Tag: Stakeholders

  • Stakeholders warn against misuse of Imo flood funds

    Following an alleged diversion of materials for flood victims in Imo State, political leaders and other stakeholders have warned against further exploitation of the victims.

    The leaders, who were from the two affected local governments – Oguta and Ohaji/Egbema – alleged that over 70 per cent of the materials and funds donated to the victims were diverted.

    The member representing Ohaji/Egbema/Oguta in the House of Representatives, Gerald Irona, addressed the leaders at the home of maverick politician, Arthur Nzeribe.

    Irona warned that he would not tolerate the mismanagement of Federal Government’s intervention fund to the flood victims.

    He said: “Those who were affected by the floods were short-changed by people who were appointed to manage the materials. In each of the communities, there are recognised leaders who should have coordinated the distribution of the materials. But they were ignored by the committee, for selfish reasons.”

    The lawmaker said the Federal Government and other intervention agencies did not consult him on how the committee handled the materials and funds to the flood victims in his constituency.

    Irona added: “Even as the member representing the affected local governmet in the House of Representatives, no one has ever consulted me or sought my opinion on how best to manage the situation. But we are watching to see how the N400million will be disbursed.”

    A former Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Nze Ignatius Umunna, expressed dissatisfaction on the handling of the materials.

    He said: “There is no way 100 per cent of the materials or funds can get to the victims, given the mentality of our people. Some of them will be cornered. What we are saying is that a substantial percentage be given to the genuine victims, who the materials are meant for.”

    The stakeholders agreed to set up a committee to monitor the disbursement of the intervention funds to ensure that they are not hijacked by government officials and politicians.

     

     

     

     

  • Stakeholders seek coordinated regulation

    Stakeholders have called for coordination in the regulation of practices in the oil and gas industry so as to engender the needed growth.

    They made the call at the PSRG-Richardson Health, Safety, Security and Environment (HSSE) forum held in Lagos.

    The forum noted that the establishment of various regulatory agencies who are working at cross-purposes was not in the best interest of the industry.

    It therefore suggested that the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) be adequately equipped and empowered to effectively perform its regulatory functions in the oil and gas sector.

    The forum also recommended that a division of the Nigeria Police Force, which is to be dedicated completely to the oil and gas industry should be created and well equipped to enhance security of operations, installations and assets.

    In his presentation entitled: “HSSE: Confronting the Challenges in the Nigerian Oil and Gas Environment,” Emiy Ikuru, Managing Director of Foisi Global Investment Ltd urged the development of a measurable and sustainable HSSE management system in the oil and gas industry. He called for the implementation of a security policy that meets the challenges of increasing crime and effective response strategies to emergencies that threaten the safety of staff, assets and the general public.

    Also speaking on the “Challenges of protecting oil and gas industry assets: An operator’s perspective,” Capt. Albert Oti (rtd) said an effective approach to pipeline protection would involve local communities in guarding the pipelines. It will also require the deployment of technology such as sensors, which are globally used to monitor pipelines.

    On the types of security breaches and threats prevalent in the Nigerian oil and gas industry, he listed them to include facility vandalisation, armed attacks on personnel and installations, kidnapping and hostage taking and the disruption of operations. Others are community protest action, crude oil theft and illegal bunkering, cyber crime and electronic infractions.

    To address these challenges, Oti urged operators to develop an effective oil and gas infrastructure protection strategy and acquire risk assessment and warning capabilities. He said there is the need for an integration of information sharing and control in the security of oil and gas infrastructure between operators and relevant security agencie.

    Head of HSE at the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Dorothy Bassey,who was represented by Ijeoma Onyeri, spoke on approaches to sustainability in her paper entitled: “Developing a winning formula for sustainability in the oil and gas industry.

    She listed innovation, transparency, taking responsibility and maintaining standards as some of the key elements required to develop a winning and sustainable business in the oil and gas industry.

