Tag: Nigerians

  • Budget impasse an indictment on Nigerians, says NECA

    Budget impasse an indictment on Nigerians, says NECA

    Nigeria Employers Consultative Association (NECA) Director-General Segun Oshinowo has said the impasse over the 2016 Appropriation Bill is an indictment on Nigerians.

    Speaking when the acting Managing Director of the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), Ismail Agaka visited him, Oshinowo said it was a shame that the budget was still not out four months into the year.

    He said: “The inability of the National Assembly and executive to produce the 2016 budget is saying something silently loud about our country. I think it is shameful that there is no budget four months into the year. What kind of image are we painting of our country outside?

    We need to urgently address our mind to a situation where our budget for the current year is unusually delayed. What stops us from getting our budget to be passed before the commencement of the budget year and then address those issues that have served as encumbrance to passing the budget annually?”

    Speaking on the Employees Compensation Scheme, Oshinowo expressed satisfaction over the decision of the NSITF to adopt social dialogue in the implementation of the Scheme, saying: “I am happy that NSITF is relying on social dialogue approach rather than on the law that establishes Employees Compensation Scheme to collect remittances.

    “There are so many things that officialdom may lack the capacity to resolve. We can always meet outside of official capacities to share information, strategize and plan on what is to be done to resolve thorny issues for the benefit of the country.

    “This strategy has gone a long way in helping the NSITF over the last few years. I want to assure NSITF that we have not changed, we remain of who are and are ready to cooperate with NSITF to ensure success of its programmes.”

    He expressed the support of the organised private sector for the institutionalisation of corporate governance by the Acting-managing director into the operations of the NSITF and called for early convocation of the interactive aspect of the Safe Workplace Intervention Programme (SWIP) to enable employers who have complaints about the implementation of the ECA to put them forward for speedy resolution.

    He said: “I think it is better to have the interactive session around July because delaying in order to have the whole SWIP will deny employers that want to ventilate their complaints.

    “Since the interactive session addresses the quality of service that is rendered, if NSITF is unable to address the contributors, that might affect inflow of contribution. Meeting the Lagos group because a lot is happening there that will be interesting to the operations of the ECA.”

    In his remarks, the Acting Managing Director of NSITF, Ismail Agaka said the fund was institutionalizing corporate governance structures to boost its operations and expressed confidence that corporate governance would, clearly spells out procedures and processes of NSITF.

    According to him, “Corporate governance is a system, methods, processes and procedures that governs organizational businesses. Where there is a breakdown in the procedure, there would be negative impact not only on the organisation, but also on other stakeholders who relate with the organisation.

    “It is no secret that not only NSITF, but also the public sector over the years has witnessed this dysfunctional corporate governance. What we are therefore doing at the NSITF is in tandem with the change mantra of the present administration.”

  • ‘Buhari’s on course, Nigerians should be patient’

    ‘Buhari’s on course, Nigerians should be patient’

    Chief Uche Nwosu is the Chief of Staff to Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha. In this interview with Correspondent OKODILI NDIDI, he says President Muhammadu Buhari will turn the country around. He also debunks the alleged marginalisation of the Ndigbo by the Buhari administration.

    How do you explain the economic hardship, fuel scarcity, massive unemployment, insecurity and power failure that have befallen Nigerians in recent times?

    Let me start by saying that I do not agree that we are having economic hardship, fuel scarcity, insecurity and other things you mentioned. Remember that this administration is not up to one year and these are the problems we inherited from the 16-year administration of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). President Muhammadu Buhari, a man of integrity, is not up to one year in office, but Nigerians are expecting miracles overnight. It was like when the Governor took over Imo State and after six months people were shouting that there was nothing to show for it, but when he started they were asking where the man was getting money for his projects. So, Nigerians should exercise patience because a journey of 1000 miles does not begin with a sudden leap; it starts gradually. What we have on our hands are accumulated problems that we have faced over the years.

    Apart from the war against corruption, the administration has done much to revamp the ailing economy. Do you think this is the right way to go?

    To me, the man is focused. For instance, without fighting corruption in the power sector, no matter what do, it will still go bad because corruption is endemic in most of our agencies and ministries. If you put billions of dollars into the sector, it will vanish. So, it is imperative to lay a solid foundation. You don’t have to go and put N100 billion in aviation sector, when you are not sure the money will be used for the project it is meant for. If those monies we are talking about today were implemented or were used for the fight against Boko Haram, insurgency will have been wiped out from the Northeast and elsewhere in the country. So, the issue of fighting corruption is very important; no government succeeds when its Ministries Departments and Agencies are corrupt.

    The APC appears to have reneged on some of its electoral promises. What’s responsible for this?

    I don’t believe that the massage has been totally forgotten. The issue of Boko Haram and bombing has drastically reduced. Do you remember that last two years Boko Haram was taking over communities, taking over local governments? But, today, the army has retaken all those areas and now people are free to move about without fear of molestation. When you talk about employment, you do not wake up and create employment; there must be a foundation. Besides, the National Assembly just passed the budget and there is nothing you can do without the budget. I still don’t know why we are so much in a hurry. I believe that all the promises made by APC at both the federal and state levels will be delivered because the man in question is a man of impeccable character and he has integrity to protect. We know how he did it when he was Head of State. So, I don’t have any doubt that all the electoral promises made by the APC will be delivered.

    Tinubu recently scolded Kachikwu over the lingering fuel scarcity. Is Kachikwu to blame for the crisis?

    Asiwaju Bola Tinubu like you rightly said is the National leader of the party and whatever the National leader of the party says there must be a reason for that and in something like this you don’t start arguing; the family needs to get together. I believe that when a man of Tinubu’s position and age talks to me that something is wrong; all I need to do is to go back and research because for a man from the same party to have said this, it means that something has gone wrong.

    As an APC chieftain, are you not worried by the chain of losses the party has suffered in subsequent rerun elections after the 2015 elections?

    I cannot call it a chain of losses because it is evident that the elections were rigged. Until the INEC is overhauled, it cannot guarantee credible elections, because in a process where INEC Commissioner is a card-carrying member of a political party it is like appointing the National Chairman of the APC as the National Officer of INEC. What will you expect when Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) are card-carrying members of political parties. So, until we restructure INEC, elections will not be free and fair.

    How do you score the overall performance of the APC as a party?

    Yes, APC states have done very well. Now, let’s take Imo as an example. Before we came to power, there was nothing on ground; there was only one road, the Owerri/Aba road, but today you have numerous projects across the state and there are lots of changes. In the United Nations record today, Imo State has the least poverty level and when you talk about the most developed states in Nigeria, Imo State ranks third. That is to tell you that this can happen when you have a good leader and where there is security and when the atmosphere is conducive for people to come in and invest. For instance, tourism has received a boost; the Concorde Hotel has been transformed into a five-star hotel. Recently, the Governor hosted Imo students travelling to Slovakia to represent the Nigeria in an international competition. This is possible because of the conducive learning environment in the state.

    How can Ndigbo find their voice again in national politics?

    You know there is this adage that the Igbo don’t have kings but when you go to the North you see how they reverence the Emir; I know this because I lived in Maiduguri and the same thing when you go to the Southwest you see the way they respect and honour the Obas. But, our greatest problem in the Southeast is that everybody is a king. When you have a little money in your community, you see yourself as demi-god and you cannot respect traditional rulers. Until this tendency is removed, there would be no progress.

