Category: General News

  • Governors meet to discuss FAAC deadlock, minimum wage

    Governors meet to discuss FAAC deadlock, minimum wage

    The Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) on Wednesday night met in Abuja to discuss matter arising from the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) deadlock, minimum wage, among other issues.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the June monthly meeting of FAAC in Abuja ended in a deadlock.

    The FAAC monthly meeting is the forum where money is shared among the federal, states and local governments.

    Also on the meeting agenda was presentation by the Cheif Executive Officer of EduMarshals, on replicating EduMarshals education project at the state level.

    The Postmaster General was also expected to make presentation at the meeting on the Nigerian Postal Service in maximising revenue potential through electronic stamp solution, digital addressing system and addressing verification system.

    The governors were also expected to be briefed by World Bank Country Director, Dr Rachid Benmessaoud, on ”the States Fiscal Transparency and Accountability Sustainability (FSTAS).  (NAN)

  • Ngige receives panel’s report on N6.2b alleged NSITF fraud

    Ngige receives panel’s report on N6.2b alleged NSITF fraud

    The Administrative Panel of Enquiry, which probed the N6.2 billion scam at the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF) on Wednesday submitted its report to the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige.

    Mr Ishaya Awotu, the chairman of the panel said that there were irregular allowances totalling N5.7 billion paid to staff and management.

    “These allowances were paid without the approval of the  National Salary, Incomes and Wages Commission.’

    Some of the allowances were Management Staff Allowance, Staff Education Allowance, DSTV Subscription Allowance, and Dressing Allowance.

    The others were generator and motor vehicle fuelling allowance which were not provided for in the Condition of Service of the fund.

    He said the panel observed that between 2013 and 2017, the internal Audit Department of the NSITF did not audit the cashbooks of the various bank accounts at the headquarters.

    The chairman also explained that the lack of effective auditing of the Fund’s accounts and records violates section 1701 of the Financial Regulations.

    “There were several transfers of funds in bank accounts without authorisation and approvals.

    “The sum of N15, 737,757,697.91.  was transferred from one account to another.

    “Evidences to show the approvals and payment vouchers authorising the transfers were not presented to the panel.

    “The panel observed that N2.9 billion was expended on computerisation and other related lCT equipment.

    “Despite this expenditure, not much was achieved on computerisation of the Fund, defeating the purpose of the expenditure,” he said.

    He, however, added that the sum of N2, 650,731,225. 93 was  deducted from various payments.

    He noted that this was in respect of Withholding Tax, Pay-As-You-Earn (PAVE), Value Added Tax, Pension and National Housing Fund , which were not remitted to the relevant authorities.

    Ngige said another committee would be set up to implement the report of the committee.

    According to him, anyone indicted will be prosecuted.

    “This is not my report, but a report of the Federal Government of Nigeria. Those findings, especially about overseas trips which were unauthorised will be dealt with.

    “Because they are actions that breached public service rules. It is not true that parastatals are exempted from public service rules.

    “This report will be fully implemented and areas of lapses corrected. Many government organisations have gone under because of situations like this,” he said.

    The Minister inaugurated  the panel on Feb. 15,  to probe  the affairs of NSITF.  (NAN)

  • Amaechi seeks public opinions on performance in transport sector

    The Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi on Wednesday sought public opinions on his performance in the transportation sector.

    Amaechi disclosed this in a statement issued by his Media Aide, Mr Israel Ibeleme in Abuja.

    The Minister, however, appreciated President Muhammadu Buhari and the general public for the opportunity given him to serve.

    “I wish to express my gratitude for this opportunity given me to serve the Nation as the Minister of Transportation.

    “However, I would like to get feedback on our overall performance from you; where you feel we have succeeded or should improve on.

    “It is our duty and desire to serve you better. Kindly email me on chibuikeamaechi526@yahoo.com.

    “I will deeply appreciate this gesture,” he was quoted as saying.

    Meanwhile, the minister few days ago received the award of the Blueprint Newspaper for his contribution to the transportation sector and construction of the first monorail in Africa. (NAN)

