Tag: Saga

  • MTN $13b saga: Questions over Senate’s postponement

    MTN $13b saga: Questions over Senate’s postponement

    It was the Senate ad hoc committee on the Humanitarian Crisis in the North East, headed by Senator Shehu Sani that unearthed the contract scam involving the suspended Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. Babachir David Lawal in October 2016. Unlike many investigative panels before it, the Sani committee did a thorough job. Some of its findings was the over N200 million contract for the removal of invasive weeds (otherwise known as grass cutting contract) in Yobe State. The committee discovered that Rholavision Nigeria Limited, the company that got what turned out to be a phony contact, was registered by Babachir Lawal. The Presidential Initiative on the North East (PINE) which awarded the contract, was placed under the watch of the same Lawal. The committee’s findings were able to establish that it was Babachir Lawal of PINE that awarded the contract to Babachir Lawal of Rholavision. When the scandal broke, the double faced Lawal applied several bullying methods to dismiss the report. But the Senate, particularly Shehu Sani refused to be silenced by Lawal’s sinister antics. In response, the Presidency referred the matter to a committee headed by Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami. And through some executive magic, Lawal was cleared of wrongdoing and a report clearing the now suspended SGF was flashed in the face of a benumbed Nigerian public. This forced the often rationally stubborn Sani to draw the conclusion that the Presidency had chosen to apply insecticide against its foes in the fight against corruption, only to spray sweet-scented deodorant on its friends and cronies. That was what the Malami report on Babarchirgate truly did. This was followed by a flurry of activities in the partisan sphere, as prominent chieftains in the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) saw the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) as save haven to cover their iniquities of the past which were being put under the searchlight of the anti-graft agencies. A number of them that were under investigation or facing prosecution hurriedly defected to the APC overnight. The defection galore spread across geopolitical zones as chieftain after chieftain assembled the media to announce their defection from PDP to APC. And just when Nigerians thought the matter had been effectively swept under the carpet through an executive fiat, the Presidency, apparently out of penitence, decided to change from deodorant to insecticide in treating Babachirgate. The flit came in the same pack with the infamous National Intelligence Agency (NIA) saga. In his wisdom, or the lack of it, Abiodun Oke, the Director General of the NIA came out to lay claim to billions of cash in local and foreign currencies discovered by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in a private apartment in Ikoyi, Lagos. According to him, the hidden cash, running to about N13 billion, was meant for “covert operations” and had to be stuffed in safe cabinets in a private apartment under the control of his beloved wife. Just like Babachir Lawal, Abiodun Oke too has been given a kick in the rump. The two gentlemen will be giving their narratives before a presidential panel in the days ahead.

    But while the Shehu Sani committee effectively applied insecticide in attacking Babachirgate, another committee of the Senate chose the soft option by spraying deodorant on individuals and corporate bodies it accused of wrongdoings. In October 2016, the Senate standing committee on Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions screamed to the high heavens, accusing some firms and local banks of assisting a telecom giant, MTN Nigeria to illegally repatriate about $13 billion out of Nigeria. That Senate committee, chaired by Senator Rafiu Ibrahim (Kwara South), issued summons to top officials of the MTN, the Central Bank of Nigeria and a number of commercial banks alleged to have aided what the committee described as capital flight. Chief executives of some private firms alleged to have played a role in the said illegal financial dealings were also summoned. The present Minister of Trade and Investment, Okechukwu Enalemah, was also summoned to give explanations regarding the role his firm played in the matter. The vast hearing Senate room was packed to the brim with the various invitees and journalists hoping to get sizzling scoop from the hearing. The hall was tense as the senators took turns to lament what they described as economic injury inflicted on the nation by the invited individuals and corporate bodies. At opening session of the public hearing, Senator Ibrahim threatened to invoke the relevant punitive rule in the Senate’s book against Minister Enalemah who appeared for the hearing but had sneaked out before the exercise began. The boisterous Senator Dino Melaye went throaty, stealing the show in his trademark fashion. He bawled, he yelled and barked at the invitees as he hinged his effusive outbursts on patriotic zeal oozing out of his agitated soul. Most of the invited individuals and corporate bodies were visibly rattled by the senators’ verbal quakes. Prying questions were hurled at the “errant” invitees and many of them became fidgety. They were cornered. The horde of journalists sat on the edge of their seats, waiting for the slam. Unconvincing explanations were offered by some of the representatives of the firms and officials of the CBN. The atmosphere became charged and reporters were ready to go for the kill. Then suddenly, the chairman of the investigating Senate committee, Rafiu Ibrahim, halted the music. He announced in his native Ilorin English, that the hearing had been postponed indefinitely. Ibrahim gave no reasons for the termination of the hearing on the very first day. And since then, members of the Nigerian public have been left to guess what transpired. Case closed. So Senator Shehu Sani cannot be said to be totally right on the insecticide and deodorant theory wherein he accused the executive arm of selective application of the two contrasting aerosols. The Senate also, is a culprit. Ask Senator Rafiu Ibrahim.

  • The Ajasin saga: corruption fighting back?

    SIR: I have been following the drama concerning the appointment of Mr. TokunboAjasin as a member of the NDDC by President Muhammadu Buhari. In the course of this drama, there was never a time when anyone disputed the qualification, capability, integrity or the character of the President’s nominee; some have even gone ahead to praise his leadership and professional qualities. So what is all the brouhaha all about?

    Some Ilaje people claim that Mr. Ajasin’s appointment was illegal because it contradicts the Act that set up the NDDC. The Ilaje community, particularly the ones that live in Ugbo believe that they and only they could be appointed to the NDDC board. They postulate that the NDDC Act 2000 that sets up the Commission makes it mandatory that the nominees to represent each of the nine states be indigenes of the oil producing communities quoting Section 2(1) (b) of the NDDC Act, 2000 to buttress their claim:

    “one person who shall be an indigene of an oil producing area to represent each of the following member states, that is, Abia State, Akwa-Ibom State, Bayelsa State, Cross River State, Delta State, Edo State, Imo State, Ondo State, and Rivers State.”

