Tag: United Nations

  • Dutch cyclists to South Africa arrive Nigeria

    Dutch cyclists to South Africa arrive Nigeria

    The United Nations Information Centre (UNIC) Lagos, in collaboration with the Netherlands Embassy Office in Lagos on Wednesday received two Dutch Cyclists of the Building Bridges project who had embarked on a bicycle journey to Cape Town in South Africa.

    The Cyclists, Jilt van Schayik, and Teun Meulepas, who are stopping over in Lagos, took off from Amsterdam in the Netherlands in February to connect and encourage young people across two continents of Africa and Europe, habouring 21 countries; a journey of about 17,000km.

    Schayik and Meulepas arrived Lagos –Nigeria on Tuesday night in the company of the Togolese grassroots initiative for Building Bridges, and were received by their Nigerian counterparts.

    Recounting the experience, Meulepas, one of the cross-continent bikers said: “So far so good, we had a great trip, we met a lot of inspiring people, we saw a lot of crazy things and we had a lot of fun on the road as well.

    “But what is important in this is the story of a lot of young people. We saw a lot of young people who are worried about their chances of getting a job. Young people are worried about the systems of education in their countries; young people are worried about corruption.”

    Meulepas and colleague promised to relate the stories of a lot of young people, who they met in the course of their journey, to the United Nations office in New York when they return.

    During his welcome address, Director of UNIC in Lagos, Mr. Ronald Kayanja, lamented the poor involvement of young people in policy making recounting that in 2000 eight goals were spelt out by the UN.

    According to him, “They were supposed to be achieved by 2015, and now we are in 2015 but the results are mixed. Some countries have achieved them, some countries have not and now we are discussing a new set of goals by2030. And we call those the Sustainable Development Goals. They are 17 goals that are being discussed.

    “In September this year in New York, member states of the United Nations will meet to agree on these goals that we shall use as our target for the coming 15 years.

    “But what we have realised is that, in all these things, young people are either not interested or are not well informed about what is going on. So their participation is minimal.”

    He however noted that the essence of accompanying the cyclists as they ride on the streets of Lagos is to create the aware among young people that something is happening.

    On his part, Drs. Taco Westerhuis, Press Secretary to Embassy of the Netherlands in Lagos commended the bikers for the courage to undertake the journey, urging Nigerian youths to connect with the idea of developmental policies from their immediate neighbourhoods.

    Drs. Westerhuis, who observed that there are more opportunities in Lagos than there are in the Netherlands, said: “The only thing to do is getting the opportunities to the right people.”

    He however commended the Nigerian group of cyclists for the team spirit observing that: “We all know biking in Lagos is not easy, I therefore commend those of you who dare to ride your bikes in Lagos.”

    Building Bridges project is about involving young people in policy making and breaching the gap between young people and policy makers.

  • UN honours fallen peacekeepers

    UN honours fallen peacekeepers

    United Nations (UN) on Friday honoured peacekeepers who gave their lives for peace at battle in other countries.
    The UN during the celebration of International Day of Peacekeepers, honoured a total of 126 peacekeepers in the last year and 49 this year.
    The UN Secretary-General in his speech at the ceremony noted that ‘This is a time of danger & growth for blue helmets.
    At the ceremony, the UN specifically honoured the about 2,975 Nigerian peacekeepers who risk their lives on front-line around the world.
    Similarly, it held a Commemoration ceremony for 4 fallen Nigerian peacekeepers who lost their lives in 2014.
    The Nigerians are Lance Corporal Silas DANYAWU and Lance Corporal John JULIUS from the United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) and Corporal Adama IKE and Sergeant Rabiatu MUSA who both served with the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL).

    Below are some activities of the United Nations through the social media (twitter):

  • Safety of mother, child in emergency

    Safety of mother, child in emergency

    “I remember hearing gunshots and feeling afraid. I ran to save my life and that of my six children, but I was not fast enough… I lost my baby… but I had to remain strong for the others…”, recounts Zainab (not real name) rescued from the Sambisa forest.

    “We are looking for your men. Do not run,” she remembers the gunmen saying when her village was stormed, leading to abduction of women and children. Another survivor, a pregnant Fatima (not real name) watched Boko Haram militants murder her husband and drag her three children away. Afterward, she was taken to the Sambisa Forest and ended up giving birth in the forest. She and her newborn were later rescued.

    The above tales of horror orchestrated by Boko Haram insurgents at the peak of their acts of terrorism in North-East Nigeria has been strongly condemned by the internal community including the United Nations (UN).

    The plain truth, yet a sad commentary, is that at the receiving end of the humanitarian crises arising from insurgency are women and children. The number of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and the refugees kept growing.

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the UN system in Nigeria put the total number of IDPs at 1,235,294 while 2,120 refugees and asylum seekers were registered as of 17 January 2015.

    According to Assessment Capacities Project, Start Network (ACAPS), the majority of IDPs are in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states, in the far northeast, but 47,276 IDPs are in Plateau, Nasarawa, Abuja, Kano, and Kaduna states.

    However, the magnitude and severity of needs remain more pressing in the northeast, where humanitarian emergency thresholds have been exceeded and access was for a long time extremely challenging.

    Thus, it is no longer news that hundreds of women and children were abducted and held in locations hitherto held by the insurgents, including the dreaded Sambisa forest. It is also not news that hundreds of women and children have been rescued and are still being rescued by the military.

    That a number of the women and girls rescued were very traumatised and found to be pregnant is also in the public sphere. However, that every pregnancy, regardless of circumstances leading to it, must be safe and delivered is the issue for the front burner of public discourse.

