Tag: Reps

  • Reps condemn killing of security personnel in Kebbi, demand immediate clearance operations

    Reps condemn killing of security personnel in Kebbi, demand immediate clearance operations

    The House of Representatives on Wednesday raised the alarm over the worsening security situation in Kebbi State following multiple deadly attacks by bandits on security outposts in Bagudo and Suru local government areas.

    The concern was triggered by a fresh assault on the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) outpost in Bakin Ruwa on November 27, 2025, where three Immigration personnel were killed by suspected Lakurawa bandits.

    Moving a motion of urgent public importance, Hon. Bello A. Ka’oje recounted how Kebbi, once regarded as one of the most peaceful states in the Northwest, has come under repeated attacks in recent months.

    He noted that Bagudo LGA, which shares an international boundary with the Republic of Benin, hosts several federal security posts, including NIS and NCS checkpoints at Bakin Ruwa and Maje, respectively, as well as multiple police formations.

    These facilities, he said, have now become frequent targets for criminals seeking to carve out operational bases in the area.

    Ka’oje informed the House that the latest killings mirror earlier attacks, including the November 10 assault on the Nigeria Customs Service outpost in Maje, where one Customs officer was killed, and the attack on a police outpost in the same community on October 19, 2025, which led to the death of a police officer.

    According to him, intelligence suggests that the Lakurawa bandits are attempting to turn the Soda Forest in Bagudo LGA into a hideout, while also using the hills in Suru LGA as a camp where kidnapped victims are held before ransom negotiations.

    He warned that the situation has become alarming and now demands urgent and decisive action to prevent Kebbi from sliding further into insecurity.

    Ka’oje stressed that the pattern of attacks reflects a broader attempt by the bandits to entrench themselves across Kebbi North, posing significant threats to national security and cross-border safety given the state’s proximity to the Benin Republic.

    The House subsequently observed a minute silence in honour of the slain Immigration, Customs and Police officers and called for an immediate joint clearance operation involving the Nigerian Air Force, Nigerian Army, Nigeria Police Force and other security agencies to flush out the criminals from Soda Forest, Suru Hills and other potential hideouts across Kebbi State.

    Lawmakers also urged the DSS and the National Intelligence Agency to strengthen intelligence sharing and cross-border surveillance along the Nigeria–Benin corridor, particularly within the Bagudo axis.

    While commending the Federal Government, Kebbi State authorities, political leaders, security agencies, vigilantes, traditional rulers, and community leaders for the rescue of the 24 schoolgirls abducted from Government Girls Comprehensive Secondary School, Maga, the House appealed for adequate compensation for the families of all security personnel killed in the line of duty.

    It also directed its relevant committees on defence, security, and legislative compliance to ensure that the resolutions of the House are promptly implemented.

  • Reps to investigate recovered NSIPA’s N30 billion funds

    Reps to investigate recovered NSIPA’s N30 billion funds

    The House of Representatives said it would investigate the total funds recovered from the National Social Insurance Protection Agency (NSIPA) during the 2024–2025 investigations to determine their current status and custodianship of the funds.

    The investigation is to identify issues delaying the release of the funds to the appropriate Agencies with the aim of facilitating the prompt recommencement of the social investment programmes.

    In a resolution following a motion of urgent public importance by Saidu Musa Abdullahi (APC), Niger, the House resolved to set up an ad-hoc committee to engage with the relevant agencies to obtain all necessary information and clarifications relating to the recovered funds, and also obtain a clear implementation and disbursement plan from NSIPA showing how the recovered funds will be utilized once released.

    Moving the motion, Abdullahi recalled that the National Social Investment Programme Agency (NSIPA) is the statutory institution responsible for implementing the Federal Government’s flagship social protection programmes, including the Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP), National Home Grown School Feeding Program,(NHGSFP) and the Grant for Vulnerable Groups (GVG) been initiatives strategically designed to lift millions of Nigerians out of poverty, improve nutrition and school enrolment, promote financial inclusion, expand livelihood opportunities for small-scale entrepreneurs, and strengthen national socioeconomic stability.

