Tag: order

  • The dawn of a new order

    The dawn of a new order

    It is exactly 275 days today since the 10th Senate came into force. And it has been a period of active law-making, constituency engagement and strategic interventions amid socio-economic and political pressures in which our nation is enmeshed. Yet, we all recognise the place of collaboration in our response to issues of vital national interests.

    As an assembly of nationalists, patriots and progressives under the leadership of Senator Godswill Obot Akpabio, CON, the 10th Senate has been strategically collaborating with key public institutions, especially the presidency, to defend our national interest; ensure economic stability; promote social cohesion and foster unity among ethnic nationalities that constitute Nigeria.

    This has become highly imperative at the time the regressive forces are working against our collective interests as a federation of over 227 million people. Their invisible hands are not just ominous, but also devastative to our collective interests as a nation. They all constitute the triggers of prevailing internal crises – economic doldrums, insecurity, food crisis, fiscal instability and socio-political disharmony – that are now undermining the livelihoods of our compatriots nationwide. They equally threaten the vision of our founding fathers to build a virile federation that would serve the interests of all.

    As complicated as these challenges are, the Senate remains resolute and undaunted, indeed methodical and pragmatic in our multi-pronged approach to restoring order to the economy, stability to the polity, prosperity to the people and confidence to the global interests that seek strategic partnership with us. This has been our preoccupation since the take-off of the 10th National Assembly on June 13, 2023.  

    This is evident in our diverse engagements with service chiefs to further guarantee security of lives and assets nationwide. Our inquiries into the regressive dynamics that plague our economy no doubt spurred stability in the fiscal space and largely restored investors’ confidence. Our prompt responses to diverse requests of national significance further deepened our pragmatic approach to the enactment of different legislations that redefine our governance frameworks.

    Between June 13, 2023 and December 31, 2023 alone, for instance, at least 338 bills were initiated in response to our quest for economic progress, internal cohesion and national greatness. Of this figure, 10 bills were fully passed into laws; 11 currently at the stage of committee; 179 awaiting second reading and 135 are yet to be laid before the committee of the whole for consideration and deliberation.

    Critics have even called us to questions for enacting only 10 laws within the time frame. Agreed, we could do much better especially at a time when critical legislative interventions are required to jumpstart our economy and stabilise our polity. Nevertheless, we should bear in mind that 2023 was the first year of the government of Renewed Hope. And the Senate, indeed the National Assembly, was preoccupied with diverse requests of vital national interests from the presidency and other public institutions.

    Besides the bills we have worked on or are still working on, the Senate entertained 90 motions. Each of these motions directly addressed the roots of highly critical issues that threatened the future of our fatherland. As well, we treated 21 petitions from different quarters; screened 123 nominees for different strategic national offices and provided diverse interventions at the time our economy was in doldrums; national security under threats and internal cohesion almost disintegrating. 

    With sustained collaboration with key public institutions, our interventions are already yielding optimal outcomes. We are winning the fight against bandits, kidnappers and terrorists, though mountainous and tedious. We are equally reversing negative tendencies that plague our economy and polity. We are gradually reuniting our brothers and sisters across the Niger and reinventing a glorious future that we all aspire and desire. And this aspiration will surely come to fruition definitely in our lifetime.

    But can these interventions alone guarantee a future we all crave for? We obviously do not need a soothsayer to tell us the limit of our initiatives and the exigency of providing pragmatic antidotes to our collective challenges. What we have been doing since the inception of the Senate was tailored at rebuilding trust in governments; reinventing a polity that fosters peaceful co-existence nationwide and stabilising our economy that enables collective prosperity.

    Read Also: Ramadan: IGP orders tight security, urges Muslims to embrace forgiveness, peace

    We are now forging ahead to another phase in our quest for a federation that serves the interests of all. That justifies a 45-man Constitution Review Committee that the Senate inaugurated on February 14, to review the grundnorm that governs our federation and work out a more efficient structure that can exponentially speed up our economic growth and redress all divisive tendencies that undermine our federation.

     Critics have however opposed our interventions on diverse grounds. Some believe the review committee is a ritual in every National Assembly. Many also question the capacity of the National Assembly to produce a new constitution that bears no vestige of militarism. Others even claim that it is a sheer waste of hard-earned public funds for the National Assembly to undertake another review of our grundnorm.