  • PHCN stakeholders kick over transfer of N1 billion

    PHCN stakeholders kick over transfer of N1 billion

    Stakeholders in the Power Holding Company of Nigeria Plc (PHCN), are questioning the depletion of the company’s account to the tune of N1billion in the first quarter of this year alone through what they see as curious requests from the supervising ministry- Power.

    They are worried by the frequency of the requests and the true intentions.

    Documents on to the transfer of funds obtained by The Nation revealed that on December 20, 2011, a PHCN executive director and a senior manager, in a memo to the Manager, Access Bank Plc Aminu Kano Street Wuse II, Abuja asked that “the Current Account of our station specified below be funded from our outstanding Debt Account No 0430010004816 with you”.

    They specifically asked that N180 million be transferred to the Federal Ministry of Power (Project) Account in Zenith Bank Plc, Maitama branch and another N50 million transferred to the Industrial Training Fund at Keystone Bank Ltd, Wuse II, Abuja.

    This was preceded by a December 9,2011 transfer of N395, 281, 000 from the company’s outstanding Debt Account

    0430010004816 on 9th December 2011.

    In a letter marked ED-MO-TCN/002-003-1706-2011, the same PHCN executive director and an assistant general manager asked Access Bank Plc, Aminu Kano Street, Wuse II, Abuja to transfer the sum to the Federal Ministry of Power (Project) at Zenith Bank Plc, Maitama branch, Abuja.

    A note attached to the letter suggested that the request was approved by the top management of the ministry.

    The request came via a letter FMP/PPRU/163/VOL.11/6 of December 8, 2011 and was tagged ‘media budget’.

    On January 17, 2012, the executive director wrote to the Head, Public Sector Group, First Bank of Nigeria Plc, Central Business District, Abuja to transfer N200million from the company’s market clearing Account No 2005859094 into the Presidential Task Force on Power ostensibly for the sensitization of the Public on Power Sector Reform .

    Another PHCN executive director and a senior management officer in a June 7, 2012 letter to Diamond Bank, Aminu Kano Street, Wuse II, Abuja requested that N84 million be transferred from PHCN outstanding Debt Account to Federal Ministry of Power (Project).

    The transfer was in response to a June 5, 2012 memo requesting ‘logistic support’ for increased patrol of transmission lines and projects nationwide.

    The memo said in part: “the prevalent vandalism of transmission lines and the increased collapse of towers had often led to the instability in the power supply causing, as it were, frequent system collapses. There is need to nip this trend in the bud and speedily attend to such issues when they arise especially with the coming on board of the National Integrated Power Projects. In order to harvest the gains of these completed projects and to ensure the strengthening of the transmission system, it becomes necessary to patrol these lines more frequently.

    “…In the light of the above, it is recommended that the lines should be constantly patrolled jointly by the officials of the ministry, Transmission Company of Nigeria and security and agencies. In order to provide the necessary logistics support for the period exercises, the following vehicles should be procured: 4 no. SUVs at N21 million each, totalling N84 million.”

    Another N98,985,000 was made available to the ministry on the strength of a presidency approval for the procurement of two treated security vehicles for the minister.

    A director in the ministry asked PHCN to “take necessary action to ensure the prompt release of the sum (N93, 985,000.00) into the ministry’s project Account.

    A source in the ministry informed The Nation that the leadership of the ministry had unfettered access to PHCN’s accounts after the company’s achievement of its target of 4,000 megawatts and the determination of the Jonathan’s administration to privatize it.

     

  • Stakeholders seek peaceful election

    Stakeholders seek peaceful election

    The clamour for free, fair and peaceful election resonated at a sensitisation workshop for party executives, stakeholders and candidates ahead of the October 20 governorship election in Ondo State. Assistant Editor AUGUSTINE AVWODE reports.

    It is just three weeks and three days before the electorate in Ondo State will elect the man to pilot the affairs of the state for the next four years. The October 20 governorship election has remained a major talking point within the country’s political space. And, many people have expressed concern about the possibility of an outbreak of violence before, during and after the election.

