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  • NANS extols Tinubu for revitalization of Port-Harcourt Refinery

    NANS extols Tinubu for revitalization of Port-Harcourt Refinery

     

    The President of National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Comrade Pedro Obi, has extolled President Bola Tinubu for the remarkable vision and ongoing strides towards revitalizing the Port-Harcourt Refinery.

     

    Obi gave the commendation in Enugu on Friday while speaking to newsmen on Tinubu’s proactive steps and unwavering commitment to the refurbishment of the Port-Harcourt Refinery.

     

    According to him, President Tinubu’s initiated ongoing work on the refurbishment of the Port-Harcourt Refinery stands as a testament to his dedication to national development and economic empowerment.

     

    “NANS extends its heartfelt commendation to President Bola Tinubu for the remarkable strides towards revitalizing the Port-Harcourt Refinery.

     

    “The reopening of this vital national asset marks a significant milestone towards ensuring energy security and fostering economic stability within Nigeria.

     

    “The restoration of the Port-Harcourt Refinery holds immense promise for Nigerian students and the populace at large.

     

    “It is poised to generate numerous employment opportunities for Nigerian youths, including students seeking internships and part-time employment within the oil and gas sector,” he said.

     

    The NANS boss said that additionally, the increased refinery capacity is expected to contribute significantly to the nation’s economic growth, potentially leading to better funding for educational institutions, scholarships, and infrastructural development.

    “Moreover, a functional refinery could lead to stabilized fuel prices, thereby alleviating the financial burden on students who rely on transportation for their education.

     

    “NANS, as the umbrella students’ body, acknowledges President Tinubu’s vision and commitment to steering Nigeria towards a brighter future.

     

    “The student body pledges its unwavering support and cooperation in fostering initiatives that enhance the nation’s prosperity,” Obi added.

  • $150m Abacha loot: CISLAC, TI task Nigeria, France on upholding asset recovery laws

    $150m Abacha loot: CISLAC, TI task Nigeria, France on upholding asset recovery laws

     

     

    Abuja: The Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) and the Transparency International (TI) have called on the Nigerian and French governments to uphold asset recovery laws as another $150 million Sani Abacha loot is returned to the country.

    MR Auwal Musa Rasfanjani, the Executive Director of CISLAC/TI Nigeria, and Sara Brimbeuf, Head of Illicit Financial Flows Programme, TI France, made the call in a joint press statement made available to newsmen on Friday in Abuja.

    They said it was time for the two countries to uphold the laws in order to ensure transparency and accountability in the recovered loot spendings.

    (MR Auwal Musa Rasfanjani, the Executive Director of CISLAC/TI Nigeria,)

    “On November 3rd, 2023, through its Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and last week at the 10th Conference of the State Parties (CoSP) to the United Nations Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC), France announced the upcoming return to Nigeria of US$150 million looted by former head of State Sani Abacha.

    “This return process falls within proceedings initiated in the United States where, in 2014, a court entered judgment forfeiting approximately US$500 million located in accounts around the world – including in France, Jersey, the U.K., etc. – as the result of a civil forfeiture complaint the Department of Justice filed against more than $625 million traceable to money laundering involving the proceeds of Abacha’s corruption.

    “As part of the same proceedings, Jersey, the US, and Nigeria secured an agreement in February 2020 for the return of US$311.7 million, which the previous Nigerian government had proposed to be used to finance several road infrastructure projects.

    ” As other returned funds confiscated in third countries have financed these same road infrastructures, several NGOs have warned of the risk of double financing and misappropriation of funds.

    “The announcement of the upcoming return of US$150M from France to Nigeria that took place during the launch of the Global Forum on Asset Recovery (GFAR) Action Series, organised by the Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative (StAR) to facilitate the communication and negotiation among origin and destination countries in connection with specific ongoing cases, raises several questions:

    “When will the negotiations between France and Nigeria start? How will France and Nigeria choose the project or programmes financed by the returned funds? Will civil society organisations be included in the return process? If so, how?” they asked.

    According to them, it is important to note that while France has never returned any confiscated assets, it has recently established a legal framework for asset restitution (article 2 XI of the Law No 2021-1031 adopted on August 4, 2021 and circular No 6379/SG adopted on November 22, 2022) that enshrines principles of transparency and accountability and provides clear guidelines on the various stages of the return process.

