Tag: Orji

  • Orji farming a push

    Orji farming a push

    Former Abia State Governor Theodore Orji has provided farming inputs for growers in his constituency.

    Orji, who now represents Abia Central District at the Senate, gave out fertiliser-spraying tools to farmers as he concluded the first phase of his constituency outreach.

    Speaking at the ceremony in Umuahia, he said he was simply demonstrating why his people sent him to the Senate, adding that he hoped beneficiaries would make judicious use of the equipment.

    He said, “This item is fertiliser-spraying equipment which is used to spray the farm with liquid fertiliser instead of the normal hand application of fertiliser.”

    The senator told the farmers to try the implement out on their farms to see if they work well, in which case, they should request for more.

    Orji said, “Those who will get any of the several empowerment items should use them judiciously, while those who may not get should wait for another outreach.

    “This programme is a continuous exercise, as there will be more empowerment programmes from me,” Senator Orji said.

    He noted that he is at the senate for their own good and that whenever anything comes out from the National Assembly which is meant for them, he will be there to get their own for them without any delay.

    The senator explained the essence of the programme, for which he set up a committee.

    He said, “I charged [the committee members] to go to the rural areas to get those who are really in need of the items and will make use of them and not those who will get them and turn around the next day to  sell them.”

    Earlier in his speech the chairman of the ceremony, Chief Uzodinma Okpara said that they are not surprised that their senator is empowering the people of his constituency, as he had done the same while he was the governor of the state.

    Okpara, the son of the late Premier of the defunct Eastern Nigeria recalled that while Orji was the governor he brought security, peace and political stability to the state, “which were the several reasons we decided to send him to the Senate”.

    He charged those who will benefit from the empowerment programme to make good use of the items to enable them to be self dependent and also help them to ensure that their families are well fed.

    In their various speeches Chief Allen Nwachukwu who spoke for Isiala Ngwa North and South and Osisioma council areas said that within the few months Orji has been at the senate, “He is doing this, then when he stays four years and more there will be a tremendous change in our  areas”.

    Col Austin Akobundu (Retd) who spoke for Umuahia North and South and Ikwuano council areas described Orji as a senator very dear to their hearts and assured his people that more good things are still on the way with Orji as their senator.

    Governor Okezie Ikpeazu described Orji as the pillar of democracy and equity in the state, stressing that his political ingenuity led to his emergence as the governor of the state.

    Ikpeazu who was represented by Chief Henry Ikoh, Commissioner for Commerce and Industry, said Orji’s empowerment programme is not a surprise to him.

    “It is part of dividends of democracy and I urge the beneficiaries to make good use of the items,” he said.

    Responding on behalf of the beneficiaries, Samuel Enyeribe thanked the senator for the gesture of which the physically challenged also benefitted.

    Some of the items given out to the people included two buses, 15  wheelchairs, 15 motorcycles, 21  sewing machines, 100 fertiliser spraying machines, eight tricycles, 21 grinding machines and 20 power generating sets.

  • Orji: I don’t interfere in Ikpeazu’s govt

    Orji: I don’t interfere in Ikpeazu’s govt

    A former Abia State governor and the senator representing Abia Central in the National Assembly, Theodore Orji, has said he never interfered in the administration of his successor, Dr Okezie Ikpeazu, since he handed power to him.

    But the senator said Ikpeazu sometimes sought his opinions on issues that seemed difficult.

    The former governor said he used his experience to advise and guide his successor, whenever necessary.

    Orji spoke at the weekend with our reporter in Umuahia, the state capital.

    The senator recalled that when he was leaving office, he swore that his successor would not go through the experience he went through in the hands of his predecessor.

    Orji said he hasd no need to interfere in the affairs of the state because he was no longer the governor.

    According to him, trying to influence Ikpeazu would mean that there were two governors in the state.

  • Between Orji and Apugo

    Between Orji and Apugo

    The current face-off between Senator Theodore Orji of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Benjamin Apugo of the All Progressives Congress (APC) is part of a long drawn struggle between the two ‘brothers’ for the political soul of Abia Central Senatorial District, reports Associate Editor, Sam Egburonu

    Concerned observers of the current war of words between former governor of Abia State, Senator Theodore Ahamefule Orji, and Chief Benjamin Apugo have described their face-off as a concrete dramatization of the hidden but prolonged battle for the control of the political heartbeat of Abia Central Senatorial District.

    The Nation investigation shows that the relationship between the two political heavyweights, who are close knit neighbours, had gone sour long ago, even when they served in the same party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), before the formation of the All Progressives Congress (APC), where Apugo now serves as a member of the Board of Trustees (BoT). While Apugo is from Nkata Ibeku, Orji is from Amaokwe Ugba, all from Abia Central senatorial District. But the closeness of their villages, instead of serving as a uniting force between the two and their supporters have rather, according to sources close to them, further helped to alienate them politically, a development some observers said may be rooted in an alleged personality clash as the supporters of each of the two politicians insist that their boss is the real political leader of the senatorial district.

