Tag: perm sec

  • Ministry gets new Perm Sec

    Ministry gets new Perm Sec

    The Federal Ministry of Finance now has a new Permanent Secretary, following the retirement of Mr. Aliyu Ahmed. He is Okokon Udo.

    Before making his exit from the ministry, Aliyu Ahmed attributed the successes he achieved in the Ministry to the co-operation and support he enjoyed from the management staff of the Ministry. He handed over the affairs of the Ministry to the Permanent Secretary, Special Duties, Udo who now serves as the Permanent Secretary, Finance. 

    Aliyu Ahmed said he enjoyed a cordial relationship with his successor noting that “for quite a long time we worked together and had a very friendly relationship”.

    Ahmed described his successor as “very competent, widely experienced in the job and therefore he would deliver positively and move the Ministry to greater heights”.

    Read Also: OAuGF, Ministry of Finance Sign LoU on SFTAS

    To the management staff of the ministry, Aliyu Ahmed said he “enjoyed great support and friendship from all that I have worked with without which I would not have achieved such success.”

    He added that “I am grateful to God for the opportunity to serve and also exiting peacefully from the Nigerian Civil Service”.

    Ahmed was a former lecturer at Usman Dan Fodio University in Sokoto State. He joined the Nigerian Civil Service in 1993 and made a steady progress to the position of a Permanent Secretary. He left the service on the day he clocked sixty years old.

    Udo, who has taken over as the new Permanent Secretary Finance in his opening remarks said that Ahmed had contributed immensely to the growth and development of the ministry and the public service at large, as such, the system needed to tap from his wealth of experience.

    He described Ahmed as an objectivity, dogged, fearless and de-tribalized person whose characters and attributes are worthy of emulation.

  • Perm Sec to civil servants: build capacity, add value to service

    • Press Director Olowookere retires

    The Ministry of Labour and Employment Permanent Secretary, Mrs Ibukun Odusote, has urged new employees of the Ministry to see their employment as an opportunity to contribute to national development and add value to the Federal Civil Service.

    The Permanent Secretary, who spoke in Abuja at the induction organised for newly recruited officers, urged them to be patriotic Nigerians, strive to bring glory to the nation by imbibing positive work ethics and shun vices inimical to the service.

    “You are different from the person sitting by you because where you are going is not where the next person is heading, you must remain focused and add value to yourself through capacity development in both computer application, labour laws and public service rules,” she said.

    Mrs Odusote enjoined the inductees to avail themselves of the opportunity provided by the induction to keep abreast of information on basic principles and ethics of the Federal Civil Service. “Make the best of this induction course. We have done our part by organising this course, and it behoves on you to reciprocate this kind gesture by not wasting this opportunity as we have put together eminent resource persons to prepare you on your voyage into the Federal Civil Service,” she said.

    Director, Human Resources Management, Mr Ajibola Ibrahim said  the induction course was aimed at building the capacity of the staff for tasks ahead.

    Ayokunle Oluborode, who spoke on behalf of the inductees, appreciated the government for the employment opportunity and the Permanent Secretary for the opportunity to be part of the induction course, believing that it would enhance their efficiency to deliver on the task ahead.

    In another development, the Ministry’s Press Director, Samuel Olowookere, has retired after 35 years of meritorious service to the nation.

    In a statement by Assistant Director (Press), Rhoda Iliya,  Olowookere was employed on January 19, 1984, and his service in the Federal Civil Service  spanned the Office of the Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters, Dodan Barracks, Lagos, April 1984-1985, Office of the Chief of General Staff, General Staff Headquarters, Dodan Barracks, Lagos, August-December 1985, Office of the Minister, Federal Ministry of National Planning, Ikoyi Lagos, January–August 1986, Office of the Minister, Federal Ministry of Finance, Ikoyi, Lagos, September–October 1986, The Presidency, Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, October 24, 1986-October 2006.

    “He was deployed to head the Press and Public Relations Unit Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment in 2006, a responsibility he discharged efficiently to the admiration of the nine ministers and 11 permanent secretaries of the Ministry of Labour and Employment, he had the privilege of working with,” the statement said.

  • Don’t question me on how I spent SURE-P funds, Perm Sec tells EFCC in court

    A FORMER Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and Productivity, Clement Illoh, yesterday told an Ikeja Special Offences Court that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has no right to question him on how he spent SURE- P funds.