    My understanding of the clause “oil producing area” that seems to be the bone of contention is that it applies to the totality of the Niger Delta area comprising the states named in the act. If the framers of the act intended places other than states it could have said so. It could easily have said Ilaje, Eket, Oron, Ughelli, Oloibiri etc. But it did not. So why input into the act what it does not say. Just like the 13% derivation applies to the states rather than the communities, if communities or local governments are the reference point, the act could have said so in the manner in which 774 local governments are recognized in the constitution.

    To argue otherwise through the use of subterfuge is fraudulent. If previous governments acted illegally and in corrupt manner as they were wont to do, a new government that prides itself in fighting corruption and rectifying several past injustices should not follow the same track. This is a government of CHANGE and just as it has been doing in various sectors of the Nigerian polity, it must institute a change by doing what is right in this situation. But the same people who want to continue business as usual are the ones clamouring for more of the same. When you fight corruption, certainly corruption is bound to fight back. The scenario currently being enacted is the vicious face of corruption fighting back.

    A change government cannot afford to buckle under the weight of these corrupt people, otherwise Nigeria is finished. Government should stay focused and ignore the irritating distractions. The courts are there to adjudicate where anyone strongly feels an injustice has occurred. The government cannot succumb to threats, intimidation and bullying to pervert the course of justice, otherwise the country is heading for chaos and anarchy.

     

    • Kehinde Ajayi.

    Akure, Ondo State.

  • The Hijab saga in Osun State

    The Hijab saga in Osun State

    There are good men in every land; the tree of life has many branches and roots; let not the topmost twig presume to think that it alone has sprung from the mother earth; we did not choose our races by ourselves; Jews, Muslims, Christians, all alike are men; let me hope I have found in you a man”.

     

    Preamble

    Quite a number of ardent readers of ‘The Message’ must have anxiously waited for today’s article having been familiar with the writing style of this columnist. ‘The Message’ is well known for its currency, promptness and research especially on matters relating to justice and logical deductions. Thus, writing on the controversy surrounding the wearing of hijab in Osun State’s schools by Muslim female pupils cannot be strange at this time. The issue has generated so much of unwarranted heat that only a few people will wonder if decorum has any role to play in religion at all in this case. And the Press which is supposed to be the Fourth Estate of the Realm is not helping the matter as men and women of the pen profession have shamelessly turned themselves into the judiciary passing judgments on the pages of newspapers or radio and television stations.

    As expected, this article is about the unnecessary hyperbolic brouhaha going on in Osun State over a court judgment on the baseless controversy surrounding the wearing of hijab by the State’s secondary school Muslim female pupils as ruled by the court of law. The brouhaha became ridiculously laughable when one looks at the caliber of people involved and the role they are playing in spite of their self-acclaimed education and religious leadership.

     

    VP’s Comment

    Nigeria’s Vice-President, Professor (Pastor) Yemi Osibajo SAN, was, as usual, eloquent, last Monday (June 20, 2016) while commenting at a conference held in Abuja on law and religious freedom in Nigeria. He said that law should not be enacted to hinder religious freedom. His Excellency was apparently speaking in reference to the controversial bill seeking to control the propagation of religions against provocation and fanaticism in Kaduna State.

    By inference that comment can equally be applicable to the situation in Osun State where the State leadership of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) is taking the law into its own hands with crude impunity against the court judgment on the case. Instead of contesting the judgment in a higher court, if it finds it objectionable, as the Lagos Muslim Community did in a similar case two years ago, Osun State CAN decided to constitute itself into a counter court with little regard for decorum expected of religious leadership.

    That situation has elicited many logical questions which would have been raised and answered in this article but a thorough and sincere stakeholder has relieved yours sincerely of that trouble in an article published by Premier Times of June 18, 2016. Excerpts from the article written by one Kikiowo Ileowo (a Christian) and entitled “Much Ado about Hijab Wearing to Schools In the State Of Osun” are presented verbatim here as follows:

    “Much has been said in recent times about the wearing of Hijab and Church robes to school by pupils in public schools in the State of Osun. However, what has apparently been missing in the discussion is the availability of facts and logic, and for discussants to analyze the true situation of things before making their opinions public.

    Before going to the crux of the matter, let me lay a background to the true situation of things with regard to the recent hullaballoo amongst organizations that purport to represent the interest of diverse religious groups in the State of Osun. We have Christians represented by the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN); Muslims, represented by the Muslim Students Society of Nigeria (MSSN); the government, led by Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, and other interested parties in the case.

    The religious conflict got to a crescendo last week when an Osun State High Court judge, Justice JideFalola, delivered a judgment in favour of a case instituted by the MSSN against the state government on the right of female Muslim students in state public schools to wear Hijab to their various classes. The judge declared the wearing of Hijab in public schools by female Muslim pupils as legal and appropriate.

     

    Litigation

    “The Muslims had dragged the state government headed by Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola to court over the refusal of some ‘Christian’ public schools to allow their female students wear the Hijab. After the judgment, CAN Osun State Chapter instructed Christian pupils to wear church robes to school if the state government dared implement the judgment.

    To cut the long story short, some five students, following the instruction of the CAN leaders, wore church robes to school this week. In fact, the CAN leaders followed the pupils to schools to make sure they weren’t turned back for wearing their church robes (never mind, they didn’t carry out the action over the failure of some Christian pupils in their examinations).

    Interestingly, a similar suit by the Muslim group in Lagos failed as the judge, Justice Modupe Onyeabor, ruled that the prohibition of the wearing of Hijab over school uniforms within and outside the premises of public schools was not discriminatory. According to her, the ban does not violate Sections 38 and 42 of the 1999 Constitution as claimed by the plaintiffs. The Judge also said Section 10 of the Constitution made Nigeria a secular state and that government must maintain neutrality at all times. Justice Onyeabor held that the government had a duty to preserve the secular nature of the institutions concerned as argued by the then Lagos State Solicitor-General, Mr. Lawal Pedro (SAN). Muslims in Lagos have since proceeded to the Court of Appeal where it is yet to be determined. Why should the case of Osun CAN be different? Aren’t they supposed to be the salt and light of the earth? Aren’t they supposed to be leading by example? Rather than take the legal route, CAN in the state of Osun resorted to self-help, asking students to disobey school rules by wearing unapproved uniforms. The Christians based their argument on one point; the Muslims cannot be allowed to wear hijab in ‘Christian schools”.