    The alleged rivalry and war of words were renewed recently when Apugo, in a media chat, advised the new governor of Abia State, Dr Okezie Ikpeazu not to be deceived by the former governor, Orji. “Governor Okezie Ikpeazu should not rely on the former governor, Chief T.A. Orji, thinking that he (Orji) has any reserve, no; T.A has nothing. He is a finished human being. Ikpeazu should not believe that it was T.A Orji that made him governor. No, he (T.A) did not win in his polling booth during the election. He scored only three votes. So, there is no basis of saying that it was the former governor that made him governor. Ikpeazu should forget about T.A Orji and move forward to develop Abia State. He should not allow T.A. Orji to deceive him. Abia people will applaud him if he helps to develop the state. Borrowing from President Muhammadu Buhari, Ikpeazu should be for everybody and for nobody.

    “I am from Umuahia; if he does not want to develop my place, he should endeavour to use whatever money he collects from Abuja to develop his place. Anywhere there is development, provided it is in Abia, I will be happy.”

    He added, “I cannot call Okezie Ikpeazu a product of T.A Orji. Why should I call him a product of T. A. Orji? Is his name T.A Orji? His name is Okezie Ikpeazu. You should know it was Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu that made T.A. Orji governor and I contributed too, but T.A. Orji did not know those that made him because if he knew and was nearer to me when he was governor, he would not have looted the state the way he did. Nobody should be proud of being a product of T.A. Orji. So, Ikpeazu should look for a way of making his own name.”

    As would be expected, this verbal attack attracted equally vitriolic reaction from Senator Orji, who described the remarks against him by Apugo as “a ranting of an illiterate with clandestine motive to get Governor Okezie Ikpeazu’s attention.”

    The former governor made his reaction through a press release signed by his Media Adviser, Mr. Don Norman Obinna, and made available to newsmen, in Lagos.

    In the statement, Orji alleged that “Apugo was a political subversive, whose selfish interest had alienated him from almost all Abia State elder statesmen, reputable politicians and family members.” He added that “despite the financial support given to him by the All Progressive Congress (APC), as the leader of the party in Abia State, Apugo worked against the APC gubernatorial candidate, Anyim Nyerere, in the 2015 elections.

    “Since the creation of Abia State, tell me one politician that is in good terms with Apugo? There is none. Is there any development project or achievement, which the people have benefitted from Apugo? There is none. Instead, he takes from them. He is scared of my status and achievements, which have changed the status quo in Abia State and especially Abia Central where he made himself a thin god,” Orji said

    “Apart from empowering almost all our youths, I practically became a father to his children whom he deserted and sent out of his house. I ensured that his first son was employed as ASEPA General Manager, as well as provided platform through which his children have excelled politically,” the former governor added.

    Describing Apugo as “an unmarketable politician who had never won any election,” Orji said, “I am focused on ensuring that the people who voted for me massively in the six local government areas that made up my senatorial district get qualitative representation at the Red Chambers.

    “I have not interfered and will not interfere in Ikpeazu’s government because I believe so much in his ability to move Abia State forward. People like Apugo have no advice for the governor who has proven within the shortest possible time in office that he has the capacity to govern despite the gang up against him.

    “If Apugo is seeking to revive his fading political relevance, he should look somewhere else. I will also advise him to always engage in actions that will engender peace and political stability rather than hatred,” Orji added.

    Root causes of the face-off

    Even when they were in PDP together and Apugo was a member of the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the then ruling party, and Orji was still the governor of Abia State, the two never saw eye to eye and they never spared one another in public. So, what is the real cause of the face-off between these two ‘brothers’ since it seems it has little or nothing to do with their belonging to different political parties?

    In one of the interviews he granted the press while Orji was still the Abia State governor, Apugo gave insight into these questions when he said: “My opinion about the governor is that he has not done anything and is not doing anything and will never do anything to better the lot of Abians. What Abia needs is development. Have you seen it anywhere? He is my kinsman. When I was saying it initially, people did not believe me. Now they have seen the truth. Since we formed this party in 1999, I have not gotten a dime as contract and I am not interested.”

    Also explaining his disappointment with PDP and why he later moved over to APC, Apugo said: “The emergence of APC as a party is one of the greatest things that have happened to this country. For people to come together to agree to be one, I am very happy about it. And when you look at their make-up, they are all leaders. I don’t want to start mentioning names but I can assure you that Tinubu is a leader; his people accept him. Buhari is a leader; his people accept him, so are all the rest.

