Tag: security

  • ‘The challenge of security, peace, in times of economic recession’

    ‘The challenge of security, peace, in times of economic recession’

    To Prof John A. Ayoade of the BOWEN University in Iwo, Osun State, political power can be reconfigured, though not without resistance, but it is not as easy to reconfigure the economy. The professor Emeritus, in this article, entitled:  “The challenge of peace and security in times of economic recession: The Nigerian experience”, says Nigeria must adopt a mission to drive a renewed vision and elect visionary leaders to truly evolve as a nation.

    Nigeria has been a political enigma from its colonial origin. It is not an organic whole and it has failed all efforts at integration, although the colonial founding fathers never intended it to be integrated. Unfortunately, their Nigerian successors invested more in the division for sectional political advantage. This was because shortly before political independence, politics as a process of allocation of powers and national resources has been appropriated as an allocation enterprise for sectional interests.

    With time, the gap between national and sectional interests widened to a point that national interest tended towards zero. This was worsened by the fratricidal internecine conflicts between and among the various sections of the country. What was the hope of Africa at independence became the sick man of Africa which suffered a military coup within six years of independence and became a subject of international mediation, first at Aburi, Ghana and later, in Kampala, Uganda. The likes of such countries as Gabon and Ivory Coast were availed diplomatic opportunities to meddle in the domestic affairs of Nigeria. A country which had hitherto prided itself as an expert in brinkmanship was at the verge of ‘sinkmanship’. The hope to join the higher League of Nations at independence vanished.  Succour came only after three years of civil war which was followed by a hurried post-conflict peace that did not address the causes of war.

    The conflict which has been simmering since then only awaits a trigger that is not too remote in the Nigerian political firmament. The drums of conflict are beating louder, publicly daring the authorities of the Nigerian State. As if the issues will go away, the Federal Government is carefully avoiding addressing the issue directly.

    The on-going political altercations arise from the fact that Nigeria has not evolved into a nation and neither has it attained a stage of integration that can drive development. As far back as 1947, the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo said that Nigeria was a mere geographical expression. It was, in fact, a country of diverse nations.

    Much later, he advised that the Nigerian Constitution should be constructed along the lines of the nationalities comprising Nigeria. Nigerians agreed with the country’s diversity. They however optimistically played it down by extolling the aspiration of unity in diversity when in reality it is a progressively diversifying diversity. As it turned out, the adversarial nature of the country continues to manifest in the continual incessant demand for the creation of new states from the old sates based on cultural differences and incompatibility. The language of demand on all occasions was so antagonistic that it is strange that resultant sates remain components of the same federation professing unity in diversity.

    The country of three regions at independence now stands at thirty six states with a recommendation by the 2014 Constitutional Conference that it should be increased to 54 states. Nigeria therefore operates a curious political arrangement of unity by division or, more appropriately, division in unity. It will appear that secession itself is an extension of the demand for the creation of separate states. Secession is only a difference of scale and not type because both are rooted in incompatibility. The multiplication of states in a country with a fixed boundary is an indication of a fissiparous relationship which is the root of national poverty and recession.

    By 2015, about two-thirds of the thirty six states could no longer meet the salary needs of the state civil service. The situation proved the point that most of the states were mere civil service states as petty traders and food sellers suffered shrinkage in their sales and income. The situation also proved the fragile nature of the economy because governments in Nigeria are the single largest employers of labour with a weak private sector. The prominent visibility of the public sector in employment is a result of the high profile and privileges of the colonial civil service. The post-independence successive governments in Nigeria did not help matters because they often vaunted the omnipotence of government without encouraging the diversification of skills, entrepreneurship, and public-private partnership. In the past, communities established secondary schools, constructed roads, and awarded local and overseas scholarships.

    Of recent, the governments arrogantly asked communities to hands-off such developments. It suddenly became an offence for parents/teachers associations to be involved in the development of the schools.

    The demand for the creation of states is both an indication of diversity as well as the conception of the state as a milk-cow. Most of the demands are based on the propensity to have a share of the ‘national cake’. The lexicon of the demand for new states shows very clearly the consumerist goals of the protagonists. Little or no attention is paid to social and economic viability of states but the income derivable form the federal purse.

    Occasionally, one hears such pious phrases and clichés like bringing government close to the people; equity; ethnic geo-political balance and federal presence among others which sidestep economic realities. All such demands are based on ethnic or geographic competition for siphoning federal resources. The end result is the mushrooming of unviable mini-states that serve only the needs of the political elite of such states. It is no surprise, then, that Nigeria has one of the highest per capita costs of governance with very high overhead cost, high recurrent cost and little capital cost. There is therefore relatively little national infrastructural investment resulting in mere subsistence governments.

    The different constitutional efforts for political integration have not yielded positive results because the benefactors devised the measures. These measures include the zoning of political offices, federal character, rotational presidency and other equalisation measures. Let us look at the zoning of political offices first. Zoning is neither a constitutional, nor statutory requirement. It was a device introduced by the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN) in the Second Republic. It is therefore more of a conventional advisory to political parties. It could enhance electoral appeal of a political party in contrast to another party that does not adopt the zoning formula. Being voluntary and advisory, the implementation has been haphazard. The lack of clarity of its implementation was one of the political shibboleths of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan’s bid for a second presidential term.

