scrub floors and do other menial jobs to make their ways through colleges and universities. On the whole, Nigerian youths in America make older Nigerians like me proud, and deserve to be thought of with pride by their parents and their country.

    About three years ago, a department of the American government – the United States National Census Bureau – published the information that Nigerians are the most educated national group in America – more educated than any other immigrant group from any other part of the world, and more educated than even Americans themselves, indeed the most educated group of immigrants in all the history of the United States. The publication added the further detail that in the typical Nigerian family in the United States, the father and mother commonly come with a university degree from their country, that the father (and often the mother) then acquires a postgraduate degree (Masters or Ph.D.), and that their older children are typically enrolled in colleges or universities studying for first degrees or postgraduate degrees. Those who come younger (with school leaving certificates) almost always go on to obtain first degrees, and then higher degrees.

    The result of this is that Nigerians are very formidably included in all aspects of America’s economy and society. Of the thousands of universities in America, there is hardly any one without some Nigerian professors. There are countless Nigerians serving in very high levels of the American government and civil service, in all branches of the American military, in top positions in the American health services, research establishments, elementary schools and secondary schools, the professions, businesses, security services, state governments, local governments, etc.

    Nigerians in America are therefore not as vulnerable as candidate Trump may have imagined during his electioneering campaign – and definitely not as vulnerable as we Nigerians at home seem to fear.   And therefore we Nigerians do not need to be trembling about the coming of a Trump presidency. We do not need all the hostile rhetoric we have been spewing at him. We must stop acting as we are sure that our people living in America are among the most vulnerable people in that country. They are not.

    Very importantly too, we must not appear to be set on a venture of disrespecting the American people. Whatever any of us may think of Donald Trump, he is the man whom the American people have chosen to be their president, and we ought to respect the American people. The president of Nigeria has joined the leaders of other countries of the world to congratulate President-elect Donald Trump, and it is, I suggest, time for us to wish him well, wish our people in America well under his presidency, and wish the great country of America well.

    Finally, here is an insight that may help us a little in assessing the surprising impact of Donald Trump over America at this time. During my decades of residence in America, one political development had gradually been observable in the politics of America – namely, that the politicians had gradually become unpopular with the masses of the common people. This was caused mostly by the fact that the leading politicians had become increasingly incapable of compromise among them, with the result that importantly needed decisions and changes were becoming impossible to arrive at. This reached a sort of peak under President Obama. At the beginning of the Obama presidency, some Republican officials even said explicitly that they intended to see to it that Obama would achieve nothing worthwhile. President Obama responded by significantly rejecting compromise too; and quite often, over difficult issues, he seemed to prefer to go on the road campaigning to the masses of his supporters rather than painstakingly working for compromise with his opponents in Washington DC. The stock of politicians fell sharply. Donald Trump’s initial attraction among some of the masses of Americans was that he was not one of the politicians. As he found this to be a bigger asset than he had first thought, he and his handlers used it more and more – and he said a whole lot of stuff that was far out. Well, it won him the election.

    But can he – can any American president – do some of the wilder things that he has indicated? I doubt it. Most of my friends and colleagues in the American intellectual community doubt it. America is a very solid entity with very solid political traditions. It is very unlikely that President Trump will be able to rock the boat as violently as some of his youthful supporters may expect. Many of the things we fear today concerning him are not likely to materialize. But we shall see.

  • Nigerians pay lower rates for DSTV, says Multichoice  

    Nigerians pay lower rates for DSTV, says Multichoice  

    Pay-TV company MultiChoice Nigeria said yesterday that Nigeria’s rate is lower than what many other African countries pay.

    It described as misleading and inaccurate reports accusing it of unfairness to Nigerian subscribers.

    The reports purport that MultiChoice effected a 20 per cent slash in DStv subscription in other countries where it operates, leaving out Nigeria and South Africa.

    A statement by DStv spokesperson Caroline Oghuma said subscription rates across countries were easily veritable.

    While admitting that DStv bouquet subscriptions were slashed in other countries,  she explained that the reduction was below the 20 per cent claimed by the reports.

    On the exclusion of Nigeria from the list of countries affected by the slash, Oghuma said Nigerian DStv subscribers have been paying lower rates than subscribers in the affected countries in spite of the recent reduction.