    “They are all leaders. Leaders are born and never made. From the look of things and with what is going on now, PDP has to work hard if it is going to survive. I am not talking about winning now; I am talking about surviving because the question of trying to relegate this person or that person is weakening the party. Somebody brought his money, worked tirelessly to form a party and because one is a governor, he is now accepted to become the leader of that party in the state.

    “The governor that I brought into PDP, inside Umuahia Stadium, in Abia State, is now the leader of the party in the state. How can that party survive? Not to talk of a party that takes people that come from other parties and make them the head of the party.

    “Those who founded the party are no longer there because we don’t want them. For being realists, saying the truth and being honest, how can such a party survive? I was the person that hoisted the PDP flag in Yenogoa. Not only mounting the PDP flag, I also donated money with which ex-governor Alameighsaigha used to take off. They came here, Oboro, Bozimo, Dr Dogu, etc.; they all came to my house in Umuahia here. I hoisted that flag and promised money.

    “The following morning they came and collected that money, which I promised the party. Up till today, none of them has even called me on telephone, not to talk of thanking me. Then you come to the aspect of developing the party, I brought money, the receipts are here; it was the money people like us brought that was used to register the party and yet we are nothing, unless we go and hawk at the Villa or blackmail people. We cannot do that; we cannot blackmail anybody because of temporary power.”

    Senator Orji also alluded to what he considers the root cause of their current face-off when he accused Apugo of being envious of his emergence as the leading political figure in Abia Central Senatorial District, where, according to him, Apugo had before “made himself a thin god.”

    So as the two political leaders exchange harsh words, observers say it is all about the political soul of Abia Central Senatorial District. “Who, between Senator Orji and Chief B. B. Apugo is the real political leader of the zone today? That is the issue behind the unending name calling between these two leaders,” said Madam Eunice Eze, an elder from Olokoro. While Apugo is obviously one of the earliest political leaders of the zone and Abia State, Orji, the immediate past governor of the state, currently represents the zone at the senate.

  • Orji unfolds plans for constituents

    Orji unfolds plans for constituents

    Senator Theodore Orji representing Abia Central in the Senate has concluded plans to lift the profile of youths, the less privileged and students in his constituency, his media adviser Don Norman Obinna has said.

    Obinna told airport correspondents at the Murtala Muhammed Airport (MMA 2) Ikeja the former governor Senator was also planning to ensure federal presence in Abia State through road network construction.

    Obinna explained that Senator Orji has about seven programmes to be unveiled for the youths especially in scholarships while, the down trodden in the society will equally be touched.

    According to him, in order to give back to the society, Senator Orji has mapped out plans to ensure that electorates were not disappointed. “From now till December this year these programs will be manifested and we cannot afford to disappoint the people”.

    Obinna described Senator Orji as an institution in Abia State and urged all Abians to embrace Governor Ikpeazu of Abia State now that the Supreme Court has affirmed his election in order to build Abia State.

    While commending Governor Ikpeazu for commencing on road construction to Aba, Obinna said the governor has started well and advised him to re-engineer the civil service for a better performance.

    According to him, there was no problem in Abia state but manipulated by a section of the media to create confusion in the state.

    Describing the Supreme Court judgment as well deserved, the media Adviser to Senator Orji stressed that before the judgement that APGA candidate had already manipulated the people making Abians believe that he has won the election.

    He said what was paraded as APGA in Abia state was never APGA adding that APGA had done it’s primaries before Alex Oti came in as a candidate. “It was some section of the PDP who felt they can easily cash in the situation at hand and become governor. But with this Supreme Court judgment APGA has died a natural death”

    Obinna urged them to apologize to the PDP in Abia State and come back to the fold as one family to work together. “They never left PDP, they were opportunist, they tried to see if they can actually realize whatever ambition they have through another party”

    He expressed hope that the state will be transformed with the pace of development set by Governor Ikpeazu and urged Asians to lend supporting hands.

     

  • Court verdict: PDP will laugh last, says Orji

    Court verdict: PDP will laugh last, says Orji

    The immediate past governor of Abia State, Chief Theodore Orji has predicted that the verdict of the Court of Appeal which sacked Dr Okezie Ikpeazu as the duly elected governor of the state and replaced with Dr Alex Otti of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) will be upturned at the Supreme Court.

    Chief Orji, who is the Senator representing Abia Central senatorial district at the Senate, said the verdict of the Court of Appeal was not a good one for the state and its people.

    “But there is the Supreme Court which is the last point of the judicial exercise in this matter,” he said.

    Speaking with reporters in Umuahia, the state capital, Orji said he has a lot of respect for the judiciary which is the last hope of any politicians’ political career, as it has always come to his rescue since he ventured into politics.

