Tag: rescue mission

  • Ezekwesili on rescue mission, says monarch

    The presidential candidate of the Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN), Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili, is needed to rescue Nigeria from her current leadership challenges.

    A revered traditional ruler, the Sakaruyi-Karu Abuja, His Royal Highness, Emmanuel Kyauta Yepwi, said this on Thursday, some days after Ezekwesili visited him as well as Nyanya and Gudu markets in Abuja.

    The monarch expressed confidence that the country would do well under a woman than those who had governed in the past.

    Yepwi said, “I used to watch you when you were active in service and I admired the way you used to do things. Women are leaders right from homes, right from their houses, and no man does anything without a woman. In every successful man,a woman must be by his side.

    “So, if Nigeria wants to be successful, I think a woman should also be considered. I wouldn’t say that it’s by accident to have selected Karu as the place to flag off your campaign. I want you to know that the real meaning of Karu is increase. No one comes to Karu and does not increase and having come to Karu, just wait and see what God will do for you.

    “In fact, it is my opinion that we should allow a woman to rule the country once and let’s see how she would govern us. So, coming to save Nigeria now is at the right time. Nigeria needs someone like you now.

    “Moreover, you have been in the affairs of the country, you know our problems and you know how to solve them.”

    On her part, Ezekwesili assured her supporters that she would not disappoint Nigerians if given the mandate to lead the country.

    She also promised that her administration would make people’s friendly policies, and urged Nigerians to join her in the mission to rescue Nigeria.

    She said, “We are not running to become president, but we are running in order to rescue our county from the past and the present administrations.

    “Unlike the normal campaigns that other political parties do, we are carrying on a campaign where people are actually going to be sitting with us and we will first hear from them the kind of government that they will want to see and the kind of government that would solve their problems before we then show them what we have in solving their problems.”

    She added, “We want to see a different country; we want to set a new direction for our country. Nigeria has no business being a country that fails in every aspect of life. Our citizens deserve the best.

    “The major emphasis of our campaign is that we want to lift over 80 million Nigerians out of poverty and if you want to do something like that, you should come direct to the people that know what the issues are and that is why we are here.”

  • I am on a rescue mission, says Alao-Akala

    THE former governor of Oyo State and governorship candidate of the Action Democratic Party (ADP), Otunba Adebayo Alao-Akala, has said he is on a rescue mission in the state.

    He alleged that Governor Abiola Ajimobi has not done enough for the state, adding that 90 percent of his  programmes and projects are not in the interest of the people.

    Alao-Akala spoke at a ceremony marking the presentation of the Alao-Akala/Olaiya ticket and the inauguration of the Akala-Olaiya campaign organisation.

    The former governor said his advice to the governor fell on deaf ears.

    He alleged that the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC) is conniving with some officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to rig the poll.

    Alao-Akala said: “I’m seeking another opportunity to govern the state. I am, on a rescue mission to reposition the state for the betterment of our people and investors.

    “Service to humanity especially holding a public office is not a function of age but mental capacity, experience, maturity, good vision and mission, sensitiveness, responsiveness, credibility and popular acceptability of a person. I am offering myself again to serve the good people of Oyo state because I am healthily and mentally fit for the rigorous tasks of governance.

    He added: “My heart aches because 90 percent of the outgoing government’s policies, programmes and programmes and projects are best described as anti-people which leave our people in pain and despondency.

    “Instead of criticizing, I made myself available to guide the incumbent government on how best to run proactive and pro-people governance but the driver lacks the required goodwill. Today, the major sectors of our economy, which are education, health, agriculture and environment, have been either neglected or bastardised. Oyo state is in a serious mess.

     

    “When a serious duty of overhauling government calls, experience counts. On July 4th of this year, I responded to Oyo State Patriots’ clarion call to contest the 2019 governorship elections, so that succor, humane posture, robust economic activities, even and equitable infrastructural developments that were once entrenched in governance of the state during my past tenure could be repeated and improve upon with renewed vigor.

     

    “Immediately after the inauguration of our government come May 29th, 2019, we shall hit the ground running by declaring state of emergencies in the education and health sectors of Oyo state. Our dying LAUTECH, EACOED, The Polytechnic Ibadan and other state-owned tertiary institutions will be rescued and their pride statuses in the comity of educational institutions will be restored.

     

    “Also, we are determined to initiate and implement policies and proagrammes that would transform the state, improve the welfare of the residents and create an environment conducive to business growth and security as well as wealth and employment.

     

    “May I use this occasion to inform the stakeholders in the Nigerian electoral system and the world at large that information reaching us from competent sources is that some bad elements in the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) are conniving with the ruling APC to disenfranchise thousands of voters across the state and weakening the leading opposition candidates in their strongholds by engaging in state-wide illegal relocation of voters from their units/local government of origins to another units/LGAs.

