Tag: STATE

  • ‘No Akwa Ibom land will be ceded to Ijaw Oil Rivers state’

    The people of Akwa Ibom State are not opposed to the creation of Oil Rivers or any other state for Ijaw people, a group, Frontline Akwa Ibom Movement, said yesterday.

    But the group said it would not allow an inch of Akwa Ibom land to be excised.

    It said it would employ every legal means to resist any attempt by any group, such as the Ijaw Youths Council (IYC), to “blackmail” Akwa Ibom leaders.

    In a statement by its President, Ibanga Isine, and Secretary Anietie Akpan, the group said proponents of an Oil Rivers state did not consult the people they intend to bring into the new state, but indulged in “blackmail and endless cries of neglect”.

    It said: “We, therefore, warn the IYC and Ijaw third columnists to stop misappropriating the goodwill of the Niger Delta people towards President Goodluck Jonathan and other respected Ijaw leaders.

    “The Niger Delta is made up of homogenous people with deep cultural and ancestral ties and nobody or group should attempt to live in a false fantasy that the region belongs to them.

    “We are prepared to defend the land, resources and people of Akwa Ibom State against annexationist groups and interest, and nobody should test our will.

    “IYC should concern itself with the multi-billion Amnesty Fund it has cornered as an Ijaw patrimony and leave Akwa Ibom and its people alone. Those whose kernels were cracked for them by benevolent spirits should not forget to be humble. A word to the wise is enough.”

  • State House braces against Ebola

    The reality of the outbreak of the deadly Ebola Virus Disease in Nigeria is now overwhelming members of staff of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The possibility of its outbreak at the Presidential Villa was conveyed in an Internal Circular last week to all State House personnel by the Chief Physician to the President, Dr. Fortune Fiberesima.

    To avert an outbreak of the disease in the Villa, he said the numerous bats and monkeys in the Aso Rock are part of the animals that have been discovered to be hosts to the disease and have the capacity to spread the deadly disease.

    While monkeys freely move around the Presidential Villa from the thick forest surrounding the Seat of Power, bats sling on almost every tree at the Presidential Villa.

    Faeces of monkeys and bats are common sights on anything or object placed within the State House, including cars parked at the various parking lots.

    Dr. Fiberesima, in the Internal Circular, warned State House personnel against contact with these animals, either dead or alive.

    He also warned them against using hands to clear faeces of the animals on their cars.

    Stressing that hand gloves are available for members of staff on request at the State House Medical Centre (SHMC), he warned car owners in the Villa to water-hose vehicles parked under trees (with or without faeces of animal droppings on them) properly before washing them.

    The circular entitled “Precautionary Measures, Re: Outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease in Nigeria”, reads: “In view of the recent outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease and that certain animals (bats and monkeys) have been linked with the virus, the following precautionary measures are deemed necessary: “Avoid physical contact with bats and monkeys, whether dead or alive.

    “Do not pick dead bats and monkeys. Please, immediately notify the Public Health Unit of the State House Medical Centre for proper disposal.

    “Avoid using hands to clear animal droppings (animal faeces) on parked cars.

    “Hand gloves are available at the SHMC on request.

    “Water-hose vehicles parked under trees (with or without animal droppings on them) properly before washing.

    “Sanitise hands or wash your hands with soap and water as often as possible.

    “The aforementioned measures are purely precautionary, in view of the large number of bats and monkeys in the Villa.”

    Apart from photocopies of the circular placed on notice boards at strategic points, copies were also given to many members of staff at the Presidential Villa in order to create enough awareness.

    Among the top government officials listed as the recipients of the internal circular are the Chief of Staff to the President, the Deputy Chief of Staff to the Vice-President, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, All Senior Special Assistants/ Special Assistants to the President and Vice-President, Permanent Secretary of State House, SCOP, ADC, Chief Security Officer, CPSO, Commander of Guards Brigade and the Office of the First Lady.

    Besides the circular, sanitisers are often spread on the palms of members of staff and visitors to the Presidential Villa at some entry points.

    Last Wednesday and Thursday when many people were at the Villa for the Federal Executive Council and the National Economic Council meetings respectively, some members of staff were positioned with sanitisers to ensure that palms of visitor are purified after handling the door handles.

    To further prevent any outbreak of the disease at the Villa, the management of the State House has also ensured that hygienic hand washing liquid soaps are placed in most toilets in the Villa.

    On Wednesday last week, President Goodluck Jonathan also demonstrated with hygienic hand washing machine against the spread of the disease during a Special Presidential meeting on Ebola Virus at the State House.

    The meeting was attended by state governors, commissioners of health from various states of the federation, Federal Government officials and World Health Organisation Representative in Nigeria.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the meeting, Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola, spoke against secrecy and non-disclosure of infected person or persons who show symptoms of the disease.

    He said: “This is not the time to make fast Naira. Next week will be defining for us, to know whether cases have multiplied. This is not something you keep in religious house to pray. Infected persons are not patients you can move by taxis. If they need prayers now, it can be done electronically.