    No doubt, the women and girls have gone through hell in the hands of their abductors. Their rights have been infringed upon; they have been brutalised and abused; and many have lost their lives in the process. The lucky ones that are still alive are back and still far away from returning to their normal self. They, obviously, need all kinds of support: foods, non-foods, dignity kits, health support, education, livelihood, among others.

    Furthermore, every time there is a humanitarian emergency, the actors in the humanitarian field are quick to rush and repeatedly provide food and non-food items to the displaced population.

    Of course, that reinforces the African proverb that says, ‘If you resolve the challenges of feeding in the life of a poor man, then he is no longer poor.’ But over time, the reality of other equally critical needs set in. The pregnant women, the lactating mothers, women of reproductive age and the children have to be catered for specially.

    The United Nations through its specialised Agencies, Programmes and Funds and the government, with the benefit of hindsight, always anticipates this and in all cases, factors such into its response plans.

    The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) being the lead Agency of the UN in the area of Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) is committed to delivering a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every child birth is safe and every young person’s potential is fulfilled. Its mandate was determined by United Nations Members, including Nigeria.

    Indeed, Nigeria is one of the countries whose 1965 appeal to the UN ultimately inspired the creation of UNFPA a few years later.

    UNFPA in Nigeria is committed to save lives, restore dignity and rebuild broken lives of vulnerable women and girls.

    Within the context of the insurgency in the North-East and its humanitarian challenges especially as they affect women and children, UNFPA is addressing gender-based violence in humanitarian settings through a wide range of services, including counselling, post-rape treatment, legal support, assistance with livelihoods, and support through its Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) programs.

    Working with and through the government of Nigeria including in the states, UNFPA interventions in 2014 alone supported more than 16,000 safe deliveries in North East Nigeria; reached about 2.6 million women and girls with SRH services including for Gender Based Violence (GBV) management in North East Nigeria; and supported provision of modern family planning services to an estimated 2 million women and Couple Year Protection of 2.2million countrywide.

    It is gladdening to note that through its interventions and support, about two thousand maternal deaths were averted country wide while another one thousand free fistula treatment surgeries were supported with 97% success rate across the country.

    Explaining the SRH support to the rescued girls and women, the Director and Country Representative of UNFPA Nigeria, Ms Rati Ndhlovu, observed that “Upon the arrival of rescued women and children in Malkohi camp in Yola, UNFPA responded immediately by providing reproductive health care and psychosocial counselling to survivors of violence.

    “Women and girls who survive unimaginable trauma of captivity and brutalizing violence need immediate and compassionate care and UNFPA has been, as always, determined to ensure that they are given everything they need to be able to heal with dignity, safety and a restored sense of self-worth. After a few weeks of counselling, there was marked improvement in the survivors.”

    Restoring the livelihood and normal lifestyle of the rescued women and children and those that are displaced by the insurgency and military operations is the issue on the front burner of the UN system in the country.

    Of particular importance is ensuring that women can deliver babies safely and that they and girls can maintain their health, dignity, rights and self-worth even in the most challenging situations.

    “Our efforts”, Ms Ndlovu added, “are focused on supporting women and girls to restore their lives as quickly as possible and begin the process of healing to be able to fulfill their potential and once again resume productive lives.”

  • UN to honour fallen Nigerian peacekeepers

    UN to honour fallen Nigerian peacekeepers


    The United Nations (UN) is to honour four Nigerians who lost their lives while serving as peacekeepers in Liberia and Senegal. The honour is part of activities to celebrate the ‘International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers’ on Friday, May 29, marking the seventh successive year in which the Organization will honour more than 100 ‘blue helmets’. Similarly, the 126 peacekeepers – military, police and civilian – who lost their lives in 2014 while serving with the UN as a result of hostile acts, accidents and diseases, will posthumously receive the Dag Hammarskjöld Medal. The International Day was established by the General Assembly in 2002, in tribute to all men and women serving in peacekeeping operations for their high level of professionalism, dedication and courage, and to honour the memory of those who have lost their lives in the cause of peace. The Assembly designated 29 May as the Day being the date in 1948 when the United Nations Truce Supervision Organization (UNTSO), the world body’s first peacekeeping mission, began operations in Palestine. This year’s Peacekeepers Day falls during the significant 70th anniversary of the United Nations, “offering a chance to honour the Blue Helmets’ invaluable contribution to the proud history of the Organization and to reaffirm our commitment to make them even more effective in the years ahead. Thus, the theme for this year is ‘UN at 70:  Peacekeeping:  Past, Present, and Future’.” In a message to mark the Day, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said: “United Nations peacekeeping has given life to the UN Charter’s aim “to unite our strength to maintain international peace and security”. Through years of struggle and sacrifice, the iconic Blue Helmet has earned its place as a symbol of hope to millions of people living in war-ravaged lands.” “At the same time, demands far outpace resources. We need better funding, training and equipment. Our troops and police must carry out ever more complex mandates while being held to the highest standards of conduct. We need developed countries to resume their historically influential role as contributors of troops. And we need stronger political support from the Member States that are responsible for authorizing, financing and contributing troops and police to the missions,” the Secretary-General further said in his message. Hervé Ladsous, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, said:  “We pay tribute to those courageous men and women who have lost their lives while serving on our Peacekeeping Missions. I express my heartfelt condolences to the families of those who have paid the ultimate price. “Today, we are witnessing our largest deployment in the history of UN Peacekeeping. This is a testament of the international community’s faith in Peacekeeping as a fundamental tool in helping to peace and security”. The 2015 commemorative ceremonies will be held at a time when the demand for United Nations peacekeepers is at an all-time high. There are now more than 125,000 UN peacekeepers, including 91,000 military personnel, 13,000 police officers as well as 17,000 international civilian and national staff serving in 16 operations on four continents. Nigeria is the ninth largest contributor of military and police personnel to UN peacekeeping.  It currently deploys 2,975 military and police personnel to the UN peacekeeping operations in Cote d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Lebanon, Liberia, Mali, South Sudan, Sudan and Western Sahara. The Nigerians are Lance Corporal Silas Danyawu and Lance Corporal John Julius from the United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) and Corporal  Adama  Ike  and  Sergeant  Rabiatu Musa who both served with the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL). The commemorative activities in honour of the fallen heroes will be held at the UN’s Headquarters in New York, and at peacekeeping operations and offices around the world.

