Tag: Oyerinde

  • NECA DG calls for strategic easing to boost growth

    NECA DG calls for strategic easing to boost growth

    Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA) Director-General, Adewale-Smatt Oyerinde, has hailed  Central Bank of Nigeria’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)’s decision to reduce the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) by 50 basis points to 27.00 percent.

    The CBN took the measure at its 302nd meeting in Abuja.

    Other measures announced include the adjustment of the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) to 45 percent for Deposit Money Banks, retention of 16 percent for Merchant Banks, introduction of 75 percent CRR on non-TSA public sector deposits, retention of the Liquidity Ratio at 30 percent, and adjustment of the Asymmetric Corridor to +250/-250 basis points around the MPR.

    Oyerinde noted that the decision comes amid a steady decline in inflation, with headline inflation moderating to 20.12 percent in August 2025, from 21.88 percent in July, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

    “For over five months, inflationary pressures have eased. This provides critical space for policymakers to balance the pursuit of price stability with the urgent need to stimulate growth,” he said.

    The modest reduction in the MPR, is commendable, its benefits will depend on effective transmission into the real economy.

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    “If credit costs are lowered, businesses can access affordable financing, expand investments, and create jobs. However, the persistently high CRR and other liquidity restrictions risk limiting these intended outcomes,” he cautioned.

    He also pointed out that food inflation remains high at 21.87 percent, placing enormous strain on households and eroding disposable incomes. “Macroeconomic stability will only have meaning when Nigerians experience tangible relief through lower food and living costs,” he stressed.

    For local businesses, he explained that high operating costs driven by raw materials, energy, and logistics continue to threaten sustainability.

    “Without affordable credit and structural reforms, enterprises will struggle to expand,” he said. For international investors, he highlighted the need for consistency and credible reforms, adding that “policy stability, improved macroeconomic fundamentals, and transparent reforms are essential to position Nigeria as a competitive investment destination.”

    The DG called on government to complement the MPC’s decision with broader interventions, including stabilizing the exchange rate to curb imported inflation, improving security in farming communities, expanding mechanization to drive agricultural productivity, and tackling bottlenecks in energy, transport, and regulation.

    He concluded by reiterating “It is time to complement price stability with deliberate growth stimulation. This is the message that Nigerians need for relief from the cost-of-living crisis, and it is also what international investors are waiting to see, credible, sustained reforms that create an enabling environment for inclusive growth.”

  • NECA urges govt on new expatriate reforms

    NECA urges govt on new expatriate reforms

    The Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA), has canvassed support for the Federal Government and other stakeholders including the Organised Private Sector on the implementation of expatriate reforms.

    The Director-General of NECA, Adewale-Smatt Oyerinde, stated this at a high-level stakeholder dialogue titled “Sensitisation on the New Expatriate Administration and Other Reforms” held at the NECA House Auditorium, Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos on Friday.

    Smatt-Oyerinde noted that the global interest in rising nationalism and the growing emphasis on homeland security, have underscored the need to align Nigeria’s expatriate and immigration systems with global best practices.

    He described the Ministry’s ongoing reforms as highly impactful and commendable, emphasizing that the sensitization session serves as an opportunity for stakeholders to gain clarity directly from the source.

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     “The reforms we are witnessing—particularly at our airports and immigration offices—are visible and valuable. These initiatives are simplifying processes not only for expatriates but also for Nigerians. We appreciate the Ministry’s decision to provide a three-month moratorium to allow organizations align with the new policies before full enforcement begins on August 1, 2025.” he said.

    Delivering the keynote address, the Honourable Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, stressed the crucial role of regulatory alignment for all business operations within the country, highlighting that government would be rolling out several initiatives of the ministry’s reform agenda effective May 1, 2025, with a three-month moratorium to enable proper adjustment and compliance.

    Tunji-Ojo explained that the Visa-on-arrival processes have been upgraded to eliminate cases of fake visa adding that a Centralized Interior and Management System (CIMAS) has been launched to enhance coordination and transparency across all processes.

    “If you want to do business, you must do business in line with the law. This is a country where there should be no ceiling in terms of growth and development for any hardworking, productive citizen. These reforms are not just policies; they are practical solutions; we want to draw the line at a standard level that supports national growth and compliance without compromising efficiency,” he added.

