Tag: US

  • Britain rules on striking Nigerian asylum seeker

    THE British Home Office has issued an ‘end of life plan’ to a detained failed asylum seeker who has been on hunger strike for more than 80 days and is said to be near death.

    The man, who suffers mental health problems, was deemed medically unfit to be detained in October but remains in custody, with a judge due to rule next week on whether he will be released.

    The Nigerian man claims his life is in danger from an Islamist group, Boko Haram named on Thursday as a terrorist organisation by the US.

    The move to keep him in custody is seen as part of a hardline approach by ministers, following the release in June of four asylum detainees who were on hunger strike in protest at their detention.

    A source at the immigration detention centre said staff have been warned to “expect a hunger striker to die”.

    Ifa Muaza, 45, sleeps on a mattress on the floor at Harmondsworth immigration removal centre near Heathrow.

    Staff are afraid he would fall out of a normal bed. He speaks in a whisper and takes long pauses between words.

    He arrived in Britain seven years ago from Maiduguri in the northeast of Nigeria.

    He claims he left his home because members of Boko Haram, a hardline Islamist group, threatened to kill him unless he joined them. He claims two members of his family have been killed by the group.

    He travelled to the UK on a valid visitor’s visa, but overstayed his time limit and went underground in southeast London, where he found work using a false name.

    In May 2011, he applied for leave to remain in the UK but was refused. In July this year he applied for asylum on the grounds his life would be in danger if he returned to Nigeria.

    He was then detained in Harmondsworth. He began his hunger strike almost immediately, on the grounds his dietary and medical needs could not be met in detention.

    He suffers from hepatitis B, kidney problems and stomach ulcers and had been on a special diet.

    He has been diagnosed as psychotic and suffering severe depression.

    Medical staff at Harmondsworth on 26 October informed the Home Office that Muaza was not fit to be detained because of his deteriorating medical state.

    Two days later his lawyers went to the high court arguing that his medical needs could not be managed in detention.

    Mr Justice Collins refused to release him but said: “This is a worrying case, but it is important to appreciate that those who use a hunger strike to manipulate their position will not succeed in doing so provided they have mental capacity.”

    The judge ordered a full hearing to be expedited. The case went before Mr Justice Ouseley on Thursday and judgment was deferred until early next week.

  • Ayefele band boys disappear in US

    Ayefele band boys disappear in US

    …Music star seeks their repatriation

    As gospel music styled secular singer, Yinka Ayefele arrived the country Tuesday, following a six-week musical tour of the United States, there appeared to be a ‘dent’ on the emotion of the artiste, whose fulfilment of the concert was partially shattered by the disappearance of three of his band boys.

    The other members of the group arrived amidst cheers by fans, but one could tell that the leader of the band was worried; perhaps knowing the credibility question the defection by the boys could pose to his career. Reports say the ‘gospel tungba’ crooner, has written to the United States Homeland Security to track and deport the three guys who defected at the tail-end of the inter city concert.

    The band left the country on September 2, performing at Washington, Maryland, Baltimore, New York, Atlanta, Houston and Dallas.

    In a mail sent to the US agency, Ayefele urged the department to look for the defectors and act accordingly, so as to serve as a lesson to others.

    The defectors, according to a release signed by his publicist, David Ajiboye, include Ojoyido Adegbenga Ezekiel (Keyboardist), Solomon Olugbenga Motimoke (Vocalist) and Olusola Kayode Isaac (vocalist). “While Olusola Kayode Isaac defected at the LaGuardiala Airport, New York on Monday, 14th October on his way from Houston with three other members of the band, Ojoyido Adegbenga was said to have disappeared from the group at the Howard Johnson Inn on Rockaway Boulevard, New York on Tuesday, 15th October. The third man was Solomon Motimoke (Yatty), who left the band while still at Washington DC on 11th October,” the statement read.