    “We are now 99 per cent following the cases. We need to have a 100 per cent because if we have one infected person, it is a global risk not just Nigeria.

    “We have to drop our traditional behaviours like shaking of hands and nobody should be offended. You have to stop defecating and urinating in public, particularly at this time of our challenges.”

    The Enugu State Governor, Sullivan Chime said: “From the reports of the meeting, it is clear Nigeria has the capacity to fight Ebola virus, but there is need for standardised practice in combating it.”

    We hope that the ongoing efforts at various levels towards tackling the Ebola scourge will not only keep the disease away from the Presidential Villa and all the areas yet to be infected, but will also kick out the disease from the states that are battling with it.

  • Council of State seeks December end to terror

    Council of State seeks December end to terror

    The National Council of State (NCS) brainstormed yesterday on how to end terror attacks in the country before December.

    Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu addressed reporters at the end of the meeting at the Aso Villa.

    He was accompanied by Governors Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom), Sullivan Chime (Enugu) and the National Security Adviser (NSA), Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd.)

    The meeting, which was presided over by President Goodluck Jonathan, was attended by Gen. Yakubu Gowon, Alhaji Shehu Shagari, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, Gen. Abdusalami Abubakar and Chief Enerst Shonekan, all former leaders.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo and Gen. Muhammadu Buhari were not at the emergency meeting. Senate President David Mark was also absent.

    Also in attendance were: former Chief Justices Muhammed Uwais and Alfa Belgore.

    Other governors at the meeting included Gabriel Suswam (Benue), Godswill Akpabio (Akwa Ibom), Dr. Olusegun Mimiko (Ondo), Rochas Okorocha (Imo) and Sullivan Chime (Enugu).

    Also present were: Seriake Dickso (Bayelsa), Abdufatah Ahmed (Kwara), Adams Oshiomhole (Edo), Willy Obiano (Anambra) and Aliyu Wamakko (Sokoto), Abubakar Yari (Zamfara), Ibrahim Shettima (Borno) and Adamawa State Acting Governor Umaru Fintri.

    Aliyu said the council resolved that all hands must be on deck to end insurgency by December.

    According to him, efforts will be made to ensure that the predictions that Nigeria will cease to exist as a united body by 2015 will remain a wishful thinking.

    The governor said the council noted that leaders, particularly politicians, were the only threats to the country and its democracy. A committee to address the issue of indigenes was set up.

    Aliyu said: “…You may recall that in some states, they even give contract appointment to some people who are not from their states.

    “In some states, there are some discriminatory school fees. If you’re not a so-called indigene, you pay higher than the indigenes. In fact, the very concept of indigeneship came to the fore.

    “Those are some of the issues that the committee will look into. But more fundamental is the issue of the buck stopping with the leadership. In fact, it came to the fore that if there is any threat to either the state or democracy, probably the threat is coming from politicians and from leaders of the country. We must understand the boundaries of leadership and the responsibilities that are involved. Leadership is not about beauty contest. In leadership, you must take difficult decisions and really go about implementing them.

    “So, all the things came to the fore at the meeting. Subsequently, each of us made it a deliberate resolution to all bi-partisan or non-partisan to support the President to make sure that we get rid of insurgency, suggesting that it be done before December.”

    Akpabio said the council resolved that all the moves in some states to register non-indigenes or their deportation should be stopped immediately.

    The governor said the committee would identify discriminatory practices in some states in order to end to them.

    He said: “Whether we need to go to the National Assembly or not, then we will go to National Assembly. Maybe we need to do so through policies at federal, state or local government levels, just to make sure that the country is totally united and all those discriminatory practices are brought to an end so that Nigerians can truly feel free and safe to work in any part of the country without hindrance.”

    According to him, the committee comprises six governors, one from each of the the geo-political zones of the country.

    Akpabio said: “We have the governors of Niger, Sokoto, Enugu, Gombe, Akwa Ibom and Ondo states. The governors were selected from each zone of the country to sit together, invite people to make contributions and then look at all practices in this country that we may term discriminatory.

    “One of such was the idea of some people in some states complaining that they are unable to get certificate of occupancy to build mosques or churches.

    “Another thing that looked very mundane, that because of the religion you belong, on your death, you are expected to be taken somewhere else to be buried because they don’t have cemetery provided for people of certain religions. Such things do not augur well for the country.”

    Dasuki said: “Last week, there was a security council meeting and you were told, after that meeting, of our concern. This was what led to the Council of State being summoned. In particular, we were very troubled. This idea of registering people and the counter thing. There was a group that came out in the North and said that all Southerners should leave.

    “And then, there were comments that followed that. Then, there was a statement issued by MASSOB that all Southerners should also leave the North.

    “The danger, as we saw it, will only lead to when one misguided person will feel that all these things are too much for him, and he goes home. That is the beginning of the divisions of this country.

    “Those of us who were around will remember very well that that was how the civil war started. We saw the danger. We said there is need for everybody to be sensitised on this.”

