Tag: Palliatives

  • Iba gives more palliatives to residents

    Iba gives more palliatives to residents

    The Chairman of Iba Local Council Development Area (LCDA), Jubril Yisa (aka ABILA), has rolled out another food palliatives for residents.

    This, he said, was part of the council’s ongoing effort to cushion the effect of subsidy removal by the federal government.

    Yisa said the palliatives would cut across all the wards in the council.

    According to him, the beneficiaries were drawn from every part of the council.

    The food items include Rice, Beans, Pepper, Groundnut oil, Spices and Garri.

    Prior to the distribution exercise, the Council Chairman had urged the Councillors and Cabinet Members to reach out to their various communities on modalities of the distribution.

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    The lawmakers and executive members were in charge of drawing the list of beneficiaries from their wards and communities.

    The council chief reassured the residents that he will continue to keep up to his promises by prioritising the welfare of the people.

    “It is heart-warming that Lagos is putting the welfare of her residents on the front burner, it is also gladdening that other states are following suit in bringing palliatives to their residents and our council will also not be behind in this kind act,” he said.

    The residents expressed appreciation the council boss for the gesture.

  • Council allocates palliatives to residents

    Council allocates palliatives to residents

    Residents of Amuwo-Odofin Local Government Area (LGA) have lauded the council for the recent distribution of palliatives they received to alleviate the effects of fuel subsidy removal.

    The food items distributed included rice, beans, eggs, palm oil, vegetable oil, yam, and plantain, among others. One of the representatives of the Community Development Council (CDC) of Amuwo-Odofin, Prince Abdullahi Akinsemoyin, efforts reached various segments of society and made a significant impact.

    According to the local government Chairman, Valentine Buraimoh, representatives were selected from various groups within the community to ensure the equitable distribution of the palliatives to their members; while noting that the palliatives were intended for the poor, the downtrodden, and those struggling to afford food during these challenging times. Buraimoh added that the distribution of palliatives would continue every month until further notice, adding that a free medical programme would be available for community members for an entire week.

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    “This is our way of providing aid to our people, and it is completely free. Considering the issue of fuel subsidy removal, we deemed it necessary to support our community. We have structured the distribution in a way that ensures all major stakeholders will be able to provide these supplies to their members who are in need. This aid is not intended for those who are already well-fed, but rather for those who are struggling to access enough food.

    We have taken the time to carefully examine all the groups within our local government council, including women, men, youths, the physically challenged, and the downtrodden. We follow the same structure every time we implement programs like this,” Buraimoh said.

    A representative of the Spinal Cord Injury Association of Nigeria, Adejoke Afolabi, lauded the chairman for his commitment to ensuring the well-being of the residents despite the harsh economic conditions.

    She said: “It’s not easy nowadays; even affording food has become so expensive. With this distribution, we are grateful to him. He has promised that it will continue every month. We don’t know how to thank him enough, but God will surely reward him.”

  • Ogun: Opposition and the politics of palliatives

    Ogun: Opposition and the politics of palliatives

    Following the decision of the Federal Government to allow state governments anchor its palliative programme meant to cushion the effects of the removal of fuel subsidy, state governors and their various administrations became the subjects of attention as Nigerians eagerly waited to see how the programme would be implemented. Defending the decision to give the assignment to the states, the National Economic Council (NEC) had argued that there was a need to adjust the previous ways of handling palliatives to ensure that the targeted beneficiaries actually benefit from the programme. According to NEC, making the state governments custodians of the programme will take the palliatives straight to the doorsteps of those who should partake in the programme. Expectedly, since the implementation of the programme kicked off nationwide, the kudos and knocks trailing the distributions have been largely deposited at the doorsteps of the governors.

