Tag: The Nation newspaper

  • Oyo PDP accuses Ajimobi of laying ‘economic landmine for Makinde’

    THE Oyo State People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has described the steps being taken by outgoing Governor Abiola Ajimobi led-administration as calculated to lay political and economic landmine for the governor-elect, Seyi Makinde.

    Saying the victory handed the PDP in the just concluded 2019 election as historical and comparable to Arab Spring in the Middle East, the party said it has resolved to treat governance in the next four years with all sense of due diligence and seriousness.

    In a statement issued by the state PDP Publicity Secretary, Akeem Olatunji in Ibadan yesterday, the party accused the outgoing APC government of looting the treasury under the watchful eyes of the state officials, especially Ajimobi, the 68 local councils and local council development areas (LCDAs) chairmen and local governments’ director of works.

    It said just within the last six months, a minimum of N19 billion was misappropriated from the 33 local governments’ Excess Crude account without recourse to laid down rules and procedure.

    The statement added that the “government hurriedly awarded over N30 billion frivolous contracts” after the outgoing governor’s candidate lost the gubernatorial election to PDP.

    “If truly Governor Ajimobi and APC is desirous of progress, development and wellbeing of Oyo State people, he should have limited his outgoing government to resolving the financial challenges facing the six state owned tertiary institutions, including Ladoke Akintola University in Ogbomosho, completion of ongoing projects, paying backlogs of salary arrears to pensioners and civil servants and most importantly, clear about N300 billion debt his administration incurred in the last eight years.

    “Juxtaposing the above scenario with suit filed by the APC gubernatorial candidate, Chief Bayo Adelabu, against the overwhelming victory of Seyi Makinde of PDP, it is evident that the reason for the frivolous awards of contracts and post-election litigation is to bogged down the incoming Makinde-led PDP administration and deprive the state of much-needed development gear to take our people out of the miserable poverty level they have been subjected to in the last eight years.

    “If indeed the outgoing government and APC are committed to serve Oyo State people, we expect them to extend hands of friendship to the incoming PDP government by reversing all secret employments and contracts awarded immediately after the election was lost and won. APC should also accept their loss at the poll as the final verdict of the almighty electorates, who have decided in their own wisdom to give PDP candidate a clear lead in 28 out of 33 local governments’ election results, “the party said.

    Read also: Adelabu, APC challenge Makinde’s victory

    When contacted, the state All Progressive Congress (APC) spokesperson, Dr.  AbdulAzeez Olatunde faulted the PDP allegations, describing them as baseless and unfounded.

    He said it was saddening that the PDP is still in campaign mood and could not put on its thinking cap and be strategising on what to make of the mandate given them by the electorate.

    He reminded the  PDP that in 2011, the then Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) that won Oyo State gubernatorial election did not begin governance until May 29, 2011,  adding that the assets and liabilities of government inherited were faced headlong.

    “Like the earlier post, the life of this current government will only expires on May 28, 2019,” he stated.

    Dr. AbdulAzeez rhetorical asked the incoming PDP government to make their findings properly about the last-minute employments, which the PDP made in 2011 at both the state and local government levels, and whether the CAN asked for their reversal.

    “No, we didn’t. In fact, our government employed more hands. And if there is any sector that needed more before the life-span of this government, is PDP asking the government to go on holiday, which is anti-people you promised to serve?

    “In APC government, there is no secret employment. If that is the stock in trade of PDP, the APC government has since corrected that. That is why the YES-O Cadets and virtually all government employments were made open through online processing.

    “Over 200 trade groups and artisans have been empowered by this government with over N2 billion revolving loans and over 320 tractors purchased for agricultural intervention in Oyo State, the first state government to acquire such hefty figure.

    “We would have ignored the advice of the PDP to APC on litigation filed on the gubernatorial election, however, they should tell us why the PDP/ Zenith Labour Party (ZLP), former Accord Party candidate, High Chief Rashidi Ladoja went to court in 2015 and why is PDP presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar in court for their lost elections. Honestly, PDP is an expired party, replete with strange ideological hypocrites.