    First, there was the definitional problem of a second term. Second, there was the problem of observance of an agreement duly entered into. Finally, there was the problem of which was the legitimate zone to present the presidential candidate. Apart from the particular problem arising from the Jonathan presidency, zoning is also not necessarily clear-cut in a multi-party situation since each political party could decide its order of zoning.

    Thus in 2015, the All Progressives Congress (APC)  selected Mohammadu Buhari from the Northwest while the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)  selected Dr. Jonathan from the Southsouth. Each party’s zoning arrangement may therefore contradict, which means, in effect, that zoning may be mutually neutralised by the parties.

    The much celebrated constitutional federal character requirement for appointments was meant to serve as mortar for the various nationalities. The constitutional clause was to the effect all executive bodies should mirror the diversity of the country by ensuring that appointments are made from all geographical parts of the country. The executive bodies must be representatively reflective of the plural nature of the country, such that no part of the country dominates the government while other parts are excluded or under-represented. At the drafting stages, this was conceived as the non-exclusion principle. The aim is to create a sense of belonging and a sense of collective ownership through participation.

    The clause therefore became an employment bill for the political class and a rationale for bloated executives. Nigeria therefore has a very high ratio of executive to the population that gulps funds for development. It has therefore contributed to national poverty and recession.

    Apart from that, it has not worked as the expected political adhesive or coagulant of diverse nationalities. It would have been strange if social homogenisation resulted from such ethnic polarisation. In fact, it could not have served that purpose because the ethnic groups or the geopolitical groups which are proxies of the ethnic groups form the basis of allocation. The application of federal character, therefore, inadvertently prioritises ethnicity and consequently, a source of acrimonious disagreement among the nationalities who complain about the computation and weighting of the federal character requirement.

    A major consequential source of complaint is that quantity is not synonymous with quality, such that arithmetical equality does not translate to qualitative equality. Neither is federal character interpreted to cover less divisive factors of diversity like ideology and stages of development of the various parts of the country.

    The trend of the discussion so far, is that the root of poverty and recession lies in the structure and administration of the Nigerian state. There is an incongruity between the design of the country and the post-independence vision and mission of the country. Such a mismatch is clearly demonstrated in the relationship between the purpose of federalism and the practice of federalism in Nigeria. The practice of federalism in Nigeria is bedeviled by the boss syndrome which results in the hierarchical ordering of the governments of the federation rather than the co-equality of governmental jurisdictions.

    This is complicated by the misperception of the role of government as the dispenser of personal, ethnic and sectional advantages. The system operated as if private sector productivity was either optional or unnecessary. And worse still, the political elite divided the country into political fiefs called states to multiply salary pay-points and inadvertently reduce the capacity of the resultant states to drive development. Nigerian governments became veritable harbingers of poverty by multiplying salary pay-points. Extractive political institutions as we have depicted above, tend to produce extractive or rentier economic systems. Even if there is growth under extractive institutions, they cannot endure because growth requires innovation which ipso facto, results in creative destruction that will destabilise established power relations. The established elite will therefore resist innovation. Extractive regimes also tend to make instability inevitable because they generate fierce competition, forcing the extractive elite to defend its unmerited privileged position. The contingent outcome of instability is decline of productivity which tends to end up in poverty.

    Neither has Nigeria attained the level of clear functional statehood. The fragility of the Nigerian state as depicted above has made scholars at different times to describe it as a soft state or a failed state by others. The state is a complex entity and there is hardly an agreement on its purpose and scope.

    For the purpose of analysis, the state can be seen roughly as a dichotomy with internal and external aspects. Its internal aspect is represented by the government while the external aspect is the country. The government is the highest ruling authority and executive agent of the country. Being the highest authority, it possesses internal sovereignty and the extent quality of its rule of the domestic society is a function of its legitimacy which determines the nature of state-society relations or the relations between the decision-maker and the decision-taker.

    Jean Bodin, espousing the juridical view of the state, identified the chief mark of state sovereignty as the power to give law to all citizens, generally and singly. Thus, the state is vested with the power to create, interpret and enforce the law. In addition to the power to legislate for all, it also has the sole power of coercion or the monopoly of legitimate force such that in the view of John Austin, the state is the superior commanding the inferior. The control of force is a consequential power to strengthen legislative power. All, except the agents of the state are disarmed, private armies are prohibited and the power of constraint is domiciled in the state alone. The monopoly of force has however not prevented dissidence in Nigeria because domestic weakness arising from unresolved national question and political power configuration is exploited different elements in the country. The state monopoly of force is challenged at different times and places.

    For more than two decades, the Niger Delta militants have challenged the authority of the Nigerian state and have succeeded squeezing some concessions for laying down their arms. But, this has been temporary as the success has become an incentive for more armed challenge. Similarly, from about 2009, a group known as the Boko Haram employed Islam as an instrument to challenge the authority of the Nigerian state in the Northeast zone. At some point, they controlled about 14 local government areas and hoisted their flag with intent to create an Islamic State. It was a challenge of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Nigeria. The power of the state to guarantee peace and security to the citizens is also regularly threatened by gangs that infested Nigeria with kidnapping for ransom.

    It started in the Niger Delta as a strategy of the militants to press their case. Oil workers were abducted and killed when ransom was not paid. Now kidnapping has become a national menace with kidnappers demanding huge ransom in foreign currency and even establishing detention camps within the city. With these threats, the Nigerian state appears to be losing claim to its raison d’etat which is the guarantee of the lives of citizens and property. The loss of empirical statehood explains the scanty inflow of foreign direct investment (fdi) and consequential heightening of poverty.

