Tag: NPC

  • Fatal attractions

    Fatal attractions

    Since his “original sin”, of opportunistic suspension against Justice Isa Ayo Salami, retired president of the Court of Appeal, President Goodluck Jonathan appears continuously drawn to the fatal attraction of essaying constitutional impunity; and see if it would stick.

    It stuck with Justice Salami, though since the jurist retired with his honour intact, the president should have known his victory was pyrrhic.

    This is because perpetrators of injustice almost always fall victims of their own machinations. Take the president’s collapsing Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Time was, when PDP would actively lure sitting governors and legislators from other parties, and declare the illicit lure the height of patriotism and political nobility, since the “biggest party in Africa” was the law, and the law was the “biggest party in Africa”.

    But the same PDP is now whining like caned dogs, after being forced to swallow its own specially brewed impunity!

    Or take the president’s estranged godfather, former President Olusegun Obasanjo. At the height of his presidential impunity, PDP was Obasanjo and Obasanjo was PDP.

    After the collapse of the third term gambit; and after the imposition, willy-nilly, of the health-challenged Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, the czar got his party to purposely amend its constitution to make the chair of the PDP Board of Trustees the exclusive preserve of former presidents from the party — a euphemism for Obasanjo himself!

    But see how the old lion has now turned prolific public letter writer, just to retain a toehold on the party! Verily, verily I say unto you, to parody that famous Biblical phrasing, impunity all too soon consumes its own children!

    Still, neither PDP’s plight nor Obasanjo’s would appear to have weighed much on the president’s mind, in his tango with Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.

    This Day reported President Jonathan phoning Mallam Sanusi; and literarily barked that he resigned his office forthwith, for allegedly leaking, to the former president, the letter alleging US$ 49.8 billion “missing” from the Federation Account.

    An apparently miffed Sanusi reportedly called the president’s bluff; adding that only a presidential request, backed by two-thirds majority of the Senate, could abridge his fixed five-year term.

    Again, the president had blundered into the myth that the Nigerian president was the globe’s most formidable Leviathan. He could well be. But anytime he strays outside the law, he becomes a Samson shorn of his divine locks!

    If the President-CBN Governor face-off is a short-and-sharp defeat of impunity, the recurring Rivers crisis is a chain of defeats, but with impunity, fired by “federal might”, always bouncing back.

    Is it then a case of the proverbial tortoise in the Yoruba folklore, that swore never to return from a journey until he was disgraced?

    Ironically, the Jonathan Presidency’s apparent fixation with the Rivers crises bears uncanny resemblance to Prime Minister, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa’s fatal attraction to the Western Region crisis in the First Republic.

    By precipitating anomie in Rivers, maybe to politically profit from the ensuing anarchy, might the Jonathan presidency be working towards imposing a state of emergency to get rid of Governor Chibuike Amaechi, just as the Balewa government contrived one out of nothing to politically liquidate Chief Obafemi Awolowo and the rump of his Action Group (AG)? And after emergency, what?

    Of course, President Jonathan denies everything. Even his spouse, Dame Patience Jonathan, denies all. But incontrovertible facts point to presidential complicity, by commission or by omission, in the sordid affair.

    For starters, how come Mbu Joseph Mbu, the commissioner of Police (CP) whose tenure the Rivers looming anarchy birthed with, appears untouchable? Neither the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) nor the president is willing or able to touch him, despite his politicising the police, and baiting anarchy in the state he is paid to secure.

    Then, Evans Bipi and his claim as “Speaker” — a claim so comical, if it were not so tragic! But then if in the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) election, the president of the Federal Republic could declare 16 greater than 19, what stops Bipi from declaring six greater than 26?

    And to think the so-called “Speaker” was product of a failed legislative coup which main victim, the battered Michael Okechukwu Chinda, is still probably abroad on medical tourism! Where is Bipi getting his Dutch courage from?

    And then, the Rivers chief presidential storm trooper, Nyesom Wike, Jonathan’s minister, with his Grassroots Development Initiative (GDI), fighting for every inch of the political space, with a colluding police behind him. All three, Mbu, Bipi and Wike, are unfazed Jonathan sympathisers and votaries of his wife.