    “ACN government of Ajimobi met debts and paid those he could and God sparing our lives till 2023, I will love to remind the public the debt the PDP government would be leaving behind,” Olatunde said.

  • Itemuagbor celebrates Oshiomhole at 67

    The promoter of the first International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) label road race in West Africa, Mike Itemuagbor has congratulated Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, the immediate past governor of Edo state as he clocks 67 years today.

    Itemuagbor, in a congratulatory message, praised Comrade Oshiomhole for providing the enabling environment that gave birth to the first internationally recognised road race not only in Nigeria but in the whole of West Africa.

    He recounted how Comrade Oshiomhole and the current governor of Edo state, Godwin Obaseki embraced the idea of a 10km road race to project Okpekpe town in particular, Edo state and Nigeria in general as an international sporting destination.

    ”We are delighted that you made Edo state the first state in Nigeria to host an international athletics event that is recognised by the world governing body for the sport. With your unconditional support Okpekpe race became the first road race in West Africa to be granted a label status by the IAAF,” Itemuagbor further wrote.

    ”As we all know, IAAF Road Race Label events are races that the international body designates as one of the leading road races around the world. Having Okpekpe race designated as one of such few races across the globe is no mean feat and we are forever grateful for it. Perhaps we won’t be talking about the race today if you did not construct the beautiful network of roads in Edo state and one of such roads is playing host to the race which is in its seventh edition this year.”

  • PENGASSAN: Strikes not feasible with NNPC’s rehabilitation plans

    Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) has assured the Federal Government that oil workers may not embark on another round of industrial action if the plans by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to rehabilitate the four state-owned refineries are realised.

    NNPC Group Managing Director, Dr Makanti Baru, had stated that the Federal Government would return the refineries to their nameplates by the end of 2019. The refineries are Port Harcourt 1& 2, Warri and Kaduna.

    In an interview with The Nation, the immediate past PENGASSAN chairman, Port Harcourt Refineries branch, Mr. Mike Agbana, said oil workers are not thinking of embarking on strike now, adding that the issue of returning the refineries to optimal capacity is uppermost in the minds of the workers now.

    Agbana said: “In every 24 months, Port Harcourt refineries and other government owned refineries are expected to undergo turnaround maintenance in line with industry standard. But that has not been possible.  Since year 2000, Port Harcourt refineries have not experienced any turnaround initiative. To be frank, the refineries are dead. This informed the decision of workers to advocate for at least, 90 per cent output of the refineries and not strike action.

    “In the first leg of the rehabilitation of the refineries, Eni-Agip and other critical stakeholders in the sector will play a role, which is good news for the industry and the country, which has been spending huge amount of money to subsidise the importation of fuel into the country.”

    Agbana said the decision by NNPC to rehabilitate the refineries would help in easing fuel scarcity and further increase availability of the petroleum products, especially Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), which the country uses a lot for economic activities.

    “Two achievements are expected to be recorded by the government’s plans to fix the refineries. First is the fact that there would be more fuel in the country. Secondly, more job opportunities will be created, when refineries work at optimum capacity. That is, thousands of jobs that have been lost to sordid state of the refineries would be recovered soon.”

    According to him, the workers are not expecting the government to out-rightly sell the refineries, but adopt the structures used in bringing the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) to optimum production for reviving the refineries also.

    He said when Dr. Baru promised to rehabilitate the refineries on March 21, this year, the statement was greeted with applause from the stakeholders, especially the workers.

    He said the reason was because the idea will lay to rest the issue of poor performance of the refineries.

    Past governments, especially those before the All Progressive Party (APC) government, he said, spent years to retool the refineries, but to no avail, stressing that workers had thought that NNPC would do the same thing.

    Agbana said NNPC has proved everybody wrong by organising what he described as a ground breaking ceremony for the rehabilitation of the refineries, a development, which would return the country to era of abundance of fuel supply.

  • Businessman arraigned for alleged dud cheques issuance

    The  Special Fraud Unit (SFU) yesterday arraigned a businessman, Akinkunle Olunloyo, at the Lagos Federal High Court for allegedly issuing N11.2 million dud cheques.