  • UN@70, empowers Nigerian women

    UN@70, empowers Nigerian women

    As part of activities to mark the 70th Anniversary of the United Nations (UN) as well as the Post-2015 Development Agenda, over 152 women were trained on how to become better homemakers.

    The training on ‘Homemakers Lifestyle and Empowerment Workshop’ organized by the United Nations Information Centre (UNIC) Lagos and Brightlight Studios was themed: ‘A Better Me’.

    Defying the biting fuel scarcity in Nigeria, the women clad in beautiful dresses turned up in their numbers to be a part of the programme which also contributes to the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 3: Promote Gender Equality and Women Empowerment.

    In his welcome address the Director of UNIC Lagos, Ronald Kayanja, reiterated that women remained a priority group for the United Nations and reassured that the organisation would continue to make a positive difference to the lives of millions of people especially in terms of vaccinating children and distributing food aid.

    The UNIC Director also mentioned sheltering refugees, deploying peacekeepers, protecting the environment, seeking peaceful resolution of disputes and supporting democratic elections, gender equality, human rights and the rule of law as other on the UN priority list.

    Quoting the UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, Kayanja noted that “The theme of this anniversary year: ‘Strong UN: Better World’, captures the importance of multilateralism. This is a time of test but far more one of tremendous opportunities.”

    Represented by the UNIC National Information Officer, Oluseyi Soremekun, Mr Kayanja further said that the empowerment workshop aligned with the message of the UN Secretary-General on UN@70 that the United Nations looks forward to working with people everywhere to build lives of safety, prosperity and dignity for all.

    The Homemakers Lifestyle and Empowerment Workshop featured the business side of beauty which included Make-up skills and head-gear (Gele) tying lessons; Marriage/Relationship Counselling; Building a Successful Fashion Designing Business; and the Art and Science of making Desserts, Cocktails and Mocktails.

    The programme also featured exhibition of women’s products from the cultural industry; beauty products; Cakes and Pastries and women wellness products among others.

    Exhibition - Cultural industry
    Exhibition of some wares at the workshop

    Having been asked to bring along their gele for the lesson on Head-gear tying which is gradually developing to be a thriving business in the country, the women brought out their different, colourful head-tie to go through the process of tying elegant, head-turning ‘Gele’.

    The ‘Gele’ tying session appeared to be the climax of the workshop as all the women looked upbeat and determined to learn the art of tying the head-gear.

    A participant, Ms Olaitan Ajilogba, expressed her delight that she eventually mastered the process after a long trial during the session and ‘tied a beautiful and glamorous head-gear.’

    Similarly, another participant, Ms Aisha Joy Omosun, noted that the Make-up session was very instructive and educating and would add both social and economic values to the women.

    Consequently, Ms Lanre Anjola-Oyebode, Executive Director of Brightlight Studios, who had earlier explained the rationale behind the programme, said it was meant to grow the number of women who are economically independent and sufficiently empowered to support their husbands in raising educated and morally upright children.

  • Insurgency: UN expresses displease

    Insurgency: UN expresses displease

    The United Nations (UN) Secretary-General, Ban Ki Moon has expressed a deep concern over the continuous attacks by Boko Haram insurgents on civilians.

    The Secretary-General was troubled by the continuing indiscriminate and horrific attacks by Boko Haram against civilian populations in Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria.

    He regrets that in spite of the military gains made by the affected countries, Boko Haram continues its wanton destruction and killing of civilians.

    The UN boss is appalled by the continued abductions and use of children as ‘human bombs’, as well as the testimony that many of the girls and women held by Boko Haram were repeatedly raped while in captivity.

    He also expressed displease over the fact that these girls and women were compelled to marry their captors as part of a campaign of forced imprisonment and sexual violence.

    “The perpetrators of these despicable acts must be brought to justice,” he said, calling on the Government of Nigeria to scale up the provision of medical and psychosocial support to the survivors.

    The Secretary-General is also deeply concerned over the further displacement of some 40,000 civilians in Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria in the last three weeks.

    He therefore urged members of the Lake Chad Basin Commission and Benin to advance the operationalization of the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF), and create a secure environment for the safe and voluntary return, resettlement or integration of displaced persons and refugees.

    In addition, he urged concerned states to ensure that all measures taken to address the terrorist threat of Boko Haram are conducted in line with international humanitarian, human rights and refugee law.

    “To be remotely effective, the response to this threat has to go beyond a purely military one.  Legitimate grievances, past and current human rights violations, and the root causes of the conflict must also be addressed,” he summed.

  • Protesters want Burundi president’s third term bid halted

    Protesters want Burundi president’s third term bid halted

    Protest organisers in Burundi on Wednesday urged African leaders meeting in Tanzania to demand that their president halt his bid for a third term, a development that has triggered the nation’s worst crisis since an ethnically-fuelled civil war ended in 2005.