     

    Authority for Taking over Schools

    “By Edict No. 14 of 1975, the then military government took over private/missionary schools because, according to available records, “the owners charged exorbitant fees and did not give quality education to students. School buildings were of substandard structures, unqualified teachers were employed, teaching and learning materials were inadequate, while classrooms were over-crowded.”

    Muslims have been wearing Hijab to schools for a very long time. As a Christian, it doesn’t hinder my faith or ability to learn. If the CAN leadership has a problem with it, they should approach the law courts, rather than embark on actions that could cause disaffection amongst the peace loving people of Osun.

    That was the summary of the situation of privately owned schools that prompted the takeover of all such schools in 1975. It should be mentioned here however that the findings of the Western State Government in 1975 was not at variance with, but a replica of one common feature of the reports of the various Educational Review Committees set up at different times in the old three main regions of Nigeria. These include the Oldman’s Report in the old North, Dike’s Report in the old East, and Banjo’s Report in the Western Region. The reports of the various committees intensely reflected the acute immobility that had characterised the inherited colonial system that involved prejudice, high handedness, religious discrimination in pupils’ enrolment, staff recruitment and the general administration of schools.

     

    Validation Decree

    “In fact, the “Takeover of schools Validation Decree” of 1977, which still remains in force, states that, “the hold of government on those schools has afforded the government to be able to provide sustained education to the mass majority of the Nigerian public at an affordable cost, without RELIGIOUS DISCRIMINATION AND BIAS”.

     

    Connotation

    What this means is that there are no Christian or Muslim schools in Osun. There are only PUBLIC schools. The government back in 1976 resolved to keep the names given by the missionaries. That is why you have public schools bearing names such as Ede Muslim Grammar School, Baptist High School, etc. The schools may bear religious names, but they belong to the government/public. It is being financed with public funds. Most of the schools now wear new looks, and have modern learning equipment paid for by ALL citizens of Osun, which include Christians, Muslims, Traditional Worshippers, Agnostics and Atheists alike.

    Therefore, the schools Christians are laying claim to are government schools. They were acquired from diverse sources: religious bodies, individuals, communities, groups, etc in 1975. That was 41 years ago. But for the five students of Baptist High School, Adeeke, Iwo, many Christian pupils in Osun ignored the CAN leadership, toeing the path of decorum and civility. In truth, the schools compound where the orchestrated drama took place housed three schools with a combined population of about 3000 students and we saw no other student wear unapproved garments to school.

    Thank God other citizens did not take the law into their own hands. Imagine if the traditional worshippers – many of whom are in abundance in Osun – decide to start wearing traditional robes such as Bante, Ifunpa, Ofi, etc. Or imagine, for a minute, adherents of Osun religion demanding the wearing of white uniforms only, with white beads to school? Or, children of Sango worshippers, in another instance, insisting on wearing red caps to school, with earrings in the ears of their boys?

    Conclusion

    “Muslims have been wearing Hijab to schools for a very long time. As a Christian, it doesn’t hinder my faith or ability to learn. If the CAN leadership has a problem with it, they should approach the law courts, rather than embark on actions that could cause disaffection amongst the peace loving people of Osun”.

    • Kikiowo Ileowo is the Chief Strategist at Revamp Media.
  • Saga of riverine communities who defecate in rivers, from which they drink

    Saga of riverine communities who defecate in rivers, from which they drink

    DEFECATING in the house and going to deposit the excreta in rivers lining the neighbourhood is a common sight in most riverine communities. Checks showed that the residents in some cases go directly to the river to defecate, without feeling abashed about it. For them, it has become an accepted way of life. They stroll out armed with medium paint buckets, nylon bags and newspapers neatly used to package the faeces they had excreted in their various homes and head straight to the river that bounds the community.

    Like short put throwers, they fling the wastes as long as their energy could muster into the river and without minding who was watching, they elegantly walk back to their homes. Beside the spot where they deposited their wastes is where the children in the neighbourhood always have their pleasure bath.

    This was the situation when The Nation visited some riverine communities in Lagos and parts of Ogun State recently.

    Some of the residents after emptying their bowels went and deposited the wastes in the rivers. Not minding what the effect of the rubbish that had been thrown into the river could be, the children who were swimming in the river took a competitive dive, splashing the polluted water at each other’s face in excitement. In the height of their ecstasy, some of the innocent children poured a handful of the water into their mouth and used a finger to scrub round it.

    “We are bathing and catching fun. The excitement we have swimming in the river doesn’t make us to realise whether somebody is throwing excreta into it. We don’t have water supply that can make us bathe as often as we want, especially in this hot weather. We equally don’t have the opportunity to go to swimming pools to swim like our privileged colleagues. This is what we have and we would not hesitate to make good use of it,” one of the children said as he took a plunge back into the river.

    Aside from bathing in the polluted river, checks showed that the river also serves other purposes for the residents who are mostly indigents. In extreme situations, some of the residents said they have had to drink the polluted water from the river. Much as this appears as fun for the children, findings revealed that the ugly development is a problem that has been eating up the adult residents of the riverine communities for a long time.

    It was gathered that they have grappled with the challenge for many decades and have often paid dearly for it as some of them, the children in particular, have had to suffer myriad of illnesses ranging from cholera, diarrhea to other water borne diseases. In fact, medical and environmental experts who spoke with The Nation said the deplorable condition in the communities could have been responsible for the mysterious death of 20 children in Eti Osa Local Government Area of the state early in the year.

    In most of the communities visited by our correspondent, a good number of the aged respondents expressed unreserved anger when they were asked to speak about their condition. It was like opening a chapter of their lives that they had closed and didn’t want reopened.

    A resident of Ebute Iga, Chief Ibikunle Matimoju’s remark showed the frustration and how long the people have lived with this problem. The octogenarian told The Nation that as an infant, his mother used to put alum in the water to purify it before they could have water to drink.

    “We have been in this deplorable condition long before I was born. We have been voting during elections as far back as 1954 when late Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Benson were at the centre of political activities in this environment. Right from that time, politicians have been making series of promises to us, assuring us that they would provide solutions to our challenges but till date, nothing has been done.

    “Aside from the government, several individual’s have always come here with other people to know what our challenges are and always promise to come back to do something thereafter but none of them has ever come back not to talk of doing anything to alleviate our plight.”