    Orji said: “Since I joined politics, the judiciary has always been there for me. From 2007 to 2011 as governor and even now as Senator, as it has always authenticated my mandate after any election my opponents proceed to the courts to challenge my victory.

    “I don’t see any difference in this case of Ikpeazu versus Otti governorship case, as some people want to be governor at all costs and desperately too simply because they have some money. But money is not everything in politics.”

    He said he is happy that the governorship matter does not end at the Court of Appeal but at the Supreme Court.

    “It is a place where there are men of integrity who take their time on such matter. I am sure that Ikpeazu will be returned as the duly elected governor of Abia State,” he said.

    The Senator said the judiciary is supposed to enhance democracy for the good of the country and its people.

    “However, this time around, the judiciary at the Court of Appeal has decided to turn democracy upside down,” he said.

    Orji said that the Court of Appeal judgment means that Ikpeazu cannot vote for himself and that his father, mother and siblings cannot vote for him.

    “It also means that he is not eligible to be voted for in the election based on the court’s verdict,” he stated.

    He posited that the continuous cancellation of election results and in some cases election results are declared inconclusive if not properly handled may end up blowing up the country.

    The former governor took a swipe at the founding fathers of the state, saying “it is a shame that those who claim to be founding fathers of the state are the ones destroying it. Instead of preaching peace, they are busy preaching discord.

    “These people do not have any electoral value during any election in the state. During the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship primaries, Ikpeazu defeated his opponents clearly and the governorship seat deserves to go to the southern part of the state; having been to the north and central parts of the state for sixteen years,” he said.

     

  • Court verdict: PDP will laugh last, says Orji

    Court verdict: PDP will laugh last, says Orji

    The immediate past governor of Abia State, Chief Theodore Orji has predicted that the verdict of the Court of Appeal which sacked Dr Okezie Ikpeazu as the duly elected governor of the state and replaced with Dr Alex Otti of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) will be upturned at the Supreme Court.

    Chief Orji, who is the Senator representing Abia Central senatorial district at the Senate, said the verdict of the Court of Appeal was not a good one for the state and its people.

    “But there is the Supreme Court which is the last point of the judicial exercise in this matter,” he said.

    Speaking with reporters in Umuahia, the state capital, Orji said he has a lot of respect for the judiciary which is the last hope of any politicians’ political career, as it has always come to his rescue since he ventured into politics.

    Orji said: “Since I joined politics, the judiciary has always been there for me. From 2007 to 2011 as governor and even now as Senator, as it has always authenticated my mandate after any election my opponents proceed to the courts to challenge my victory.

    “I don’t see any difference in this case of Ikpeazu versus Otti governorship case, as some people want to be governor at all costs and desperately too simply because they have some money. But money is not everything in politics.”

    He said he is happy that the governorship matter does not end at the Court of Appeal but at the Supreme Court.

    “It is a place where there are men of integrity who take their time on such matter. I am sure that Ikpeazu will be returned as the duly elected governor of Abia State,” he said.

    The Senator said the judiciary is supposed to enhance democracy for the good of the country and its people.

    “However, this time around, the judiciary at the Court of Appeal has decided to turn democracy upside down,” he said.

    Orji said that the Court of Appeal judgment means that Ikpeazu cannot vote for himself and that his father, mother and siblings cannot vote for him.

    “It also means that he is not eligible to be voted for in the election based on the court’s verdict,” he stated.

    He posited that the continuous cancellation of election results and in some cases election results are declared inconclusive if not properly handled may end up blowing up the country.

    The former governor took a swipe at the founding fathers of the state, saying “it is a shame that those who claim to be founding fathers of the state are the ones destroying it. Instead of preaching peace, they are busy preaching discord.

    “These people do not have any electoral value during any election in the state. During the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship primaries, Ikpeazu defeated his opponents clearly and the governorship seat deserves to go to the southern part of the state; having been to the north and central parts of the state for sixteen years,” he said.

     

  • Court verdict: PDP will laugh last, says Orji

    Court verdict: PDP will laugh last, says Orji

    The immediate past governor of Abia State, Chief Theodore Orji has predicted that the verdict of the Court of Appeal which sacked Dr Okezie Ikpeazu as the duly elected governor of the state and replaced with Dr Alex Otti of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) will be upturned at the Supreme Court.

    Chief Orji, who is the Senator representing Abia Central senatorial district at the Senate, said the verdict of the Court of Appeal was not a good one for the state and its people.

    “But there is the Supreme Court which is the last point of the judicial exercise in this matter,” he said.

    Speaking with reporters in Umuahia, the state capital, Orji said he has a lot of respect for the judiciary which is the last hope of any politicians’ political career, as it has always come to his rescue since he ventured into politics.

    Orji said: “Since I joined politics, the judiciary has always been there for me. From 2007 to 2011 as governor and even now as Senator, as it has always authenticated my mandate after any election my opponents proceed to the courts to challenge my victory.

