Tag: replaces

  • Banker Kuru replaces  Chike-Obi as AMCON boss

    Banker Kuru replaces Chike-Obi as AMCON boss

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday dissolved the management team of the Assets Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) led by Mustafa Chike-Obi.

    A statement by Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the President Mr. Femi Adesina, announced a new management team for the corporation.

    The new team is led by Ahmed Lawan Kuru – Managing Director, Kola Ayeye – Executive Director, Eberechukwu Uneze – Executive Director, and Aminu Ismail – Executive Director.

    Apart from Chike-Obi, other members of the sacked team are: Mofoluke Benedicta Dosunmu, Heweth  Adegboyega Benson and Abbass Mohammed Jega

    Prior to his appointment, Mr. Kuru was the Group Managing Director of Enterprise Bank Limited.

    He started his banking career with the old Habib Bank in 1985 and rose through the ranks to become an Executive Director of Bank PHB (now Keystone Bank) in 2005.

    The appointment of Mr. Kuru and the three AMCON Executive Directors, the statement said, is with effect from yesterday.

    AMCON was established under the AMCON Act 2010 to resolve the issue of non-performing loan assets in the banking sector.

    It currently has over 12,000 bad loans in its portfolio and has continued to pursue the recovery of the debts. It has sold bonds worth over N4.7 trillion in the course of its operation.

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) last November, asked the Federal Government to phase out the activities of AMCON.

    “Ongoing initiatives to strengthen the supervisory framework, including supervision of banking groups, should continue, and AMCON’s activities phased out gradually,” Mr. Gene Leon, the Fund’s Mission Chief and Senior Resident Representative in Nigeria said.

  • Nigeria replaces Saudi Arabia as top crude oil supplier to India

    Nigeria replaces Saudi Arabia as top crude oil supplier to India

    Nigeria has replaced Saudi Arabia as the largest crude oil supplier to India after its oil exports to India last month surged by nearly 200%, supplying some 745,000 barrels per day.

    It’s the first time in at least four years that Saudi Arabia, the world’s top crude exporter, has lost the top spot, Reuters reported.

    The shift comes as more Indian refiners switch out their long-term contracts with Middle East suppliers in favour of African oil spot purchases.

    Saudi Arabia also fell behind Russia and Angola last month as the largest crude supplier to China. The fuel-rich nation struggles to maintain market share in Asia as the gap narrows between the Middle East price marker and the international crude oil benchmark Brent.

    India’s African oil imports rose to the highest in more than four years, from 15.5% in April to 26% in May with tankers mainly from Nigeria and Angola.

    Meanwhile, the share of Middle Eastern oil to India fell to 54% in May from 61% in April, with Saudi Arabia supplying some 732,400 barrels per day.

  • Court replaces PDP governorship candidate in Borno

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has faulted the choice of Mohammed Imam as the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Borno State.

    Justice Ahmed Mohammed, in a judgment yesterday, declared illegal, the decision by the party’s leadership to nominate Imam as against Gambo Lawan, who won the primary election.

    The judge declared the plaintiff as the authentic standard-bearer of the PDP for the April 11 governorship election.

    He ordered the PDP to replace Imam with Lawan as its candidate.

    Justice Mohammed ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to recognise Lawan as the PDP’s candidate.

    The judge, who dismissed the objection raised against the suit by Imam, PDP AND INEC, held that the plaintiff proved that he contested and won the primaries conducted on December 11 last year at Arewa Suites in Abuja.

    He further held that Section 87(4) of the Electoral Act provided

    that a party was under obligation to forward the name of the aspirant with the highest votes at its primary election to the INEC as its candidate for an election.

    Justice Mohammed, who faulted the party’s claim that its choice of Iman as a consensus candidate was because of the security situation in the state, which prevented a proper primary election, held that the plaintiff was right to have approached the court on PDP’s failure to forward his name to INEC as its candidate.