    In many states of the federation, the opposition sought to ‘play’ politics with the palliative programme, vehemently criticising the methods adopted by the ruling party to distribute the palliatives. In some places, opposition parties adopted outright lies and barefaced falsehood to drum home the impression that the palliatives weren’t properly distributed. Ogun State is no exception. In fact, the opposition in the state has been hysterical in its struggle to pin the ‘failed’ tag on the palliative programme not minding the fact that stakeholders across the state have been describing it as ‘the best ever.’ Weeks back, Governor Dapo Abiodun, while flagging off the distribution of 300,000 bags of 10kg rice palliatives to citizens of the state, made it clear that the state government was domesticating the Federal Government initiative. According to the governor, the palliatives were sent to states to be distributed to indigent residents.“This is a Federal Government initiative that is being domesticated right here in Ogun State. We have decided to use the 5,400 polling units as a reference of distribution, not wards, because we realized that using wards won’t be equitable,” Abiodun said, demonstrating his desire for the palliatives to get to the intended beneficiaries. He further revealed that a committee made up of “eminent men and women of distinguished character” is in charge of the distribution of the palliatives.

    The committee, chaired by the Deputy Governor, Engr. Noimot Salako-Oyedele, with two former deputy governors nominated to support her alongside two members of the National Assembly, one representing the House of Representatives, and the other representing the Senate, worked out the modalities for the actualisation of the governor’s desire. Promptly, the Salako-Oyedele-led committee inaugurated committees in each of the 20 LGAs of the state comprising of the council chairmen, Governor’s Liaison Officers (GLO), a member of the state House of Assembly in each LGA, religious leaders, community leaders, youths, students, Iyalojas and the traditional institution.

    Instructively, the Federal Government was specific in saying that the palliatives were not meant for everybody but for the most vulnerable people in various communities across the country. The term, ‘poorest of the poor’ was used in some instances to categorize those who should benefit. Conscious of this, the implementation committees across Ogun State went to work with an approach that directly targeted the very vulnerable among us. Of course, it was obvious that 300,000 bags of rice cannot go round the entire population of the state come what may. The committees and other stakeholders worked hard in ensuring that it is largely those who really need these palliatives that got them. The result of these selfless and painstaking efforts is that the government of Prince Abiodun has been severally lauded at home and abroad for its way of distributing the state’s share of the palliatives. To any observers, this was possible because Governor Abiodun made it clear to everybody involved in sharing the palliatives that it must get to the intended beneficiaries.

    Comrade Adesoji Alausa, the Ogun State Coordinator of Voters Right Agenda (VoRA) said: “The mode of distribution adopted by Ogun State is the best I have seen in the state since we started experiencing the sharing of palliatives and other social supports as well as empowerments. The governor should be appreciated for making it clear to the stakeholders that he wanted it done with the vulnerables in mind. My organisation monitored the distribution across the state and I can tell you it went far better than we have ever seen. How I wish the quantity is more than just 300,000.” Another social commentator, Barrister Patrick Ogunnowo of the Centre for Justice and Democracy (CfJD), while reviewing the distribution of the palliatives in the state, described it as “carefully planned and effectively executed with the targeted beneficiaries in mind.” But in spite of these widely applauded efforts of the government to ensure that the palliatives get to the right beneficiaries promptly, some people, especially members of the opposition and their agents, were and are still unrelenting in their bid to tar the administration with negative brushes for reasons not beyond politics. This explains the case of some social media attacks on the government, especially a recent online video released by a man who claimed to be the chairman of Shokeye Community Development Association in Obafemi-Owode Local Government Area of the state.

    The man poured invectives on the government for initiating the palliative programme at all. His narrative that the bag of rice he was holding was meant for the whole community. He is not the first rabble-rouser to spin that web of lies. Not even the well publicised directive of the federal government that the bag of rice is meant for ONE vulnerable family in the community, and not for all residents of the community, made any sense to the enraged man as he sweated to discredit the initiative. But it didn’t take long to discover that the man lied as investigations revealed that that bag of rice was actually sent to him with a clear explanation that he should help transfer it to a vulnerable widow in his community. Rather than do as he was meant to, he chose to play politics with the gesture.

    And in so doing, he exposed himself as one of those who are of the opinion that the federal government should provide grains for all families everywhere in Nigeria. Clearly, he and others like him are men on hatchet missions and no amount of explanations will assuage them. Another CDA boss in this same Obafemi Owode LGA had made similar remarks about the palliative programe but later recanted his claims, saying he later discovered that many bags of rice were shared in his community while the one given to him was meant for just one vulnerable family. It has similarly been established that numerous other bags of rice were sent to beneficiaries in Shokeye community through other stakeholders aside from their CDA.