    Incidentally, Mbu just claimed his latest scalp in Senator Magnus Abe, a Save Rivers Movement (SRM) kingpin, sitting senator and Amaechi sympathiser, shot by Mbu’s police on January 12 and flown abroad for treatment. Hear Mbu crow on the senator’s felling: “If we used live bullets,” The Nation quoted him, “you know the implication. If a live bullet hits your hand, it will shatter the hand and if it hits the neck, the person is gone.”

    Abe and co should learn the grim lesson: while Wike’s GDI has an unfettered charter to prowl, SRM, in Mbu’s police state, would do so at fatal risk! And for starry-eyed Amaechi supporters, it could be worse next time round — when rubber bullets become real ones!

    That goes back to the Balewa-Jonathan parallel: how the one misused, and the other is misusing, state coercion for partisan ends.

    In Sir Abubakar’s case, the late prime minister had ethno-political motives to run Awo and his AG out of town, though the famed “golden voice” was himself regarded a gentleman. But all that nobility vanished with his Northern People’s Congress (NPC) agenda to crush Awo and his AG. But the principal federal players back then got buried under their own impunity.

    In Jonathan’s case, it would appear some strange spousal fealty, that seems to have dimmed presidential faculty on how far the impunity can go.

    Still, spousal folly has buried many. The fearsome Samson became a Philistine jelly because he ensnared himself with Delilah. The wise Solomon, in uxoriousness, ploughed the ultimate in folly. The Roman Mark Anthony, for Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt, forfeited his life and share of the Roman Empire.

    And in 1936, British King Edward VIII abdicated his throne for the warm bosoms of American Wallis Simpson, a serial divorcee. He enjoyed that warmth for 35 years. But the stiff price was his and his descendants’ renunciation of the British throne.

    To be sure, the Jonathan camp are no devils any more than the Amaechi camp are saints. But to unleash state organs as political vendetta, especially on a state government constituted by law in a federation, is tantamount to treason.

    Dr. Jonathan is a learned man; a logical adult who knows the consequences of his choice. Still, the easy attraction of impunity in Rivers is dangerous. It might yet turn fatal!

    On Rivers then, Jonathan has the First Republic Western Region misadventure to profit from. He can learn from history — or be consumed by it!

  • Jonathan and his Afenifere allies

    Jonathan and his Afenifere allies

    In December 20, Governor Olusegun Mimiko led representatives of the Yoruba socio-cultural and political organisation, Afenifere, to visit President Goodluck Jonathan. The visit came some eight or so days after former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s venomous letter to Dr Jonathan was made public, and a few days before the president’s insipid reply was published. The president is under enormous pressure to opt out of the 2015 presidential race and to accept responsibility for what his critics describe as the unremitting dullness of his government. But he not only soldiers on valiantly, even if the opposition to his presidency increases and renders his hold on power tenuous, he also appears eager to clutch at any straw within his reach in order to give the impression things have not yet spiralled out of his control.

    There are not many straws Dr Jonathan can clutch at in the near future, especially with the withering look he gets from the North, and the barely disguised contempt he attracts from the Southwest. But there is at least one straw he can clutch at gutsily outside the fawning regions of the South-South and Southeast where his canonisation remains unquestionable and irreversible: the Afenifere. The Afenifere, not the Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG), of course, is not only irredeemably splintered, as everyone knows, it is also neither as ideologically coherent and consistent as before nor as relevant as it used to be when the Southwest was buffeted by Gen Sani Abacha’s oppressive machines and Gen Abdulsalami Abubakar unfurled his presumptive transition programme.

    Dr Jonathan is by all considerations out of favour. His arch supporters in the oil rivers have seemed to exhaust their ethnic jingoistic cries, and were in fact dealt a massive blow by Chief Obasanjo’s letter which described the Jonathan government as mindlessly and unconscionably mining the region’s ethnic sewers. Whatever raucous noise they make henceforth in those forbidden creeks will continue to weaken into hoary whispers of disjointed support. His supporters in the Southeast stand ramrod, but it is not altogether clear on what foundations the region’s brazen support for him stands, or that given an accentuation of the bolt from the national political stables begun by the All Progressives Congress (APC), the region would not be tempted to burn the barn. The amperage of Dr Jonathan’s support in those parts may still be burning high, but it has not stopped the president from despairing or from showing signs of paranoia.