    He disclosed that on 8th January 2024, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, in a decisive move to uphold accountability and transparency, suspended NSIPA operations for six weeks to enable a comprehensive investigation into alleged financial infractions by relevant security and anti-corruption agencies.

    According to him, the investigation resulted in the tracing, freezing, and recovery of substantial public funds belonging to the Agency from Deposit Money Banks and Payment Service Providers, including funds appropriated for Trader Moni, MarketMoni, FarmerMoni, and Grants for Vulnerable Groups which are programmes central to the Renewed Hope Agenda’s commitment to supporting households, petty traders, women, farmers, and vulnerable Nigerians.

    He said credible sources have indicated that recovered funds estimated at over ₦30 billion have not been remitted into NSIPA’s designated Treasury Single Account (TSA), thereby stalling programme implementation and leaving millions of intended beneficiaries without the social and economic support envisioned by the Federal Government.

    He expressed concern that the prolonged non-release of these funds undermines the Renewed Hope Agenda by slowing down poverty alleviation efforts, weakening small-scale enterprises, exacerbating hardship in rural and urban communities, delaying local economic stimulation, and eroding public trust in the government’s social protection commitments.

    The Nigerian lawmaker said that continued uncertainty over the exact location, custodial status, and administrative handling of the recovered funds poses fiscal risks, disrupts programme timelines, and may create institutional bottlenecks across related national social intervention initiatives.

    He said, despite the Presidential approval lifting the suspension on NSIPA operations on 21st January 2025, the Agency has been unable to resume full implementation of its programmes, allegedly due to the non-availability of recovered funds expected to have been released, thereby exposing millions of Nigerians to prolonged socioeconomic distress.

    He said the National Assembly has the constitutional responsibility to ensure accountability, transparency, and prudent management of public resources, particularly funds designated for poverty reduction and social investment programmes.

  • Reps allege mismanagement of midstream, downstream gas infrastructure fund, seek forensic audit

    Reps allege mismanagement of midstream, downstream gas infrastructure fund, seek forensic audit

    The House of Representatives Committee on Public Accounts has alleged the misapplication and mismanagement of the Midstream and Downstream Gas Infrastructure Fund by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA).

    The Committee has therefore called for a comprehensive forensic audit of the fund’s operations from 2021 to date.

    This followed a motion, titled “Motion on the Urgent Need to Investigate Misapplication and Mismanagement of Midstream and Downstream Gas Infrastructure Fund by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) from Year 2021 to Date in Contravention of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021,” moved by Hon. Cyriacus Umeha and seconded by Hon. Kafilat Ogbara.

    According to the Committee, Section 52(1) of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021 established the Midstream and Downstream Gas Infrastructure Development Fund, stating that its utilisation must be subject to appropriation by the National Assembly.

    It further observed that Section 52(7a) stipulates that the fund should be financed through 0.5 percent of the wholesale price of petroleum products and natural gas sold in Nigeria, collected from wholesale customers, in addition to levies outlined in Section 47(2)(c) of the Act.

    The lawmakers drew attention to Sections 52(8) and (9) of the Act, mandating the NMDPRA to ensure prompt collection of all such sums into the Fund’s account within 21 days of the sale of petroleum products and natural gas in the country.

    In a letter dated July 21, 2025, Committee, the Committee requested the NMDPRA to submit relevant information on the administration and utilization of the Fund and to appear before the Committee on August 12, 2025.

    However, rather than respond to the request, the agency failed to honour the invitation.

    Lawmakers raised the alarm that several wholesale customers defaulted in paying the mandatory 0.5 percent levy, despite Section 52(9) empowering the Authority to set regulations for late or non-payment, while citing serious allegations of due process violations, disregard for financial regulations, and the absence of audit reports on the fund since its establishment.

    The Committee asked the Office of the Auditor-General for the Federation to conduct a comprehensive forensic audit of all funds collected by the NMDPRA since 2021.

    The Committee said the audit is expected to uncover the extent of alleged mismanagement, misappropriation, and fraudulent diversion of funds, as well as identify wholesale customers who failed to remit the required levy. 