    When the APC was being formed, our brothers in the Southwest were wise; some remained in the PDP, because in politics you don’t put your whole eggs in one basket, while others joined hands to form the APC. But, in our own case, our people underrated the chances of the APC and they supported the government of the day then. Even as we speak, they still find it difficult to come together to pursue the Igbo interest under the present dispensation. Until the Igbo come together and speak with one voice, people will still come to the zone and do whatever they like without anybody asking them question. We have leaders in this zone who are ready to unite the Igbo; people like Governor Okorocha, Chris Ngige, Ogbonnaya Onu among others. I am not talking about leaders who can only be moved by money, who can only support a group because of money; I am talking about leaders who cannot be moved by money. There is an urgent need for the Igbo to speak with one voice.

    Do you subscribe to the view that the Buhari administration has marginalised Ndigbo?

    We are the ones marginalising ourselves. Before now, we never believed that Buhari will be President; our people believed only in the government in power then, even though it was not doing well. That is not good for any nation. It was only Governor Okorocha that saw the vision, even with all the pressure and intimidation, he decided to go with the APC. Today, most Igbo leaders who are in the  PDP are trying to bring Okorocha down, in spite of the fact that he is the only voice at governors’ level that can represent the Southeast whenever there is serious meeting in the APC. That is our greatest problem, but if we are wise the entire Igbo leaders will support Okorocha and approach the President Buhari and say these are the things we need.

     

     

    How would you assess the role of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu in stabilising our democracy?

    Frankly speaking, I have to give it to the man called Ahmed Bola Tinubu; he is a great Nigerian. This is a man I respect so much; he is a dogged fighter, if he believes in a course he doesn’t go back until he achieves his aim. The APC we are talking about today is the creation of Tinubu. As a Governor of Lagos State, he was able to penetrate the Yoruba states. In the chequered history of Nigeria, it is only a man with a large heart that can single-handedly win four states. When the APC was being formed, nobody believed it was going to succeed. There are leaders that will have destroyed the party with their selfish interest from inception, but for people like Tinubu. He worked for the party to win the election first and that is why he is one of the greatest leaders we have from the Southwest today. There is no local government area in the Southwest that you go today without seeing someone that Tinubu has empowered. So, when a man gets up to that level in politics, you have to give it to him. So, I give it to the man called Asiwaju Ahmed Tinubu.

     

  • Nigerians groan under hardship of acute water shortage

    Nigerians groan under hardship of acute water shortage

    Nigerians are facing acute shortage of potable water in spite of claims by some state governments that funds are being allocated to solve the problem.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that water is a transparent fluid which forms the world’s streams, lakes, oceans and rain, and is the major constituent of the fluids of organisms.

    Water is one of the most important substances on earth. All plants and animals must have water to survive.

    If there was no water there would be no life on earth. Apart from drinking it to survive, people have many other uses for water.

    Mr Simone Grego, Regional Science Advisor, UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Abuja Office, told NAN that water was a vital element for humans and ecosystems.

    ‘’As we all know, we need water for food production, energy, industrial and domestic uses, the world is facing an increasing pressure from these demands, which is worsened by growing population.’’

    The UNESCO official expressed regret that over 630 million people in the world were still living without access to clean water.

    He added that around 2 billion people in the world still required access to improved sanitation, especially girls and women who the most vulnerable.

    Dr Michael Ojo, Country Director, WaterAid Nigeria, said eliminating inequalities would help Nigerians out of poverty and achieve their full potential to live healthy and productive lives.

    “Walking, queuing and carrying jerry cans in search of water is often a job that is not paid and not recognised, it wastes time and hinder productivity for many women and girls.

    “In sub-Saharan Africa, women spend combined total of at least 16 million hours each day collecting drinking water, we can do more when these inequality gaps are closed.”

    Ojo said Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) was an essential component of an integrated approach towards tackling poverty, hunger, health and inequality, saying prioritising this would make growth sustainable.

    However, he said that 57.7 million Nigeria do not have access to safe drinking water, while thousands of children die every year from diarrhoea caused by unsafe water and poor sanitation in Nigeria.

    The National Coordinator for Health and Environment Basic Registry Information System in Nigeria (BRISIN), Dr Misbau Lawal, however, lamented that more than 130,000 Nigerians die of water-borne diseases.

    Lawal told NAN that water borne-diseases were as a result of inadequate provision of safe drinking water and sanitation.

    Quoting the World Health Organisation (WHO), he said statistics had shown that about 3.4 million people in the world die annually as a result of water borne diseases.

    In Ibadan, Oyo State capital, Gov. Abiola Ajimobi, said at a forum that his administration at inception in 2011 met water supply at zero level.

    He said his administration’s efforts had, however, put it at 70 per cent productivity level to date.

    Ajimobi also said the inaugurated ultra-modern water treatment plant at the Asejire Water Scheme cost N262 million.

    NAN reports that the Asejire scheme has a production capacity of 186,000 cubic meter of water per day.

    He said that the scheme was supplying potable water to 85 per cent of Ibadan population, as well as Ikire, Ikoyi and Apomu in neighbouring Osun.

    Apart from the aged equipment, other factors that led to the decline of water production at the water scheme included lack of
    spare parts for maintenance and persistent disruptions in power supply.

    Residents, however, insisted that scarcity of water was biting harder in spite of government`s efforts and fund allocations at addressing the problem.

    A resident, Alhaji Busari Adeyemi, told NAN that they often had to resort to the patronage of water vendors to access water for domestic use.

    Another resident, Mrs Eunice Okanlawon, said many people now seek assistance from owners of boreholes to access potable water.

    To ameliorate the current challenges, the state government has awarded contracts for the construction of Ayete Water Supply scheme to serve Tapa, Idere and Ayete communities and has dedicated a power Line to Saki and Ogbomoso Water Supply
    Schemes.

    Government, it was learnt, had also awarded the contract for the extension of pipelines to new areas across the state and upgraded the water treatment facilities at Koso and Atori in Iseyin.

    This is in addition to those of Igboho, Igbetti and Ogbomoso as well as laying of New Rising Mains from Eruwa to Igboora (Phase I & II).

    The General Manager, Water Corporation of Oyo State, Mr Olusoji Oguntola, said that the projects were awarded as part of government efforts to increase the volume of potable water to the residents.

    NAN also reports that repairs of dilapidated pipelines across Ibadan metropolis were ongoing while N1.8 billion was budgeted for water in the 2016 budget just passed by the state assembly.

    In Abeokuta, residents called on Gov. Ibikunle Amosun to address the prevailing water challenges in the state to avoid outbreak of cholera and other communicable diseases.

    Some of the residents in separate interviews with NAN said they have continued to groan under the hardship of acute water shortage in the state.

    Mrs Ademola Alaga, a housewife at Post-Office area of Ijebu-Ode, told NAN that the situation had left them to continue to live with the risk of outbreak of diseases.

    Alaga expressed regrets that in spite of unjustified water bills, those who patronise the Ogun State Water Corporation’s (OGSWC) pipe-borne water scheme could hardly get potable water.

    She said residents had continued to depend on wells, streams and water vendors for their daily needs.

    Alaga said those on the state water scheme pay bills ranging from N3, 000 to N6, 000 monthly depending on the volume of water consumed.

    She, however, urged the government to resuscitate the Yemoji Dam, which she described as a good source of water to Ijebu-Ode and its environs.

    Another respondent, Mrs Kemi Oduneye, residing at the Market area in Ota area of the state, said she had been spending N300 on water purchase weekly, aside her payment to the state Water Corporation.

    She appealed to the government to make the supply of potable water regular while stressing the need to fix pipe leakages and minimise wastages.

    Mr Bola Oyedele, the Chairman, People’s Party of Nigeria (PPN) in Ogun, urged the state government to invest more on the provision of potable water.

    He said that so many water projects had been abandoned by the government, stressing that this had contributed to the suffering of the masses.