  • I’m here to find my roots, says U.S. comic act

    I’m here to find my roots, says U.S. comic act

    The duo of Tony Roberts and Deeray Davis, the top American comedians who have been hyped as headlining acts for this weekend’s Glo Laffta Fest in Lagos, arrived the Murtala Mohammed International Airport yesterday, looking unruffled by a change of weather. Parts of America have been hot of late, and that perhaps explains why the Lagos weather posed no challenge, especially to a more excited Tony Roberts who said he is glad to be home. “I have come to meet my real family,” he said of Nigeria. “I have come here to find my roots. I’m expecting to see something I’ve never seen before. I’ve got my camera ready, so I can go home and show my wife and kids something they’ve never seen and I’ve never seen something different.”

    Asked how he intends to thrill the Nigerian audience, Roberts said his act is never scripted: “I don’t know what to say. I’m very unpredictable, if you are in front of me, I might talk about you, and that might make a lot of people mad but you never know.”

    Roberts said of how he hopes to make the Nigerian audience laugh. “We do our research about every country we go. What do you have that we don’t have back home? I have to know where your mindset is at and know what jokes to tell. I know you are ready for me, but I have to also get ready for you.”

    Roberts said he and his country man will expect the best of cooperation from the Nigerian comedians who understand the terrain better. “They know the in and out here. They know the local stuff that we don’t know about, so they have the upper hand on us, but we are super funny and you are just going to find out. We hope to work as a team with these guys.”

    For a quieter DeeRay Davis, he is looking forward to the new opportunity. “I’m here to have a good time and bring my comedy to a new place and scene. I do it on TV, but it’s a totally different feel and vibe when you are on stage. I’m looking forward to learning all I can about the local stuff. This is my first trip here, but I don’t want it to be my last time,” he said

    Asked what his first impression was, when he set out on the trip to Nigeria, Davis answered: “I was really skeptical at first before coming to Nigeria because it’s such a long flight. I’ve never flown this long before. But the closer I got, the more I felt comfortable, I got excited and I’m happy to be here.”

    Sponsored by Globacom, the ‘Lafta Fest’ show is in two phases, the first is billed for Saturday October 19, at the Expo Centre of Eko Hotel & Suites, Victoria Island Lagos, while the second leg holds in Abuja at the popular This Day Dome on October 25.

    The visiting comedians are expected to perform with Africa’s comedians including Ndumiso Lindi of South Africa, Uganda’s Salvador and Nigeria’s top comedy acts; Basketmouth, Ali Baba, Bovi, Okey Bakassi and Akpororo. Others are Klint de Drunk, Buchi, Gordons, Funny Bone, Bash, Emeka Smith, Julius Agwu and Sim Card.

    The telecoms operator said the comedy sessions will be spiced with the best of Nigerian music, with a line-up that will feature P-Square, Lagbaja, Wande Coal, MI, Burna Boy.

  • U.S to drop Syria ‘military threat’

    The United States will drop its insistence that a United Nations resolution on Syria must be backed by military force, officials say, after strong objections from Russia.

    U.S and Russian diplomats say the two sides are edging closer to a deal on Syria’s chemical arsenal, as talks in Geneva enter a third day.

    BBC reports they are thrashing out the technical details of the disarmament process.

    UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said a UN report will “overwhelmingly” confirm that poison gas was used last month.

    He made no comment on who was to blame for the August 21 attack in eastern Damascus.

    But he said Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had committed “many crimes against humanity,” in comments at the UN Women’s International Forum that were shown on television.

     

     

     

     

  • At  home amid the chaos

    At home amid the chaos

    LESS than a week after collecting my bags at the domestic terminal at Lagos Murtala Muhammed International Airport, I have come to fully accept that all the warnings and cautionary tales about this chaotic city were little more than old wives’ tales and urban legend.

    Yes, the traffic and roads are insane. The people are loud and aggressive. The nights can certainly get sketchy. And most importantly, it contains pockets of poverty that strain the mind’s ability to comprehend.