    We note the concerns of our critics, mainly the opposition, with a sense of duty. And this duty is founded on a conviction that the task of nation-building is not just collective, but should also be constructive in the way we engage. This conviction remains the key driver of the review of the 1999 Constitution and not the assumption of the critics. It is not another ritual or a waste of public funds. Rather, it was born out of the need of crafting a new socio-economic and political order that promotes efficiency and spurs accountability.

    This conviction is consistent with the power of the National Assembly under Section 4(1-2) of the Constitution. Under this section, the National Assembly is not just the parliament of the federal government authorised to enact laws for the purpose of federal governance. It is also the sovereign parliament of the Federal Republic of Nigeria vested with the power “to make laws for the peace, order and good government of the Federation or any part thereof…”

    By implication, the resolve of the National Assembly to review the 1999 Constitution contravenes public assumptions. However, it is driven by the armed attacks on villages on the Plateau; the violent killing of traditional rulers in Ekiti and Kwara; the unlawful occupation of farm settlements in the Benue Basin, the abduction of pupils in different parts of the federation, the shadow enterprise of kidnapping nationwide and the waning capacity of the Nigeria Police to guarantee a functional public order.

    This drive is also spurred by our quest for a new framework for effective economic governance that will reflect the character and strength of our federation. And our intention revolves around recalibrating our federal governance structure and making all its federating units constitutionally responsible, economically viable, fiscally independent and globally competitive. This is our dream and not all those assumptions flying around in the public space.

    As our records have shown, the federation we are currently running is not what our founding fathers envisioned and operated before the coming of khaki men. No, it is not a federation we all bargain and crave for; neither is it the Nigeria our founding fathers handed over to the generations before us. It is not definitely the Nigeria of our dream.

    In this generation, our dream is not what we witness daily. Rather, it is a nation where peace perpetually reigns, a nation where our economy grows unfettered, a nation where social cohesion is an order and a nation where politics is a tool for socio-economic transformation. And as an institution, we shall not allow criminals to derail our lofty dream.

    The time is now to stamp out banditry, criminality and terrorism from our space. The time is now to spur investors and accelerate growth that will catapult into a glorious future we all desire. The time is now to raise an army of patriots who treasure our peace; who leverage our diversity for national growth and who handsomely prize our collective interests far above their parochial and pecuniary rewards.

    All of these occupy a prime place in our quest for review of the 1999 Constitution. And we shall be open to different ideas on how to restore order and promote human dignity. We shall also debate the possibility of reinventing our federal governance structure for the purpose of introducing a functional order that guarantees accountability and probity, efficiency and optimality, progress and sustainability.

    • Senator Bamidele, CON, Leader of the 10th Senate, writes from Abuja.
  • A welcome order

    A welcome order

    • Lockdown: Humanitarian affairs ministry must make public what it spent on school feeding 

    Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Dr. Beta Edu, has since her inauguration been  quite visible in the media explaining how her ministry intends to lift 133 million people out of multi-dimensional poverty. However, on various occasions she had been faced with a barrage of questions. Many want to find out the magic wand she intends to wave seeing that ‘lifting’ people out of poverty needs more than good intentions. The strategies must be as realistic as it needs deeply thought-out policies and execution strategies. 

    There must also be trust on the part of the beneficiaries of the humanitarian efforts. That this seemed not to be the case led to a situation where some non-governmental groups took the ministry to court for not attending to their requests made under the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act.

    No doubt the road to poverty is a long one just as the road to recovery is not a hundred metre dash. 

    Perhaps no administration in the country had driven more people into poverty more than the last administration of Muhammadu Buhari. This was in spite of the novel creation of the humanitarian and poverty alleviation ministry that had Dr. Sadiya Umar Farouq as the minister.

    However, despite more than N3.5 trillion spent by the former administration, most of the social intervention schemes failed to make any noticeable impact; more people in fact fell into the poverty bracket and Nigeria earned the unenviable tag of the poverty capital of the world. 

    The National Social Intervention Programmes (NSIP)include the School Feeding programme, Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP), N-Power, National Social Intervention  Programme (NSIP), National Social Safety Net Programme (NASSCO), and the National Cash Transfer Programme (N-CTP) otherwise called ‘Trader Moni’.