    He added: “It looks very innocent now to say: ‘I have security concerns. I can register anybody who is not from here.’ But you don’t think that you have some people on the other side. What will you feel if they have the same concerns and decide to register everybody who is not from there? That is not the way the framers of the constitution envisaged that the constitution should be operated.

    “That is why this meeting was held. I’m very happy that there was a lot of commitment. The governors, who are the main operators, who are the leaders at that level, are committed that this issue is resolved.  There is a lot of commitment and support across party lines by those who attended.”

    The NSA said the council discussed the attacks on General Muhammadu Buhari and Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi.

    According to him, the government was not responsible for the attacks.

    Dasuki said: “We said something about the attacks on Buhari and Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi . There was a threat as far back as February, issued by Shekau (Boko Haram leader) calling them infidels by name and position. They said  those eminent Nigerians were in trouble and they were going to see.

    “Well, the government was not responsible. If you say that the government was responsible in the case of General Buhari, why don’t you say the same in the case of Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi?”

  • Abu, Uzezi state mission to Warri Wolves

    Abu, Uzezi state mission to Warri Wolves

    • Seasiders reveal identity of new signings

    Azzez Abu and Uzezi Oghenebo have stated their missions to Warri Wolves after they and four others put pen to paper on deals with the club till the end of the season.

    Abu, a member of the national Beach Eagles team, crossed over from Kwara United while Uzezi joined the Seasiders from Union Bank.

    Both players expressed happiness at the prospect of featuring for the 2013 Federation Cup finalists and reiterated their desires to ensure that Warri Wolves return to the continent.

    “I am happy about this move and very confident that I will do well in Warri. I thank Kwara United’s management and players for the opportunity I had with the club. This is a new experience for me and I would like to make the best of it,” an elated Abu told SportingLife.

    On his part Uzezi promised to make the Seasiders happy with his form both on and off pitch.

    Warri Wolves have also added Ifeanyi Ede, formerly of Enyimba, Tega Irihose, Gift Atulewa and Adama Coulibaly to their squad to ensure that the club finish the season higher than their present seventh position.

  • Knocks for state creation proposal

    Knocks for state creation proposal

    More obstacles are on the way for advocates of new states, despite the National Conference’s endorsement of their case.

    The conference has endorsed the creation of 18 states. But, to many Nigerians, including some delegates to the conference, this is unnecessary.

    According to them, creation of states is not the solution to Nigeria’s problems.

    Youths delegates at the conference, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Vice President Isa Aremu, who also a member of the conference, Ijaw Youths Congress (IJC), House of Representatives Deputy Leader Leo Ogor, among others, rejected decision.

    The conference on Thursday recommended the creation of an additional state for the Southeast and 17 other states.

    The states are Ijebu, Aba, Katagum, Amana, Apa, Aioma, Savannah. Etiti, Njaba/Anim, Gurara, Ghari, Adada, New Oyo, Orashi, Ogoja and Kainji.

    Delegates representing youths’ interest in a statement yesterday by Hassan Rilwan, Yadomah Bukar Mandara and Nnaemeka C. Ikegwuonu, said creating additional states would further divide the country rather than deepen its unity.

    Besides, the youth delegates noted that cries of marginalisation by minority groups would be better resolved with power rotation and not states creation.

    They said Nigerians should be concerned with a Nigeria in good state and not Nigeria with more states.

    The statement said: “It was extremely embarrassing for us as delegates of the National Conference that approved the creation of 18 more states. What is happening in Nigeria?

    “We understand the issues of marginalisation in some states; we support innovative ways of solving it. Not creating more problems to solve a problem.

    “Does state creation solve the issues of marginalisation? What happens when others feel marginalised within the new states?

    “Are we going to have to create even more states? Except we want to create states out of the over 300 ethnic groups in Nigeria. State creation as a solution is a short cut which is usually our way in Nigeria.

    “The only reason the elite may want more states is to increase ease of access to power.  If that’s the case, then rotation along senatorial zones with states and local governments would have solved that.

    “What will solve marginalisation are responsible leaders who will take special interest in the affairs of the minorities to see that they are adequately catered for.

    “How did the late Sardauna of Sokoto, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello lead northern Nigeria as a whole? He did it by making sure all had a sense of belonging, which made the late Sunday Awoniyi, a Yoruba and Christian in the North, to respect him till he died.

    “On one hand, we say we want to reduce cost of governance and on another we want to build 18 more government houses, create 18 more recurrent expenditure centres?

    “We the youth of this country reject the balkanisation of our country and urge our elders to please thread with restrain. Let us not make mistakes that will prove more difficult for our children to solve.

    “Let us think out of the box and factually allow justice and selfless leadership take centre stage in our country. Enough is Enough!”

    Aremu, Vice Chairman, National Conference Committee on Labour, Civil Society, Sports and Youths, said more states were not sustainable. The states, as they are, remain dependent on federal allocation and loans because they are not financially viable.

    Aremu, who spoke yesterday in Ilorin, said the creation of a state in the Southeast would enable the region, which has five states, to be at par with the other geo-political zones.

    Ijaw youths expressed anger over the proposal, saying it is skewed to favour some nationalities to the detriment of Ijaw people.