    Regretting that his children and grandchildren have inherited the problems they were born with, he said: “We don’t have potable water. My mother used to fetch water from the river and to make it fit for us to drink, she would put alum in it. Back then, the river was not as bad as it right now. As I am speaking with you, we can’t dig wells or toilets in this area because before you dig a foot, water will be everywhere.

    “This is why we defecate in our houses and go to the river to deposit them. I must confess that it t is not a cheering development. It is something that draws tears from our eyes because our children and grand children have come to inherit the problems that we grew up to know.”

    If Chief Matimoju was sad by the development, 100-year-old Pa Salawu Sanni was visibly disturbed when our correspondent sought his view on the issue.

    He noted that the community made conscious efforts to build a toilet for members of the community to avert the stench and health hazard associated with depositing human wastes in neighbourhood rivers.

    “Our late traditional ruler did everything possible for us to build a toilet but it didn’t work out. As you must have heard, we don’t have toilets. We have paint buckets that we defecate in, in our homes. After doing that, we would go and pour it in the river. Our children bathe and swim in the river. What we have done is to tell them the portion they must not go beyond when they are swimming.”

    Chief Lateef Eshinlokun, the traditional leader of the community, also expressed his anger about the plight of community.

    “The problem we are going through in the community is borne out of the fact that they see us as common villagers who do not matter in the scheme of things. They would always come and ask for our vote but immediately we give them our support, they would turn their backs at us. Before I became the traditional ruler of the community, the agency responsible for environmental issues asked us to construct toilet. We made the move but we didn’t dig far before we encountered water.

    “At a point, some officials suggested that we should have a tank where we would be depositing our excreta so that it would be removed from time to time. But before you know what was happening, there were cockroaches everywhere and people could not cope. All that didn’t work at the end of the day. We also attempted to dig a well but that also had its challenges. The water that came out was salty. We couldn’t use it to bathe because it is not good for our body.”

    A visit to Ogolonto, another riverine community in the area also showed how the environmental challenge bedeviling the people is making life unbearable for them.

    One of the residents who identified himself as Ogunsanya Bello said the difficulty in having a proper place to defecate has always put them in serious mess, adding: “Virtually all the houses in this neighbourhood don’t have toilets. We often go to the river to defecate. It is a huge challenge because the stench is always disturbing. Flies and cockroaches do feast on this excreta and later come to perch on our food. This has often caused all manners of sicknesses for the people. Some children end up stooling and vomiting.

    “Aside from the challenge of not having appropriate places to defecate, the problem of water supply is also causing huge problem for us. We always have to buy water but all hands are not equal. Some people don’t have the means of buying water and because they have to use water, they take water from the river that we defecate in to take care of their domestic needs. They bathe, wash and in some extreme cases drink them. This also leads to huge health challenges, some of which may begin o manifest in future,” he said.

    Akeem, a resident of Agboyi Ketu, appeared unruffled about the development as he said: “What is the big deal in bathing in the water that people defecate into? Ai mo iye igbe leko (There is uncountable faeces in Lagos). It appears you are just a new comer to this area because if you are familiar with this environment, you will not be perturbed about what you are seeing.

    “When you are bathing in your house and you see a dirty object in your water, don’t you remove it and continue bathing? That is what happens here but we don’t remove the dirt be it faeces or anything. When you are swimming and you find any rubbish, you dodge it and move in opposite direction. The people that are supposed to be of help to us have abandoned us and we have created an alternative way to survive.”

    Salau Jimoh, another resident of the area, however, expressed worries about their condition, adding that they face all manners of health challenges as a result of it. He said: “Typhoid, skin rashes and diarrhea are common sicknesses that happen here. Unfortunately, our people don’t link it with our state of hygiene. It is always worse for people that are new because their whole body system would be disorganised for sometime before they adjust.

    “At times, some innocent young boys that have not known anything about sex contract gonorrhea in the course of bathing in the polluted water and because going to hospital is not part of us, they would always go and treat it locally. This could have serious reproductive health for them later in life but they are not aware of it.”

    It was also a tale of lamentation at Ilase, a community in the suburb of Ogun State, as the residents narrated their difficulty getting potable water and appropriate place to defecate.

    A prominent member of the community, Mathew Kehinde Alaje, said they were drinking the water in the neighbourhood river before now, regretting that they have lost every access to getting potable water thereafter.

    “We are having problems getting water in this neighbourhood. Many of our people don’t have money to buy sachet water and therefore make do with what they see. This is very unhealthy for the people as it portends great danger to their health. The people in government are not concerned about our plight. They don’t even know that human beings are living here except when election is approaching.

    “Aside from water challenges, many residents also have problems with defecating. Many landlords have attempted to dig soakaways but they ended up abandoning them because they ran into water shortly after they started. This makes it impossible for many to have proper places to defecate. It is worrisome because human wastes are not what you handle carelessly because of the health problems that comes with doing that,” he remarked.

    “We drink, bathe and wash with any water we can lay our hands on because it is not all the time that one has the money to buy water. It is even worse now that the economy is extremely inclement. We go into the bush to defecate because, as you must have heard, we can’t dig soakaway because water comes out as soon as you begin to dig the soil. Just imagine how the blind people in the community will be defecating.

    “Think about how disabled people in the area who crawl would manage to enter the bush to defecate. Don’t you think that before they would have crawled from their houses to the bush, they would have ended up using their bodies to mop the feaces on the floor?  Or would somebody that is on wheel chair move the wheel chair to the bush or river to defecate? It is a serious mess we at hand,” Biodun, a resident, said.

    Alhaja Basirat, another resident of the area, recounted that previous attempts to construct borehole in the community have yielded no fruits.

    “A politician came and gave us a borehole some years ago but it didn’t work. The whole thing is just there. There was also another one that was dug within the premises of our mosque. It brings out water but you can’t use it for meaning things. There is also another one that a corporate body did in a neighbouring community when they were promoting their detergent. They abandoned it after sometime. Through the efforts of the people the borehole has started working but the water it brings out would turn a white container to red within a short time of fetching it. We are suffering from both ends and dying in silence.

     

    Environmental/ medical experts speak

    An environmental expert and Director Corporate Accountability and Administration, Environment Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FOEN), Akinbode Oluwafemi, bemoaned the condition of the people lamenting that the coastal belt is under siege.