    From all indications, analysts believe these programmes were high on names but lacking in efficiency and valid outcomes. There were allegations of high-level corruption and inefficiency on the part of the drivers of those programmes. The COVID-19 impact and the badly handled school-feeding and palliative-sharing scandals across the country worried industry watchers who felt that that was a human error of incompetence and corruption. Unfortunately not much was done by the then government to either prosecute suspects or remedy the situation, hence the NGOs raised the alarm and even dragged the ministry to court. Justice Nkeonye Maha of the Abuja Federal High Court subsequently gave the order that Dr. Edu  should release details of N535.8million of the schoolchildren feeding fund during the COVID-19 lockdown. This couldn’t have come at a better time. Justice Maha held that the minister’s failure to respond to the groups’ letter dated August 6, 2020, or even give reasons for its refusal to respond to the request as prescribed under the FOI Act contravened the provisions of Section 4(a) and (b) of the act.

    Read Also: UHC Day: Tinubu unveils plan for massive investments in health sector

    This judicial intervention is a welcome development, especially given the furore the issue had generated across the country. People had averred that the programme was dead on arrival as it seemed poorly thought-out and in real terms would always be a logistical nightmare even for a Federal Government. A better planned process would have seen the local governments in a better position to coordinate such programmes in a country as populous as Nigeria. In a country with very opaque bureaucratic system, it seems to have been a disaster foretold.

    We commend the judicial order, as accountability by government and its agencies is the soul of governance in viable economies. We just hope too that the order would be obeyed by the present government so as to reassure the people that they would not go the same route as their predecessors. The rule of law in all instances must be paramount. This should also serve as a lesson to the government to re-evaluate the programme, which is not a novelty as most developed countries have the school feeding programme that is seen as a way of nurturing the children, especially in underserved communities.

    The school feeding programme in a Nigeria with high poverty index is a necessity as most parents can no longer afford to feed their children properly and in some cases the feeding in school serves as an incentive to send the kids to school. This is especially valuable in a country with the highest out-of-school children at more than 20 million. 

    Accountability in government is a sine qua non to confidence-building in a country with high level trust deficit in all tiers of government by the citizens. We commend the NGOs for pushing this through the courts instead of employing non-legal means that might do more damage. The trillion naira investment in the whole programme must be properly probed too.

  • Executive order legal, constitutional, Presidency insists

    The Presidency on Sunday replied the critics of the execution order six insisting  that it is legal and constitutional.
    President Buhari on Saturday ordered for full implementation of the new order, with 50 persons already on the watch list.
    A statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, on Sunday also maintained that the new measure will speed up corruption cases in the country.
    He said “In the history of independent Nigeria, this is the first time any government is taking such a key decision to fight corruption. EO 6 is not only revolutionary to the efforts to rid Nigeria of corruption but a manifestation of systemic changes that are required to to make necessary adjustments as we carry on with the war against corruption.
    “The very essence of the order is to make for speedy trials and conclusion of graft cases. The order is not political and there is no political gain behind its activation.”
    He pointed out that the high profile corruption cases have been going on for up to 10 years with no end in sight.
    He said “These case were mostly originated by administrations other than this one. What is clear is that the access to these resources by the suspects has enabled them to be in a composition to sometime compromise investigation, prosecution and trial.
    “In most of the cases, the courts are held in a helpless position by legal acrobatics paid for from corrupt enrichment by the suspects,” Shehu stated
    He went on “The new measures put in place should compel everyone involved to make for a speedy conclusion of these cases. If it is your money, you have it back. If it belongs to the public, it goes back to the treasury.
    “The question of the constitutionality of the restriction order is answered by the fact that a court of the land has given government a clean chit. The Executive Order is legal and constitutional and therefore implementable.
    “One of the cardinal objectives of the government under our constitution is to fight corruption. Fighting corruption is a responsibility and obligation upon the government.”
    Denying issuing the list of 50 persons on the watch list in circulation, he said “On the so-called list you asked for confirmation, I want to confirm to you that we have not issued any list and we are not doing so.
    “These cases that are well known and to say this or that name is on it will open the door to further accusations, including trial by media. The Immigration Service and other security agencies have the mandate of the President to carry out enforcement and they will do so giving due respects to individual rights, in line with the the constitution.”
  • Presidential order : 50 high profile persons placed on watch-list

    Fifty high profile persons have been placed on watch-list and restricted from leaving the country pending the determination of any corruption related cases against them.