    Among the reforms introduced is the Electronic Certificate of Expatriate Quota and Residence Permit Application (E-CERPAC), which allows for seamless application and payment through the Nigeria Immigration Service’s website, with virtual cards sent directly to applicants via email.

    Other key reforms include improvements to the expatriate understudy framework, Business Permits, Temporary Work Permits (TWP), the introduction of Expatriate Comprehensive Insurance covering arrival to exit, and the E-Visa, which guarantees visa issuance within 48 hours.

  • Oyerinde: Police head to Supreme Court over N5m fine

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar and the Police Force have appealed the ruling of the Appeal Court asking them to pay N5 million into an interest yielding account.

    The Appeal Court, sitting in Benin, the Edo State capital, ordered them and the Attorney-General of Federation, Mohammed Bello Adoke, to pay the money, pending the judgment on the arrest and detention of the Executive Director of Africa Network For Environment and Economic Justice, David Ugolor.

    Ugolor was arrested and detained for the murder of Olaitan Oyerinde, the Principal Private Secretary to Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole.

    The appellants in a suit filed by their counsel, Henry Michael-Ihunde, said they were dissatisfied with the decision of the Appeal Court for granting them conditional stay of execution of the judgment of the Edo State High Court.

    The appellants said the Appeal Court erred in law on the ground that there was no counter–affidavit before it disputed the averments in the motion sought by the police, IG and the AGF.

    The appellants said the Appeal Court ought to have granted the stay of execution of the N5million fine without condition and ordered accelerated hearing of the appeal.

    The Edo State High Court presided over by Justice Esther Edigin last year awarded N5 million as damages against the police, IG and the AGF for unlawful arrest and detention of Ugolor.

     

  • For Olajoku and Oyerinde

    For Olajoku and Oyerinde

    The two were comrades killed in the line of ‘duty’. Sadly for them both,  their killers are yet to be found and brought to book. But one good thing is that they are still both being fondly remembered by the people.

    For Hassan Olajoku, a chieftain of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Osun State, who was killed in May 2005, it was time to be remembered in death as Osun State governor, Ogbeni Rauf Argbesola, last Wednesday inaugurated a park named after the man many in Osun describe as a martyr of democracy.

    With his widow, children and other family members in attendance, Aregbesola led thousands of Osun indigenes to pay tribute to the slain politician. Days later in Lagos, it was the turn of Olaitan Oyerinde, the murdered Principal Private Secretary to Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State to be remembered by his friends and colleagues in the struggle.

    At a memorial lecture held at the Textile Labour House in Ikeja and delivered by a Senior Advocate of Nigeira (SAN), Femi Falana, the late Oyerinde came alive amidst encomiums and eulogies from friends and colleagues who wondered why it is taking forever to find his killers.

    Though these gesture are not capable of bringing the dead back to life physically, they will surely help in keeping their memories alive in the minds of those who truly miss them.

  • Oyerinde: Activists urge Jonathan  to probe IGP, AGF

    Oyerinde: Activists urge Jonathan to probe IGP, AGF

    An Abuja civil society coalition, End Impunity Advocacy Group, has urged President Goodluck Jonathan to probe the roles of Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Mohammed Abubakar and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) Mohammed Adoke (SAN) in how the police handled the investigation into the killing of Comrade Olaitan Oyerinde, the Principal Private Secretary to the Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole.

    The probe led to the arrest and detention of a rights activist, Rev. David Ugolor.

    In a statement by its Coordinator, Mr. Bernard Onororakpene Oyabevwe, the group said the President needs to investigate the roles of the IGP and the AGF by setting up a committee that will tell Nigerians the truth of the matter.

    The group said it was not surprised that the police chief and the AGF did not honour the N5million cost an Appeal Court ordered them to pay Ogolor.

    According to the group, there have always been inconsistencies in the police investigative report on the killing of Oyerinde.

    End Impunity wondered why the police arrested and detained Ugolor over the killing without proving their case against him.

    “The Appeal Court ruling against the IGP did not come to us as surprise, given the inconsistencies in the police investigative report on the killing of the governor’s Principal Private Secretary.”