  • Reps summon BPP, Budget Office, others for evasion of power sector probe

    Reps summon BPP, Budget Office, others for evasion of power sector probe

    The House of Representatives ad-hoc committee investigating Nigeria’s power sector reforms and expenditure from 2007 to 2024, has summoned the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), the Budget Office of the Federation, the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation, Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Power and Office of the Auditor General evading legislative oversight.

    Chairman of the committee, Arch. Ibrahim Almustapha Aliyu, issued the summons during a continued investigative hearing on Thursday, expressing frustration that several government institutions had repeatedly ignored official correspondence and failed to submit documents crucial to the probe.

    Aliyu said the committee would no longer tolerate what he called “an emerging pattern of avoidance” by agencies expected to provide clarity on decades of public spending in the electricity supply industry.

    He directed the agencies to appear no later than 8 December 2025, warning that failure to do so would compel the House to invoke its constitutional powers.

    According to him, the committee had written to the agencies multiple times—starting from 12 November, with follow-up letters on 19 November and subsequent reminders—yet received no acknowledgment or submission. “We are getting increasingly frustrated,” he said. “We cannot pre-empt their reasons for refusing to appear, but these ministries and agencies are critical to the success of this investigation.”

    Members of the committee earlier endorsed a motion urging the chairman to grant a short extension for the agencies to appear while also expanding the mode of communication.

    The lawmakers suggested that invitations be published in the media to ensure no MDA claims ignorance of the summons.

    The chairman upheld the suggestions, announcing that the committee would publish its invitations and also issue fresh letters as a final goodwill gesture before deploying legal instruments under Sections 88 and 89 of the Constitution, which empower the National Assembly to compel attendance and demand documents from any person or authority.

    He said the evasions recorded so far risk undermining the probe, which aims to establish how trillions of naira invested in the power sector over 17 years have failed to translate into stable electricity for Nigerians.

    “We cannot continue this way,” Aliyu said. “These agencies must come forward with their records. The Nigerian people deserve answers.”

  • Reps seek comprehensive solution to insecurity

    Reps seek comprehensive solution to insecurity

    Members of the House of Representatives on Wednesday sought a comprehensive action by governments at all levels to address the rising cases of insecurity in the country, emphasising their earlier position against negotiating with bandits. 

    Zonal caucus leaders and members took turn on the second day of the House debate on the security situation in the country to vent their anger and frustrations as Nigerians across the country are subjected to terror attack daily. 

    Chairman of the House Committee on Women Affairs, Kafilat Ogbara set the tone for the day when she said that the reality confronting the nation was not a distant episode in our national conversation. 

    She said, “It is a deep and bleeding wound in the lives of our children, our families and our communities. And I termed the Papiri and Kamba abductions as a national tragedy. 

    “We are facing severe insecurity crises with widespread kidnapping and banditry. When people come to communities to kill them, to traumatise them, this is nothing but terror. Let me be clear, these are not mere security failures. They are breaches of the most fundamental duties of the state, which is the security of lives and properties.

    “When we have security issues, we need our governors to do more because the president cannot be everywhere. He cannot be in Sokoto, he cannot be in Zamfara, he cannot be in Ogun State. He cannot even be in Lagos State, his own state. We need our governors to do more and this is the right time for us as a house to legislate on the right legal framework on our state’s policy. 

    “As politicians, we say every politics is local. For me, I may not be a security expert, but I know that every security is local. We need a security situation where our security operators will be communicado, where Nigerians can call any security operative at any hour of the day and they are sure to get the right response. 

    “Where we have that, that is where we have the right policing. In normal climes, you find out that citizens police themselves. When you see something, you say something, you act and you do something. This is the only way we can have the right security network in this country.”

    He commended the President for the empathy he has shown and for the release of the Kebbi girls saying “the brief relief felt by the families of those that escaped is overshadowed by the agony of those still waiting, waiting for a knock on the door, for a phone call, for any sign of hope”. 

    She asked, “We have seen the children where are the kidnappers? Nigerians are asking. We have seen the children, where are the kidnappers? We need to know.

    “This crisis demands our urgent attention because children are used as deliberate targets. Schools that are once safe havens have become tragic targets. I think vulnerability for our women and children who face kidnapping, violence, exploitation, displacement and psychological trauma.