    “Nigeria, on the contrary, has a longstanding asset return experience with more than US$4 billion having been returned from different jurisdictions like Switzerland, the UK, the US, and Jersey, over the past three decades.

    “While Nigeria has been commended for making efforts to repatriate stolen assets from abroad, the utilisation of these assets has been a challenge due to the lack of transparency and accountability in the management and utilisation of funds. These challenges gave rise to several calls by Nigerian and international state and non-state actors in Nigeria for a legal framework to ensure transparent and accountable management of recovered assets.

    “These advocacy efforts led to the adoption of the Proceeds of Crime (Recovery and Management) Act 2022 which assigns roles and responsibilities to relevant institutions on recovery and management of proceeds of crime and gives a provision for civil society to monitor its implementation.

    “The upcoming restitution of US$150 million presents an excellent chance for France and Nigeria to implement the legal frameworks existing in their respective countries to ensure that the return process is transparent and accountable and includes civil society organisations.

    “This is a chance for France to establish itself as a model for other destination countries wishing to return stolen assets and a chance for Nigeria to demonstrate that it is willing to be transparent about its management and utilisation of recovered assets,” they concluded.(Flowerbudnews)

  • Nigeria Army gets 112 new generals

    Nigeria Army gets 112 new generals

    The Nigerian Army Council has promoted a total of 47 Brigadier Generals to Major Generals.

     

    Also, 75 Colonels were elevated to the rank of Brigadier General.

     

    Their promotion is coming after the retirement of 113 generals on Wednesday.

     

    However, a statement on Friday by the Director, Army Public Relations, Brig. Gen. Onyema Nwachukwu, said the council approved the promotions of the senior officers on Thursday.

     

    He noted that the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Taoreed Lagbaja, urged them to redouble their efforts to justify their elevation and the confidence reposed in them.

     

    According to him, those promoted to the rank of Major General include, Brig Gen WB Etuk, Commandant Nigerian Army College of Logistics and Management; Brig Gen JE Osifo, Commandant Nigerian Army School of Finance and Administration; Brigadier General WM Dangana Commander Sector 3 Joint Task Force North East Operation HADIN KAI; Brig Gen TB Ugiagbe Acting Chief of Military Intelligence, Brig Gen ASM Wase Deputy Director General Land Forces Stimulation Centre Nigeria Operations; Brig Gen MA Abdullahi Commandant Depot Nigerian Army; Brig Gen BI Alaya Commander Command Engineering Depot, Brig Gen AO Oyelade Director Personnel Planning Army Headquarters Department of personnel Management; Brig Gen OO Arogundade Commandant Nigerian Army School of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, Brig Gen EI Okoro Commander 13 Brigade; Brig Gen CR Nnebeife Executive Director Nigerian Army Farms and Ranches Limited and Brig Gen FU Mijinyawa Director Plans Army Headquarters Department of Policy and Plans

     

    Others are Brig Gen MT Abdullahi Commander 50 Space Command; Brig Gen M Adamu Commander 32 Brigade; Brig Gen ND Shagaya Commandant Nigerian Army School of Supply and Transport; Brig Gen ME Onoja Office of the CDS and Brig Gen MO Erebulu Acting Director Psychological Warfare Defence Headquarters.

    elevated to the rank of Major General are Brig Gen BA Ilori Commander of Army Headquarters Garrison Ordnance Services, Brig Gen MO Ihanuwaze Director Budget Army Headquarters, Brig Gen O Nwachukwu Director Army Public Relations, Brig Gen EE Ekpenyong of the Nigerian Army Resource Centre, Brig Gen SI Musa Director Legal Service (Army), Brig Gen M Galadima Commander Command Finance Office and Brig Gen AP Ahmadu Commander 1 Division Ordnance Service.

     

    Officers promoted from the rank of Colonel to Brigadier General are Col Nwakonobi Chief of Staff Headquarters 3 Brigade, Col MC Akin Ojo Commander of 41 Engineer Brigade, Col BM Madaki Deputy Director Army Headquarters Operations Monitoring Team, Col MO Edide Directing Staff Army War College Nigeria, Col KE Inyang Commander 76 ST Brigade, Col OO Nafiu Chief of Staff Office of the Chief of Army Staff, Col PA Zipele Commander Signal Operations Command, Col OA Onasanya Acting Command Guards Brigade, Col MI Amatso Deputy Director Department of Civil Military Affairs, Col CM Akaliro Deputy Director Army Headquarters Department of Army Transformation and Innovation, Col NE Okoloagu Directing Staff Army War College Nigeria, Col AS Bugaje Acting Director Special Forces Infantry Corps Centre, Col AM Kitchner Commander 6 Division Finance and Account, Col SJ Dogo Deputy Chief of Staff Operations Headquarters 82 Division and Col JN Garba Commander 32 Brigade Garrison.

