Tag: The Nation newspaper

  • Dangote, Arewa and the multi-billionaire truth

    It is not exactly new talk; the news is that it came from the lips of Aliko Dangote, thus breaking the age-old culture of silence.

    Summoning a moral courage rare among the elite, the Forbes-certified richest black man came down hard on northern governors while lamenting the clear and present danger extreme poverty poses to his native Arewaland.

    Speaking at the fourth edition of the Kaduna Investment Summit (KadInvest 4.0) in Kaduna last week, Dangote wondered why a region endowed with vast land that should have been exploited to drive agrarian revolution is, instead, wallowing in abject misery.

    His words: “It is instructive to know that the 19 Northern states which account for over 54 percent of Nigeria’s population and 70 percent of its landmass collectively generated only 21 percent of the total subnational IGR in the year 2017. Northern Nigeria will continue to fall behind if the respective state governments do not move to close the development gap.”

    The severity of the reality Dangote speaks to is perhaps better appreciated when juxtaposed with the existing classification of Nigeria as the world’s poverty headquarters. The Arewa situation could only be described as something worse than grim therefore if the broader picture of the nation seen from outside had already been termed beggarly.

    As he put it: “Nigeria is ranked at 157th out of 189 countries on the human development index. While the overall socio-economic condition in the country is a cause for concern, the regional disparities are in fact very alarming. In the North Western and North Eastern parts of Nigeria, more than 60 percent of the population lives in extreme poverty.”

    Indeed, the symptoms are visible in Boko Haram, abysmal literacy level, decrepit healthcare system, exploding Almajiri population and lately widespread drug abuse.

    Unless drastic measures are adopted to reverse the trend, one does not need to be a sociologist to know that the region’s preponderant poor are condemned to perpetuate the dynasty of poverty. According to reports, the North-west has 77.7% of its population living in relative poverty while the North-east comes second with 76.3% and the North-central 67.5%.

    Read Also: Dangote to boost local refining to 1.095m

    Dangote’s candid words in Kaduna are a reminder of the melodrama in Abuja last year when visiting Bill Gates cast diplomatese aside before a much wider audience and decided to shock his hosts with bitter hometruth.

    Decrying what he saw as a misalignment in government’s spending and the people’s needs as reflected by the economic blueprint unveiled, the world’s second richest man gave it straight to the special session of the National Economic Council led by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. To achieve sustainable growth, he counseled that investments in infrastructure must go hand in hand with human capital development. According to him, building roads, ports and factories without skilled workers to manage them cannot sustain an economy.

    Of course, no one could accuse sexagenarian Gates of mischief or insolence. Through Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the American billlionaire and philanthropist has shelled out more than $6 billion of his personal fortune fighting polio and other charity causes in Nigeria since 2006.

    Taken together, if there is any lesson to be learnt from the cold statistics reeled out by Dangote it is undoubtedly another sad reminder of the curse of rent-seeking. On top of the over-abundance of natural resources, the nineteen states of the north collectively get the bigger share of the national cake monthly. But this hardly translates to prosperity for the generality of the people other than oiling a feudal system that nourishes a tiny few and immiserates the vast majority.

    Indeed, philosophers and scholars had long diagnosed cancer afflicting the north; what remains is the will of the political leadership to effect the prescriptions outlined. Central to a sustainable recovery strategy will be education and re-education, as well as the pursuit of an economic rehabilitation and reconstruction through agriculture.

    For instance, Boko Haram and the festering Almajiri culture are fruits of cultivated ignorance. So, the sort of education Arewa kids need at this age is the type that truly liberates the mind, purges the mind of undue suspicion and channels their creative energies in the right direction.

    In Kaduna, it is reassuring that Governor Nasir El-Rufai is leading the way by taking sometimes draconian but necessary measures to change the story in the acclaimed political capital of the north by insisting that only qualified teachers remain in the classrooms to teach the pupils the right ideas.