    The youths described their delegates at the National Conference as “docile without an agenda”.

    Rising from an emergency meeting in Yenagoa at the weekend, the youths under the aegis of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) Worldwide, threatened to block oil exploration, insisting that “our oil won’t be used to develop the proposed new states”.

    The youths said the conference had undermined all the requests and agitation of the Ijaw people, including their demand for the creation of Toru-Ebe and Oil Rivers State.

    “The Ijaw made a request for the creation of two additional states, Toru-Ebe State from the present Delta, Edo and Ondo states and Oil Rivers State from the present Rivers and Akwa Ibom states,” IYC spokesman Eric Omare, said.

    “However, the conference committee on Political Restructuring and Forms of Government recommended creation of additional 18 states across the country without considering the Ijaw requests.

    “It is totally unacceptable for the Conference to recommend the creation of additional 18 states without considering the requests of the Ijaw ethnic nationality, which is Nigeria’s fourth largest tribe.

    “The conference recommendations are geared towards empowering some ethnic nationalities to have more political control to the detriment of other ethnic nationalities in Nigeria and in total disregard to the political marginalisation and oppression of the Ijaws of Delta, Edo and Ondo states,” he added.

    Omare recalled that the Ijaws were the first to demand a region of their own, even before independence in 1960 when Nigeria had only three regions.

    He said despite the creation of the existing 36 states  in Nigeria, the Ijaws, who first demanded a region, has only one state, Bayelsa.

    “If the conference recommendations are implemented, there would now be 54 to 55 states out of which the North would have 28 states; Yoruba: nine states; Ibos: nine states, with additional two to three in south-south.

    “But Ijaw that is the fourth largest tribe that requested for a region of their own even before independence and their leader Major Isaac Boro declared a 12-Day Republic partly because of state creation would have only one state: Bayelsa State,” he said.

    Ijaw youth leaders are to meet to reconsider the roles of the Ijaw delegates at the ongoing conference.

    He said: “The IYC would not and will never allow Ijaw resources to be exploited to fund and develop other states to the detriment of the Ijaws.

    “And without creation of Toru-Ebe and Oil Rivers State to liberate the politically oppressed Ijaws, the Ijaw people would have no other option than to reconsider their position in Nigeria.

    “In the coming days, Ijaw Youth leaders would meet to take a position, especially to consider the role of Ijaw delegates at the ongoing National Confab, who have been docile without an agenda.”

    The Centre for the Vulnerable and the Underprivileged (CENTREP) also knocked the conference  for recommending the creation of additional states and the return to the old National Anthem.

    The Executive Director, CENTREP, Mr. Oghenejabor Ikimi, noted that the recommendations were not borne out of patriotic or nationalist consideration.

    According to him, the conference was set up by President Goodluck Jonathan to discuss the problems that had retarded the growth of the country; and to proffer solutions to them.

    He insisted that the National Anthem had never posed any problem to the country neither had it retarded the country’s growth.

    Ikimi said returning to the old National Anthem, which “we had claimed in the past to be a colonial relic, is unacceptable as same would be likened to a dog going back to his vomit”.

    “We make bold to say that creating 19 additional states to the existing 36 states is senseless, and the said recommendation should be jettisoned.

    “The present scenario where two thirds of the 36 existing states in the Federation are not financially independent and viable as they depend solely on monthly allocations from the purse of the Federal Government for their survival is pitiable and, indeed, very sad.

    “Many governors have had to complain in recent times of shortfalls in the monthly revenue allocations due their various states, which the Federal Government has attributed to dwindling level of crude oil revenue.

    “Therefore, creating an additional 19 states to the existing 36 states would no doubt be chaotic. The above recommendation as in the instant case is what a country gets, when its leaders adopt the same mentality and methodology with which they used in creating a problem, to trying to solve the same problem,” he said.

    Ogor said the resolutions of the National Conference must pass through the National Assembly because it has no constitutional backing or force of law.

    He said efforts and resolutions of the Conference may end up being just a waste of time, as the issue of if or not to subject the resolutions to a referendum does not arise because the Constitution makes no provision for such.

    Ogor said the fact that the delegates were selected and not elected “ by anybody”, and that their resolutions may pass for law only if “a new constitution is written.”

    His words: “It would be more like a wasted effort because there is no way you can pass whatever they are doing into law without subjecting it to the process or modalities with which laws are made, except probably we are going to write a new constitution.

    “There is no section of this constitution that gives room for what they call referendum. And you have the the provision of Section 1 sub 2 of the Constitution stipulating clearly that any law of Act that is inconsistent with the provision of the Constitution, is to the extent of that inconsistency null and void.

    “The modality or methodology of making laws is clearly stipulated under the provision of Section 58 of our Constitution. So, how are you going to pass a law without following the 1999 Constitution? Are we going to set the 1999 Constitution aside?”

    The lawmaker described the misunderstanding of issues, especially the powers of the National Assembly by the delegates as “unfortunate”.

    “The Conference is there to articulate positions that will be presented to Mr. President, because first and foremost, lets know that the delegates to the Confab were not elected by anybody – they were selected.”