    The directive followed a directive by President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday who  ordered full implementation of executive order six.

    A statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, said that the new directive followed the judicial affirmation of the constitutionality and legality of the Executive Order 6.

     

    The statement reads “Following the instant judicial affirmation of the constitutionality and legality of the Executive Order 6 (EO6), President Muhammadu Buhari has mandated the Attorney-General of the Federation and the Minister of Justice to implement the Order in full force.

    “To this end, a number of enforcement procedures are currently in place by which the Nigeria Immigration Service and other security agencies have placed no fewer than 50 high profile persons directly affected by EO6 on watch-list and restricted them from leaving the county pending the determination of their cases.

    “Also, the financial transactions of these persons of interest are being monitored by the relevant agencies to ensure that the assets are not dissipated and such persons do not interfere with, nor howsoever corrupt the investigation and litigation processes.

    “It is instructive to note that EO6 was specifically directed to relevant law enforcement agencies to ensure that all assets within a minimum value of N50 million or equivalent, subject to investigation or litigation are protected from dissipation by employing all available lawful means, pending the final determination of any corruption-related matter.” it added

    He said that the Buhari administration reassures all well-meaning and patriotic Nigerians of its commitment to the fight against corruption, in accordance with the 1999 Constitution (as amended) and the general principles of the Rule of Law.

    “Accordingly, this administration will uphold the rule of law in all its actions and the right of citizens would be protected as guaranteed by the Constitution.” he said

    The presidency also enjoined all Nigerians to cooperate with the law enforcement authorities towards ensuring a successful implementation of the Executive Order 6 which is a paradigm-changing policy of the Federal Government in the fight against corruption.

     

  • ‘An order from above’

    ‘An order from above’

    Accounts of how two leaders of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), University of Lagos (UNILAG) Chapter, were arrested in the early hours of February 15 are a cause for concern.  The two men are Joseph Adefolalu and Adekola Adetomiwa.

    Chairman of the Non- Academic Staff Union of Universities (NASU), UNILAG, Kehinde Ajibade, said: “Adefolalu was arrested at 12am in his residence at Ikorodu and Adetomiwa 1am at his residence in Onike. Adefolalu is not a thief. Why would he be arrested at that ungodly hour? What warranted his arrest? So we went to the police command for them to tell us what they have done but they could not tell us any offence they committed. They only said it was an order from above.”

    In Adefolalu’s case, a report said: “According to a family source, the security operatives, numbering over 12 who came in three vehicles with special plate numbers invaded his residence around midnight and held the members of his family hostage, until he was forced to open the door.”

    The report continued: “They came around midnight and surrounded the entire house. Initially, he did not want to open the door to them. We were all inside and some of the landlords in the environment came out. The security men who came with guns and clutching their walkie-talkies identified themselves to the landlords that they were from the State Criminal Investigation Department, Ikeja Division and acting on ‘orders from above,’ the family source said. Eventually when the threat became unbearable, and for the security of the members of his family, he surrendered to them.”

    It is positive news that UNILAG Vice-Chancellor Prof Oluwatoyin Ogundipe later secured the release of the arrested men. The VC and the leadership of the non-academic staff unions were said to have visited the office of the Department of State Security (DSS), Shangisha, to bail the   caged union leaders who had been transferred to the office from the Ikeja Division of the State Criminal Investigation Department.

    The authorities at the Ikeja Division of the State Criminal Investigation Department have a lot of explaining to do. Who gave the so-called order from above which led to the arrest of the union leaders? Why was the order given in the first place?  Why was the order carried out in that manner?

    It is noteworthy that the ongoing national strike declared by the Joint Action Committee of the non-academic staff in the universities nationwide has generated tension. But the friction should not be allowed to degenerate.

  • Station owners to be prosecuted for violating DPR order

    Proprietors of eight filling stations in Akwa Ibom State are to be prosecuted for violating the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) seal off order, the Controller (Operations), Mr. Tamunoiminabo Kingsley-Sundaye, has said.