    Illoh is standing trial for allegedly stealing N14.1 million from Sure-P funds.

    Illoh was being cross-examined by the EFCC lawyer Rotimi Oyedepo on how the N14.1million disbursed to his personal account by the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) was spent.

    “You don’t have the right to ask me such questions. Why are you asking me such questions? Besides, the money in question wasn’t budgeted for neither was it appropriated, because it wasn’t the ministry’s fund.

    Read also: Buhari’s, Atiku’s campaign chiefs clash at presidential debate

    “I collected the money in the capacity of my official office, but it was NIMASA’s money that I spent and not from the Ministry of Labour’s office.

    “I wrote a memo requesting for the transfer of N14m from maritime to my business account called Clement and Bob Associates, wherein Access Bank was asked to debit NIMASA and credit my account.

    “The money was paid to my personal account by NIMASA in a form of non-personal advance,” he said.

    The former permanent secretary also told the court that he didn’t keep any receipts to show transfer of funds neither did he write any memo to his superiors stating that NIMASA disbursed such an amount to him.

    The EFCC had earlier arraigned Illoh on a three-count charge, bordering on stealing by conversion of property to the tune of N14.1 million.

    The ex-permanent secretary, who admitted remitting N616 million to the Federal Government upon arrest, said N3.5 million, which was the funds leftover from the N14.1 million budgeted for the meetings, was expended on logistics, honorarium, stationeries and transport.

    “I paid the sum of N3.5 million to Mr. John Tsonwa, my late special assistant and he is the only person who has the details of how the money was used, but sadly he is late,” he said.

    Illoh, however, denied taking money from the defunct Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme.

    He said he was aware that the EFCC recovered funds from his office and some contractors but claimed that the deceased managed the sum of N3.4 million for the workshop.

    Illoh also agreed that it was his duty to comply with the financial regulations of the Federal Government regarding disbursement of funds or how funds ought to be expended.

    Oyedepo  tendered the statement of the deceased man in evidence.

    Justice Oluwatoyin Taiwo thereafter adjourned the matter till December 3 for continuation of trial.

     

  • I can’t remember when I was appointed, says Perm Sec facing N14m theft charge

    •Iloh argues with EFCC prosecutor over N453m in account

    FORMER Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Labour Mr. Clement Iloh yesterday told an Ikeja Special Offences Court that he could not remember the date or year he was appointed as a permanent secretary.

    Iloh is facing trial for allegedly stealing N14 million  by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) before Justice Oluwatoyin Taiwo.

    He pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    Iloh, however,  noted that as at 2013, he earned N757,000 as a Level 17 officer.

    When shown the bank account statements of a company, Clement and Bob, to which he is the sole signatory, Iloh  maintained that it was his business account, which he opened alongside his son.

    When Oyedepo showed him that the account has a credit balance of N453 million,  Iloh said: “I don’t know how you jumped into that amount. What brought me here was a N14 million alleged theft charge.”

    Iloh also denied receiving credit alerts into the account from several contractors and junior officials in the ministry and Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) staff.

    The former Permanent Secretary’s counsel Chief Bolaji Ayorinde (SAN), however, raised objection when Oyedepo again showed the defendant his company’s statement of account where he received N100 million from a Bureau de Change operator while also receiving the dollar equivalent in cash.

    Ayorinde questioned why Oyedepo was trying to get his client to accept that he received the dollar equivalent of N100 million.

    “My Lord, the prosecution is simply trying to get my client to admit to money laundering charges so that they can file new charges,” Ayorinde said.

    Illoh, however, admitted to collecting another N100 million in 10 tranches of N10 million each, but maintained that the money does not belong to him.

    He explained that the N49 million transferred into his company account by NIMASA was meant for “community service”.

    On further probing by the EFCC prosecuting counsel, the defendant said the community  service he referred to was  a SURE P programme.

    He, however, admitted that there was no contract between his company, Clement and Bob and NIMASA as at the time the N49 million was paid.

    Justice  Taiwo thereafter adjourned the matter till November 21 and 22 for continuation of trial.

  • Perm Sec to Muslims: be grateful to Allah

    Muslims have been urged to learn how to give thanks to God Almighty always and seek for the forgiveness of their sins.

