Tag: The Nation newspaper

  • Wike dedicates victory to God, slain Rivers people

    Rivers State Governor Nyesom Ezenwo Wike yesterday dedicated his victory to the people of the state.

    Fighting back tears, the governor said that he was overwhelmed by the support and love they displayed during and after the general elections.

    Governor Wike also dedicated the victory to God.

    Speaking at the Government House, Port Harcourt after he was declared duly re-elected by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC ), Wike expressed gratitude to the people for standing by the ruling Peoples Democartic Party (PDP) despite  the actions of enemies of democracy.

    He said:  “I want to thank the people of Rivers State for showing the kind of love we have never seen before.  I thank them for showing the kind of support we have never seen before.”

    He thanked PDP members “for their show of courage, despite intimidation by security operatives who illegally wanted to change the will of Rivers people.

    “Those who died not because they were criminals, but because they wanted to defend their votes. We dedicate this victory to God those who were killed.

    “They protected our votes and they defended us. We pray God to grant their families the strength to bear the losses. We shall continue to support the families”, he said.

    Read also: Rivers election: INEC declares Wike winner

    He said that he will run an inclusive government, which will accommodate all shades of interest.

    Wike said: “We have no other state. You may have mansions elsewhere, but there is no place like home. We must come together and build our state.

    “We must make the state move forward. We must not continue to de-market the state. I cannot stay beyond 2023, but Rivers State will continue to be. If you believe you are from Rivers State, end this now.”

    The governor extended a hand of fellowship to his opponents, saying that nobody won or lost, but Rivers people won.

    He said the struggle to stop collation was so vicious that it continued till the end of the collation, stating: “We will not disappoint the PDP. We will not disappoint Rivers people.  We shall continue to serve.

    “If anybody does anything contrary as a member of the House of Assembly, House of Representatives, Senate, the blood of those who died will visit them. I will never betray PDP.”

    Governor Wike thanked INEC for working in line with the tenets of the electoral act. He thanked the Police, but berated the F-SARS.

    Former vice president and PDP presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, Imo State governor-elect, Emeka Ihedioha, Adamawa State governor-elect, Ahmadu Fintiri, and the party’s National Chairman Prince Uche Secondus, congratulated Wike. They prayed God to strengthen him and also lauded Rivers people for standing firm and insisting  on the right thing being done.

  • Offa poly probes student’s death

    The Management of the Federal Polytechnic Offa (FEDPOFFA) is investigating the suicide of one of its students, Ridwan Ajiboye, alleged to have been caused by his handling of the money he gathered from selling handouts for a lecturer.

    In a statement, Olayinka Iroye, Head, Public Relations and Protocols at the institution, debunked claims about the cause of death of the ND 1 student of Civil Engineering.

    The statement reads: “The deceased, an ND 1 student of Civil Engineering actually took some quantity of poisonous substance which led to his death days after he was taken to several hospitals for treatment.

    “However, the other angle to the story…that the said student took poison because he was embarrassed by a lecturer over handout proceeds, is unfounded and false.

    Read also: Nigeria, EU, others get set for 5G technology

    “Up till now, the circumstance surrounding the reason why the student took the substance is shrouded in mystery. However, the Management is investigating the case to get to the root of the matter.”

    The statement added that the sale of handouts had been outlawed at the institution for over 20 years.

    “For the benefit of doubt, sale of handouts has been banned for more than two decades at the Polytechnic and no lecturer sells handout to students no matter the situation.

    “Management of the Federal Polytechnic Offa headed by Dr. Lateef Olatunji has eradicated all forms of corruption and malpractices, and machineries have been put in place to curb and check every forms of indiscipline by both staff and students,” it reads.

    The statement also noted that a report of another attempted suicide by an ND student of Estate Management was false.

  • Association berates multiple checks by task force

    The African Association of Professional Freight Forwarders of Nigeria (APFFLON) has taken its stance on the recent threat to down tools, by a coalition of Freight Forwarders, due to alleged multiple checks by men and officers of the Nigeria Customs.

    Rising from an emergency meeting, president of the association, Frank Ogunojemite, who addressed reporters, said in as much as APFFLON appreciates the Nigeria Customs for remaining committed to revenue collection and anti-smuggling, the organisation should also carry stakeholders along in its policies.