    “Mothers and female educators bear emotional and economic burdens. Community disruption. And I must say that this trauma lasts a lifetime sometimes. We have to avoid this. Children who escape captivity or witness violence often experience long-time trauma, insomnia, anxiety, nightmare and withdrawal.

    She recommended the establishment of a national safe schools protection framework, mandatory deployment of security teams to high-risk boarding schools and also reinforce dormitories, night surveillance, panic alert systems, invest in early warning infrastructure, cameras, sensors and secure communication links with law enforcement agencies. 

    Leader of the North West, Sada Soli said the current challenges are not just criminal, but structural, rooted in environmental stress, with governance and economic marginalisation, adding that tackling these threats demands a holistic strategy that combines security operations with social, economic and environmental interventions. 

    Soli said a purely military or kinetic response won’t be sufficient to address the issues in the Northwest, adding that long-term stability will require building trust in state institutions. 

    “We must build trust in our institutions, while making efforts to reform land and livestock governance, addressing climate response and pressure and ensuring that affected communities are meaningfully taken part in providing solution to our security threats.

    He said, “Once the communities that are affected are not taken meaningfully in the course of providing solution, forget it, we will not get where we want to get there. 

    He identify major security threats bedevilling the Northwest to banditry and kidnapping. Farmer-herder, that is pastoralist conflict, then cattle rustling and organised crime.

    He said, “The security challenges in the Northwest started through farmer-herder clashes, cattle rustling, which have become a more organised, organised then transmuted into a criminal enterprise. Rustlers operate from forested areas, e.g. Darjeel Rugu forest, which cut across Kaduna State, Katsina State, Zamfara State and Sokoto State.

    “You can see how complex nature it is. So somebody can start, a criminal can start traversing from Kaduna State and he will end up in Sokoto State without being noticed because the forest is thick and they are connected. As well as the impact of Binin Gwari forest, which started from Kaduna and ended up in some part of Kebbi State.

    “There is a limited trust in state mechanisms in many localities. There’s a limited trust in our communities, in state mechanisms in our localities. There is traditional conflict resolution frameworks.

    “They have been weakened. The traditional conflict mechanism resolutions, they have been deeply and vastly weakened. And state capacity to enforce security or mediate is often very stretched, resulting to lack of local legitimacy.

    “Some of our local authorities, they have lost their legitimacy as well as broken down social cohesion in communities. How do social cohesion is broken down in our communities? Because they have been displaced. Possible escalation, ethnic and religious distrust, displacements of feedback loop are all issues of concern if we want to address these issues.

    On his part, Leader of the North East Caucus, Mukthar Betara said Borno state and the North East has remained the epicentre of the insurgency, terrorism, kidnapping and communal violence. 

    Betara advocated for adequate funding for the security agencies and the provision of adequate welfare package as a way of encouraging them. 

    He said ‘Nigerian security challenges may be vast, but they cannot be there with strategic planning, coordinated action, and awareness, political commitment, we can stop and spread violence, restore public confidence, stop spread of violence.

    “This special session provides us with not just opportunity, but a responsibility to charge a bold new direction, sir. The Nigerian people are waiting. Communities across the Northeast, the nations are watching.

    “History will remember us today. What we have chosen to do today in this chamber, let us rise for a moment together and help and secure the nation. That is our solution.’

  • Reps to hold security debate tomorrow

    Reps to hold security debate tomorrow

    The House of Representatives will tomorrow hold a nationwide debate on national security as Nigeria grapples with worsening insecurity.

    Speaker Tajudeen Abbas announced the decision during yesterday’s plenary.

    He said the scale and spread of violence across the country required decisive and collective intervention from lawmakers and security agencies.

    Abbas said this when Minority Leader Kingsley Chinda sought to move a motion on the recent abduction of schoolgirls in Kebbi State and the killing of a senior military officer.

    The Speaker stepped the motion down, saying the House had reserved tomorrow exclusively for security deliberations.

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    “We are deeply saddened by these unfortunate incidents,” Abbas said. “I announced earlier that we will dedicate the whole of Thursday to security-related matters, and this particular event is one of the reasons behind our decision.”