    Permanent Secretary Public Service Office Alhaji Bashir Olumuyiwa Braimoh gave this advice at the Annual Eid-ul-Adha Get Together organised by the Muslim Community of the Lagos State House of Assembly on Wednesday at Alausa, Ikeja.

    Braimoh, who was the guest speaker, said the gathering was meant to show gratitude to Allah for “creating us, making us Muslims and a practicing ones.”

    The lecturer added that to witness Eid-Ul-Adah is a blessing from Allah, adding that people should show gratitude to God Almighty always.

    “We need to thank Allah for Him to know that we appreciate what he has done for us. We should not feel that it is our fasting and prayers that make us to be alive.

    “Those who believe that it is not their fasting and prayers that kept them alive should give thanks to God Almighty always,” he said.

    Quoting copiously from the Quran, Braimoh advised that whoever knows how to thank Allah will always be blessed.

    He stressed that anyone that does not give thanks to God owes a debt and that He honours those, who gives thanks to Him.

    According to him, whoever asks for forgiveness should forsake his sins.

    “Allah said He would not punish us as long as we have the prophets. He says He would not punish us so long as we seek forgiveness from Him. He told the prophets that there are things he would give you if you ask for forgiveness. He said all He told them is to seek forgiveness from Him.

    “If you thank Allah, you are seeking His blessing. He promised us Paradise on earth and in heaven. Glory be to God, the gracious. Praising God weighs more than anything in the world,” he said.

    True worshippers of God, he said, should focus on heaven and not the things of this world.

    He enjoined Muslims to shun the allure of this world, saying that the Quran contains everything they needed in life.

    “If there is any book that can bring the dead back to life, make life better and get you to where you are going, it is the Quran,” he said.

  • Federal Health Ministry gets Perm Sec

    Mr. Abdullahi Abdullaziz Mashi has assumed duty as the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Health.

    Mashi, who addressed directors and workers of the ministry, harped on the need to improve on service delivery at hospitals, particularly, at the Accident and Emergency (A&E) departments. The Permanent Secretary urged the Servicom department to occasionally pay unscheduled visits to hospitals to monitor activities to ensure proper work ethics and improve efficiency.

    Mashi, an accountant by profession and an indigene of Katsina State, was deployed from the Federal Ministry of Communication.

  • Reps mull ‘stiffest penalty’ for Perm Sec

    THE House of Representatives is planning to punish the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Science and Technology,  Amina Shamaki, with the “stiffest penalty” for obstructing its proceedings at a public hearing.

    This followed the submission of Beni Lar (PDP, Plateau), who alleged Shamaki to have ordered Directors General (DGs) under her ministry to walk out of a public hearing on amendment to establishment bill of some agencies in the ministry.

    Lar, in her point of order, said the  Permanent Secretary on May 31, during a public hearing on eight  bills, asked the DGs of agencies in her ministry  in attendance  to walk out of the hearing.

    According to the lawmaker, Shamaki, who was seen stepping out of the hearing hall on a number of times, instructed the DGs to refrain from attending to the committee’s inquiries, else they will be queried.

    The lawmaker said Shamaki’s action was a slight on the institution of Legislature and a bad precedence.

    Uzoma Nkem-Abonta (PDP, Abia) said the action of the Permanent Secretary was grievous than the incidence of the Senate’s stolen mace.

    Chief Whip Hassan Doguwa, who said he witnessed the event, said the matter should not be handled with levity.

    The Speaker Yakubu Dogara referred the matter to Justice Committee, saying it was still an allegation.

  • MY LIFE from orphan to PERM SEC —Lekki Concessions Company boss Hassan

    The general belief is that Lagosians don’t like to do much of schooling. But here you are, pursuing a doctoral degree after two master’s degrees.

    I actually started with an HND (Higher National Diploma) in Accounting. But when Nigerians were about to mess up my HND, saying that it is not equal to B.Sc., I asked myself what is in this B.Sc? Although I was already a permanent secretary on the strength of my ICAN certificate as a chartered accountant, I enrolled for the B.Sc. degree at Olabisi Onabanjo University. I also encouraged some of my colleagues to follow me there. I graduated with a First Class. With that, I moved to the University of Lagos to do that dreaded M.Sc. I made aggregate 4.0. I then enrolled for Ph.D. Accounting at Babcock University. But God is wonderful. He said I should have a break. Otherwise by now, I would have become Dr. Mubashiru Hassan. Right now, my colleagues and lecturers are calling me, but I tell them that God’s time is the best. So, the Nigerian system is not encouraging. You get a qualification, they mess up the qualification and you have to start afresh. That was what led me to go for B.Sc. after getting an HND, and M.Sc. after getting MPA. Now I’m doing my Ph.D. Remember that I became a chartered accountant about 30 years ago.