    The concern is germane, given the trend of things in the state in the past few months. There has been an increasing rise in the wave of political violence, inter party fracas and other sundry forms of intimidation. The question has always been what would happen on election day and after the results would have been announced? Besides, reference has always been made to the orgy of violence that swept through the state in the not too distant past when a governorship election was manipulated in favour of a candidate which the electorate in the state clearly did not want.

    It was in a bid to forestall a possible repeat of such unwholesome and ugly development that the Special Adviser to the President on Inter Party Affairs Senator Ben Ndi Obi, last Friday, put together a sensitization workshop for party executives, stakeholders and candidates ahead of the election. The workshop which held in Akure, the state capital, saw stakeholders calling for free, fair and transparent election which should be held in very peaceful and conducive atmosphere.

    Senator Obi must have been inspired by a similar workshop conducted in June in neighbouring Edo State. In the run up to the July 14, governorship election in that state, anxiety was high, that violence coulddisrupt activities in the state. There were accusations and counter accusations by the major stakeholders, particularly, between the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).

    The workshop turned out to be the needed tonic almost everybody had been waiting for to call attention to the need for peace, law and order. The election held and, apart from being generally peaceful, it was acknowledged as the freest and fairest since 1999.

    President Goodluck Jonathan wasted no time in congratulating Governor Adams Oshiomhole of the ACN who was declared winner. The PDP as a party did same, displaying great sportsmanship. It is on record that the party refused to contest the result of the election.

    That was in Edo State. But then, the Anambra State born presidential aide must have considered it a sacred duty to try and replicate the same in Ondo State.

    In his welcome address, Obi came up with far-reaching recommendations. He was quick to remind all present that the fact that they were all at the workshop represented a “collective desire to change the nature and character of elections in Ondo State and by extension, our nation”. Obi recalled with a deep sense of satisfactions the results which the Edo experiment of the workshop yielded.

    “It all started in Edo State in June 2012 following the need to arrest the dangerous political atmosphere preceding the Edo July 2012 Governorship Election that generated serious anxiety in the nation owing to the escalation of political insecurity, acrimony and rancour in that state. It was a paradigm shift. We are all living witnesses to the great success recorded by our sensitisation workshop in Edo State”.

    He added that “This workshop is, therefore, an occasion for party associates and stakeholders to rub mind on how to ensure a crises-free election in Ondo state. It is the time for all stakeholders to evolve the machinery to sensitise our various supporters on the need to adhere to electoral rules.

    “We must ensure that our supporters are thoroughly informed that in any election, there must be a winner and ensure that each vote counts. There is no doubt that the political environment in Ondo State is presently passionate and emotional but building on the lessons of the past, there is need for a positive decision to make it safe and friendly once again”.

    Outlining the place of periodic elections in a democracy, he spelt out what must be done by all stakeholders to achieve the dreamed free, fair and peaceful election. “Periodic election remains paramount in a democratic dispensation because it is the moment of truth for both the leader and the led. While election is a nightmare to nonperforming politicians, a great expectation it is to the people as it affords them the opportunity to choose their leaders as well as drop nonperforming ones. But elections cannot perform this function if the right attitude is not developed and right atmosphere enthroned.

    “Free and fair election calls for unrestrained right to vote and be voted for, a level playing ground for all in spite of party affiliations; common access to common facilities; one that is devoid of intimidations, misuse of state resources for electoral purposes, violence, riggings and the manipulation of the judicial process in situation of electoral litigations, etc”, he said.

    In his address, the chairman of the workshop Gen. Alani Akinrinade (rtd), while commending the initiative, warned that nothing short of a free and fair election is acceptable. He reminded the audience of what happened in the state once when electoral cheats tried to rob the people of their right to freely choose who to rule them.

    “People of my generation cannot forget the stiff, uncompromising attitude, backed by physical demonstration of limitless violence with which the people of this state stood against cheating, demonstrated by electioneering heist in the recent past”.