    But there is also need to be broad-minded to receive offer of genuine help from outside. For instance, an otherwise patriotic initiative, though token, by Bishop Hassan Kukah to help address the issue of Almajiri by persuading them off the streets and enrolling them in free schools has received the harshest criticism from bodies quick to read religious motives to it. But while in a hurry to shoot down the idea obviously to protect their sectarian turf, such critics fail to offer a viable alternative to curbing the social menace.

    While the Almajiris today offer ready recruitment ground for thuggery for unscrupulous politicians, let it be acknowledged that the original incarnation was innocent. The word, Almajiri, derives from the Arabic word “Al-muhaajirun”. It describes a learned “ulama” who propagates the peaceful cause of Islam.

    But the concept has since been bastardized to also become the by-word for child begging/destitution and potential recruits for the terror enterprise.

    With its vast land resource, the Arewa states have the comparative advantage to engage not only in growing but also processing agricultural products. A partnership between Lagos and Kebbi States two years ago created the LAKE rice. With collaboration among the governors of states like Sokoto, Kebbi, Niger, Zamfara, Jigawa and Kano, the envisaged economic turnaround of the region can, in fact, be catalyzed by harmonising policies and programmes to fully exploit their huge rice potentials, incorporating the Fadama for mechanised production.

    The time has come for the political leadership of the north to incentivize the migration of the Almajiri back to their respective communities rather than allow them to continue to loiter around the cities. Of course, no one should stop them from professed desire to study the Qur’an. But they should also be made to understand that nothing stops them from being gainfully employed on the farms on the side.

  • Saraki: Education crucial for peace, security, rule of Law

    President of the Senate, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, has reiterated the importance of education in ensuring peace, security and rule of law in any society.

    Saraki, stated this while contributing to the General Debate on the theme: “Parliaments as Platforms to Enhance Education for Peace, Security and the Rule of Law” at the ongoing 140th General Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) in Doha, Qatar.

    He noted that “education is a fundamental human right – central to the development of citizens as well as what contributions they make to society,” according to a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Sanni Onogu.

    Read Also: Lift visa ban on Nigerians, Saraki begs Qatar

    He added that the National Assembly holds strongly that with the right education, Nigerian youths would be less susceptible to the radicalising influence of terrorist groups and other societal ills, thereby “helping to birth a more peaceful, secure and just society.”

    He however regretted that the security challenges confronting the country today are traceable to – or exacerbated by – challenges in the nation’s education sector.

    He however stated that even though Nigeria has about 13.2 million Out-of-School-Children – the highest in the world – according to the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), the 8th National Assembly has and would continue to work with the Federal Government to address the shortfall with combined strategies to enhance peace, security and the rule of law in the country.

    Saraki said: “De-radicalisation programmes for former militants or insurgents have a strong education component, and these have proven very effective for peace-building and security.

    “The Presidential Amnesty Programme for ex-Niger Delta militants involved free local and international tertiary education for former combatants. This is in recognition of the fact that education reduces youth restiveness, which in turn promotes peace.

  • Maritime security: Navy takes delivery of new equipment

    The Nigerian Navy on Monday said it had procured new equipment and embarked on fleet overhaul to adequately safeguard the maritime domain.

    Commander Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) BEECROFT Rear Admiral Okon Eyo stated this while inaugurating some projects including renovated blocks of classroom at the NN Primary School, Okokomaiko and some offices at the base’s headquarters in Apapa.

    According to Eyo, the base has undertaken no fewer than 50 projects in one year mostly geared towards improved maritime security and enhancing the welfare of personnel.

    He said: “The base has unfortunately been living in deficit of some of the crucial inputs. For instance, as a key requirement of a complete army, this base in its status as a brigade had no functional band.

    “Its expanse was in the main replete with worn out colonial structures, badly in need of dressing; the waterfront severely restricted by widespread wrecks.

    “Most of the available offices were at states of disrepair and needed urgent rehabilitation. The base’s welfare outlets were also similarly affected and this situation had the potential of negatively affecting the administration of personnel and undermining operation.”