    To Ogor, the concept of the National Conference is that the executive has the power to put a team together to discuss Nigeria because there are challenges, but the outcome must pass through the National Assembly.

  • Ebonyi builds modern state capital  

    Ebonyi builds modern state capital  

    When Governor Martin Elechi assumed office as the second civilian governor of Ebonyi State, he said that he would prioritise every aspect of his administration because of the need to improve the well-being and status of his people in all sectors.

    His government, he said, will be anchored on three cardinal agenda namely civil service reform, attitudinal change and infrastructural development.

    To actualise these dreams, the government rolled out several strategies toward making the state a place and home for all, including awarding contracts for constructions of over 30 unity bridges, roads and two mega water projects at Oferekpe and Ukawu in Ikwo Local Government Area and Onicha Local Government Area respectively.

    On attitudinal change, the governor promised a reward for good quality and sanctions for bad behaviour, even following up with  public enlightenment.

    In his quest to make Abakaliki, the capital city, look like a modern city that will not only stand the test of time but also compete favourably with other state capitals in the country, Governor Elechi conceived the vision and idea of Ucho Udo City.

    Ochudo City is a modern city that will bring forth the beauty of Ebonyi State which goes by the tag of “the salt of the nation”. To actualise this the governor went to the Ministry of Defence to plead for a portion of their land to be ceded to the state government for him to try out the city of his vision.

    The Ministry of Defence granted his request and gave the state government land measuring about 1, 200 hectares. Since then, the government has been developing the land in which some gigantic buildings are being elected while some federal agencies like Central Bank, State Security Service and Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) have started erecting structures, some of which have been completed.

    In a chat with our correspondent, the Commissioner for Land, Survey and Housing Friday Nwaoha said the Ochudo City was the brainchild of the governor, who was in the forefront for the creation of the state and seeing that the present structures in the capital city do not qualify Abakaliki a status of a capital city.

    The commissioner stated that the state government, after securing the land from the Army, went into action to develop the land and the design was completed where the proposed Ucho Udo City was divided into 23 zones namely residential area, low and high density, government reservation area (GRA), commercial area, secretariat area, banking area and others.

    According to Nwaoha, some zones are being developed which include the secretariat where government is constructing secretariat buildings for the civil servants.

    He noted that the governor, after appraising the old city where the ministries were scattered and noting that connecting one ministry to the other is taxing, he decided to create an enabling environment for the civil service. So, the governor went to zone 17 which is the secretariat zone and put up about 11 gigantic blocks in place to accommodate all the civil servants.

    In each of the blocks, the commissioner said, two ministries can comfortable be accommodated to grant optimal service delivery to the people of the state and even beyond, adding that nine blocks have two lifts while the rest have three lifts each.

    He said the buildings which have been completed and are waiting inauguration cost the state government over N16 billion, even as he said that apart from the secretariat blocks, the road network of the entire Ucho Udo City, the street lights, the drainage system and the recreational facilities have been completed.

    “As I speak, the Central Bank, State Security Service and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) buildings have been completed while the giant power plant that the state is embarking upon are nearing completion.

    “Apart from these areas, at the residential zone action is on top gear for the allocation of land to those that applied for development, maintaining that Ucho Udo City is a reality and before the tenure of this administration elapses, the place must be a modern city that will give the state capital a face look,” he said.

    Before taking over the land, three communities namely Agbaja Unuhu, Enyimagu Unuhu and Igbeagu communites were occupying the ceded land in which they were asked to move from. This resulted in demonstration by the three communities.

    The commissioner said the communities knew they were occupying the land illegally, adding that the government, in its magnanimity, has carved out a community layout that will accommodate them.

    He added that the Ministry of Defence said the communities were well and dully compensated.

    On when the whole city will be ready, the commissioner said “we don’t have definite date for the completion. The total development of the city may be this year, next year or beyond. It will be a gradual process.

    It is now certain that Ucho Udo City has come to stay and will compete with any other cities in the world when completed. But what is in the mind of the people are when will these dreams materialise?

  • The state of Boro

    The state of Boro

    Isaac Adaka Boro is not lying in state. He is haunting a state of lies. When his folks in the Niger Delta exhumed and re-interred him, they only performed a ritual that mocked reality. Adaka Boro, a name that rhymes in poems, fulminates in books and essays, chimes in songs and rollicks on dance floors, has never passed away. Boro has burrowed our lives and unearthed all our hypocrisies as a nation.

    Nigeria’s best musician ever, Rex Lawson, paid tributes to his vision and valour. But the recent account of him came from the masterpiece of that carnage, written by General Alabi Isama. He told the story about how he was killed in the uniform, ironically not of Biafra but of Nigeria. In the damp and ominous atmosphere of the Niger Delta, Boro was searching a building for Biafran stragglers. But he did not know that an Igbo soldier stalked in the shadows, positioned himself and blasted the Ijaw hero to death. No one has contradicted Isama’s account. In the book, The Tragedy of Victory, Isama portrayed Boro as one of the valuable hands of the Third Marine Commander, under the feisty zeal and predatory cunning of the diminutive Adekunle. Isama was the chief of staff.