    It is not only the juridical function of the state that has been challenged. Equally so, is the physical property of the state which is the fact that the state is an area with a government, population and a means of keeping order. The citizens are part of that physical state because they live within the geographical boundary. Membership of the physical state is normally compulsory for all that live within that geographical boundary. Obedience to the laws is mandatory, disobedience is punishable, and secession attempt is treasonable.

    Of recent, even the physical extent of the Nigerian state is not sacrosanct. There are open and audible announcements of intention to secede from the Nigerian state in the finalistic language of no return. The Federal Government is handicapped in confronting the open breach by the reality of the extra- constitutional configuration of the country rather than by dereliction.

    Nigeria therefore exhibits all the signs of a sub-optimal state driven by extra-constitutional considerations and consequently unable to perform the minimal constitutional duties of statehood. It continues to muddle along because of a demonstrated unwillingness to deal with the fundamentals of building a state from the congeries of nationalities at war with themselves.

    The complex dilemma of Nigerian state is that the architecture of political power is not coterminous with the architecture of the economy. The troubling paradox is that the area that is perceived to be less economically endowed exercises political control over the economy because there is unequal distribution of power and unequal distribution of resources.

    Unfortunately, while political power can be reconfigured, although not without resistance, it is not as easy to reconfigure the economy. Although political power is required to reconfigure political power, power is hardly ever conceded or freely transferred particularly in a conflict-ridden polity where power confers immeasurable advantage. Power, by its nature, never lacks patronage because it is highly sought after, even more so in a deeply-segmented society.

    The resultant negative effect of the high pitched competition in such societies is poor and/or sub-optimal decision-making. Parties negotiate all issues and since every sectional actor wants the maximum benefit, facilities are sometimes splintered below the level of functional efficiency or located most inappropriately while crucial decisions fail the rationality test. Even the punishment of crime is seen through ethnic and regional lenses. The Nigerian governance system is a conducive environment for breeding poverty and violence. Poverty derives, in part, from maladministration just as violence could be a product of bad administration and perceived inequity

    Nigeria is a paradox. It is the seventh most populous country in the world and the sixth largest producer of petroleum in the world. One is tempted to say that it has no reason to be poor. However, the lack of good governance, general insecurity, and stupendous accountability challenges pushed her into the league of the poor. One hundred and twelve million Nigerians making 67.1 per cent of the population lived below poverty line by 2016.  Poverty has maintained a steady increase with 54.7 per cent in 2004; 60.9 per cent in 2010; 60 per cent in 2015 and a whopping 72 per cent in August 2016. Nigeria is not just one of the poorest countries; it is also one of the most unevenly developed countries of the world. The poverty prevalence in the country ranges from 46.9 per cent in the Southwest to 74.3 per cent in the Northwest and Northeast. Another source puts the national average at 46 per cent while the prevalence of the six geo-political zones is as hereunder: Southwest (19.3 per cent); Southsouth (25.2 per cent); Southeast (27.36 per cent); Northcentral (45.7 per cent); Northeast (76.8 per cent) and Northwest (80.9 per cent).

    The average for the South comes to 23.95 per cent while the average for the North is 67.8 per cent which is nearly triple the average for the South. The sharp contrast between North and South is one of the causes of political instability in Nigeria. Even when the North has been broken into nineteen states and the South into seventeen states, the threat of the North remains. Nigerians continue to complain and fear Northern political clout, Northern numerical superiority and Northern political advantage. Whenever Northern prowess is contrasted with Southern human and material resource advantage, southerners feel that they derive less than their contributions to the Nigerian state. That feeling of deprivation is a source of socio-political tension in the country. Be that as it may, there is evidence of affluent poverty throughout the country. Most houses on the major streets of Nigeria are defaced with shops for retail pure water. Able-bodied college graduates sell telephone recharge cards and commercial motorcycles called ‘okada’ or ‘Going’ have replaced taxis and buses on our streets. Nigerians now take jolly rides on ‘okada’ making telephone calls and sending text messages as the go. I believe that some can now even take a nap as the ride.

    Both structural political and economic imbalance threaten the peace of the country. It is equally important to factor into this discussion that political conduct shapes and is shaped by political context. It is more interesting to go behind the formal structures into the actual processes of politics.

    Karl Marx appears to have correctly stated that men make history although not in circumstances of their own choosing. He therefore identifies mutuality between structure and agent. Every action is therefore a product of the mix of structural and agential factors. We have taken some space to explain the structural factor which is the setting in which social, political and economic events occur and are meaningful. It is necessary to look at political conduct defined as the actor’s conscious effort to realise his goal. In commenting on the Corruption Perception Index (CPI), Transparency International (TI) confirmed that the lower – ranked countries are ‘plagued by untrustworthy and badly functioning public institutions like police and judiciary’. This is a conflation of structure and agent. Oftentimes neither structure nor agency alone can explain a phenomenon. For example, the rate of unemployment in Nigeria rose from 10.4 per cent in 2015 to 14.2 per cent (11.549 million people) in 2016 but it is not every unemployed person that engaged in crime just as some employed people also engaged in crime. This means that crime can be explained from both structural and agential perspectives. It must be emphasised, though, that work is the best route out of poverty and according to Guy Ryder, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Director-General, ‘access to decent work opportunities for all … is the most effective way to increase participation, lift people out of poverty, reduce inequality and drive economic growth’.