    Protesters have taken to the streets for more than two weeks saying Pierre Nkurunziza’s bid for another five years violates the constitution and the Arusha peace deal that ended the civil war.

    Both documents limit a president to two terms, Reuters says.

    More than 20 people have been killed since unrest erupted, according to an unofficial count by activists.

    East African leaders and a top official from continental heavyweight South Africa met in Tanzania’s commercial capital Dar es Salaam to discuss the crisis that has already spilled over into a region with a history of ethnic conflict.

    More than 50,000 people have fled to neighbouring states. The United Nations refugee agency UNHCR said the crisis was heading towards a “worst case scenario” that could see 300,000 people fleeing, some to other parts of Burundi and others abroad.

    That would mean displacing about three percent of the 10 million-strong population in one of Africa’s most crowded nations.

    “We expect the east African heads of state to tell President Nkurunziza that the constitution of Burundi and the Arusha peace agreement do not allow him to run for a third term,” Pacifique Nininahazwe, a civil society activist and protest leader, told Reuters.

    Nkurunziza, 51, who once led a rebel group from the majority Hutu population against the minority Tutsi-led army in the war, has pointed to a constitutional court ruling that said his first term did not count as he was chosen by lawmakers, not voted in.

  • The shape of things to come

    The shape of things to come

    How can Nigeria reenergise its economy in the face of falling oil prices? Experts are voting for the property market, which they say can drive the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) this year, MUYIWA LUCAS writes.

    The United Nations (UN) predicted that between 2010 and 2030, a growth of 113.4 million  would be recorded in Nigeria’s population.

    This increase is greater than the combined population of Ghana, Kenya and Tanzania in 2010. But a twist to the forecast for the country, which was perhaps not envisaged so soon, is the emergence of Nigeria as the largest economy on the continent, a feat that has been it overtaking South Africa.

    As at last April, the rebased Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was estimated at N80.22 trillion  ($509billion), leading to ranking as the world’s 26th largest economy with a per capita income rising from $1,555 to $2,688. To ensure that Nigeria remains on top, the Nigerian Financial System Strategy (FSS 2020) has been developed to attain the country’s goal of reaching a GDP of $900 billion by 2020.

    For the government, the continuous fall in the international crude oil price poses a great danger for this dream.This is because oil revenue constitutes about 90 per cent of government’s revenue. Now, to continue to make this dream a reality, especially with the tumbling oil market, the government and, indeed, investors will now have to look at other areas of investments this year.

    One area that will prove fertile for investment is the real estate sector.This is because since the recovery from the global economic meltdown in 2009/2010, the property sector has witnessed resurgence, particularly in the south.

    Also, a New World Wealth report buttresses this position. The report says there are more than 200,000m² of retail development  under construction, particularly concentrated in the south. The projects include Port Harcourt Mall measuring 11,000m2 and the Owerri and Delta Malls measuring 12,000m² and 15,000m².

    According to the Federal Government, the real estate sector  contributes about 15 per cent of the rebased GDP, while the growth recorded in the domestic real estate sector on a yearly basis stood at 11 per cent in 2012. Therefore, investing in housing, experts reckon, is considered to provide a significant multiplier effect on the broader economy as it contributes to GDP through two main drivers – private residential investments and consumption spending on housing.

    These activities will be more pronounced in Lagos State, going by a report by Agusto & Co. – a Pan-African credit rating and research agency, which reported that activities in Lagos account for at least 40 per cent of the real estate market.

    The UN has also predicted that with about 58 million people moving to cities in sub-Saharan Africa this decade, Nigeria will be at the heart of the continent’s urbanisation.

    These predictions may have spurred the Federal Government’s planned massive investment in the housing sector, an initiative that is billed to commence this year. The Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Mrs. Akon Eyakenyi,  presented what she described as  housing roadmap for the country. Though the document is still awaiting the government’s ratification it seeks to provide about one million housing units per year over the next 30 years.

    Under this initiative, the private sector is to provide 800, 000 housing units yearly, while the Federal Government will provide the remaining 200,000 units.This makes for ample investment opportunities for the private sector, on whose shoulders the sector squarely lies.

    Experts said given the poor records of the government over the years to provide affordable and sufficient accommodation for the citizens, the private sector may have to provide more than the 800, 000 units in the initiative.This reasoning is right going by the fact that in the last four years, the Federal Government, through its various housing agencies and parastatals, have been able to build a paltry 43,126 housing units nationwide.

    A boost for investment in the real estate sector this year is also captured in a report by Lamudi Real Estate Agents. In a survey by Lamudi last year, 81 percent of respondents agreed that there is a great demand for more houses and apartments in the country, while 52 per cent said more than one million new units are required to meet yearly demand.

    But to ensure that the sector brings good and speedy return on investments this year, property developers will have to consider building truly affordable houses which will be within the earning capacity of the middle and low income class.

    Lamudi further revealed that the majority of housing units targeting the country’s middle income earners are priced at between N20million and N35million, whereas their earning capacity is between N30, 000 and N100, 000  monthly.

    In this regard, the Nigerian Mortgage Refinance Company (NMRC) is expected to play a vital role by providing funds to facilitate housing development.

    An interesting development across the country has been the rise in capacity and execution of state-level property development corporations in both residential and increasingly commercial developments.

    The real estate is also expected to take advantage of the crude oil situation to impact well in the stock market. Experts say while the share value of some oil firms are falling as a result of a slide of crude oil price, the real estate firms would benefit from divestments. This means there is likely to be more players in the real estate sector of the capital market, which may likely swell the number from 10.

