Tag: trouble

  • Fresh signs of trouble in the Niger Delta

    Fresh signs of trouble in the Niger Delta

    At a time the Federal Government is persuading the insurgents in the North to accept amnesty, the Niger Delta, which is enjoying a similar package, seems set to return to its pre-amnesty days when kidnappings, killings and all manner of criminality was the order of the day, writes OLUKOREDE YISHAU

     

    The winding creeks of the Niger Delta are rumbling again. And Abuja, the seat of government, is feeling the heat. The development is disturbing to the Dr. Goodluck Jonathan administration because it is coming at a time the government is trying to find a way around the insurgency which has made many states in the North killing fields.

    Last year, the country spent about $450 million on its amnesty programme for ex-Niger Delta militants, more than what it expended on basic education. More is expected to be spent this year, as more ex-militants have been admitted into the programme.

    On Sunday, a statement supposedly from the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) said the group was now prepared to launch attacks on mosques, hajj camps and Islamic clerics.

    MEND has been mostly inactive over the years, because most of its leaders accepted amnesty. Though oil theft did not stop totally because of the deal, it reduced and violence went down to an all-time low. But, the conviction of one of its leaders, Henry Okah, in South Africa for the 2010 bombing in Abuja, fuelled the anger of the aggrieved within its ranks.

    The Sunday statement said it planned to launch a bombing campaign tagged “Operation Barbarossa”.

    “The bombings of mosques, hajj camps, Islamic institutions, large congregations in Islamic events and assassinations of clerics that propagate doctrines of hate will form the core mission of this crusade,” its spokesman, Jomo Gbomo, said in an e-mailed statement.

    May 31, according to the statement, has been set aside for the start of the operation, which, Gbomo said, is to save Christianity from extinction in the country. It earlier announced “Hurricane Exodus”, part of which was the attack in which 11 policemen were killed in Bayelsa State.

    It said for it to agree to a ceasefire, the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), the Catholic Church and Okah must intervene.

    The MEND’s statement reads: “On behalf of the hapless Christian population in Nigeria, MEND will from Friday, May 31, 2013, embark on a crusade to save Christianity in Nigeria from annihilation…

    “This campaign will not in any way interfere with the ongoing ‘Hurricane Exodus’ – which on Saturday, April 13, 2013, at about 01:00 Hrs, swept through the Ewellesuo community, Nembe, Bayelsa State, leaving the destruction of Well 62, belonging to Shell Petroleum in its wake.

    “We may only consider a ceasefire of Operation Barbarossa if the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), the Catholic Church and Henry Okah, one of the few leaders in the Niger Delta region we respect for his integrity, intervene.

    “Also, the assurance for a cessation of hostilities targeted at Christians in their places of worship, made privately or publicly by the real Boko Haram leadership will make us call off this crusade.

    “We have no problems with their (Boko Haram sect’s) attacks on security agencies, including the prisons, for their role in extra-judicial killings, torture, deceit and corruption.”

    Before MEND’s latest threat, it claimed responsibility for the April 5 assault, which led to the killing of 11 policemen. Twelve were initially thought dead, until one of them re-appeared. The officers were allegedly escorting a former militant leader, who is now an adviser to the Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson when they were waylaid by a group of men wielding AK-47s.

    According to a police account, the attackers fired from a jetty before two speedboats bearing other assailants arrived and also shot at the officers.

    Bayelsa State Commissioner of Police Kingsley Omire told the AFP, in a report yesterday: “They (the police) were overwhelmed.”

    Between 2007 and 2009, the Niger Delta was simply on fire. Pipeline vandalism, oil theft, kidnappings, bombings and all manner of criminality was the order of the day. Hardly did a day go by without cries being heard in the creeks of the impoverished oil-rich region.

    Then in 2009, the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua came up with an amnesty deal, allowing the militants to submit their weapons and enjoy monetary reward and vocational training in return. Until recently, the deal appeared to have worked, as the country was able to regain its place as Africa’s biggest oil producer.