  • Group faults police autopsy report on Oyerinde

    Group faults police autopsy report on Oyerinde

    The quest for justice by friends and associates of Olaitan Oyerinde, the slain Principal Private Secretary to Edo State Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, continued yesterday with the Conference of Non-Governmental Organisations (CONGOS) in Edo State rejecting the autopsy report released in a newspaper by the police recently.

    A statement by the President of CONGOS, Jude Obasanmi, which was made available to journalists in Benin City, said it feared that the said report might have been quickly put together by the police because of the queries it got during a public hearing organised by the House of Representatives on the killing of Oyerinde on how it did not include the said autopsy reports in its submissions.

    The statement reads in part: “The autopsy report which many expected would unravel the details of the dastardly murder and real killers of the late comrade seems to be causing more confusion than ever.

    “The credibility of the autopsy report is highly questionable as it is coming out to the public after the Police was asked during the public hearing by the House Committee on Public Petition why the autopsy report was not included in the police investigation report.

    “It is shameful that the autopsy report was not included in the police report sent to the Department of Public Prosecution (DPP), neither was it contained in the report sent to the National Assembly Committee investigating the matter. This is a further proof that the police is up to some game.”

    The statement also claimed that contrary to claims by the police that a Consultant Pathologist, Dr. W. O Akhhiwu, conducted the autopsy, Akhiwu is an Assistant Commissioner of Police still in the service of the Nigeria Police Force. “How could he be said to be a consultant?”

    The statement noted that CONGO had accused the Nigeria Police Force of complicity in bungling of investigations, asking: “How could a reliable autopsy be obtained from such an institution that sets out ab initio to bungle the investigation as they have been proven to do with the frame-up of rights activist, Rev. David Ugolor?

    “The report, from its contents, lacks the details of a best practice autopsy, particularly given a controversial situation the murder has assumed.

    “In particular, whereas the police claim Oyerinde was shot at close range with a short gun, the State Security Service says he was killed with a pump action. More details as to the type and number of pellets or bullets extracted from his body is absent in the report. Who manufactured the bullets and so on and so forth? Not the rice and beans that the late man ate.”

  • Group commends Reps for public hearing on Oyerinde

    Group commends Reps for public hearing on Oyerinde

    The Coalition to Save Nigeria (CSN) yesterday commended the House of Representatives for holding a public hearing on the gruesome murder of Comrade Olaitan Oyerinde, the former principal private secretary to the Edo State Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole.

    The National Chairman of the coalition Dr. Philip Ugbodaga, said he was saddened that the public hearing, rather than help unravel the mystery surrounding the mindless murder of Oyerinde, has only succeeded in perpetuating the official cover-up with the police and the State Security Services maintaining the reliability of their conflicting reports of investigations into the murder.

    “We ask again: how can two different sets of suspects acting differently and using separate weapons be responsible for the murder of a single individual?

    “The excuse by the AGF for not making any progress in the arraigement of the actual killers as a result of the above is self-serving, deceitful, unacceptable and deliberately fashioned to permanently sweep the heinous crime under the carpet.

    “After the House’s public hearing, what next? We demand action. We demand justice. Justice for the family. Justice for his friends and comrades and justice for the society that he struggled all his life to better.

    On the first anniversary of the assassination of Oyerinde in May, we expect to be comforted by the news of the commencement of the trial of the actual killers, and we call on the security agencies to immediately put their act together in order to achieve this.

  • Oyerinde: AGF writes Reps

    Oyerinde: AGF writes Reps

    …Says ‘I was never confused’

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) on Thursday said his office was never confused on investigation into the murder of Oyerinde Olaitan, who was a former Principal Private Secretary to Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole.

    He also said that it is the responsibility of the Nigeria Police to handle investigation into the murder and not the State Security Service (SSS).

    He said the Federal Ministry of Justice has no power to prosecute all suspects arrested in respect of the gruesome killing of Oyerinde.

    Adoke made the clarifications in a February 28, 2013 letter to the chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Public Petitions.

    He said: “My attention has been drawn to the representations made by Mr. O.T. Olaitigbe, Deputy Director, Public Prosecutions of the Federation on behalf of my office and the Federal Ministry of Justice at the Public Hearing organized by your Committee on February 27, 2013 on the alleged complicity and improper investigation in the murder of Oyerinde Olaitan, an Aide to the Edo State Governor.

