Tag: Yemi Osinbajo

  • Yemi Osinbajo…chastity is never enough

    It is acceptable wisdom across political and social circuits that the most virulent critic poses no threat to the devious and corrupt public officer. Thus no matter how brilliantly the critic articulates censure of a crooked official’s savage, mediocre performance, he poses no threat to the office and grotesqueness that the officer symbolises.

    Indeed, the harshest critiques have been known to bounce off the hide of the Nigerian politician as bed bugs fall off the tresses of the poodle’s medicated hair. This no doubt manifests as another malady in the Nigerian scheme of things. It is the ultimate malady.

    Very few people are genuinely interested in eliminating corruption and improving the quality of life in the country. Since the era when large segments of the citizenry, bludgeoned to acquiescence by corrupt leadership, swallowed dissent to hide behind the ‘Yabis’ of unrepentant government critics like late Fela Kuti, Nigeria has suffered freefall down the steep crag of institutionalised corruption.

    Very few Nigerians would dare the dangerous activism of self-appointed government critics like late Afrobeat maestro, Fela and human rights activist, Gani Fawehinmi. The duo were two of Nigeria’s most vocal critics even in the face of brutal backlash from the government and its apologists.

    Today, we suffer the absence of Fela Kuti and Fawehinmi among others. What we have left are pathetic impostors pretending to defend the citizenry’s rights. Despite the posthumous honours accorded Fela and Fawehinmi, few mothers would want their children to engage in such dangerous agitation in the  interest of the collective. ‘Were dun wo, ko se bi lomo,’ meaning: While it is fun to behold the antics of a lunatic, it is anathema to sire one.

    Late Fela and Fawehinmi are no lunatics, but they are the figurative madmen by whose tireless activism and exploits, Nigeria’s critical mob attained a semblance uprightness and political awareness. Despite their activism, the citizenry whose rights they aspired to protect towed the path unabashed spinelessness. This emphasises the role of the critic.

    There is no gainsaying that since the advent of Nigeria’s democratic experiment, the nation elevates corruption as its cultural essence. At President Goodluck Jonathan’s emergence, state-sponsored corruption mutated into the Nigerian persona: bigotry, decadence, terrorism and official looting were weaponised by public officers and their cronies in pursuit of selfish political and economic interests.

    The Nigerian decadence, ingenious in pleasures and cruelties, became the politically-correct personae, an acceptable profanation of morality and rape of ancestral norms. Thus in Jonathan’s era, corruption’s chthonian reverence assumed the imagery and dimensions of politicised orgy. Morality became un-Nigerian as the immediate past administration evolved a program and formula for looting the country silly.

    Enter President Muhammadu Buhari and his All Progressives Congress (APC); Buhari was  expected to clean Jonathan’s mess and rid the polity of corruption and administrative ineptitude wrought on the nation by successive military and democratic tyranny. Having sacked Jonathan and his People’s Democratic Party (PDP) with remarkable ease at the March 28, 2015 general elections, Nigerians believed he would rid the country of deviously orchestrated misdemeanours characteristic of Jonathan’s PDP.

    But like a recalcitrant bug that will not go away, mismanagement, corruption and a legion of more carefully orchestrated misdemeanours have resurfaced in the nation’s corridors of power, on Buhari’s watch.

    However, this writer would be committing duplicity similar to that which the incumbent government inflicts on Nigerians even as you read, if he fails to acknowledge the flashes of competence betrayed by Buhari and his bumbling team. Buhari’s initiative at establishing one purse for the Nigerian government is worthy of commendation. Mr. President’s military campaign against the dreaded Boko Haram is commendable too.

    Although, he has failed woefully at keeping his promise to rescue Chibok girls and exterminate the terrorist sect within his professed timeline, the military has succeeded considerably, at containing the terrorists’ activities.