    Nigeria ranked very low on Good Governance, Global Peace and Corruption. The World Bank identified six key indices of good governance as follows:

    • Voice and accountability
    • Political stability and lack of violence
    • Government effectiveness
    • Regulatory quality
    • Rule of law
    • Control of corruption.

    Good governance is simply the legitimate socio-political citizen expectation from the state and which the state has responsibility to deliver. The Ibrahim Index of African Governance in 2016 ranked Nigeria in the 33rd position among 45 countries in 2016 putting Nigeria in the last thirteen African countries. On Global Peace Index, Nigeria ranked 151 out of 163 countries in 2014; 151 in 2015; 149 in 2016; and 149 in 2017. Nigeria’s best performance was in 2016 and 2017 with a placement in the last fifteen (15) countries. It is axiomatic that a population with adequate basic needs is most unlikely to resort to violence to solve problems. We may therefore say that, to some extent, that violence is a possible sign that basic needs are not met. Nigeria has about 3.3 million internally displaced persons which is Africa’s largest ranking behind Syria and Columbia on a global scale. Nigeria’s performance on Corruption was equally poor. In fact President Muhammadu Buhari was blunt when he said that ‘Corruption will kill Nigeria unless Nigeria kills corruption’. Corruption has grown to mega heights and Nigeria is better identified by corruption than by her national flag. Even as early as the 1980’s Alhaji Shehu Shagari saw the need for suggesting an ethical revolution to combat corruption. Unfortunately, the desire was not backed by political will.

    I want at this stage to argue that our conception of violence is too narrow. We often see violence only as actions that draw blood, destroy life and limb. There are however actions that sap more blood over time from a larger population.

    I include corruption, poverty, and bad governance among such slow, soft and sure incapacitation agents. We have said a few things about soft or silent violence. We may now turn to hard violence which within a short time snuffs out lives, displace populations and disrupt economic activities. Nigeria has had quite a number of such violence in recent history. They include: the Maitatsine; the Niger Delta militants attack; the Boko Haram insurgency; kidnapping and the recent Nnamdi Kanu’s demand for Biafra. All of these are insurrections that take advantage of the domestic weakness of the state. The state has a compulsory hold on citizens and when that hold loosens by acts of commission or omission, citizens who have reasons, genuine or otherwise, resort to self-help.

    It is the natural opportunistic moment. Thucydides said in his book entitled: The Peloponnesian War “Of the gods we believe, and of men we know, that by a necessary law of nature they rule wherever they can”. The Niger Delta crisis is a product of illogical neglect resulting in on-going illogicality of demands. Curiously the ancient Nigerian Mineral Act allocates the ownership of all minerals on land and below to the government. The law is an example of the greed of the modern state. The law would perhaps have been better to also include all moving creatures on land including the people. The law almost equated the State with God as defined in Psalm 24.1 which states ‘The earth is the Lord’s, and all its fullness, the world and those who dwell therein’. Three things are wrong with this massive appropriation. First, the nationalists opposed it when the British passed the ‘obnoxious’ law in 1944 but they did not abrogate it after independence. Second, it failed the test of history because in the First Republic, the derivation formula gave 50 per cent of the proceeds of minerals to the land/state of origin. The explanation for the present 13 per cent wobbles against precedence. Third, any law that does not have a human face does not belong in the human race. Derivation is not a pocket money concession from a higher authority to a lesser authority. It is a right to restore the mining areas to a tenantable position, as it were. Finally, the law violates the ‘golden rule’ of treating others as one would like to be treated. At the Afe Babalola Committee of the National Political Reform Conference in 2005, the question was asked whether the North would have accepted 13 per cent derivation if oil were discovered in Kaduna rather than the Delta. Significant members of the Committee quibbled rather than answering the question directly. The above queries easily turn the law into an instrument of expropriation.

    The reaction of the Niger Delta militants from Isaac Boro to date threatened the survival of the Nigerian State. The reality of modern statehood is that bad laws must still be obeyed until those laws are changed. Violation of a bad law is an offence just as the violation of a good law. There are however two avenues to changing a bad law. It is either changed via persuasion and due process or by violent means outside the realm of law. Whenever the second option is adopted, the law will take its toll because it is a challenge to the sovereignty of the state.

    Maitasine and Boko Haram are different in cause, course, modus operandi and ideology. While the militants operated on principally on grounds of rights, justice and equity, Matasine and Boko Haram advanced a sectarian position. They argued for a supposedly purer Islam. It was clear in the case of Boko Haram that the goal was territorial and religion was a camouflage for territorial ambition. This was a clever choice because religion is one of the most difficult institutions to confront. Religions are meant to be divine orders beyond disputation. To dispute it is to incur divine wrath which must be avoided by all believers. Religion is therefore, the most effective agent of socio-political mobilisation. Apart from the appeal to spirituality, Boko Haram was not successful at propaganda. It argued that western education was a sin without proposing a viable alternative. Its tactics and strategy also contains elements of weakness. It bombed churches and mosques thus violating Islamic laws that make non-combatants immune from attack and protect Muslims from attacks by fellow Muslims. It employed a scatter strategy of attack in Abuja, Kano, Bauchi and Potiskum among other areas. Although it struck terror in the public, it did not advance its goal in terms of consolidation. The kidnapping of the Chibok schoolgirls was a strategic blunder that earned Boko Haram negative international attention. As long as the girls were held captive, Boko Haram remained in the international media. Boko Haram strategy was very destabilising resulting in mass movement and contributing to large camps of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). Its activities lasted that long because of the lack of cooperation of the host communities partly because of the fear of reprisals and partly for political reasons. By December 2016, Boko Haram was declared officially degraded. This is not to say that it is gone for good. By the nature of insurgencies which have no central command, every fighter tends to become a General still fighting on. Insurgencies last long. Chinese communists fought for 28 years, Vietnamese communists for 30 years and Sandinistas for 18 years. So, it is not yet Uhuru from Boko Haram.