    “Nigeria coastal belt is about 853 kilometers long. That area of our country has suffered enormous environmental challenges as a result of industrialisation and activities of extractive industries.  If you take a look from the Niger Delta side, you will find that there have been oil spills, gas flaring, marine pollution as a result of heavy vessels that come to the state end up in these rivers. Besides, we also have the discharge of all sorts of chemicals into these rivers. All these compromise the environment.

    “The environment in the riverine communities has actually been subjected to a state of siege. There is just no way that the environment can be tolerant of those things and it makes adaptation difficult for the people. In February, 20 children were killed in Eti Osa Local Government Area. Initially people attributed it to a strange disease. But it was later found out that it was measles. So you can link a lot of things going on in the riverine areas with sanitation, water and poverty. There is acute water problem in Lagos State but it is worse. There are some places where the water coming from their boreholes is mixed with petrol and they are drinking it like that,” he said.

    Taking a medical look at the condition of the residents, Dr. Rotimi Adesanya, a public health physician, said: “The residents are bound to suffer enormous health challenges because flies would always perch on their excreta and move on to perch on their food. When they eat food that flies have dropped their larva on, they would be susceptible to suffer from diseases like cholera, typhoid that is endemic. They are also prone to suffering from Hepatitis A and B viruses, skin diseases like measles.

    “Aside from the human wastes that are dumped in the rivers, the wastes constantly dumped in the rivers by various companies are also capable of causing skin problems called dermatitis for the people. Consuming salty water by the people can cause dehydration and make them drink a lot of water. Salty water is concentrated and can cause high blood pressure for the elderly residents in the communities.

    “It can worsen the health condition of those that already have the sickness. Where the water enters their mouth and body system in the course of bathing in the polluted rivers, it can cause diarrhea, stooling and vomiting, especially for the children. It is also capable of causing dysentery an abdominal pains for them.”

    For the residents that are consuming well water, Dr Adesanya has this to say: “Well water contains a lot of chemicals and this can cause electrolyte imbalance. Some of this water is contaminated by mercury which is poisonous to human body and capable of causing untimely death. Some of them also contain lead that could make the children not to be performing well in school because it causes mental retardation.”

     

    Solution

    Proffering solution to the challenge, Dr Adesanya advised: “The residents must work together to get a proper way of disposing off their wastes. The various governments should also make their presence felt in these communities to bring about behavioural change. They should also endeavour o build health centres in these areas to take care of their health needs.”

    Akinbode on his part said: “The people should act by rising to demand that water should be made available to them because they bear the burden of the environmental problem of our development. Developed countries take coastal areas as assets but the coastal belt in Lagos is an apology because everywhere you place your feet, you will step on human wastes.

    “Digging boreholes is not the solution to the problem because this has its own environmental challenges too. There are about 25 water works in the state and from Marina, most of these riverine communities can be served safe water because the distance is just about few kilometers apart.”

    Efforts to speak with the Commissioner for Environment in Lagos State, Mr Adejare Babatunde, were unsuccessful. Thereafter, our correspondent reached out to the public relations officer of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA) who after seeking to know the purpose of the enquiry asked him to come on Thursday to speak the Director General (DG).

    The meeting did not also hold as she said the DG was in a meeting, adding: “The issue does not fall within the purview of what LASEPA does. It is the ministry of environment that can speak on it.”

    However, the commissioner for the environment at a recent retreat organised to review and consolidate on the draft of the Lagos State Water and Sanitation Policy (WASH) in preparation for its presentation to the state executive council promised to ensure a speedy implantation of the policy. He also expressed optimism that an implementation of the policy will lead to decline in childhood mortality.

    “Through the WASH policy, we are teaching mothers to be more hygienic and to use safe water to provide food for their babies. The number one killer of children is diarrhea, so if we take care of the safe water part of it, that would lead to decline in the death of children,” Dr Adejare submitted.

    Speaking after the death of 20 children suspected to have died of measles early in the year, the Commissioner for Health, Mr Jide Idris, also said: “The state government is conducting mapping of all slum areas in the state toward reducing the health hazards associated with such areas.”

  • Arms deals saga

    The presidency and all institutions of state involved owe it to Nigerians to speedily bring those involved to justice

    It is no longer news that the national economy is in dire straits and security is threatened. This is due to acts of omission and commission, especially of the immediate past leadership of the country. One of the areas in which the national interest has been gravely subverted is in procurement of arms and ammunition for combating the Boko Haram insurgency in the North East.

    The arms deals are an eye-opener to all that much has gone wrong with the federation for so long. The mind-boggling figures being linked to the Office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) to the former President Goodluck Jonathan, Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd), shows that in the past, little governance took place as prominent Nigerians holding political offices or linked to men in power were more interested in milking the country dry, subverting institutions and diverting scarce resources.

    While the cases are still in court, signifying that no one has been found guilty yet, the figures being contested and the facts of the helplessness of the troops during the Jonathan administration are enough proof that a lot went wrong.

    It is gratifying that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Department of State Services (DSS) have undertaken intensive probe into how the money earmarked for prosecution of the war against insurgency was approved and released. The promptness of arraignment of suspects in the deals, including the former NSA, and Emeritus Chairman of Daar Communications, Chief Raymond Dokpesi, is an indication that the government is serious about fighting sleaze in the country and recovering the loot.

    We recall that about $9.3million was seized by the South African authorities last year for alleged aborted attempt at smuggling the cash into that country illegally. It is surprising that all this took place under the watch of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala who was directly brought in from the World Bank to help straighten the accounting processes and procedures. The EFCC has already extended invitation to the former finance minister and coordinating minister for the economy to explain the part played by her office in the release of the funds. It has been said that her ministry, among other releases, caused about $322 million to be released to the office of the former NSA for security reasons.

    We call on the EFCC and the Attorney-General of the Federation to ensure diligent prosecution of the cases with a view to getting the guilty punished and the looted funds recovered. Recovered funds must be committed to getting the army of unemployed youths engaged as the All Progressives Congress (APC) promised while campaigning for votes.