    Skyrocketing inflation, rising debt profile and a weakened Naira, resurgence of Biafran clamour and other secessionist tumult, to mention a few, crept on the country in the wake of Buhari’s leadership. There are the usual hardships too, like unstable electricity, corruption in the oil and gas sector, politicised anti-corruption fight and cutthroat intraparty squabbles afflicting Buhari’s ruling party.

    Suddenly, the hero mutates into a villain in the estimation of an impatient electorate. The latter, split by ethnic and political bigotry since the March 28, 2015 presidential elections, yielded to greater animosity, political and tribal divisions as Buhari’s reticence about northern herdsmen’s murderous quests across eastern and southern farmlands resonate uglier narratives about his presidency.

    Then Buhari falls sick. However, in a manner reminiscent of late President Musa Yar’Adua’s ill advised circumstances, the presidency, allegedly held by the jugular, by a mythical cabal, fails to satisfactorily explain the actual nature of Buhari’s ailment thus substantiating dreadful conjectures by the electorate. Despite devoting public fund to Mr. President’s medical tourism abroad, Buhari’s ‘handlers’ and facetious media team have suddenly lost their voice alongside their wits.

    Now, we have Vice President Yemi Osinbajo in the saddle as Nigeria’s Acting President. Since he assumed office by constitutional dictates and at Buhari’s behest, Osinbajo, a presumably ‘quiet giant’ and ‘unflinching enforcer,’ has attracted flak from the mythical northern cabal. He attracts remarkable plaudits too, which is scary.

    Nigerians should be wary of heaping praise on Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo, lest he falls victim to hubris. We do not need him to be more ‘likable,’ ‘chaste,’ ‘humble’ or cut like a paper ‘intellectual.’ Nigeria needs Osinbajo to be more efficient. He should man up and clear some of the mess left by his boss, if he is indeed man enough for the job.

    Acting President (AP) Osinbajo recorded no extraordinary achievement as Nigeria’s Vice President. And he is yet to achieve any remarkable feat as Acting President. Except his closet and raucous sycophants consider his emergence as VP or AP his extraordinary achievement.

    No one expects Osinbajo to become an overnight success. No one expects him to magically resolve Nigeria’s institutionalised corruption and administrative ineptitude. After all, corruption remains a remarkable feature of his APC platform despite the party’s initial posturing otherwise. A cursory glance at the party’s current and estimated membership will convince you.

    No doubt, Osinbajo is incapable of ridding his party of corrupt but despite this sad reality and the hideous politics pitted against him, Nigeria expects him to perform creditably. He could begin by actually attempting to serve the interests of the impoverished and presumed dispensable divide.

    Unless Nigeria experiences ‘Change’ that reflects positively in the lives of the citizenry, Acting President Osinbajo will be dismissible as just another ‘ceremonial minder’ holding forte for an incapacitated President.

    Perhaps Osinbajo will evolve as everything but another disease of governance and civilisation. Let him remember that Buhari started out as a man devoted to wiping out corruption. He sought to do that while conveniently turning a blind eye to his inadequacies and self-imposed handicaps, or compromises, if you like.

    He forgot that nature and history only cares to identify individuals as intrinsic part of species and never as a lone genus. Will Osinbajo fare better?

  • ECOWAS to set up solidarity fund to rebuild North East

    ECOWAS to set up solidarity fund to rebuild North East

     

    Mr. Edward Singhatey, the Vice President, Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Commission says that plans are on-going to establish a solidarity Fund for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of the North-East.

    Singhatey made this known on Tuesday in Abuja during the celebration of the 2017 World Refugee Day with the theme “We stand together with refugees and IDPs”.

    He said the Solidarity Fund was in compliance with the decision of the Mediation and Security Council to support the Federal Government’s Plan for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of North-East Nigeria.

    He said that the humanitarian crises in the insurgency affected states of the North-East was enormous, adding that it was constantly being assessed by the ECOWAS Commission.

    Singhatey said that the dire situation in the North-East deserved special attention, adding that it had necessitated the international community and ECOWAS Commission to engage in several interventions.