    Boro represented a contradiction. He fought to excise his people out of Nigeria. Eventually, he exerted his soldiery in cementing the survival of that same entity he despised. A soldier from Biafra that tried to fulfil his subversive fantasy gunned him down. He became the distorted vision of sacrifice but not the sacrifice of his own vision.

    The contradiction was typically Nigerian. It is the soul of Nigeria, a rabid show of togetherness only exhibited by a zest to undermine that togetherness. We call one Nigeria, but we worship tribe and disdain Nigeria. The American poet of democracy wrote, “Do I contradict myself? Yes I contradict myself. I am large. I contain multitudes.” Walt Whitman was emphasising the American obsession with itself, its self-renewing energy, its desire to melt together its various peoples and races in spite of its yawning differences. We can see the United States confront its turbulent divergences, its compulsion to morph from a mosaic to a melting pot. It is an imperfect attempt. It has shed blood, ruined families, but wrought a Michael Jordan, a Tiger Woods, and hoisted a Barack Obama.

    Boro died in flesh that day the Biafran soldier extinguished him. But he regenerated powerfully. He abandoned the dust of nothingness. He came alive, and he became Ojukwu and his generals who gave the federal soldiers and Yakubu Gowon blood for every blood, flesh for every flesh, bone for every bone. For 30 months, the spirit of Boro hewed down the Nigerian tree.

    When the war ended, we thought we were done. The ghost gave a reprieve, but he walked the night of Nigeria and allowed a honeymoon of illusion. We cannot, however, forget that Orkar and his fellow coupist plotted with Boro when they wanted to slice off Arewa in a fumbling fiasco. Boro also wanted it to fail, so the nation could look at itself and ponder its tragic hypocrisies. We tagged along shamelessly.

    So, today, we know he was not killed that hapless noon of the civil war. He said to Nigeria, “I was he that was alive, and was dead. Behold I am alive till the end of time. I hold the keys to Nigeria’s hell and death.”

    So we see it today. Why is it that we did not see the Niger Delta folks perform a ceremony of reburial in the past? Why today? It is because it is now that he cannot be buried. Today he is more alive. He is telling us he is alive and well and portentously so. He is alive in the Enugu State House. He growled with the subversives of Biafran dreams who attacked the government house. He chanted with them when they disdained Nigeria and brandished Biafra. They want back not just Biafra, but the shimmering beard of the Ikemba, his glistening pate and also the glittering dame, the svelte Bianca.

    He is with Boko Haram, the young and virulent bigots who slit throats, burn down houses, waylay emirs, despise books and western education, kidnap Chibok girls, and loft high a leader online who celebrates his barbarities. He abides the contradiction of a body that despises books but uses the same literacy to propagate its sovereignty.

    He spoke inelegantly with the Adamawa fellow in the sham of a national confab, who threatened to go away with northern Nigeria to join his neighbours. Boro took him seriously because he appeared to him in his dream.

    Did we not see Boro when Yar’Adua was sick? Boro thwacked and flared all over Abuja and ignited the nation to give the top seat to an Ijaw son. Once he got there, he made sure the Ijaw son would not be a tower of grace. Rather he planted a seed like Boko Haram to germinate and sprout into a monstrous bower. Under the same son, we know that it is not about differing tongues alone that we bicker but also over differing gods. One God is better than the other, and it does not matter the humanity, the wisdom of their worshippers.

    But then, we have seen Boro in the land of Oduduwa. They now call for regionalism. They want to be their own law and their own grace. Boro is holding sway. His is arming Boko Haram as he armed the militants of Niger Delta and the OPC and the MASSOB. No one should wonder how the arms get into the country. They come in spirit.

    Boro may be no one’s hero. He did not walk his talk. But he is us, groveling in self-deceit today. We abide the lies. That is why he is not lying in state. He is flying in our face and instructing us. He is like the ghost in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, who says, “I am thy father’s spirit, Doomed for a certain term to walk the night, And for the day confined to fast in fires, Till the foul crimes done in my days of nature, Are burnt and purged away. But that I am forbid, To tell the secrets of my prison house, I could a tale unfold whose lightest word, Would harrow up thy soul, freeze thy young blood…”

    Boro’s prison house is us, and we must shed ourselves of the hypocrisy before we can fly out of the cage. Then he can truly be buried and forgotten.

  • ‘Southeast deserves another state’

    ‘Southeast deserves another state’

    Former governor of Ebonyi State and a delegate at the National Conference, Dr Sam Egwu spoke, in this interview with OGOCHUKWU ANIOKE, on various issues, including the propriety of the confab and the agitation for a sixth state in the Southeast. Excerpts:

    ON National Conference

    The National Conference, like you know, has been very controversial whether it will be or it will not be but I thank God that Mr President thought it wise to convoke the  conference for people to sit down to talk because it has always been said that it is better to talk than to war.