  • Nursing mother,  154 stranded Nigerians in Russia arrive Abuja

    Nursing mother, 154 stranded Nigerians in Russia arrive Abuja

    A nursing mother and 154 out of 230 Nigerian football fans stranded in Russia after the 2018 FIFA World Cup arrived the country on Friday night.
     The stranded football fans including a nursing mother in her mid thirties came through Ethiopian Airline flight number ET-ALP that arrived Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport Abuja at about 9.12 p.m on July 20.
    The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Geoffrey Onyeama, who was at the airport to monitor their arrival, lauded President Muhammadu Buhari’s effort to ensure their safe return.
    He said that Mr President had directed that Nigerians, who were stranded in Russia after the 2018 World Cup tournament, should be evacuated immediately.
    According to him,  the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has been monitoring the process of the evacuation, which is under the coordination of the Mission of Nigeria in Moscow.
    He said that 155 stranded Nigerians had been cleared to board an Ethiopian Airline flight to Abuja.
    ”The aircraft departed Domodedovo Airport in Moscow with the stranded Nigerians in the afternoon and arrived in Abuja this evening.
    Onyeama said he had been working very closely with the Minister of State for Aviation following President Buhari’s directive on the exercise.
    He recalled that some Nigerian football fans who were stranded had besieged the Embassy of Nigeria in Moscow on July 12.
    ”They were among the fans who travelled to the Russian Federation for the 2018 FIFA World Cup Tournament and were stranded after the events due to lack of funds for their upkeep.”
    The minister explained that there was also an allegation that some airline travel agents cancelled return tickets of their customers without informing them.

    He said that Mr President, however,  gave the directive that they should be evacuated with immediate effect at the expense of the government.

    Onyeama commended the good gesture of Mr President, saying those stranded were never part of government delegates to Russia.
    According to him, the Nigerian Mission had been supportive by making arrangements for the feeding and accommodation of the stranded Nigerians in hostels around Moscow.
    One of the returnees, Bamidele Fatai was full of praises to President Buhari for making their journey possible.
    He also thanked the Nigerian Mission in Moscow for giving them necessary support.
    Another returnee, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he was swindled by an agent who cancelled his return ticket.
    He said he was in Moscow to support the Nigerian Football Team and to catch fun only to discover that his ticket had been cancelled when he was ready to return home. (NAN)
  • Minister clarifies directive to NERC on service delivery

    The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, says his directive to Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) is rectify issues impeding electricity supply in the country, but not to demonise DisCos.

    Fashola offered the clarification while reacting to an assertion by Mr Sunny Oduntan, the Executive Director, Research and Advocacy, Association of Electricity Distributors (ANED), in Abuja on Friday.

    The minister said in a statement that his directive was to legal entities and not to an interloper.

    He said it was untrue that Oduntan’s minded interpretation of his directive was an attempt to demonise the DisCos.

    Fashola had at a news conference mandated NERC in line with the law to prevail on the DisCos to improve their distribution equipment and capacity to take up the available 2,000MWs.

    He had said that NERC should enforce the contract of DisCos to supply meters and act to ensure urgent speedy supply and installation of meters to eliminate estimated billing and promote efficient industry market structures.

    However, ANED, in a response by Oduntan, faulted Fashola’s directives to NERC to prevail on the DisCos.

    Oduntan also spoke on the wrong timing of declaration of customers’ eligibility by the minister.

    He also faulted the minster’s comment on meter supply by DisCos and claim on current power generation, among other pronouncements of the minister on the sector.

    Fashola said: “Before fiction becomes fact for lack of a response, I feel obliged to respond to some, not all of the allegations credited to one Sunday Oduntan.

    “Which he made in response to my directives to NERC and Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) and Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading (NBET) as contracting parties to the DisCos.

    “Throughout my press statement which contained the directives, I referred copiously to the provisions of the Electric Power Sector Reform Act (EPSRA) which is the law that regulates the power sector.

    “I referred to DisCos in their capacities as licencees.

    “If ANED is not a licencee, who is ANED, an NGO? If so, they should listen to consumers because nothing is going on about poor service.

    “The BPE, NBET and NERC, to whom my directives were made, contracted individually with DisCos not as an association.

    “However, to suggest therefore that my directives were political turns reality on its head.

    “For the past 20 months, in all my public briefings at monthly meetings with the DisCos these same issues of service delivery of meters, estimated billings, investment in distribution equipment by DisCos have dominated my remarks.

    “However, assuming this was not so, do the onset of elections preclude the quest for better service or continued governance?

    “His statement that no directives from me will save the power sector from collapse is consistent with the views of someone who has no skin in the game.

    “It is revealing of the mindset of a saboteur not a builder, and he will do very well to acquaint himself and advise his co-travellers about the consequences of sabotaging the economy under our laws.

    “I am optimistic that the power sector will prosper in spite of Oduntan-minded personalities.

    “As for the allegation that figures of power generation and distribution released by me are not true, the taste of the pudding lies with those who eat it.

    “Electricity consumers know what their experience was in 2015, 2016, 2017 and today.

    “These figures have been released many months back when we reached those milestones as part of my monthly report and roadmap of incremental power.

    “It is obvious that the warning lights of compliance necessity are blinking, and those he represents do not like the colour.

    “If the DisCos connect with their consumers, they will hear from them first-hand, how traumatised they feel about load shedding, absence of meters and estimated billing.

    “The GenCos, who are short paid because the DisCos under-remit in spite of high estimated billing to consumers, will tell DisCos how they feel.