    It added that Customs should ensure that officers operate within the ambit of the law; even as he frowned at the multiple checks by different task forces that litter the major roads, querying the wisdom behind reopening and re-examining already exited containers by the roadside after battling with series of alerts placed on the same consignments by various customs units.

    This practice, he said, jeopardises the economy and causes unnecessary loss of man hours by creating traffic gridlocks, saying it was an indictment on Customs at various examination bays, as well as on Releasing Officers.

    The National President of APFFLON added that if proper examination is done at the terminals, following strictly the original declarations on the PAARs by the agents and also proper duty payments, why should men and officers of the same organisation who okayed and released the consignments stop them at various points for  re-examination? He said it was a sheer lack of trust on the side of the organization.

    The association appealed to the Chairman of Council For The Regulation of Freight Forwarding Practice in Nigeria (CRFFN) Abubakar Tsanni, and the Comptroller-General of Customs, Col. Hameed Ali, to appeal to the Federal Government to fasten the rehabilitation of the Oshodi/Apapa Port Access Road to ease business.

  • NGO urges Sanwo-Olu to revamp civil service

    A Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), the Centre for Science, Engineering and Environment has urged Lagos State Governor-elect, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu to revamp the civil service.

    The Director General of the centre, Adeyemi Saliu Abidemi, said such a move was necessary for the success of the incoming administration as the civil service is the engine-room of governance.

    Abidemi, a former Permanent Secretary in the state, said: “I wish to enjoin him (Sanwo-Olu) to quickly embark on immediate healing processes of the civil service which has in recent times suffered from demoralisation, arising from deliberate neglect and the promotion of guile among its principal actors, usually leading into witch-hunting and humiliation of the top echelon of the civil service.”

    To bring back the glory of the state’s civil service, Sanwo-Olu, he said, should take the bull by the horns by immediately reverting to the old structures of the MDAs obtainable in the days of the Babatunde Raji Fashola administration, for maximum productivity and overall development of the state.

    “Lagos is a cosmopolitan state with ever-increasing population and developmental challenges which could hardly afford the luxury of experimentation with already functional structures without causing undesirable distortions in the system,” he said.

    The governor-elect, he said, needs well-motivated civil service to help in delivering projects that have direct benefits to the public.

  • 60 Nigerians participate in 2019 special olympics

    With 7,500 athletes participating, the 2019 Special Olympics World Summer Games which took place in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, is the largest sports and humanitarian event in the world.

    This year’s competition, the 50th in its series, played host to the best talents across the world with 60 Nigerian athletes living with intellectual disabilities competing for medals in different sports categories from swimming to football.

    Committed to spotlighting the often-overlooked significance the competition represents, and motivated by tenacity, and determination of its participants, documentary photographer, Adedotun Soyebi captures the feat of athletes at the 2019 Special Olympics.

    He also captured the behind-the-scenes moments that define the competition founded by Eunice Kennedy Shriver, a pioneer in the global struggle for the rights and acceptance of people with intellectual disabilities.

    Team Nigeria had an impressive run at the Games carting home nine Gold, 10 Silver, and seven Bronze.

    This documentary photography project is to spotlight the issue of intellectual disability, therefore publishing same on your platform draws much-needed attention to the strength and ability of people living with the condition daily.

  • Director hails Rotary for supporting health care

    The Medical Director of General Hospital, Ifako-Ijaiye, Dr. Olushola Amure, has hailed the Rotary Club of Omole-Golden for its passion for health care.

    He said the club had contributed a lot to the development of health care, adding that it proved this by laying the foundation of the hospital’s neo-natal building.

    Amure, who spoke yesterday when the Rotary Club visited the hospital, also praised it for donating phototherapy machines and incubators to the neo-natal ward.

    He said: “The General Hospital, Ifako-Ijaiye was recently given the award of the best hospital in neo-natal care in Lagos State because of the support by Rotary Club of Omole-Golden.

    “Another history is being made today with the foundation laying of the neo-natal building by the club.