    “I don’t see any difference in this case of Ikpeazu versus Otti governorship case, as some people want to be governor at all costs and desperately too simply because they have some money. But money is not everything in politics.”

    He said he is happy that the governorship matter does not end at the Court of Appeal but at the Supreme Court.

    “It is a place where there are men of integrity who take their time on such matter. I am sure that Ikpeazu will be returned as the duly elected governor of Abia State,” he said.

    The Senator said the judiciary is supposed to enhance democracy for the good of the country and its people.

    “However, this time around, the judiciary at the Court of Appeal has decided to turn democracy upside down,” he said.

    Orji said that the Court of Appeal judgment means that Ikpeazu cannot vote for himself and that his father, mother and siblings cannot vote for him.

    “It also means that he is not eligible to be voted for in the election based on the court’s verdict,” he stated.

    He posited that the continuous cancellation of election results and in some cases election results are declared inconclusive if not properly handled may end up blowing up the country.

    The former governor took a swipe at the founding fathers of the state, saying “it is a shame that those who claim to be founding fathers of the state are the ones destroying it. Instead of preaching peace, they are busy preaching discord.

    “These people do not have any electoral value during any election in the state. During the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship primaries, Ikpeazu defeated his opponents clearly and the governorship seat deserves to go to the southern part of the state; having been to the north and central parts of the state for sixteen years,” he said.

     

  • Putting more money into SWF  is right thing to do, says Orji

    Putting more money into SWF is right thing to do, says Orji

    Barely three years after Uche Orji pioneered the Nigerian Sovereign Investment Agency (NSIA),  his leadership has turned around the fortunes of the agency. The additional $250 million injected into NSIA by its shareholders, he believes, is a vote of confidence in its management. He bares his mind in this chat with Group Business Editor, SIMEON EBULU. 

    You appear upbeat and not weighed down at all. What has happened?

    The development is that we have a very successful engagement with the National Economic Council which resulted in what we believe is a vote of confidence, as evidenced by the additional contribution that has been made to the Sovereign Wealth Fund of $250 million. And what makes this even more remarkable is that we are in a tough economic time. With oil price downwards and this is a very powerful signal that this administration and the National Economic Council are focused on fiscal discipline.

    They have looked at examples of other countries and how this has been implemented successfully, and want to participate in what is a very credible approach to managing the nation’s resources. Other countries  have done this successfully too but it is not every country that has recorded success. But most of them have done it successfully to varying degrees. If you look at Norway for instance, that has been a spectacular success story.

    So across the spectrum, one thing is clear, savings, or investing is a culture that must be encouraged in  good times and bad times. And this is what I take from the governors’ recent commitment.

    Secondly, it is looking into the future and being able to bequeath something into the future of Nigerians. It is disciplining ourselves to be focused at whatever resources we have. But on behalf of the Board NSIA and the management of NSIA, we are pleasantly surprised by this vote of confidence. We will work very hard to make sure we justify the faith that has been reposed on us by the government and the National Economic Council in giving us additional resources.

     

    Looking at it from the first $1billion you got at inception and the time it has taken for this second one, what was actually responsible for this change of attitude?

    The first thing is, the management of NSIA has to show that they are credible and can be trusted. You have to build credibility. And I have to tell you that it is not uncommon that many Sovereign Wealth Funds start and wait before they make more contribution, and you will notice that even in the big examples that you made, even Norway.

    At the beginning, people just can’t be sure. So we went through that phase, we had a meeting with the National Economic Council which is our Governing Council Meeting, during which we presented our status report and our strategy, and I think the governors could see that we are working very hard within a limited set of resources to show some gains, and be able to be in a position to make dividends. I think and I believe it is a commitment showed at managing things with a sense of duty.

     

    Again, given the initial opposition you had with the governors, wasn’t this a surprise?

    Yes it came as a surprise. A pleasant surprise and we are happy. But more importantly, I think we are happy because of the faith, again credibility has been earned and has to be justified every day. So the fact that you have it doesn’t mean we have to relax now, but you have to justify it every day because a reputation takes 20 years to build, but one second to destroy.

    So we want to make sure that having crossed this major hurdle of showing that we are trying very hard to keep the money safe and make returns, we’ll continue to justify it on a day-to- day basis, but I also think that when they now started to see the level of accountability, transparency, governance,  strategy and focus in managing the money, andalso commitment to justify that every day, to them, I think in some ways, that is a turning point.

    But more importantly, there is a philosophical commitment to bettering the future of all Nigerians and I think that philosophical commitment is something that precedes anything we would show them. My sense is that this would have happened, regardless. So for this to happen with us, makes me happy because to some extent, we view it as  us having tried  very hard to earn the  justification from our shareholders

    For the larger society, the surprise would be that at a time that government’s resources are dwindling, there is a willingness to invest.

