Tag: panel

  • APC raises panel on Kaduna crisis

    APC raises panel on Kaduna crisis

    •‘Sani’s suspension continues’

    All Progressives Congress (APC) in Northwest has raised a committee to look into the internal crises in its Kaduna State chapter and the suspension of Senator Shehu Sani.

    The committee is chaired by Katsina State Governor Aminu Masari.

    National Vice Chairman, Northwest Inuwa Abdulkadir spoke in his keynote address at the party’s zonal Executive Council Committee Meeting in Dutse, Jigawa capital, at the weekend.

    He said: “We will not condone arbitrary disciplinary action against loyal party members. Therefore, laid down party constitution must be followed before such decisions could stand.”

    Abdulkadir urged warring factions to respect the reconciliation committee.

    The Kaduna State chapter yesterday denied reports that the indefinite suspension of Senator Shehu Sani was lifted at the zonal meeting in Jigawa State.

    A statement by the state Secretary, Yahaya Baba-Pate, said the issue was not discussed at the meeting. He insisted Sani’s indefinite suspension stands.

    The statement reads: “Shehu Sani, without sense of shame, hired a journalist to report the purported lifting of his indefinite suspension and credited the charade to the Vice Chairman, Alhaji Inuwa Abdulkadir.

    “His suspension was not discussed and was never mentioned. Knowing he is on indefinite suspension, he was not allowed to speak at the meeting.

    “It did not come to us as a surprise that he sponsored the false reports but whatever his wishful thinking may be, it cannot change the fact that he is being disciplined. And just as he did not join the party via media statements, he cannot alter party decisions using the media.

    “Sani’s tantrums are entertaining for the media; he may enjoy being ridiculed, but our party cherishes its reputation.”

  • Govt sets up panel to probe incident

    The Akwa Ibom State government has said it will set up a high-powered commission of enquiry to examine the causes of Saturday’s building collapse at Reigners Bible Church International in Uyo, the state capital.

    Many worshippers died while several were injured.

    In a state-wide broadcast, Governor Udom Emmanuel said he was in the church when the incident occurred. The governor said he supervised the rescue and evacuation of the injured to hospital.

    He said: “A high-powered panel of enquiry is being constituted to ascertain the factors leading to collapse of the church building, with a view to forestalling a recurrence of any such incident and bringing to book any person found to have compromised professional standards in the construction of the building.”

    Emmanuel commiserated with families of the victims.

    The governor pledged that his administration will pay the medical bills of the injured.

    He appealed to the citizens to remain calm and pray for those in critical condition in hospital.

    Urging the Christian community to pray, Emmanuel advised the people to avoid speculation because the situation was getting the best attention.

    He said: “I supervised the rescue operation and evacuation of the injured to hospital. I directed all emergency organisations and agencies of government and corporate organisations, especially construction companies, to be involved in the exercise. They acted promptly, and I commend them.”

  • Senate panel to fast-track FHA’s restructuring

    Senate panel to fast-track FHA’s restructuring

    The Senate Committee on Housing has promised to work with relevant agencies to fast-track the restructuring and commercialisation of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA).

    Its Chairman, Senator Barnabas Gemade, made this known in Abuja when he led his colleagues on an oversight visit to the Authority’s headquarters.

    He said urgent legislative action was required to fast-track the reform and commercialisation of the FHA which had been on-going since 1992.

    He said the planned amendment would strengthen the Authority and return it to its pride of place as an effective national instrument for housing delivery.

    The lawmaker, who was accompanied by four of his colleagues, noted that the fortunes of the FHA has been adversely affected by somersaults in government’s policy. He said the removal of the FHA from government funding had stacked the odds against the agency and affected its ability to deliver on its mandate.

    To strengthen the FHA, Gemade promised that his committee would explore the possibility of its benefitting from the Central Bank’s N30 billion Real Estate Development Intervention Fund. To this end, he directed the Authority’s Managing Director, Prof. Mohammed Al-Amin, to furnish his committee with a list of all its completed and on-going housing projects, including partnership projects, loan portfolio, and nominal roll.

    During a visit to the FHA/ENL Paradise Hills Estate, Apo, Abuja, Gemade expressed satisfaction with the quality of work done on the houses.

    He said FHA demonstrated a high level of professional competence in delivering quality houses for medium and high income earners and urged it to brace up to build houses for millions of the nation’s low  income earners.

    Al-Amin said there was need to strengthen the Authority’s ability to deliver on its social housing mandate through special subventions and regular budgetary allocation.

    He appealed to the committee to hasten work on the amendment of the law establishing it. He said the FHA depended solely on public- private partnerships to deliver houses since the government funding for it stopped.

  • AUDU MAIKORI HEADS  CHIVAS’ ‘THE VENTURE’ PANEL

    AUDU MAIKORI HEADS CHIVAS’ ‘THE VENTURE’ PANEL

    WITH over $1 million in funding and resources, Chivas Regal has announced the return of The Venture, a global search to find and support the next generation of startups.