    That means your chain of degrees is like a protest against the system… Yes, you can say so, although I am also academically inclined. I take academics as a hobby. I don’t like going to parties, so I spend my spare time to lecture. I have lectured in ICAN schools and have produced so many chartered accountants. I also still lecture at Yaba College of Technology. I started lecturing there in 1989 on part time basis, just to keep myself busy and make new friends among the students. Most of them are now big men. So, if I want anything done in any big company, all I need to do is ask, ‘Who is your head of accounts here?’ It is likely to be someone I have taught at YABATECH. He comes out saying, ‘Oga, what are you doing here?’ I tell him I want this or that, and he says, ‘Please, sit down, I’ll get it for you.’ So, in my own case, the reward for teachers is here on earth; not in heaven. Even as at today, many of the lecturers in the Accountancy Department, I taught them. How was your experience as a civil servant? It was really fantastic. I joined the service as a clerical assistant on Grade Level 03. That was when I finished my school certificate examination and was awaiting result. I joined with the assistance of my uncle, Hon. Richard Afolabi, who was the Commissioner for Employment in the state.

    He just came to me one morning and said, ‘Mubashiru, you are still sleeping? Wake up and follow me!’ He took me to his ministry and I started work the same day. By August when the result was released, I tendered it and I was upgraded to Grade Level 04 as a Cleriacal Officer. My salary as a clerical assistant was N1,284 per annum. That was about N107 per month, and I was staying in Ojo, working in Ikeja. When I joined service, my uncle handed me over to somebody—the late Joseph Olukayode Gbadebo. He said, ‘This is my son. Take care of him.’ The man just took me and we became like father and son. I later went to school to do my OND. But that is another story entirely. I will tell you about it later. I went on study leave without pay. Because I was too young in service, they could not give me study leave with pay. When I was doing the OND, I was promoted notionally to Grade Level 05, so that I would not have any set back with my colleagues.

    Notionally means studying without pay. When I finished and returned, I was advanced to Grade Level 06, and I started collecting salary. Then within the same year, I applied again for study leave with pay to do my HND. So, I was earning Level 6 salary while doing my HND. The most interesting part was that you would not get a study leave with pay if you did not have a guarantor. By that time, my uncle had left as the Commissioner for Employment, so I was worried about getting a guarantor. I told my adopted father about it, and he said, ‘Why are you worried about that? Are you not a Lagosian? If you like, you can run away after the course. I will stand for you.’’ My friend, Abiodun Balogun, who eventually became the Head of Service, also said he would sign for me. So, the two of them signed for me because I needed two guarantors. So, I went to do my HND and came back after my NYSC and was upgraded to Grade Level 08.

    The next step was to do my ICAN, but there was no money, because I had lost my parents at a very tender age. That is why I call myself a certified orphan. I lost my father when I was writing my mock exam in secondary school, and lost my mother the second day I started my OND programme at YABATECH. So I had to struggle and struggle to complete the course. How old were you then? I finished my school cert at age 18. That means I lost my father around age 18. Then in 1981, that was age 19, I lost my mother. Then, the state government was giving out car loans, but the amount that was being granted could not even buy a bicycle. It was N4,800, and you would pay back in five years. I had to apply. Again, guarantors were required and I had to call on my two guarantors again. Of course, they had confidence in me. They signed for me. I then used the N4,800 to write ICAN until I qualified in 1988 and I was upgraded to Grade Level 09. That was the beginning of my rapid rise. From there, I moved to Lagos State Agricultural Development Project as Acting Financial Controller. From there, I crossed to Local Government as Internal Auditor. I did the job for about seven years before I was appointed Council Treasurer. So, I was rising without missing any level until I got to Grade Level 15, which is Assistant Director Finance. I was trying to follow in (Governor Akinwunmi) Ambode’s footsteps.