     

    Others elevated to the rank of Brigadier General are Col PT Gbor Commander 81 Military Intelligence Brigade. Col SO Okoigi Acting Corps Commander Nigerian Army Medical Corps, Col AF Maimagani Acting Director Chaplaincy (Roman Catholic), Col PO Alimekhena Headquarters 81 Division, Col BI George Acting Director Directorate of Dental Services Headquarters Nigerian Army Medical Corps, Col IB Gambari Headquarters 63 Brigade and Col AY Emekoma Participant Senior Executive Course 45 National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studie

  • Abia Uncovers ‘Japa’ Doctors Still Receiving Salaries

    Abia Uncovers ‘Japa’ Doctors Still Receiving Salaries

    Governor Alex Otti disclosed this in Umuahia, the state capital at the first Abia State Council on Health at the International Conference Centre on Thursday.

     

    Speaking on the theme, “Providing an Accessible, Affordable and Quality Healthcare System for the New Abia,” Otti said such doctors are still collecting salaries from the state despite leaving Abia’s employment and now working abroad.

     

     

     

    “Furthermore, our ongoing digitalization of the Abia State civil service has uncovered some staff that have left their duty post for greener pastures, yet still receive remuneration from the State government,” he said.

    While the criminality involved in this is going to be addressed by the relevant agencies of government, the important thing here is that we do not have the number of hands that were hitter to report. We are working hard to fill these gaps.”

     

    The governor added that his administration would recruit more health workers to strengthen the health sector.

     

    Otti said his government was strengthening primary health care and ensuring that health facilities were manned by personnel across the state.

     

    Also speaking, the Minister of Health, represented by the Permanent Secretary of Abia State Ministry of Health, Dr Ifenyinwa Uma-Kalu, stressed the need for state governments to support the federal government by providing the necessary infrastructure in the health care system.

     

    The State Commissioner for Health, Dr Ngozi Okoronkwo while giving her address described the first State Council on Health as a demonstration of the commitment of Governor Alex Otti’s administration to prioritizing developmental initiatives that are capable of unlocking the potential of Abia’s strategic human capital to fast -track the attainment of socio-economic development of the present administration.

     

    Okoronkwo said that the focus of the administration is to bestow on Abians a health system that meets the needs of the people irrespective of socio-economic status, adding that it would in turn put Abia on the path of attaining Universal Health Coverage for all.

  • Fuel subsidy: Bisi Akande blames Buhari for economic hardship in Nigeria

    Fuel subsidy: Bisi Akande blames Buhari for economic hardship in Nigeria

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress, APC, and elder statesman, Chief Bisi Akande, has blamed former President Muhammadu Buhari for the suffering Nigerians are currently experiencing as the result of removal of fuel subsidy

    Akande, a former Governor of Osun State, said that Buhari should have removed fuel subsidy from 2015 when he was first elected President, insisting that by now Nigerians would have overcome the challenges associated with subsidy removal.

     

    The former Interim National Chairman of the APC also said that from the beginning he was not in tune with the economic policies of the Buhari administration

     

    And I kept saying it but as part of the administration, I couldn’t go to the press to say it. It would have been senseless because Buhari never closed the door of his house to me. I can meet and talk to him whenever I want,” he said on Channels TV.

     

    “And I was saying that I wasn’t comfortable with economic management. Let’s use, for example, the removal of fuel subsidy, between the time Buhari was elected as President and the time he was inaugurated, we had several sessions of discussion to see if the subsidy should be removed and he was convinced.

     

    “And I thought that as soon as he got to power he would removed the subsidy but I didn’t know what happened. And after his inauguration he started being careful, slowing down until the first four years.

    So, at the beginning of the term, he came out, he wanted to remove the subsidy and the country reacted and he had to back out. So from the beginning I wasn’t comfortable. Subsidy ought to have been removed at that time and by now Nigerians should have been used to it.”