    Yes.

     How do you react to that?

    It is a very powerful message. It is a powerful message that says, we are committed to this, in good times, or bad times. It is a powerful message that says to Nigerians, that there is a whole new  commitment to better management of resources. It’s a powerful message that says, in the next oil boom, you’ll see a better accountability of the revenues that accrue to this country. And I think in some ways, we are very pleased with that. That is one.

    It’s also a message to our international partners and I think it will win the country a lot of credibility, externally. To be blunt, I was blown away, because it was not the most politically conducive thing to do, but it is the right thing to do, and for that we are grateful to the governors, the National Economic Council and the President.

    It might be early in the day to ask how soon you expect the next payment, but  how do you intend to deploy the $250million?

    We are most likely going to maintain the allocation strategies that we had with the first tranche, and that is, 20 per cent go to the Stabilisation Fund, 40 per cent to Infrastructure Fund  and 40 per cent to Future Generation Fund.  We believe that strategy has worked at the beginning. The amount we are talking about is still very small, relatively, so in itself, it won’t make huge difference. So the safe thing and the rational thing to do, would be to allocate it the same way that we allocated the first one.

    But where you start to see significant likelihood of change, is when the Fund accumulates to a certain  level, and depending on the opportunities we have in the day, we might still want to do a bit more Future’s generation and a bit, Infrastructure. But this $250million is, really not that a significant number to materially change our strategy. It is a significant and powerful statement that we want to make sure is not missed out.

    Questions have been raised on  your fund allocation to the three areas you have opted to invest in. The issue is, why are you not  investing extra money where the yield is more?

    It depends on your view of the yield curve. Do you know what the yield would be in two, three, or more years! First of all, I’m open to suggestions. In the first place, we have a firm called Cambridge Associates working with us on assets allocation. They are an Investment Advisory firm, and their job is, advice firms bigger than ours, including us on how to allocate assets. So we use them as advisers, and the things that go behind an investment decision, go beyond what we see today.

    Somebody could have said to me, Uche, why didn’t you buy oil stocks last year! Oil was booming, booming, then, and today, it’s a whole different story. You could get carried out on a stretcher very easily, if you had put your money in some of these things.

    We are humble enough to admit that we don’t know all the answers, and so we are open to suggestions, and we have also hired a lot of advisers doing their job to advise us on what to do. I want people to be rest assured that the decisions we are making today are to the best of our ability and to the best of information we have available to us. Nobody is always right, we may make mistakes, but one of the commitments we gave to ourselves, is to have more wins than losers.

    I laugh because last year, the biggest criticisms I got was that we didn’t take enough risks, that we should have put more in equities, put more in this, or that. This year, we are making more money, but our peers are not, because the equities market, dipped. I am willing to take suggestions, but we have an army of smart people who are helping us. All we need to do is try and do the right thing, and we are hoping that we can do the right thing and always do the right thing.

    Back home, people are anxious  to know NSIA’s commitment to certain infrastructure projects, amongst which are the Second Niger Bridge and the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. How committed are you to these projects?

    Very committed, however we have not signed a Concession Agreement for the Second Niger Bridge, we are still in the process of actualising that. At the moment, we are Project Managers and Co-developers. We have engaged many financiers, so we are willing to put money into it.

    There is a lot of work being done and we are hoping to get the preliminary works concluded by sometimes mid next year before we get into full construction. You know this is a big project and people sometimes don’t realise that. We are working very hard, and for big projects like that, you don’t wield the magic-wand and the bridge comes up, no, we’ve been talking about the Second Niger bridge since the 1970s, so I will never mislead people to think that it will happen overnight. The plan we have is that by 2020, that bridge will be finished. That is the plan we have today, but like every project, things vary, but we are still sticking to that plan.

    Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, we have committed ourselves that we will invest $100million, subject to the structure making it comfortable for us. Now we cannot talk about that project any more because there is currently a court injunction against the development of that project.

    Second Niger bridge, we are Co-developers, Lagos-Ibadan expressway, we are investors, somebody else is developing it. When that person is through with his work and he says, NSIA, here’s the financing plan, then we’ll come in.

    What is the assurance that you will recover your financial commitment to these projects?

    We have a contract with the government, where, if we don’t get through to financial close, the government will pay us back our money. The contract is structured in such a way that we can always get our money back, and the investment return is structured in such a way that Nigerians will be very happy with.

    The NSIA is an investment company. Before we go into any project (unless it’s a social project and we have a few), but for commercial project, we structure it in such a way that it primarily protects the NSIA, because the NSIA’s money does not belong to the Federal Government, it belongs to the three-tiers, so I have to account to all these people.