    Lagos faces a future fraught with numerous challenges, but any city has its woes, and at its heart, Lagos is like other metropolises in that it is a place where millions of hopeful people flock in order to pay huge amounts of money to live in small, often rundown homes in exchange for the sheer privilege of being there.

    Clearly there’s a reason why we urban-dwellers make that decision, despite all the difficulties and downsides of living in a densely-populated environment that thinks nothing of chewing up and spitting out a person who doesn’t have the talent, means and luck it takes to survive there.

    Some of these reasons are largely based on atmosphere and superficial concerns. Parisians love their city for its beauty, high art and refinement. In Tokyo it’s the brash futurism juxtaposed against the soothing peace of the Japanese approach to life. Romans’ strongest amour is reserved for their country’s spectacular food.

    As for Lagos, part of what draws thousands of new residents to the city every week is its dynamic culture, the spirit of its people and the excitement of its raucous atmosphere, parties and commerce.

    But in Lagos, as in every of the world’s other capital cities, the real draw is the sense that anything is possible — a strong, passionate hope and drive to succeed that persists even among many of its most downtrodden citizens.

     

    Big dreams

    While it is exceedingly difficult to come up from nothing in this teeming city on the Atlantic, every person who makes the decision to pack up their lives and start anew in Lagos must truly believe that they have the capacity to do just that. Given how intimidating this town can seem even to a short-term visitor with sufficient means, it must be terrifying to move here from a small rural village in Borno State or the Republic of Niger with little more than the clothes on your back.

    Yet new success stories are told every day, even as millions of people starve, flounder and struggle to feed their families. In every megalopolis around the globe, it’s that dream of reaching epic heights that drives people to fight through the soul-crushing lows.

    There’s a famous saying about my hometown of New York City that “if you can make it there, you can make it anywhere.” It’s an apt slogan for the Big Apple, the place where big dreamers go in America, but I believe that it should be passed on to Lagos.

    Lagosians, as I’ve been told countless times since I arrived here this past weekend, often drive upwards of three or four hours each way in exasperating go-slows just to get to and from work. And to top it off, they seem to work longer hours than the people of any other city I’ve visited. It’s why the clubs only really start hopping around 1 a.m. They do what New Yorkers do, only they’ve taken it a step further, and I like where they’ve landed.

    Lagos to me is a heaving, collective organ of striving and selling and enjoying and lamenting. At the same time, it’s an exciting place to visit and explore, and a gateway to the horrors of concentrated urbanity. It’s New York in Africa, and that’s a high compliment coming from a Manhattanite.

     

    The Lagosians

    The people of Lagos will be what I remember best upon my return to the U.S., I’m convinced of it. Dissertations have probably been written by previous Western visitors about how welcoming and personable and lovely people are across Nigeria. These are well-known facts among those who have been here.

    What impresses me most about Lagosians is how much I see myself reflected in them. New York has always seemed like the one place in the world where a fast-talking, loud, aggravating person like myself could fit into the social order, or lack thereof.

    But what blew me away in my interactions with Lagosians is that they are all those things, only magnified. Much as Lagos is bigger, dirtier and more hectic than New York, in my experience, the people of Lagos are often much more interesting, outspoken and more fun than my friends and I tend to be. You very nearly have to assault them if you want to pay the bill, no matter how many Gulders everyone has had, and their energy seemingly knows no limit.

    They read newspapers, listen to the radio and watch movies from Nigeria, America, England and beyond, absorbing a wider range of knowledge than many insular New Yorkers ever do.

    They dance better, they know how to show people a good time, and they want to be your friend the moment you get past their hardened shells, which can be thicker than those of most New Yorkers, but fall away much quicker. Lagosians laugh, scream and cry louder than we do, and they drive in a manner that would have our cabbies handing their taxi medallions in out of pure shame.