    Through the programme, over 13,000 ex-militants have been deployed in local and foreign institutes for training, skill acquisition and other formal education. No fewer than 2,500 of them are in higher institutions of learning. About 4,608 are undergoing skill acquisition training, and 9,192 have  graduated in various fields, including agriculture, automobile, welding and fabrication, entrepreneurship, carpentry, plumbing, oil drilling and marine related courses; electrical installation, ICT and other areas.

    Sure that the leaders of the ex-militants needed more than the stipends paid to their leg men, the Federal Government, through the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), awarded them lucrative contracts to ensure the safety of oil installations in the Niger Delta.

    The mouth-watering deal, worth N6.5 billion, did not completely stop oil theft. This deal, which was cancelled early in the year to the chagrin of the ex-kingpins, saw good times rolling in for the former Niger Delta militants.

    The leader of the Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Force, Mujahhid Dokubo-Asari, who rejected amnesty because he was not a militant but a freedom fighter, was not left out of the lucrative deal. While it lasted, Asari-Dokubo earned N1.420billion.

    A report in the Wall Street Journal said: “Nigeria’s state oil company began paying him $9 million a year, by Mr. Dokubo-Asari’s account, to pay his 4,000 former foot soldiers to protect the pipelines they once attacked. He shrugs off the unusual turn of events. ‘I don’t see anything wrong with it,’ said the thickly built former gunman, lounging in a house gown at his home here in Nigeria’s capital.”

    About N599.64million was paid annually apiece to Ebikabowei “Boyloaf” Victor Ben and Ateke Tom, to guard pipelines. Government “Tompolo” Ekpumopolo enjoyed a N3.614billion contract to do the same job.

    This, according to presidential aides, was to end a situation where as a result of oil theft to bombings to kidnappings, oil production reduced to as low as 500,000 barrels on some days.

    Special Adviser to the President on Research and Documentation Oronto Douglas told WSJ then that there was no alternative to the amnesty programme. “If it’s too huge, what are the alternatives?” he asked.

    Really, oil theft fell sharply. But it did not take long before it blossomed again, even with ex-militants guarding oil pipelines. It seems to have now been seen as a gold mine. This is a major threat to the country, which relies on oil for about 80 percent of its revenue and almost all its foreign exchange earnings.

    Last Thursday, the Managing Director of Shell Nigeria, Mr. Mutiu Sunmonu, said oil theft and illegal refining in the Niger Delta had reached unprecedented levels.

    In a statement published on Shell’s website, Sunmonu said the size of the problem indicated “a well-financed and highly organised criminal enterprise” that uses “influence, corruption and violence to protect (its) interests.”

    President Goodluck Jonathan said the situation is alarming, noting: “It is only in Nigeria that people go to all length to steal crude oil and its by-products through breaking pipelines and other associated means of oil bunkering. And most times, these illegal activities lead to huge economic waste, environmental degradation and loss of lives within minutes. This administration is out to stop this and we are going to take decisive steps to make this evil which is becoming a habit, a thing of the past.”

    Senate President David Mark recently said death penalty may be a way out, a development some lawyers have described as too harsh.

    An estimated 60,000 barrels of oil are stolen a day from Shell’s local joint venture, according to the company. The estimate for all oil companies is given as 150,000 barrels a day, which represent 7.5 per cent of the country’s crude-oil production.

    With this level of oil theft and fresh signs of violence in the creeks, many fear a return to the pre-amnesty days, which will deal a heavy blow on a country already suffering from the deadly blows of an amnesty-weary sect called Boko Haram.

     

  • The real trouble with Nigeria

    The real trouble with Nigeria

    SIR: Nigeria is burdened with multiple socio-political­ problems that have left many disenchanted. The systemic decay, apart from nauseating, leaves many gasping for fresh air. In the effort to situate the problem, many self-righteous folks trade blames as to where the problem of Nigeria lies. To some, it is our leaders while others hold colonialism responsible. Such naïve conclusion especially the one that holds the hugely corrupt PDP responsible for our woes merely distracts our attention from successfully situating the problem.