    “If Oduntan truly speaks for the DisCos, which I doubt, he should ignore the messenger (Fashola) and advise those for whom he acts as surrogate, to focus on the message.”

    The minister said his directive seeks to rectify the problems because he believes they could be rectified.

    According to him, his directive, among others, is that electricity consumers want better service, NBET wants its money of about N800 billion from the DisCos, so it can pay GenCos.

    He also said DisCos should respond on why 408 feeders, which have a capacity to deliver 5,756MW of power to consumers only carry 444MW because of faulty lines, bad equipment and load shedding.

    “These are part of the subject of my directives to NERC to address deliberate load shedding, that is what electricity consumers want, better service,’’ the minister said. (NAN)

  • FG to adopt National Policy on Protection of Civilians in conflict situations – Lai Mohammed

    The Federal Government says it will soon adopt National Policy on the Protection of Civilians in Conflict Situations, to strengthen and entrench its constitutional practice on civilians protection.

    The Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed disclosed this in Washington, US, while addressing a High-Level Roundtable organised by the Atlantic Council, an American think tank on international affairs.

    The minister said that the policy, which would be drawn in collaboration with the National Hunan Rights Commission, would form part of the several measures put in place to address human rights violations.

    Mohammed, for the umpteenth time, faulted the Amnesty International’s periodic reports on alleged human rights violations by the Nigerian military.

    He specifically dismissed the latest of such reports bordering on violations of human rights and International Humanitarian Law by the Nigerian Armed Forces and other government agencies.

    The minister said, “the protection of human rights is a cardinal objective of the President Muhammadu Buhari Administration, and that the violation of rights is not a government policy”.

    He told the Roundtable that the government has taken several measures to address human rights violation in the course of the counter insurgency operations.

    He gave examples of such policies as the establishment of Human Rights Desks in all military formations and the quarterly Human Rights/Military Dialogue.

    He said the military also organised trainings on Mainstreaming Human Rights into Counter-Insurgency Operations, and Court Martials officers indicted for human rights violations.

    Mohammed insisted that Boko Haram had been badly degraded hence “it is incapable of carrying out organised massive attacks beyond using women and children to carry out suicide bombings against soft targets.”

    He also told the Roundtable that the incessant farmers-herders clashes were neither religious nor ethnic in nature, as they had been portrayed in some circles.

    ”There is no question that this (conflict) is driven mostly by an increased contest for dwindling natural resources like land and water.

    “This has been worsened by demographic pressure and climate change.

    “Nigeria’s population in 1960 was 45 million, and this has ballooned to
    about 200 million in 2018, but the available resources have not grown
    at all. If anything, they have shrunk.

    ”As desertification continues to encroach and the Lake Chad that
    provided a livelihood for over 35 million in several countries shrank
    from 25,000 to 2,500 square kilometres.

    “Herders in particular are forced to move south in search of grazing land and water for their cattle,” he said.

    The minister said beyond the main causative factors, however, disgruntled politicians and beneficiaries of corruption, who have vested interest in undermining the Buhari Administration through any means necessary, have latched on to the conflict.

    The Roundtable, which was convened by the Africa Centre of the 57-year-old think tank, was attended by about 30 current and former senior US government officials, as well as other stakeholders
    in the US Policy on Africa.

    The participants included retired Gen. William E. Ward, former Commander, US Africa Command, former US Ambassador to Nigeria Robin Sanders and Ms Florizelle Liser, President and CEO, Corporate Council on Africa;

    Mr Thierry Dongala, Senior Advisor, House Foreign Affairs Committee; Mr Trevor Keck, Deputy Head of Policy, International Committee of the Red Cross and Dr. EJ Hogendoorn of the International Crisis Group’s Africa Programme.

    The Nigerian Ambassador to the US, Ambassador Sylvanus Nsofor, led a team of the Nigerian Embassy officials to the event. (NAN)

  • Fears of arrest, abuse by Govs may kill State Police Bill – Sen. Ibrahim

    Fears of arrest, abuse by Govs may kill State Police Bill – Sen. Ibrahim

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Police Affairs, Sen. Abu Ibrahim, says the fear of indiscriminate arrest and detention by state governors may kill passage of the State and Community Police Bill.

    Ibrahim, who made this known in an interview with newsmen in Abuja, said the bill which had passed first reading in Senate, may not get two third majority to allow for a third reading and passage.

    He said that while lawmakers from some parts of the country may vote in favour of the bill because of their control system, others may not for fear of abuse.

    “My fear is the required numbers. The disagreement between the national assembly members and governors may kill it.

    “This is because I know many senators and House of Representatives members think that if state governors get state police, they can trample on them, arrest and detain them.

    “From my assessment, there is no way it will get two thirds in the National Assembly.