    “We have a World Bank project around Idi-Aba in Abeokuta which has been abandoned, the water scheme is supposed to supply Idi-Aba and its environs.

    “The state government should revive all abandoned water projects and do the needful by meeting up with the yearnings of the people in the area of adequate water supply.

    “State Governments under the watchful eyes of state water corporation should be committed to sinking boreholes in all nooks and crannies of the state, “ he said.

    In Akure, many residents complained of either outright lack of pipe borne water or inadequate water supply in their areas.

    Mr Kunle Banire, a resident of Oba-Ile, Akure, told NAN that he had resorted to the use of water pump to get potable water from his well for his household.

    “There is no provision of pipe borne water by the government; people in this area have to provide potable water for themselves.

    “I will implore the state government to reticulate the Owena Dam and other dams in the state for the usage of people. “

    Mr Adejare Solomon, a resident of Oshinle in Akure South Local Government Area of the state, also lamented the acute shortage of water in the area.

    Adejare, who is a community leader, attributed the shortage to poor funding of water projects by the state government.

    But the state government has reiterated its commitment to provision of potable water for people of the state.

    Speaking during the 2016 Water Day recently, Gov. Olusegun Mimiko said the state had spent over N3 billion in rehabilitating and upgrading various water schemes in the last seven years.

    Mimiko said that the fund was mostly spent in renovating the Awarada Dam Scheme, Ifon Water Scheme, and agro-spring water supply project for the benefit of the residents.

    He stated that arrangement was being made by his administration to partner with the Federal Government to complete the Owena Multipurpose Water Dam for the benefit of the people in the Central Senatorial District.

    Also speaking with NAN in Akure, Mr Steve Giwa, the Executive Chairman, Ondo State Water Corporation, said government was of the belief that boreholes were meant for rural dwellers.

    “For urban cities such as Ikare, Akure, Ondo, etc, Mimiko prefers working on dams, construction of treatment plans, installation of pumps and reticulation to individual homes, which he has embarked on since he came on board.

    “We have so many functional water schemes in the state but we also have some dilapidated ones.

    “The governor took some bold steps to rehabilitate and upgrade all these schemes to meet the current needs of the people, “ he said.

    Giwa disclosed that the scheme in Akoko zone was already in existence some 50 years ago when the population was not high.

    “But due to increase in population, the state government had to embark on rehabilitation of the schemes, “ the chairman said.

    Giwa said the Awara dam in Akoko North East Local Government Area had been upgraded and was functioning while the Igbaraoke Multipurpose Dam had been completed except for reticulation and transmission.

    “At Igbobini in Ese-Odo Local Government Area, there is a completed dam and also the Oba-Akoko dam is on test-run.

    “The government has also completed the Ose/Ifon Treatment Plant at the cost of N100 million but it was vandalised by hoodlums.

    “Some old dams are still working, especially the Ondo/Owenna Water Scheme, while we have about 25 functional dams/water schemes across the state, “ he said.

    In Osogbo, Mr Adelere Oriolowo, the Head of Planning, Research and Statistics, Osun Ministry of Water Resources, said the state government had budgeted N431 million for provision of potable water in the state.

    Oriolowo told NAN that government was also carrying out major rehabilitation at Ede head works.

    He said the government was spending N20 million on rehabilitation of 59 motorised boreholes, in 11 communities spread across seven Local Government Areas of the state.

    He said the boreholes being rehabilitated are those built by the European Union Water Supply and Sanitation Sector reform programme (EUWSSS), which was done between 2005 and 2012.

    Oriolowo said another ongoing project, is EUWSSS phase two, on which N666 million would be spent, adding that the state government had already paid its N119 million counterpart fund of the project.

    The General Manager of Osun Water Corporation, Mr Gbenga Owojuyigbe, said there was steady water supply in the state.

    Owojuyigbe told NAN that the Ede head works, which is the biggest water scheme, was currently serving 13 Local Governments in the state.

    He also said that the Ekonde, Okuku and Ife dams are functioning at full capacity.

    Mr Richard Adediran, the Director of Water and Environmental Sanitation for Ife Central Local Government, said that United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and European Union were partnering with Local Governments to provide potable water for the people.

    Adediran said that the African Development Bank (AfDB) was also collaborating in the effort to providing potable water.

    NAN also reports that the Federal Ministry of Water Resources had on March 11 handed over a 32-million-cubic-capacity dam to the state government in Kajola near Ilesha.

    Mr John Ochibo, the Deputy Director/Project Manager in the ministry, described the project as a contribution of the Federal Government toward the provision of potable water to the people of the state.

    Ochibo said the dam cost the Federal Government N3.3 billion to complete the pump and power house.

    In Ilorin, the General Manager of Kwara Water Corporation, Mr Tunde Yahaya, admitted that the state was facing the problem of acute water shortage.

    He said the current water supply could not cater for the high population growth in the state.

    Yahaya told NAN that the population was growing in geometric progression without corresponding increase in water supply to the towns and villages in the state.

    “For now the level of water supply in Kwara cannot cope with the current number of residents in the state and government needs to take urgent steps, “ he said.

    Yahaya attributed the current water situation to non-completion of ongoing water reticulation embarked upon by the state government more than eight years ago.

    He said the state water supply scheme is present in all the 16 Local Government Areas of the state with 94 boreholes constructed across the three senatorial districts.

    The Senior Special Assistant to Gov Abdulfatah Ahmed on Media, Dr Muideen Akorede, said government was poised to ensure adequate and regular water supply to the people of the state.

    Akorede told NAN that government was also determined to complete the Ilorin water reticulation project.

    He said the water reticulation project was in three phases and would cost a total of N7 billion with about N5.2 billion already expended.

    Akorede also said that in order to bridge the potable water accessibility and availability gap in the state, the state government would rehabilitate some water works.

    This, he said, were those of Ballah, Bakase, Gbugbu and Obbo-Ile, adding that the contracts for the rehabilitation were already awarded.

    He also said that contracts for the extension of water pipes from Pepele waterworks to Elesin-Meta Community had been awarded.

    Akorede said that repair and restoration works on the washed-off water mains around Baba-Ode were completed.

    “Under the special intervention programme, 15 hand pump boreholes were provided to some communities in Ekiti, Baruten and Kaiama Local Government Areas. “
    He said a total of N1.28 billion was budgeted in the 2016 fiscal year, for the expansion and maintenance of water supply infrastructure and services in the state.

    When completed, Akorede said the coverage area of the water distribution network in Ilorin metropolis would be increased by about 25 per cent.

    He added that 792 hand pumps and 144 motorised boreholes would be provided to rural communities across the 16 Local Councils.

    In Ekiti, NAN learnt that only 40 percent of Ekiti residents have access to pipe-borne water.

    The state Commissioner for Public Utilities, Mr Deji Adesua, told NAN that the other 60 percent of residents obtain their water from alternative sources, most of which are unsafe.

    “Other implications are huge because water, sanitation and hygiene issues cut across other sectors that are interdependent of one another such as health, education and agriculture.

    “This will certainly have indirect implications for the attainment of goals set for other sectors, “ he said.

    The commissioner, who blamed the development on neglect of the water sector by past administrations, regretted that most women and children had to trek for hours every day in search of water.

    He claimed that major water dams in the state such as Ero dam, Ureje dam and Egbe dams were either abandoned or wrongly concession to inexperienced firms to manage.

    Adesua said the state government paid N36 million toward the completion of Afao/Kajola/Ikere water projects in partnership with the Federal Ministry of Water Resources.

    He also disclosed that N501million was also budgeted for water provision by the state government in the 2016 fiscal year.