    Are you confident that these projects will be seen through?

    There are still so many things that the government needs to do — like the right of way, buying, paying compensation, and such things, so lets wait and see what the budget says.

    How are you able to insulate yourself from the politics that goes with your office?

    My number one responsibility is to keep the NSIA’s money safe, and my second responsibility is to earn a return. I never lose sight of that. Politics is transient, the money is permanent.

    We are making an effort,our best possible efforts to keep the money safe and make a return, but more importantly, we have constituted the benchmark for ourselves with  global peers. So we have presented it to them at the National Economic Council and we will continue to engage with them. I think that all of that will go a long way in making sure that more faith and confidence is imposed on the management of the Sovereign Wealth Fund.

    Given the return so far on our investment,  there is every reason for everyone to believe that it is a profitable engagement. Which other sources are you considering to grow you investment funds?

    Some Sovereign wealth funds grew through cash given to them, some through assets given to them. So you know, the government will transfer certain assets to the Sovereign Wealth Fund. So we are looking at those alternatives. Of course in a Federal system, it could be very tricky because this is a wealth belonging to the federation. So if I go to the Federal Government and I say, give me a building, how do I account for that! There are many things that we would be careful about. Let’s not rush these things. You know we wake up late and then we start rushing.

    Everybody else started this thing long time ago, and many of them took many years, in some cases, decades, before they started making great impact. But we want to do everything at once, let us be realistic in our  expectation. We are working as hard as we possibly can. Don’t forget that if I don’t keep this money safe, it doesn’t matter what I built, so that if I say your money is in that bridge, you have got to show me how and why. So you have to be very careful. But we are going to do what we can.

    We are going to show you a few things in the healthcare ,let us not forget about that because that is important. We are working on forest  programme with Ogun State to reforest land that has been wasted, for the purpose of agriculture for tens  of thousands of people. So we are working on many things.

    But if you look at other Sovereign Wealth Funds, many of them took a long time before they started making great impact. And I must say that I am not trying to lose expectations but I am trying to keep it realistic.

    Are you stymied by government bureaucracy?

    I grew up in Nigeria, my father was a civil servant, a sub-treasurer in Umaiha and my mother was a primary school teacher. And I understood bureaucracy watching my father. But you have to realise it is easy to sit in the private sector and say – that government bureaucracy.

    But when you are in government, you realise that it is a lot of work. I had a new found respect for the ruling government and I understand why in some cases the bureaucracy exists, and I am not saying it shouldn’t be improved, but I understand why it exists. So we are working with them as much as we can with it. Don’t be part of the problem, be part of the solution.  That is the way I look at it. If you don’t like something, go and try to fix it.

    When I go to the Ministry of Health or this MDA, there are so many things I don’t like and I am like, hey, can I just help you this way, this is how you should do it with the Sovereign Wealth Fund. So the bureaucracy is something you will have to work with whether you like it or not.

    There is provision in NSIA to lend support to government. How soon do you see this happening?

    You know, they have just given us money, so they have not come to us to ask for money now. So let us just keep the money. Look, there are lots of demand, we will help solve problems for this is the job we are all signed up to do. So we are trying our best to solving the problems.

    You know by raising more capital, getting investors, and how do we solve these problems. Because, there is a lot of problems and we are very happy to participate. This is our country. It is how you make your bed that you lie on it. We grew up complaining about our fathers, the things they didn’t do, we say they could have done it this or that way.  But now, we are the ones in charge and it is time to do it.

    The NSIA has come a long way, give us a picture of where you want to see this Sovereign Wealth Fund in the future?

    For sure, in the near future, I will be looking at it from the outside.   But I think during one’s time, you ensure you build a house solid enough to add another layer.  In 10 years time, I want to see Nigerian Sovereign Wealth Authority punching above, sitting down amongst the committee of nations and being very influential and very powerful.

    So I think that is  the first thing I will like to see happen. It is that the Nigerian Soveriegn Wealth Authority is respected, growing and solving Nigeria’s problem. Being very effective in solving infrastructure problems of the country. I will like to see a more sovereign development, not sovereign wealth. The Infrastructure Fund is development and we cannot substitute sovereign development for sovereign wealth.

    And I am not trying to play on words here. But we have infrstucture funds, it is not big enough to really authorise big projects, but I will like to se it 10 years from now, that the Federal Government of Nigeria wants to build certain projects and that project is commissioned by the Sovereign Wealth Fund.

    Before you start calling any DFI or Donor Agency and World Bank and others, you call the Sovereign Wealth Fund first, and that is what I want to see. Ten years from now, the CEO of the Sovereign Wealth Fund is at the top table and making big decisions, that would be fantastic. You know why, because that is how it is in Abu Dabi. That is how it is in other countries. If this thing is viable and big enough for you to bring in foreign investors, let your own Sovereign Wealth Fund do it, because you said it is viable.