    He said that the ECOWAS Commission, working with partners had donated one million dollars’ worth of food items to support the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and 300,000 dollars for Nigerian refugees in Niger, Chad and Cameroon.

    The ECOWAS Commission vice president said that it also donated 400,000 dollars for the support of affected communities in the North-East.

    According to him, a recent statistics by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimates over 65 million out of the eight billion worldwide population are refugees, asylum seekers and IDPs.

    Singhatey said that the African region represents about 30 per cent of the total number of refugees worldwide with a record of 180 million refugees as at 2016.

    He said that in West Africa, displacement and sufferings were caused by conflicts and other natural and human made causes.

    Singhatey said that failing to address the situation of refugees and other persons of concern amount to inviting adverse consequences for the environment.

    He said that the Commission’s Department of Social Affairs and Gender leads the humanitarian works with the goal of a borderless, prosperous and cohesive region with the capacity to effectively prevent and mitigate conflicts.

    He said the goal was also to limit the impact of conflicts and disasters on citizens and residents with a view to achieving human centered development.

    Singhatey said that the commission would continue to support the efforts of the Nigerian Government in assisting refugees, IDPs and other persons of concern.

    Also speaking, Mr. Jose-Antonio Canhandula, UNHCR Representative to Nigeria and ECOWAS tasked Nigeria to join the new approach, which he said was the Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework.

    He said that the framework was already being piloted by other African countries, including development actors and private sector in Chad, Tanzania, Ethiopia and Uganda.

    Canhandula, however, said that UNHCR was working with various partners to foster the protection of refugees and IDPs, to collectively seek ways to increase support to the government in assisting people.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the occasion was attended by Acting President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, who was represented by Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, the Minister of State, Budget and National Planning.

    Others present were Hajiya Sadiya Farouq, the Federal Commissioner, NCFRMI, humanitarian actors and the refugees and IDPs who displayed the wares they made from various skills acquisition programmes.

  • Osinbajo to attend 2017 National Insurance Conference

    Osinbajo to attend 2017 National Insurance Conference

    Mr. Shola Tinubu, Chairman, Planning Committee, 2017 National Insurance Conference (NIC), said on Tuesday that Acting President Yemi Osinbajo would declare open the three-day conference to begin on July 9.

    Tinubu, who made this known at a press briefing in Lagos, said that the conference would hold at the Transcorp Hotel, Abuja.

    He said the conference was aimed at removing all inhibitions against growing insurance business in Nigeria.

    “It is insurance practitioners and stakeholders’ pleasure to applaud the Federal Government for the all policy directions, especially against the backdrop of the nation’s recessive economy.

    “There was the dire need for a reversal of the economic trend, and the Federal Government through the promotion and exportation of local products and policies, is gradually leading the economy out of recession.

    “Also, worthy of commendation is the three years Economic Recovery Growth Plan (ERGP) from 2017-2020,” he said.

    Tinubu said the 2017 conference with the theme: “Nigeria Open for Business”, was apt in view of the Federal Government’s Ease of Doing Business Initiatives (EDBI).

    He noted that the EDBI was spearheaded by the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC).

    Tinubu said that this year’s conference would be the third since the conception of the Insurance Industry Consultative Council (IICC) in 2015.

    He said the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kevin Adeosun, would be the Chairman of the technical session of the conference while the Commissioner for Insurance, Alhaji Mohammed Kari, would be the chief host.

    “Mr. Tony Elumelu, Chairman of Tony Elumelu Foundation, will be discussing the theme paper with the aim of making delegates to draw from the speaker’s enormous exposure and experience in the nation’s financial services sector.

    “Discussants include Dr. Joseph Nanna,  Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria;  and Alhaji Kyari Bukar, Executive Secretary of Nigeria Economic Summit Group,  among others,” he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that IICC is the amalgamation of all the constituent arms of the insurance industry.