    The cheques, it said,  bounced on presentation at the bank due to insufficient funds in Olunloyo’s account.

    The defendant was arraigned on five counts alongside his company, Code Media Ltd.

    Prosecuting counsel Mr. Chukwu Agwu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), representing Officer-In-Charge of SFU Legal Department Mr. Emmanuel Jackson, said the defendant committed the offence between 2011 and 2017.

    The SFU said Olunloyo issued the dud cheques for N11,250,913.78 five times to the representatives of Aquila Leasing Ltd.

    Read also: Businessman charged with impersonating Adeboye, Olukoya, Joshua

    The prosecution said each time the cheques were presented at the bank, they were dishonoured because the defendant did not have enough money in his account.

    Some of the cheques were dated February 28, May 28 and June 28, 2015, the SFU said.

    The defendant pleaded not guilty.

    Olunloyo’s lawyer Samusudeen Abubakar said  he had filed an application for his client’s bail.

    Agwu said the prosecution was not opposed to the application, urging the court to impose conditions that will ensure that the defendant comes for his trial.

    Justice Muslim Hassan granted Olunloyo N5 million bail with one surety in the like sum.

    The surety must be a landed property owner within the court’s jurisdiction, a grade level 14 officer either in the federal or Lagos State establishment or a director of a registered company, who must also deposit his or her two recent passport photographs, the judge ruled.

    The case continues on May 20.

  • ‘Rapist’ of minor gets N100,000 bail

    A 32-year-old man, Cottrell Otelemaba, has been arraigned at a Chief Magistrates’ Court in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, for alleged rape.

    Otelemaba allegedly raped a six-year-old girl by inserting his finger in her private part.

    A document obtained from the court alleged that the accused committed the offence on February 28 at the Family Support Primary School, Port Harcourt.

    The charge was read to him and he pleaded not guilty.

    Counsel to the defendant and a representative of the Federation of International Women Lawyers applied for his bail on the grounds that he is a married man with a young wife and will not allow himself to get involved in such act.

    Read also: Hotel gang-rape: Court rules on suspects’ bail April 29

    The court presided over by Magistrate Sokari Andrew-Jaja obliged and granted N100,000 bail to the defendant with one surety in the like sum.

    He said the surety must be resident in Port Harcourt and his address must be verified by the prosecutor, Wilson Isaiah.

    Jaja adjourned the case till April 8.

  • Anxiety as NERC meets operators on metering

    Anxiety has gripped firms, which applied to serve as Meter Asset Providers (MAPs) under the new metering arrangement, following the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission’s (NERC’s) decision to invite them for a meeting this week.

    The 115 firms were in a last minutes rush to know the details of the meeting as they made frantic efforts to ensure that their chief executive officers, were available for the meeting, which is billed to hold in Abuja.

    However, sources told The Nation that the meeting may not be unconnected with granting approval to firms shortlisted for reducing the metering gap of 4.8 milliion people in the country.

    The sources further said the need to fashion out modalities for the take-off of the firms and the date for the commencement of their operation, among others, informed NERC’s decision to invite them to the meeting.

    Reacting, Momas Electricity Meter Manufacturing Company Limited (MEMMCOL) Chief Executive officer, Kola Balogun, said he believed the meeting would discuss knotty issues that pertain to the operation of the meter asset providers.

    He said the Commission was eager to move the sector forward by proffering solutions to meter shortage in the country, adding that stakeholders in the value chain, especially meter providers and the consumers, are looking forward to a date, when the scheme would be fully implemented.

    Balogun, whose firm is also a prospective meter asset provider, said the sub-sector is bedeviled with problems such as shortage of meters, adding that NERC’s decision to take off the burden of distributing meters from the eleven power distribution companies (DIsCos) and instead allow some privately owned companies to help in providing meters to consumers, would move the sector forward.

    According to him, meter asset providers would be happy to start operation as soon as possible, adding that the indigenous manufacturers of meters are ready for the job. He said operators are expecting the meeting to iron issues that are bothering them and provide them the way forward.