    Nigerian problem can aptly be summed up as “frail institutional set-up that thrives on ignoble culture of impunity and corruption”. It is caused by Nigerians, not the PDP.

    Except we want to feign ignorance, we all know that the root of our problem is dearth of morals. Decayed moral fabrics make it possible for us all to break rules of engagement in and out of government.

    While elected/­imposed officials can afford to steal, sycophancy and greed make us hail the criminals. We have all refrained from doing what is right to build our nation. We can and should thus blame ourselves for our socio-political­ woes and not lay it at the door step of the PDP when we have all failed the nation.

    A careful analysis of our problem, shows a collective failure of all to do the needful.

    How is the PDP our problem when we have all failed in our bit of nation building?

    Strong institutions need resolute people to succeed. We are people that want convenient laws…laws we obey when it favours us? Show me the nation that is built up that way and I will congratulate Nigerians for building Nigeria.

    Our estate will nose-dive as long as our collective docility in the face of nation building continues.

    I personally don’t support corruption that the PDP and indeed political life of the nation has come to be known for, but that will not make me situate our problem where it doesn’t belong. Nigerians are the problem of Nigeria. Our ignoble sense of entitlement with zero percent sense of responsibility to nation building is our problem.

    Way out? We must stop finding help where there’s none because such would amount to an exercise in futility. We must see beyond the PDP and be willing to selflessly build the Nigeria of our individual dreams. Fixing our socio-political­ woes in Nigeria must go beyond political groupings. Until we experience mental shift that will birth to attitudinal change in us all as Nigerians, the circus of ineptitude in governance and impunity in the society will continue.

    For if we gather under any guise with same mind-set that has led us to this sorry state of affairs, we are of all men most miserable. Political grouping not people oriented, can at best, bring about cosmetic changes that will mock essence of the real change we all yearn in our polity.

    We must thus soberly come to that point where we will say, enough of the mess we have plunged our dear nation Nigeria. Until we are ready to come to the table of nation building with patriotism in our wings, can we actually get to the promise land when we ply the wrong route? Attitudinal change is the way out!

    • Oyejide Victor,

    University of Ibadan

  • ‘Why some banks ran into trouble’

    ‘Why some banks ran into trouble’

    About four years ago, a tsunami hit some banks when their management teams were sacked by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Those banks have since been given to others to manage and they are today doing fine. What really went wrong? Mr Ahmed Kuru, Group Managing Director of Enterprise Bank Limited, which evolved from Spring Bank, said their undoing was lack of good corporate governance. He spoke on this and more to reporters. Deputy Business Editor SIMEON EBULU was there.

     

     

    What are the specific figures as regards Enterprise Bank’s improvement?

    I will give you figures. We have grown our deposit by 27 per cent. The industry average growth rate is 15 per cent, and we have grown ours by 27 per cent between last year and now. On loan book, the industry growth rate is 16 per cent, we have grown ours by 200 per cent. In total asset, the industry growth rate is 15 per cent; we have grown that of Enterprise Bank by 26 per cent. On return on investment (ROI); which is also important, the industry rate is seven per cent; we have achieved about 20 per cent and by any standard anywhere in the world if your ROI is 20 per cent, it shows that you are not destroying value. In the previous year, the bank was in a loss situation, now we have reported profitability in billions, I don’t want to mention figures; because the auditors and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) are checking our books. I can tell you that our corporate communications in the next three weeks or one month would furnish you with the actual figures.

    How do bankers operate? A legacy bank was taken over by the CBN and the same CBN appointed managements that didn’t perform well, sacked them and paid them huge amount of money. Why pay those who have not performed well?

    You say our predecessors were paid huge sums of money, I’m sure some of them would have contested for political offices. Every management has a different mandate. When the previous management came on board, at that time there was an intervention, after the CBN’s special examination of 2009, the banks were almost collapsing, so the CBN wrote them to stabilise the situation and find core investors. This was their mandate, stabilise the situation and find core investors.