    Another source of insecurity in the Nigerian state is the terrorism of kidnappers. It started as a tactic of the Niger Delta militants to fund arms purchase, force the oil companies out and earn money to run the organisation.  They kidnapped expatriates and got the employers to pay ransom for their release. It eventually escalated and gangs developed in other parts of the country, including faraway Northern Nigeria. It soon became the most lucrative business that was not quoted on the stock market. The telephone became the most effective facilitator of kidnapping with a war against the middle and upper classes. The qualification for kidnapping is the ability to pay huge ransom. Information is required for a successful operation and the recent communication explosion has aided the nefarious act. Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp and email among other means  have become sources of required information and those who are unwary expose themselves.

    The last and perhaps the most difficult of these threats confronting Nigeria is the recent Nnamdi Kanu phenomenon. Kanu established the Independent Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) to demand for the sovereign state of Biafra. He was incarcerated for that demand and he is currently on bail. He has been playing host to youths who want the actualisation of Biafra. The older and more experienced Igbo are treading softly. The experience of the civil war cannot easily go away. The Yoruba often warn in like circumstances that those who witness Sango (god of thunder) disappear underground will not insult Oba Koso. Any Igbo born after 1970 can only learn about the civil war from moonlight stories told after a good meal of pounded yam. That is different from direct experience. It is only when myths are tested against reality that they are validated. Just recently, Kanu instructed the people of Anambra to shun the November 18, 2017 governorship election as a sign that the Igbo have nothing to do with Nigeria any more.  The National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Grand Alliance which is the ruling party in the state, Mr. Ifeatu Obiokoye, wrote that the call was ’irresponsible, and devoid of intellectual focus’.  He went further that Kanu had no authority to speak for the Igbo of the Southeast. Obiokoye emphasized that the Biafra concept was a metaphor for the demand for equity and fair play in the Nigerian state and not a separate movement. He continued: “We are concerned about the continued existence of Nigeria under the present structural arrangement.” He finally advised Kanu to drop the ‘Emperor’ perception of himself. Biafra is not new to Nigerian political narrative.  Secession had always been used as a bargaining tool in Nigerian politics. It was Ojukwu’s blunder to go beyond threat that led to the civil war.

    Nigeria has a quantum of security challenges. The Federal Government has to be strategic in handling those challenges. Some require constitutional adjustments, others require mere legislation, while yet others require negotiation. In adopting any of these measures, political actors must place country above self and clan and place tomorrow above today and yesterday. Nigeria must adopt a mission to drive a renewed vision and elect visionary leaders.

     

  • Adulterated fertiliser, input threaten food security

    Farmers are reporting damage caused by the use of adulterated and  fake fertiliser distributed by some dealers  during the  season’s planting exercise, it was learnt yesterday.

    This is coming on the heels of Federal Government’s inability to force down the prices of fertiliser since January which it pegged at N5, 500 per bag. The government slashed the price of Nitrogen, Phosphorus and Potassium (NPK) fertiliser to N5,000 per bag to encourage farmers to boost agricultural production in the country. Despite this, a 50kg bag of NPK fertiliser is currently being sold at N9,500 in the open market, while Urea is sold at N8,000. NPK fertiliser reached an all-time high of between N9, 000 to N10, 000 last year.

    Reports from Cross River, Kaduna and Anambra states say farmers have recorded failed crops attributed to adulterated fertiliser. The farmers expressed fears that the country may face fertiliser crisis which will directly affect the farming community and indirectly hit the masses. Speaking in Lagos, the Director-General, Feed Nigeria Summit Secretariat, Mr Richard Mark Mbaram expressed concern over the proliferation of adulterated fertilizers and pesticides, saying that the government should immediately investigate the illegal practice in the industry.

    He said that such practices in the fertilizer and pesticide industry puts in peril the government’s food self-sufficiency targets. According to him, because the fertiliser and pesticides that farmers are using are adulterated, the government may not achieve the desired [self-sufficiency] target, not only in corn, but across all agricultural commodities that depend on these products.

    For corn sector alone, he   said that production may drop, while unregulated components mixed with the fertilizers can cause long-term effects to the quality of soil.According to him, fertilizer is vitamins for soil and consists of three main types, nitrogen, potash and phosphate. He urged the government to revive the  Growth Enhancement  Support(GES) to cushion losses caused by use of sub-standard fertiliser. Chairman, All Farmers Association of Nigeria(AFAN),Otunba Femi Oke  called on the government to monitor the industry and ensure that measures are taken  against unscrupulous traders.

    According to him, it was the government‘s mandate, working with  manufacturers   to assure adequate supplies of fertilizer and pesticide at reasonable costs, as well as rationalize fertilizer manufacturing and marketing, and protect consumers from the risks inherent in pesticide use. Recently in Anambra State, the    Ministry of Agriculture, Mechanization, Processing and Export  had  raised alarm over the circulation of uncertified agricultural inputs, mostly fertilisers, allegedly brought into the state by unscrupulous individuals. It listed the fake agricultural inputs to include substandard fertilizers, rice seedlings and insecticides. A statement from the ministry warned farmers, registered cooperative societies and others associated with the agricultural value chain against the purchase and usage of such fake inputs.