    Making the announcement last Wednesday at a press conference held at Film House, Lekki, the management of Chivas revealed that the 2016/2017 edition of The Venture has begun its search for entrepreneurs that want to succeed whilst positively impacting the lives of others.

    Craig Van Niekerk, Marketing Director, Pernod Ricard Nigeria, stated that; “A new breed of entrepreneur is emerging in Nigeria; one that uses business ideas to succeed whilst making a positive impact on the lives of others. Chivas Regal launched The Venture to offer significant resources to help drive and support the social entrepreneurship movement worldwide and in Nigeria.”

    This year, 32 countries across 6 continents will be taking part and applications will be accepted from any for-profit-startup that creates both financial value and a positive impact on the lives of others.

    Chivas Regal has partnered with E.D.C (Enterprise Development Centre) – for this years’ initiative, to find and support promising local social entrepreneurs across all sectors.

    The top three participants will pitch their business plans at a finale session to a panel of industry experts chaired by AuduMaikori.

    “Chivas and I share the same values – the belief that businesses must have a purpose beyond profit. It is therefore an absolute honour to be back again as a judge, to find like-minded individuals who are not only successful within their own rights but sharing their success with their communities. This is profit with purpose,” Maikori said of his relationship with the brand.

    The winner will join the other 32 participants across the world in an Accelerator Week programme in Oxford, UK and will represent Nigeria at The Venture final event in the USA, July 2017.

  • Ekiti deputy speaker, panel chair incur Fayose’s wrath

    Ekiti State House of Assembly Deputy Speaker Olusegun Adewumi and Information Committee Chairman Gboyega Aribisogan may have run into trouble for allegedly meeting with those perceived as an enemies of Governor Ayo Fayose, it was learnt yesterday.

    They were accused of meeting with Senator Buruji Kashamu,  former Ekiti State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Secretary Temitope Aluko,  Special Adviser to the President on Political Matters, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, activist, lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) and a new entrant into Ekiti All Progressives Congress (APC) Yinka Akerele last Saturday in Lagos.

    Adewumi, who represents Ekiti West Constituency I, was said to have been impeached on Fayose’s alleged order at plenary and replaced with Ekundayo Akinleye representing Ijero Constituency

    Aribisogan, who represents Ikole Constituency I, was said to have been suspended at the session.

    The plenary was yet to hold by noon  when reporters visited the assembly, but the lawmakers led by Speaker Kola Oluwawole, were said to be meeting with Fayose at press time.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ekiti is polarised. The faction loyal to Fayose has Gboyega Oguntuase as chairman; the other faction loyal to Kashamu is led by Williams Ajayi.

    Fayose and Kashamu, who used to be allies are now battling for PDP soul in the Southwest.

    Adewumi could not be reached for comment but Aribisogan denied being suspended.

    Aribisogan, who spoke on phone, claimed that he was in Abuja. He said he had not committed any offence to warrant suspension.

    Speaker Oluwawole debunked insinuations of a leadership crisis in the Assembly, saying whatever might have happened at plenary was a “family affair.”

    Oluwawole said: “Nothing of such happened. I am not aware of any impeachment or suspension plot. The Deputy Speaker is still there as my deputy.

  • Union decries minimum wage review panel’s pace

    the Amalgamated Union of Public Corporation Civil Service Technical and Recreational Services Employees (AUPCTRE), Federal Capital Territory (FCT) council, has expressed worries over the slow pace of work by the committee on review of the new minimum wage set up by the Federal Government.

    This was contained in a communiqué issued after the meeting of the State Governing Council  (SGC). It was signed by the President, Comrade Benjamin Anthony, in Abuja.

    AUPCTRE urged the committee to hasten up its work.

    The union condemned “the factionalisation” of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), pledging its unalloyed loyalty to Comrade Ayuba Wabba. It urged other unions and Nigerians to support the NLC.

    It called on the  Federal Government to save the ailing economy and to rescind its suspension of the tenure policy of the Federal Civil Service,  because of its  stagnation tendency.

    “The SGC-in-session commends the Federal Government for setting up the Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System (IPPIS), but observed that much is still desired to sanitise the system so as not to use it as a conduit pipe to syphon government money and urges government to take necessary steps in this direction,’’ it said.

    The union condemned the move by the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde  Fashola,   to privatise the Federal Housing Authority (FHA)  and change its name to Federal Housing Company.

    “The implication is that Nigerians would not have access to affordable houses. The union, therefore, calls on the Federal Government to appoint a substantive management team and Board to run FHA for effective operational activities,” it said.