    The General Manager of the State Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (RUWASSA), Mr Olawoyin Fatoba, also told NAN that the government was committed to providing safe water to the citizenry.

    He said as a way of achieving this target, government had already begun the replacement of old and damaged water pipes.

    A visit by NAN correspondents to some of the waterworks in Ado Ekiti, Okemesi Ekiti, Ikere Ekiti and Ijero Ekiti showed that repair works had already commenced on the waterworks and channels of distribution.

    Some residents in different interviews acknowledged government’s intervention and efforts toward ensuring regular supply of clean water in the state.

    In his own comments, a don, Prof. Taiwo Oluwadare, urged government at all levels to consider higher allocation to water in their yearly budgets.

    The Professor of Medical Sociology at the Ekiti State University, Ado Ekiti, said it was disheartening that governments at all levels often voted ridiculous amount to service the water sector.

    In Lokoja, an investigation by NAN on access to potable water supply in Lokoja, Kogi State capital, revealed that there were improvements in access to potable water supply by the people.

    Mr Kayode Ayodele, Director of Water Resources, told NAN Correspondent that there was an increase in water supply across the state capital.

    According to him, over 90 per cent of the people of Lokoja township are currently enjoying potable water supply on daily basis.

    He attributed the major factor responsible for the tremendous improvement to the commitment of the state government.

    Ayodele said that the state government had ensured that the necessary funds were made available for prompt execution of water projects and consistent water supply for the people.

    “Pipe borne water is now accessible by the people for duration of 24 hours every day of the week, “ he said.

    He disclosed that Kogi has over 700 water points projects out of which over 70 per cent of them were currently functional.

    Regarding the reticulation of potable water supply, the director said the first phase of the reticulation projects had been completed and inaugurated.

    He stated further that the second phase of the reticulation would start very soon, which would cover Felele, Crusher, Zone 8, House of Assembly, and a distance of seven kilometres from the Greater Lokoja Water Works to other suburb communities of Lokoja.

    He said, aside The Greater Lokoja Water Works, which has the capacity of producing 45 million litres of water per day, the government has embarked on bond projects for the provision of potable water to communities in rural areas.

    “The state government is committed to providing potable water supply everywhere across the state, and not just the state capital.

    “Most of these projects have reached various degrees of over 70 per cent completion.

    “It is expected that on the completion of the schemes, water challenges facing various communities across the state would be alleviated, “ he said.

    Meanwhile, water supply situation in some states in the North West has remained epileptic, with most communities relying on water vendors for their daily water needs.

    NAN further reports that most respondents said the public taps have remained dry for years although others in major cities say the supply has not been constant.

    In spite of the problem, some state governments have budgeted huge amounts to enhance water supply to the people.

    In Katsina, the State Government has budgeted N6.1 billion for the provision of potable drinking water in 2016.

    Alhaji Salisu Gambo, the Commissioner for Water Resources, told NAN in Katsina that part of the money would be used to upgrade and rehabilitate existing urban water supply schemes in the state.

    According to him, one of such schemes is the Ajiwa dam that provides water to Katsina Township.

    “Ajiwa dam was constructed in 1974 with the capacity to provide 350,000 gallons of water per day, it is going to be expanded to cater for the need of Katsina, the work will cost government N2 billion.

    “Nevertheless, the government will soon award contract for the completion of Zobe dam that supply water to seven local government areas.

    “When Ajiwa dam is upgraded, and we complete Zobe dam water project, the issue of water problem in Katsina will be over, “ he said.

    The commissioner explained that Zobe dam water project was designed to provide water to Dutsinma, Kankia, Charanchi, Bindawa, Rimi, Batagarawa and Katsina, including the nearby communities.

    In Plateau, for instance, the current situation of potable water has become far better, especially to the people of Jos-Bukuru axis‎.

    According to Mr David Wuyep, Plateau Commissioner for Water Resources and Energy, there has been a tremendous improvement in the sector in the past eight years, with more expansion and renovation of the three major water treatment plants in the state.

    “The expansion and renovation cost more than N3 billion,“ Wuyep told NAN in Jos.

    “During the exercise, dams were dredged, areas that were not covered in the old Jos Master Plan were reticulated and are still being reticulated, “ he said.

    The commissioner further revealed that new pipes were fixed to replace the old ductile pipes.

    NAN, however, observed that the water was more accessible in the urban areas, with most rural areas still without pipe borne water.

    “For the rural areas, what we have done is to provide hand dug wells and motorised boreholes to curtail issues of water-borne diseases in the state.

    “Currently, the state government, through the Plateau Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (PRUWASA), has embarked on the provision mobile of treatment plants in the rural areas to alleviate their plight.

    “The Plateau State Water Board is functional and we are bringing in modern facilities to meet the rising needs, “ Wuyep said.

    NAN checks revealed that there are various ongoing water reticulation‎ in the state, while the State’s Water Board was embarking on new pipe networking in Jos-Bukuru axis.

    The dams in Lantang, Shendam and Pankshin are currently being rehabilitated.

    ‎Our correspondent also reports that more projects had been lined up to be executed with the N3.24 billion voted for the water sector in the 2016 budget.

    In Lafia, the situation appears a bit different, where the residents have decried inadequate potable water supply for domestic use.

    Some residents of Nasarawa State capital told NAN that they have no access to pipe borne water.

    Mr Sunday Abimiku, who resides around Bukan-Sidi axis of the capital, said that he had never seen tap water in the area since the creation of the state.

    “Talking about pipe borne water is strange to children in my area; we depend solely on boreholes and water vendors for our water supply needs, “ Abimiku said.

    He explained that a 20-litre keg of water was being sold for between N15 and N20 by public water vendors in the area.

    Suleiman Abubakar from Rimi-Uku corroborated Abimiku’s position.

    He said that taps only run around the Government Reservation Areas and low-cost housing estates.

    Abubakar maintained that more than 80 per cent of Lafia residents rely on boreholes and vendors for their daily water needs.

    Mr Mark Oshla from low cost housing estate along Shendam road, however, said that they had been enjoying regular pipe borne water supply until some months ago when the supply ceased.

    Oshla claimed that he pays water rate regularly and wondered why the water board stopped supplying, thus leaving the taps dry.

    Reacting, Simon Ibi, Acting General Manager of the Nasarawa State Water Board, attributed the inadequate water supply to the population explosion in Lafia.

    He said that the existing water scheme in Lafia was inaugurated in 1985 with a capacity for three million gallons per day, “when the town was only a local government headquarter. “

    He added that following the creation of Nasarawa State in 1996 with Lafia as the capital, the population exploded, and making water supply grossly inadequate.

    Ibi said the state government had concluded plans for the rehabilitation and expansion of the water works to meet the growing demands for water supply in Lafia and its environs.

    He said a Ukrainian company had been engaged by the state government to dam the Amba River in Lafia as part of the expansion programme.

    Ibi expressed optimism that residents of Lafia and its environs would soon have water once the water scheme is fully rehabilitated and expanded.

    He also explained that government had carried out a total overhaul of the Mada water works, which services Keffi, Akwanga, Kokona and Gudi towns.

    “Similar turnaround maintenance had been done on the abandoned Nasarawa-Eggon and Nasarawa Toto Water Schemes by the Al-Makura led administration, “ he said.

    The general manager, however, frowned at the attitude of residents over the non-payment of water rates.

    He expressed regret that most residents sees water supply as purely a social service from the government and do not want to pay for it.

    “We have been advocating that people should see water as an economic goods that should be paid for in order to augment government’s effort and ensure constant supply, “ Ibi said.

    He appealed to residents to be patient with the board for the recent cut in water supply to Lafia and its environs.