    The Afenifere has a rich and enviable history of enduring pain and rejection. Indeed, in its long and proud years of existence, it always preferred complete ostracism than any romance with the forces of reaction and conservatism. If by its associations today it has appeared to jettison its historical principles, that fact is explained both by the philosophical makeup of its current leaders, most of whom are ordinary pragmatists relying more on common sense than any deep introspection, and the circumstances of its bitter loss to regional political rivals, particularly the All Progressives Congress (APC). For whatever pretences it makes, the fact is that Afenifere is much more political than cultural, and more sneakily autocratic than Yoruba history richly demonstrates.

    It was, therefore, not surprising that Dr Jonathan and the Afenifere were driven into each other’s arms, the former because of the rejection and humiliation he suffered at the hands of Nigerians appalled by his government’s lack of initiative and charisma, and the latter by their regional loss, flat-footedness and poor political manoeuvrability. Dr Jonathan’s desperation is not surprising, nor does anyone expect him to spurn any alliance, no matter how opportunistic. What is really earth-shaking is the ease with which the Afenifere jumped into bed with a government that has all but transformed into fascism. Sometime in October, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, an Afenifere chieftain, seemed to have set the stage for the Afenifere romance with the Jonathan government when he declared his support for the convocation of a national conference before the modalities had been stated. That support remains intact even after it became clear that what Dr Jonathan had in mind is not exactly what the true proponents of national conference have in mind.

    In the interview Chief Adebanjo granted a newspaper in October, he went as far as suggesting that if need be the constitutional provision of periodic election should be subordinated to the conference, for, in his opinion, a conference was more exigent than an election or a constitutional provision. It was no use, he argued, to hold an election when the country had not been restructured, and the fear of conflict not dissipated. On the surface, he would appear to be making a logical presentation. However, not only did he fail to question the motives of Dr Jonathan who was obviously driven by pressure and circumstances into yielding to a measure he once roundly loathed, Chief Adebanjo kept talking of sovereign conference as if the president had decided on making the conference sovereign.

    In any case, when the president eventually put his so-called conference ideas into words, he preferred to use the word ‘national dialogue’ rather than conference, let alone a sovereign conference. Neither Chief Adebanjo nor his colleagues in Afenifere were dissuaded by their past political failures in seeking for proof of government’s sincerity in policy enunciations. In 1998, they accepted to fully participate in Gen Abubakar’s transition programme even without the promulgation of a constitution, when they could have forced major changes in the constitution given the peculiar circumstances of the time. It is the same constitution that is now in focus. Before the 2003 elections, they also uncharacteristically embraced ethnic politics by throwing in their lot with Chief Obasanjo who was clearly the wrong choice for the presidency, not to talk of his questionable democratic credentials and poor policy conceptions. Now, barely a decade after those egregious blunders, the Afenifere leaders are embracing Dr Jonathan who has no grain of democracy or liberalism in him, cares nothing for the constitution he swore to defend, especially seeing that he prefers a monarchical form of government, and is merely using the dialogue to ventilate the pressures on his uninspiring government.

    There are rules guiding the postponement of elections. In October, Chief Adebanjo discountenanced those rules and turned the constitution into a capricious document with flexible provisions and timelines. The Mimiko-led Afenifere took the extraordinary step of denouncing before the president those who questioned the convocation of a dialogue at this point, especially the decision of the president to forward the outcomes of the dialogue to the National Assembly for their deliberations. Femi Okurounmu, chairman of the committee tasked with working out the modalities for the conference, described the conference as a dialogue in at least one sentence during the presentation of his committee’s report to the president. While Afenifere’s support for Dr Jonathan is no longer in doubt, a support that is however antithetical to their history and credo, it is hoped that they and the Jonathan government will have settled whether to call the conference a conference or a dialogue before the talks begin. At least, it is already known that it won’t be sovereign.

    The incurable optimists of the Afenifere see nothing wrong or alarming in embracing the agenda of the Jonathan government. If Dr Jonathan’s hidden agenda do not frighten them, perhaps because they are too hopeful to see the dangers of having a major conference in what appears to be an election year, they should at least be worried by their own transformation from a progressive and principled organisation of a majority of Yoruba people to a bitter, opportunistic and unthinking organisation of a minority of Yoruba people. They should be alarmed by how rapidly they have descended from the Olympian height of supporting democrats and charismatic leaders in office to wholeheartedly and unscrupulously embracing reactionary non-performers in office. And while they copiously quoted the sage, Obafemi Awolowo, in the presence of Dr Jonathan, it is hard to explain why they failed to hear how ludicrously they sounded when they flattered their host as an offshoot of Chief Awolowo’s First Republic campaign prediction.