    Sadly, the man chose to play the usual dirty politics of his political party on social media. Perhaps, some people are of the opinion that they could snatch the political victory they could not win at the polls and at the tribunal through the backdoor by hoodwinking the people of Ogun State with lies and half truths on social media. But like every pack of lies, the antic of the opposition is not standing the test of time. Stakeholder after stakeholder been debunking the claims of these agents of falsehood. During the week, at a meeting called by the leadership of Obafemi Owode LGA to explain how the palliatives were distributed, stakeholders again hailed the formula used to share the bags of rice as the best they’ve ever seen in the state. According to Bishop Ezekiel Olukunle, who represented CAN on the LGA committee that shared and monitored the palliatives, the online video is a hatchet job.m”CAN was given 1000 bags of rice for our members who are vulnerable. We shared these diligently and Shokeye, like every communities, got its own share. How then can he say only one bag was to be shared by all households in the estate? He is definitely up to something bad and we plead that he should be ignored,” he said.

    Another stakeholder, Dr. Saheed Adeleye represented the Muslim Community on the sharing committee. He said the formula used to share the palliatives is the best he has seen in his almost 40 years of living in the council area, adding that the man who did the video lives in the same area with him. He described him as a known opposition agent. “There is no truth in the claims of the man. He is being used. We know him. He has never contributed to the development of our area but he is good at ganging up against every government. I can tell you that we in the Muslim Community got 1000 bags of rice which we distributed to the vulnerables amongst us. I live in Shokeye and I can confirm that not less than 165 bags of rice were given to the needy in the community. This is the same community the man was lying about. And we are not the only one who got rice to share. CAN, youths, market women, traditionalists, Baales, the Obas, Hausa, Igbo, Igede communities the Isese, artisans and many other stakeholders also shared rice for people in Shokeye. We have never had it so good in the last 40 years that I have been there,” he affirmed.

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    According to Babalola Samuel Olakunle, the Chairman of the Community Development Council (CDC) covering Shokeye Estate, not less than 2000 bags of rice were given to the CDC to be shared to the vulnerables in the various communities. He added that the CDA chairman who did the video refused to be part of the efforts to distribute the palliative when contacted.

    “The one bag of rice he displayed was specifically given to him for onward transmission to an identified vulnerable widow in his estate, not for the whole estate and he knew that. He is being used by opposition politicians to tarnish the government. We know him very well and we can tell you his antecedents,” he said. Urging the public to ignore the naysayers and encourage the state government to stick to the formula used, Chief Mrs. Kemi Ogunleye, the Iyaloja of the LGA, revealed that market women were given 1000 bags of rice. In his own testimony, Chief Kasumu Jamiu Sonola, the Baale of Asese community and Chairman, Council of Baales in the local government, said he took delivery of 1000 bags of rice on behalf of the Council. “We didn’t keep it for ourselves. We shared it for the needy in our various communities. All the Baales collected and took it to the poor people in their domains. Shokeye got its own share. So the man cannot be saying the truth. I personally ensured that it was given to the targeted beneficiaries,” he said.

    Speaking on the development, Oba Taofeek Owolabi, the Olu of Obafe and Chairman of the Council of Obas in the LGA, lauded Governor Abiodun for ensuring the diligent distribution of the palliatives. He noted that sharing of the palliatives was done in a manner that it got to the people who should benefit from it. Confirming the modality used to share the palliatives in his domain, Chairman of Obafemi Owode LGA, Hon. Lanre Ogunsola Adesina said the committee put in place to oversee the sharing of the palliatives did a good job.

    “We started the process with the composition of palliative distribution committee that was inaugurated at the local government secretariat on 26th September 2023. The members of the committee were drawn from the three zones made up the council area namely, Obafe, Owode and Oba zones with Kabiyesis, Baales, religious associations, youths, women, market associations, Community Development Associations, people with disabilities, security agencies and others ably represented. It is now unfortunate to see a viral video being presented by the CDA chairman to the public that a bag of rice was meant for the entire household in his estate. It is pertinent to say that the bag of rice shown in the viral video was meant to be sent to a vulnerable within the community through the CDA chairman. A similar viral video earlier thrown to the public was later debunked by the CDA chairman who released it after he sought further clarification. This is why we suspected very strongly that the Sokeye CDA chairman may be out to intentionally work against the state government’s bid to reach out to the targeted vulnerables. It is politically sponsored by the opposition,” he said.