    “We call on the INEC chairman and the constituted security agencies to put a stop to this advanced rigging method.

     

     

     

  • Fayemi: Second phase of rescue mission

    Former Minister of Mines and Steel Development Dr. Kayode Fayemi was sworn in yesterday as the governor of Ekiti State. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU examines the challenges that will confront the administration.

    The second coming of Dr. Kayode Fayemi is significant in many ways. Four years ago, he lost power to former Governor Ayodele Fayose on controversial manner, despite his achievements across the sectors. His rescue mission was truncated. His legacies were not protected. The problems he had tackled returned. After comparing the two governments, many Ekiti were seized with nostalgia.

    Yesterday, he was back in the same saddle. His triumph at the poll underscored a sort of audacity of hope and courage. He is starting off his second term as if Ekiti is in pre-2014 stage. Fayemi is inheriting a divided state, the agony of unpaid salaries, a demoralised and dispirited civil service, the dearth of infrastructure, an army of restless and unemployed youths and a people who now have a demeaning view of governance, due to the confusing doctrine of stomach infrastructure.

    Many people are excited about the new era. There is euphoria. But, the governor is not oblivious of the task ahead. At the inauguration, he was bubbling with patriotic anger. “We have reclaimed our state from those who have held us captive,” he said, thanking God for making his second term a reality.

    Fayemi lamented the ineptitude of the last four years. He chided his predecessor for ignorance and alleged corruption that has pervaded the administration. Giving a hint about his intention to investigate the financial books, he said the N170 billion debt profile and the elephant projects pursued by Fayose, especially the bridges that lead to nowhere, were worrisome. He ruled out any regression to media trial. The governor said transparency and accountability will be restored.

    Fayemi said: “My coming back is not a revenge mission. We owe it a duty to ensure that we will not make the same mistake that has set us backward.”

    During the campaigns, the governor urged the people to anticipate the new dawn with optimism. He advised them to reject the continuity of poverty and embrace freedom. He said the eight-point agenda will be strengthened. Ahead of the inauguration, Fayemi was not idle. He had started wooing investors, assuring that a conducive environment will be provided in post-Fayose era. He visited the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola (SAN) to discuss Federal Government’s infrastructure and assets in the state and ways of improving them. He was also in the office of the Minister of Interior, Lt-Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazau, to seek cooperation and collaboration on security.

    Ekiti is noted for agriculture. Fayemi is thinking of how it can become an alternative source of income. This motivated his visit to the managing Director of the Nigeria Export-Import bank (NEXIM) on how to assist the rural economy to achieve a boom  through export of farm produce. He also held talks with the representatives of Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, led by Managing Director Paul Basinga, who promised to partner with Ekiti in the development of its health sector. More important was his discussion with AGCO South Africa Limited, whose Vice President, Nuradin Osma, said the partnership will need to the creation of over 3,000 jobs for Ekiti youths. Also, at the Agence Francaise de Development (AFD), Fayemi sought for assistance in the implementation of his economic programmes.

    The governor also met with British Embassy officials in Abuja. He was able to discuss with the Head of DFID in Nigeria, Debbie Palmer, modalities for technical assistance for his programmes, in terms of enactment and enforcement of new laws for social protection. Apart from visiting the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, and Secretary to Government of the Federation Boss Mustapha for assistance in relevant areas, Fayemi also visited the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Audu Ogbeh, to discuss how the Federal Government can assist Ekiti in developing the sector. He also met the Head of the European Union Delegation to Nigeria, Ambassador Kertil Karslen, to discuss isues of economic development.

    Many challenges will confront the administration. The first is financial problem. How will fayemi clear the mess? How will he reposition and rebrand Ikogosi Warm Spring Resort? Will he resuscitate the welfare package for the aged?   Another challenge is the re-orientation of the people to move from their wild applause of crumbs falling from the master’s table to an appreciation of good governance.

     

  • I am on rescue mission -Akinyele

    Prince Adewale Olusola Akinyele is the governorship candidate of Green Party of Nigeria (GPN). Akinyele said he is on rescue operation and redemption of Ekiti State.

    WHAT will be your immediate action if you are sworn in as governor of Ekiti State?

    I have developed an agenda called Ekiti State Economic Recovery Plan (ESERP). I will declare a state of emergency on food security, free health system, free education, job creation, low cost mass housing for the masses and ensuring security of lives and property. There would be a major overhaul, rejuvenation and revitalization of Ekiti State economy through agriculture, health, education, employment, housing, solid minerals development, sports, tourism and infrastructural development.