    Dolapo Omidire, in her analysis for Estate Intel, a real estate online survey firm, noted that of the 10 listed real estate firms in the capital market, four, including Julius Berger, UPDC REIT, UAC Property Development Company and Union Homes REIT account for 96 per cent of the sector’s market capitalisation; with Julius Berger alone accounting for 57 per cent at the end of 2014, with a market capitalisation of over N80 billion.

    Omidire noted that of the 10 listed, UPDC is the only property developer, while the other three are run-of-the-mill REITs, demonstrating that the listed real estate sector is still very rudimentary when compared to the New York Stock Exchange, where hundreds of REITs, real estate service providers and real estate investment funds/firms are listed.

    Though the sector accounts for 1.22 per cent of the market capitalisation; that is, N139 billion of N11trillion at the end of last year, it is expected that this will increase in the year.

    The beginning of construction works for the Centenary City development in Abuja is expected to impact on the sector. The project will include 260 luxury villas, 265 apartment buildings, 139 office buildings, 308million high mixed use Africa square and tower, five major retail centres and much more.

    Much as the year holds bountiful return for investors, experts say this could only happen provided government, developers, construction firms and financial institutions work together to ensure the success and development of the sector.

  • Housing…Simply tokenism!

    Housing…Simply tokenism!

    The federal and state governments are not folding their arms. The private sector is contributing too. But the truth remains that all these efforts are insignificant, making many wonder what will happen in the next ten years when an estimated 60 per cent of Nigerians will live in cities. Failed and unimplemented policies, including very weak institutions, have been identified as why Nigerians are daily becoming destitute, writes MUYIWA LUCAS 

    As a young artisan, John Essien left his home in Ikot Ekpene, Cross River State, for greener pastures. His destination turned out to be Lagos State, the commercial nerve centre of Nigeria. But his hopes soon turned into nightmare, when after six weeks of squatting with three other friends in a one-room apartment in Ajegunle, a suburb in the state, he was evicted. Frustrated, after several failed attempts to get accommodation on his own due to financial constraint and unavailability of room space, he returned to Ikot Ekpene.

    On the part of Musa Ibrahim, a resident of Okene, Kogi State, coming to Lagos for him was influenced by the ‘sweet stories’ he heard about the coastal city. But his sojourn was cut short after only two weeks. He had no shelter to retire to after roaming the streets all day. He returned to Okene.

    Shelter, going by Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, ranks among the topmost needs of man. It is, therefore, understandable why the desire of man owning his own house remains a priority in his life ambition. However, considering the harsh economic environment in the country, achieving this dream has become elusive for most Nigerians. And for a country whose average citizen lives on less than $1 a day, this dream of home ownership may remain a tall order.

    Various states and the Federal Government are making  efforts to solve housing problems, with an estimated deficit of 17 million deficit. From the LagosHoms scheme of the Lagos State government, to the various private initiatives, housing solution seems to be on the front burners of every stakeholder. For instance, the Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Mrs. Akon Eyakenyi, through the Federal Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development (FMLHUD), explained it has made tremendous effort in solving the housing needs of the country. In the last four years, the FMLHUD has built 43,126 housing units nationwide. A breakdown of this figure shows that 710 housing units were built under the Prototype Housing Scheme; 7,869 housing units under the Public Private Partnership; 3,302 units through the FHA; 5,007 units from the FMBN; 17, 240 through estate development loans provided by FMBN, and 8,998 units through contractor finance initiatives. The ministry also generated N8, 110,389, 817.79 as internally Generated Revenue (IGR). The IGR, which showed a tremendous improvement across the years, were generated through tender fee, ground rent, premium on land, title registration fee, consent fee, Certificate of Occupancy processing fee and survey fee respectively.

    One of such efforts to reduce the problem is the setting in motion of a process that brought about the development of a roadmap for the housing and urban development sector. This, it is hoped, would give effect to the National Housing policy and the National Urban development Policy. This policy includes the restructuring of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA) for the effective and efficient discharge of its mandate; supporting the implementation of the mortgage liquidity facility through the operationalisation of the Nigerian Mortgage Refinance Company (NMRC), and the recapitalisation of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN).

    With the recapitalisation of the FMBN, a new product targeting the provision of housing finance to an estimated 17 million Nigerians in Diaspora has been developed by the mortgage institution. This scheme will target one million Nigerians within the first year of the launch of the “Nigerians in Diaspora Mortgage Scheme” and provide $100 million (at $100 per person per year) to FMBN as monthly contributions. Another product the recapitalisation will birth is the opportunities for Nigerians to own a home on a “Rent-To-Own” basis. Under this scheme, rents paid by occupants of a house will be converted to mortgage and when the amount for the house has been paid up, the occupant becomes the owner. This does not involve any initial deposit for the house.

    The restructuring will also make the institution attractive to international lenders, whose credit line facilities are needed to enable the FMBN achieve greater feat in the country’s housing sector. The FMBN is also to engage with key partners, such as the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Federal Ministry of Finance and international development partners to address its challenges and explore opportunities for intervention funding for social housing aimed at redressing the national housing deficit.

    With the huge capital requirement of the sector, stakeholders are of the opinion that an effective national development tools are needed to actualise the dream of adequate housing in the country. To this end, government, it is believed, is now considering the use of additional sources of funding for housing delivery. This may come in the form of deploying pension funds, unclaimed dividends, and dormant accounts for this purpose. Besides, the FMLHUD is said to be planning an adoption of various housing delivery models for mass housing development. This will include new towns development, cooperative housing, public-private partnership, public-public partnership, regeneration (including completion of abandoned houses) rental housing and sites and services schemes.