    Read also: Metering is DisCos’ obligation, NERC insists

    “I believe the meeting would come out with a communiqué that would tell us the position of things on the new metering programme. It is after the meeting that everybody, especially the prospective meter asset providers, would know when they would commence operation,” he said.

    The Federal Government through the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola, last month, announced plans by the government to license meter asset providers to help in providing meters to consumers across the country.

    Thereafter, NERC obtained and sought out applications from firms that want to play as meter asset providers and fixed January 2019 for the commencement of their operation.  However, firms are waiting for NERC to fix a new date for the commencement of their operation following their inability to start operation in January as planned.

  • Land encroachment: Family sues Amosun, two others

    THE Balogun Oko-Osi/Olubete royal family of Gan-un, Ogun State, have sued Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun to the Ota Division of the State High Court over alleged encroachment into the family landed property situated at Gan-un Village, Ifo Local Government Area of Ogun State.

    Ogun State Attorney-General and some unknown persons were joined as co-defendants in the suit.

    The suit was filed on behalf of the family by Chief Nureni Farombi, the family head; Chief Hakeem Balogun, a principal member of the family; Chief Babatunde Adenekan, traditional ruler of Gan-un town and Chief Bisi Ayinde Abass, family secretary.

    In the suit, the claimants alleged that on September 1, 2018, a signpost was erected on the land by Governor Amosun indicating that it belongs to Ogun State Government and that trespassers will be prosecuted.

    They said they were shocked at the governor’s action and that all effort and overtures towards getting him to understand that the land belong to them were unsuccessful.

    Read also: Ogun APC warns banks over Amosun’s alleged loan requests

    The claimants added that the governor’s presence on the land was not caused by them and that they had in no way sold or consented to the sale of the land.

    They added that they were never at any time aware or put in the know or on notice of the interest of any defendants, either on grounds of compulsory acquisition, purchase, allocation and superior title that would have warranted the right to lay claim of ownership to any portion of the land.

  • My pastor sexually harassed me, alleges teenager

    A 17-year-old girl has narrated how the resident pastor of a Pentecostal church in Edo State allegedly introduced her to alcohol and had sex with her several times.

    The teenager, who spoke to reporters in Benin City, said the cleric had sex with her in her father’s house and at hotels.

    She was in tears as she narrated how the affair began last September shortly after she finished her secondary school education.

    Stating the reasons for opening up on the love affair, she said she wanted to leave the state for lack of concentration, adding that she wanted the pastor to be jailed.

    The girl said: “The pastor used to advise me to stay away from boys, live a good life and respect my parents. I regarded him as my father. I trusted him and confided in him.

    “That was how he started calling me, talking to me till it got to a time he told me that he liked me. I took it as a normal thing. He started taking advantage of me. He showed me things I had not seen before and took me to places I had never been to. That was how it started. He was the first person to show me a condom. He taught me how to drink alcohol.

    “He told me not to tell my parents. He said they would understand what he was doing.   He slept with me many times, even in our house, whenever my parents were not around.

    “Thinking about the affair has affected me psychologically. I cannot read again. The whole thing is disturbing me. When I told his wife, she said I was lying and told me to come to their house and repeat it before her husband.

    “I want the pastor to be jailed. I’m always shocked anytime I am in church and see him preaching. I was initially afraid of telling my mother about the affair I had with him.”

    The victim’s father, who is the board chairman of the church, said he was shocked that a pastor he trusted could defile his only daughter.

    Read also: Girl ‘raped to death’ in Enugu

    He said what pained him most was that the cleric had sex with his daughter “in my home when she was menstruating.”

    He said he wanted the pastor to be prosecuted.

    The teenager’s mother said what happened to her daughter was sad and unacceptable.

    The Nation learnt that the pastor has been arrested and detained by men of the Department of State Services (DSS).

    Sources said his wife has also been nabbed.

    A senior pastor of the church, who preferred anonymity, said the church was still investigating the matter.

     

  • Seplat urges public, private sector investments

    Seplat Petroleum Development Company Plc, has urged the public and private sectors to invest more in research and development aimed at promoting safety.