    The name of your party is Green Party of Nigeria, which shows that it has a bias for agriculture and how do you hope to turn this into fortune for Ekiti which is an agrarian state?

    We will ensure food production and food security through sound agrarian policies and ensure that the state becomes a net exporter of agricultural produce. First and foremost, I will open a palliative office on food security to speedily and expediently cushion the effect of hunger in Ekiti State pending the time our agricultural policies and framework will start yielding results. The palliative office will be saddled with the responsibility of securing food at cheaper prices for the benefit of the people of Ekiti State by buying and reselling to Ekiti people at affordable prices. The office will function directly under the Governor’s Office for effective attainment of the goals of the palliative measure.

    What other things do you hope to achieve with investment on agriculture?

    We have also designed an integrated investment plan and implementation strategies in agriculture that will target employment and entrepreneurial opportunities for young men and women. In line with our party’s articulated implementable progressive blueprint, covering agricultural investment and marketing framework, we are determined to use agricultural sector to aggressively create jobs, wealth and ensure food security and derive more revenue for the state. We are going to create jobs through Youth Employment in Agriculture (YEA). Also, we are going to develop a programme of crop development such as cocoa, rice etc to be intensified through the production of premium seedlings which will be provided to farmers at subsidized rates.

    What are other areas you are looking at to develop Ekiti under a GPN government?

    Health is wealth and we believe that a healthy population is a productive population. We will provide Ekiti people with access not only to primary healthcare but also to secondary and tertiary care, as needed through a functional referral system. We are going to intensify active disease prevention programme in the following areas: maternal and child health, immunization, environmental sanitation and control and elimination of disease-transmitting insects.

    We will motivate our doctors, nurses and other professional healthcare providers with better and equitable conditions of service, facilities and equipment to enable them carry out their duties effectively and efficiently. In line with GPN manifesto, I will enforce free, compulsory and accessible basic education throughout the state. School fees will be slashed by reasonable percentage and we are going to provide educational facilities and materials to ensure environment conducive to learning. Infrastructural development, security of life and property, promotion of arts, culture and tourism, sports development, good welfare package for workers and pensioners and zero tolerance for corruption.

  • The rescue Imo needs

    SIR: The end time is a Christian buzzword that is frequently used by greedy and extractive priests in Christendom. God created the world and it is apparent that no one knows when and how he created it. The first man and woman just found themselves on earth and never knew how they came about, who brought them and at what age. It stands to reason therefore to assume that no one knows the end time.

    I sadly wish to draw the attention of the reading public to what is currently happening in Imo State. I speak about the so-called Rescue Mission that is scrapping Imolites into a seeming mass grave like a very busy scrapper caterpillar of Julius Berger. A mission that perfects its acts on the unprotected poor masses. Imo State is almost a deserted state now as almost all her elite have relocated to Abuja and Lagos for safety and livelihood. Hardship is at an unbearable point. Our Youths at various levels are leaving the shores of the country to just anywhere else the wind blows them.

    The Rescue Mission Government of Rochas Okorocha is doing abracadabra  some less discerning members of the hoi polloi clapping. Salaries and pensions are paid after 30 percent deduction; shops and business places are being pulled down with gusto.

    The Agwa and Awara Boys now being used to foment trouble and harass the populace don’t know enough history to understand their parents suffered under- development and why Mr. Douglas, Mr. Wetheral, Mr. Tetlow and Mr. Royce did not settle within Oguta territory when in about 1890 the British came into Owerri through Oguta (Osemoto Sea Port).

    Why can’t the governor organize overseas trips, foreign scholarship and developmental programmes for these future hopes of Imo State oil producing area; why have they not asked the government about the 13% oil derivation fund and how the fund has so far been deployed? Why must they be used to carry out ‘Owelle show us the man and go to sleep’; can’t these boys be governor in 2019? The elders of Ohaji/Egbema Local Government Area should speak sense to their youth. I was very close to the late Nzeobi of Egbema HRM Eze S.N.A. Uzor and the late HRH Eze K.O. Ekwueme also of Egbema who were highly development-minded leaders and lights of that Local Government Area.

    Those who delight in training other people’s children as cultists, armed robbers and political thugs must always remember that those they arm will exact revenge on their master’s generations. Those who jostle and jump up and down around Eke-onunwa and Douglas Road carrying unauthorized weapons should know that “Ofe akputara n’aga ite n’ala n’aga onu.” Anyone who loves your family will not teach you how to do evil.