    The FMLHUD is also said to be championing the African urban Agenda, in collaboration with UN-HABITAT, in view of the need to deal decisively with the rapid population growth and deteriorating living conditions of human settlements in the continent. This, it is believed, is very fundamental going by the estimation that by 2025, more than 60 per cent of Nigerians will live in cities. This belief is also influencing the designing and implementation of a national programme aimed at making slums become history in the country by 2020.

    To make this achievable, Eyakenyi revealed that the Federal Government, through the ministry, has put in place a social and affordable housing scheme. Under this scheme, estate developers are being enjoined to embrace the concept of mixed development in housing delivery and also ensure that at least, 20 per cent of the total number of housing units built in projects sites is allocated to low-cost housing ranging between N1.5 million to N5 million for one to three bedroom houses. Moreover, she explained that the ministry is also collaborating with domestic producers for the supply of building materials to estate developers at factory prices.

    A boost for housing delivery also comes with more contributors now joining the NHF under a new e-collection system. This is now ensuring an efficient, more transparent and accountable system of fund collection and remittance.  Also, mortgage access for informal sector workers has been put in place since December 2011 under the informal sector cooperative housing scheme. The FMLHUD has also developed a framework for conducting a National Housing Survey with the aim of ascertaining the authenticity of the 17 million housing deficit figure being bandied in the country instead of relying on forecasts. This will also give an insight into the quantum of the investment needed to meaningfully address the housing gap, as well as the requirements for transforming the housing and urban development sector on a sustainable basis. Already, a ministerial committee under the minister’s chairmanship, including stakeholders, such as the National Population Commission (NPC), National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as members, is carrying out the survey.

    The launch of the NMRC on January 16 gave hopes that the estimated 17 million housing gap may soon be filled. And with this, the President is convinced that his administration is creating the “enabling environment for primary mortgage banks and other financial institutions to offer real mortgage facilities to Nigerians at affordable rates.”

    Interestingly, when the NMRC launched its first application for 10, 000 housing units about two months ago, over 60, 000 applications were received, forcing the government to direct the company to accommodate all the applicants. The mandate given to the NMRC is to provide mortgage-lending institutions with access to long-term finance at an affordable interest rate, which in turn will enable mortgages to be issued by these institutions to Nigerians at longer tenors and affordable rates. Simply put, NMRC though is government inspired, is a private sector-led effort to provide affordable housing for Nigerians through loans accessed from mortgage and commercial banks. It is being implemented as a component of the Nigeria Housing Finance Programme, an initiative of the Federal Ministry of Finance in collaboration with the CBN, the Federal Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development (FMLHUD) and the World Bank/International Finance Corporation (IFC).

    The NMRC scheme, a vehicle set up to bridge the funding cost of residential mortgages and promote the availability and affordability of good housing to working Nigerians, is to provide mortgage lending banks with increased access to liquidity and longer term funds in the mortgage market. It is designed to be an integral part of the country’s financial system, with special focus on housing finance and/or the mortgage system. Also, it has the mandate of resolving access to affordable housing finance and, more importantly, as a focal point for creating an enabling environment for housing finance by playing a strong developmental role in supporting the improvement of land, legal framework,  housing development and construction. Thus, it is the latest hope for low-income earners who cannot afford the cost of a mortgage loan. As a take-off for the scheme, the World Bank approved a concessional $300 million 40-year interest free International Development Association (IDA) loan to facilitate the execution of the Housing Finance Programme. About $250 million of the IDA loan will be disbursed in instalments to NMRC as Tier 2 Capital based on key performance indicators – it will be retained on NMRC’s balance sheet to provide credit support for NMRC’s bond issuances. The balance of $50 million will be allocated to other components of the Housing Finance Programme as follows: $25 million for the establishment of a Mortgage Guarantee Facility for lower income borrowers and $25 million to support the development and piloting of Housing Microfinance Products. This is where the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN) will benefit from a $25 million facility to improve its mass housing programme and empower some of its microfinance partners. This measure is also believed to be a major step that will reposition the Federal Housing Authority (FHA). It is hoped that the introduction of NMRC will reduce the cost of mortgage loan by improving market efficiency, lowering cost of funds and allowing for longer repayment tenor period by financial institutions.

    But such efforts are yet to have the desired effect. Laudable as these feats are, stakeholders are concerned that Nigerians are yet to feel the full impact, at least, going by the high demand for accommodation and the high cost of rents. They fear that these policies may be all talks and no results. They, therefore, canvass for a reduction in the cost of building materials, even as they want an early implementation of the housing roadmap. The roadmap, it is expected, will drive housing and urban development in the country for the next 30 years.

    One point generally agreed on by stakeholders and participants at the validation is that the country is not short of having good plans, but implementation of such plans remains the problem.

    The roadmap draft seeks to achieve nine strategic goals. They  include the annual provision of one million housing units over the next 10 years to enebale the country tackle the housing deficit in the country headlong. The housing units are to be delivered by the government and the private sector. The private sector is to deliver 800, 000 units and the remaining 200, 000 by the government. till date, no government agency has delivered 300, 000 housing units in a year. The strategy to achieve th feat will include collaboration with the Ministry of finance to promote a private sector-led housing and infrastructure fund institution; collaboration with the Nigerian Mortgage Refinance Company (NMRC) to promote group mortgage as a strategy to ease access to housing for household not currently qualified for individual mortgages; and promotion of local production of high quality critical building materials. The collaborating agencies to actualise these goals include the Federal Ministry of Finance, Stock Exchange Commission (SEC), states’ ministry of housing and urban development, developers, insurance firms, international development partners, and financial institutions.