    Nigeria is overdue for this type of discussion. Remember the Igbos that is the Southeast started this request for this discussion under the Aburi Accord. And prominent Nigerians went to Ghana and it was agreed that we will sit down and talk so that the people will air their grievances especially the people of the southeast, the Igbos.

    At that time other nationalities started their own agitations. The Southsouth started, the Southwest started, the North started and it became so confusing. But this was what the Igbos started agitating for a long time ago.

    And like in a family where people are disgruntled, people are annoyed; it is always good for them to come together and find a lasting solution to the problems. If we agree that we want to stay together as a country, there is need to sit down together, all the nationalities and this is a country that has more than 250 ethnic nationalities.

    And they all have their different problems, issues and we want to move forward, we have to hear ourselves and try to accommodate ourselves for the country to move up. In the very first place, this a very good thing the President Goodluck Jonathan has done.

    Before, it was like we were going to box ourselves but now we are understanding ourselves, everybody is settling down and we are hearing ourselves and I think at the end of the day, we will come out with something that will be acceptable by everybody.

    If you listened to the President’s speech, he said that at the end of the day, our decision will go to referendum and that he is happy that the National Assembly is also working towards that. So there is no way you will go for referendum without National Assembly.

    Additional state for the Southeast

    After discussing Mr President’s speech, we went into committees and incidentally I am in the committee of restructuring of the politics and government. And this is a very important committee.

    And there, we discussed whether we are going to be a federation or confederation.

    And generally, we said we want to be a federation unit and one major issue that concerns the Southeast is the issue of creating an additional state in the region to remove that imbalance which everybody acknowledges.

    If in every zone, we have six states and the highest has seven, why should the Southeast have five states as a zone?

    The southeast came out with their own position, saying they believe in zonal arrangement. And they have very good reasons for that. The reasons are that if things are shared on the zonal basis we are now sure that nobody is shortchanged.

    Whatever you want to do with your own, you do; if you want to create 10 states, you do; if you want to create 20 states, you create, we have the same amount. Others, if you want to merge your states, you merge. At least one thing is sure that there is equal distribution.

    However, within the Southeast caucus, we said that Ebonyi differs from other states in the southeast, the reason being that we told them our position that under the East Central State or even down to Enugu, Anambra states, many parts of our state suffered serious marginalisation and parts of Abia state also suffered this marginalisation.

    For us, our state was like an independent state for the first time. That is when we started having what we never had for the first time. Why we agree that regional arrangement is good, in our own peculiar situation, we will prefer states to be a federating unit.

    The implication is that if you make a zone a federating unit, ie the centre and the zone, it means that in terms of allocation, the Federal Government will take their own allocation and they give to zone.

    When Ebonyi was created, we were among the Igbo states that are least developed, educationally backward. To us it was a very pathetic situation. For us it was when we got our state that we now because of our free education which I initiated, which the current governor continued, we started having the number of graduates, we started having professionals we never had before.

    We started being like others. When I enumerated the story of our position, Enugu immediately said they were no more following the regional agitation; they are now following Ebonyi for Centre and States.

    So the entire committee agreed that it is better to have a centre and states. However, when they asked other delegates in that committee, Peter Odili is from Southsouth and all members from the zone said they preferred states. So it was a national issue.

    The whole Northern states said they are not for a region or zone. So, our position was popular at the end of the day. While we were at the zonal level, we were like a minority, at the national level we carried the day.

    Then on the issue of making the states a federating unit, so money will now come to us directly. Remember there was a time in this country when all the schools in the Southeast were on strike because of Labour, Ebonyi was the only state working because I paid our workers. Ebonyi had the highest salary for workers under the Minimum Wage. Remember, I gave Ebonyi the highest. And when others were on strike, Ebonyi was busy going to school because of our peculiarity and many other examples.

    Federal Government’s partnership with US and other country’s against insurgency

    It is long overdue. The truth of the matter is that we have to tell ourselves the truth. We should be able to acknowledge our sufficiency and insufficiency at every particular point in time. Nigeria because of our population has gone to the level where our population has outgrown our facilities.

    And subsequent governments have not been able to address these issues. This did not start with Jonathan. It is something that started many years ago. And it is not just in one sector. We are saying insecurity because of its prevalence rate. In the education sector, it is also there. That is why you see, JAMB for instance, we have more than one million candidates every year but at the end of the year, we can only admit 15% or highest 20 %.

    We don’t have the school facility to absolve all of these people. And what happens to the other 80%? The facilities, schools, infrastructures we have are not enough to cope with the massive population of people we have. The same in the health sector. And in the military, it is the same thing.

    Incidentally and unfortunately, the previous governments have not taken time to address these issues. They have not planned ahead to know that with our country coming up with population explosion, we need to plan ahead on these issues on the education, health, military.

    Many other countries have done that. We are interested in politics. The problem has now overwhelmed us. And that is why I say that we should acknowledge that as a country we have failed in trying to address these issues that are presently confronting us.

    And if we have not been able to confront them, to address them adequately, what we could do is to address it is to have two approaches to it. Short term plan and long term plan. Short term plan is under the current situation, get to governments or countries that have had similar situations that have been able to overcome it or have the technologies to handle it.