    But it was not unexpected that Governor Mimiko would lead the woolly hairs of the Afenifere to meet minds with the distressed and increasingly forlorn Dr Jonathan. Before his re-election, the Ondo State governor had been projected by the losing groups in the regional political sweepstakes of the Southwest as the counterpoise to the feisty iconoclasts of the APC. When he won, the bitter and unforgiving rivals of the APC concluded that Dr Mimiko would serve as the new core of Yoruba politics. Since he won, they have begun to practicalise their aspirations. It, however, does not occur to them that they are merely giving a contemporary feel to the cancer that relentlessly gnaws at the sinews of the Yoruba, a cancer that sees the losing group forming an alliance with the political and cultural antagonists of the Southwest. This cancer saw a bitter Afonja align with Oyo Empire enemies; and it saw a bitter and frustrated Ladoke Akintola align with northern hegemonic leaders against the Western Region. It is certainly not a mistake that the majority of south westerners are in the APC. The reasons can be located in the disruptive inclinations and influences of the Obasanjo presidency, the obnoxiousness of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) which offended the civilisation and sensibilities of the Southwest, and the absolute ineptitude of those who govern the country so uninspiringly and so loathsomely from Abuja. Why the Afenifere thinks this movement is a fluke is hard to explain. Why the Labour Party (LP), which at the moment stands for nothing, hopes to make itself the rallying core for the Southwest is also hard to explain.

    It is, however, evident that history is being replayed in the Southwest. When Afonja entered into an alliance with the Fulani against the empire he was appointed to defend, it was to spite his people whom he ended up betraying. When Chief Akintola forged an alliance with the Northern Peoples Congress (NPC), it was to underscore his grievances against Chief Awolowo and the Action Group (AG). Now that the same spirit has been awakened and blended in the alliance between Dr Mimiko and the Afenifere, the stage is set once more for a replay of the regions’ bitter and violent past. If history is a guide, however, not only will the opportunistic alliance fail, and its contraptions collapse, the end can be foreseen clearly in the failure of those who prefer to dine with the enemy because they hate the false dentition of their compatriots.

    As they took pictures with Dr Jonathan in their starched agbadas, in addition to making sarcastic and caustic remarks about their Southwest compatriots, a diligent person must doubtless appreciate anew what it feels like to deaden the censorious pangs of conscience during the act of betrayal. For it would be too optimistic to suggest that the romantics of the rump Afenifere visited Aso Villa and met the president without the reproof of conscience that the ordinary man experiences on a daily basis in the process of telling a small lie or coveting a neighbour’s property.

  • Jonathan nominates ex- PDP chief as NPC chairman

    President Goodluck Jonathan has nominated former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman in Imo State, Chief Eze Duruiheoma, as Chairman National Population Commission (NPC).

    The nominee whose name was read on Tuesday by the Senate President, David Mark, was nominated to replace Chief Festus Odimegwu who resigned his appointment as NPC chairman two months ago.

    Odimegwu ruffled political feathers when he vowed to clean up the NPC by ensuring that the expected 2016 census was credible.

    The controversial NPC boss who was forced to resign also claimed that records available to him showed that the country had never conducted credible census.

    According to him, figures presented as census figure for the country had always been cooked up by interested parties.

    President Jonathan in the letter dated November 27, 2013 entitled: “Request for confirmation of chairman and members of the National Population Commission,” noted that the NPC is one of the Federal Executive Bodies established under Section 153(1) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    He said that by provision of Part 1(J) of the Third Schedule of the Constitution, the Commission shall comprise a chairman and one person from each state of the Federation and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

    He added, “In this connection, the slots for the chairman and members representing the FCT, Katsina and Ekiti States on the Commission are currently vacant.”