    It includes the Nigerian Insurers Association (NIA), Nigerian Council of Registered Insurance Brokers (NCRIB) and Institute of Loss Adjusters of Nigeria (ILAN), while the Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria serves as the coordinating arm.

  • FG approves payment of N701bn assurance system to boost electricity supply

    FG approves payment of N701bn assurance system to boost electricity supply

    The Federal Government has approved the payment of assurance system of N701 billion to break the liquidity of the entire electricity value chain in the country, the Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, has said.

    Osinbajo made the fact known at a roundtable on Nigerian Renewable Energy in Abuja on Tuesday, adding that part of the amount which was approved by the Federal Executive Council had been released.

    He said the second payment of the assurance system would soon be made to further boost electricity supply.

    “We have mentioned several of the plans, the power sector plans and so many of those initiatives.

    “The latest is to break the gridlock in the liquidity of the entire electricity value chain and so our payment assurance system of over N701 billion has been approved by the Federal Executive Council and in fact the first payment has been made. We are onto make up the second payment.

    “We hope that we free up that value chain which has created several problems of its own and we hope that this injection will help.

    “We are also looking at several other reforms in the sector hoping that the market can become self-sustaining, independent and run on its own and free up all of the private sector energy that is waiting to come into the market,’’ he added.

    Osinbajo noted that, as a multi-stakeholder platform, the Nigerian Renewable Energy Roundtable should champion the new vision for renewable energy and ensure that they could translate theory to practice for the greater good of the people.

    In his remarks, the Minister of Science and Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, said the ministry had been resolute in pursuing alternative energy sources.

    According to him, focus on renewable energy will benefit the rural areas and help to create jobs as stated in the government’s Economic Recovery Growth Plan.

    He said that diversification could only be successful in an environment of renewable energy system.

    Majority of Nigerians lack access to electricity and where it is available supply is irregular.

    The interest in renewal energy is expected to accelerate  electricity generation and supply to the populace.

     

  • 2017 budget: Jibrin backs Osinbajo on project insertion

    2017 budget: Jibrin backs Osinbajo on project insertion

    Suspended Abdulmumin Jibrin (APC, Kano) has expressed regrets that the acting President Yemi Osinbajo may have played into the hands of the National Assembly by signing the 2017 budget into law despite the misgivings he had over the document.

    He however said the acting President Osinbajo’s gesture should not be mistaken as a flaw neither was it deserving of the threats he is getting from the federal legislators.

    Jibrin, in a statement Monday regretted that due process was jettisoned over grey areas identified by the acting President before the document was signed into law.

    Jibrin however assured that more facts about the 2016 budget were set to be released by him as a means of further identifying the inherent flaws in the 2017 budget document.

    He said: “The Ag President made what, in my opinion, was a harmless remark when he observed that the National Assembly has no powers to introduce new projects in the budget. In the same statement, however, he admitted the powers of NASS to allocate resources as that is its core powers of appropriation.

    “I consider his statement very objective. His tone wasn’t confrontational, neither was his body language. Ag President Osinbajo had a day earlier signed the 2017 budget noting that there were grey areas, especially funds lifted from key projects, to introduce new projects by NASS.

    “He further stated that he agreed to sign the budget after the assurance of commitment from NASS to restore the lifted funds. That demonstration of faith in NASS was unprecedented, and the most generous concession in budget negotiation by a President since 1999.

    “No any President has ever agreed to sign the budget into law on the basis of extracting commitment from NASS to attend to outstanding issues after the budget is signed into law, the reasons being:

    “Once the budget is signed into law, the President MUST implement it, whether NASS makes the correction or not.

    “There are only two ways to achieve such corrections: supplementary budget or Virement, both of which are as good as going through the entire budget process all over again, and will require the Executive to go the full length of lobbying and massaging the ego of NASS, a process they detest so much.

    “The unpredictable nature of the relationship between the Legislature and the Executive, as the state of such relationship at a particular time determines how friendly and expeditiously NASS attends to requests from the Executive.