    The Speaker urged security agencies to intensify efforts and reassess their strategies.

    “I call on all security agencies to please step up all actions and strategies to ensure the lives and properties of Nigerians are secured,” he said.

    Abbas also instructed all lawmakers to come prepared with detailed briefs from their constituencies.

    “Every member is invited to make submissions on insecurity in his state or constituency. Thursday will give us the opportunity to hear, in detail, all the security issues bedevilling our constituencies and our states,” he added.

  • PIA: Reps to change leadership of some HCDTs over non-performance

    PIA: Reps to change leadership of some HCDTs over non-performance

    The House of Representatives has expressed disappointment over the poor performance of some Host Community Development Trusts (HCDT) established to develop oil producing communities in line with Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

    Chairman House of Representatives Committee on Host Communities, Dumnamene Dekor disclosed that of the Trusts after receiving funding from their settlers have failed  to execute one project after more than one year of existence. 

    Dekor, while speaking during the  Bridges Project Host Community Development Trust Stakeholders Dialogue Forum in Ikot Ekpene Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State on Thursday, hinted of a possible change in the leadership of some of the HCDTs.

    The two-day close-out forum, themed “Four Years of the PIA: Lessons, Gains, and the Path Forward for Host Community Development Trusts (HCDTs),” was organised by the Foundation for Partnership Initiatives in the Niger Delta  (PIND) in collaboration with the Ford Foundation. 

    The Bridges Project which was launched in 2023, has served as a transformative platform for dialogue and collaboration among regulators, settlors, and host communities.

    Through its Multi-Stakeholder Platform, the project strengthened transparency, built trust, and promoted shared accountability in the implementation of the PIA’s HCDT framework — a central mechanism of the PIA  designed to ensure that host communities benefit directly from extractive activities.

    However , the lawmaker expressed dismay that out of over N373bn available to all Trusts in the country some Trusts are yet to start one project after receiving funding for those projects. 

    Dekor said, “‘Like you rightly said over N373bn is available to all the Trusts, what percentage of this has been put to use? This is another question. And so for those Settlors and those Trusts that must have been funded but they are yet, for so many months and some of them more than a year, to even start one project, then there’s the need to look at it.

    ”The NUPRC and the House will partner with you and if there’s the need to change of the leadership of the Trusts for the benefits of the people, then we will propose that bill”.

    In her keynote address on behalf of the Chief Executive of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, the Commission’s Manager, Host Community Development Administration, Mrs. Omolade Awah, commended PIND and the Ford Foundation for ”fostering dialogue and evidence-based engagement that strengthen transparency and accountability under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).” 

    She expressed satisfaction that the Host Community Development Trust (HCDT) framework — a core pillar of the PIA — is already yielding visible results across the Niger Delta, from infrastructure and human capital projects to renewed community trust and stability. 

     Awah reaffirmed the Commission’s commitment to ensuring that the HCDT structure continues to serve as a credible mechanism for sustainable development, peacebuilding, and shared prosperity in host communities.

    Executive Director of PIND, Mr. Sam Ogbemi Daibo, noted that the forum marks a pivotal step in consolidating lessons from the Bridges Project for future implementation. 

    “The Bridges Project has shown that the success of the PIA — and particularly the HCDT model, depends not just on compliance, but on collaboration, trust, and shared accountability’

    ”The lessons learned from this process provide a roadmap for the years ahead — guiding how we strengthen partnerships, deepen community engagement, and sustain the gains of host community development,” he said.

     Akwa Ibom commissioner of Budget and Economic Planning Dr. Linus Nkan,  emphasised that “the success of the HCDT implementation depends on shared accountability, trust, and continuous learning, and it should also be extended to government houses of all the Niger Delta states”.

  • Reps to probe diversion of containers, excise duty leakages

    Reps to probe diversion of containers, excise duty leakages

    • House to review report on govt’s abandoned property since 2000

    The House of Representatives has moved to investigate infractions and the diversion of containers, excise duties leakages, temporary importation irregularities and misuse of quota on importation of essential commodities.