    Officials in charge of water supply in Borno, Bauchi, Gombe, Adamawa, Jigawa and Taraba told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that funds were required to address the numerous water challenges facing water supply to their communities.

    Adamawa Government said it needed about N30 billion to rehabilitate the four major water treatment plants that supplied water to Yola, Jimeta, Numan and Mubi towns.

    The state Commissioner for Water Resources, Mr Julius Kadala, told NAN in Yola that the present administration in the state inherited a completely dilapidated water treatment plants and distribution network that required total overhaul.

    “Almost everything is the grounded in those plants, most of which were constructed in 1976,” he said.

    Kadala said minor repairs had commenced, adding that a Memorandum of Understanding had been signed with a Chinese firm for major overhaul of the plants and distribution network.

    He told NAN that the N1.7 billion earmarked for water supply in this year’s budget was just meant to manage the situation before the total overhaul.

    Meanwhile, most lawmakers in the state assembly had utilised the N1 billion released to them for constituency projects in January on water supply, following the problem of scarcity of potable water in the rural areas.

    The House Committee Chairman on Information, Malam Hassan Barguma (APC-Hong) told NAN that he had to concentrate on water project in his constituency in view of the acute water scarcity in his constituency.

    “In one of the communities in my constituency I saw people taking water from the same source with animals.

    “Therefore, I concentrated on sinking boreholes, including solar boreholes,” Barguma said.

    Similarly, Sen. Abdul-Azeez Nyako of Adamawa Central Senatorial District said that he would utilise the N250 million approved for each senator for constituency project on water supply.

    Nyako said that he resolved to concentrate on water following the request of wards in his constituency for provision of potable water.

    Also, Hon. Yusuf Buba, member representing Gombi/Hong Federal Constituency, said that he provided 250 boreholes to his people in his constituency.

    Buba said the gesture was his personal effort towards assisting his people to have potable water.

    In Jigawa, the State’s Commissioner for Water Resources, Alhaji Ibrahim Hanu-Giwa said government had spent one billion naira in the last 10 months on both rehabilitation and construction of new water schemes across the state.

    Hanu-Giwa explained that N700 million was spent in the first phase while about N300 million was expended in the second phase of water scheme projects in the state.

    He said that before the coming of the present administration, most water sources in the state had broken down.

    The Commissioner explained that immediately the present government took over, Gov. Muhammad Badaru constituted a committee to rehabilitate all the water schemes across the state.

    According to him, the committee identified 4,610 different water schemes to be rehabilitated in the first phase of the programme.

    He disclosed that the second phase would begin before the end of this quarter.

    A member of the state assembly, Alhaji Kais Abdallah, also told NAN that the state government had procured and rehabilitated 164 hand pumps in Malammadori Local Government area to enhance access to potable water.

    Abdallah, who represents Malammadori state constituency, said that obsolete hand pumps were repaired and new ones constructed in various communities in the area.

    He said that more than N5.8 million was also expended on the rehabilitation of the small water scheme at kampala, Sabon Gari and Kafar Fada wards.

    The legislator said the projects were executed under the phase 1 of the Rural Water and Sanitation (RUWASA) programme, adding that more projects would be executed under phase II of the programme.

    He said the state government has made adequate provisions in the 2016 budget to upgrade water plants to ensure steady water supply in urban and rural communities.

    Also commenting, Alhaji Ali Alkali, the Care Taker Committee Chairman, Malammadori Local Government Council, said that the council had rehabilitated 20 hand pumps in Malammadori and Garingabas communities in the past four weeks.

    The chairman called on the people to protect water facilities provided in their communities by the government.

    Meanwhile, some farmers in Hadejia, in Jigawa have called on the Federal Government to complete the abandoned Hadejia Valley project to enhance water supply and encourage dry season farming activities.

    NAN reports that the Hadejia valley project was initiated in the 1980s, to encourage irrigation farming and enhance water supply to communities, but was abandoned in the last 20 years.

    Malam Kamilu Baba, a rice farmer, said that the call was imperative if the target of achieving self-sufficiency in food production was to be achieved.

    “It is disheartening to see the project being abandoned, despite its importance to the development of agriculture and provision of water,” he said.

    Usman Haruna, another farmer, noted that the non-completion of the project had resulted in the growth of weeds, which blocked water channels and caused flood.

    “We want completion of the project to enhance access to land and water, and provide a lasting solution to flood disasters,” he said.

    A competent source at the Hadejia-Jama’are River Basin Development Authority, told NAN on condition of anonymity that the project was abandoned due to paucity of funds.

    In Borno, the State Government said it would establish a new water scheme in Maiduguri, the state capital, to boost water supply in the metropolis.

    Malam Mai Sheriff, the Commissioner for Water Resources told NAN that the project would address the problem of perennial water scarcity in the Maiduguri and its environs.

    He said that government had already set aside N300 million for the project, which was expected to be completed before December.

    He said when completed, the new Maiduguri Water Works would generate up to seven million litres of water per day, thereby addressing the perennial water scarcity in Bulunkutu area of Maiduguri metropolis.

    The commissioner said the project, which is already in its first two phases, had already gulped N300 million, saying that over N100 million would be required for the third and final phase.

    He said that the government had started laying pipes, adding that very soon it will commence the drilling of 12 boreholes and construction of reservoir and overhead tanks at the water works.

    The commissioner also said that maintenance work at the Maiduguri Water Treatment Plant had commenced, saying that it would generate 40 million litres per day when completed.

    In Gombe, the state government said it spent N4.2 billion on the extension of water pipes to cover additional towns and communities in the state.

    Malam Isah Mohammed, General Manager, Gombe State Water Corporation, told NAN in Gombe that the pipe lines were extended to Kwami, Bojude and other communities.

    He said that plans had been concluded for the construction of Gombe South Water Scheme, which would serve all the four local government areas in the southern part of the state.

    He said that the Dadin Kowa water treatment plant was initially designed to discharge 50,000 cubic meters per day, to serve the population of 260,000 people when it was inaugurated in 2006.

    “It was further estimated that in 2015, the population would have increase to 300,000.

    “So the treatment plant was expected to be expanded in 2015 to discharge about 70,000 cubic meters.

    “Unfortunately, in 2015, the population in the area where we were expecting 300,000 increased to 700,000, following the influx of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) as a result of insurgency, “he explained.

    He further said erratic power supply was the major challenge they were facing in the provision of potable water.

    In Bauchi, the General Manager of the State Water Board, Mr Aminu Gital, said the population of the state capital was on the increase, thereby overstretching facilities for distribution of water.

    “The demand is about 40 million gallons per day and what we are able to produce is about 12 million gallons daily, necessitating the rationing of water to consumers,” he said.

    According to him, the government is planning to expand the existing Gubi dam in the state to meet the water demands of the metropolis.

    “When additional Treatment Plant was constructed at Gubi dam, we will be producing about 24 million gallons per day, which will be enough for Bauchi metropolis,” he added.

    Mr Garba Magaji, General Manager, Bauchi State Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (RUWUNSSA), said the state government, in collaboration with UNICEF, provided safe drinking water and increased hygiene to 1.7 million people in the state.

    According to him, the state government requires N33 billion to provide water and sanitation to about three million rural people in the state.

    In Enugu, the state government has started the rehabilitation and repair of various water reticulation facilities in Enugu and Nsukka at the cost N100 million.

    The state government had earlier earmarked N661 million in its 2016 budget for its ministry of water resources and its agencies order to expand water supply projects in both urban and rural areas.

    The state’s Commissioner for Water Resources, Chief Charles Egumgbe, told NAN that the government planned to expand potable water supply from its two water schemes in Oji River and Nsukka to reach more households at the grassroots.