    “Already an unhealthy prevailing circumstances is being created that will make the process tough and place few people in NASS to negotiate some selfish interest only beneficial to themselves.

    “That has been the name of the game. The NASS should know that how it handles this historic concession granted it by the Executive under the guide of Ag President Osinbajo will determine the approach of the Executive Arm in future budget negotiation”.

    Jibrin said Osinbajo was able to accomplish a lot with the signing of the budget what no leader had done before.

    “On one occasion,  President Buhari said, “If we have waited for six months, we can as well wait for weeks for NASS to correct the grey areas before I sign.” That has been the pattern with successive presidents.

    “No President was ready to take the risk with NASS but Osinbajo did, as it appeared like striking a deal with an untrustworthy partner.

    “Whether this seeming pact is calculated or not, is left for time and the scrutiny of vigilant and critical Nigerians to determine.

    “What is obvious, however, is: the Ag President has played into the hands of NASS.

    “What the Ag President has given to NASS is a victory it has never had in the budget process since 1999, understandably to strengthen the relationship between the two frequently hostile arms of government.

    “And so, he deserves a reciprocal gesture and unmistakable friendship from the lawmakers, not attacks and threats. This is my position,” he added.

    The lawmaker disclosed that in due course, he would do a recap of the 2016 budget fraud with new revelations of facts and key actors involved.

    “We will talk about fraud in 2017 budget, how members of the Executive arm collaborate with NASS in this venture, new strategies to beat vigilant eyes, concealment, abnormality, reckless spending, budget revenue frame work, and 2 dollar extra benchmark.

    “Also to be addressed are N140 billion increment in budget size amidst dwindling revenues (the largest in recent years), poor economics, the “reformed” budget process, public hearing of budget, page by page consideration of details, corrigendum, the lies, facts and half-truths of budgeting, conspiracy of a few members of NASS in the budget process against majority of the 359 Members and 108 Senators and, very importantly, how to stop these infractions”.

     

  • Nigeria can’t afford bloodshed again, says APGA National Chairman

    Nigeria can’t afford bloodshed again, says APGA National Chairman

    Dr Victor Oye, National Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), has called on those beating the drums of war not to plunge the nation into fresh internal crisis.

    Oye made the call in an interview with News agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Awka.

    He said the nation could not afford another war after so much life had been lost with attendant setback in the course of keeping it united.

    “All these threats, all these ethnic jingoism, all these grandstanding and shenanigan does not worth the blood of any Nigerian.

    “We have had enough of crisis and we cannot afford another one,” he said.

    Oye said there was need for Nigerian to come to the round table, examine the situation and find out what is causing tension in the country.

    He said the recommendations of the 2014 national conference should be implemented in the interest of the country.

    The party chairman commended Acting President Yemi Osinbajo for his tact in managing the challenges so far, but added that he could not do it alone.

    “We need a committee that shows the true representative of the people to sit down and study the 2014 conference solutions as it concerns the situation now.

    “Nigeria could not have spent so much money, time and brain on such document only for it to be locked up in a drawer.

    “We have to genuinely discuss as a people; only that can give us the peace we crave.

    “America is larger than Nigeria, more populated than Nigeria and even more diverse than Nigeria but yet they are more united and stronger because they agreed, respect each other and adhere to a constitution that is a product of its people.

    “The quit order issued to some people in other parts of the country is irresponsible and ill thought out, the issuers should be arrested and tried for treason because they want to create crisis in Nigeria.

    “The Acting President has done well so far but it is not enough, it would have been better ifa PresidentMuhammdu Buhari was around to handle the problem of this country.

    “That is why I continue to pray for his quick recovery and return to his seat,” he said.

    Speaking on the crisis in the party, Oye described those seeking to take over the national leadership of the party through the backdoor as faceless impostors.

    He said the court judgement which gave the Police and INEC Order of Mandamus to recognise Chief Martin Agbaso as national chairman of the party could not stand the test of time.