    At the same time, much like New Yorkers, they sometimes get a bad rap among their disapproving fellow countrymen for being rude, manic, overly obsessed with money and generally unpleasant. Those negative impressions should be struck from the record in regards to both cities, because though we learn to put up barriers to maintain our sanity in the face of so much humanity, both New Yorkers and Lagosians are just fronting, and that charade of toughness helps us retain our exuberant essence.

     

    The dilemma of progress

    Looking back on the defining moments of my time in Lagos as my journey here nears its unfortunate end, the first things that come to mind are fried croaker with jollof rice and plantains; dancing at Fela Kuti’s shrine and the endless hours spent laughing with new local friends as they manoeuvred their cars through the city’s congested streets.

    But the experiences of one eye-opening day persist in my memory as well, and they are not easily ignored considering how destructive the trend they represent is to the spirit of Lagos, and the ways they clearly illustrate the challenges that lie ahead for the city, its government and its residents.

    Thursday is the day that I began to see clearly why Lagos must change in order for it to respect its people, its heritage and its character.

    My photographer and friend Cameron Barnes and I started the day by visiting the Oto-Ilogbo Extension slum of mainland Lagos, where we found ourselves face-to-face with the reality of a situation that as Americans had always previously existed for us only as a concept and a smattering of pictures and news stories.

    We saw with our own eyes what the poorest Lagosians deal with on a day-to-day basis, walked the trash-strewn streets, spoke with folks who call it home, stood atop the mound where they relieve themselves in full view of their neighbours and friends. We were stunned, saddened and humbled to our cores, and neither of us will ever forget our walk through Oto-Ilogbo.

    But we had to continue to work, and from there, we trekked to Victoria Island for an interview with some of the city’s well-off professionals, young people who thought nothing of spending $25 on a bowl of pasta with pesto. It was a contrast so stark it has stuck with us to this moment, and it mirrors the troublesome wealth divide between much of Africa and the West.

    But this is a story about Lagos and Nigeria, not about international economic forces, which clearly have done next to nothing to help the situation. The wide dichotomy between these two extreme results of modern capitalism’s excesses recalled the myriad news reports I’ve read on corruption and the yawning income gap between the rich few and the impoverished many in Nigeria.

     

    Government’s role

    The need to find a workable situation to the global slum travesty will only grow in coming years, as the United Nations reported in 2003 that nearly a billion people already lived in slums worldwide, and that a third of the world’s population will reside in them by the mid-2030s.

    And yet it appears that Nigeria’s local governments have chosen a slash-burn-redevelop approach to their urban slums. As Barnes and I learned in both Oto-Ilogbo and Mpape, Abuja – which have been targeted for demolition, but have so far escaped that fate – and hundreds of thousands people from Lagos communities from Bar Beach to Badia East know all too well, local governors are more interested in tearing down slums, kicking out their residents and building shiny office buildings and hotels than working with slum-dwellers to find workable solutions.

    The blanket arguments against the slum-dwellers are many and varied: they’re squatters, they’re criminals, they don’t own their land, they shouldn’t be subjected to such horrendous living conditions.

    But in the end, even if many of them were able to be fit neatly into one derisive box or another, the denizens of these marginalised communities are still humans, and they deserve some form of dignity and compensation, if their lives are to be uprooted in the name of making millions for developers and appeasing the wealthy.

    It’s a problem that’s playing out around the world, but if Lagos is to become a world-class city, as its leaders have said they intend for it to be, it needs to find a way to deal with its ballooning slum problem over the coming years, or it will fall victim to its own excesses, as the people of Oto-Ilogbo did long ago.

    Just as Lagos is messy, multi-faceted and impossible to define, so too are my thoughts as I take stock of this mind- and world-expanding trip that I’ve been given the privilege to take part in by the International Center for Journalists, International Press Centre and U.S. State Department.

    There’s no one way to sum up my impressions of Lagos, just as there are so many different versions of the city within its expansive environs.

    Lagos is a place with wonderful qualities and with nearly intractable problems, but as can also sometimes be necessary in the course of human relationships, I have learned to love it in spite of itself.