    He charged beneficiaries of the inaugurated projects to use them responsibly, maintain the equipment and derive maxi

  • Why I want to go to Senate by Okorocha

    Imo State governor, Rochas Okorocha, Monday gave hint why he wants to go to National Assembly as Senator representing Imo West Senatorial zone.

    He said that he wants to build a strong political bring between the Southeast and other geopolitical zones of the country.

    The governor also hinted that he would pursue the policy of Free Education at the National Assembly “so that the children of the poorest in the society would have hope of survival in Nigeria”.

    According to him, “I also want to use the opportunity in the Senate to rebuild the Political Bridge that has linked the South East with the rest of Nigerians. The Political Bridge is somehow faulty and it is dutifully incumbent on me to rebuild this bridge so that Igbos will play a recognized role in the Politics of the Federal Republic of Nigeria”.

    Read Also: Okorocha inaugurates boards, parastatals

    He continued that “I am going to the Senate to promote the course of ordinary Nigerians. These are some of the things I am going to the Senate to do. Otherwise, I have no business there”.

    Governor Okorocha who spoke when he received the new Commander, 34 Field Artillery Brigade (FAB) Obinze Brigadier-General Yusuf Tukura when he came on Courtesy Call at the Government House Owerri, also disclosed that he is leaving behind a viable and secured State.

    He said  that his administration in the State from 2011 to 2019 saw the disappearance of kidnapping, armed robbery, ritual killings, baby factories, militancy and other organized crimes in the State, adding that he would not be happy to hear that these crimes are back to the State when he has left.

    He said “We have enjoyed a very good working relationship with all the past Army Commanders and we are hopeful it will continue. Imo is a peaceful State. It was made peaceful through the efforts of the rescue mission government, in partnership with other Security Agencies in the State.

    “The transformation you have seen in Imo State eight years down the line is as a result of Sacrifice. A leader who does not make sacrifices has no business with leadership. What you are seeing in Imo is a product of sacrifice. Sacrifice of self, Sacrifice of Comfort and personality, denial of yourself who you are, that you might serve your people well”.

  • World Bank cuts sub-Saharan Africa’s growth forecast

    The World Bank on Monday cut its growth forecast for sub-Saharan Africa this year to 2.8 per cent from an initial 3.3 per cent.

    The commodity price slump of 2015 cut short a decade of rapid growth for the region, and the bank said growth would take longer to recover as a decline in industrial production and a trade dispute between China and the United States (U.S.) take their toll.

    The bank’s 2019 forecast means economic growth will lag population growth for the fourth year in a row and it will remain stuck below three per cent, which it slipped to in 2015.

    In its latest report on the regional economy, the bank also cut its 2018 growth estimate to 2.3 per cent from last October’s prediction of 2.7 per cent growth for last year.

    “The slower-than-expected overall growth reflects ongoing global uncertainty, but increasingly comes from domestic macroeconomic instability including poorly managed debt, inflation and deficits,” the bank said.

    Nigeria, South Africa and Angola, which make up about 60 per cent of sub-Saharan Africa’s annual economic output, were all facing various challenges, curbing their contribution to the growth momentum, the bank said.

    “This downward revision reflects slower growth in Nigeria and Angola, due to challenges in the oil sector, and subdued investment growth in South Africa, due to low business confidence,” it said.

    Read Also: World Bank names David Malpass 13th President

    Nigeria’s economy grew by an estimated 1.9 per cent last year, up from 0.8 per cent the previous year, the World Bank said, reflecting a modest pick-up in the non-oil sector.

    South Africa came out of recession in the third quarter of last year but investors were still cautious due to policy uncertainty, the bank said.

    In the meantime Angola, the region’s third-biggest economy, remained stuck in recession, as oil production remained weak.

    High inflation and heavy debt loads discouraged investors in economies like Zambia and Liberia, hitting their growth prospects, the World Bank said.

    Economies that do not depend on commodities like Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Benin and Ivory Coast, continued to grow strongly, the bank said in the report.