    The pronouncements and conduct of military chiefs on this matter under the Jonathan administration amounted to man’s inhumanity to man. We shudder to think of the former Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh’s contention that troops that fled the war zone ought to have been summarily tried and executed in the field without due regard for their  rights as citizens, and circumstances. The same men who were tried and sentenced to death by a military tribunal in Abuja have now had their sentences reviewed. The revelations coming out of how money voted for procuring equipment was diverted and the men sent barely armed to  the war front is a vindication of the public outcry that greeted the kangaroo trials and sentences.

    The same CDS was later to admit at retirement that the troops were poorly equipped and that impeded operations. How did he expect them to willingly face superior fire from the terrorists? In addition, it is obvious now that money voted for the welfare of the men and their families were released for the wrong purpose. Those who partook of the heinous crime must all be properly identified, the degree of culpability established and properly tried. In this connection, the former military chiefs, including the CDS, the Chief of Army Staff and the Chief of Air Staff should be invited to help in the investigations. This is not one of those occasions when criminals are pampered and allowed to escape with a slap on the wrist. It is not a time to recover loot privately or encourage behind-the-scene plea bargains. Nigerians, the human rights community and, indeed, the international community are watching President Muhammadu Buhari and the anti-graft agencies to see how they would resolve the matter. It is time a firm stand is taken against corruption to deter people from fiddling with public funds.

    The Federal Government has thus far acted commendably on the matter. The executive and judiciary must ensure that the country’s soul is restored by bringing all the culprits to justice speedily.

     

  • Amalaha’s drug saga saddens Danagogo

    Amalaha’s drug saga saddens Danagogo

    • Says coaches/officials risk sanctions

    Sports Minister and Chairman, National Sports Commission (NSC), Dr. Tammy Danagogo has expressed sadness at the reported drug-test failure by Chika Amalaha, Team Nigeria’s first gold medallist at the on-going 20th Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, Scotland.

    Convinced that Amalaha is innocent, an angry Danagogo has warned that officials as well as coaches who are found to aid or condone cheating will face severe sanctions from the NSC.

    Amalaha, who was the heroine of Team Nigeria at the African Youth Games in Gaborone, Botswana, last May where she won three gold medals in her weightlifting event, was alleged to have failed the first sample drug-test conducted on her after her  Games’ record lifting in the 53kg category and suspended pending the result of the B sample.

    Dr. Danagogo, who is also at the Games and had directed that Team Nigeria’s medalists be rewarded instantly for their feat so as to further boost their morale, described the dope incident  as embarrassing but hopes the B test turns out negative.

    “The reported first sample drug-test failure of our female weightlifter is very embarrassing and I feel so saddened although I’m still convinced that the 16-year-old Amalaha is innocent,  and I hope that she doesn’t fail the ‘confirmation test’,” the minister said from the Games venue in Glasgow.

    As a way of  curbing  the drug issue, he stressed that, “nevertheless I must use my office as Sports Minister to enshrine tenets of integrity and fair competition in our sports, especially as it concerns the youths.

    “In that regard, I will ensure the use of MRI (Multiple Resonance Imaging) scanning devices amongst others, as routine (tests) on our age-grade players, and pre-competition drug-test regime on athletes generally,” warning that “Officials and coaches who are found to encourage or condone cheating of any kind would face severe sanctions.”

  • Enugu impeachment saga in perspective

    Expectedly, the impeachment proceedings commenced by the Enugu State House of Assembly against the Deputy Governor of the state, Mr Sunday Onyebuchi, have continued to generate much attention and attract sundry reactions in both the regular and the social media.

    Much of the frenzy as usual, is easily attributable to the perennial mischief-makers and detractors of the government whose attempts to distort the facts and demonize Governor Sullivan Chime and some of his principal officers notably, the Chief of Staff, Mrs Ifeoma Nwobodo, have gone rather psyschotic.

    Despite the fact that the House of Assembly gave express and explicit reasons for its action against the deputy governor, these fellows would have none of it, instead they have continued to generate and circulate fairy tales claiming them to be the real reasons behind the Assembly’s move against Mr Onyebuchi.

    For purposes of clarity, the House upon a motion signed by 22 of its 24 members directed the Clerk of the House to serve an impeachment notice on the Deputy Governor for abuse of office and disobedience to the lawful directives of the governor. The House went ahead to give the particulars and details of the offences. In the first instance, it stated that the Deputy had in flagrant disregard of an existing law in the state, continued to maintain and operate a commercial poultry farm within the premises of his official residential quarters; and further refused to carry out the directives of the relevant officials of the government, including the governor himself, to remove the poultry.

    Instead of carrying out the directive, the deputy governor invited the press to ridicule his own government and its principal officiers. On the second charge the Assembly had this to say, “The deputy governor habitually refuses, fails and or neglects to carry out and or perform the functions of his office as directed by the governor  pursuant to section 193 (1) of the Constitution, without any excuse. Details of this manifest breach of the Constitution as aforesaid include the following:

    (a) On the 11th day of March, 2014, the deputy governor was directed by the governor to represent him (i.e. the governor) at the flag-off ceremony of the construction of the 2nd Niger Bridge in Onitsha by the President, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federation of Nigeria, His Excellency, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan; but the deputy governor refused to attend the ceremony.

    (b)    The deputy governor also blatantly refused to represent the governor at the South-East Governors Forum, held at The Lion Building, Enugu on Sunday, 6th of July, 2014, despite the express directive of the governor to represent him at the Forum.

    (c)    The deputy governor persists in his defiance of lawful directives issued to him by the governor, which defiance has adversely affected and will continue to affect the smooth running of the government; and he will continue to do so if not removed from office.

    Still, the Assembly, accorded the deputy governor his statutory right to fair hearing by giving him 7 days to respond to the charges.

    However, even as unambiguous and explicit as these charges are, the hack writers would rather chose to claim that the deputy governor’s impeachment woes are a result of his intention to contest the Enugu East-Senatorial elections against the Chief of Staff, Mrs Nwobodo.

    This claim is as nonsensical as it is puerile and clearly portrays the hollowness and pettiness of its creators. Aside from the fact that it would have been the first time that many people, including the electorate in Enugu East, were to learn that the deputy governor was interested in the senatorial contest, one would find it difficult to understand how his removal from office would stop him from participating in the contest-assuming he is really interested.