    At the end, they succeeded in stabilising the banks. Five of the 10 institutions succeeded in finding core investors, the only three that couldn’t conclude because the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) gave a deadline, they now have to intervene and appointed a management to complete the cycle, they came to stabilise and get core investors, and they were able to achieve the mandate that was given to them by the CBN. We were appointed to come and run these institutions as commercial entities. When we came on board, we were not challenged by issues of negative assets or inadequate capital; by the time we came, all those issues had been addressed by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) that purchased these institutions.

    So, we were given the institutions and mandated to run them commercially and competitively, and I think that’s what we have done and what we are doing and we are on the right track. These three banks are strong enough today to compete competitively with all operators in the industry. Anybody that was appointed was based on contract; so they are, ultimately, compensated at the end. I will not define the amount paid to them as huge; but I think they were adequately compensated based on their assignment. And, of course, because we were appointed to come and run the institutions commercially, we have to tread with caution.

    The last pronouncement by AMCON was that the nationalised banks would be sold next year. Would this have any setback on your operations?

    Yes, AMCON made a statement that they wanted to sell the institutions either next or this year or two years time. For us that means nothing. What is important to us is to run the institutions commercially, profitably and put all the structures on ground to ensure that business continues; because whoever steps in to buy the banks, is not coming to buy structures, he is coming to buy the value that is in the structures. He is coming to buy quality of the customers, balance sheet, quality of staff and infrastructure etc.

    Those are the things that a buyer will want to see. To run the bank profitably, these are the areas we are concentrating; we are not involved in issues of if they are selling or not; because we have three-and-five-year plans. Of course AMCON’s pronouncement does affect us once in a while because everybody wants continuity. I can tell you if you go into the institution, you will see how the processes are, considering how our customers are well taken care of. Anybody who is well attended to will like to come back and continue patronising the bank and if you are a good staff, anybody that takes over will want to retain you. As I said earlier, we have a three to five year plan and we are pushing it.

    What does your logo signify?

    The logo is deliberately designed the way it is, just a shadow, so that the black and yellow colours will show as a spirit of our enterprise. It explains how the eagle flies and, ultimately, takes care of us.

    The financial inclusion that the Bankers Committee want to pioneer and kick off in Borno State, will you send your staff to the rural areas of Borno State, considering the current security situation in that place?

    We are aware of the security issue in Borno State. However, if you go to New York, the security risk is higher. These days in New York there are certain streets you cannot walk at night; especially when you are a black person. Yes, the issue of security in Borno is a problem; but I can say you don’t just employ people and send them to a volatile area just because you want to prove a point. Every organisation has the responsibility to protect its workers. There are people that hail from those areas and there are people in those areas; part of the structure we want to leverage on; besides, the bank branches in those locations are also to offices in almost all the over 700 local governments in Nigeria. In some of these states, in every local government you go to, there is a post office structure and how does this work? They try to put local people that speak the local dialect; they are usually the staff that manage post offices in Nigeria.

    If you have a problem and go to the Post office to ask questions, you will realise that those that are there are local people. So, what we need to do is to build capacity and train them, you don’t need to carry people from other locations to a different place. Be conscious of the lives of those people that are going to manage it and try as much as you can to ensure that you eliminate any danger that may come to people you are bringing from outside.

    But in all the budget that I have seen, security is always at the top and that is why the project is the one the Federal Government, states, bankers committee and security agencies are involved to ensure that no life is lost in the process; because no matter the profit you are making and putting people in danger; definitely there is a challenge in it. The security issue has been taken into consideration and some of us strongly believe that it will work because some of these security challenges also have linkages with economic empowerment and economic activities. We believe that in the banking industry we are going to do something that will benefit the society.

    You mentioned that you have put structures in place, I want to believe that one of the major challenges that led to the collapse of the former banks was that of structure, I want you to be specific on what you have done on this.

    What has happened is that when the CBN intervened, they realised that most of these banks got affected because of lack of good corporate governance structure. At Enterprise Bank, the first thing we did was to convene a very strong corporate governance structure. And we insisted that there must be strong policies to this regard. Also, the level of regulation has gone up. In our bank as small as we are, we have a 16-member board. We have five executive Directors; including the Managing Director, we have 10 members non-executive directors. The least amongst them was a former Executive Director in a bank; so we are very strong, we have former Managing Directors of banks and insurance companies.