    “For two years, prices were not increased in Nigeria until April, 2015. Even when they were increased, they remained substantially lower than in other countries. MultiChoice made a decision to absorb costs on behalf of the Nigerian subscriber because the company recognises that the country is passing through a difficult economic phase,” she explained.

    On the agitation for “pay-as-you-view”, Oghuma said there is no such model in pay-television, blaming the demand on misinformation, which makes the public confuse pay-as-you-view with pay-per-view (PPV).

    Pay-per-view, she explained, is a model used in the telecast of one-off, usually, high-ticket events in sports and entertainment. She said the pay-per-view requires a subscriber to have an active subscription on top of which an amount is paid for the specific event the subscriber desires to watch on pay-per-view.

    “A good example of this was last year’s world boxing title bout between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao. The two-hour fight was exclusively on pay-per-view in the United States, where boxing fans paid $99.5 to watch the fight in addition to having an active subscription. In Nigeria, boxing fans watched it on DStv’s SuperSport as part of their Premium bouquet. Pay-per-view is considerably more expensive and is for one-off events,” she said.

    She said, the company made available toll-free lines on all the mobile telephone networks in the country to ensure that subscribers could reach its call centres at no cost to resolve issues.

    The operating hours at its call centres, she further said, was  extended to 8am to 9pm daily, including weekends and public holidays.

    In addition, Oghuma said, MultiChoice is the first pay-TV service provider to allow customers to switch off their accounts for seven days twice a year when they are not at home. The company also announced the Nigerian Television International (NTAi) channel as the Free-to-Air channel for subscribers when their subscription expires.

    “These initiatives received a nod of approval from the Consumer Protection Council (CPC)” she said.

  • Pay attention to us like Chibok girls, wounded soldier urges Nigerians

    Pay attention to us like Chibok girls, wounded soldier urges Nigerians

    Cpl. Ibrahim Usman, one of wounded soldiers in the fight against the  Boko Haram terrorists in the North-East, has called on Nigerians to pay more attention to troops’ welfare.

    Usman made the appeal in an interview with newsmen on Monday, when the Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, visited wounded soldiers at hospitals in Maiduguri.

    The soldier, who was admitted to military hospital, Maimalari Cantonment, about three weeks ago, urged Nigerians to pay attention to soldiers’ well being in the frontline just as they were doing for the missing Chibok girls.

    According to Usman, his two legs broke during an explosion when a vehicle conveying him and nine other soldiers to Monguno in Borno north during an operation stepped on mine planted by the terrorists.

    “We need Nigerians to take care of us. Like this my injury, broken legs, they suppose to take me to a specialist hospital or abroad for a good treatment.

    “If it is these girls – Chibok school girls, they will take them abroad. We are the ones fighting in the bush,’’ Usman said.

    Although the solider said that he was responding to treatment, he said would retire from the military when he gets well due to the injury.

    “I cannot fight again because I do not have that strength any more. My legs are broken.

    “If I get well, I will retire because my legs are broken. I can no longer go and fight the insurgents,’’ Usman.

    Another soldier, Sgt. Ahmed Musa, however, thanked the army chief for visiting wounded soldiers in the hospital.

    Musa of 119 Battalion Task Force, Mallam Fatori said: “My situation when I got here was worse but God I am getting healed.”

    “I have injury in one of my hands. When he – Buratai came here we are happy because when we came here we did not see anybody. We appreciate the way he comes here,’’ he said.

    According to Cpl. Innocent Gabriel, a nurse attending to one of the wounded soldiers at the time of the visit, the common cases of injury are fractures resulting from explosions and gunshots.

    Gabriel said that most of wounded soldiers were responding to treatment, adding that some of them may be taken to the theatre.

    The doctor in charge of the hospital, Lt.-Col. Ndidi Onuchukwu, a Consultant Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgeon, said that 97 wounded soldiers were being treated in the facility which had capacity for 105 patients.

    Onuchukwu said that the worst cases come from combat injuries, adding that the hospital was,collaborating with the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital – UMTH to give the best to them.

    Speaking after the visit, Buratai described it as “operation and welfare visit” to encourage the wounded soldiers.

    He said that most of them would soon be discharged and commended troops for efforts in the war against the insurgents.

    Prof. Abdurrahman Tahir, the Chief Medical Director of UMTH, lauded the army for the prompt settlement of its personnel medical bills. (NAN)