    “Those who are scheming to takeover APGA through the backdoor are faceless impostors, most of them were expelled members of APGA and Agbaso is a PDP man.

    “The Police and INEC that are to execute that order are in court because they were not served writ of summon prior to the judgment just as I was not served.

    “As matter of fact, the Judge who gave that judgement has excused himself from the matter, how can I suffer precarious liability for what I know nothing about?

    “All these are just part of the grand design to stop Gov. Willie Obiano from contesting and winning second term, but it will not work,” he said.

    Oye said APGA remained party to beat in the Nov.18 governorship election in Anambra.

    He urged all stakeholders to play according to rules and in the best interest of the state
     

  • Agitations for Biafra, other secession plots unlawful, says Osinbajo

    Agitations for Biafra, other secession plots unlawful, says Osinbajo

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Sunday reiterated that agitations for creation of Biafra and Arewa youths’ ultimatum for Igbos to leave the North are unlawful and against the Nigerian Constitution.

    He stated this  during his opening speech at a consultation meeting with traditional rulers from the South East led by Eze Udo 1 of Mgboko Ngwa Amaise in Abia State and Chairman of South East traditional rulers, Eze Eberechi Dick, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    According to him, the manner, method and objectives of the agitations are wrong.

    The agitations, he said, deserve to be dealt with in accordance with the country’s constitutional provisions.

    Osinbajo said that where there were grievances to be addressed, the only way to make anything right is by doing it right, instead of threatening to break the law or the country.

    “As you are aware there has been agitation from some of our youths in the south east urging secession, the creation of Biafra. In apparent response young people in the north states, under the aegis  of Arewa youths have purportedly issued an ultimatum where they have said set a date for the eviction of persons from south east region who live in the northern states.

    “Those agitations, the manner of those agitations, the method and objective are wrong, unlawful and the violation of the laws of Nigeria and the constitution of Nigeria. I want to repeat that both the agitations for secession and the ultimatum to leave the northern states are wrong and a violation of our constitution.

    “Our constitution says in Section Two that Nigeria is one indivisible and indissoluble sovereign state to be known by the name the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “That is the law of our country. Let us not be in any doubt about the fact that the federal government is committed to ensuring that our country remains united.

    “And that anyone who violates the law in the manner such as we are seeing all over the place will be met with the full force of the law.

    “And the reason why it is so is because Nigeria’s unity enough blood has been spilled and many hundreds of thousands of lives have been lost. Many have paid for the unity of this country with their lives and it will be wrong of us as men and women of goodwill in this generation to toy with those sacrifices that have been made.

    “This is why men of goodwill in our generation must not tolerate any tendency that drags us in the direction of yet another civil conflict.

    “But we must be sensitive to the reasons why there are agitations by the various young men across the various zones of this country. Many have to do with perceived marginalization, some have argued safety in the different zones have been compromised. But I want to say the only way to make things right is to do things right. And it will be wrong of us to approach even our grievances by threatening to disobey the laws or by threatening the integrity of our nation,” he said

    He assured that the Federal Government is committed to listening to all the reasons, the various suggestions and the various agitations in order to ensure that justice is done to all persons.

     

    The meeting was a continuation of Osinbajo’s consultations with leaders of thoughts and traditional rulers from the North and South Eastern regions of the country, following the escalation of ethnic tensions occasioned by the agitation for Biafra and the vacation order issued by Northern youths for Igbo to quit the North.

    Present at the meeting were Speaker of the House of Representatives Yakubu Dogara, Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, Deputy Senate Leader, Senator Bala Ibn Da-Allah

    Others include Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Staff Abayomi Olonoshakin, Inspector General of Police,  Ibrahim Idris, National Security Adviser, Babangana Mongonu, Chief of Staff to the President, Abba Kyari, and other top government officials.

  • We are importing poison, not rice, Gov. Bagudu warns

    We are importing poison, not rice, Gov. Bagudu warns

    Gov. Abubakar Bagudu, the Chairman, Presidential Taskforce on Rice and Wheat Production, has condemned the continuous importation of rice into the country, describing it as importation of poison.