    We brought credible people and put them on the Board so that the corporate governance structure will be strong to avoid any abuse of process. It’s usually the abuse of process that allows banks to engage in unethical practices. So, everybody on the board is an independent character particularly now that CBN has intervened. They are professional people, Chairman of the Board is the former Managing Director of Diamond Bank, and he is a professional and disciplined banker. So, CBN has ensured that what happened in the past will not happen again, now due process is followed in whatever is done.

    Are you still a medium-sized bank considering all the achievements you mentioned?

    We are still a medium-sized bank. When I gave the unverified figures, and you look at it in absolute terms, if I grow by 20 per cent of N200 billion or N40 billion, and some other banks for example grows by one percent of say N5.0 trillion, in terms of size, I’m still a medium sized bank and I want to be a medium-sized bank, like I said in December 2011, we are not here for any size game or size war, we want to be an efficient bank and that is our strategy.

    What is the number of depositors in Enterprise Bank?

    In December 2011, we said we had about 1.5 million customers. What happens in the industry is that you always have five to 10 per cent dormancy and deposits continue to go down. We have not gone farther than the 1.5 million, because immediately we stop managing dormant accounts, you realise that naturally we have to drop so many accounts. In those days, what banks do is to go for mass market appeal, they go to the market and start opening accounts with zero balance; sometimes with N20 balance; by the time you start evaluating some of these things, you will have to move them because of administrative costs; because those accounts are not being maintained for so many years; some of them you try to pursue if after sometime you don’t get them, you have to remove them so that you will continuously have a realistic number to work with.

    On your business relationship with Union Bank UK?

    Union Bank UK has continued to support us; last week we had a major transaction with them,;happy with them also. We will still maintain a good relationship with them.

    You have narrated the things you have done so far for the bank, which ones have you not done yet?

    There are so many things that we will want to do, all those things that we have indicated are already in process. I’m working towards having a cost income ratio of 50 per cent, when I came, the cost income ratio was around 180 per cent, now I’m around 88 per cent which is a very good move; but my target is to make it 50 per cent which is good.

    On loan to deposit ratio, industry average today is about 80 per cent and I’m looking at making it 15 per cent. I have not reached the level of efficiency that I want. To train is not an easy task, it takes time, you cannot turnaround all sectors regardless of whatever you have on ground in one or two years. The only thing you can do is to put those things that are necessary on track, and then you start to measure them. I think that is what we have been able to do. I want to have a traditional institution; while in terms of percentage; maybe only five percent of my customers come to my bank. I want to be a traditional institution that is leveraging on innovation and technology to deliver an efficient service, we have not achieved that; but we are on track.

    Where do you think the bank will be at the end of 2013?

    I want to be a formidable bank; where you can identify with me and know when you come into my banking hall I will be able to give you an efficient service; this takes time; but we are on track. I’m happy with the progress we have made so far and happy we are on the right track to be anything that we want to be in the industry. We must continue to innovate, invest in our human capital, invest in technology and have the freedom and process that we are able to do what we want to do and once we are able to put those things in place, I’m sure we will be where we want to be.

    There is no going back in Nigeria, for us first and foremost, we want to take it to the next level and at the end of this year, I want to have maybe three per cent of the market, I don’t want to be like Bank A or Bank B, I want to have my own market share, I want to know that I’m making profit. I want to concentrate on the target I set for myself regardless of what every other person feels; I will then achieve my target of being an efficient and service delivery oriented bank. Be a bank that identifies with the tail end of the market regardless of size.

    How many branches have you opened since coming on board?

    When we were appointed, our mandate is to consolidate, and when you talk of how many branches we have opened, branches typically in a banking environment are supposed to be channels to where you offer banking services and the branch thing is gradually phasing out, the issue of having 10 branches on a particular street doesn’t count anymore; because people now want to transact business inside their houses.