    So 10 years from now, that is what I am planning to see.  My greatest legacy for the Nigerian Sovereign Wealth Investment Authority is to have built the foundation for a viable, solid, strong business. And that the government has had enough confidence to grow to the point where it becomes the first point of call for large infrastructure projects that are commercially attractive.

    And let them build that platform that other countries want to come and invest in. We would start that next year in 2016, you will see more investment, you will see us being able to create funds and bring other people.   We would put that platform in place by 2016 in certain areas, but because we still have small money, that platform would be fairly small, but 10 years from now, I want to see that platform much bigger.

    Given your experience and insight of the other very successful Sovereign Wealth Fund, what limitation do you see in the Nigerian  entity?

    I think we have overcome the very first limitation, which is, should we do this. I like to again thank the Governors and the National Economic Council for having the courage to make what is a very difficult decision. And so I think that over the next few months and years, it would put us in a position where we would make the economic environment better.

    How have you managed to keep your cost low?

    We have 21 professionals in the organisation. First of all I set a cost cap, to no more than eight per cent of assets. So all I need to earn is one per cent and I am making profit. So if I earn four per cent, or five per cent, I make a whole lot of money. So with that in mind, I will say that there is no big man at the NSIA , most time when they see us flying,you will never see us on a first class. It would never happen. If you ever see me in a first class, it is because they gave me an upgrade, or it is my own money. And I will never use the Sovereign Wealth money.  It is a culture that has started with the fact that it started with no money.

    When I arrived to start the Sovereign Wealth Fund , there was not a penny in the bank. There was not even an office. After squatting in what was a storage room in the Ministry of Finance, I rented a house, a service department, from my own pocket, and I put the Sovereign Wealth Fund department at the ground floor, and my dinning table was the office.

    I borrowed resources from our partners, the FID. That is because we didn’t have any money to operate for the first three months. By the end of the fourth month, we even borrowed money, which we had to repay within a year. So we have got a small office. Even now, our offices are compact. So we learnt so honestly, it is the same way I would have started it, if it were to be my business.  For a long time, we had no official car, we had two Hondas, of which I used to drive myself on the weekends. So you do things like that and gradually, you build a name.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Orji happy with win against Giwa

    Orji happy with win against Giwa

    Heartland  coach, Bethel Orji is hugely relieved with his side hard fought 3-2 victory against Giwa FC in Sunday’s Nigeria Professional Football League match day 36 clash at the Dan Anyiam Stadium in Owerri.

    Top striker, Bright Ejike put the Owerri outfit in front in the 10th minute but the Jos side responded quickly with an equaliser off perfect header of striker, Edoh Ocheme in the 14th minute ending the first 45 minutes on even score.

    However, upon resumption of play it was the Tin City side that went in front through Ocheme but two quick goals from the duo, Chinedu Efugh and Emeka Ogbugh in the 75th and 77th minute proved adequate to hand the Naze Millionaires the whole three points at stake.

    Orji said the key for his side is the three points as it has greatly improved the 2009 CAF Champions League finalists position on the league log.

    “I’m happy that our game plan to notch up the whole three points worked out perfectly well despite stiff challenge from Giwa FC.

    “Giwa FC play very well and created several scary moments for us but I give kudos to my wards for quick response to draw level as well as edge forward to win the match.

    “The most important thing for us in the encounter is the three points, at least, it has succeeded in pushing up our position on the league table.

    “We will continue on the strong form in the remaining two matches on the season’s calendar aimed at finishing the season on high,” said Orji to supersport.com.

    The hard fought victory against Giwa FC has taken Heartland points haul to 53 from possible 108 with two more matches against Dolphins and El Kanemi Warriors to wrap up the season’s campaign.

  • Orji: I was not booed in Abia

    Former Abia State Governor Theodore Orji has debunked reports that he was booed at the burial of Senator Nkechi Nwaogu’s husband.

    A statement by his legislative aide and media adviser, Eddie Onuzuruike, described the report as false.

    The statement reads: “To put the fact straight, the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu was received by Senator Orji at his residence in company of Senator M. Ohuabunwa, before leaving for the Abia State Government House.

    “The trio moved to the funeral service of Dr. Rowland, husband of Senator Nkechi Nwaogu, where they were welcomed with a loud ovation and contrary to the report, there was no murmuring or booing of any kind.

    “If I may ask, was this booing selective when the trio arrived at the venue or when Orji gave a speech? Senator Orji did not give any speech. Do you boo one who won an election or the one who failed in many attempts?”

    He wondered why the press crew of Senator Ike Ekweremadu and other journalists present at the event did not report the incident except the newspaper.