    Jonathan noted that in the exercise of the powers conferred on him by Section 154(1) of the 1999 Constitution decided to appoint Chief Eze Duruiheoma (Chairman), Aliyu Daniel Kwali (FCT), Alhaji Bala Almu Banye (Katsina) and Adebola Adetunmbi (Ekiti) as members of the NPC.

     

  • ‘World Bank committed to supporting Nigeria’s data system’

    ‘World Bank committed to supporting Nigeria’s data system’

    The World Bank is committed to supporting and positioning Nigerian Statistical System (NSS) to enable it to contribute meaningfully to the national Transformation Agenda, an official has said.

    Mr Alain Gaugris, a Senior Statistician at the Bank, spoke yesterday in Abuja at the 2013 African Statistics Day celebration, which had as its theme “Quality Data to Support African Progress’’.

    He said the Bank was partnering the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) because of the importance of statistics to development and poverty reduction.

    “The World Bank is actively involved in statistical development in Nigeria, mainly through the 10 million dollars grant for Statistics for Results Facility (SRF) project.

    According to Gaugris, the project, which spans 2011-2014, is focused on capacity building at the federal level for NBS and National Population Commission (NPC) staff, as well as members of staff of six pilot states.

    The states are Anambra, Bauchi, Edo, Kaduna, Niger and Ondo.

    “The objective of the three-year project is to initiate the implementation of the National Strategy for the Development of Statistics (NSDS) by producing reliable statistics in participating states,’’ he said.

    Gaugris said the project was meant to improve the legal and institutional framework in NSS to improve vertical and horizontal coordination.

    “It is also meant to develop the human resources, statistical framework and the Information Technology infrastructure in the NSS to professionalise statistical production in Nigeria,’’ he added.

    The President, Nigerian Statistical Association, Dr Muhammad Tumala, said the need for collaboration between producers of statistics at national and sub-national levels to avoid conflict in national data.

    Tumala called for sustained cooperation and collaboration of all data-gathering agencies to improve production of quality statistics in the country.

    The Statistician-General of the Federation, Dr Yemi Kale, said the 2013 African Statistics Day was held to promote the importance of statistics in national planning, policy formulation, monitoring and evaluation of government projects.

    He said the theme was selected to draw attention to the importance of quality statistics for evidence-based decision-making in economic management, poverty reduction and all aspects of socio-economic development processes.

    Kale was represented by Mr George Oparaku, the Director, Real Sector and Household Surveys Department in NBS.

    The celebration was initiated in 1990 by the Joint African Conference of Planners, Statisticians, and Demographers, a subsidiary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa.

  • Identity crisis

    Identity crisis

    • President Jonathan’s call that a national citizens’ data base be pooled by 31 December 2014 is good, but …

    President Goodluck Jonathan spoke the minds of many Nigerians when he ordered all government agencies needing citizens’ data should hook on to the centralised data bank, which the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) is building. He also gave a target of December 31, 2014, for the NIMC to complete the current registration exercise.

    The president did well by putting a halt to what appears some malady on the data gathering front. The situation in which the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), Nigeria Police, Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) and Nigeria Population Commission (NPC), would embark on varied data gathering, some of them at the expense of the citizen, is undesirable and absolutely unacceptable.

    In one of those schemes, the FRSC even unilaterally cancelled binding legal agreements, by purportedly abrogating national drivers’ licences before their due date, for a new updated one, just like it did in the case of car registration plate numbers. In its own case, the Police also started – before it stopped – its own Biometric Central Motor Registration scheme. In both cases, citizens were burdened with undue expenses.

    Still, it is only fair to note that these multiple registrations, in search of data gathering, were caused by the absence of a national data base, in which biometrics of every citizen is captured. That absence was itself caused by the failure of previous attempts at national identity card projects, under Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo as military head of state, under President Shehu Shagari and under Obasanjo as civilian president. On these three occasions, the schemes failed, with billions of naira going down the drain.

    It is with such previous failures in mind that everything must be done to make the current exercise a success. On that score, NIMC is expected to capture all eligible citizens latest December 31, 2014. Perhaps the NIMC would have preferred an open-ended deadline, particularly given the fact that citizen registration is an open-ended event, taking in newly born citizens while the dead ones exit. Still, a deadline of one year and two months would appear fair, other things being equal.