    “We want our people to have cheap and hygienic potable water which ultimately will increase their health status and avoid unnecessary diseases, which also can lead to death.

    “For now, we are thinking about supplying water to 70 per cent of the households in Enugu and Nsukka respectively; although Enugu, which is the state capital, requires a minimum of 150,000 cubic litres of water,’’ Egumgbe said.

    Currently, many households in Enugu receive water from the state water scheme mostly two times a week, prompting the residents to own storage tanks.

    However, the residents of rural areas are still finding it hard to get potable water as they either depend on streams or buy borehole water from vendors.

    Mrs Faith Odo, a health worker at Nsukka District Health Centre, noted that limited access to potable water was responsible for unhygienic and poor sanitary conditions that result in some health problems in rural areas.

    Odo urged the Federal Government to mandate council chairmen in the country to ensure that every community have a treated borehole in order to reduce water-borne diseases.

    “80 per cent of people living in rural villages do not have water system toilet; they embark on open defecation, which pollute these streams,’’ she said.

    Mr Richard Ogbu, a community leader in Nsukka, urged government at all levels to give special attention to the provision of water to citizens in order to reduce hardship.

    “I spend about N30,000 yearly to buy water for my family, as it cost between N3,000 and N3,500 in Nsukka town to fill GP rubber tank of 1000 gallons,’’ Ogbu said.

    However, a worker in Enugu State Water Board, Nsukka District office, told NAN on condition of anonymity, blamed poor public power supply to inability of the board to provide water.

    “We depend on public power supply to pump water through our industrial generating sets.

    “As a worker in the board for two decades, what I have discovered is that people will like to use tap water but they will not want to pay their monthly water bills.

    “If it is possible, I will suggest that government should introduce prepaid metering system to improve the revenue generation of water boards,” he said.

    In Ebonyi, the State Commissioner for Water Resources, Dr Francis Orji said in Abakaliki that the state government has shown enough commitment to ensuring that indigenes have access to potable water.

    He said that the three water schemes in the state were operating at full capacity.

    According to him, the three water schemes in Ezilo, Oferekpe and Ukaghu are built to ensure that the indigenes of the state have an all-year-round access to safe drinking water.

    He said that the construction of pipe for water reticulation to communities were ongoing, saying that the capital city had been fully reticulated.

    “Water is a critical infrastructure and government is doing everything possible to ensure unhindered access to safe drinking water.

    “Already reticulation work to link other towns and communities to the new Oferekpe and Ukaghu water schemes are ongoing, while residents of Abakaliki are now enjoying water from the Oferekpe water project.

    “It is the desire of government to ensure that there is stable water supply from the public water source,” Orji said.

    He said that over N3.5billion was appropriated for Water Resources in the 2016 budget.

    The commissioner assured the people that the Ministry would live up to its mandate of ensuring regular and uninterrupted water supply.

    He said that the Pipe Manufacturing Industry at Ezzamgbo in Ohaukwu Local Government Area of the state was to ensure that the state have access to pipes for regular maintenance and repair of burst pipes.

    “The initiative is to ensure that no part of the state is cut off from water supply for a period more than 48 hours in any event where our water pipes vandalism,” he said.

    He said that the provision of safe and potable drinking water were antidote to prevention of water borne diseases including guinea worm, cholera among others.

    Meanwhile, some residents of Abakaliki in an interview with NAN extolled the state government for ensuring that the Oferekpe and Ukaghu water schemes were made functional to complement the Ezilo water scheme.

    Mr Chinedu Elom, a civil servant said that the construction of the two additional water schemes had brought the perennial water shortage previously experienced in the state to an end.

    “There used to be a perennial water scarcity usually during the dry season but since the construction of the Oferekpe and Ukaghu water schemes the problem of water scarcity have been brought to a halt.

    “We are only appealing to government to ensure that the water schemes are adequately serviced and maintained,” he said.

    In Anambra, the state of public water supply has remained poor as resident in the major towns of Awka, Onitsha and Nnewi do not have access to water.

    The NAN investigations revealed that the Anambra Water Corporation, Awka had not been pumping water since 2003.

    Mr Chukwudi Omalu, a resident of Awka, said they had not experienced the flow of public water supply since it collapsed about 12 years ago.

    Omalu said only the well to do people had turned to drilling boreholes in their houses thereby exposing the city centres to geological dangers.

    In Onitsha, residents also called on the state government to improve public water supply.

    Mrs Adaora Onuma said the greater Onitsha Water scheme which was inaugurated in march 2015 had not been functioning optimally.

    Onuma said the about 32 year old water project if fully operational will solve the problem of perennial water scarcity in the commercial city and save millions from spending so much on privately owned boreholes.

    She noted that residents suffer in their area to get water to the skyscraper apartment, in additional to the danger of water borne diseases.

    Onuma appealed to the Anambra government to find urgent solution to the problem of water supply.

    Chief John Okeke said that the water situation in Onitsha was becoming quite worrisome because the lack of proper sanitation or hygiene in the city could engender an outbreak of diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea among others.

    In Owerri, the Imo Government is still on course to providing pipe borne water.

    A survey conducted by NAN in Owerri revealed that in the last 15 years, the state has never heard functional water scheme.

    The last pipe borne water that flowed in Owerri was in 1983 during the administration of the then Gov. Sam Mbakwe.

    The survey further revealed that the pipe borne water flowed for eight months and since then the state has never had access to any public water scheme.

    Former Gov. Achike Udenwa in 2001 awarded a project to build a water scheme that will flow across the 27 Local Governments of the state.

    However, the project was abandoned and Gov. Ikedi Ohakim in 2008, handed the project to Imo Water Board which equally failed to complete the project.

    But Gov. Rochas Okorocha in a stakeholders meeting in 2014 promised to revolutionise the Imo Water Board by privatising it for more efficiency and productivity.

    A geologist and owner of Johnson Water Resources, Dr John Ibe, told NAN that the problem of access to pipe borne water was due to corruption and bad policy on the part of the government.

    He said in the past twenty years, both civilian and military governments had failed to come up with policies that will drive water scheme in Imo.

    He also alleged that corruption among some past government officials was also a problem with the access to public water supply.

    The Permanent Secretary, state Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, Chief Okechukwu Isiuzo, regretted that Imo state has no functional water scheme.

    The State’s Commissioner for Environment and Natural Resource, Mr Udo Aguha said government was on course to providing pipe borne water that will run across the 27 council areas of the state.

    Aguha said government has awarded contract to a foreign firm, GG Investment, which is handling the provision of potable water across the state.

    In Abia, the inability of the government to resuscitate the Umuahia and Aba regional water schemes, which went moribund in the late 1990s, has caused a drastic water deficit in the state.

    NAN investigation revealed that the schemes, which were built by the late Dr Sam Mbakwe’s administration, became dysfunctional due to many years of neglect and poor maintenance culture by successive military and civilian administrations.

    Consequently, residents of the state now depend on privately-owned commercial boreholes for their water needs.

    A cross-section of residents said that the Umuokpara water scheme in Umuahia broke down during the early days of Orji Kalu’s administration, causing serious water shortage in the capital city and its environs.

    A retired civil servant, Mr Godwin Nwankpa, said that since the Umuokpara water scheme stopped functioning, we no longer enjoy pipe borne water in Umuahia.

    A teacher, Sylvester Ihediwa, expressed disappointment that successive administrations in the state could not maintain the two major water schemes initiated by Mbakwe.

    “Today, there is no part of the state that can boast of pipe borne water, rather we are at the mercy of commercial borehole operators,” Ihediwa said.