    He spoke yesterday in Uyo when the surveillance team of DPR carried out operations.

    Kingsley-Sundaye listed the stations as ABC filling station, Oil Link Lubrication Ltd, UdyChris filling station, Tonimas filling station, Sannil filling station, First Indices filling station, Nickgloson filling station and Spicy filling station.

    He said they were located on Ikot Ekpene road, Uyo, Abak road, Uyo and Aka Itiam in Uyo Local Government.

    “We are writing to the police and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) to arrest owners of these stations and prosecute them,” Kingsley-Sundaye said.

    He said when the team visited the stations that had been sealed off to find out the level of compliance, eight of them were caught selling fuel with DPR seal.

    “We had sealed off the eight stations for selling above approved government pump price of N145 per litre,” Kingsley-Sundaye said.

    He said the marketers disrespected the Federal Government price regime, adding that they would be prosecuted.

    Kingsley-Sundaye said the stations would be suspended from loading at the depot.

    “We are writing to the depot to stop these stations from lifting petroleum products,” he added.

    The      DPR controller of operation said their suspension would act as a deterrent to others.

    He warned independent marketers to desist from selling fuel to black marketers carrying jerry-cans.

    Kingsley-Sundaye said the department seized 50 litres of petrol and 100 jerry-cans of the product from black marketers, who sold fuel opposite NNPC filling station in Uyo.

  • ‘Tariff review at free zone in order’

    Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) Simbi Wabote has backed the reduction of tariffs and cut in cost of doing business in the oil and gas free zones.

    Speaking during a visit to the Managing Director of the Oil and Gas Free Zone Area  (OGFZA) Mr Umana Okon Umana, in Yenegoa, Wabote commended the initiative by OGFZA.

    The executive secretary said he was aware, based on his knowledge of the industry, that high cost of doing business caused by excessive service charges had always been an issue in the industry.

    Wabote said: “In the past, many enterprises in the industry complained about the cost of doing business because of excessive charges.

    “We are with you in this bid to bring down cost. We discussed this in the past and felt that the cost should come down to manageable levels.”

    He explained that given the long history of the problem, the tariff moderation policy initiated by OGFZA is of such historic significance that it should be supported by stakeholders who want to see a globally competitive oil and gas industry in Nigeria.

    Wabote said he was happy that the Federal Government was providing solution to the cash call problem in the industry as global oil prices were picking up. He pledged to work with OGFZA to contribute to the resolution of challenges facing the industry.

    Umana briefed Wabote on the resolve of the Authority to reduce tariffs applicable in the Onne Oil and Gas Free Zone and also to ensure that the tariff structure is approved in line with the provisions of the extant law and regulations.

    Umana also briefed the executive secretary on other aspects of the ongoing reform in the Authority, such as the automation of its operations processes to achieve operational efficiency through the deployment of Oracle Cloud application and the effort to provide cheaper power in the Onne Oil and Gas Free Zone.

    He explained that OGFZA’s operation is driven by a roadmap drawn up in-house in January t that is committed to the execution of its mandate in a manner that ensures a level playing field for all free zone enterprises; guarantees that incentives provided for free zone businesses by law are protected, and makes sure that no action by any free zone licensee is allowed to undermine the plan of government to use the free zones as agency for inclusive and sustainable economic development.

    He told the executive secretary that OGFZA was discussing with Intels Nigeria Limited with a view to resolving the issues in contention.

  • PENGASSAN kicks over no-work, no-pay order

    PENGASSAN kicks over no-work, no-pay order

    The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) has decried plans by the federal government to enforce the no-work, no-pay clause.

    Speaking in an interview, Francis Olabode Johnson, the National President of PENGASSAN said no union worth its salt would instigate workers to go on strike without following the laid down procedures.

    “No union will just wake up and say we are shutting down. If a union is giving you 21 days, I believe that to avoid a situation of no work, no pay, you should nip it in the bud. You don’t wait till the expiration of those 21 days. Even after those 21 days, we still give 14 days’ notice to see whether there is seriousness in addressing the issues. In most cases, they ignore it, only to start running from one place to the other later and now wants to invoke the law of no work, no pay,” he said.

    The PENGASSAN boss, who said the union won’t support the no work, no pay policy, maintained that the federal government needs to be advised against taking any such rash decision.