    The former minister of the defunct federal ministry of works and housing, Mamman Kotangora had earlier estimated that there were about 4, 000 uncompleted or abandoned projects worth about N300 billion across the country. Therefore, to meet up with delivering of its 200, 000 housing units share of the estimated one million units, the Federal Government, through the FMLHUD, will adopt legal/policy instrument for completion of abandoned projects, establish a Task Force for completion of abandoned projects, develop and implement a national programme for completion of abandoned project phased over 10 year period.

    Other goals in the roadmap include; to establish an information management system for planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of projects and programmes; establishment and enforcement of building standards based on the national building code to ensure quality, functionality, aesthetics, and safety; making serviced land with secured tenure easily available, accessible and transferable and at an affordable price for housing development; building adequate capacity of professionals and artisans in the built environment; making cities and human settlements inclusive, productive, safe, livable, resilient, and sustainable; transforming the way FMLHUD is structured and operate as the industry regulator and facilitator; and promoting research and development.

    Prof Bade Falade, a former United Nations (UN) Habitat Representative in Nigeria, reckons that the roadmap is a measure of filling a long gap in the operation of the FMLHUD.

    “There is a need for proper planning. In the UN that I come from, there is always a five- year plan. So with the ministry putting in place two robust policies- national housing policy and urban development policy, then we are on course. Nigeria became the first African country to have a housing policy in 1981. Others came to borrow from us,” he told The Nation, regretting that the country achieved nothing with the 1981 policy until it lapsed.

    Therefore, he contends that there is a need for the roadmap to drive the implementation of those policies that are put in place. This, he said, will give the country a vision for the future, substantive things to achieve and also contribute to the transformation agenda.

    As the largest economy in Africa, Prof. Falade explained that there is a lot for the economy to benefit from the sector. “This sector holds a lot of solutions to our economic problems because the city is the vehicle for growing the economy. The business is in the city – everybody lives in the city -and that is where the demand is and that is where services are required and where people are willing to pay. If you plan the cities very well, then the gross domestic product (GDP) of the country will go up. It can also contribute to huge employment as several people are employed in building sites,” Falade said, adding that urban planning is the preventive arm of deadly sicknesses as it will eliminate sicknesses such as malaria, cholera, amongst others.

    Eyakenyi believes that the revalidated Draft Roadmap, once approved, will provide the pathway for navigating through the housing and urban development sector over the next thirty years.

    The former Minister of Information, Mr. Labaran Maku, showed an understanding for these concerns when at an interactive session on the housing sector issues he noted that “the housing sector is a sleeping giant that has just woken up.” For him, the housing sector has now moved on because it is being driven by policies that are feasible. “In the next two to three years, Nigerians will get the full benefits of what is being done now,” Maku assured.

    Maku’s optimism, some say, may just be viewed as political talks. This is because salient issues affecting the delivery of houses have remained unresolved. Prominent in this is the Land Use Act, which several stakeholders have blamed as constituting a clog in the desire to have an efficient housing finance system; bureaucracy; high cost of building materials, amongst others.

    This is because despite several efforts by government, through its mortgage institutions, to encourage or improve on housing finance, its own policy on the Land Use Act, has remained its albatross in achieving this goal. Stakeholders insist that except a review is done on the Act, the problem of housing finance would linger. The Act, promulgated in 1978, was to allow the government access to land for developmental purposes. This was because in the past, land owners proved to be a hinderance to government’s developmental plans as they constituted bottlenecks; therefore, the creation of this Act vested land ownership in government, and also made it easier for government to lay claim to land ownership in order to develop the country and create infrastructure.

    Lending credence to this belief,  the chief executive officer, 3Invest, a firm of Real Estate consultants, Mrs. Ruth Obih said that as a growing nation, there is the need for a reformation of the Land Use Act, considering that it has caused lots of the problems in the country as it does not allow the housing finance sector to kick-start.

    “A major reason why our housing finance cannot take off is because of the foreclosure law in the Land Use Act. There is a foreclosure law, and what does it say? First of all, the Land Use Act does not allow you to own a property until you transfer title. That means if you haven’t transferred or perfected a title, you don’t own that property,” Obih explained.

    Besides, she identified red-tapism and bureaucracy, as enshrined in the process of perfecting land title documents. The process, which  she said involves over 56 procedures, takes about two years to perfect. Within this period, she argues, a lender, usually a financial institution, cannot foreclose on such property in the event of a default in payment by the borrower because both parties cannot lay claim to the ownership of the land since the title document may not have been perfected with government.

    “That is the reason why we don’t have a housing finance sector in Nigeria. The banks that have actually done it in the past have been banned. So, you see them trying to foreclose illegal forecloses because legally they don’t own the property as a result of non-perfection of the property title in anyone’s name. That is one problem,” Obih said.

    Legal issues have also been identified as being a factor militating against effective housing delivery. she disclosed the trend has always been a global phenomenon in real estate business. For instance, after the 99 years lease period on land, the land refers back to the government, for which renewal of ownership is always difficult.

    Mr. Ola Aluko, of the Department of Urban & Regional Planning, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, University of Lagos, in his research on “The Effect of land Use Act on Sustainable Housing Provision in Nigeria: The Lagos State Experience”, submitted that land is the main component of housing problem in urban areas. The problems surrounding availability of land in urban areas, he identified to include the various policies and regulations that were formulated by governments at all levels to tackle the problems of housing; the fees payable and the procedure of obtaining Certificate of Occupancy and the Governor’s consent, which he said, is about 15 per cent and in some areas up to 45 per cent of the cost of the land.