    He held that the PDP failed to support, with documentary evidence, showing the

    resolution of the party members, that a consensus candidate be chosen in place of the plaintiff because of the security situation.

    The judge noted that the plaintiff tendered before the court, the date

    and results of the primary election of the party conducted in Abuja

    and endorsed by the PDP’s National Chairman, National Secretary,

    National Organising Secretary and the Returning Officer.

    He said the evidence produced by the plaintiff were sufficient to persuade the court to ignore PDP’s submission that there was no primary election for the purpose of electing the governorship candidate.

    “In view of the above, I find merit in the plaintiff’s suit and I hereby grant all the reliefs in the originating summons of the plaintiff,” Justice Mohammed said.

  • Who replaces Bello-Osagie in Oredo?

    Since 1999, no lawmaker from Oredo has been elected twice into the House of Representatives. Hon Razaq Bello-Osagie, who was elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC), is not contesting the general elections. He lost the party primaries to Speaker Uyi Igbe, not because of non-performance, but because of Oredo principle of one term.

    The succession race in Oredo is a two-horse race between candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Omoregie Ogbeide-Ihama and Hon. Igbe, the Speaker of Edo State House of Assembly.

    Oredo is a metropolitan constituency where the PDP has not secured easy victory in previous elections. Unlike in other constituencies, no political party has won election in Oredo twice. Between 1999 and 2003, Dr. Willie Ogbeide of the PDP was in the House. He was replaced by a candidate of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) Mr. Emmanuel Arigbe-Osula who served till 2007. Patrick Obahiagbon was elected on the platform of the PDP in 2007 and was removed in 2011. Obahiagbon defected to the defunct ACN but failed to secure a return ticket and was replaced by Hon. Bello-Osagie.

    The battle for Oredo is a renewal of rivalry between the PDP and the APC. Candidates of both parties have intensified campaigns to the various wards. The PDP had hoped that protest votes by Osagie’s supporters would easily sway victory for it at the polls. But, Osagie refused to defect to another party.

    Hon. Bello-Osagie, in a surprise move, has thrown his weight behind Igbe, despite losing the primaries. He has printed large banners and placed them at strategic places, urging the people of Oredo to vote for all APC candidates.

    Osagie who denied speculations that he has perfected plans to defect to the PDP urged his supporters at an APC rally to forget the party primaries and vote for the APC.

    He stormed the APC campaign rally at Oredo Local Government with his teeming supporters and raised the hands of Hon. Igbe, saying “the APC is the best platform to bring about development and a better tomorrow.”

    Osagie said the general elections was not about himself, but to rescue the people from hopelessness and disappointment. He added that the APC has of men that could harness abundant opportunities in the country for the benefit of the people.

    Bello-Osagie added: “Politics is about the upliftment of the lives of the people and the development of the society. What we need are men who are visionary, men with strength of character, men with capacity to deliver on their promises.

    “I am happy to be part of the APC to ensure we bring happiness to our people. I want to ensure that the APC succeeds all elections. I cannot subvert the successes of the APC because I am no longer in the race.

    “A man cannot operate outside the limitations of his abilities. I have strength of character and want to help reposition our country and to enforce the integrity of our national prestige. What we need are men and women with capacity whose activities are based on purposeful leadership.”

    Omoregie Ogbeide-Ihama

    Ogbeide-Ihama is an engineer and a player in the oil and gas industry. He contested against Bello-Osagie in 2011 and scored about 8000 votes. Ogbeide-Ihama in the 2011 contest to put up a good campaign structure that saw him moving from house-to-house and in the streets of Benin City even at night. He told newsmen recently that his purpose of joining the race again was to provide good governance and quality representation. Ihama would have a herculean task at the elections because of Osagie’s performance. There is hardly any ward across the constituency where Hon. Osagie did not initiate and complete a project. Ihama however said what was important to him was for the people of Oredo to live well and have access to good roads, education, quality health care, security, job opportunities and empowerment.

    Speaker Uyi Igbe

    Speaker Igbe has served for eight years at the Edo State House of Assembly. He emerged Speaker in 2011 and was able to provide leadership that saw a crisis free assembly until June last year when the PDP attempted to take over leadership of the assembly. Igbe, by the end of his tenure, would be the first Speaker in the state since 1999 to have spent four years without impeachment. He got the support of Governor Adams Oshiomhole and other major party leaders because of his resistance against the PDP. He was tear-gassed and a policeman threatened to shoot him on a day policemen stormed the assembly to stop renovation work. In several wards he had taken his campaign train to, he was reminded of the achievements of Hon. Osagie. Igbe is quite sure of victory because the people of Oredo have not always supported the PDP. Besides, the achievements recorded by the APC led administration.

     

  • Emeteole replaces Obuh in Rangers

    Emeteole replaces Obuh in Rangers

    Enugu Rangers have appointed Heartland coach Kelechi Emeteole as their new coach in place of ex-Nigeria U-20 handler John Obuh.

    “We have appointed Emeteole as the technical adviser, while Imama Amakapabo will remain chief coach,” disclosed Rangers General Manager Paul Chibuzor.

    Obuh’s year-long contract was not renewed by Rangers after he led them to finish eighth last season.

    ‘Caterpillar’ Emeteole, on the other hand, has clashed with the Heartland General Manager as well as players as ‘The Naze Millionaires’ placed 10th on the league table in the past campaign.

    He is believed to have beaten Nasarawa United coach Mohammed Baba Ganaru to the top Rangers post.

     

  • Goni replaces Sali as Head of Civil Service

    Goni replaces Sali as Head of Civil Service

    A NEW Head of Civil Service of the Federation has been named by the President.

    He is Alhaji Bukar Goni Aji.

    He takes over from Alhaji Isa Bello Sali, who will attain the mandatory retirement age of 60 tomorrow.

    The appointment is contained in a statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati.

    The statement said: Alhaji Goni was the Permanent Secretary of Common Services Office, Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation.

    The statement reads: “Alhaji Goni hails from Yobe State and was born on January 13, 1959. He attended Government College, Maiduguri, Borno College of Basic Studies, Maiduguri and graduated from the University of Maiduguri in 1984.”

    “A career civil servant, Alhaji Goni has held several key positions at the state and federal levels including Chief Administrative Officer, Governor’s Office, Maiduguri (1989-1991), Principal Secretary to the Military Administrator of Yobe State (1991-1992), Principal Secretary to the First Civilian Governor of Yobe State (1992-1993) and Principal Secretary to the 2nd Military Administrator of Yobe State (1993-1995).”

    “Alhaji Goni was appointed Director, Planning, Research and Statistics at the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs in 1995 and moved to the Federal Ministry of Defence in the year 2000 as Director of Personnel Management. He headed various departments in the Ministry of Defence until his posting to the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation in 2008 as Director, International Organisations.”

    “He was appointed Permanent Secretary in 2009 and posted to the Ministry of Defence. He later served as Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Police Affairs (August, 2009 – August, 2010) and Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Works (September, 2011 – November,

  • US replaces airport scanners

    The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has said it is removing controversial full-body scanners at United States’ airports and replacing them with new scanners that allow greater privacy.

    The TSA cancelled a contract with Rapiscan last week because the company had failed to deliver software to protect the privacy of passengers.

    The TSA had faced widespread complaints from travellers that the Rapiscan equipment, using an X-ray technology called backscatter, had shown what looks like a naked image of passengers’ bodies to security officers.

    A TSA spokesman, David Castelveter, said they would be largely replaced by a scanner made by L-3 Communications that uses so-called millimetre technology. The radio wave device creates a generic outline that highlights the body area where an anomaly is detected.agencies, he said.

     

  • For Azazi, funeral replaces Xmas Carol

    For Azazi, funeral replaces Xmas Carol

    For many years, he had hosted Christmas carol services at his Ikoyi, Lagos residence at least, a week preceding Christmas. It was an annual ritual with attendance drawn from far and wide – the high, the mighty and the lowly placed. Over the years, it had assumed a life of its own as everybody looked forward to the yearly event.

    Preparations were in top gear for this year’s event. My brother and friend of many years, Brigadier-General Felix Ayodele Muhammed (retd.), had been made the coordinator of this year’s event. He had had several meetings with those who will actively participate in the service – band leaders, choirs, religious groups, army chaplains and others. Last Friday, Muhammed, whom his boss of many years, the late General Andrew Owoye Azazi, prefers to call ‘Felix’, had intimated the general that he was coming over the following day, Saturday, December 15, to give him an update of the preparations so far. Azazi did not oppose this. Rather, he simply told Felix to meet with Alero, his wife of many years and finalise issues as he was billed to dash down to Bayelsa, his home state, to attend a function.

    Last Saturday afternoon, Felix made it to the residence of his former boss. He drove into the compound oblivious of the fact that something was amiss. As he entered the sitting room, hoping to meet Mrs. Azazi, an eerie silence descended on the whole environment. It was an unusual situation, but all the same, he sat down on one of the chairs waiting for the ‘madam of the house’ to surface from any part of the one-storey apartment. Just then, he started hearing some shrill cries upstairs. It was then it dawned on him that something had, indeed, gone wrong.

    By the time Felix was face to face with Azazi’s wife, the story became clearer. “Oga is dead!” Felix was transfixed and dazed. He inquired to know what had happened and how it happened. “It was a helicopter crash at Okoloba community in Tombia, Bayelsa State. Oga was returning from the community where he had attended the burial ceremony of Pa Tamunoobebara Douglas, father of Oronto Douglas, Special Adviser to the President on Research and Documentation”.

    From then on, wailings and grief took over as family members, friends and associates trooped in one after the other. Although no details of the crash emerged until later that evening, those who had contacts in Bayelsa, Rivers and in the military were able to extract some information about the crash.

    ‘Felix’ or General Muhammed, a chartered accountant, was the accounts officer to the late Azazi when Azazi was General Officer Commanding, GOC, 1 Battalion of the Army, with headquarters in Kaduna. Since then, both of them had struck a rapport that had endured till date. Besides, Alero, Azazi’s wife is also a chartered accountant.

    I had attended last year’s Christmas Carol in Azazi’s house in the company of General Muhammed and his wife. That evening, Azazi read the first out of about nine readings lined up for the day. His wife and some of his children who were present read some while other family members and close friends also took their turns. It was a night of great revelry, sobriety and thanksgiving for God’s abundant blessings during the year.

    Many known faces turned up for that event. They include Colonel Edore Obi (retd.), one-time military administrator of Bayelsa State; Donald Duke, former governor of Rivers State; business mogul Wale Babalakin; Timi Alaibe, former managing director of Niger Delta Development Commission and later Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs. In attendance also were top military chiefs, both serving and retired.

    It was there I came across Rear Admiral Arogundade (retd), the naval officer whose aides reportedly brutalised a lady in Lagos after a minor traffic incident. I took time to ask him some questions on the incident. He did not appear like the ‘monster’ which was painted of him by the media at that time. He lives almost next door to the Azazis and I have met him several times after that encounter both in Lagos and Abuja.

    I first met late General Azazi in early 2005 at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Conference Centre in Abuja. It was at the launch of Iniquity in Nigerian Politics, a book authored by my brother and bosom friend, Professor Steve Azaiki. The launch had attracted heavyweights across the country and the diplomatic community. That was one book launch in which several senators were merely confined to the lobby as all the seats inside the conference hall had been taken over by dignitaries. It was like a carnival and I am yet to witness any other book launch of equal attendance of who’s who in Nigeria ever since.

    At the end of the book launch, Azazi, who was in full military uniform, had moved to the podium for a photo session with Azaiki. It was there that Azaiki introduced me to him. Azazi, who was then a brigadier-general, was at that time the boss of the Directorate of Military Intelligence, DMI. Shortly after, he was appointed GOC, 1 Mechanised Division of the Army in Kaduna. He was later made Chief of Army Staff before he was promoted Chief of Defence Staff. Although he was subsequently retired from service, but by that time, his image had loomed large all over the place.

    In the last few years, Azazi had given out some of his daughters, if not all, in marriage in very colourful ceremonies. I attended the one in late 2006 at the Church of Assumption, Falomo, Lagos. I was at the ceremony in the convoy of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan who was then the governor of Bayelsa State. At that time, he had just been picked as running mate to the late Umaru Yar’Adua, who had also earlier been chosen as the standard-bearer of the Peoples Democratic Party in the 2007 presidential election.

    It was at that wedding reception that the idea of putting together a national political platform for Jonathan was conceived by me, Azaiki and Chief Ephraim Faloughi, the chairman of Sovereign Trust Insurance Company. The following day, we came up with Yar’Adua/Jonathan Committee of Friends and held the inaugural meeting at the residence of Chief Ebitimi Banigo in Victoria Island. Others in attendance at that meeting were Ben Bruce, chairman, Silverbird Group; Chief Lawson Omokhodion, former MD of All States Trust Bank and later Liberty Bank who is now into oil business, and a few others. It was the committee that first rallied support for Jonathan all over the country.

    Generally, in Azazi’s death, Jonathan has lost one of his pillars of support. In and out as National Security Adviser to the President, Azazi had always provided support for the President on security matters. Throughout his eventful career – within and outside the military – Azazi had proved to be a patriot, an officer and gentleman whose watchword was discipline in all his deeds. All the same, he was not without some human errors. One of them was that as NSA, he was too visible everywhere when he was expected to operate more incognito.

    Now, he is gone and gone forever. His funeral might as well replace this year’s Christmas Carol service, which would have been held today, Wednesday, December 19. However, it is not how far or how long one lives. It is actually how well. Adieu Andrew Owoye Azazi. May your soul rest in peace! May the souls of all others who also died in the ill-fated flight rest in perfect peace! May their families be consoled by the fact that death is an inevitable end of all human beings! Amen! We all have our entrances and exits at different times and places!

     

  • Salisu Yusuf  replaces Eguavoen at Enyimba

    Salisu Yusuf replaces Eguavoen at Enyimba

    Enyimba Int’l FC have appointed Salisu Yusuf as Technical Adviser of the club.

    The former Super Eagles assistant coach begins his appointment immediately after signing the contract papers at the club’s base in Aba on Saturday.

    Chief Executive Officer of Enyimba, Felix Anyansi-Agwu told EnyimbaFC.net after the signing event that the appointment of Salisu Yusuf is an excellent choice.

    “I believe Salisu Yusuf is the right man to move the club to where we want to go,” Anyansi said. “He has an outstanding reputation for his technical knowledge of the game and led Kano Pillars to their first league title. He also worked well with the Samson Siasia-led technical crew of the Super Eagles.”

    “Salisu shares our long-term ambitions and ethos of playing great football and winning trophies and I believe he will be able to do so now with all the support we will give him. Every member of Enyimba and the government of Abia State will give him everything he needs to succeed.

    “We are constantly trying to move Enyimba forward. It is important that we hire and work with people with great determination and spirit. This appointment is the first part of a process of putting the club firmly on the path to great success.”

    On his part, the newly appointed Technical Adviser said it was a honour to work with a well known club like Enyimba.

    “I feel honoured to be a part of Enyimba,” said Salisu. “This is one of the most well known clubs in Africa and I’m hopeful that at the end of the day, we can win a lot of trophies because when a club gets to the level where Enyimba is, only victory and success is acceptable.”

    The Zaria-born Salisu Yusuf replaces Austine Eguavoen and brings a wealth of experience to the Elephants after spells with the Super Eagles, Kano Pillars and Lobi Stars.