    Bagudu, who is also the governor of Kebbi, told journalists on Sunday in Birnin-Kebbi that the imported rice, auctioned by different countries, was no longer good for human consumption.

    The chairman, who expressed regret over citizens’ patronage of foreign rice, said imported rice usually contained preservatives, which are poisonous.

    He disclosed that there were three major importers of rice into the country who specialised in importing very cheap, auctioned rice into the country.

    The governor said that Thailand in April 2017, auctioned 1.62 million tonnes of rice at about $140 per tonne whereas the market price of it was $700 per tonne.

    “Countries, particularly Thailand, India, China and Vietnam, buy a lot of paddy from their farmers and keep in storage sometimes, as long as nine years so that by so doing, they are supporting their farmers.

    “A country like Thailand, for example, may have eight million tonnes of rice in storage; so occasionally, they will auction the ones that are almost going bad that is, the one that is not fit for human consumption.

    “They sell the paddy as low as 20 per cent less than the international market price.

    “Those that import rice into Nigeria will go and buy the paddy and clean them up.

    “Because they do not buy rice at the international price, our local farmers who are offering rice for $500 will not be competitive.

    “If that importer is to buy fresh rice, he cannot bring it into Nigeria below $700 per tonne.

    “This is the biggest obstacle to our rice efforts because consumers say local rice is expensive; it is not expensive because we are not comparing it with equivalent rice elsewhere,” the chairman explained.

    The governor said that out of the 600 million tonnes of rice produced in the world, Nigeria produced about six million tonnes which represented one per cent of the production.

    Bagudu said that rice could grow in the 36 states of the federation and called on stakeholders and citizens to come together to significantly advance rice production.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, on June 7, established a National Rice and Wheat Task Force to set up targets that will yield comprehensible and self-evident results in rice and wheat production.

    At the inauguration of the task force, Osinbajo said the Federal Government was trying to evolve a strategy for the economy, for employment and for feeding the people.

    Other members of the Task Force are Gov. Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano and his Ebonyi counterpart, David Umahi.

    Others are the Minister of State for Agriculture, Sen. Lokpobiri Heineken, the President of Rice Farmers Association, Mr Aminu Goronyo and the President, Wheat Farmers Association, Alhaji Salim Muhammad.

  • 2018 budget: FRC advises FG to stick to ERGP

    2018 budget: FRC advises FG to stick to ERGP

    The Fiscal Responsibility Commission (FRC) has advised the Federal Government to stick to the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) in processing the 2018 Appropriation Bill to boost the nation’s economy.

    FRC Acting Chairman, Mr Victor Muruako, gave the advice while speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Sunday in Abuja.

    He said that the ERGP was a very important and compact document that would help set the right stage for the nation to get back on the path of growth.

    “That well-articulated plan is a roadmap to boost our economic growth.

    “It is a very bold statement on which most of the 2018 appropriation requirements or plans will have a foothold and there must be strict adherence to this roadmap.

    “With this plan, the nation is on the right path,” he said.

    Muruako, however, said although it was not the first time that the nation had come up with a very good master plan or roadmap, it must stick to the plan to benefit from it.

    He commended the Federal Government for coming up with measures to ensure that the nation returned to the usual January to December budget cycle.

    He said that the 2018 budget calendar was already out and the Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, had issued executive orders to Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to ensure that the nation gets back on track.

    “There are three executive orders issued by the acting president and order number two clearly specifies that all financial transactions relating to the national budget and appropriation must adhere strictly to time.

    “There is a new wave of commitment to stick to financial plan, particularly the ERGP 2017-2020 and this has set the right tone for the nation to return to the usual budget cycle of January to December.”

    According to him, the order specifies that every MDAs must, before July 31, submit its budget details to the Minister for Budget and National Planning who will then work on it.

    He said that there was a firm commitment by the Acting President and the economic team to submit the budget proposal of 2018 to the National Assembly within the first week of October 2017.