    He had left local government for Alausa when he saw that there were no more challenges. So, when I became the Assistant Director of Finance, I started asking myself what else was new in local government? I said if Ambode could do it, I too could do it. So I applied for a transfer, particularly because I was always at loggerheads with the chairman. Instead of getting the transfer to state service, I was appointed as the Auditor-General for Local Government. That was during the regime of Sunny Ajose as Head of Service. After Ajose, Abiodun Balogun became the Head of Service. When he became the Head of Service, you know I was his son, he grew me and upgraded me to Permanent Secretary. So I became Permanent Secretary/Auditor General for Local Government. You can then see how fantastic it was. I was so lucky that I was coming across people who really believed in me. They saw a star in me and supported me all through. Even when I was to marry, the man Gbadebo I mentioned earlier and Balogun followed me all the way to Ondo State and stood in as my father. They signed the marriage certificate as my father. I will never forget them in my life. Are they still alive? Gbadebo is dead. He died about two years ago. But Balogun is now in the House of Reps. I have just told him that my son is wedding next month and he is going to be the chairman of the occasion. Back to what you said earlier, that Lagosians don’t usually read, times have changed.

    Today, we have professors and doctors everywhere. They used to say Aworis don’t go to school; that they only sell land. Now, there is no more land to sell except the Lagoon (laughs). So, they have no choice but to go to school. We have so many educated Lagosians now who are doing very well in their callings. You spoke of having disagreements with your chairman when you were in local government service. What was the basis for the disagreements? You know that when a politician assumes duty, their thinking is always in opposite direction with those who hold offices. So, we were always disagreeing. I was managing everything before, at least since I crossed in 1990 until 2005. So, I said what kind of nonsense is this? I am going. I wrote a letter to the state requesting a transfer, but the chairman refused to sign. He is now the Director-General of NISER in Ibadan. Now we are very good friends.

    He is doing well and I’m doing well, so what are we fighting for? He believed that civil servants are very slow and fingering whatever is available. At the end of the day, he ran into trouble. I just left in annoyance. I said, ‘I’ve had enough in local government, I’m going back to my roots.’ That was how I returned to the civil service. You spoke of losing your parents at an early age. How was life, growing up in those circumstances? (He heaves a heavy sigh, shakes his head and sobs) It was, well, the wish of God that I came through them into this world. God had a purpose for giving me to that family. My father was a casual worker with the local government. It was one of the reasons I chose to work in the local government. I told myself that I must achieve what my father could not do when he was there. How much was his salary then? My mother was a petty trader, selling palm oil, maize, firewood and fish, and I was her marketing manager (laughs). After returning from school, I would hawk the palm oil or the fish or the maize to raise money for us to eat. You know that we men are usually care-free. And because it was a polygamous family, the other side thought my father was spending his earnings on my education, whereas it was my mother that was shouldering everything.

    May God make us more responsible (laughs). Whenever it was time to pay my school fees, which was N5 or N10, my mother would go and borrow and then pay back in instalments. She assisted me in going to secondary school, but she really could not afford it. It was my uncle, Richard Afolabi, who was a headmaster at St. Michael’s Primary School, who insisted that she must send me to school because he said I was brilliant. So, on many occasions, he would come to assist my mother. My mother, in exchange for that assistance, would send some fish to him in appreciation. But borrowing money meant that I had to work harder to support her so that she could pay back. You can imagine what I experienced right from Primary One.

    Then during vacation, I would go to do holiday job. Mind you, my own holiday job was never in an office. It was doing all manner of odd jobs. I almost became a bricklayer, carrying concretes, blocks and what have you to earn N3 per day. Interestingly, the man I was working with as an apprentice bricklayer is still alive, and I call him my Oga (boss). The man Gbadebo, when I was on Level 3, he was on Level 9, but I became a perm sec before him. Can you see how God works? But he was never jealous. He said, ‘You are my son; just take care of me.’ And I took care of him until he died. I tried to get a scholarship but it didn’t work out. So, the lot fell on my mother and I had to support her. But it was just when I was trying to make her happy that death took her away.