  • Palliatives: Whither military pensioners?

    Palliatives: Whither military pensioners?

    Sir: The federal government has just rolled out an impressive package of palliatives to cushion the short-term effects of the removal of fuel subsidy on the Nigerian masses. The least paid federal government worker would get additional N25,000 paid to his/her salary every month, for six months (making a total of N150,000 for the least paid worker),15 million vulnerable households each to be paid N25,000 every month, for three months, (Oct – Dec), making a total of N75,000 to each vulnerable household. There are plans to give tax waivers, cheap loan or grants to small and medium businesses to assist them survive the hard time. There is another plan for cheaper public transport, and more.

    In all of this, we are not able to see where military pensioners and other non-pensionable veterans belong in the palliatives coverage. We have already been agitating against the minimally-paid allowances/entitlements which the last finance minister said there was no money then to pay us. Now, the economic inflation situation has worsened,  the federal government now has more money and has designed palliatives package for Nigerians in general,  it appears as if we are not accommodated in the package, as if we are supposed to quietly die off unnoticed.

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    Military pensions belong among the charges on federal government treasury, just like serving personnel and other federal government workers. And, who is more vulnerable person than most military pensioners in Nigeria? Many of them have injuries related to the years of active service, and the health effects deteriorate with age, so they spend much of their meagre monthly pension on drugs. Good effort is being made by Defence authorities to improve the present minimal scope of health insurance coverage of treatments, but much still remains to be done in that respect. Also, we were already agitating for an upward review of our pension before the present hard time set in.

    We pray that someone somewhere would, as a matter of duty and concern, raise the case for military pensioners to the level of the Presidency. There is no doubt that President Bola Tinubu would immediately address it and even do more.

    If nothing is done now over this issue in our usual Nigerian attitude of waiting late for fire-brigade approach, then we should be prepared for a mass peaceful protest on January 15, 2024 (Armed Forces Remembrance Day celebration) at Abuja, as our last resort to draw the attention of Mr President to our plight. We have paid our dues in patriotic service to this nation.

    God Bless Nigeria.

    •Azubike Nass,

    Enugu.

  • Palliatives:  Fed Govt gets help on Data Collection

    Palliatives: Fed Govt gets help on Data Collection

    Hope For the Needy and Skills Empowerment Foundation has said it will assist the Federal Government in fast tracking data collection of Nigerians to improve living standard of over fifty million poor Nigerians in creating a stable economy.

     President of the foundation, Kerry Sholaye, speaking to reporters in Lagos, commended effort of the Federal Government in fighting poverty.

    He said the news conference was to keep the media abreast of the intervention and update of the National Social Register (NSR) and State Social Register (SSR).

    Kerry said the foundation put together mechanisms to ensure the process captures all deserving beneficiaries, and have set up offices in 36 states and FCT to ensure the f collation is effective, with emails addresses and phone numbers.

     The National Social Safety Net was established in 2015 to collect information on impoverished Nigerians.

     He explained President Bola Tinubu has made provision through minister of Humanitarian Affairs for the national social register to kick off the programme.

     “The programme is set to reach the poorest people in the country through the national social register and state social register, also this register will help the masses and poor people to get help from international bodies”.

     To be eligible for this programme, he urged rural and underprivileged Nigerians to ensure their names and contact information are included on the national social registry.

     Additionally, he claimed the initiative will give over 50,000 youths employment, with participation ranging from local to national levels.

     He added each community leaders will assist the bodies in listing names of the poorest people in their area.

     “The cash transfer palliative will be sent to each person without passing through third party.

    Read Also: Hiccups and fisticuffs over palliatives

     “Once your name is listed on the register, you will receive yours, he added.

     Southeast zonal Coordinator, Robison Ezike, said the project will cover villages and communities in Southeast.