    Muruako said that this would give the National Assembly the necessary time to work on it and for the President to study and give assent before Dec. 31.

    He said that with this, the financial life of the nation could begin on Jan. 1.

    He, however, said that the 2017 Appropriation Bill that was recently signed into law by the acting president may encounter some challenges in implementation because its late passage.

    “It is coming a bit late, so obviously, there may be some challenges in the full implementation of the budget.”

    He also advised that henceforth, more stakeholders should be involved in the budgetary process to get it right.

  • Stop Beating Drums of War – Lai Mohammed

    Stop Beating Drums of War – Lai Mohammed

    Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed has admonished those beating drums of war through hate speeches and divisive statements to desist in the interest of the nation’s unity and safety.

    The minister gave the advise on Saturday at the “Lai Mohammed 10th Annual Ramadan Lecture” held in his country home, Oro, Kwara.

    Lai Mohammed expressed concerns over the rate of inflammatory statements capable of causing division and war in the country in recent times.

    He urged Nigerians to disregard those who were engaged in hate speeches as well as their purveyors.

    “In the last couple of months, we have witnessed the increase inflammatory and hate speeches.

    “Hate speeches have been responsible for wars. Rwandan genocide where more than 800,000 people were killed was started by hate speeches.

    “Like people say, wars are not really started by bullets, they are started by words of mouth.

    “Nigeria is too big and God has a purpose for making us one and we shall remain united.

    “There will be differences, but like the Yoruba says, “Ori bibe ko ni ogun ori fifo” (beheading is not antidote to headache).

    “We have been living together peacefully and we will continue to live together, because we have a lot to gain by being united.

    “If there is war today, none of us will escape whether you are young or old whether you are Yoruba, Igbo of Hausa ,” he said.

    The Minister recounted a story he said Acting President Yemi Osinbajo narrated on the dire consequences of the Rwanda war on two judges from that country.

    “The Acting President told us a story that in 1982, he was a young lecturer in the University of Lagos and two Supreme Court Judges came visiting from Rwanda.

    “He said ten years later, in 1992, he went to work in Rwanda and on the street with a bowl in hand looking for food were the Supreme Court Judges that he saw in Lagos.

    “This shows that when there is war, the young, the old, the rich and the poor, we are all victims,” he said.

    The Minister stressed that Nigerians must work together, understand their differences and must never pray for war.

    Mohammed thanked those who attended the lecture noting that their presence was key to its success.

    He said the Ramadan lecture, the tenth in the series, was unique because it’s attendance cuts across religions and denomination.

    The Minister explained that the presence of Christian faithfuls at the event was an indication that Nigerians, irrespective of their religious leaning, could work and live together.

    The Special Guest of honour at the event, Gov. Rauf Aregbesola of Osun said he was impressed with the turn out of people in their diversity at the event.

    The governor urged Muslim faithfuls to remain pious in the remaining days of Ramadan and pray for the unity of the country.

    Gov. Abdulfatah Ahmed of Kwara commended the Minister for organising the annual lecture.

    The governor, who was represented by the Commissioner for Information, Mahmud Ajeigbe said it was a great feat for the minister to have sustained the Ramadan lecture for 10 years.

    Earlier, the Guest Speaker, Sheikh Ibrahim Gidado from Lagos preached on piety especially during the Ramadan period.

    He charged the gathering on the need for people to have the fear of God in all their dealings and to be compassionate and show love to the less privileged.

    He also called for the support of Nigerians for the Administration of President Muhammadu Buhari as well as their prayers for the President’s quick recovery.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Chief Imam of Oro, Mohammed Sanusi led other clerics at the event on prayers for the country, the President and his cabinet as well as the
minister and his members of families.

    The lecture was attended by traditional rulers from Kwara, including Oloro of Oro, Oba Abdulrauf Oyelaran, Clerics, Muslim and Christian faithfuls, politicians, students and people from other walks of life