    Funny enough, she was even trying to lay the foundation of a portion of land given to her by her mother. In those days, you would work for three months before you were paid. It was from my first salary we started the foundation, but she died and the dream ended there. You could see how I struggled without support from anywhere but my mother. But she couldn’t stay to eat the fruit of her labour. She died in an accident. So, each time I remember her, I shed tears. Reflecting on what I had gone through in life gave me focus and helped me to work harder and harder. I had no time for frivolities at all, because I kept telling myself that if some people could become perm sec, I too could become one. It will interest you to know that by the time I became a permanent secretary, some of my contemporaries who joined service at the same time were still on Level 7 or 8. I also helped as many people as possible to get into service, realising how I myself was helped by others. I do so in the hope that two or three of them would also become somebody so they can continue from where I stopped. In every local government area in Lagos today, you would see my footprints. Today, many of the people I helped are in the senior staff of different establishments.

    At what point did marriage come in? (Laughs) I got my wife during my NYSC (national youth service). I was very popular in the camp. Very, very popular. Where was that? That was in Abuja. 1986/87 What accounted for your popularity? I was in the food committee. Nobody in the camp would not come and eat. I was also in the football team of my platoon. From there, I was selected to play for the Abuja NYSC team in the NYSC Director’s Cup. So I became very popular. Everywhere I went, it was MM, MM, MM, and you know that ladies like popular guys. So, one day, I was walking in the camp when I saw this beautiful lady. I called her and toasted her and she agreed to my proposal. That became my gain from the NYSC. We became so close and decided to get married after courting for about two and a half years. We got married in 1989. The marriage was another experience altogether. An orphan was getting married and there was no money. I talked to my adopted parents and they agreed to go with me. All the people who believed in me in the village supported me. The state government also gave me a bus and they followed me to Ondo. To raise the money for marriage, we were five on my mother’s side. When my father died, they gave us a plot of land. We sold the plot of land and shared the proceeds. It was my own share of the money that I combined with my salary to do my wedding. My monthly salary as a Grade Level 8 officer then was N306. We sold the land for N40,000 and we were five in number. I thank God that the wedding came to be. How has your experience been as the Managing Director of Lekki Concessions Company Limited? I regard that as another beautiful job expected to bring out the best in me; to solve so many problems that the company was facing.

    I have always taken Governor (Akinwunmi) Ambode as a kind of model which I adopted. Whatever he did, I liked to do the same thing. He crossed voluntarily from local government to state service before he became the Auditor-General, having handed over to me as the Auditor-General for local governments. By the time he retired, I was almost 10 years in that position. He retired voluntarily because he felt there was nothing else there to achieve. In the same manner, I looked round and asked myself what else is here to achieve? So, I also retired voluntarily and went into politics about the same time Ambode also went into politics. When I lost the primaries, God spoke to him to call me to go to LCC as the Managing Director. When I got there, I saw the job as a very, very challenging one because of certain problems that must be solved. I thank him because he believed in me that I could do the job.

    That was the reason why he really sent me there. I thank him for that, and I pray to God that He will support me not to disappoint the governor in the challenging job. It is very challenging, especially when we were to increase the toll on the Lekki-Epe Expressway. When you work in the local government, it is an environment that you will never regret in life, because you are dealing with the grassroots people. You must be very intelligent, otherwise you will face problems here and there. In the local government, you are very close to the Babalawos, the Iyalojas, and so on. If you misbehave to any of them, they will send you a message. But if you are able to manage them, there is nothing else you cannot handle. That is why Ambode is performing very well in his job as the governor of the state. So, when I was asked to handle the project, I sat down and used my experience as a former local government worker. I engaged all the residents, talking and appealing to them. If you see yourself as an alakowe from somewhere and you just ignore them, they are very powerful and tough to manage. But I was able to bring them together, and when they agreed with me, I knew I had succeeded. Today, the toll is on and there is no more resistance. The only group that tried to resist and said they were going to protest, I just walked round them to find out who was really supporting them, and I begged them. That day, the protest was not successful.