    Albert Zeufack, the chief economist for Africa at the bank, said the region could boost annual growth by about nearly two percentage points if it harnesses information technology more effectively. “This is a game-changer for Africa,” he said.

  • Social cost of gridlock

    The Lagos Waste Management Authority’s (LAWMA) stringent alarm, on the virtual collapse of the environment in Apapa, Lagos, is dire – but hardly news: “Our findings showed a general degradation of the environment in the area and a looming epidemic, if the situation is not quickly addressed,” the body warned in a release.

    “Owing to this situation,” LAWMA continued, “LAWMA sweepers cannot work efficiently there; people bathe and defecate on the road, thus wearing out the asphalt. The roads have also been turned into mechanic workshops where major repairs of heavy trucks are carried out, spilling engine oil and diesel on same road.”

    These indeed are a dire report on the Apapa environment. It also shows how one out of many urban mixes – a traffic gridlock – could, not only mess up the environment almost beyond repair, but also exact terrible social costs, leading to needless deaths and trauma. What LAWMA didn’t capture was the possibility of the collapse of bridges and flyovers, labouring under the excessive weight of parked trucks, since those facilities were not configured to withstand dead weights.

    Everyone knew this was disaster brewing, before our very eyes. Yet, everyone feigned helplessness. It is time to move against this clear and present danger before it turns children into orphans, wives into widows, husbands into widowers; and further degrades the Nigerian common humanity.

    The root cause clearly is the long queue of tankers and allied articulated trucks, on business shuttles to the ports, either to disgorge exports or bear imports further inland.  The first problem here is the over-utilisation of the two Lagos Ports, at Apapa and nearby Tin Can Island, to the operational detriment of other sea and river ports in the country: Warri, Port Harcourt, Onitsha, Lokoja, etc. Though this can only be corrected in the long run, efforts at diversifying port services in the country deserve urgent attention.

    Read also: FG to deliver Apapa truck park this month

    Then, there is the devil-may-care outlawry of these tanker drivers, who seize any track of available land as emergency parking lot, including bridges and flyovers. It is the dire manifestation of the Nigerian’s contempt for safety, and the legendary penchant to bait disaster, only to wail uncontrollably when the inevitable happens. Because these drivers, and their support staff, park just anywhere, they block off, for days and weeks, some significant part of traffic.  That increases the stress on Lagos road, with its signal traffic gridlock. But being hooked in a place for days, without access to toilet facilities, inevitably results in the environmental hell LAWMA is crying about.

    Double trouble for LAWMA: though it is charged with clearing urban refuse and managing general waste, the big trucks hamper its own compactors from accessing Apapa. So, while the trailers choke up the road, and their drivers foul up the environment, yet LAWMA is barred from doing its job of clearing these wastes. With Lagos over-population, and the jaunts to Apapa by those hustling for daily bread in the maritime sector, the environment is fast degraded – with putative disastrous consequences.

    That is why the federal and Lagos State governments must put heads together to chart an emergency to clear these trucks from Apapa and environs; and enforce the orderly access of these trucks to the ports, only when they are sure they would be attended to.  If anyone must park to wait, space should be found outside that area; and adequate technology can be used to prompt the drivers to move to the ports, only when the port is ready for them. If this emergency is not imposed fast, a needless epidemic may well consume lives in that blighted area.

    However, the ultimate solution is the integration of rail into Nigerian ports.  That way, the bulk of the egress or ingress would be by rail. That is another good reason the Buhari presidency must accelerate its rail modernisation programme.

  • Offa robbery: ‘Wounds on suspects’ legs not caused by gunshots’

    The doctor in charge of medical welfare of inmates at the Kwara State Prisons Command, Olaleye Paul Olasunkanmi, yesterday told an Ilorin High Court trying the Offa robbery suspects that the report of the medical examination on the suspects did not show that the wounds on their legs were as a result of gunshots.