    That is why the commission must ensure it makes a success of this current exercise. As the president said, multiple registration for data is not only expensive, it is inefficient. If indeed resources are scarce, that would appear a double jeopardy. It is better, cheaper and more productive, therefore, to invest in one fool-proof scheme, and build a pool from which other data-thirsting agencies could drink from.

    But if the present exercise must succeed, there must be more publicity and enlightenment. Indeed, NIMC should crank up its publicity blitz as if the exercise is closing in but a few months, enlightening citizens on how to register, where to register and possibly how long registration takes. That way, the target is likely to be achieved.

    The benefits of a central biometric data base are many. To start with, it would generate social security numbers imperative for planning and other social security schemes. It also acts as control to census exercises, which in these climes, have also been too controversial, therefore making planning a nightmare. With adequate citizen registration, it would be more difficult to manipulate census figure; and the Nigerian economy would be better for it.

    Nigeria must get the national identity card scheme right this time. It is the least the country can do if it ever wants to get its planning right.

  • Power plants: NPC rejects requests for bid submission extension

    Power plants: NPC rejects requests for bid submission extension

    THE National Council on Privatisation (NCP) yesterday dashed the hope of those angling for extension of the bid submission deadline for the 10 National Integrated Power Projects (NIPPs) of the Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPHC) Limited.

    NCP Technical Committee Chairman, Mr Peterside Atedo said would not be granted.

    Atedo, who spoke at the NDPHC Transaction Review Conference in Abuja said: “The only thing I would say from my experience on this is that without being disrespectful, every time we are involved in this kind of exercise, there is always a major issue for extension of submission, payment deadline, so excuses have always been given. The only thing that we think that is certain is when the vendor draws the line in his hand. Do you know what? It is not compulsory. Those of you who have been able to submit best of luck, to the rest of you goodbye.”

    He explained that it appeared those that refused to meet the deadline never liked the deal, adding that their failure offered better chances to the firms that beat the deadline.

    The Federal Government had at 5.00pm on July 20 closed the submission of bids for the power plants after receiving 110 bids submission from the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) and the NDPHC offices.

    The stakeholders in the power sector had, among other things, requested that the Federal Government extend the June 2014 handover date.

    It was a feedback forum between the Federal Government and the stakeholders, who noted that the November 28 submission date should be extended to December 31 even as some sought for an extension to January 31.

    A representative of one of the bidding firms, Eme Elayiho, said: “Bearing in mind that majority of the construction of most of the plants is for December 31, with PPAC certification next year, I think we should allow due diligence after the construction to allow us to look at the quality of the plant and thereafter a month or two after December we are allowed to submit our bids so that it does not slip into extending the June the overall timetable for the handover.

    “Chijoike Okafor representing Setpower Consortium said: “Now with the lead, giving the table, on time and request for extension to milestone, this may or may not affect the global timeline date. But I think there is a particular timeline date which at the moment appears a bit unworkable.

    “And that is the investors feedback on the transaction and industry agreement which is for 27th of this month. I think that particular milestone might need to be shifted down a little bit.”

    Yemi Ayeni expressed fears over the protection of the investments as the plants have not been completed and the government has disclosed much about them because of warranty.

    She complained that the NCP disclosed the memorandum, the information in the data even as the investors have not visited the physical sites.

    She said “ you have disclosed the information that you can fairly deduce so all these things you have mentioned the disclosure has wiped them away. So I don’t think that the investors are protected because the disclosures are so wild. “

    The NDPHC is jointly owned by the Federal, States and Local Government of Nigeria through their subscription from the excess crude account.

    Most of the projects at at different stages of completion.

    Meanwhile, the Managing Director, Nigeria Electricity Bulk Trading Company (NBETC), Mr. Rumundala Wonodi said that for the ongoing payments, the Federal Government has capitalized the bulk traders with over N80million from budgetary allocation.

    He revealed that the NBETC has “$350million and SPT for enhancing the bulk traders to make sure that PHCN privatization is closed also approved. There is N50billion from the proceeds to the escrow in favour of those power plants.”

    The Managing Director stated that his company is empowering every electricity distribution company with a post DISCO payment guarantee of three months.

    According to him, the capitalization of the NBETC allows it to continue to make payments for energy and capacity for the period without any recourse to DISCO revenue.

  • How credible?

    How credible?