    So, instead of spending so much time in opening new branches, our strategy is to consolidate the 152 branches that we have, before the end of this month, we are going to open in five states and these states we were not there before, that is why we are opening them. If we had branches in these locations, we wouldn’t have done that. We want to be present in all the state capitals, so we are going there as a strategic move not the one driven by profitability; but ultimately, it must be profitable.

    So, we want to make sure that wherever you are, you can reach us even leveraging on infrastructure built by other people. You can reach us on the Internet, go to the ATM. I believe things are changing; because if you go to developed countries, hardly you find the kind of banking halls that you find in Nigeria. You will see one small place, sometimes; you have to ring the bell before you go in, but if you know the kind of transaction that is happening in that office, you won’t believe it; because everything is now based on technology. As a banker 80 per cent of my transactions are done on the telephone; so the moment I have to go to the banking hall, I feel a little constrained and even you as a person, you will want to come out of your NUJ building and draw your N100,000. You don’t want to go to the banking hall to waste time; just because you want to collect cash. The emphasis will be more on technology driven channels than the kind of branch banking that we are used to.

    What are you doing with the assets of the legacy bank you inherited?

    The African Continental Bank (ACB) assets just like other banks assets are huge assets to the bank. What we are trying to do is to ensure that we get maximum benefit out of them; because at the end when you are going to value the institution, they will also count in that process. We are trying to extract maximum benefit out of our premises. The buildings we are not using, we will maintain them and rent them out. The plan is not to sell any asset; but to use them as a basis to earn some income.

    How do you manage to cope with over regulation?

    What happened in 2009 has made CBN to intervene and tighten their regulatory processes. All over the world, regulations have increased tremendously. I think the financial sector; mostly the banking industry is the most regulated in the world. The most important thing is it is for the good of the industry; because what the CBN is trying to do is to ensure that they put necessary measures in place; so as not to be caught unawares; that is why they continue to roll out guidelines. I can tell you that many of the circulars they put out are also discussed at the Bankers Committee meeting; they want to carry everybody along and as partners, we will see how to position the industry; it will not be driven by individuals, but structures; so, if anybody comes into the system, regardless of what happens, the structure will mould how he conducts himself. We are not distracted by the CBN’s regulation; but rather encouraged by it. So, we will continue to operate in a way that we do not go contrary to the CBN rules.

     

  • The trouble with state police

    The trouble with state police

    SIR: Founded in London by Sir Robert Peel three centuries ago, the state police was first named Metropolitan Police. The men employed by the force were called “Peelers” or “Bobbies” after the founder. Working full time and wearing a special uniforms, with prevention of crimes as their primary function, England set the example, and other countries who virtually share similarities began to establish the formal or modern policing, though those who differ, developed it to centralised policing system.

    In its effort to establish a police force in Nigerian colony, the British had two options; either to adopt its own system or to develop the local African means of maintaining law and order. The former was adopted in the East, while the latter for the West and Northern Nigeria.

    The name pillars “peelers” was called yandoka in the North and they did everything but just!

    In Kano, a man was arrested when he visited a friend who was in a police custody, just because he belonged to opposition party. Fifty women were shot dead, when they revolted against special taxes in Aba, just to mentioned a few.

    To allow the state to have its own police means only those from the state would be recruited, and needless to add, justice would surely be denied to non indigenes, considering how ethnicity and religion bigotry have become the order of the day.

    Its undisputed fact, the some states will also use it to have an easy way of arming their supporters during elections, since politics is now a “do or die affair”.

    Moreover, in a situation where majority of states depend on monthly allocation from federal coffers, and yet not enough is available to cater for other social amenities, funding would also be a major problem.

    Despite being tagged as one of the most corrupt institutions, the constitutional review committee, should look for way forward to make the Nigeria Police corruption free, and more citizen-friendly as against relying on excessive force. Police entitlements should be paid promptly, and training should be top priority, to curb extra judicial killings, which is to be blamed on the aggravation of the crises in the northern states.

     

    • Auwal A. Dankano,

    Kano.