     According to him, “If palliative care is served to people with food and stuff, it will never get to the grassroots, but the project of cash transfer will get to everyone who is registered.

     He added the palliative project is mainly for the poor and not the average Nigerian.

    “This is why government is sending people to the villages and forgetting areas to get poor people to benefit from the project.

     “We have made provisions for those who don’t have bank accounts to get one.

     “We are not giving this money to anyone to give to their people but each person will receive their own.”

     “We want people to know this is not a political arm of any government, but we want to go down to the grassroots, so we must ensure everyone benefits from this palliative.”

     “Southwest Zonal Head, Mrs Obeta Ogechi, said she would take well-being of the communities her mission, and with local outreach, cultural sensitivity, community workshops/training, youth engagement, collaboration with local leaders and data protection, the states will be covered with no one left behind.

     “The zonal coordinators resolve extends to our state coordinators, local coordinators and workers fully engaged in accurate data delivery.

    “Our organisation went further to seek strategic partnership with MORUBU Grassroots Foundation. Founder/President, Matthew Ovie believes no community is destined to be poor.

     “And his organisation has  invested in the future to provide, contribute and empower All on the Grassroots level.

     “He knows the National Social Registry aligns with such goals and assure Nigerians that MORUBU Foundation will deliver the data for the National Social Register”.

  • Hiccups and fisticuffs over palliatives

    Hiccups and fisticuffs over palliatives

    There is only a thin line, as they say in street lingo, between ‘How are you?’ and ‘Who are you?’ One is an expression of endearment and friendship, while the other is a challenge  to hostile confrontation negating friendship. The border line is thin. And that thin line gets easily crossed, as it seems, where distribution of palliatives intended by government to cushion the hardships of citizens occasioned by the economic reforms of the present administration is involved.

    Ondo State Women Affairs and Social Development Commissioner Olubunmi Osadahun, who is presumably a stalwart of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state since she serves in an APC government, suffered a broken head recently from another chieftain of the party, namely the APC chairman in Akoko Northwest Ward 1, Olumide Awolumate, popularly known as “Cuba.” They are members of the same party family, but departure point reportedly came over the manner in which Osadahun conducted the distribution of the palliative items to vulnerable households, which apparently was to Awolumate’s dissatisfaction. The Ondo government had in the previous week flagged off the distribution of the palliatives and posted commissioners to lead the exercise in their respective local government area.

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    Reports said some APC members in Akoko Northwest council area alleged that government officials shrouded the distribution of palliatives in needless secrecy. Awolumate’s specific beef with Commissioner Osadahun was said to be that she allegedly removed his name from beneficiaries of the palliatives in Arigidi. A viral video showed how the party chieftain engaged the commissioner in public fisticuffs, smashing her head with a chair and raising a table to encore he was stopped. The commissioner came off with a deep cut and a massive lump on her head, and had to be rushed to hospital for medical attention. Some youths loyal to the commissioner reportedly thereafter counterattacked the party chieftain and left him battered as well. The matter was, of course, reported to the police who have said they are pursuing their investigation. Meanwhile, State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu expressed deep displeasure over the matter and said he would ensure the attack on his commissioner is duly requited by the law.

    But how did it come to the point that two leading officials of state were involved in a dog fight over palliatives meant to succour the less privileged? The items were not perks from which a share should have been demanded as of a right, and neither were they meant to be items for dispensing patronage and motivating cult support. But that is what results when privileged persons who should join efforts to fight for the common good fight over commoners’ goods (i.e. palliatives).

  • How not to administer palliatives

    How not to administer palliatives

    Sir: In response to the socio-economic chaos elicited after the removal of fuel subsidy, President Bola Tinubu unveiled his government’s palliatives for the masses, to ameliorate their suffering.

    The 36 states of the federation, together with the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, each received N5 billion, together with 1,000 trucks of rice. The cash given to the states was meant to help them procure more food items for distribution to Nigerians in their domains.

    Agreed, federal government’s efforts to cushion the hardship of Nigerians in this gruelling period should be commended. But the palliative programmes are not sustainable, in the long run. They would not address the nation’s food and unemployment crisis, even by a stretch.