    The residents appealed to the government to take genuine steps to revive the Umuahia and Aba water schemes and also build new ones to sufficiently address the water needs of the people.

    Several efforts made to speak with the Commissioner for Public Utilities, Mr Tony Ezebiro, on the efforts by the present administration to tackle the water deficit in the state were unsuccessful. (NAN)

  • Buhari’s govt not insensitive to plight of Nigerians- Shehu

    The Presidency has dismissed the allegations by former Gov. Ibrahim Shekarau of Kano State that the Buhari administration is insensitive to the plight of Nigerians.

    Reacting to the allegation in Abuja, the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Malam Garba Shehu, enjoined Shekarau to stop insulting the intelligence of Nigerians with his false and misleading allegations.

    He noted that the “audacity of Shekarau to preach about sensitivity is incredibly amazing, considering the large-scale stealing of public funds by the unseated PDP government at the expense of the welfare of the people.

    “The greatest insensitivity to the welfare of the people is epic corruption for which the PDP had a notorious and unrivalled record in our recent democratic history of bad governance.’’

    The Presidential aide explained that “the greed of PDP leaders respects no boundaries of decency and rationality, so much that they could illegally steal any funds within their grip or reach, including monies meant for the security of Nigerians and the welfare of soldiers fighting terrorism in the Northeast.’’

    According to Shehu, Shekarau’s colleagues in the PDP government that he served have been coughing out monies that they illegally stole while in office, adding that “bringing misery to your fellow countrymen and women on account of your greed and thievery is the worst example of insensitivity.”

    He said that the wellbeing of the citizens was at the heart of the President and for this reason, “the administration is seeking permanent solutions, not temporary ones to the county’s economic woes by first securing it, developing infrastructure and diversifying its economy.’’

    Shehu reassured that the several measures put in place by the Buhari administration would bear fruition in a matter of time.

    On the current fuel scarcity, Shehu said the Buhari administration had saved one trillion naira on account of removing subsidy which was fraudulently making some cabals richer at the expense of the welfare of the people who were being short-changed.

    He explained that the Buhari administration had significantly reduced the rate of corruption and frustrated people with corrupt and fraudulent tendencies.

    According to him, those that benefitted from subsidy fraud are using their illegal gains to finance smear campaigns against the Buhari administration on the social media and other forums.

    Addressing the issue of insecurity, Shehu said the Boko Haram terrorist group had been so “thoroughly militarily weakened that they no longer have the capabilities and staying power to confront our troops, or occupy any part of Nigerian territory without being decisively expelled.’’

    He recalled that markets and bus stations that were closed three years ago in the Northeast “are now being reopened, thanks to the decisive restoration of relative peace in the area by our now motivated and reinvigorated troops.

    “The Buhari administration is also proud to say that poor Nigerians that were once displaced by terrorist attacks are now returning to their liberated towns and villages, and this government won’t relent until it rids the country of the vestiges of terrorism.’’

    According to the presidential aide, the commitment of the Buhari administration to fighting corruption is firm and irrevocable, and that “every stolen kobo would be recovered and channeled into improving the welfare of Nigerians.’’(NAN)

  • President to Nigerians: I feel your pains

    President to Nigerians: I feel your pains

    President Muhammadu Buhari has lauded Nigerians for their perseverance while urging them not to lose confidence in the ability of his Administration to bring about the change they so much desire.

    Speaking at the 2015 Vanguard Awards in Lagos on Friday night, where he was honoured with the Personality of the Year Award 2015, the President said he is keenly aware of the difficulties that Nigerians are facing at this time, resulting mostly from the fuel scarcity, poor power supply, inflation etc.

    He said, ‘’As a government that was propelled into office by the power of the people, we cannot but feel the pains of our compatriots, and we deeply empathise with them. We are working round the clock to ease the pains of Nigerians, and the efforts of the government have started yielding fruits as we seek to make the petroleum products available nationwide, restore gas supply to the power generating firms, reflate the economy and put Nigerians back to work,’’ he said.

    President Buhari, who was represented by the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said he understands that Nigerians have started questioning whether this indeed is the CHANGE they voted for, while some have even gone as far as saying that by voting for the All Progressives Congress (APC), Nigerians have entered ‘’One Chance’’.

    ‘’Well, I can tell Nigerians that our CHANGE AGENDA is real, and that indeed, they will get the change they voted for. Nigerians have not entered ‘One Chance’, because the ‘One Chance’ drivers and their conductors have been driven out of town.’’

     

     

  • Our Change is not One Chance, Buhari assures Nigerians

    Our Change is not One Chance, Buhari assures Nigerians

    President Muhammadu Buhari has commended Nigerians for their perseverance while urging them not to lose confidence in the ability of his administration to bring about the change they so much desire.
    The president stated this at the 2015 Vanguard Awards in Lagos on Friday night, where he was honoured with the Personality of the Year Award 2015.
    The President, who was represented by the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said that he was keenly aware of the difficulties that Nigerians were facing, especially as a result of the fuel scarcity, poor power supply and inflation.
    “As a government that was propelled into office by the power of the people, we cannot but feel the pains of our compatriots, and we deeply empathise with them.
    “We are working round the clock to ease the pains of Nigerians, and the effort of the government has started yielding fruits.
    “We seek to make the petroleum products available nationwide, restore gas supply to the power generating firms, improve the economy and put Nigerians back to work,’’ he said.
    The president said that he understood that Nigerians had started questioning whether this indeed was the `Change’ they voted for.
    He said that some had even gone as far as saying that by voting for the All Progressives Congress (APC), Nigerians had entered “One Chance’’.
    “Well, I can tell Nigerians that our change agenda is real, and that indeed, they will get the change they voted for.
    “Nigerians have not entered ‘One Chance’, because the ‘One Chance’ drivers and their conductors have been driven out of town.
    “Change is a process, and that process has begun. The pains of today are temporary, and will soon give way to abundant joy as we put our country firmly on the path of sustainable growth and development,’’ he said.
    The President said that all Nigerians, the civil society organisations and the media were the real heroes of the last general elections and the country’s democracy in general.
    He commended the media for the role it played in ensuring the relative success of the last general elections and the resilience of the nation’s democracy since the beginning of the Republic.
    “When the history of the last general elections as well as our democracy is eventually written, I have no doubt that the media will occupy a prominent place on its honour’s list.
    “This is not a surprise because there is no contesting the fact that from the pre-independence years through the years of independence, the various attempts at democratic governance and the years of military interregnum, the media has stood solidly on the side of the people.
    “It has fought for the national interest without compromising its integrity,’’ the President said.
    In bestowing the honour on the President, the Vanguard described him as “a living example of what tenacity, fortitude, and perseverance meant in human experience.’’
    “Until future experience proves otherwise, Buhari is the closest yet that Nigeria will have to America’s Abraham Lincoln,’’ it said.

  • ‘Selfish Nigerians behind Boko Haram video’

    A northern group, the Arewa Youths Integrity Forum, has described the latest video of Boko Haram, claiming it has not surrendered, as the handiwork of selfish Nigerians determined to ensure that the insurgency continues.

    Addressing reporters in Abuja yesterday, the group’s National President, Alhaji Ibrahim Abubakar, said the video showed there was a crack in the ranks of the Boko Haram terrorists.

    Describing the individuals as “war entrepreneurs”, he said: “The war entrepreneurs, who defrauded the Goodluck Jonathan administration to the tune of billions of naira with the claims of negotiation and ceasefire are back to their game of wanting to keep exploiting Boko Haram for monetary gains.”

    Abubakar said it was good that the military dismissed the indirect call for a truce and pressed on with President Muhammadu Buhari’s orders as commander-in-chief to wipe out the insurgents.