    I refrain from making judgment on the political heft of the deputy governor in the state (as to warrant a sinister plot to stop him)  but suffice it to say that whether  or not he remained in office as deputy governor, he cannot be prevented from pursuing his ambitions if any. Therefore, seeking to remove him for the said reason would only amount to chasing shadows or window dressing.  I don’t believe that the Chime administration and its officers have time for such frivolities.

    Rather than shadow boxing and trying to dodge the real issues, any reasonable person would rather be concerned about the veracity or otherwise of the charges against the deputy governor.

    Did he or did he not commit those offences and are the offences not enough to warrant his removal?  Could anyone in all honesty expect that a principal would continue to trust a second in command who flagrantly disregards laws and his own instructions.  Could any responsible House of Assembly sit by and watch such impunity and impudence fester in the executive arm to such extent as to threaten the government’s relationship with other governments, including the Federal Government? Could anyone imagine what questions could have assailed the mind of President Goodluck Jonathan when he discovered that Enugu State was not represented at the flag-off of the second Niger Bridge?Or could one imagine how the governors of other South-East states would have felt when they attended a meeting in Enugu only to discover that their hosts were absent?

    Ever since he became the governor of Enugu State, Sullivan has shown himself to be a very tolerant and patient man even  to his own detriment. He has weathered all manner of plots, abuses, insults and assaults from his enemies but had rather than join them in the trenches, remained true to his mission of transforming the state. He has endured treachery and subterfuge from close associates but remained ever focused on his job.

     

     

  • My thought on Chibok abduction saga

    SIR: First let me offer my deep sympathies to the missing Chibok girls and their families. What they have been through, the unending injustice, frustration, pain, worry and fear, are almost too harrowing to consider at once. Our prayers go out on behalf of you and your families. May Almighty God provide safe and speedy return for as many as are still missing.

    I heavily doubt there is a man more reviled today than Abubakar Shekau. Already drunk off the blood of thousands of innocent victims, he has now stepped up his campaign of terror to target school children. Perhaps it was the scale and impunity of the act, or the heart-breaking accounts of desperate parents trying to mount their own rescue mission into a dangerous forest, deterred only by the risk to their daughters’ lives; something snapped in the consciousness of a nation and world that had previously watched from afar. Whatever Shekau’s calculus was, he has definitely succeeded in drawing the outrage of even Al Qaeda leaders, for whom the kidnap and trafficking of young girls is apparently too extreme.

    Indeed, the outcry, from Nigerians as well as the international community, has been nothing short of impressive, spurring action where there had previously been none. Nations with the best counter-terrorism operations have offered assistance, now received, in personnel and resources; voices heretofore silent about terrorism have begun speaking up specifically about Boko Haram. It seems now that credible efforts will be mounted, that the tide may yet turn, families made whole.

    Yet, these positive developments come with a stark dose of reality. With each passing moment, locating and recovering the missing girls will only get harder. If, and hopefully when they are recovered, these children will need extensive medical and psychological assistance to overcome the trauma they have no doubt experienced at the hands of their captors.

    Along with the aforementioned international statements of support has come stinging criticism about the handling of this tragedy by the state and federal governments. Equally disheartening was the finger-pointing and political sniping between the two. It is, to put it simply, shameful, and unworthy of the urgent plight of these girls. There will be time for heads to roll (and roll they must) but this is the time for cooperation an action. It is time to show Nigerians and the world that this government is capable of confronting all forces of disintegration and terror.

    There is no doubt that the government has been very slow in grasping the seriousness of this abduction that has bought pains to parents and the nation as a whole.This administration was treating the abduction with business as usual attitude until there was a global outcry of Bring Back Our Daughters.There were conflicting information from agents of government as to the safety,whereabout and number of the girls that returned.The contradiction was so much that a US Senator concluded that there is no government in Nigeria. The way the government handled the unfortunate incident has brought to Nigerians shock, shame and embarrassment.

    What this ugly incident has bought to the consciousness of Nigeians is the capability of the Nigerian military in terms of training, equipment and command structure to fight this insurgency effectively.The military deserves better funding to rid the nation of this menace soonest because  negotiating with the insurgents should not be an option.The emergency rule in three affected states has not been been justified by the success of the insurgents in unleashing havocs on communities on daily basis in the North-east.Nigerians deserve more and demand more from government protection from all forms of terrorism that have been unleashed on our nation.

    Finally, I believe Nigerians need to lift the veil of hypocrisy and look within. This country is a major international player in the trafficking of women and children for sex and cheap labour. This industry is fuelled, more than anything, by extreme poverty and desperation, the same factors that fuel political and religious terrorism. Even if and hopefully when Shekau and his followers are captured or killed, the circumstances that animate him will still exist and possibly spread, unless we put a credible effort toward making this country work for everyone.

     

    • Senator Robert Boroffice OON

                 National Assembly, Abuja

  • ‘Why I wrote a play on the Amaechi / Mbu saga’

    ‘Why I wrote a play on the Amaechi / Mbu saga’

    The lawyer and playwright, Mr. Clinton Dan-Jumbo, gives insight into a play he has released on the Rivers crisis. He spoke to ROSEMARY NWISI, in Port Harcourt.

    What is the play, Amaechi Mgbu all about?

    The play is about my conversations of happenings in Rivers State, my state and Nigeria, my country.

    Looking at the title, ‘Amaechi Mgbu’, two popular names in the recent Rivers political crisis. Has the play anything to do with that?

    Just as I said earlier, the play is all about my observations of happenings in my state; it is not about any individual or particular institution. Am sure as journalists my job as a writer is to mirror the society which I live in and Nigeria is that society, I will therefore be failing in my duties if I don’t write about the things I see in my country.

    So what is your objective of writing the play?

    My objective here is to make my leaders to learn not to politic with our moral values. The issues of 16 being greater than 19, as stated in my work and 5 greater than 26 or 27 touches on our moral values, as it makes our leaders liars and by extension teaching the younger generation that it is alright to lie or distort facts.

    By the way, you sound as if you are a card carrying member of a political party.

    Yes. But my political tie with any party has nothing to do with this work. I try to devoice my political tie to any party from my work. My work is on the society I live in and the things going on in it.

    Did anybody or group sponsor this work?

    Neither the state government nor any group sponsored the work. I can say that in any case giving my profession. I am a bit comfortable and can afford to sponsor my work. Whether Amaechi, President GoodLuck Jonathan or any other person has seen the work, I do not know.