    Waxing philosophical, Olabode said: “If you have a child who is sick, are you going to wait till that child has a relapse of have issues that will cost you more harm? As a parent, you try to nip that in the bud by giving him medical attention. When unions are pushed to the wall, they fight back and that is why we go on strike.”

    While reiterating that the union will not support the issue of no work, no pay under any circumstances, the labour leader said, “No union worth its salt will just wake up and shut down without following the lay down procedures. That is not possible. Except that union has given you 21 days, follow it up with another 14 days and yet another 7 days. In 2014, we gave government 21 days, followed by another 14 days and another 7 days. After the expiration of that, we still waited for about four days before we went on strike. Those are the issues.”

    While commenting on the vexatious agitation for minimum wage, the labour leader said it is disheartening to note that most elected public officials are living in luxury but would readily deny workers their dues.

    Short of blaming the lawmakers for their insensitivity, a visibly angry Olabode was unsparing of in his criticism: “Senators buy cars and accessories running into several millions but workers go home with pittance.”

    Raising some posers, he queried: “How much is the minimum wage? That is why the unity of labour is also important because I have seen different figures being paraded by labour leaders. If we don’t unite, we may lose this opportunity to make sure that Nigerians get a well deserved living wage because N18,000 is nothing. You find out that some states are not even paying that N18,000 despite the Paris Club refund. That is why I said the NLC, TUC and all of us team up. In a situation where states owe salaries running into months is ungodly.”

  • Senator asks Appeal Court to quash house forfeiture order

    Chairman of the Senate Committee on Niger Delta Affairs Senator Peter Nwaoboshi has asked the Court of Appeal, Lagos Division to set aside an interim order forfeiting Guinea House, Lagos, to the Federal Government.

    The Federal High Court in Lagos made the order on April 24, following an application by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), through its counsel, George Chia-Yakua.

    Nwaoboshi, who represents Delta North, and two of his firms, Golden Touch Construction Project Limited and Bilderberg Enterprises Limited, are the defendants.

    The court ordered that Guinea House, a 12-storey building at 29, Marine Road, Apapa, bought in 2010 for N805 million, be forfeited pending the EFCC’s conclusion of an investigation of a petition against the trio.

    Last Wednesday, the defendants through their counsel, Chief Anthony Idigbe (SAN), unsuccessfully applied to Justice Abdulaziz Anka at the same court to lift the interim order, which “perpetually put the property under investigation”.

    Justice Anka ruled that, notwithstanding a pending suit challenging EFCC’s alleged “unconstitutional” pasting of an “under investigation” notice on the building, the ex-parte order was necessary to preserve the property until the substantive matter was disposed of.

    “In the current action, the EFCC has put their intention to manifestation and I, therefore, see no abuse of the process,” Justice Anka held.

    But in their notice of appeal, Nwaoboshi and his firms raised four grounds, including that the judge erred in law when he dismissed their application.

    According to them, the court ought to have discharged the forfeiture order, because the EFCC did not place any cogent material before Justice Anka to indicate that any of the appellants would be prosecuted.

    No date has been fixed for hearing.

  • Flood disaster: NEMA complies with Buhari’s order, moves to Benue

    Flood disaster: NEMA complies with Buhari’s order, moves to Benue

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has deployed a team to provide humanitarian services to victims of floods in Benue State, the Director-General of the agency, Mustapha Maihaja, announced yesterday.

    The reaction is in compliance with the directive of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Maihaja, in a statement through NEMA’s Head of Media and Public Relations, Sani Datti, said that the humanitarian team had been reinforced with another contingent headed by Air Commodore Paul Ohemu, Director, Search and Rescue.

    He said that this was in addition to the officers of the North-Central Zonal Office of NEMA in Jos.

    NEMA boss said they were to deliver immediate humanitarian assistance to the affected persons in the various locations and to assess the situation for further support.

    He said that seven 30-tonne trucks had been despatched to the state.

    Maihaja sympathised with the affected people and assured that NEMA would work closely with the state government in providing them with the necessary assistance.

    On  Thursday President Buhari directed NEMA to deploy personnel and resources to provide succour to victims of flooding in Benue.

    The flood displaced over 100,000 people in 12 local government areas of the state.