  • LASU disciplinary panel begins probe today

    A disciplinary committee set up by the Lagos State University (LASU) to investigate the alleged abduction of the Students’ Union president, Tayo Sekoni, by two undergraduates and one alumnus on Thursday last week will begin investigations today.

    The LASU management has denied the claim by the trio on social media that they are being witch hunted in favour of Sekoni.

    Oladadayo Mojeed Babatunnde a final year student of the School of Transport; Adebanjo Fatai Adekoya another final year student of Law, as well as Fola Kososko who graduated last year, were reportedly suspended last Friday for attempted kidnap of Sekoni and for general misconduct.

    At briefing on Monday, Dean of Student Affairs Dr Oluwafemi Obayori, promised that the investigation would be fair, as the management would look into the current and remote causes of the incident.

    Explaining what prompted the investigation, Obayori said that that on July 24, Sekoni drew his attention to threats by Adebanjo to assault him, which he (Adebanjo) did not deny.

    Obayori said he traced the animosity to the NANS convention held in Gombe July 13-16, which Sekoni and the trio attended as supporters of two different factions for the position of NANS PRO.   There was   a faceoff between the two parties at the venue, which neither reported when they got back to LASU until the assault issue came up.

    Obayori said: “He (Adebanjo) said it in my presence that he was going to beat Sekoni right inside the campus. I asked him why and he said it was because he (Sekoni) brought some other people against the candidate they presented at NANS convention in Gombe two weeks ago. I then instructed our PR to take minutes of our encounter. I also brought in some other people as witnesses.

    “These students have been claiming on social media that when they returned from Gombe, they drew management’s attention to what happened but we paid no attention because we wanted to be biased. I want to put it on record that until Sekoni notified me that his life was being threatened by Adebayo that I desired to know why he wanted to attack the SUG president.

    “It was at that point he narrated everything that occurred in Gombe to me. I immediately asked he and others involved to present their individual accounts and some have already submitted. In fact the last person submitted on Friday. But on Thursday Sekoni was waylaid by Adebayo and his cohorts while returning to his hostel.  According to reports, the situation would have gotten out of hand, but for other students that prevented Sekoni from being dragged out of the commercial bust he was in.

    Prior to Kosoko’s graduation, the DSA said management had restrained him from participating in union activities due to some misconduct. Kosoko however became more prominent on social media launching insults at management.

  • How to find Chibok girls, by presidential panel

    How to find Chibok girls, by presidential panel

    The Presidential Fact-Finding Committee on the abducted female students of Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State has asked the Federal Government to take advantage of foreign support, backed with hi-tech equipment, to locate the abducted girls and rescue them.

    It called for the beefing up of arms and ammunition of the military as well as the strengthening of security agencies in the theatre of operation.

    The committee made the recommendations in its 50-page report submitted to the government, according to Premium Times.

    The 27-member panel chaired by Ibrahim Sabo, a retired brigadier general, was inaugurated by former President Goodluck Jonathan on May 6, 2014, to, among other things, find out the circumstances leading to the abduction of the 276 female students of the Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State on April 14, 2014 by Boko Haram terrorists.

    The establishment of the committee followed claims and counterclaims about the circumstances and the actual number of students abducted by the terrorists.

    The panel submitted its report to then President Jonathan, but its details were never made public.

    In the report, the committee, which sat for five weeks, said altogether 276 students out of the 395 female students that registered for the WAEC examination were abducted by the terrorists.

    It further stated that while 57 of the students escaped from the insurgents after the abduction, the remaining 219 were unaccounted for.

    It said five of the 57 students that escaped were found in the bushes near Damboa.

    It said at the time the girls were abducted, the school was relying on extant security arrangement and had only two guards while there was no electricity because its only generator had broken down.

    The panel said intelligence available to it at the time it was submitting its report to government showed that the girls were in different camps in and around Sambisa Forest, which covers an area of 60,000 square kilometres with scrubby semi desert tangle of low trees and bushes in the corner of the Northeast zone.

    “The abducted girls have been split into groups under the watch of separate syndicates as confirmed from various sightings of the insurgents at different locations,” it said.

    “Another batch of girls is believed to have been transported by canoe to an Island around the Lake Chad.

    “Insurgent attacks on communities and markets situated in Hyuum, Askira Uba LGA, Klakaisa and Sha’awa villages of Damboa LGA in search of food and other supplies, indicate that some of the girls could be within the area.”

    The committee suggested two ways of rescuing the girls, namely negotiation and military operation.

    It explained that the negotiation initiative would require dialogue with hostage-takers through trusted intermediaries and conflict mediators. The military option would involve the deployment of counter-terrorism and/or hostage rescue team, which would undertake a surgical strike storming the locations where the hostages are held.

    It listed the advantages and disadvantages of the two options.

    The panel told the government that in determining which option to adopt, the advantages and disadvantages of each approach should be carefully examined in the context of the hostage crisis and new developments.