    “On behalf of Health Commissioner Dr. Jide Idris, I thank the club members for their kind gesture. The government should also be commended for providing more health care facilities. Other organisations should emulate Rotary Club of Omole-Golden.”

    The President, Mrs. Ibironke Alaba, said the club has donated over 10 incubators and phototherapy machines to the hospital.

    She said the hospital needed a new neo-natal clinic because there was no space in the neo-natal ward to accommodate more incubators and phototherapy machines.

    Alaba said the club would donate another incubator to the hospital.

    District Governor Rotary International District 9110 Nigeria Kola Sodipo urged the hospital workers to join Rotary Club “so that we can together put smiles on people’s faces.”

  • In search of the ‘strong’ president (I)

    Most hands in the All Progressive Congress, APC, seem now desperately on deck, battling to forestall a repeat, at the legislature, of what happened in 2015. The legislative ‘big bird’ in 2015 had lost its good ‘headpiece’ and was strangely adorned -by the contraption of traitors- with the ‘head’ of a vulture. The Hausas call it ‘angulu da kan zabuwa’. But in this case it should actually be the other way round, ‘zabuwa da kan angulu’. And for four gruelling years, we have had to bear with the ‘head’ of a carrion-eating avian falsely beautified with the feathers of a peacock. Buhari himself has admitted that, that treacherous contraption had terribly slowed his government down. And now his ruling party is strategizing not only to get the numbers right at the National Assembly (NASS) but this time around also, to get both chambers wear the right peacock ‘headpieces’ as we enter into the next dispensation. But then the question arises, will it be enough to have just the numbers at the legislature, and maybe even to install the desired leaderships of both chambers? Would that then be the legislative Eldorado that the Buhari government will require to hit the ground running in its second coming? Absolutely no!

    Let’s hope that Mr. President will not discover, to his chagrin, that the key to a successful democratic governance lies more in the execution of a ‘strong presidential initiative’ at the legislature than it does in merely having the ‘numbers’ and the right ‘leadership’ at the legislature. Truth is, in spite of achieving those, a weak presidential initiative at the legislature will still be as counterproductive as having a treacherous Saraki on the rudder. Any parliament, no matter how favourable constituted, in addition to being potentially ‘a woman of easy virtue’, it can also be ‘a beast of self-harming contumacy’: just now it is responsive and tender to executive concerns, and just now it can be cantankerous and rebellious even to the comely overtures of a friendly executive.

    The legislature, unless it is handled firmly by a ‘strong president’, it can be more of a systemic drag than the democratic incentive that it is intended to be. And whatever parliament becomes in the long run, -whether responsive or repulsive to executive concerns- would depend largely on the president’s ‘strong’ or ’weak’ initiative in the legislative process. As parliament is the centrepiece of democratic governance, the legislative process is the heart of all democratic enterprise. It is usually tended to the benefit of the entire body polity and it is ignored often at great peril not only to the system’s operation but indeed to the entire democratic enterprise. The legislative process feeds the democratic circulatory system from the mighty pipe of political life namely the jugular vein right to the minutest capillaries of everyday administration. It is the most all-encompassing of any governmental processes touching on all sectors of a polity and of necessity leaving out no constituency. And it is the reason that ‘strong’ and ‘weak’ presidents are usually judged strictly by the deftness of their initiative in the legislative process. Any presidential initiative must be effective enough to keep parliament in synch with the norms of constitutional ‘checks and balances’. Because the legislature, by the very nature of its unique powers and functions, is hardly ever wilfully amenable to, or tolerant of, checks by the other arms of government.

    Every parliament ought to be its nation’s ‘moral high ground’. The legislature alone is suited for that hallowed spot atop which only men of impeccable character should reside. Yet every parliament potentially can also be its nation’s moral drag. It can be both eminently corruptible and a willing infidel. Even as sublimely exemplary as the American parliament is reputed to be, President Abraham Lincoln, once in the heat of an executive-legislature brickbat, had lampooned the Capitol of his time as the “do-nothing Congress” which he said catered more to ‘special interest’ than it did to public good. Yes, the legislature is the touchstone of democratic liberty, but there is this erroneous impression that the legislature is not to be limited by any other institution. This false notion arrogates to an otherwise fallible law-making body a toga of infallibility, so much that although legislators have no constitutional immunity, the attribute of infallibility has the effect of creating a sense of immunity against the right of the other arms to call the legislature to account. And it is inevitable that these falsely arrogated attributes illimitability, infallibility and immunity may result in the grandeur of a feeling of irreproachability that lawmakers begin to see themselves as divine. And it is from this arrogant station that high crimes and misdemeanours are committed by lawmakers in the guise of legislating for public good.