    The rescue missionary government has failed Imolites, the worst of it is the Imo House of Assembly that is akin to a congregation of village headmasters under the authority of an illiterate oba. A lot of our common funds have been used without records on the continuous urban renewal nonsense and round-abouts without processes. By the way what is renewal, when was Imo State created and what is indeed old that needed renewal and who drew the renewal plans. These, of course, are mere ploys to siphon our common wealth. A trailer load of naira will of course be required to match Ararume’s pick up loads of money for the 2019 general elections. That is what all these abracadabras happening in Imo state in these past seven years is all about… aggrandizement and politics. Imo State has suffered disastrous politics these few years which has left it prostrate. The real rescue needed urgently.

     

    • Nze Okwaraeze Eronini

    email:eromanshiplines@gmail.

  • Obaseki’s rescue mission in Edo

    The mind is a terrible thing to waste, and perhaps the best way to keep your mind productive is to ensure that your hands do not stop working.

    In Nigeria, for the most part, the prevailing socio-economic, ethno-religious and political challenges take their root from these two sides of the same coin: Idle hands and wasting minds.

    Call it the insurgency in the north-east, which has claimed the lives of over 30,000 people and displaced over two million, with an estimated economic loss of $9 billion, representing around 50 per cent of Nigeria’s budget for 2017, or any of the other less analysed restive situations around the country, they all take their roots from idleness of a large proportion of the population, particularly young people.

    Unfortunately, these very counter productive socio-economic upheavals have spread across the entire country in the form of herdsmen-farmers fatal clashes across the north-central regions of the country and militancy in the Niger Delta which almost brought the country to its knees recently.

    With the atrocities caused by terrorism in the north and militancy in the delta area already well documented, the rising problems of violent thuggery and gangsterism which are equally deadly and devastating to socio-economic and political cohesion in states like Edo, are creeping in subtly, poised to become an intractable problem in the near future that will result in national emergencies if not checked.

    In Benin City and other parts of Edo State, the names of these thugs and gangsters, some of who now lay claim to some form of political relevance which is actually non-existent, dot the societal horizon.

    Ask these fellows and their likes what they do for a living, or what skills they possess with which they ply one trade or the other, for their economic survival and the answer you are certain to get is…….wait for it……., NOTHING. They have no jobs, no vocations, no trade.

    Yet, you see these hoodlums move around in top dollar SUVs, build expansive houses with wives and children spread across the various local governments of the state.

    If you thought that these people seeming to live in opulence without any commensurate productive effort is a tragedy, then more tragic is the fact that the younger generation have idolised  and projected these thugs firmly as their role models. This poses potent threat to posterity and must be addressed.

    If a survey is carried out in the sub-urban and parts of the urban centres of Edo State to determine what children want to become when they grow up, the outcome will likely be shocking.

    Those days are gone when children wanted to become doctors, lawyers, engineers and scientists when they grow up. Now they want to be community thugs and local tyrants, who now somehow seem to be the ones with all the money, fame and power, for creating absolutely zero economic value.

    However, judging by some steps that have been taken by the Edo State governor, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, since he took office, it seems like he has set out to adjust some of these maladies.

    A good example is his decision to return the responsibility of revenue collection in local governments across the state to local government employees.

    Obaseki’s argument anchored on the fact that only parties empowered by the laws of the land should carry out constitutional activities like collection and remitting of government revenue is sound to any fair-minded person.

    But for the thugs and gagsters who have made government revenue collection their forte and have in the past amassed mind-boggling wealth for themselves as a result, Obaseki has murdered sleep.

    Threats are being issued and efforts are being made to stir up violence in the state with the instrumentality of proliferating secret cult groups across the state, as well as activities of other criminals.

    Some politicians and interest groups seeking undue relevance in government and in the polity have also thrown their subtle or sometimes brazen support behind these aggrieved thugs who have been nothing but leeches to the government for decades. There are also allegations that major security agencies that are supposed to be unapologetically on the side of law and order, are sometimes in passive support of these hoodlums, conferring with them and treating their criminality with kid gloves.

    They want the waste to continue, because when there is chaos and disorder, people receive patronage that they do not deserve.

    Each of these individuals consider themselves as power blocs in the state and they demand to be courted ‘one-by-one’ by the governor. When they are told that the appropriate thing to do is to form themselves into interest groups with productive agenda, they get offended. Their intention is to reduce the responsibility of governance in the state to continuous frolicking with individuals towards satiating each person’s selfish needs. This will never be a sustainable approach to governance.

    The biggest mistake being made by these people is that they have failed to understand the resolve of the Edo governor to stick to only decisions and activities that are in the best interest of the majority of the Edo people instead of satisfying the greed of a handful.

    The old model of governance made popular by some Nigerian governors, where state chief executives seem to strengthen their political security, simply by patronizing individuals who have created some mobster status for themselves, as well as some so called political leaders and godfathers, is never in the interest of the larger population of any geopolitical entity.