    Annulment of census results in 14 of 20 LGs in Lagos raises question about our headcounts

    The decision of the census tribunal to annul the 2006 census results in 14 local government councils of Lagos State, six years after the exercise, fits into the aphorism, that it is better late than never. Yet we must ask, what caused the long delay before the tribunal reached this decision? Again, we want to know how and why the National Population Commission (NPC) got it all wrong in as many as 14 local government councils, out of the 20 in the state, in the 2006 census. Indeed, even more scary is the fact that but for the dogged determination of Lagos State to pursue justice over the census figures allocated to it, the faulty figures would have been presented to urban planners as the valid census for the councils; with all its consequences.

    We therefore commend the Lagos State government for tenaciously seeking justice in this matter; and we urge the commission to immediately take necessary steps to conduct a valid headcount in the affected councils. It may interest other states that have queries about the 2006 census figures ascribed to their states that, apart from seeking a nullification of the disputed census figures, Lagos State also conducted a parallel enumeration programme to determine the population of those living within its boundaries. The importance of this exercise, despite the extra burden on the resources of the state can now be appreciated, considering the inaccuracies of figures from the NPC; more so as no modern-state can be effectively governed without accurate demographic figures of the persons and physical development within a given area.

    In the face of this judicial confirmation of the inaccuracy of the 2006 census, at least in the 14 local councils of Lagos State, it is necessary for the commission to conduct an internal enquiry as to how it faired so poorly despite the availability of modern demographic technologies to help it perform its function. The commission must also take necessary steps to impart on the general public an understanding that census is for effective economic planning, as against the notion that it is merely for the politics of resource allocation. It must also be borne in mind by the staff and agents of the commission, and indeed Nigerians, that without an adequate census, governments at all levels cannot properly plan for the provision of infrastructure, which include schools, electricity, water, recreational facilities and of course the apparatus for security of lives and properties.

    It is also important to note that an accurate census has become even more critical for our country because of our recent security challenges. The menace of Boko Haram and sundry other crimes cannot be appropriately dealt with without an accurate data of Nigerians and her physical development. Nigerians should appreciate that with a forensic and physical data of its citizens and development, it would be a lot easier to determine and pin down criminal elements, whenever a crime is committed anywhere in the country. Indeed, the population commission has the primary responsibility to have a demographic data bank, which can be used by the security agencies, in pursuit of their responsibilities. Such capacity would also help the country counter trans-border crimes, and stop foreign criminals who claim to be Nigerians when they are caught even outside our shores.

    It is also important for the commission to conduct an internal audit of its systems and processes, to understand how it could get its work wrong in as many as 14 councils in Lagos State, alone. Of course, there is also the possibility that similar errors were committed in other parts of the country; such auditing would help the commission to understand the weaknesses and the challenges that wrought these statistical fallacies. Since many argue that census is a political issue, it is also important to find out whether the error was an act of commission or omission, and either way identify the persons or the techniques responsible for these errors, to avoid a recurrence.

    Working towards a more reliable census in 2016, we restate the urgent need for the NPC to begin to plan for the deployment of the most modern technology available for demographic exercise. The commission should also recruit and train the appropriate manpower for the exercise, if it is to avoid the pitfalls of 2006. While the commission’s chairman, Mr. Festus Odimegwu, may wish to say that the tribunal’s judgment has vindicated his recent comment on the credibility of censuses over the years in Nigeria, we must state clearly that Mr. Odimegwu’s comment was a needless controversy. Going forward, he should, henceforth, concentrate his energy at working to conduct a very transparent and credible census in 2016. Where the commission succeeds under his chairmanship, the country will be better for it.

  • NPC to Fed Govt: Nigeria ‘s population will become asset if…

    Following the over 170 million Nigeria’s population, the Chairman, National Population Commission (NPC), Eze Festus Odimegwu, has advised government that the country’s population can become our asset if properly managed.

    Odimegwu spoke in Abuja when the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) team, led by its Regional Director for West Africa , Dr. Benoit Kalasa, paid him a working visit.

    He however said if Nigeria ‘s population is not well managed, it can become our liability which may lead to disaster in the nearest future.

    The NPC boss advised people, especially couples, to take proper decisions on family size.