    “It has been widely reported in the electronic and print media that Mr. Olaitigbe while making his presentation to the Committee, stated among other things that the Ministry of Justice was confused as a result of the investigation reports it had received from the Nigeria Police Force and the State Security Service (SSS) which appeared to have indicted different sets of suspects for the alleged murder of Oyerinde and that the ministry could not proceed further with the prosecution of the suspects because of the need to harmonize the two reports .

    “I wish to completely dissociate myself from the comments purportedly made on my behalf by Mr. Olaitigbe as the comments were at best, a figment of his imagination and very far from the truth. Mr. Olaitigbe was under firm instructions to inform the Committee that:

    (a) The Federal Ministry of Justice had examined the powers of the State Security Service as provided by Section 3 of the National Security Act, Cap.N.74 LFN, 2004 and the powers of the Nigeria Police Force as provided by section 4 of the Police Act Cap. P.19 LFN, 2004 and had come to the reasoned conclusion that the power to investigate crimes of the nature under consideration (murder) resides with the Nigeria Police Force while the power to gather intelligence lies with the State Security Service, and

    (b) Murder, the offence allegedly committed by the suspects is exclusively within the jurisdiction of the police in all the States in the Federation. The Criminal Procedure Act, Cap., C. 38 LFN, 2004 is very clear on this matter. The Federal Ministry of Justice therefore has no power to prosecute murder cases as murder is a state offence committed against State law and that the matter was already been handled by appropriate authorities in Edo State.”

     

  • Oyerinde: Falana, others for public hearing

    Human rights activist and lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) will today lead civil society groups to the public hearing of the House of Representatives on the murder of the Private Secretary to Governor Adams Oshiomhole, Olaitan Oyerinde.

    Oyerinde was murdered at his Benin City home on May 4, last year.

    The public hearing is sequel to a petition by the Conference of Non Government Organisation of Nigeria (CONGOS).

    Falana is the legal counsel of the civil society groups.

    The President of Trade Union Congress (TUC), Peter Esele, will lead some union leaders to the hearing.

    The TUC, at its NEC meeting in Benin City last weekend, called for a probe into the murder and frowned at the role played by the police in the investigation.

    Executive Director of African Network for Environment and Economic Justice David Ugolor confirmed Falana’s and Esele’s attendance.

    Ugolor, who was arrested and detained for 48 days for alleged implication in the murder, challenged the police to produce the video clips of his parade identification and the cross examination of the suspect, Garuba Maisamari, who identified him.

    He alleged that investigation by him revealed that the police tortured and shot Maisamari and Moses Okoro three times before they implicated him in the murder.

    Ugolor said: “I challenge the police to produce the video clips of my parade and cross examination of Maisamari.

    “All the suspects are alive in Oko Prison to confirm my statement. I urge the Public Hearing to visit the Oko Prison to meet with the suspects to ascertain the truth of my revelation.”

     

  • Oyerinde: Falana, others to storm public hearing

    Oyerinde: Falana, others to storm public hearing

    Human right activist, Femi Falana, will on Wednesday lead the Civil Society Organisation to the Public Hearing of the House of Representative on the murder of Private Secretary to Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole, Comrade Olaitan Oyerinde.

    Comrade Oyerinde was murdered at his Benin City residence on May 4 last year by unknown gunmen.

    The Public Hearing by the House of Representatives is sequel to a petition filed by the Conference of Non -Government Organisation of Nigeria (CONGOS).

    Falana is the legal counsel to the civil society organisation.

    Also, the President of Trade Union Congress, Comrade Peter Esele will lead some union leadership to attend the hearing.

    The TUC at its National Executive Council meeting in Benin City last weekend called for a probe into the murder of Oyerinde and frowned at the role played by the Nigerian Police in the course of investigating the murder.

    The Executive Director of African Network for Environment and Economic Justice, Rev. David Ugolor confirmed the decision of Falana and Comrade Esele to attend the public hearing.

    Ugolor, who was arrested and detained for 48 days over alleged involvement in the murder challenged the police authorities to produce the video clips of the cross examination of Garuba Maisamari, the suspect that fingered him as the mastermind of the murder.

    Rev. Ugolor alleged that investigation by him revealed that the police tortured and shot Maisamari and Moses Okoro three times before they implicated him in the murder.