    It was in discussing the perils of parliamentary life, its lethal combination of inertia, greed and arrogance that the British lawmaker Fenner Brockway once said that “Sometimes I remark that I have spent three years in prison and three years in parliament and that I saw character deteriorate in parliament more than in prison”. And this reminds of the American author-cleric Edward Everett Hale who, when he was asked, ”Do you pray for the senators?” replied: “No, I look at the senators and I pray for the country”. In truth all democracies are inevitably tormented by the cantankerousness of that one arm of government –the legislature- which enjoys a plethora of constitutional powers, including being more pre-eminently positioned to oversight others than it too is to be oversighted. The law-making power of the legislature, its investigative powers, its powers of oversight over both the executive and the judiciary, its power to allocate and to authorize spending, and even to remove the president whenever it deems fit, all combine to place the legislature as the only arm of government in which virtually all the separated or shared powers of the three arms find absolute expression; so that only the legislature enjoys at once legislative, quasi-judicial and quasi-executive powers, the combined effect of which rather than be a sobering stimuli for good, often serves as an intoxicating force for evil. In fact the right of the legislature to equally initiate bills plus its power to override presidential veto and thus make to become law what the president has vetoed, are proofs of the absoluteness of the legislature’s law-making authority.

    The abuse, by parliament, of this enormous power-potential is either to be counterproductively tolerated by ‘weak’ presidents or deftly checked by ‘strong’ ones. There is hardly any more effective moderating force to keep the legislature in check than a ‘strong president’ who -even in the absence of constitutional guarantees- enjoys the liberty of ‘democratic convention’ to act legally or sometimes even extra-legally, to whip erring parliament into line. But a pre-emptive president who has successfully put in place a formidable initiative in his executive’s approach to the legislature, may not require a resort to bare knuckle approach to check the legislature; and more less likely so if he enjoys the partisan accommodation of a legislative leadership which he has personally lobbied to bring about and which is favourably disposed to his executive concerns. And so whereas a jackbooted approach would be practically unsustainable to keep parliament in check, a totally non-interfering approach on the other hand, would be terribly self-harming! Rather than portray the president as respectful of democratic limits, executive non-interference in the affairs of parliament can only betray a weak presidential initiative and by implication a weak presidency. It is in tactfully striking a delicate balance between these two extremes that ‘strong presidents’ in a presidential democracy live up to their executive billing. Their strength manifests more in thinking ‘independently’ but acting ‘inter-dependently’ with the other arms of government.

  • Army seeks exemption from budget envelope allocation system

    The Nigerian Army (NA) has requested to be exempted from the envelope system of budgetary allocation by the Federal Ministry of Budget and National Planning.

    While the Army is proposing N472.8billion for the  fiscal year, the Ministry of Budget is suggesting a reduction of the amount to N232.4billion.

    According to the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt. Gen. Yusuf Buratai, the evelope system of allocation can not aid its immediate response to crisis situations taking into consideration Army’s on-going structural changes, volatile security environment and massive engagement of troops in virtually all the 36 states.

    The COAS appeared before the House of Representatives Committee on Army yesterday where he also asserted that the Army deserved whatever budgetary allocation it requested  for because it performed almost 100 per cent on all its 2018 budget implementation.

    He said: “The National Assembly should prevail on the Ministry of Budget and National Planning to exempt the Nigerian Army from the existing budget ceiling or envelope allocation system in view of the on-going structural changes, volatile security environment and massive engagement of troops in virtually all the 36 states of the Federation.

    “The National Assembly should change the 40 percent Second Instalment Payment for purchase of 3 x LUH AS-350 for NA Aviation with the procurement of Armoured Personnel Carrier “A” Vehicles.

    “The Nigerian Army has for years grappled with fund insufficiency; however it has remained resilient and ever dedicated to the discharge of its constitutional roles.