    The most essential, yet most limited resource available to a governor or a president for that matter is his time. Instead of spending it courting the approval of a few individuals in the name of political survival, it must be spent meeting the manifold and dire needs of the teaming populace with the people left to judge in the fullness of time, who has served them well and who has betrayed them.

    Having analysed the problem, Obaseki seems to clearly understand that among the negative actors comprising the thugs, mobsters and the seemingly responsible politicians who support them are many who are largely victims of the system, so he is therefore developing models that can return them into the state’s productive economic cycle.

    He has identified the need to create massive amounts of jobs and is deploying a clear strategy to ensure that millions of decent jobs are actually made available. The idea is that people mostly want to be honest and decent as long as in their honesty, they can be gainfully employed and be given the dignity deserving of responsible members of the society.

    Obaseki’s foray into the development of the Azura-Edo power plant is clearly part of the overall strategy. It is a 450MW Open Cycle Gas Turbine power station being constructed near Benin City in Edo State, Nigeria.  It is the first phase of a 1,500MW Independent Power Project (IPP) facility located on a 100-hectare site, large enough to accommodate future expansion of the power plant.

    The plant is situated close to Nigeria’s main trunkline, the Escravos Lagos Pipeline System (ELPS), which is only 1km from the Azura-Edo project site.

    With power generated and effectively deployed in Edo State, the governor is working on industrial zones that will receive the power evacuated, along with favourable tax regimes and massive human capacity development through revamped global-standard technical education.

    When all these come on stream, it is expected that labour will move from thuggrey, gangsterism and the prevailing wasteful ‘community youths’ system in different suburbs in Edo into technical and vocational schools for skills acquisition that will help them benefit from an actively evolving economic climate.

    Many have said that by trying to change this very negative status quo, which puts money where no real value is created, out of fear of a political backlash, Obaseki is trying to commit political suicide. But the governor himself seems to have effectively counted the cost and is resolved that it is always a suicide mission when anyone attempts to put the interests of the helpless many over those of the ‘privileged’ few.

     

    • Ajayi, a social commentator writes from Benin City
  • $1b loan: CBN, NCC launch rescue mission for Etisalat

    $1b loan: CBN, NCC launch rescue mission for Etisalat

    A rescue mission was launched yesterday for troubled mobile giant Etisalat.

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) resolved to intervene in the over $1billion  loan repayment issue between the telco and its local creditors.

    According to the NCC, the decision was taken yesterday afternoon after a meeting in Abuja between the NCC  Executive Vice Chairman  Prof. Umar Danbatta and CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele.

    NCC spokesman  Tony Ojobo, in a short statement, said the meeting at the Central Bank Headquarters, Abuja was convened by the financial sector regulator at the instance of the NCC, the telecom regulator, to stave off the attempt by banks to take over Etisalat.

    “At the end of the meeting, the CBN agreed to invite Etisalat management and the banks to a meeting tomorrow (today), towards finding an amicable resolution.

    “The NCC, as a regulator of the telecom industry had moved quickly to intervene earlier in the week by reaching out to the CBN convinced of the negative impact such a bank take over will have on the industry.

    “NCC was worried about the fate of the over 20 million Etisalat subscribers and the wrong signals this may send to potential investors in the telecom industry,” Ojobo said.

    Access Bank yesterday said the telco was owing it N40 billion ($131 million).

    The lender’s Chief Executive, Herbert Wigwe said the loan talks were triggered 10-days ago when the company asked lenders to “stand still” on the loan for it to review its operations.

    He also said Etisalat Nigeria’s parent, Emirates Telecommunications Group (Etisalat) had converted a loan to the Nigerian company into shares to free up cashflows and was being asked to inject more equity capital.

    “Banks are saying we would need an equity injection or commitment to support the business. That is being discussed,” he told an analysts’ call when asked about Access Bank’s loan book.