     

    DAILY POST reported that President Bola Tinubu said the 2023 budget did not provide for fuel subsidy payments during his inaugural address at the Eagles Square.

  • Two dead as two-storey building collapses in Lagos

    Two dead as two-storey building collapses in Lagos

    Emergency responders have recovered the bodies of two middle aged persons, a man and a woman, from the rubbles of a two-storey building that collapsed on Friday morning in Ebute Meta, Lagos.

    Mr Ibrahim Farinloye, Lagos Territorial Coordinator, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), confirmed the development to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

     

    Farinloye said that a two-storey building with a pent house collapsed at about 0930 hours along Herbert Macaulay way, Ebute Metta.

    He said that the Lagos Building Control Agency (LASBCA) had issued evacuation notice several times and all the original occupants had parked out.

     

    “It was alleged that the property had been sold out about four months ago.

     

    “Three of the occupants jumped to safety with the assistance of the residents,” Farinloye said.

     

    He added that search and rescue operations was ongoing.

  • Supreme Court affirms Mbah as Enugu State Governor

    Supreme Court affirms Mbah as Enugu State Governor

    The Supreme Court, on Friday, upheld the election of Governor Peter Mbah of Enugu State.

     

    The apex court, in a unanimous decision by a five-man panel of Justices, dismissed an appeal that the Labour Party, LP, and its candidate, Chijioke Edeoga, filed to challenge the outcome of the governorship election that held in the state on March 18

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    According to the apex court, it found no reason to dislodge the concurrent verdicts of the Enugu State Governorship Election Petitions Tribunal and the Court of Appeal in Lagos, which dismissed all the allegations the appellants raised against the election victory of governor Mbah of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.

    resolved all the issues that were raised in the appeal, against the LP and Edeoga.

     

    It will be recalled that the Lagos Division of the Court of Appeal had on November 10, upheld governor Mbah’s election, after it dismissed three issues that the LP and its candidate, Edeoga, raised against him.

     

    In a unanimous judgement, a three-member panel of the appellate court led by Justice Tani Yusuf-Hassan, held that Edeoga and his party failed to establish their allegation that governor Mbah was not qualified to contest the gubernatorial poll.

     

    The court noted that though the appellants alleged that there was widespread over-voting within Mbah’s strongholds, they, however, failed to tender the voters register that was used for the election, to prove the allegation.

     

    It was the position of the appellate court that the LP and its candidate failed to adduce sufficient reasons to warrant the setting aside of the earlier verdict of the Enugu State Governorship Election Petitions Tribunal, which dismissed their case.

     

    It accordingly dismissed the appeal as lacking in merit and affirmed Mbah as the valid winner of the governorship election.

     

    Dissatisfied with the judgement of the appellate court, Edeoga took the matter before the Supreme Court, where he also lost on Friday.

     

    Mr Edeoga of the LP came second with 157,552 votes, while Frank Nweke of the All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA, polled 17, 983 votes to place third.

     

    Not satisfied with the results as announced by INEC, Edeoga and his party filed a petition to challenge Mbah’s victory.

     

    The petitioners insisted that they polled the highest number of valid votes at the election and therefore ought to have been declared winner instead of Mbah of the PDP.

     

    Among other things, the LP and its candidate alleged that Mbah was ineligible to contest the election, alleging that he submitted forged National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, Certificate to the INEC, in aid of his qualification.

     

    Meanwhile, in its verdict on September 9, the Justice K.M. Akano-led tribunal dismissed the allegation, stressing that the PDP candidate met the minimum requirements for the election, which it said included the possessing of a school certificate or its equivalent.

     

    More so, the tribunal held that the issue of forgery, being a criminal allegation, ought to be proved beyond reasonable doubt.

     

    The tribunal further rejected the testimony of some of the witnesses that testified in the matter, stressing that their evidence were inadmissible since their statement on oath were not filed alongside the petition.

     

  • STRENGTHENING AND REPOSITIONING ECOWAS FOR EMERGING CHALLENGES

    STRENGTHENING AND REPOSITIONING ECOWAS FOR EMERGING CHALLENGES

    By Paul Ejime

    In less than two years, (2025), the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) will mark its Golden Jubilee Anniversary. Given the high rate of turnover of similar regional organisations vis-a-vis its achievements, especially in the domain of preventive diplomacy, conflict management and resolution since its establishment in May 1975, even hardline critics will not deny ECOWAS its due credit.