     

  • Nigeria, EU agree to enhance security, economic cooperation

    Nigeria and the European Union (EU) have agreed to enhance cooperation in the areas of corruption, security and economy.

    It followed a political dialogue held yesterday at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Abuja.

    The meeting agreed on how to facilitate investment flow into Nigeria from the EU states.

    EU Ambassador and Head of EU delegation to Nigeria and Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Michell Arion led the EU delegation to the dialogue. Nigeria Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama led other ministry officials to the meeting.

    Briefing reporters, Arion said the meeting focused on Buhari’s three-point agenda of security, economy and corruption as well as others, which include irregular migration and the humanitarian situation in the Northeast

    The envoy said that EU and Nigeria could work together for mutual benefits of both parties and enhance peace, security and economic cooperation.

    “We believe that our prosperity is your prosperity. We see West Africa as a block of ECOWAS and Nigeria as the economic base.

    “We see West Africa not as export designation for the EU but investment destination for EU; we don’t have hidden agenda.

    “I will say that what we can do is to facilitate the EU investment in Nigeria, not only at the level of bilateral relations but in other fora,” he said.

    He said the meeting also focused on the Buhari’s agenda of security and economy.

    He said the whole point was not on what the EU can do for Nigeria, but what the EU and Nigeria could do together.

    “I believed that there are a lot of things we can do together basically in two main areas one is peace and security and security.

    “We really believed that our security in the EU is your security; I believe we are fighting the same terrorists.”

     

     

     

     

     

  • Doctors urge police to beef up security in hospitals

    Doctors under the aegis of Association of General and Private Medical Practitioners of Nigeria (AGPMPN) have raised the alarm on the unprecedented abduction of their colleagues, especially in Rivers State.

    They spoke at the weekend,  during  the National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of the Association in Port Harcourt, Rivers State capital.

    National President of AGPMPN,  Dr.  Omo-Ehijele Frank Odafen, condemned the recurring abduction of doctors,  noting that some of their members had lost their lives in the hands of suspected kidnappers.

    Dr.  Odafen urged government and security agencies to provide armed security men for doctors to enable them carry out their social responsibility effectively without fear of being abducted or killed.

    He said: “Doctors are not wealthy  people.  Doctors are not receiving brown envelopes. Doctors are committed people.  We practice social service for the nation.  We are appealing to the society and kidnappers to leave doctors alone.  We don’t have money.  We are struggling people.

    “We are appealing to the government, especially Rivers State government.  We thank the government and security agencies too. But,  we are appealing to the government,  please,  provide armed security men for doctors at their residential homes and offices.”

  • Military battling 14 security threats nationwide, says CDS

    The military has said it is confronting 14 security threats across the country.

    Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Abayomi Olonisakin spoke at a reception organised for him by the Permanent Mission of Nigeria to the United Nations (UN), in New York, United States.

    The defence chief was at the UN headquarters for the Second Chiefs of Defence Conference, with more than 100 chiefs of defence staff all over the world.

    He said: “By my estimation, we have about 14 security threats that we are confronting, ranging from terrorism, insurgency, kidnapping, cultism, to issues linked to armed robbery.

    “We are handling operations in all the geo-political zones of the country, but the major one is the one in the Northeast, which is ‘Operation Lafiya Dole’.

    “We have, of course operations down South and taking charge of militancy and oil theft; we also have that in Lagos.

    “But the major one is Operation Lafiya Dole, which of course since we came on board, we have stepped up the scheme.

    “Right now, we have been able to decimate Boko Haram terrorists, but what they are doing right now is hitting soft targets through suicide bombers.

    “We realised that to mitigate this particular menace is not only about the military. So, we need to carry the whole nation along to be able to address that.”

    To mitigate incidences of suicide bombing, Olonisakin said the military high command had met with other stakeholders to encourage the populace to provide them with necessary intelligence.

    He said the command realised that intelligence was vital to handling the menace of suicide bombing.

    The defence chief added that the military has started the process of restoring full civil authority to areas formerly controlled by Boko Haram terrorists.

    “We are working alongside the DSS – Department of State Services -, the Police and the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps.

    “We are also ensuring that the civil authority is put in place; places that the military had taken over, we encourage the Police and Civil Defence to come on so they can provide civil authority for displaced people to move in.”

    Olonisakin noted that last week, many Boko Haram militants surrendered.

    He said: “We have what we call Operation Safe Corridor in Gombe that is to handle this kind of surrendered terrorists.

    “I believe in the next couple of days, repentant Boko Haram terrorists will be moved to that Operation Safe Corridor where they will conduct de-radicalisation and integration procedure for them.

    “Down South, of course we have issues too. But the military is stepping up its game to make sure we address the security challenges back home.”

    On peacekeeping operations, the Chief of Defence Staff said Nigeria had met and exceeded the gender percentage, having 16.2 per cent female peacekeepers as against the 15 per cent benchmark by the UN.

    The Nigeria’s Ambassador/Permanent Representative to the UN, Prof. Tijjani Bande, hailed Nigeria’s security forces for decimating the Boko Haram as a fighting force.