  • Manhunt for 8 students, staff abducted at Turkish school in Ogun

    Manhunt for 8 students, staff abducted at Turkish school in Ogun

    • We’ll get them freed, security chiefs vow

    A massive security hunt got underway yesterday at Isheri, Ogun State, for the eight people abducted by suspected kidnappers on Friday from the Nigerian Tulip International College (NTIC) in the town.
    Taken away were three students, three female supervisors, one female cook and a female Turkish teacher.
    Two of the abducted students were said to be preparing for the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board exam.
    The school formerly known as Turkish International School is owned by a Turkish organization, First Surat Group.
    Senior officers from the army, navy, police and the Department of State Security Service (DSS) in the State yesterday moved to the town at the boundary with Lagos to coordinate the search and rescue mission.
    The search and rescue team began its task by combing the waterways around Arepo, an Ogun-Lagos border town.
    Lagos towns of Ikorodu and Iba have in recent times been used by suspected militants for kidnapping and oil bunkering.
    It was learnt that Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris, ordered that the rescue mission be led by the elite IGP Intelligence Response Team (IRT).
    The IG team is being led by Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), Abba Kyari.
    A source said: “We are combing the creeks around the school and are working on some intelligence reports, which cannot be disclosed so as not to jeopardise the operation. We hope that we will make a breakthrough soon.”
    The Ogun State Police Command’s Public Relations Officer, Abimbola Oyeyemi, told The Nation that the security chiefs were already tracking the abductors.
    He pledged that the victims would be rescued alive.
    Mr. Mehmet Basturk, the Group Managing Director of First Surat Group, was also expected at the school yesterday from his Abuja base.
    Spokesman for NTIC Colleges, Mr.Cemal Yirgit, threw light on how the kidnap took place, saying everything was being done to free the abducted people.
    Yirgit in a statement entitled, “Kidnap of students and a Turkish teacher” said: “We wish to notify the general public of the unfortunate incident that occurred on January 13, 2017, at the premises of The Nigerian Turkish International Colleges (NTIC), Ogun State.
    “At about 9.30 pm local time, a group of people armed with dangerous weapons gained entrance into the girls’ section through different means and held hostage three female supervisors, a female cook, a female teacher (Turkish) and three students.
    “The school security noticed some movement on the CCTV camera at the girls’ section and promptly deployed security personnel and alerted the relevant security agencies in the area as customary.
    “Upon hearing the security alarm activated and sighting our personnel, the armed invaders opened fire on the security staff and managed to escape through a very dangerous route, with the hostages.
    “The security agencies are currently on their trail as the whole area has been cordoned off.
    “We wish to assure parents and guardians that the students and teacher will return to safety as soon as everything possible has been deployed to ensure that our teachers and students return unhurt by God’s grace.”
    It was gathered that the kidnappers gained entry into the compound by climbing the fence.
    They then dug a portion of the fence close to a swamp. They proceeded to the female hostels, where they seized the victims all of whom they threatened with gun before forcefully taking them away.
    The abductors were yet to contact the school management or parents of the abducted students at press time.
    Parents stormed the school yesterday to pick their wards ignoring pleas by the Ogun State Deputy Governor, Yetunde Onanuga, who visited the school.
    Addressing the agonising parents, Onanuga, spoke of government’s commitment to the safe return of the students, saying state government had put security measure in place in that direction.
    The deputy governor appealed to parents and guardians of the pupils to remain calm and not engage in panic withdrawal of their children from the school.
    “We are here to express our concern and sympathy. It is unfortunate that, this is happening barely few days on school resumption. When we heard about it, we quickly sprang into action, hence the urgent visit.
    “Our government has put necessary security measure in place for the rescue of the abductees. Ogun State is already in action. Let me reassure you that we are going to rescue the victims soon.
    “No doubt, it does happen once a while but it’s unfortunate, the state is aware and we are doing the work, we will do all that is possible for the safe return of the children. The FG is aware and they have also assured us that very soon, they would be rescued.
    “It’s not the time to start taking children out of the schools, the security operatives are all on ground to ensure safety of life and property of the school. We will do all that is possible to make sure the school is safe and the school authority is also doing what is possible to ensure that the state is safe.”
    Mr. Ahmad Ajani, whose daughter – Hanatullah Aderinto Ajani (22), was one of the abducted pupils, said he got the information on Friday night.
    Ajani who described the incident as sad and unfortunate said his child was in the school to prepare for the forthcoming JAMB exams.
    “Somebody called in the midnight that something happened here and my daughter was involved, I had to come down this morning (yesterday) and the Police Commissioner addressed us assuring that they would work on it and that everything would be alright very soon.
    “I am very sad but prayerful that they are rescued on time. As I am standing, I am traumatized; you can imagine a girl of 22 preparing for University and somebody took her away, it is a big issue.”
    Another parent, Mrs. Funmi Tijani, said: “We (parents) are taking our children away. We’ve agreed amongst ourselves to take our children away for a week.
    “My daughter saw them (kidnappers), witnessed the whole scenario and she’s traumatised. Psychologically, they (students) are not balanced; you don’t expect me to leave her behind.”
    Expressing concern over the development, a parent who requested anonymity urged security agencies to examine all possibilities of both domestic and international involvement in the incident.
    “It is a fact that a group within the country preys on innocent school children to prosecute a warped war while some forces outside Nigeria who failed in the bid to cause the closure of Turkish schools in Nigeria have not relented,” he said.
    The kidnap comes about three months after gunmen invaded Lagos Model College in Epe and kidnapped four students, a vice president and a teacher from the school.