    The House also resolved to review the report of the Presidential Implementation Committee (PIC) on government property conducted in Year 2000, as well as verify reports of other properties abandoned since then to identify the state of the properties.

    The infractions, the Green Chamber said, caused the Federal Government a huge loss of revenue.

    Adopting a motion sponsored by the Deputy Chairman of the House Committee on Customs and Excise, Hassan Shehu Hussain (NNPP, Kano), the House directed the Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) to beam the agency’s searchlight on Customs officers involved in the transfers and the escorting of containers.

    The Green Chamber urged the NCD boss to deploy technology to ensure that every container’s duty is collected and accounted for once it reaches its destination.

    Hussain told the parliament that the creation of Bonded Terminals and Fast-track Warehouses was aimed at decongesting the ports and facilitating trade, thereby making the ports more user-friendly to boost revenue for the Federal Government.

    According to him, the activities of those he called unscrupulous Bonded Terminals/Warehouses across the country have been detrimental to the economy and pose a security threat to the nation.

    The lawmaker alleged that containers meant to be transferred from mother ports under the NCS escorts with bond coverage for the value of the containers were diverted before reaching their final destinations.

    He said the contents of such containers were largely unknown, adding that they might have contained dangerous drugs, such as tramadol, or arms and ammunition that could destroy the nation.

    Hassan explained that it is the policy of the Federal Government to grant tax or excise duty holidays to newly established factories and industries, typically for a three-year grace period before excise duties are collected.

    The lawmaker said some of such factories and industries abuse the government’s magnanimity and continually evade paying excise duties.

    In some case, he said, the collection of excise duties is done manually, leading to improper assessments and inadequate collections.

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    Hassan added: “Another source of substantial revenue loss to the Federation Account is through Temporal Importation (TI), an arrangement that supports investors to bring in vessels, aircraft, and other major equipment for a specified period without paying Customs duties, provided a cash-backed bond with banks for the duration applied for is deposited.

    “Unfortunately, many organisations with TI have exceeded their bond periods, and these bonds remain undischarged into the Federal Government’s account, resulting in unpaid duties.

    “Another cause of revenue losses is due to the overshooting of import quotas for sugar and other essential commodities to supplement local production shortfalls, which were doubled without proper government approval. Additionally, the repeated recycling of these quotas has resulted in losses amounting

    to billions of naira that should have accrued into the Federation Account.”

    The House yesterday set up an ad hoc committee, headed by Amos Gwamna Magaji, to review the reports and report infractions, determine and make recommendations for final resolution on the government abandoned landed property and buildings.

    This followed the adoption of a motion on the urgent need for action on Federal Government-abandoned landed properties and buildings in Nigeria, sponsored by House Minority Leader Kingsley Chinda.

    The lawmaker recalled that in August 2021, the Nigerian Institute of Quantitative Surveillance (NIQS) identified a large quantum of about 11,866 abandoned government landed properties and buildings across the nation.

    He said this has resulted in a colossal waste of resources worth over N20 trillion.

    Chinda noted that about 63 per cent of the Federal Government’s landed properties, buildings, and projects since independence has been abandoned for one reason or the other.

    According to him, some of the Federal Government’s major landed properties and buildings that have been abandoned include the Federal Secretariat Building in Ikoyi, Lagos.

    The Minority Leader listed several other properties spread across the country that have been abandoned, expressing worries that since the Year 2000, when the PIC was set up by the Olusegun Obasanjo government, no official report of the committee has been submitted to the government till date.

    He said this “can jeopardise the accuracy and accountability of the said PIC reports”.

    Chinda added: “Several years after the majority of these landed properties and building foundations were laid, by now, market inflation and engineering design would have been affected.

    “Hence, the Federal Government can rescue some of the landed properties, buildings and projects through private-public partnership to avoid continuous wastage and weakening of the structures and loss of value.”

    The House unanimously adopted the motion when put to a voice vote by Speaker Tajudeen Abbas.

    It mandated the Special Audit Committee, when constituted, to report back to the House within six weeks for further legislative work.