    Bande said: “Soft targets are being exploited by desperate group but in truth, even beyond Boko Haram, other challenges are also being addressed.

    “What is important is the synergy that has been expressed by Chief of Defence Staff in relation to what all the security agencies are doing together; when we work together, we are secured.”

  • Badoo: Amosun, security chiefs meet

    Badoo: Amosun, security chiefs meet

    The Ogun State government and security chiefs, comprising the Army, police, Department of State Services (DSS) and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), met yesterday on how to prevent the deadly cult group, Badoo, from entering the state from Ikorodu in Lagos State.

    The meeting, chaired by Governor Ibikunle Amosun, followed intelligence reports that the cult group, which had killed several people in Ikorodu, were planning to infiltrate the Gateway State.

    The Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Taiwo Adeoluwa, addressed reporters in Abeokuta, the state capital, after the meeting.

    He said the government had taken proactive measures to secure the lives and property of residents against Badoo cult group or other criminal elements.

    Adeoluwa said: “We just rose from a meeting with the governor and all the security chiefs. We evaluated the current challenges, especially as they relate to the Badoo cult group. We want to sound a note of warning to them not to come to Ogun State as we are determined to make our state uncomfortable for them to operate.

    “We have mapped out our plans to deal with them and we are leaving no stone unturned in this regard.”

    The SSG urged  residents to remain calm and go about their lawful activities without fear.

    Police Commissioner Ahmed Illiyasu said: “Security agencies in the state are united and committed.”

    He added that they “are ready to dislodge any criminal and bring them down” in any part of the state.

  • Badoo: Ogun govt, security chiefs meet

    Badoo: Ogun govt, security chiefs meet

    ….warn cult group to steer clear of Ogun

     

    Ogun State government and security chiefs from the Army, Police, Department of State Security (DSS) and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) among others, met on Wednesday to fashion out ways to prevent the deadly cult group – Badoo, from entering the state from Ikorodu – Lagos.

    The meeting which was chaired by Governor Ibikunle Amosun followed intelligence reports that the badoo group which had been visiting residence of with bloodshed, were planning to infiltrate the Gateway State.

    The Secretary to the State Government, Taiwo Adeoluwa, who issued the warning while speaking with journalists on behalf of the government in Abeokuta, the state capital, after the meeting, said   the administration has taken proactive measures to secure the lives and property of its people against badoo cult group or other criminal elements.

    “We just rose from a meeting with the Governor and all the Security Chiefs where we evaluated the current challenges, especially as it relates to the Badoo cult group. We want to sound a note of warning to them not to come to Ogun State as we are determined to make our State uncomfortable for them to operate.

    “We have mapped out our plans to deal with them and we are leaving no stone unturned in this regard,” Adeoluwa said.

    He reiterated the Government’s commitment to investing heavily in security, and urged residents to remain calm and go about their lawful activities peacefully without any apprehension.

    He explained that security agencies in the state were working hand in hand to ensure their safety at all times, as the state government would not fold its arms and watch criminal elements, under whatever guise unleash terror on people.

    And Speaking on behalf of the Service Chiefs in the state, the Commissioner for Police, Ahmed Illiyasu said “the security agencies in the state are united and committed,” adding that they “are ready to dislodge any criminal and bring them down.”

     

  • Ex VP Sambo alleges plans to implicate him for corruption

    Ex VP Sambo alleges plans to implicate him for corruption

    The immediate past Nigeria’s Vice President, Architect Mohammed Namadi Sambo has expressed fear that the nation’s security agencies may plant incriminating objects in his house to implicate him of corruption.

    The former Vice President who reacted to the repeated raids on his Kaduna residence by the anti-graft agencies said he is apprehensive that a repeat of Commando-style raid of his residence will not be surprising if an incriminating object is planted in order to willfully and deliberately incriminate him.

    Sambo in a statement issued by his Media Adviser, Umar Sani, lamented that the recent desperation exhibited by some security agencies in carrying out a raid on an unoccupied residence and blocking all entry and exit points, in a ‘commando-style’ and coming along with a bullion van speak volumes of the ‘clandestine’ intention of the security operatives.

    According to the statement, “In the late afternoon of Wednesday, the 28th of June 2017, the Alimi Road, Kaduna un-occupied residence of the former Vice President Arc Mohammed Namadi Sambo, GCON, was invaded by security operatives armed with a search warrant, who conducted a forensic search of the entire residence.

    “Initially, we were at a loss as to their identity but later discovered that they were operatives from the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC). This raid brings to five the number of times the residence was searched within a period of six months and on each occasion valuable fittings were deliberately destroyed.

    “It is worthy of note to state that no such brazen attempts were made at any point, either at his Link Road Kaduna residence, or his Abuja apartment, which he presently occupy.

    “As the visit of the operatives was unscheduled, the reasons for the search were not specifically stated. However, the outcome of the search was made known. At the end of the whole exercise, the officers, who carried out the search were satisfied that nothing incriminating was found.

    “As a law-abiding citizen, the former Vice-President did not raise any alarm in the previous invasions in view of the fact that he has nothing to hide.

    “The recent desperation exhibited by some security agencies in carrying out a raid on an unoccupied residence blocking all entry and exit points, in a commando-style and coming along with a bullion van speaks volumes of the clandestine intention of the security operatives.

    “It is therefore worrisome to note that the consistency with which the searches occurred and the intervals between them portrays a desire of a fault-finding mission. We are apprehensive that a repeat of such episode will not be surprising if an incriminating object is planted in his residence in order to willfully and deliberately incriminate him.