  • Syria will defend itself against aggression

    Syria will defend itself against aggression

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said on Thursday that Syria would defend itself against any aggression, following reports that the U.S. and its allies were preparing military action in response to an alleged chemical weapons attack.

    “The threats of direct aggression against Syria will only increase our commitment to our deep-rooted principles and the independent will of our people.

    “Syria will defend itself in the face of any aggression,” state television quoted Assad as telling a delegation of Yemeni politicians.

     

     

  • US to partner Nigeria in intelligence sharing

    The United States Consul-General in Lagos, Mr. Jeffery Hawkins, has described Nigeria as a great partner of the United States of America in drug control.

    The US envoy, who spoke when presenting technical equipment to the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) in Lagos, said the equipment would be used in the establishment of a Centre for Intelligence Sharing between the two countries.

    “NDLEA is a great partner for the United States in drug control. The United States embarks on a serious war against narcotics and we are proud to contribute in developing the capacity of the NDLEA through the establishment of a Centre for Intelligence Sharing,” Hawkins said.

    The Chairman/Chief Executive of NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade, who received the items, said the country’s partnership with the United States has been very fruitful.

    “The relationship between the United States Government and the Government of Nigeria has been characterised by similar gestures in the area of technical support. “It is important to acknowledge your sustained determination to support Nigeria in winning the fight against notorious drug trafficking syndicates. This assistance to the agency is highly treasured,” Giade said.

    The NDLEA boss attributed the high performance of the agency to the growing support and partnership it has with the United States.

    His words: “Our collaboration in the area of intelligence gathering and joint operations has led to high profile seizures and arrests.

    “Training remains vital to the success of any intelligence-driven task like drug control. Your training programmes for operatives as well as high level seminars and workshops have helped to enhance the capacity of personnel. We are appreciative of your support and motivated by your continued determination to extend our frontiers of success in the drug war.”

    According to Giade, “the agency’s investigative capacity at the airports has been enhanced by the provision of scanners by the United States Government. The agency will justify the confidence you repose in us.”

    Appreciating the removal of Nigeria from the Drug Majors List by the US, he urged the envoy to assist the agency in advocacy campaign.

    “The prompt and objective assessment by the United States Government, which led to the removal of Nigeria from the Drug Majors List, has further increased the tempo of our campaign. We hope we can count on your advocacy support to ensure that more attention and resources are devoted to the all-important war against drug abuse and illicit drug trafficking,” Giade said.

  • Itsekiri in US worried over humanitarian crisis in Warri

    Itsekiri in US worried over humanitarian crisis in Warri

    Over two months after suspected Ijaw militias razed dozens of Itsekiri communities in Warri North Local Government Area of Delta Delta State, an Itsekiri socio-cultural group in the United States of America, Ugbajo Itsekiri USA Inc, has expressed concern over the humanitarian crisis in the areas.

    The group expressed the concern when it donated multimillion naira relief materials to the IDPs (Internally Displaced Persons) in the area. The Ugbajo Itsekiri remarked that relief efforts by government and other public-spirited individuals did not reach the suffering victims.

    A member of the group, Mr. Bawo Akonu, who led the team’s visit to six crisis-ravaged Itsekiri communities of Eghoro, Ebrohimi, Obaghoro, Aja-Amita, Tebu and Tebu-Kporo communities, said in spite of recent peace shuttles, hundreds of victims remain homeless, face hunger and are vulnerable to attacks.

    Akonu was accompanied by Mr. Amorighoye Mene, a representative of the Itsekiri Leaders of Thought, which facilitated the visit.

    He lamented that over one thousand locals including children and women who fled their homes in the wake of the incident are yet to be resettled.

    The group observed that a few of those who remained in the communities lack food, shelter, water, health care and adequate sanitation.

    Our correspondent observed that tension is still high in the communities despite the nearness of security checkpoints in the creeks as the small amount of people still remaining in the communities are subjected to heavy military scrutiny.