    But the court admitted in evidence the medical examination report on the wounds allegedly inflicted on the suspects during their interrogation by the police.

    The examination was conducted by Dr. Obiora Adunichukwu.

    The suspects are Ayoade Akinnibosun, Ibikunle Ogunleye, Adeola Abraham, Salahudeen Azeez and Niyi Ogundiran.

    At the resumed hearing of trial- within-trial, Olasunkanmi presented the medical examination report before the court.

    He said during the cross-examination that the instrument used in the hospital could not tell the date the injuries occurred.

    Olasunkanmi said the fracture seen on the X-ray film showed that the fracture was there in the past and was caused by metallic object.

    “I am satisfied with the medical examination presented to court despite not being the writer. The author followed due process which has provided answer to the needs of the court.

    “I have informed the court that the date cannot be told by our instrument and the injuries are caused by trauma.

    Led in evidence by the prosecutor, Yusuf Beki, Olasunkanmi testified that there was no place where gunshot was mentioned in the report.

    In his response, the defence counsel, Mathias Emeribe, prayed the court to allow further examination of the cause of the wounds on the legs of the suspects by a ballistician.

    He said since the court was after dispensing justice on the matter, the assistance of the ballistician in the matter was necessary.

    Responding, the prosecutor, Yusuf Beki, said the submission of the defence counsel was not valid in the case and urged the court to discountenance it.

    He said a ballistician cannot determine the cause of wounds, adding that ballisticians don’t work in the hospital.

    Beki added that ballisticians only determine the various forms of guns.

    The trial judge, Justice Haleeman Salman, in his short ruling, dismissed the submission of the defence counsel, saying the Chief Medical Director of the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital (UITH) has no authority to order a ballistic examination of the wounds on the suspects’ legs.

    “This is outside the power of the CMD of UITH and I agree with this. This application is tantamount to attempts to delay the dispensation of this case. The application is hereby dismissed,” the judge ruled.

    During the continuation of proper hearing of the case after a short adjournment, the defence counsel further submitted that the combined effects of the prolonged detention of the accused spanning six months without arraignment “as facts can show is enough torture itself, which goes against constitutional provisions.

    Read also: Offa robbery: Senator-elect urges unity, prayers one year after

    “The implications of this weaken the accused emotionally; the prosecution cannot precisely tell when the accused were arrested or taken to Abuja. This leaves us with no option but to conclude that the prosecution was lying.

    “There is no medical report to show that Michael Adikwu died of natural causes. This shows that the prosecution is lying. There is a consistent story line by the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and fifth accused that from the day of their arrest they have been under torture.

    “In the light of all this fact, it is difficult to conclude that whatever statement wherever it was obtained, provided it occurred during the currency under the custody of the police, was never voluntary. It was a statement that was given to stay alive.”

    The defence counsel further argued that the contents of the medical report earlier tendered and admitted in evidence by the court “gives credence to the story line that the (accused persons’) confessional statement was obtained under duress and that the crux of the matter that makes the admissibility of the confessional statements impossible.”

    Responding, Beki said the medical examination report showed that “the evidence of the prosecution witness in the trial- within- trial is credible, having not been discredited in any way. I urge the court to admit the evidence of prosecution witness.

    “Metallic is not same as bullet pellet. The doctor said if it were to be gunshot despite being healed, it would have shown. We urge Your Lordship to admit these statements.”

    Justice Salman, however, adjourned ruling on the admissibility of the accused confessional statement to a later date.

    She adjourned continuation of hearing till May 2.

  • Obiano celebrates arrest of most wanted murder suspect

    Anambra State Government yesterday celebrated the arrest and prosecution of the most wanted murder suspect, Ikechukwu Udensi, (aka Ikanda).

    The suspect was declared wanted last year after he allegedly killed a 38-year-old graduate businessman, Ndubuisi Nwokolo, in June, in Onitsha.

    Governor Willie Obiano, in a statement yesterday in Awka, hailed the new police commissioner, Mustapha Dandaura, for the feat.