    “It is against this background that we wish to draw the attention of the unsuspecting members of the public to this phenomenon. The desperation of some of the security agencies is glaring by the number of times such searches were conducted and still counting. We hope it is not a way to try to give a dog a bad name in order to hang it,” Sambo  said.

  • Muslim faithful mark Eid in Ibadan amid tight security

    Muslim faithful mark Eid in Ibadan amid tight security

    •Downpour stalls prayers in Bauchi

    Islamic prayer to mark the end of holy month of Raman fasting  in different parts of Ibadan witnessed large turnout of Muslim faithful amid tight security yesterday.

    Stern-looking policemen and other sister security agents, including Civil Defence and plain cloth state security agents were observed in most of the praying grounds across the city and environs.

    Commissioner of Police Abiodun Odude had on Friday told reporterswhen he visited the Oyo State Chief Judge, Justice M.L. Abimbola, that his men had been posted to strategic areas to forestall breach of the peace during and after the Eid-Fitiri celebration.

    In all the praying ground visited yesterday, there was peaceful conduct of prayers by Muslim faithful who trooped enmass as early as 9am to supplicate to God for the successful end of the fasting period.

    The Chief Imam of Ibadanland , Sheik Busari Agbotomojekere, who led prayer at the Yidi praying ground at Agodi , Ibadan, prayed for the unity of the country and President Muhammadu  Buhari .

    In Bauchi, heavy downpour in the early hours yesterday prevented teeming Muslim faithful in the metropolis from performing congregation prayers.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the rainfall, which started at about 8am, lasted about  two hours, taking worshipers that had already arrived at open prayer grounds, by surprise.

    As it intensified, worshipers had to seek refuge in nearby buildings and tents, most of them, soaked in their new Sallah attires.

    When the rainfall subsided, most of them, particular women and children,  returned home. Few others sought for alternative places where the prayers were delayed.

  • Security agencies probe identity of Evans’s gang member in Bayelsa

    Security agencies probe identity of Evans’s gang member in Bayelsa

    Security agencies in Bayelsa State are probing the identity of one Suoyo mentioned by the notorious kidnap kingpin, Chukwudumeje Onwuamadike, aka Evans, as one of his gang members in the state.
    Evans, in one of his numerous confessional statements, named Suoyo as one of the active members of his gang, who had the assignment of buying arms and ammunition, for their operations.
    “When Suoyo, who lives in Bayelsa state, called me and expressed fears, I also assured him that nothing was going to happen. I told him I was making plans for another operation and needed him to go into the creeks and buy a new set of arms and ammunition,” Evans said in an interview.
    But security commanders in Bayelsa were said to have met over the weekend to analyse Evan’s confessional statement to unmask the real identity of Suoyo.
    At the meeting which held in Government House in the presence of Governor Seriake Dickson, the security commanders were said to be certain that that the Suoyo mentioned by Evans was the same person recently arrested by the operatives of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) in the state.
    One Suoyo  Dickson was arrested and paraded on Thursday by the state Commandant of NSCDC, Mr. Desmond Agu, in connection with the recent attack on a pipeline belonging to the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC).
    Suoyo, popularly known as Hustler, reportedly led a gang of vandals that attacked the Agip pipeline at Lagosgbene, Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of the state on May 30, 2017.
    He was, however, arrested on June 16, 2017 at Agbigiba community in Southern Ijaw.
    Suoyo, in his confessional statement, also admitted having some criminal camps in the creeks saying he led an oil and gas task force operating in Southern Ijaw to destroy the camps but became frustrated when the task force failed to reward him.
    On how he attacked the pipeline, Evans said;: ”I used two handsaw blades and handsaw to open up the point, I cut the handle in the valve, I fetched 20 litres of petrol, I lit spark lighter and threw it into the pipe and burnt it.”

    ”I burnt the pipeline because the task force  did not keep to their promise of employing us after making us to show them our bunkering camps and the subsequent destruction by the military.

    ”We showed them our camps, eight of them. All the camps did not belong to me. Three were mine while other groups have five. After showing them, the task force engaged the military to destroy our camps. 

    ”The other groups, whose camps were destroyed were not happy with me. They said I betrayed them and they started planning to kill me and my family members. The situation put me under pressure more so the employment they promised all of us after seven days did not materialize”.
    It was gathered that Agu, after parading the suspect, handed him over to the Joint Task Force, Operation Delta Safe (ODS) for further investigations.
    A security source, who spoke in confidence, said at the meeting of the security commanders in Yenagoa, which was attended by the heads of ODS, the police and NSCDC, it was agreed that Suoyo should be subjected to further investigations.
    Following Evans’ confession, the security heads were said to be linking him to the theft of service rifles of security operatives especially policemen in the state.
    They recalled many attacks on operatives by criminals, who only fled with arms and ammunition handled by their victims.
    “The security heads also agreed to compile a list of such stolen arms and ammunition in the state and send it to the Force Headquarters to know whether they were among the ones  recovered from Evans.
    “The Suoyo mentioned by Evans seems in all ramifications to be the same suspected arrested by the NSCDC recently in connection with attack on a pipeline. The security heads in the state believe so and they will surely carry out further investigations to determine his linkage with the Evans’ gang.
    “Suoyo may be the mastermind of various attacks on security operatives, whose rifles were stolen in the state. They were also killed in the process,” the source said.