  • Reps to review report on government abandoned property since 2000

    Reps to review report on government abandoned property since 2000

    The House of Representatives on Wednesday resolved to review the report of the Presidential Implementation Committee (PIC) on government property conducted in the year 2000, as well as verify reports of other properties abandoned since 2000, to identify the state of these properties.

    The House set up an ad hoc committee headed by Amos Gwamna Magaji to review the reports and report infractions, determine and make recommendations for final resolution on the government-abandoned landed property and buildings.

    This followed the adoption of a motion on the urgent need for action on federal government-abandoned landed properties and buildings in Nigeria sponsored by the Minority Leader, Kingsley Chinda.

    Chinda said that in August 2021, the Nigerian Institute of Quantitative Surveillance identified a large quantum of about 11,866 abandoned government-owned landed properties and buildings across the nation, saying this has resulted in a colossal waste of resources worth over 20 trillion naira.

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    Chinda said further that about 63% of federal government landed properties and buildings, and projects since independence have been abandoned for one reason or the other, adding that some of the major federal government landed properties and buildings that have been abandoned include the Federal Secretariat Building in Ikoyi, Lagos.

    He listed several other property spread across the country that have been abandoned while expressing worries that, since the year 2000, when the Presidential Implementation Committee was set up by the Obasanjo government, an official report of the committee has not been submitted to the government to date.

    According to him, “Can jeopardise the accuracy and accountability of the said PIC reports. Several years after the majority of these landed properties and building foundations were laid, by now, market inflation and engineering design would have been affected.

    “Hence, the federal government can rescue some of the landed properties, buildings and projects through private-public partnership to avoid continuous wastage and weakening of the structures and loss of value”, he further stated.

    The House unanimously adopted the motion when put to a voice vote by the Speaker, Tajudeen Abass, and mandated the Special Audit Committee, when constituted, to report back to the House within six weeks for further legislative action

  • Reps seek reactivation of farm centres to engage Inmates

    Reps seek reactivation of farm centres to engage Inmates

    The House of Representatives has asked the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security and the Nigerian Correctional Service to reactivate existing farm centres across the country and implement a policy to engage inmates serving in correctional centres in farming.

    This followed a motion by Folorunsho Adegbesan on the need to engage inmates in Nigerian Correctional Centres in farming activities.

    Adegbesan said in most African countries, the average diet provided in correctional centres contributes to malnutrition among inmates to the extent that many courts in Africa have expressed concern over the frequency, quantity, and quality of food served in correctional centres, deeming it cruel, inhumane, and degrading treatment.

    According to him, approximately eleven (11) million people are currently being held in correctional centres across the world, with Nigeria accounting for about 84,741, comprising 82,821 males and 1,920 females.

    He explained that correctional centres and other organisations around the world are creating and implementing sustainable food programmes to bring better nutrition to incarcerated people.

    He said there are positive examples of how correctional centres have tried to deal with food insecurity in African countries, saying “in 2017, a prison in Mozambique produced one ton of potatoes, which were used in the prison and shared with other prisons.

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    “In Botswana, irrigation farming was introduced in 2025 to combat drought impacts on prison farms and ensure consistent prison food production, focusing on sorghum, cowpeas, lablab, and maize. In Tanzania, in 2024, environmentally friendly and cost-effective stoves designed to operate using alternative charcoal and minimal firewood were introduced in 126 prisons.

    “In 2024, Mauritius introduced a fish processing plant at one of its prisons; Ghana Prisons Service equips inmates with modern cultivation skills to create agricultural activity in Ghana’s prisons and ensure that the standards of its prison system are consistent with internationally recognised norms and Namibia, Hydroponic systems have been utilised to improve food security in a female prison.

    He maintained that inadequate access to sufficient food compromises the immune system and leads to nutritional deficiencies, weight loss, and increased susceptibility to infectious diseases.

    He expressed concern that the World Health Organisation (WHO) reports that food affects physical and mental health and is key to an inmate’s successful rehabilitation and resettlement upon release.

    He said food sustainability in correctional centres can help inmates receive nutritious food, learn about sustainable agricultural practices, and obtain vocational training experiences that can help them integrate back into society and expressed the conviction that engaging inmates in farming will enhance food security, improve nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture in Nigeria and beyond.