    In some communities in Minna, the capital city of Niger State, the sharing formula adopted for distributing the palliatives will shock one to the marrow. There are instances where a community of over a thousand residents got five to 10 mudus of rice, and five leathers of spaghetti, together with a few cups of beans. 

    Pray: how will the over 1,000 community members equally and adequately share the food items? But the communities who got pittance should even be grateful. Several others were not so lucky to even get a cup of rice, beans or even a leather of spaghetti.

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    It is imperative to state that corrupt government officials are always the stumbling block to the judicious implementation of social welfare programmes designed by the government for the needy and less privileged in the society. And this time around, they also didn’t disappoint in baring their fangs.

    Reports abound of how some food items to be shared to citizens not only in Niger State, but across the country, were diverted by fraudulent officials saddled with the responsibility of disbursing them to target beneficiaries.

    These rascality and acts of inhumanity of man towards his fellow beings must stop forthwith. Persons who enrich themselves with what is meant for the society should be made to face the music. The failure to prosecute or sanction them is what is fuelling impunity.

    Also, the onus lies on the government to ensure that the strategy of disbursing foodstuffs, cash and other palliative items at any time is transparent and not shrouded in secrecy. The government should also accord priority attention to empowering jobless youths and other unemployed Nigerians.

    That is the most sustainable means of alleviating poverty and hunger, together with the unemployment crisis in the country. The charades of palliatives’ disbursement in times of socio-economic turmoil have never addressed the masses’ problems. They have to be stopped.

    • Yaseera Muhammed Wando, Minna, Niger State.
  • Six Northeastern states get N15 billion palliatives

    Six Northeastern states get N15 billion palliatives

    • Shettima urges NEDC to scale up intervention across region
    • Govs urge military to neutralise unrepentant insurgents

    The North-East Development Commission (NEDC) has presented palliatives worth N15b to the six states in the region.

    The states are Borno, Adamawa, Yobe, Gombe, Bauchi and Taraba states.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the food and non-food items were presented to the governors of the states by Vice President Kashim Shettima at a ceremony on Saturday in Maiduguri.

    Shettima, who lauded the management of NEDC for prudent management of scarce resources, said the destruction in the six states was worth nine billion dollars.

    According to him, in Borno alone, the destruction is worth 6.8 billion dollars.

    Shetima also performed the ground breaking of the 22.5 km Mafa-Jere road project being undertaken by NEDC.

    NEDC Managing Director, Mohammed Alkali, in a remark, said the provision of the N15b food palliatives was in line with the Federal Government’s initiative to cushion the hardship faced by the less privileged.

    Alkali said the 22.5km road linking communities in Mafa and Jere was part of the 38.66km Zabarmari Area Roads Network from Ngowom-Koshebe, Galameri-Dusuman and Khaddamari-Zabarmari-Gongolong.

    He said the road was part of the network of roads being executed by the commission to provide access to Jere Bowl, an important agrarian locality in Borno, to enhance security and mobility of people and goods.

    “Similar road projects such as the 32km Dabna-Garkida Road in Adamawa, 53km Kirfi-Gombe Abba Road in Bauchi and Gombe States, and 54km Mutai-Ngalda Road in Yobe State, among others, are ongoing.

    “There are also other projects of the commission in other sectors such as mass housing, mega schools, hospitals, etc.

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    “These infrastructural projects are the strides the commission has been taking towards the development of the region as captured in the 11 Pillars of North-East Master Plan.

    Shettima urges NEDC to scale up intervention across region

    The Vice president also urged the commission to consider handling some critical federal roads linking states in the region to facilitate socioeconomic activities.

    The Vice-President highlighted the significance of the road construction project, describing it as a milestone that will provide the local population with the opportunity to tap into Borno’s potential as a food basket, benefiting not only the state but also the entire Northeast region.

    Expressing gratitude to NEDC for this substantial undertaking, Shettima called on the commission to extend its support to other critical areas, particularly the Bauchi-Gombe road, which serves as a vital transportation link connecting Borno, Yobe, Bauchi, Gombe, Adamawa, and Taraba states.

    He stressed that, despite their classification as trunk A federal roads, the people of the Northeast are burdened with challenges on these routes.