    But how do you imagine that Amaechi will sponsor a book that has balanced view of issues like this one. To a large extent, the book throws punches at him also. Some of the things he has not done well were identified in the work, and the areas the president has equally not done well were also captured in the play.

    Before now have you had any work to your credit?

    Yes. ‘The Snatched Verdict’ and ‘Broken Pedigree’ were my original works.

    Are these books in the market, and is their rate of acceptance?

    The Snatched verdict was my final year project; it was later adopted into the Nollywood movie. While the Broken Pedigree was used for the NYSC 1996 yearly national competition of art.

    Apart from being a lawyer, what else would you have done?

    I am also a playwright as I said earlier, and I love it. I must confess here that I lost the muse at a point, but I have found and recovered it.

    In a nutshell what is the play all about?

    Amaechi Mgbu is a play that Ex-rays large number of unresolved questions in the minds of people, within and outside Rivers state of Nigeria.

    It encapsulates events of happenings in the state on one hand and showcasing its concomitance effects on Nigeria polity on the whole.

    Interestingly, the word “Mgbu” is an Igbo term meaning pain. I have already stated in the introduction that should anybody suggests any other meaning to that word that is the person’s own opinion. In this sense, “Amaechi Mgbu” simply means Amaechi’s pain.

    The play blends fiction and facts. The facts are based on what I gathered from the media. It also captures arguments for and against parties in the imbroglio. It allows the readers to decide for themselves who has the superior argument in this whole drama.

    The work attempts to force those who maybe partisan in the imbroglio to play the characters in it, by engaging in common questions and answers, dialogue, without recourse to physical attacks from anybody or carrying arms to disrupt rallies; that is what all this work is all about.

    Why is the scenario of the drama on a “Mama Put”, eatery joint?

    Well, I needed to gather the facts and the facts I gathered were from those areas. The arguments are more in these areas, including the airports. In fact, as we are granting this interview now I can bet you that arguments are going on concerning this whole drama we are talking about here.

    This is a period we are talking about politics, are you a political office hopeful of any political party.

    I have not contemplated contesting any election, so the question will be addressed much later, time will tell, but for now, I don’t have any such ambition.

    Port Harcourt has been adopted as the World Book Capital for the year 2014, what is your view concerning knowledge application and reading in the state?

    I thank God for Port Harcourt being made World Book Capital. To a large extent I believe that it will take this state to another level. You will agree with me that reading culture died a while. Like, how many people are still visiting the Port Harcourt Library?, but with what was kick started by the “Rainbow Book Club”, in which children were gathered together to appreciate reading culture equally positioned Port Harcourt to winning this honour.

    I believe also that it will engineer more book writers, that is my thinking.

    Who are your target audience?

    To me, this book is for everybody, pupils, students, teachers everybody at all provided you can read. It is devoid of any form of in-umbrage, it is made easy to read by everybody.

    It is even targeted more by the younger generation, because some of the things happening in the polity of this country currently affect them. They are the ones who are learning from it.

    The question of 16 being greater than 19, 5 being greater than 27 as mentioned in the book are questions that would disturb their minds at a time. They will be asking around it, some may even want to accept it as a norm; this book tend to answer their mind agitations by saying no, this is not the norm or right thing, this is the reason for the book.

    The event that led to the writing of this book took place in this environment within eight months and the book is already out, how long did it take you to gather the facts played out here?

    There is no one writer that can capture everything on a particular event. But in this case I can say that I captured so much. It took me approximately one month and half to capture and put these together.

     

  • ‘Three-tier federal structure an anomaly’

    ‘Three-tier federal structure an anomaly’

    •Aregbesola, Sagay speak at national public discourse

     

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola and renowned Professor of Law, Itsay Sagay (SAN), yesterday described Nigeria’s three-tier federal structure as a fundamental error and an anomaly.

    They said in a true federal system, no provision is made for local governments as federating partners.

    According to them, the centre and the states make up federating units, while local governments ought to exist as states’ administrative units.

    They said states, therefore, should be free to decide the number of local governments they want, when to create them and how to run and fund them.

    Listing Nigeria’s 774 local governments in the 1999 Constitution is therefore an aberration, they said.

    Aregbesola was the keynote speaker at the second edition of the National Public Discourse held in Lagos. It had the theme: Local Government Authority: How Autonomous?

    He said: “When we talk about local government autonomy, we should qualify it. In a federation, the federating entities are the states and the centre.

    “In a federation, therefore, autonomy makes sense only in the relationship between the states and the centre where we look at a spectrum that runs on the two extremes of unitarism and confederation.

    “In a federal system, there is no provision for local governments as a federating partner, and to talk of one is to engage in peddling ‘federalism fallacy’.”

    The governor said the issue of local governments’ autonomy should only come into play within the context of their relationship with their states.

    He said Nigeria has a fundamental problem with the structure of its federalism, which has negatively affected its development prospects.

    He said it is not logical that the 1999 Constitution confers power to create local governments on states, but at the same time makes their creation invalid without National Assembly’s endorsement.

    “This is mainly due to tying the funding of local governments to allocation from the centre, because the Federal Government maintains an unhealthy stranglehold on the wealth of the nation,” Aregbesola said.

    He added that local governments cannot be autonomous as long as they are dependent on federal allocation for their funding, and as long as the power of states to create them is seemingly made largely theoretical.

    Aregbesola attributed the anomaly to the inherited military unified control (garrison command) of the federation.

    Calling for fundamental changes, he said the creative talent of people would never be unleashed where the Federal Government maintains a stifling hold on the nation’s sources of wealth by taking over 50 per cent of the country’s wealth.

    Sagay said Nigeria is a federation, so the idea of having autonomous local governments makes no sense.

    “To have the local governments listed in the constitution is an aberration,” he said, adding that councils should exist as agencies of the states for development.

    “It should not be mentioned at all in the constitution. States should decide how many local governments they need and fund them. We don’t even need a Federation Account.

    “It is not the duty of the constitution to direct the state to create a local government area. A state should decide whether its local government officials should work on a part-time basis or not, or whether to run them like a parliamentary system. We don’t have to have the same system for all the local governments.

    “If you want autonomy for the local government, then kiss federalism goodbye,” Sagay said.