    “It was able to cope with the financial constraints due to the relative peaceful environment across the country prior to the re-emergence of insurgency and other hostile activities of Violent Non-State Actors.

    “You may recall that since the beginning of 2015, the activities of the Violent Non-State Actors have exacerbated in various regions across our dear country.”

  • Fayemi appoints five more advisers

    EKITI State Governor Kayode Fayemi has approved the appointment of five additional advisers.

    This is coming barely a day after he transmitted a list of 14 commissioner-designates to the Assembly for screening and confirmation.

    The Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Yinka Oyebode, in a statement yesterday, said: “In a bid to further position the administration for effective service delivery, Ekiti State Governor has approved the appointment of five additional special advisers.

    They include V.O. Kolade (Special Adviser, Social Investments), Alhaji Ademola Bello (Special Adviser,  Inter – Party Relations and Allied Matters), Abiola Olowokere (Special  Adviser,  Legislative  Affairs), Dr. Sikiru Eniola(Special Adviser, Tertiary Education) and Dr. Kofoworola Aderiye (Technical Adviser , Education).

    REsd also: Fayemi nominates 14 for commissioner

    Oyebode stated “all the appointments are with immediate effect”.

    However, the 14 commissioner-nominees will appear for screening today before the House of Assembly in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital.

    Their names were forwarded to the House on Tuesday by Fayemi, following extensive consultations with stakeholders and party leaders across the 16 local governments.

  • Financial literacy and national development

    SIR: Entrepreneurial development is critical to the large-scale innovation and industrialization that countries like Nigeria need. We are lacking in this area because our formal education systems have not incorporated financial literacy into the schools’ curriculum. In Europe and the Americas, young children as far back as 40 years ago were already setting up entrepreneurship and investment clubs where they were simulating a variety of entrepreneurial ventures. These subjects were taught firstly as after school programmes, but in many countries have now been mainstreamed at all levels. It is no surprise the progress they continue to make while our schools and children are at best being prepped to gather as many degrees and pass as many professional exams as possible to compete for the increasingly fewer jobs available.

    We cannot see that jobs are driven by entrepreneurship, and entrepreneurship by financial literacy.

    Think about all the capital destruction that takes place on account of poorly conceived and executed businesses in Nigeria. With higher levels of financial literacy, the rate of failure of small businesses will reduce significantly. Financial literacy will equip business owners especially start-ups with all the skills they need to make better and more prudent decisions regarding their personal and business finances that would increase the chances of survival as a business. But it seems everyone is so busy chasing and trying to make money that very few of us are actually sitting back to manage and plan our finances.

    Then, the issues around corruption and greed and the near-worship of money in our society. The crass materialism, conspicuous consumption in the midst of debilitating poverty and the gross ethical violations and financial impropriety that takes place in this country. If people got an education in financial literacy that included the ethics of money – the fact that money is not an end itself, but only a means to a temporal end, then perhaps all of this nonsense that is going on in our society on account of money would have been averted. Think about the Ponzi schemes, prosperity-preaching, exam malpractice, vote-buying, voter-inducement, and all the shenanigans that we have seen in our financial markets in the past – all signs of a grossly financially illiterate society.

    Consider the number of employees who are struggling from one pay day to another and the succor they could get if they were more financially astute. Imagine the man-hours we lose to under-productivity brought about by financial challenges – the endless borrowing, loan sharks and “gbese” that families have to endure and the impact on people’s health, well-being and productivity, all because they are not financially savvy.

    What do we need? Firstly, we need to work harder on getting the financial literacy curriculum in schools from our basic to tertiary institutions. It has been in the pipeline for some time and we need to move really faster. Then we need parents to start paying attention to this even at home regardless of where the schools are. Financial literacy is a broad subject and is not just about making money. It includes a variety of areas including the ethics of money which makes it more wholesome. Parents should find books, games and resources and start exposing their children.

    Finally, organizations need to realize that beyond just paying salaries each month, they need to invest in training and educating their employees on how to manage their finances better – to bolster productivity and ethical behaviour in their organizations.

     

    • Omagbitse Barrow, FCA, Abuja.