    Harping on the negative consequences of rigging elections, Akinrinade warned in no uncertain terms that: “When an election is not free and fair, people’s faith and confidence in the system are eroded, bad and unwanted leaders are sanctimoniously and ignominiously selected, democracy dividend are denied, crisis of unimaginable proportions with its concomitant violence are enthroned, development is distorted and lives lost”.

    Akinrinade warned those who are planning to ferment trouble to desist saying the election must be a true reflection of the wishes of Ondo people. “Political killings are not only antithetical to democracy; they are also satanic and contrary to the principle of the ‘General Good’. This time around, Ondo State and her people cannot afford to play into the waiting hands of the anarchy that result from manipulated elections. Election must be a true reflection of the people’s collective wish”.

    The ACN governorship candidate, Mr. Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, who was represented by the Vice Chairman, Southwest of the party, Senator James Kolawole, noted that the consequences of not conducting a free and fair election are grievous. He maintained that Ondo State has sophisticated citizenry which makes it mandatory to ensure free and fair election in the state. Kolawole said the ACN, being a peaceful party, will not tolerate and promote any forms of violence.

    The governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), represented by his running mate, Mr. Saka Lawal, not only condemned the denial of air time to opposition parties by public electronic media in the state, he also lamented the series of attacks against members of the PDP.

    He said: “We in the PDP, we are not violent, but the sitting government ever since has not learnt anything from us. Over the last one month, we have been to 203 wards, we have visited about 350 communities. We were at Idanre, we got police permit, but the SA to the sitting governor led thugs to attack our members. If not for the timely intervention of the Commissioner of Police, that rally would have been aborted”

    In his remarks, chairman of the Independent national Electoral Commission (INEC) Prof Attahiru Jega, who was represented by a national commissioner, Hajiya Aminat Zakari, recalled the positive outcome and subsequent confidence building mechanism that resulted from the Edo State workshop. Jega noted that the Commission is always concerned whenever the electoral environment is over-heated by aggressive language, threats, and other forms of intimidation before during and after elections.

    “These do not augur well for all contestants, the voters as well as the political and electoral systems at large. Such an atmosphere also generates, and inevitably creates situations that not only lead to threats to life and property, but could also impact negatively on the credibility of the election”.

    Jega stressed that only personal commitment can help the system.

    “It is the personal commitment of political parties and candidates that can create the kind of peaceful atmosphere for the conduct of free, fair and credible elections that we all desire as a nation. As you deliberate on some of the most pertinent concerns on peaceful elections, I hope that you will generate concrete suggestions that will assist all Stakeholders in ensuring that the forthcoming Ondo State Governorship Election is conducted in a peaceful and conducive atmosphere”, Jega said.

    Delivering the keynote address, Dr Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, a Political Scientist at the Usumanu Danfodio University, Sokoto, which he titled: “Trust: That rare value in politics,” said the essence of the exercise was to capture what he called an “illusive and rare value” in politics which he identified as trust.

    According to him, people are searching for: “Trust that politicians can rely on INEC to conduct the forthcoming elections in a manner that they can accept the results as genuinely reflecting the will of the people of Ondo State. Trust that political parties and contestants will play by the same rules, and will respect the electorate by giving them enough room to exercise free choice.

    “Trust of the people of this state that both INEC and politicians will allow their will to prevail; to remove fear from the entire exercise; and respect outcomes as the voices of the people. Trust that this election will serve as a benchmark for a nation eager to establish the possibility that we can elect leaders freely and openly, and, the heavens do not need to fall in the process”.

    The guest lecturer challenged all present to make sure that what would happen in Ondo represents an improvement on the election in Edo State. wish you a very useful workshop”.

    The communique signed by all stakeholders. As the d-day draws nearer, all eyes would be on these critical stakeholders to do the needful for Ondo, the state which prides itself as the “Sunshine State” and Nigeria.

     

    hip election in Ondo State. Assistant Editor AUGUSTINE AVWODE reports.