  • Boko Haram: Dialogue won’t stop our rescue mission – Buratai

    Boko Haram: Dialogue won’t stop our rescue mission – Buratai

    •Says 20,000 abductees so far rescued

    THE military has no intention of back-pedaling on rescuing Nigerians being held hostage by the terror sect, Boko Haram, irrespective of whether the group agrees to dialogue with government or not, Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt. General Tukur Buratai, said yesterday.

    Among those still being held by the terrorists are the over 200 school girls abducted from the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, in April 2014.

    Buratai said   20,000 persons abducted by the Boko Haram insurgency have so far been rescued by the military and more will still be rescued.

    The army chief told journalists shortly after indugurating the  Nigerian Army Officers Wife Association (NAOWA) Day Care, Nursery and Primary School at Ribadu Cantonment, Kaduna, yesterday that  the move by the federal government to negotiate with the insurgents will not stop the military’s rescue operations.

    He appealed to anybody with useful information that could boost the rescue operations to volunteer such information to the military.

    He said: “We have so far rescued over 20000 abducted persons, and we are still rescuing more and we will continue to do that.

    “We will continue to carry out our rescue operations. This rescue is ongoing, as far as the Army, and indeed the military is concerned, we will continue to play our own part.

    “The negotiation is left for the appropriate arm of government, but we are looking for any information to rescue anybody that is being held hostage.”

    He visited the headquarters of One Division, Nigerian Army, Kaduna where he had a closed door meeting with officers and men of the division.

     

  • ‘I’m on rescue mission’

    ‘I’m on rescue mission’

    Tayo Alasoadura is the senator representing Ondo Central District.The former Commissioner for Finance spoke with DAMISI OJO on his governorship ambition and other national issues. Excerpts:

    You are a Senator. Why do you want to be governor?

    When God looked at the affliction of human beings, He asked His only begotten son, Jesus Christ, to go and save them. That was why Jesus came here. Jesus abandoned his kingdom. He left everything and came to rescue mankind. Ondo state has been bastardised; Ondo State has been pushed back for another 20 years; Ondo state has been pillaged; Ondo state has been ruined. Somebody has to have the courage to come and say we can do it better.

    No patriot can see the way things are now that will not feel sorry for Ondo State. I cannot fold my arms and allow things to go the way they are going. It will not be good for me; it will not be good for the people of Ondo state; it will not even be good for my children. I can still add value to what we are doing in Ondo state. I can still reverse this ugly situation we are experiencing in the state.

    What are your plans for the state?

    During the government of Late Olusegun Agagu, we had what was called ‘Roadmap to Progress’ which was well documented. We had policy papers that were prepared for all sectors in this state. Is it agriculture, education, health or industrialization? We intend to bring them out. If there are areas to make changes, we would make changes. We have to industrialize this state. We started Olokola Free Trade Zone but the present government ensured that it was killed. We are going to revive Olokola.

    Free trade zones are one of the effective development strategies  in the world today. Dubai was a desert. They started building free trade zones here and there. The country has now become the cynosure of all eyes. It has become the economic hub of the far east. Everybody goes to Dubai now to go and buy this or that. Even people go there to rest.

    I can remember that the first factory that was to be put in Olokola was requesting for 4000 housing units for its senior staff. Can you imagine how many people could have worked while building those housing units? Even if it was only five artisans for a unit, 20,000 would have worked there. By the time the housing units would have been completed, those senior staff would have employed middle-level and junior staff. I am sure the company would have employed not less than 20,000 people. If it was 20 or 30 percent that the company gave us as the catchment area, 6000 Ondo state indigenes would have worked in that company. Other factories would have come.

    We have factories that are now moribund. If I become governor, I am not going to revive Oluwa Glass Industry as it is today because it is not revivable. The Chinese have the cheapest ways of doing things. I will go to China as well as other places and bring those who can bring the required technology to do the work. Partners will come. Give them the enabling environment. Let Ondo state own maximum of 20 percent of that organization. Our people will work there. We would be seen as an industrialized state. People who come to buy what we produce here will lodge in the hotels around. The ripple effects will be unimaginable. So, industrialization is one. We also intend to empower our women, revive our education and health systems as well as getting our road networks in good condition. When we were in government, we used to get a kilometer of road constructed for N42million. But when this government came, it is doing it for N165million per kilometer.

    When I make it as governor, we would stretch our naira to the limit where it will almost break.. That means we are going to ensure that we use the little resources we have for as many projects as possible.