    The few of them who came out shouted and shouted but nobody joined them. I joined them and we were shouting together. I now saw that they were distributing some hand bills and I collected one. That was when I saw the names behind the protest and I realised that it was more of a political rally, because they wrote Joint Socialist Party of Nigeria. When I was later interviewed by BBC, CNBC and I think OGFM, and I was asked that question, I said there was no protest. They said what did I mean? I said I was there and I saw that it was a political rally; they were distributing the handbills of Joint Socialist Party. I showed them the handbill and they were surprised. I told them I was there in their midst personally. They didn’t know me, so I collected their handbill. They were surprised. When BBC and CNBC now flashed the interview, I was just laughing. I focused on the residents—the NURTW (National Union of Road Transport Workers), the okada riders and those that I knew could be used for such protests, because learned people like you and me don’t protest. I focused on those that I knew that when they protest, there would be trouble, and they accepted me as their son. It is an Awori area, and I was sponsoring an Awori radio programme called Omo Olofin at 7 am every Saturday. That has given me a very good image with them. Everywhere I go, they say, ‘Oh, you are M.M. Hassan, the man sponsoring Omo Olofin? We will support you.’ So, God has been wonderful.

  • What State House Medical Centre got since 2015, by perm sec

    Permanent Secretary of the State House Jalal A. Arabi yesterday explained that the State House Medical Centre only received 33 per cent of capital allocations and 48 per cent of recurrent expenditure from 2015 to 2017 budget.

    He made the clarification in a statement issued by Deputy Director (Information) in the State House, Attah Esa.

    The statement reads: “The attention of the Presidency has been drawn to recent media reports suggesting that the State House Medical Centre had received N11.01billion as appropriation for the period 2015-2017.

    “According to the Permanent Secretary, State House, Jalal A. Arabi, contrary to the above claims, out of the total capital appropriation of N2,941,062,044.00 and recurrent appropriation of N465,935,358.00 for the period under reference, only the sum of N969,681,821.53 (representing 32.97 per cent) for capital and N225,575,200.60 (representing 48.41 per cent) for recurrent was actually released.

    “Arabi also said it may interest the public to know that there was zero capital allocation for the Medical Centre in 2017, while out of the N331,730,211.00 being recurrent appropriation for 2017, the actual amount released up to September was N91,370,053.60 (representing only 27.54 per cent).

    “The Permanent Secretary emphasised that the above figures are verifiable from the Ministries of Finance, Budget and National Planning.”

    Permanent Secretary observed that during the three-year period under review (indeed two years since no capital allocation for 2017), and despite the shortfalls between budgetary provisions and actual releases, the medical centre continued to provide free services to the over 10,000 registered patients annually.

    According to him, the centre has also continued to execute on-going projects.

    Giving further insight into the scope of the medical centre’s clientele, Arabi stressed that apart from the Presidency, other beneficiaries of the free services include political appointees, the military, para-military, other security agencies, members of the National Assembly and the public.

  • Obaseki sacks Perm Sec over N283m budget padding

    Obaseki sacks Perm Sec over N283m budget padding

    The permanent secretary in the Edo State Ministry of Youth and Special Duties, Dr. (Ms) Osayuware Idahosa yesterday lost her job over alleged  padding of the  budget for the conduct of primary school examination to the tune of N283 million.

    Three other civil servants were sent on suspension for their alleged role in the scam.

    Governor Godwin Obaseki who handed down the punishment also ordered an investigation into the schools’ delisting accounts in the state.

    The decision was arrived at an extraordinary meeting  of the State Executive Committee.

    Dr. Idahosa, who served as Permanent Secretary in the State Ministry of Education at the time the alleged fraud was committed, was referred to the State Civil Service Commission for appropriate action, in line with the rules and guidelines of the service.

    Others involved in the alleged fraud are: Barr. S. A. Erhunmwunse Edokpayi, Mrs. E.I. Ero-Ugiagbe and Mr. Lucky Adagbonyin.

    The EXCO resolved that they should proceed on indefinite suspension without pay and their case forwarded to the State Civil Service Commission for appropriate actions according to the rules and guidelines of the service.

    Communication and Orientation Commissioner  Paul Ohonbamu told reporters at the end of the meeting that that the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Prof. Yinka Omorogbe, submitted a report on the panel of enquiry on the conduct of the 2016/2017 Primary School Leaving Certificate Examination.

    He said the State Executive Council similarly  set up a committee headed  by Employment and Wealth Creation Commissioner  Emmanuel Usoh  to investigate the removal  of about 350 private schools from the list of eligible schools to participate in the Primary School Leaving Certificate Examination and also the conditions that led to the relisting of these schools shortly after they were delisted.