    Akonu said that the Itsekiri people in the US believes there are humanitarian services that could be rendered hence they intensified efforts to gathered resources for the donations made.

    “We were able to identify those that were directly impacted because we were made to understand that relief materials sent here were not taken to the grassroots people so this time around we wanted it to get to the grassroots”.

    He said that the visit was just a way of ameliorating the immediate needs of the people which included shelter and medical care saying that they would take time to evaluate the situation in order to address the injustice in the area.

    “The visit was just like a tip of the iceberg; it was not enough to address the issues because we observed there is a lot of suffering among the people. There have been a lot of injustice and from our experience a whole of people were dislodged, the pains and grievance are still there”.

    “What we have done is just a first aid treatment so we are calling on the government and other humanitarian agencies to go in there and address the issues of lack of food, water, health care and many more plugging the people because the people are truly suffering”.

    While describing the incident as unfortunate, he said that if the government was up and doing with the security in the area the ugly incident may have been averted and therefore urged the government to brace up to tackle the security challenges confronting in the area.

    “There is a government in the state but it is rather sad that the government is not responding according though they have promised to erect the built houses, they have not critically condemn this attack even come to the aid of the suffering people of the area”.

    Mene said the destruction was most regrettable.

    He said: “You seen how communities were wiped from the ground level, this were people who are naturally poor and no matter how poorly built this houses were to them, they value them but the houses were levelled to foundation and it is most unfortunate that a thing like this is allowed to happen in a country like our.”

    He lamented that despite the series of correspondence done to the state government, the state government have not responded accordingly saying that government has failed.

     

  • 20 pupils off to US

    It was a mixture of fun and lecture for 20 pupils of Pacesetters College, Abuja as the school management took them on a three-week  summer study tour of the United States of America (USA).

    The trip led by the chairman of the School, Kenneth Imasuagbon alongside other four staff, exposed the students to different perspectives of American curricula.

    The  students who were received on arrival by the Nigerian Ambassador to United States, Ade Adefuye also visited  the White House, the American Embassy in Washington DC, the Kings Dominion among other places.

    Kenneth Imasuagbon while speaking with Abuja Review last week after returning from the trip said the aim of the summer study was to make the students have a comparison between what is obtained in the Nigerian Educational system and that of the United States.

    “The School aims to make  the children  have a comparative educational and  vocational knowledge,to see how the American Educational  system is, the setting there,to see what we can learn from the American educational system and how we can use it  to restructure the Nigerian Educational system and most especially  Pacesetters school”

    “They were taught the rudiments of  Algebra, calculux among other things, it was a mixture of academics and fun”he added

    The students were also taught the basic  English writing skills and word formations among others things”

    “Beyond the learning and academic aspect, they were also exposed to the various characters and traits of hardwork and discipline”

    “ They have also learnt things that they can do to take Nigeria to the next level as future leaders of the country”

    Imasuagbon while speaking on the interest shown by the pupils throughout the tour said with all what they have been exposed to, he believes that they are well groomed to compete with their contemporaries anywhere they find themselves in the world.

    “The student are now well  prepared and with their various experience and interest while in the United states, they are set to do exploits in their studies here in Nigeria”he assured

    He commended the  American Embassy for facilitating the visa of the students which he said was made possible within a very short period which he said was  due to the great importance the US Government attaches to the education of the Nigerian Child.

    “The Americans are wonderful people, when  it comes to education, I can tell you the Americans are one of the best, they assisted the school to make the trip a successful one”he said

    The Vice Principal of the Wuye Campus of the School, Roseline Olumobi was also part of the trip alongside the School Director and wife of the Chairman, Mrs Kate Imasuagbon, Segun Awogbade, the Principal of the Wuse Campus and Amaechi Osuji, the Head of English Department of the Gwarinpa Campus of the Pacesetters School.

    Mrs Olumobi who also narrated her experience said it was really a great opportunity for the students to improve on their academics after been exposed to foreign studies and tutelage for a period of three weeks.