    He emphasised that the designations of trunk A and trunk B roads are mere labels, and what truly matters is the well-being of the people.

    He urged collaborative efforts with the federal government to address the pressing infrastructure needs faced by residents of the region.

    Govs urge military to neutralise unrepentant insurgents

    In a related development, the North East Governors’ Forum has urged the military to neutralise insurgents that fail to surrender in the ongoing mass surrender by terrorists in the sub-region.

    The Chairman of the North East Governors’ Forum, Gov. Babagana Zulum of Borno, made the call on Saturday in Maiduguri at the 8th meeting of the forum.

    Zulum, who lauded the military for the relative peace in the sub-region that facilitated the return of normalcy in many areas, said there was need to smoke out the remnants that refused to surrender from their hideouts.

    “Let me use this auspicious occasion to commend our brave military in the fight against the insurgency, which remains unquestionable while their determination to succeed is very glaring.

    “No doubt, they have considered and acted upon a wide range of options in the fight against terrorism, thereby recording tremendous progress, which has clearly indicated that the end to the insurgency in the sub region is fast approaching.

    “I want to call on the Nigerian military to reach in to the enclaves of the insurgents who are not ready to lay down their arms. We must pursue them to their hideouts in the remote nooks and crannies and neutralise those who refuse to surrender,” Zulum said.

    The governor, who decried the negative effect of insurgency that affected the socioeconomic activities in the sub-region, said until the terrorists were subdued, efforts to improve things would be slowed down.

  • Palliatives: Political appointees in dilemma as traders inflate prices of foodstuff

    Palliatives: Political appointees in dilemma as traders inflate prices of foodstuff

    Political appointees in the standing committee saddled with the responsibility of distribution of palliatives in Niger State are currently facing a dilemma, as they are finding it difficult mopping up foodstuff in the market, as traders in various markets across the state have increased prices of foodstuff.

    The increase is due to the directives of the state governor, Mohammed Umar Bago, that all palliative foodstuffs should be procured from the local markets.

    The political appointees found it difficult to procure the required foodstuff on Wednesday and Thursday, especially as the state governor warned the Standing Committees not to share money as palliative to the people.

    The governor had stated that the money given to all the local government councils is to be used to procure grains and other food items, stating that any standing committee that shares cash will be sanctioned.

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    The Nation learned that several of the local government areas could not get enough grains to the tune of the money given to them while others who got did not get at the real price, as the traders increased the prices.

    It was also learned that some of the members of the standing committee have had to go into the inner lands to search for farmers who have saved up grains in order to meet up with the required quantity.

    The inability to get adequate grains led to the delay in the palliative distribution, as several local government areas did not start the distribution till Thursday night.

    As at the time of filing this report, several wards and polling units were yet to get their palliatives.

    The state governor had rolled out some modalities for the distribution of fuel subsidy removal palliatives, which will last for three days, starting from the 6th to 8th of September, 2023.

  • Akwa Ibom spends N5b on palliatives

    Akwa Ibom spends N5b on palliatives

    Akwa Ibom State Government has spent N5 billion on the palliative scheme, Governor Umo Eno has said.

    Eno, who made this known yesterday in his address to mark his 100 days in office, said the government had begun the distribution of additional bags of rice to each of 2,272 villages.

    He added that the government had also done cash transfers to 53,000 workers for three months, as well as embarked on levy-free Fridays for transporters for three months.

    The governor said: “Distribution of additional bags of rice to each of the 2,272 gazetted villages; cash transfers to 53,000 workers for three months, levy-free Fridays for transporters and traders for three months; all these have raised our contributions to the palliatives scheme to over N5 billion.”

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    He said the state government had acquired over 50,000 hectares across the 31 local governments and signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with a Songhai farm to tackle food insecurity.

    “We have sent hundreds of our people for training so they can form the nucleus of the skilled workers to drive this exercise,” Eno said.

    Noting that education remained free and compulsory at the primary and secondary levels, the governor said as part of the palliatives, his government intended to support parents with uniform, shoes and payment of bursary to students.

     “Our commitment to the payment of WAEC fees is irrevocable and we have already done so, since we came in,” he added.