    The oil company noted that such investments should cut across the various sectors of the economy as is the case for the oil/gas and aviation sectors, among others.

    Its Operations Director, Effiong Okon, stated this at the Nigeria Professional Development Conference and Exhibition in Lagos. It was organised by the American Society of Safety Professionals (ASSP), Nigerian Chapter. The theme of the event was ‘Sustainable safety for national development.’

    According to Okon, safety is at the forefront of Seplat’s activities, which have enabled it to conduct its activities across the country with minimal footprint. “We approach safety, using the people, environment, asset and reputation model incorporated in our ‘safety first’ policy. We only execute projects that promote continuous reduction of environmental impact in our operations,” he said.

    He added: “We track offshoots from our operations and strive to reduce adverse effects from our facilities. Our internal use of gas flared reduced by over 95 per cent between 2011 and 2017.

    “Seplat has incorporated key programmes across all its facilities to achieve flares out by 2020 in line with keeping the environment safe. We comply with all regulatory requirements and benchmark our performance with international standards.”

    Okon said the company has seen continuous decline in safety incidents over the years and would continue to deploy safety training and coaching to hone safety consciousness and skills of its local contractors.

    Progressively managing challenges around establishment of support infrastructure for safety management, he noted, remained a priority to the company, adding that: “Since the taking over of our current assets, third-party interference on Seplat’s infrastructure had been significantly minimised.”

  • “Boycotting all boycottables”

    There was a certain Captain Charles Cunningham Boycott (1832-1897) an English land agent in Ireland then ruled by the English who treated the Irish people in general cruelly. But the situation in county Mayo was generally unbearable because of the bad manners of Captain Boycott who worked as an enforcer for Lord Erne, a major landowner who lived off the exorbitant rents charged the tenants. Boycott regularly expelled poor farmers from their land which led to many dying of hunger. The Irish land league organized against the landlord’s cruelty and ostracized Captain Boycott and his family with the whole community withdrawing all services to him. Their action gave the English language the verb to boycott meaning avoid or do away with something.

    In the 1950s during the British colonial rule over Nigeria, a certain Mbonu Ojike, the deputy of Ibikunle Olorunimbe, the mayor of Lagos and one of the Nigerian nationalists, led a campaign that Nigerians should boycott all things British. Mbonu Ojike threw away his western suits and began to wear agbada. He dropped the prefix “Mr” and replaced it with “Mazi”. Other nationalists like Raji Abdallah, Ibrahim Zukogi, Ibrahim Imam and Aminu Kano began to prefix their names with “Malam” and Ogedengbe Macaulay, the son of Herbert Macaulay and Kolawole Balogun, a firebrand member of the Zikist movement, also prefixed their names with “Ogbeni” in solidarity with Mbonu Ojike’s campaign and call to “boycott all boycottables”. Nnamdi Azikiwe, their leader, a six footer who looked very regal and handsome in his suits reluctantly followed his radical lieutenants. Obafemi Awolowo and his Action Group were more practical and natural in their Yoruba outfits without calling attention to it. Being conservative in their politics of the time and using the traditional rulers as pillars of their political movement, they preferred becoming honorific chiefs and being referred to as “Oloye” than the plebeian “ogbeni”.The two groups were however united in rejecting the western standards of civilized dressing. This cultural rejection of the appearances of western imperialism was a necessary precursor to political liberation.

    In recent times, I watched a presentation by Audu Ogbeh, the minister of agriculture in which he brilliantly appealed to Nigerians to only eat what they produce and boycott all food imports through which our national wealth is transferred abroad to other farmers. He said importers of rice for example, would do anything to sabotage the country’s plan to grow enough rice for home consumption. He said those importers are not only desperate but dangerous in strangulating the local economy. He argued that importers contribute nothing to the economy but use the country’s foreign reserves to bring all sorts of junks including toothpicks and all sorts of furniture we can make from our hardwood timber. Just at the time Audu Ogbeh was making his submission, the CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele said all textile imports would be banned from Nigeria in order to stimulate the moribund textile industry. Any student of economic history knows that textile industry is the beginning of industrial revolution in a country because in most cases, at least in the tropics, it is easily adaptable to backward integration. The cotton needed as raw materials can be grown locally, ginned locally and fed to the textile mills. From the mills, the textile materials can be sold to tailors who will then produce apparels of different types for wear and cloth for home and office furnishing and the fashion trade.Apart from producing for home consumption, they can also produce cotton wears for export.