    In the statement, made available to reporters by Information and Public Enlightenment Commissioner Mr. Don Adinuba, he said there was more work to do by the command.

    Read also: We’re losing great men difficult to replace – Obiano

    The statement said Obiano had written to the police commissioner to express satisfaction about how officers in Onitsha acted on a tip-off and arrested Udensi, who was at a secret location waiting for his agents collecting revenues illegally, to bring him money.

    “The governor has been studying the strategy the command used to arrest this person on whom the government placed N1million bounty since last year for the callous manner in which Nwokolo’s life was ended last June.

    “Obiano is impressed that immediately Udensi was arrested, he was taken to court, to avoid legal loopholes.

    “The arrest and quick prosecution of Udensi show that the new police boss is here to work for the people and has bought into the government’s development agenda, which makes security of life and property the first cardinal objective of the present administration.

    “We recognise the importance of security in our socio-economic development architecture,” Obiano said in his letter to Dandaura.

  • Police nab man with ‘human parts‘

    The police in Ekiti State have arrested a man simply identified as Nifemi, for allegedly going about with human parts.

    Nifemi, 23, was nabbed last Saturday at Ijero-Ekiti during a stop and search.

    An eye witness, who craved anonymity, told reporters in Ado-Ekiti yesterday that the suspect was held while going to Okemesi-Ekiti with the hands of a human being.

    The source said the young man reportedly kept the human parts in a polythene bag and was apprehended on Ijero-Ikoro road while heading for Okemesi to sell the parts to customers.

    Read also: Police urged to protect rights

    “When quizzed by the police, the man said he got the two hands at Asa farmstead, near Okemesi and brought them to Ijero.

    “He told the police that he wanted to take the human parts to Okemesi to sell to some people,” the source added.

    Before the arrest, the police in Ijero Division had tightened security across the local government, following a tip-off by the public that robbers were planning to invade the area.

    Police spokesman Caleb Ikechukwu confirmed the arrest.

    He said investigations had begun.

  • Police declare teacher wanted for ‘sodomising’ pupils

    A teacher at a private school in Ogun State has been declared wanted for alleged sodomy on many pupils within ages nine and 11.

    The teacher, Adebayo Gbadebo, was said to have fled last week after his alleged crimes at Isolog School, Agbole in Akute, were uncovered.

    Although his last attempt was said to have been a fortnight ago, The Nation gathered that the suspect was declared wanted when some child advocates reported the case to the police.

    Gbadebo’s alleged atrocities were exposed by a parent of one of his victims identified as Daniel, who is said to have developed a severe medical condition as a result of the anal rape.

    It was learnt that the child’s parents knew about the incident after he allegedly sodomised another child.

    When the school learnt about it, it was gathered that the head teacher, Mrs. Rachael Oduntun, allegedly fired Gbadebo without reporting the crime to the police.

    The school was said to have also administered drugs on the victims without their parents knowing, just as it allegedly threatened workers and pupils not to discuss it with anyone or risk sack.

    “These pupils have been taken to hospital for medical examination. One of the victims, aged nine, has been diagnosed with a severe condition. Her anal nerves have been damaged, which causes her to pass urine and faeces uncontrollably.

    “It was discovered that Gbadebo started abusing her sexually when she was six-years-old, while he molested other victims from Basic Five.

    Read also: Police nab man with ‘human parts‘

    “His wife has reported him for sexually abusing a kid in their neighbourhood. The man is a serial rapist and needs to be imprisoned before he goes about hurting other children,” said a source who pleaded anonymity.

    Confirming the manhunt for the suspect, command spokesman Abimbola Oyeyemi, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), said it was unfortunate the school fired him without reporting the crime.

    He said the school proprietor and headteacher had been ordered to produce the suspect.

    “They claimed they do not know his whereabouts and that they fired him when they knew about it. The police were not informed, until the NGO came into the picture. The proprietor and the principal were invited for their statement. After that, they were asked to produce the suspect within a given time,” he said.