    However, faced with a combination of factors in recent years, particularly bad governance, poverty, and corruption, compounded by the crisis of globalising liberal democracy, the collapse of multilateralism and the rise of multipolarities and asymmetric threat vectors, such as terrorism, cyber warfare and social media, the West African regional bloc has found itself struggling to even meet its own standards.

    Leadership deficit at the national and regional levels is only part of the problem. Most telling and unresolved is the chronic lack of institutional capacity, which features prominently in the reports of external stakeholders and ECOWAS development partners.

    With an estimated staff strength of under 2,000, including less than 70 Directors servicing the organisation’s 14 Specialised Agencies and six Institutions, including the Commission, ECOWAS is grossly understaffed in quality and quantity of hands-on technocrats.

    This translates to a lack of absorptive capacity, which limits its ability to fully utilise available resources or attract more funding for the coordination and implementation of critical and strategic programmes and policies to deepen cohesion and progressively eliminate identified barriers to the full integration of the more than 400 million Community.

    To compound matters, the organisation only returned recently to a seven-Commissioner structure made up of the Offices of the President, Vice-President, and five Commissioners overseeing more than 26 Directorates, Divisions, and administrative Units.

    Until last year, the regional leaders had in their wisdom, expanded the organisation to a 15-Commissioner structure with the attendant drain on human and financial resources.

    The lack of dynamic and visionary technocrats means that ECOWAS, once applauded for its forward-looking and proactive policies and engagements, has become increasingly ineffective and on the verge of losing relevance.

    The tragic consequences of leadership failure coincided with the lack of independent-mindedness and the required ‘supranationalism’ of actions/decisions at the level of the Commission, coupled with an accelerated retreat of democracy in the region.

    Four of the 15-nation regional bloc are now under military dictatorships from 2020, with three – Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger, forming a Cooperation and Defence Alliance, short of withdrawal from ECOWAS.

    The gap in critical thinking at the Commission has left the Heads of State with a field day without stabilising and nuanced inputs from skilled technocrats.

    In a bid to address the manpower shortfall, previous managements had resorted to ad-hoc recruitments, following the embargo placed on wholesale employment.

    But the problem has persisted with some staff members complaining about unfairness, lack of transparency or alleged bias in favour of either of the ECOWAS three language groups – French, English, and Portuguese.

    Consequently, the President Omar Alieu Touray-led ECOWAS Commission Management, which assumed office in July 2022, is in the process of conducting a new recruitment exercise.

    But even before its commencement, the exercise has generated an unnecessary controversy as a result of Management’s position that new recruitment at the Commission would be limited to internal staff, such that vacant positions would not be advertised.

    The Civil Society Network Against Corruption (CSNAC) is among NGOs and independent observers that have faulted this decision.

    The CSNAC in a widely publicised petition to the Commission has threatened to challenge the decision, which it described as violating ECOWAS Revised Treaty and Staff Regulations, at the ECOWAS Court of Justice.

    In particular, the Network drew the Commission’s attention to Article 18(5) of the ECOWAS Revised Treaty of 1993, which stipulates that “in appointing professional staff for the Community, due regard shall be subject to ensuring the highest standards of efficiency and technical competence, to maintaining equitable geographical distribution of posts and gender balance among nationals of all Member States (pgs. 64-65:1993).”

    It also argues that the decision contravenes Article 9(2b) of the ECOWAS Staff Regulations, which stipulates that “all permanent professional positions declared vacant shall be advertised. Applicants shall be notified of the receipt of application for the positions advertised. The deadline for receipt of applications shall be forty-five (45) calendar days after the date of publication.”

     

    Furthermore, the Network quoted Article 9(c) of the Staff Regulations, which “states that (vacant) positions shall be filled through a competitive recruitment process in which all shortlisted candidates shall appear before the relevant Committee (pg. 14).”

    It reminded the Commission President, “that as primary custodian of all ECOWAS regulations, laws and policies, he should not be perceived to be condoning any forms of illegality.”

    The Network, therefore, demands “rescindment of the illegal position of denying qualified community citizens, including the current staff of the ECOWAS Commission, the right to apply and be considered for professional positions at the ECOWAS Commission.”

    “Failure to do this will compel us to approach the …ECOWAS Community Court of Justice, in order to compel the ECOWAS Commission to do what is fair and just to all,” it added.

    Sources at the Commission have explained that the recruitment could be opened to external candidates in cases where internal candidates did not fit the skill set.

    However, independent analysts and sources at the ECOWAS Court of Justice all agree that the standard practice, which is consistent with ECOWAS instrumentalities is to advertise vacant positions, with a proviso that due consideration would be accorded internal candidates under specific circumstances.

    The Commission President probably meant well, as part of efforts to boost waning staff morale, even so, recruitments take unnecessarily long periods and cost money in the ECOWAS system. A controversial decision involving splitting the process into phases will not only cost more but will defeat the purpose of urgently filling critical positions.

    Furthermore, any recruitment exercise that is perceived as discriminatory will be against the principles of natural justice, equity, and fairness.

    Another counterargument is that the present “internal staff,” could not have gained employment in ECOWAS if recruitment had not been externalised.

    ECOWAS has to inject fresh blood into its foundering system, and for its personnel to perform at optimum, they must be of the highest calibre of competencies and proficiency. This is the only way to retool and reposition the regional bloc to address emerging challenges effectively.

    This position is consistent with the Touray-led management’s “4×4 Strategic Objectives – Enhanced Peace and Security, Deepening Regional Integration, Good Governance and, Inclusive and Sustainable Development” – as well as ECOWAS Fundamental Principles of “Equality and inter-dependence of Member States,” and “Equitable and just distribution of the costs and benefits of economic co-operation and integration.”

    It is also in tandem with the new Vision of moving from an ECOWAS of States to an “ECOWAS of the People: “…a borderless region where the population has access to its abundant resources … (and is) governed in accordance with the principles of democracy, the rule of law and good governance.”

    Proceeding with a controversial recruitment process will only open the floodgate for costly and unnecessary lawsuits against the Commission, at this critical juncture of ECOWAS’ history. (Flowerbudnews)

    *Paul Ejime is a Global Affairs Analyst and Consultant on Peace & Security and Governance Communications

  • NSCDC decorates 280 newly-promoted personnel in Enugu

    NSCDC decorates 280 newly-promoted personnel in Enugu

     

    By Flowerbudnews

    Enugu:  The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) has decorated no fewer than 280 personnel newly-promoted serving in various units, departments and squads within Enugu State.

    The unprecedented number of newly-promoted personnel, which cut across various ranks, started with the rank of Deputy Commandant of Corps to the level of rank-and-file.

    Decorating the officers on Thursday in Enugu, the Commandant of NSCDC Enugu State Command, Mr Muhammed Dada, tasked the newly-decorated officers to double their efforts and shun laziness in all forms.

    Dada noted that everybody, both the newly-decorated and entire staff needed to adjust to hard work, adding: “There are no two ways about it and you cannot be under me and be docile”.

    According to him, we should also be our brother’s keeper and learn to work as a team and as a family in order to achieve a common goal for the overall good of the Command.

    “As a Command, we must uphold professionalism and excellence in our service and ensure that everyone contributes to the success of the Command,” he said.

    Dada thanked the Commandant-General (C-G) of the Corps for his continued support to the Command and for the welfare of personnel.

    The Commandant also urged the residents of Enugu State to support NSCDC in its quest to rid-off the state of infrastructure vandals.

    “We need the support of all, especially in the area of timely and prompt information about vandals and other criminals that will be treated with utmost confidentiality,” he said.

    Responding, newly-decorated Deputy Commandant of Corp, Abdullahi Rogo, assured the C-G and Commandant of a renewed zeal to fight vandals and other criminals disturbing the peace of Nigerians in Enugu State.

    Rogo, who spoke on behalf of all newly-decorated, said: “Our dedication and commitment to duty and sacrifice to deliver on our task will be second to none henceforth”.

    Speaking, newly-decorated Deputy Commandant of Corps, Helen Egwuonwu, thanked God, President Bola Tinubu, the Minister of Interior, C-G of NSCDC and the Commandant for making the promotion of an unprecedented number of personnel possible.

    Egwuonwu, who is the Head of Department, Administration, said that the promotion would motivate her to put in more in the job and ensure adequate supervision of those under her department.

    High points of the decoration were group photography sessions and the celebration of the newly-decorated by their families, friends and well wishers. (Flowerbudnews)