    In the long term, why they are here, try to see what we will be able to do to handle the situations when they leave. And what you do is massive employment and recruitment. I have gone to many countries, when I look at our soldiers, the number of people we have today, I always ask, can we adequately say at a time of serious war that we have enough men?

    This is population. We are talking of equipment and training. Israel is a small country bordered by hostile Arab countries but they are able to contain them not by their number but they have their technology where the stay in a particular place and monitor their entire boundaries with a satellite.

    Why we called these people to come and help, we should put efforts so that by the time they would have finished, we must have been  able to make do with the training they must given to us and our massive employment.

    A lot of our people are roaming around the street and we are in the state of war, for Christ sake, whether you like it or not. What we should do is massive employment or conscription. Let our young boys, graduates be recruited into the Army to avoid roaming about, they can be of help to Nigeria.

    The amount of money we spend in politics is not worth it at all. Let’s face our security, health, education. The current position of the President accepting foreign assistance is in right direction. You don’t fight modern war with the kind of technologies we have.

  • ‘Comply with cash-less policy or lose subventions’

    The Ogun State government has warned that any government-owned tertiary institution which fails to adhere to the cash-less policy will, henceforth, lose its subvention.

    At its weekly State Executive Council meeting on Monday, the government said full compliance with the state government’s cash-less policy by the institutions would be a pre-condition for the release of government’s subvention due to it, according to the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Alhaji Yusuph Olaniyonu.

    In a statement in Abeokuta, Olaniyonu said: “Any state government-owned tertiary institution found to have wilfully contravened the cash-less policy of the state government shall forfeit the subvention due it for the period of non-compliance, with immediate effect.”

    The decision, Olaniyonu said, became necessary because of the wilful circumvention of the policy by some institutions, which if left unchecked, have dire consequences. He revealed that the state government, which spends N600 million monthly (N7.2 billion per year) on subventions to its tertiary institutions had in September 1, 2012 started the cash-less policy for revenue collection in all the institutions, adding that “to date, all the 11 tertiary institutions had complied as compliance is a pre-condition for the continued receipt of subvention.

    “The thrust of the cashless policy is not just to account for revenue collected and block all leakages, but more importantly, to assist the state Ministry of Finance in developing an accurate and sustainable financial model for each tertiary institution. Under the policy, all revenue items of the tertiary institutions are to be collected and accounted for using an electronic platform.

    “The implementation of the policy in all tertiary institutions of government has resulted in unprecedented increase in the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) of the tertiary institutions covered. The IGR rose from N4, 363,806,432 in Year 2012 to N8,221,001,069 in 2013, representing 88.5 per cent increase as a result of the reform,” Olaniyonu stated.

    Aside facilitating budgetary planning, cash-less policy, Olaniyonu noted that the implementation has afforded management of tertiary institutions prompt access to automated funds for speedy project execution on campuses and control over students admission and management.

     

  • Lagos criminalises land fraud, rogue agents

    Lagos criminalises land fraud, rogue agents

    Lagos State Government has amended its criminal law proceedings by adding fraud involving land transaction as a criminal offence.

    The State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Ade Ipaye said before now, the law stated that land cannot be stolen, development which aided unscrupulous people, especially rogue estate agents to hide under it to sell third party properties.

    He spoke at the launch of the “Code of Conduct of Estate Agency Practice in Lagos State” by the Lagos State Real Estate Agent Transaction Department (LASRETRAD).

    He said the state has changed the definition of property that can be stolen.

    He said: “The law before now stated that you cannot steal property, but now our law says you can steal land because we have changed the definition of property that can be stolen. Now land grabbing and fraudulent estate agency practice is priority in the criminal justice.”

    He added that the state has zero tolerance for fraudulent workers, especially in the Ministries of Land, Housing and Judiciary who aid and abet criminals outside in landed matters.

    “We will want to use them to set example of how committed we are to checking fraudulent cases in landed property in the state,” he said.

    Ipaye also said under the state new criminal law, assault, manslaughter, murder and grievous bodily harm are all criminal offences because people commit them in land grabbing. The attorney- general urged the police to partner with the state, saying they have a basis to interfere in the matter unlike before.

    “The Police must be ready now to give us the case file as the need arises,” he added.

    He said part of the new rules is that a registered agent transacting business in the state must have a registered office, underscoring the zero tolerance for portfolio agents who dupe people and quickly change base.

    He said an agent must maintain a record of his or her business and ensure that a prospective tenant or purchaser takes physical possession of the property paid for within 14 days except otherwise stated in writing.

    He added that the agent should also ensure that his principal performs all necessary obligations due to the government under applicable legislation and regulation.

    On standards of professional conduct, he maintained that a registered agent must comply with the fiduciary obligations to his or her client arising as an agent. He must not mislead a customer or client, nor provide false information, or withhold information that by law or fairness be provided to a principal.

    He must also ensure that the principal is informed of any significant potential risk so that the principal can seek expert advice if he chooses.