    “Probably the bulk of South West senators will go for it because in the area,  there is some control and there is synergy because of the control system.

    “I do not want to mention names but there are states that there is no way they will vote for its passage.

    “From the way I see it, nine states out of 37 will no vote for it. But let us see how it goes,” he said.

    On whether or not there is merit in the clamour for state and community police, the lawmaker said if passed and signed into law, it would help in tackling security challenges in the country.

    However, he said, besides the fear of intimidation and abuse, there were other factors that may not allow the structure to work effectively.

    According to him, basically, the problem with the Police is funding.

    “If you create state police, will you get a better funding? These are the things we should ask ourselves.

    “What are the main reasons for failure of the Federal Police system if it is regarded as failure. The reason is lack of funding.

    “You give Nigeria Police N20 billion as budgetary allocation when they require about N300 billion.

    “Even the N20 billion is not fully released. It is sometimes between 40 per cent and 50 per cent.

    “So, will state police do better. They may know the locality better but do they have the resources?.

    “Can the states pay them their salaries and allowances. These are things we should look into, ” he said.

    Ibrahim advised that rather than creating a system that would be dead on arrival because of the mirage of problems that would come with, the current internal security system should be overhauled and properly funded.

    According to him, creating state police would be overburdening for states that have to be assisted by the Federal Government for not being able to pay workers’ salaries.

    He pointed out that if state police must work, there must be change in the revenue allocation formula to give states more money.

    “If we maintain the current allocation formula, maybe Lagos, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Kano, Kaduna may pay. But after that who else.

    “This is a federal function, if I have to take a federal function to state, it is reasonable that I reduce the amount going to federal and give more to the states.

    “Also, there are questions like, how many functions do you take from federal to states.

    “We cannot just say, create state police with the present allocation formula.

    “It will not work and that is beside the political angle I spoke about earlier, that is, the relationship between state governors and lawmakers,” he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports  that a Bill seeking the amendment to the 1999 Constitution to accommodate State and Community Police passed first reading in the Senate on July 12. (NAN)

     

  • Vote-buying biggest threat to Nigeria’s democracy, says Group

     

    By Ikenna Osuoha

    The Integrity Group (TIG) on Monday said that vote-buying was not only a criminal offence but the biggest threat to Nigeria’s democracy.

    The founder of the group, Livingstone Wechie, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that such act contravened sections 124 and 130 of the Electoral Act.

    He called for immediate enforcement of the punitive prescription of the law to deter recurrence.

    “We are calling for the immediate enforcement of the law against perpetrators of such act.

    “This is the time to save our democracy for posterity sake,” Wechie said.

    The group’s leader, who called on the Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC) to rise up against such electoral offence, said the battle was a collective one.

    He condemned in strong terms any of form of undermining the integrity of the electoral process.

    According to him, this crime if established must be treated with the full weight of the law.

    Wechie commended the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for its efforts on voter education.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that there are allegations of vote-buying in the Ekiti election by politicians. (NAN)

  • Attractive cultural sites: Magnets to foreign exchange, says Don

    By Oladapo Udom
    Lagos, July 23, 2018 (NAN) Dr. Boniface Igbeneghu, an Associate Professor of French Language, University of Lagos (UNILAG), has  said that beautifying cultural sites will attract more tourists to such sites and improve foreign exchange earnings for the country.

    Igbeneghu told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that the three tiers of government should invest more in the cultural aspect of the country.

     

    The don said that they could achieve this through regular maintenance of infrastructure at tourism and entertainment centres.

    “Nigeria has several untapped tourism potential, both in physical and human resources that can be adequately packaged to attract tourists from around the world.

    “By so doing, we will be selling our products to the international community, and thereby promoting our cultures and traditions in the Diaspora.

    “This will make Nigeria a better choice for tourism, social activities and cultural diplomacy for foreign tourists,” he said.

    Igbeneghu urged the Lagos State Government to embark on the renovation of the Afrikan Shrine and its environments following the visit by President Emmanuel Macron of France to the place.

    He said that the state government should utilise the opportunity the visit had provided to promote trade, commerce, entertainment and international politics in and around the state.

    “Several foreigners will want to see what attracted Macron to the shrine. They will, therefore, be interested in also visiting the shrine whenever they have the opportunity to visit Nigeria.

    “Upgrading the infrastructure in and around the place, such as renovating the road networks, erecting functional street lights and building capital projects around the shrine, will make it more attractive as a tourist centre.

    “This will definitely improve the inflow of tourists, boosts foreign exchange earnings and upscale  tourism ratings in the country,” he said.

    Igbeneghu said that for a world leader to have visited the shrine shows how much Nigeria’s culture is respected in the international community, particularly, its entertainment and tourism sectors. (NAN)
    OUU/PAD
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    Edited by Peter Dada