    “The negotiation initiative is inclusive while the military option is exclusive to the team that would be involved in the rescue operation,” the Committee said.

    Citing the successful release of the 52 U.S. officials, who were held hostages for 444 days at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Iran from 1979 to 1981, the committee listed the advantages of the negotiation approach to include a greater likelihood of rescuing the girls alive and safe from harm and the provision of an opening to broader discussions and understanding that would eventually lead to a peace agreement.

    On the other hand, the committee said by adopting the military option, Nigeria would have, among others, complied with the internationally accepted norms of non-negotiation with terrorists; boost morale within the country and among the security agencies; and send a strong message to the insurgents that the government was not weak.

    It, however, noted that the constraints of the option were insufficient number of mobilised troops; inadequate combat equipment (power, mobility and communication); porous/unmanned borders with Cameroun, Chad and Niger Republics, which provide the insurgents the advantage of safe haven, access to mercenaries and weapons; and time constraints in the procurement process for combat equipment.

    Stating that most of the people it interacted with during its fact-finding work did not consider the military option advisable “in order to protect the abducted girls,” the committee said should the government decide to adopt the approach, a thorough assessment of the strength and capability of the military and the Boko Haram insurgents must be undertaken.

    It suggested that the assessment of the military should be in the areas of personnel, equipment, the terrain, logistics and state of preparedness of the rescue team at the conflict site and in geographical location for possible reinforcement.

    For the insurgents, it said, “there should be an appreciation of their supply route, personnel, fire power, camouflage tactics and guerrilla war strategy”.

    The committee said from its findings the insurgents are armed with sophisticated military hardware such as Armoured Personnel Carriers (APCs), Anti-Aircraft (AA) guns, Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPGs), among other weapons.

    It said: “The sophistication of their equipment has emboldened the insurgents leading to an increase in the frequency and intensity of their attacks. The Nigerian military and other security agencies should be provided with additional and superior weapons to counter the insurgents.”

    The committee also recommended that the military should review its rules of engagement to appropriately counter the insurgents.

    It asked the government to also co-opt the Youth Volunteer Group, otherwise known as Civilian JTF and the Shuwa tribe into the search and rescue of the Chibok girls.

  • Minimum wage panel begins talks

    Minimum wage panel begins talks

    The 15-man committee inaugurated by the Federal Government on the implementation of the new minimum wage for workers has started sitting.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) gathered from some members of the committee at the weekend that it had met once.

    Mr Chris Onyedika, acting general secretary of a faction of the NLC and a member of the 15-man committee, confirmed that it had started deliberations on the agreement reached between the Federal Government and factions of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) in May, this year.

    “The 15-man committee will review the Federal Government’s liberalisation of the downstream sector of the petroleum industry, leading to the new fuel pump price of N145 per litre.

    “The committees will discuss and recommend a new national minimum wage, the N500 billion palliatives being proposed by the Federal Government and the re-constitution of the Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency Board, among other issues, before presenting its recommendations to government,” Onyedika said.

    NAN recalls that the government in May increased the price of petrol from N97 to N145 per litre, which led to some agitation and a warning strike by Organised Labour.

    The Joint Negotiation Council had started to agitate for an increase in national minimum wage for workers, which was last reviewed five years ago.

    At this year’s International Labour Organisation (ILO) conference in Geneva , Switzerland, participants encouraged the ILO to promote the ratification and implementation of the Minimum Wage Fixing Convention, 1970.

    The NLC and Trade Union Congress (TUC), the two central labour organisations in the country have proposed N56, 000 as the national minimum wage to the Federal Government, as against the current N18,000.

    The National Minimum Wage Law, which prescribed N18,000, was enacted in 2011.

  • Govt sets up 16-man panel on fuel price palliatives

    Govt sets up 16-man panel on fuel price palliatives

    The sixteen-man Technical Committee for the implementation of the palliatives to cushion the effects of the hike in fuel price has been constituted.

    In a release from the Ministry of Labour and Empoyment, the committee, which will be chaired by the Minister of Labour and Employment, Sen. Dr. Chris Nwabueze Ngige (OON), has the representative of the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Prof. Adamu K. Usman as Secretary.

    Other members  includ Minister of State, Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, Minister of Budget and Planning Sen. Udo Udoma, Minister of Finance Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, Minister of Solid Minerals Dr. Kayode Fayemi, the Chairman of National Salaries and Wages Commission, Chief R.O Egbule and the representative of the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation.

    The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) will be represented by Comrade Peter Adeyemi, Comrade Amaechi Asugwuni, Comrade Ibrahim Khaleel, Comrade Igwe Achese and Comrade Abdullahi Sale.

    Similarly, the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) will be represented by Comrade Augustine Etafo, Comrade Alade Bashir Lawal and Comrade Abdullahi Sale.

    The committee was inaugurated yesterday at the Conference Hall of the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation.