Tag: reposition

  • Reposition military hospitals, says General

    Former Corps Commander Medical (CCM) Major General Samuel Ameh (rtd) has called for the repositioning of military hospitals to deter Nigerians from seeking treatment overseas.

    Ameh, who spoke at the pulling out of 21 senior officers at the Nigerian Reference Hospital in Yaba, Lagos, said Nigeria could become a medical tourism destination for other African countries.

    He said the right infrastructure and manpower should first be provided to raise more revenue for the country.

    He said: “Quality healthcare is hinged on a tripod- appropriate infrastructure, right equipment, well trained and retrained personnel. The present NAMC (Nigerian Army Medical Corps) is grossly deficient in all of these. It is worthy of note that some former Chiefs of Army Staff (COAS) made genuine attempts at addressing these problems, unfortunately these attempts were not sustained.’’

    Ameh, who was also pulled out after meritorious service, lauded plans by the Nigerian Army to hire some health personnel into the corps as well as employ consultants as Majors.

    “The solution to the problems should be holistic and sustainable so that the corps will be in a better position to provide timely and comprehensive medical support for the enhancement of the combat efficiency of the NA,” said Ameh.

    The Corps Commander Major – General. Abimbola Amusu said the event was held to celebrate Generals who have retired from the NAMC in the last three years.

    “This ceremony is part of the customs of the Nigerian Army and a sign of respect and farewell from service for Generals that retire honourably. It is, therefore, the wish of every officer that attains this rank. It serves to appreciate the officer for his or her meritorious service, while being motivation for those still in service.

  • How to reposition PDP, by chieftains

    How to reposition PDP, by chieftains

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain Chief Ladosu Ladipo has called for the restructuring of the party to avert future electoral misfortune.

    He described the party as a party of few oppressors lording it over the majority, stressing that many party leaders are self-centred.

    The party elder from Osun State reflected on the party at the recent Southwest PDP Elders Summit in Lagos chaired by Chief Olabode George.

    At the meeting, a party leader from Ekiti State, Ambassador Dare Bejide, warned against the imposition of candidates during congresses and general elections.

    He said the party may continue to wallow in crisis, unless a culture of equity, justice and internal democracy is promoted.

    The politician lamented that Governor Ayodele Fayose may not give the party any chance of survival, owing to his manipulative tendencies.

    He said: “Some party leaders have sat down and compiled the list of delegates to the national convention. In Ekiti, the governor has compiled the names of ward and local government chairmen and delegates.”

    Ladipo, who sought to rule Osun State in 1990, said: “We must restructure the PDP. The PDP is not a party now. It is more or less a cash and carry party. Some leaders are self-centred. They don’t carry the grassroots along. This will always lead to disagreement.

    “Many people in the All Progressives Congress (APC), the Labour Party (LP) and the Accord Party (AP) are disgruntled and they want to come to the PDP. But, we are not providing an enabling environment for them.”

    Urging the party to postpone its convention, he added: “The officers should have interim status, pending the restructuring of the party. If we continue like this, many will desert the PDP and there will be no new entrants.”

    The former Majority Leader of the House of Representatives, Hon. Mulikat Akande-Adeola, urged the leaders to dump the culture of imposition and promote internal democracy.

    Senator Bode Olajumoke from Ondo State said the party should put its house in order to attract aggrieved APC members.

    He said: “We went through an era of negativity and impunity. We now have an opportunity to reflect. The era of imposition and absence of internal democracy should give way. Whatever disaster that befell the PDP was self-imposed.”

  • Governors: we trust Sheriff to reposition PDP

    Governors: we trust Sheriff to reposition PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP) Governors Forum yesterday  expressed confidence in the ability of National Chairman Ali Modu Sheriff, to reposition the party and make it more inclusive.

    A statement by the Coordinator of the forum, Mr. Osaro Onaiwu, yesterday in Abuja quoted the governors as saying the choice of Sheriff, ex-governor and senator, came after a careful deliberation, given the battle ahead.

    “Sheriff is coming on the job with immense wealth of experience and will, no doubt, use his vast network to rebuild the party.

    “He will restore members’ confidence and act as a counterforce to the many antics of the present APC regime.”

    The governors urged the national chairman to avoid all diversionary tactics and work toward uniting all aggrieved members and fashion out modalities to woo new party faithful.

    “We urge you to shun all diversionary tactics that might be thrown at you and concentrate on how to bring all aggrieved party members together; as well as fashion out ways to woo new members, especially the youths.

    “The forum is solidly behind you and will deploy its support to ensure that the shared vision for our party is realised as we prepare for 2019.”

    The governors said the situation in the country was an opportunity for Sheriff to show that the PDP remained the only truly national party that could reunite the country.

  • Buhari working to reposition economy, says Edo legislator

    A member of the Edo State House of Assembly from Akoko-Edo South Constituency, Hon. Emmanuel Agbaje, has assured Nigerians of the Federal Government’s effort to reposition and stabilise the economy. He said: “I am confident that these efforts would change the situation for the better”.

    Agbaje, who called on Nigerians to be hopeful of a better country, said: “I consider it an obligation as well to let you know the challenges confronting us and our determined efforts. This is important so as to bridge the gap between expectations and realisations”.

    He spoke at the weekend, in Igarra, Headquarters of Akoko-Edo Local Government Area, during a Town Hall Meeting and interactive session with his constituents.

    Agbaje said: “We are all witnesses to the economic woes now bedeviling our dear country. The situation knows no exception. Governance at all levels have been seriously affected and in some cases almost brought to its knees, hence it has become increasingly difficult for governments to make good, its promises and obligations to our people.

    “Irrespective of this untoward situation, we must look forward with hope and this is more so, as the All Progressive Congress (APC)-led Federal Government is working assiduously to reposition and stabilise the economy. I am confident that these efforts would change the situation for the better.

    “Permit me to say that the 2015 constituency projects is being handled by my predecessor, Hon. Dele Oloruntoba. I want to express hope and confidence that the projects are on-going and that they will be well executed.

    The legislator added: “The 2016 budget has been presented already; it is going through the process of possible review. I want to assure you that I and my colleague from the North constituency have been putting heads together to making sure we have our fair inputs which we will pursue vigorously. Subsequently, however, I hope that we will take advantage of this kind of town hall meetings to articulate our needs in order of priority and set them as our common agenda and targets. This will guide us to project our collective interest.

    “Within the period under review as a new legislator, I have moved two Motions on the floor of the House and have also contributed positively to other Motions and Bills which I am convinced are in the interest of my people. I became the first to move a Motion that got to a resolution of the House in this Sixth Assembly of Edo State.

    “With the support of my colleagues, I moved a motion of urgent public importance on the BEDC impunity which resulted in the power outage experienced in Igarra community and environs. We got justice.

  • How Enelamah can reposition real sector

    How Enelamah can reposition real sector

    Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment Dr Okechukwu Enyinna Elelamah has a major task-to revive the moribund real sector, whose contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) stands at a meagre 9.5 per cent. Is he up to the task? Operators and experts point the way forward. CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    The task before the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr Okechukwu Enyinna Enelamah, is enormous. He came at a time the real sector is the focus of the Federal Government’s strategic rethink in favour of weaning the economy of its age-long over-dependence on  oil revenue. This means that the responsibility of driving the diversification agenda rests on him.

    Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) Director-General Mr. Muda Yusuf said the minister’s success would depend on the support he gets from other ministries and agencies to complement his efforts through appropriate policies and infrastructure.

    “If the country does not have the right infrastructure and policies, he cannot succeed in his portfolio,” Yusuf told The Nation.

    Describing the minister as “a good material,” he said the bulk of his work should be advocacy so that other agencies would collaborate with him in the task of repositioning the real sector, especially manufacturing, to play its role as a catalyst of economic development through the provision of basic infrastructure.

    “He can only succeed to the extent that other ministries complement him to drive the real sector,” Yusuf emphasised.

    Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) president Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs said Enelamah must concentrate on improving on the nation’s poor infrastructure such as electricity, roads and railway among others. According to him, the dearth of infrastructure especially poor electricity supply is responsible for the rising cost of production, which in turn lowers manufacturers’ productivity and competitiveness. It is also responsible for the high mortality rate of manufacturing firms in the country.

    Jacobs, who spoke with The Nation on the sideline of the 48th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of MAN, Ikeja branch, held in Lagos, last week, noted that without infrastructure, locally manufactured products won’t sell beyond the country’s shores. Pointing out that the manufacturing sector, more than any other, has the greatest capacity to create wealth, generate employment and facilitate skill acquisition, he said: “All obstacles to its sustainable growth and development should be removed in order to achieve its full potential.”

    He also said the minister must address fiscal and monetary policies that have worked against the manufacturing sector. Although he described Enelamah’s emergence as industry minister as “a welcome development”, Jacobs pointed out that one of the policies the minister must address is the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Foreign Exchange (forex), which prohibits importers from accessing its forex window for 41 items that can be sourced locally.

    Jacobs lamented that under the forex restriction policy, which has thrown manufacturers into confusion, some essential raw materials that are not available locally were lumped together with finished products. He argued that only imported finished items should have been on the list for the policy to be truly beneficial to the manufacturing sector and the economy generally.

    Noting that the challenge of inadequate forex and CBN’s new forex guidelines, to a large extent, negatively affected manufacturers and increased the cost of production, Jacobs raised the alarm that if not addressed , the policy could result in factory closures and loss of jobs.

    Indeed, the picture of the real sector Enelamah inherited is everything but inspiring. For instance, over the last decade, the manufacturing sector’s contribution to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) stood at an average of four per cent. Although, there was a significant increase in the sector’s contribution to GDP to 9.2 per cent in 2013 following the rebasing exercise, before it peaked at its current 9.5 per cent, the figure is still considered a drop in the ocean.

    For instance, while Nigeria’s real sector contribution to GDP is 9.5 per cent, those of US and China stand at 35.6 per cent and 49.5 per cent, respectively, according to the Chairman, Economic Policy Committee (EPC) of (MAN), Reginald Ike Odiah. He said Japan, India and Germany also parade 38.2 per cent, 38.4 per cent and 35.9 per cent real sector contribution to GDP.

    Odiah, who made this known at the 48th AGM of MAN Ikeja branch, expressed regrets that, despite priding itself as Africa’s biggest economy following the recent re-basing of the economy, Nigeria has been unable to ensure the support and development of her real sector to grow her economy the same way other countries with large populations like hers such as China, India, Indonesia and Brazil did.

    In a paper he presented at the AGM titled:“Serious Constraints to Sustainability of the Real Sector (From a Manufacturer’s Perspective)”, Odia, who is also Managing Director of Bennett Industries Ltd., said when adequately developed, the benefits derivable from the real sector, which includes agriculture and manufacturing are huge. According to him, the sectors have enormous backward and forward linkages with other sectors of the economy.

    Indeed, Odiah and other experts believe that the real sector holds better prospects of galvanising the economic. According to them, the sector is more inclusive and sustainable, growth-oriented and also characterised by high economic linkages.“The real sector of any economy is the engine of growth. The need to ensure a healthy and strong real sector therefore, cannot be over emphasised’’, Odiah pointed out.

    The need for a  robust real sector has become more compelling now that oil prices are plunging, compelling the Federal Government to shift focus to the sector in the hope of reversing the trend where oil revenue accounts for more than 75 per cent of government’s revenue and close to 90 per cent of foreign exchange income. For real sector operators, this is the most auspicious time to unlock the massive potential in the manufacturing sector and increase its productivity through result-driven policies.

    One of the major steps is for the minister to work with relevant ministries and agencies to close the huge infrastructure gap, particularly power that has been a thorn in the flesh of manufacturers. The consensus is that the power sector reforms embarked upon by the immediate past administration failed to offer manufacturers the needed succour. The crisis in the energy sector has refused to abate. The power sector privatisation has not seen any significant improvement in electricity supply to residential and industrial consumers.

    “A situation where manufacturers spend a whopping N500 billion annually on in-house power plants along with other added costs of providing other infrastructural deficiencies certainly is out of the equation,” Odiah lamented, noting that apart from basic infrastructure, other major components the minister must focus on, working with other relevant ministries and agencies, include good governance, financial reforms, security and corruption.

    He said, for instance, that a good government must constantly look inwards with a view to encouraging consumption of locally made goods. “This is the first step to developing a strong real sector. A strong internal market for locally-made goods will create employment, reduce crime and bring prosperity to the people,” Odiah pointed out.

    In recent time, unemployment rate has assumed a scary dimension and is believed to be contributing largely to the insecurity that pervades the nation. Investors’ confidence has also drooped. Most local and foreign investors are said to be holding back, waiting to see a significant improvement in security of life and investments.

    Although these issues present significant challenges to the new minister, industrialists and members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) say he has no reason to fear if only he could pay closer attention to the challenges facing the real sector. Some of them who spoke with The Nation said in doing so, the minister must give room for robust consultations with private sector bodies for input into policy formulation processes and a universal application to all investors in a given sector.

    For economist and Managing Director of Cocosheen Nigeria Limited, Mr. Henry Boyo, respecting the sanctity of monetary stability would help reposition the real sector. “The pillar of any economy is monetary policy and the pillar of monetary policy is interest rate, inflation and exchange rate. When you get those ones right like in other countries you will fix the sector and the economy generally,” he declared.

    Delivering a paper titled: “Future Growth and Capacity Utilisation of Nigeria’s Manufacturing Sector in the Context of New Economic Realities and Tariff Policy Constraints” at a 44th AGM of Apapa branch of MAN, Boyo said: “high interest rate makes it impossible for the real sector to grow”. According to him, there is need to stem the crisis of excess liquidity in the system, which is responsible for the high interest rates, inflationary pressure, and devaluation of the naira.

    According to him, excess liquidity in the system is caused by Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) “crazy, merciless, insensitive, and unilateral policy” of substituting naira allocations for dollar-derived revenue. He said CBN’s conscious, deliberate and misguided payment arrangements result in market imbalance, which ultimately weakens the naira exchange rate.

    Can Enelamah ride the storm? Only time will tell. But going by his intimidating resume, operators and stakeholders are hopeful that the Abia State-born medical doctor, chartered accountant and chartered financial analyst would deliver.

  • Usani to ‘reposition NigerDelta’

    The Minister of Niger/Delta Affairs, Pastor Usani Uguru, promised yesterday that positive changes are imminent, considering the determination of the leadership to succeed.

    Pastor Uguru, who assumed duty alongside Minister of State Prof. Cladius Daramola,  urged workers in the ministry to rededicate themselves to duty, stressing that accountability and transparency would be the watchwords of the present administration.

    Prof. Daramola urged the workers and senior officials not to mislead them as they are prepared to work as a team to move the nation forward.

    They were received by Permanent Secretary Belema Wakama who also resumed duty yesterday.

    Senator Musa Adede told reporters that “the President has again demonstrated that the five months wait was after all not in vain. It goes to show that he was meticulously striving to put square pegs in square holes as can be seen in the choice of ministerial portfolios.

    He described the Niger Delta minister as a go-getter who will turn around the fortunes of the ministry for good. “Usani is a thoroughbred technocrat who left a track record as commissioner during the military regime in Cross River State. He is a highly-experienced bridge builder and has the intellectual capacity to mobilise a team that will help him set and achieve a well-grounded agenda of change for the Niger Delta area.”

    Adede urged Niger Delta stakeholders to shun partisanship and quickly rally round the minister and provide him the necessary support and credible advice. He noted that “the time for people to begin to lay emphasize on where the minister comes from and which party he belongs is in the past, all we need now is to mobilise and support him to succeed.”

    On the Niger Delta youths restiveness, Adede noted that “apart from his spiritual background as a pastor, he has the milk of human kindness and will do everything possible within his capacity to encourage every youth in the Niger Delta region to embrace peace and support the federal government change agenda.”

  • Our dream is to reposition health system — FG

    The Federal Government has said that its immediate target is to build a health sector that is capable of responding to any health challenge.

    The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Health, Mr. Linus Awute, disclosed this when he received 30 motorcycles donated by the World Health Organization (WHO) Country Director, Dr. Rui Gama Vaz, at the office of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Abuja.

    Awute assured Nigerians that the government is committed to achieving a strong and resilient health system capable of responding to any health emergency.

    He noted that support from partners and UN agencies would help significantly to move the health sector forward.

    While thanking the WHO for its gesture, said the world health body had been offering valuable support to the ministry.

    He went down memory lane, recalling the role that the WHO played last year during the period of the Ebola outbreak in Nigeria, describing it as highly commendable.

    The WHO Country Director, who was represented by the National Professional Officer, Health Emergencies, Dr. Ifeanyi Okudo, said the donation was to complement the efforts of the ministry in the areas of health surveillance and emergency response.

    Earlier, the permanent secretary led directors of the ministry on a facility inspection of the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control (NCDC).

    The National Coordinator, NCDC, Professor Abdulsalami Nasidi, assured the permanent secretary that the NCDC reference laboratory and administrative offices would be ready for commissioning before the end of September 2015.

    The permanent secretary was impressed with the level of work on the projects.

    He said when completed, they would be enduring legacies that would compare with state-of-the-art facilities in advanced countries.

    When in operation, the NC DC will also serve as the ECOWAS Regional Centre for Disease Control.

  • Govt urged to reposition commodity exchange

    The Federal Government has been urged to strengthen the commodities market to boost trade in the sector.

    The Managing Director, Multimix Academy, Mr Obiora Madu, said failure to do this would put off investors and stifle the development of commodities business.

    According to him, the main factor limiting economic potential of the sector is lack of a common market that boosts the confidence of farmers, as well as financial institutions, to invest in the sector.

    The move, he said, would encourage market access and fair returns for smallholder farmers and facilitate the formalisation of informal agricultural trading.

    Madu  said commodities trading platform has certain innovative features which have been designed to limit risks in the sector to attract agricultural investments, aside from the provision of a ready market and formalisation of commercial activities.

    To create a transparent and efficient marketing system for key agricultural commodities to promote agricultural investment and enhance productivity, he said the government must commit itself to the establishment of a functional commodity exchange and associated Warehouse Receipt System (WRS). One structure of a commodity is the Warehouse Receipt System, where farmers will be provided with receipts based on the food crops that they deposit.

    This system means dealers or farmers certified by the exchange to receive receipts from warehouses showing the quality and quantity of the commodity that they have delivered. The warehouses serve as the point at which the commodities are stored with the owner of the goods issued with the receipt to confirm their existence. In the event of a pressing need, the receipts can be presented to the bank as security for loans, in a manner similar to the way title deeds and logbooks are used in lending.

    At the commodities exchange, the warehouse receipts can be traded like shares, thereby becoming derivative instruments because they are derived from underlying real assets in the form of commodities.

    He said it is good for the banks to understand the system, so that they could see these receipts as collateral to provide funds to various actors along the agric value chain to push sector productivity and growth.

    Madu said banks would introduce financing for commodity traders and farmers secured through warehouse receipts. He said the commodity receipts will be used as collateral by exporters and commodity dealers to get loans from banks. He said dealers could then pay for their business activities even when the goods have not been sold or exported.

    He said the exchange would  tackle the challenges which make the sector a risky investment as farmers and sector actors would produce and deposit their crops to the designated warehouses and get the receipts to source funds from banks.

    This, he said, would help smallholder farmers to move from subsistence to commercial farming, as they would grow more crops which the country has comparative advantage in to promote the national quest for an export-based economy.

  • Fed Govt urged to reposition PHC system for better access

    Fed Govt urged to reposition PHC system for better access

    •Expert calls for universal health coverage

    The Federal Government has been advised to reposition the Primary Health Care (PHC) system, which is closest to the grassroots, to ensure unhindered access to medical treatment.

    According to an Associate Medical Director, Nethermayne, Basildon, Essex, United Kingdom, Prof Rotimi Jaiyesimi, this will  make Primary healthcare Centres (PHCs) effective, and as such, healthcare better and disease prevention easy.

    Jaiyesimi, who spoke in Lagos, said if the PHC system is made to be functional, it would be able to render most care, especially in the area of curative and disease prevention because it is closer to the people.

    He called for its better funding, adding that the present three percent of the country’s budget dedicated to healthcare is too poor. “It can be six percent but I would recommend 10 percent because health is wealth,” he said.

    Jaiyesimi, an obstetrician and gynaecologist, said secondary and tertiary facilities should handle only referrals and other serious health problems.

    “I am passionate about the PHC because that is where about 70 percent of problems, such as diarrhoea, anaemia and hypertension, among others are treated. Expectant mothers too can be attended to at the centres,” he said.

    The PHC system, he said, should be well-equipped to meet international standard as stipulated by the World Health organisation (WHO), adding: “Adequate infrastructure across the 774 local government of Nigeria is necessary to make treatment easy.”

    Jaiyesimi said the midwifery scheme under Jonathan administration was a step in good direction, adding that such programmes should be sustained as nurses are important to effective healthcare delivery.

    He said the PHC system has worked more effectively under  former late Health Minister, Prof Olikoye Ransome-Kuti as it handled communicable and non-communicable diseases so well.

    To achieve unfettered access to healthcare at all levels, he advised the Federal Government to make available to Nigerians universal health coverage (UHC) so that the rich and poor can benefit.

    “The National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) should be involved in the UHC. The private sector also have a role to play. A token sum of money can be deducted from the call rate charges of telecommunication providers to act as premium for each enrollee in the scheme because almost everybody uses telephone nowadays in Nigeria,” he said.

    The professor said this would also reduce health tourism.

    Jaiyesimi said political will is needed to make this work.

  • IGP set to reposition Police Mobile Force

    IGP set to reposition Police Mobile Force

    Police  chief Solomon Arase has ordered the transfer of Police Mobile Force (PMF) commanders, who have spent more than three years in their duty posts, in contravention of the statutory regulations of the force.

    Most of the affected officers, The Nation gathered yesterday, are appointees of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.

    The police chief, an informed source said, has also directed the immediate withdrawal of mobile policemen attached to unauthorised persons across the country by the previous administration.

    The moves, explained the source, were necessitated by the IGP’s preparedness to reposition the force for improved effectiveness in its statutory duties.

    “The IGP is keen on giving policing its ideal meaning by repositioning it for more effectual performance. He has also expressed his readiness to reposition the Police Mobile Force to give it more biting powers to actualise its duties. Every sector now is talking about change and the IGP believes firmly that the force must be an exemplar in this regard.

    “By the laid-down regulations of the force, a PMF commander should not stay more than three years at his posting. But the IGP discovered that many had been there before Jonathan came on board while he appointed many others who still outlived his administrations against the regulations. This is among the things that the IGP found unhealthy,” said the source.

    The source also explained that among other irregularities, Arase frowned at the attachment of mobile policemen to “undeserving” individuals by the erstwhile administration, saying that it was an unacceptable contravention of the law which must be terminated forthwith.