    He said: “They will use the two videos as a compelling argument to draw the Federal Government into engaging them as brokers and will pocket the proceeds of the media they have carefully set up. The country must not be led down this path again.

    “An equally possible facet is that Boko Haram sponsors, patrons and benefactors, who want to undermine the Army and the Federal Government, used paid actors for either of the videos or for both. The intention will be for the Federal Government, the Army, to become complacent and engage in premature celebration of a seriously-battered Boko Haram and consequently slow down the offensive against the terrorists, who will then regroup and receive arms and logistics to take on the military.”

    Abubakar enjoined the Army and the Federal Government not to be lulled into any false sense of achievement by the kind of trick that Boko Haram just pulled so it would not repeat the mistakes of the previous administration that dealt with paid actors while the terrorists continued.

    Said he: “The only surrender that Nigerians will recognise is that of Boko Haram members or leaders that surrender or hand themselves over to our troops. Surrendering by video or any other indirect method is not acceptable. The crimes they committed were committed in person, so they should also surrender in person. Those who want to continue fighting the Nigerian state have made their choices as enemy combatants and the rules of engagement are clear.”

  • Have faith, Adeboye urges Nigerians

    Have faith, Adeboye urges Nigerians

    The General Overseer of The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has urged Nigerians to have faith in God, be prayerful and grateful.

    Pastor Adeboye spoke yesterday at the Special Prayer and Thanksgiving service for Landlords and Tenants by the RCCG, National Headquarters, Throne of Grace Parish, Ebute-Metta, Lagos.

    The programme featured  prayers, song rendition, bible teaching and prophetic ministration.

    He said God owns all nations and he is the master builder and anyone who wants to enjoy His mercy and favour must have faith in him.

    His words: “Nigeria belongs to God. It is indeed a blessed nation. I have never seen a nation as blessed as Nigeria . We only need to put our faith in God to build our nation.

    “Psalm 127:1: Unless the LORD builds the house, the builders labour in vain. Unless the LORD watches over the city, the guards stand watch in vain.

    “God is the master builder and when we let him know how much we depend on him for sustenance and be grateful with the little he has done, we will make it.

    “Our economy became awful when we forgot God and brought in idols.”

    Pastor Adeboye, speaking through his Special Assistant on Personnel and Administration, Pastor Johnson Odesola, said before Festac 77, the Naira was equivalent to a dollar and “our economy was stronger and better, until we forgot God and became the laughing stock of the world”.

    “It is only what He does that can stand and if we really want God to build this nation, we must return back to Him, know Him personally and let Him occupy our national life.”

  • Expert: many Nigerians don’t know they are hypertensive

    Expert: many Nigerians don’t know they are hypertensive

    Many Nigerians are living with high blood pressure (HBP) also known as hypertension without knowing, says Medical Advisor, Novartis Pharmaceutical Services, Dr Chinwe Adebiyi.

    According to her, the best way to know one’s state is by having a test.

    Adebiyi, who spoke at Roche Novartis breakfast meeting with reporters in Lagos, said blood pressure is the force of blood pressing against people’s arteries.

    “So, hypertension means high pressure or tension in the arteries. Arteries are vessels that carry blood to the pumping heart to all the tissues and organs in the body,” she said.

    Hypertension, she said, does not mean excessive emotional tension or stress, although it could temporarily increase blood pressure.

    “Normal blood pressure is below 120/80. Blood pressure between 120/80 and 139/89 is called pre-hypertension while that of 140/90 or above is considered high. So,  a normal blood pressure readings will fllbelow 120/80mmHg,” she said.

    The company’s Medical Advisor said the top number, which is systolic, shows the pressure when the heart beats.

    “The bottom number – distolic, shows the pressure t rest between the heart beats, when it is being filled with blood,” she said.

    Mrs Adebiyi said half of the world population has pre-hypertension, urging people to make lifestyle changes.

    According to the physician, a high blood pressurecan lead to hypertensive crises, such as stroke, cardiac arrest, fainting attacks and multi-organ damage, among others.

    African-Americans, she said are more likely to develop hypertension because of genetic make-up as black race and salt sensitivity.

    “Sodium, a major component of salt, can raise the BP by causing the body to retain fluid, which leads to a great burden on the heart,” she said.

    Other risk factors are stress and obesity, pregnancy and unhealthy eating.

    There are also smoking, excessive alcohol intake, lack of exercise, familyhistory, diabetes milletus, excessive steroids intake and high caffeine intake as risk factors.

    Symptoms, she said, are headache, nausea, vomiting and dizziness.

    Others are blurred or double vision, epistaxis (nose bleeding), palpitations and dyspnea.

  • Majority of Nigerians not corrupt

    SIR: It is evident since inauguration of the present administration that President Muhammadu Buhari and his team are determined to nip in the board the hydra-headed monster called corruption which has eaten deep into the fabrics of our political and economic life as a people and as a nation. One has no choice than to support the APC-led government’s anti-corruption fight if the report of Transparency International, which has over the recent years consistently rated and placed Nigeria among some of the most corrupt nations, is anything to go by.

    However, the perception and misconception which have been created that every Nigerian is criminally minded is unfounded, unnecessary and unfortunate. Every country under the sun has her own share of corruption and corrupt people; it’s just the frequency and level of corruption that makes the difference. This is largely as a result of the fact that some of the developed nations have put in place strong and independent institutions to prevent and minimize the level of corruption.

    Corruption may have increased in both quantity and intensity with devastating consequence on human development and standard of living of the citizenry; however, the percentage of corrupt minded Nigerians still remains insignificant compared to the millions who set out daily to do their legitimate and lawful businesses. Just like the popular saying “one bad egg spoils the rest “when a person picks an egg from a basket of eggs and the one turned out to be spoilt is it right to assume that all the eggs are spoilt? Some of our corrupt leaders and a very insignificant few Nigerians who engages in one form of criminal activity or the other are continually destroying the image of the entire country.

    The fact that we Nigerians commit ourselves to the things we do and exhibit the highest sense of duty and professionalism in our chosen career, putting our soul, time and energy has translated in the huge success that Nollywood has recorded in just a little above two decades of its existence. Today, Nollywood isn’t just the second largest film industry in the world and of course the largest in Africa, Nigerian films have become the beautiful bride and is in high demand throughout Africa and beyond due to the Nigerian attitude of industry, dedication and the will to be the best.

    The Nigerian music industry didn’t capture Africa and the world scene by mistake, but it was a result of hard work, brilliance, dedication and agility of our musicians, entertainers and music producers who work tirelessly round the clock to earn a living and give the world what good music is all about. In medicine, Sciences, Law, Engineering, Poetry, Arts and Culture Nigerians are doing twice as good as their international counterparts and this exploits is being recognized across the globe. The likes of Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe, Jelani Aliyu, Chimamanda Adichie and a host of others have become a source of pride not only to Nigeria and Nigerians but to the entire African continent.

    The guts and strong conviction to stand against whatever we perceive to be wrong for us and agitate for what is right in defence of our fundamental human rights and the boldness to change the leaders through the ballot in demand for better living conditions was exemplified at the last general election when Nigerians defied religious sentiments, ethnicity, tribal differences and political propaganda to elect new sets of leaders. We shamed the prophets of doom at the last general election by conducting one of the most peaceful elections and change of government from one political party to the other when the whole world looked forward to an outbreak of war and a ‘river of blood’.

    It would do us all a lot of good of the present administration also focus on uplifting the economic condition of non corrupt and hardworking Nigerians.

    • Hussain Obaro,

    Ilorin, Kwara State.