    Odimegwu, who was represented by the Head, Technical Management, NPC, Mr. Festus Uzor, said the NPC has identified 16 population quality improvement issues that need to be addressed, which when addressed, will turn Nigeria’s population into greatest asset.

    The issues he said are: resolution of historical challenges or divisive issues, putting Nigeria first before tribe or religion and development of visionary leadership for political parties.

    Other problems to be tackled, he said are: “stopping corruption and impunity and ensuring good education at all levels, promoting agricultural transformation and rural development and industrialisation-driven urbanisation for increased productivity.

    “Our population in Nigeria can become our asset if well managed. If it is not well managed, then it becomes liability. People should be able to take proper decision on family size.

    Commenting on the visit, he said, “it is my hope that this visit will mark the beginning of effective collaboration between the UNFPA and NPC not only in the conduct of the 2016 Census but also in the implementation of the strategic architecture.”

    The UNFPA boss, Dr. Benoit Kalasa, promised to support Nigeria in conducting the 2016 census with a view to achieving success.

    Kalasa said if the census is successful, other African countries will emulate Nigeria, urging the country to ensure acceptability in providing a good result.

     

  • Pension contributions now N3.4tr,says NPC boss

    Pension contributions now N3.4tr,says NPC boss

    The contributory pension scheme introduced in 2004 has generated about N3.4 trillion, the Acting Director General, National Pension Commission (NPC), Mrs Chinelo Anohu-Amazu has said.

    She spoke in Abuja at an interactive workshop for Justices of the Supreme Court, Court of Appeal and Judges of High Courts.

    Mrs Anohu-Amazu said despite the phenomenal growth of the scheme, many workers are yet to fully understand the initiative and its objectives.

    She said the interactive workshop was one of the ways through which the commission was reaching out to stakeholders in its quest to ensure that the scheme achieved its primary goal of providing an enduring, self-sustaining and effective pension system.

    She said NPC found the judiciary as a critical stakeholder in the pension reform and therefore chose to interact with the judges to ensure proper appreciation of the legal and regulatory framework involved in the adjudication of pension cases.

    The NPC boss said the debate was currently on at the National Assembly for the amendment of the Pension Reform Act 2004

    Mrs Anohu-Amazu noted that inputs from the judiciary would go a long way in ensuring that the amendment reflected the people’s desire.

    She stressed the importance of the interactive workshop with the judiciary, saying: “The commission is aware that as it is with all reforms, there are bound to be some concerns and misunderstandings.”

    The Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Justice Ibrahim Auta, who declared the workshop opened, commended the NPC for the initiative.

    He noted that the responsibly for interpreting the Pension Act falls on judges of the Federal High Court.

    He expressed confidence in the ability of the judges to do justice to cases arising from the implementation of the Pension Act.

  • Pension contributions now N3.4tr,says NPC boss

    The contributory pension scheme introduced in 2004 has generated about N3.4 trillion, the Acting Director General, National Pension Commission (NPC), Mrs Chinelo Anohu-Amazu has said.

    She spoke in Abuja at an interactive workshop for Justices of the Supreme Court, Court of Appeal and Judges of High Courts.

    Mrs Anohu-Amazu said despite the phenomenal growth of the scheme, many workers are yet to fully understand the initiative and its objectives.

    She said the interactive workshop was one of the ways through which the commission was reaching out to stakeholders in its quest to ensure that the scheme achieved its primary goal of providing an enduring, self-sustaining and effective pension system.

    She said NPC found the judiciary as a critical stakeholder in the pension reform and therefore chose to interact with the judges to ensure proper appreciation of the legal and regulatory framework involved in the adjudication of pension cases.

    The NPC boss said the debate was currently on at the National Assembly for the amendment of the Pension Reform Act 2004

    Mrs Anohu-Amazu noted that inputs from the judiciary would go a long way in ensuring that the amendment reflected the people’s desire.

    She stressed the importance of the interactive workshop with the judiciary, saying: “The commission is aware that as it is with all reforms, there are bound to be some concerns and misunderstandings.”

    The Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Justice Ibrahim Auta, who declared the workshop opened, commended the NPC for the initiative.

    He noted that the responsibly for interpreting the Pension Act falls on judges of the Federal High Court.

    He expressed confidence in the ability of the judges to do justice to cases arising from the implementation of the Pension Act.