    “This creates a problem in housing delivery especially if these documents are required to secure financial assistance from banks. It also leaves room for fraud and compromise. The long time it takes to obtain consent (from six months to eternity) has made reliance on properties as collateral security for loans quite unattractive, as the process of perfecting a legal mortgage is cumbersome,” Aluko submitted.

    According to Aluko, the present land policy in the country is faced with many problems that make land acquisition difficult for corporate estate developers.

    The high interest rates have also not made procurement of capital for housing development through mortgage finance attractive to developers.

    An Lagos-based estate developer, Mr. Kayode Oyedele, contends that the Land Use Act as it is,  constitute a clog in the housing development effort. This is because of the financial constraint that has come with the policy, as financial institutions remain reluctant to lend a hand to land owners who have no C of O. “The Act should be modified or repealed,” he canvassed.

    Stakeholders in the sector have since charged lawmakers to transform the Land Use Act, reform the foreclosure law, and help to make the people understand how they can key into the process for better result as it obtains in modern day. This would stimulate a robust real estate industry from the legal perspective.

    Another major problem for the attainment of efficient housing delivery in the country has to do with the operational capabilities and efficiency of government agencies saddled with such responsibilities. Recently, Eyakenyi had to dissolve the management of the FHA, citing    years of below par performance as reason.

    The FMBN has also not fared better. Its much talked about “Nigerians in Diaspora Mortgage Scheme” which the Bank’s managing director, Mr. Gimba Yau Kumo, said would be launched before the end of this year has not seen the light of the day. The FMBN, which is seeking international cooperation with other financial bodies to finance its projects seem to have been hitting a brickwall in its efforts. This is because until recently, for four years, beginning from 2010, the mortgage bank did not have an audited account. The Nation gathered that at one of the bank’s Board meetings, the management was embarrassed when asked by the CBN for its audited accounts.

    The Chairman of the FMBN Board, Chief Bisi Ogunjobi, however, told The Nation that the 2011 audited account of the bank has been published; while that of 2012 has been awaiting CBN approval and that of 2013 has been completed. Ogunjobi, a former Vice President of African Development Bank (AfDB), said the auditing had to be done as a way of enshrining transparency in the institution.

    “We try to build the internal transformation and capacity for effective utilisation of the resources that will be put at the disposal of the bank, like external resources from international organisation. This lays emphasis on transparency as a base for preparing the ground for resources we might be given,” Ogunjobi explained. He added that the FMBN is a goldmine for the country.  Experts say that the financial muscle of the FMBN is nothing to write home about when compared to that of Ghana, in spite of the bigger demands on the former.

    But the unaudited account of the bank is not its only albatross. The Nation discoveredthat the bank is bogged down by huge debts, said to be in excess of N50 billion. Part of this debt was incurred from loan facilities granted defaulting property developers. The primary mortgage institutions (PMIs), that are supposed to drive mortgage in the country are relatively weak. This is evident in the inability of most of the PMIs to meet the recapitalisation  as only less than 50 per cent of the banks have met the recapitalisation, whose deadline and further extension ended on July 31.

    Ogunjobi said the bank has recorded progress in its debt recovery efforts, while it is also taking further measures, including exploring options for addressing non performing loans, enhancing the credit review process and streamlining project monitoring. He expressed satisfaction at the over 75, 000 housing units that the mortgage bank has delivered nationwide, adding that efforts would be intensified to deliver 15, 000 units in the next two years.

    But this is not the only bane to affordable housing. Stakeholders in the sector stressed the need to have a mortgage system, which encourages a longer time period to buy and pay for houses, say for a 20-30-year tenor and at single digit interest rate. This is the practice in other developed countries. Ogunjobi agrees with this position, saying that long term funds is required for this type of regime to be put in place. But he regrets that this is not easily available because institutional investors such as the  pension funds’ managers, have not really been very active in the mortgage and the housing sectors, blaming their seeming inactivity on the limit placed  on the ammount of resources they can invest in such projects. The issue of foreclosure is another problem that needs to be addressed in the industry. Stakeholders are of the opinion that foreclosure  is not favourable because of the delay in getting debts sorted out. “The attitude of Nigerian businessmen not paying back their loans is also a disservice to mortgage in the country. Somebody is owing you and you have no opportunity to take over possession of the property,”  Ogunjobi explained. The high cost of building materials is also a problem for effective housing delivery. And much as the government has promised to look into this, it has remained all talks and no action.

    However, experts and stakeholders say all hope for a better housing finance is not lost. They based their hope on the establishment of the NMRC, for which they hope government may have realised that the housing sector will bring out a better economy. For now, Nigerians can only live on hope.

     

     

     

  • IDPs: Ngilari seeks help

    The Adamawa State government has called on the Federal Government, the United Nations (UN), donor organisations, corporate bodies and individuals to assist Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

    Governor Bala Ngilari said the government alone could not continue to shoulder their responsibility due to its lean resources.

    The Director of Press and Public Affairs to the Governor, Mr. PP Elisha, in a statement, thanked the Federal Government for providing relief materials for the IDPs but said more still needs to be done.

    He said the state needs help to continue to provide three square meals daily, constant water supply, free primary health care services, make-shift classrooms for primary and secondary schools, sporting facilities and skill acquisition programmes for the IDPs.

    Madagali Local Government Chairman James Abawa and his Michika counterpart, Mr. Teri Favanza, said over one million people from their councils were displaced.

    Favanza said thousands of IDPs were hiding in the mountains, faced with hunger, and exposed to snakes and wild animals.