    She commended the school management for the  gesture that was extended to them as it was an opportunity that they never dreamt of.

    “This opportunity is what we never dreamt of but by the grace of God and with the passion we have for the school , Pacesetters management have  make it possible”

    “The Chairman and the wife sponsored the teachers’ trip,they paid for the visa, accommodation and the flight ticket,they made us have a wonderfull stay in the United States”she added

    “The students learnt a lot from  the American system as well as modern technology in teaching ,interactive teaching and discipline as well”

  • Govt urged to deepen gas market as US builds reserves

    Govt urged to deepen gas market as US builds reserves

    Nigeria’s gas market appears threatened as it faces potential competition from the United States(US).

    US’s decision to open up its gas resources for exploration will increase its reserves from 229 trillion cubit feet to 312 trillion cubic feet by 2035, and the new resource is likely to compete with Nigeria’s liquefied natural gas in the international market.

    To overcome this potential threat, operators have called on the Federal Government to review its strategies to withstand the competition in the gas market and further generate more revenue for the country.

    The President, International Association of Energy Economics (IAEC), Prof Adeola Akinisiju, said Nigeria must rethink its strategies to be ahead of the competition in the global gas’ market, adding that the country must try and give discounts to get new buyers, and retain the old ones for sustained growth.

    He listed two types of exports namely; the Nigerian Liquifield and Natural Gas (NLNG) based exports and non-NLNG based exports.

    The former, he said, had to do with long-term contracts that NLNG has with Italy, Spain, France, and other countries in Europe, while the latter relates to short-tern exports to countries in Asia Pacific.

    “The gas we export are based on NLNG long-term agreements with some countries. As for non-NLNG based exports, they are excess production that Nigeria has. This has some implications because it requires that we compete with countries that are in the Middle-East before we can sell our gas well. To achieve this goal, we may have to offer disocunts to buyers,” he said.

    He said Nigeria has some expectations about trajectory of prices, arguing that the country may not achieve it unless it looks for other markets. He said the price of gas in the US will have a long-term effects on the international prices of gas, advising Nigeria to prepare for the shocks that may arise from the development.

    Akinsiju said: “Because of the huge discovery in US, more volumes of gas would be release into the market. When the supply is high, the price would come down. That shows that market forces will come into play. There would likely be a fall in the long-term price of gas. When this happens, it would affect many exporters of natural gas.”

    The General Manager, External Affairs, NLNG, Dr Kudo Eresta-Eke, said the US’s growing gas reserves may have long-term effect on Nigeria, unless urgent steps were taken to address the problem.

    He said the US, which has been an importer of gas, is about reversing that status as a result of new discovery of Shale oil and gas, explaining that the discovery which was brought about by advancement in technology, has made the US an exporter of gas.

    He said once the US resolves the legal issues surrounding the exploration of its gas, Nigeria would have more volumes to compete with in the international market.

    “When there is plenty of supply, the price will be affected. The more the supply of gas, the less the price. When the price of gas is lower, the economies of countries with projected greenfield projects will suffer. Any greenfield project that has not established itself would have problems. Such projects would be difficult to sustain. The projects that are likely to be sustained are projects that are not only on ground, but are recording profits, Eresia-Eke, said, adding that once the price of gas becomes lower, new entrants would find it difficult to enter the market.

    The President of the Nigerian Liquifield Petroleum Gas Association (NLPGA), Dayo Adesina, said the country must adopt measures to absorb shocks in the international gas market.

    He said market volatilities are not new, arguing that the Nigeria needs to prepare for them in view of the increase in the number of gas exporters.

    Adeshina urged the government to step up efforts to create new markets as competition hots up globally, stressing that gas exporting countries, including Nigeria must be wary of competition from their counterparts with bigger reserves if they want to survive.

    He said over $400million investments were recorded by operators in the Liquifield Petroleum Gas (LPG) segment in the past five years, adding that the investments cover areas such as construction of terminals,depots and bottling plants, among others.