    When I was in primary school in Ekiti in the 1950s, our school uniforms were woven by women each of who had local looms somewhere in their homes. I watched these women bring cotton from their husbands’farms, carefully ginned them and removed the seed from the cotton lint. They then turned the cotton lint into thread through the use of manual threaders before rolling them into yarns which were then fed into the looms. All this was done by the women manually as secondary occupation in their spare times since farming was their primary occupation as helpmates to their husbands. They of course were also good cooks. After the weaving of these white clothes, they will then be sent to dyers who produced usually black or blue stripes which tailors then sewed interspersing black and white to make knickers and jumpers for primary schoolchildren.  The entire processes from weaving to dying were products of native ingenuity and local vegetable sourcing. This was the textile industry which the white man found here when they came but destroyed when they introduced their khakis as school uniforms. Happily the textile industry still survives as “aso oke” in parts of Oyo. Kwara, Ondo, Kano,Katsina,Zaria, Sokoto, Akwete and Ijebuland. But it seems to have disappeared in most places in Nigeria. Interestingly they can be found in western museums showing African textiles going back to the 15th century.

    I remember wearing my agbada made from hand woven “aso etu” when I presented my letters of credence as Nigeria’s ambassador to the German President Baron Von Weisacker in 1991. My southern African colleagues could not believe we had our own textile industry going back to the 15th century. I had to proudly give a lecture on how everything I wore that day was home-grown unlike my other southern colleagues dressed in Saville Row suits.

    What Godwin Emefiele and Audu Ogbeh are saying is that we must go back to our past to find our trajectory to a viable and productive and prosperous future! Imagine what we can do with a thriving textile industry. We can wipe out unemployment almost immediately. More than three million tailors would be needed to sew what our teeming population will be wearing. We even look more dignified in our environment and climate-friendly Babanriga, Agbada, Dansiki, Jallabia, and kaftans. I remember having to beg my tailors in Maiduguri between 1982 and 1984 to sew my Babanriga on time. The cost of sewing was not cheap either but the skill and dexterity of the master tailors was what we paid for. I would like to see a cultural renaissance in which we all wear what is most appropriate with our hot climate.

    What will be saved in foreign exchange can then be used for industrialization in other areas of heavy industries and in chemical and petroleum industries in which we are well blessed because of our comparative advantage. In this way we will raise the value of our much abused Naira and thus make Nigeria great again.

    The government must be determined and strong to achieve this. It is Jean Jacques Rousseau in his theory of the “General will”who said it is possible to force a people to be free which sounds contradictory but in real fact sometimes this may be necessary because people don’t usually know what is good for them. A strong government can put in place an agricultural programme to encourage the young people roaming the streets selling junks to go back to the farms by mechanizing farm production and supporting young farmers with monthly stipends until they can fend for themselves. This was how the kibbutz in Israel led to the greening of a desert now producing different types of fruits for the world market. This will require a policy of social and political mobilization involving the universities, community and traditional leaders as well as political leaders. It will only work if leaders are ready to make sacrifices.There is money to be made in agriculture but first it must be divorced from the hoe and cutlass hewers of wood and drawers of water type. If we make our agriculture attractive, money will go into the rural areas. Life there will become liveable with very little attraction and incentive to embark on rural urban migration. If the cities are not overwhelmed by unplanned growth, the rate of crimes and criminality would go down and money being spent on policing and pacification would be spent for social welfare. It is a “win-win” situation and I therefore call on the government to build its programme of taking us to the next level around the well-articulated ideas contained in Audu Ogbeh’s agricultural revolution and Emefiele’s foreign exchange management to force us to produce cotton for our daily wears or go naked .These are solid prescriptions for economic revival. I join the chorus of “boycotting all boycottables “