    There will be no room for people to steal our money as it is being done now. If the amount spent on Dome had been used for industrialization, at least it would have done two factories. By the time we were doing an event centre which is what they have done and called Dome now, we awarded the contract for N645million. I don’t know but the Dome will be about N2.8billion. From N645million to N2.8billion for God sake!

    Why do you think you are the best for the job?

    The aspirants are all good people. But they don’t have the experience that I have. That’s why I’m better. And for you to win elections, you must have experience, you must have your structure, you must have some requirements. I think I have them. The other aspirants are all good people. They are contributing to the development of our party. They are all welcome into the race. To me, the more the merrier. I like challenges. It makes me stronger, it makes me work harder. At all times, through the grace of God, I’ve always overcome any challenge that comes my way. I like challenges like the one we are having now. I am happy about it. I always perform better at a time like this.

    What are the chances of the APC at the election?

    APC must be careful. We must pick a grassroots politician. We must pick a politician that can give it to the opponents the way they come. We must forget about this notion that PDP is dead in Ondo state, that nobody loves the present administration anymore. We saw what happened during the House of Assembly election and that should teach us a lesson. We need somebody who can win elections. Winning an election is an art. It is not for anybody to win. It is for people who know how to win elections to win. So, APC has a very good chance if they don’t make the mistake of picking a wrong candidate like it was done in the past.

    There has been this story that you once chased away the monarch of your town, Iju. What’s your own side of the story?

    The truth is that such a thing never happened. The Oba is my cousin. It was just like giving the dog a bad name in order to hang it. But I thank God today, the Oba, who is my cousin; is one of my best friends. There is no problem between us at all. So, the story was a creation of some people. It was a creation that was magnified by my political foes who are now in the doldrums. I am at peace with all my people, including the Oba.

    The Agagu government left N41bn in the treasury for the current administration of Governor Olusegun Mimiko. How did you manage to achieve this feat?

    I became a chartered accountant in 1974. Over the years, I have gained a lot of experience. I know that if you harness your resources very well, it will be enough for you. If you have N20 and you plan with it very well, you are likely to succeed. But If you have N200 and you don’t plan, you are likely to fail. The policy we enunciated was that if we didn’t have money, we must not award any contract. We attached projects to the budget. What the federal government is trying to do now is what we were doing when I was Commissioner for Finance which was zero budgeting.

    When we came, what we met was incremental budgeting. In this type of budgeting, we may say last year, Ministry of Education had N200 million for it to execute its programmes and projects. This year, let’s add 10 percent. It goes up to N220milion. But when I became Finance Commissioner, I said “no, what are we using N220million for? Let us see what they need in the Ministry of Education. Is it renovation of classrooms? Is it getting chairs and desks for pupils? Is it writing or educational materials that we need money for? Itemize them. Lets cost them. Let us know the specifics.” I would now try to find on the internet what would be the cost of the product you wanted to buy. For example, if it was a telephone, what was the cost of a blackberry? We knew that government would award it as a contract, we would add the profit element to it and then we would know how much money we would get the telephone that you wanted to buy. With that, we were able to reduce the waste that usually accomplishes incremental budgeting to the barest minimum.

    We put in place a policy that when you wanted to execute any project in the budget, you had to come and defend it at the exco. If you said you wanted to buy, for example again, a telephone, we would ask you what happened to the telephone that you bought last year. For us to approve another telephone for you, you must show cause why another one should be bought. If you do that, you just find out that a lot of people will chicken out, knowing fully well that questions will be asked.

    After defending your project at the budget level and the state executive council approved that you should go and execute it, there were processes that you had to go through. We would advertise. after advertisement, we would invite people. The tenders board would look into all the bids. By the time all these were going on, monies coming into Ondo state were being put in a fixed deposit account, earning interest. There was hardly any year that I was not able to earn for government up to N2billion interest on the moneys that were coming.

     

     

    We decided also not to let local governments waste their funds. Such funds would come to me as the Commissioner for Finance and I would fix the money. We would release only monies that were for recurrent expenditure to the local governments to pay salaries. We would keep the rest for three months. By the time the money was released to them, they would have had their programmes and projects. The proposed programmes and projects would also be reviewed by us so that the local governments didn’t use the money for frivolous purposes.

     

     

    Within three months, if I kept N5billion, you know how much that would earn for the state and the local governments. So, it was an interplay of prudent financial husbandry and ingenuity.

    There are two ways to have money. It is either your production goes up or you block leakages. During the Agagu government, if money was released to you, maybe as imprest or whatever, before you could get another one, you must account for the one you were given. Once you accounted for it and we were satisfied, then you would get another one. In the past, moneys were just released. No accountability. But during our time, you had to account for every kobo that you received.