Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Rivers: Rights group warns ex-council chairmen against anarchy


Published June 19,2024
The Southern Post online-

The Human Rights Advocacy Network (HRAN), a prominent international human rights organization, has issued a strong caution to the former chairmen of various local government councils in Rivers State to refrain from actions that could incite anarchy or crisis in the region.

HRAN also called on security agencies, such as the Nigeria Police and the Department of State Services (DSS), to take proactive measures to prevent any disruptions to law and order.

The official tenure of the local government council chairmen ended on June 17, 2024. However, Chidi Lloyd, the Emohua Local Council Chairman, along with others from the Ikwerre ethnic group, have refused to vacate their positions, citing an alleged six-month extension granted by the state assembly.

In a statement released by Mr. David Mathew, the Country Representative of HRAN, it was clarified that the supposed extension by the now-defunct Martins Amaewhule-led House of Assembly had been invalidated by a competent court.

The organization highlighted the potential threats posed by the former chairmen's actions to the peace and stability of Rivers State. HRAN emphasized the need for adherence to the rule of law and urged security agencies to monitor the situation closely to prevent any breach of legal protocols.

Reports of local unrest have emerged, with youths demonstrating at the entrances of certain local government secretariats. The situation has led to concerns about potential security risks in the state.

The situation has already sparked local unrest, with youths blocking the main entrances to the Degema and Asari-Toru Local Government Area (LGA) secretariats, demanding the departure of the council chairmen.

The ongoing situation has led to local unrest, as youths have blocked the main entrances to the Degema and Asari-Toru Local Government Area (LGA) secretariats, demanding the removal of the council chairmen.

Armed youths, believed to be surveillance workers, have been observed patrolling the creeks of riverine local councils in videos circulating online.

Recently, a state High Court in Port Harcourt invalidated the Local Government Law No. 2 of 2024, which extended the tenure of the 23 local council chairmen by six months.

An Appeal Court ruling over the weekend advised both parties to maintain the status quo, resulting in conflicting interpretations by factions aligned with the Minister of FCT, Nyesom Wike, and Governor Siminalayi Fubara.

Monday, June 17, 2024

‘We only eat to survive, not satisfactorily,’ Nigerians decry rising cost of foodstuff

Some Nigerians living in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) have expressed worry over the continuous increase in the prices of foodstuffs and other commodities this Eid-el Kabir festive season.

A visit to some markets in Abuja and its environs showed that the prices of goods have continued to rise.

Some respondents told journalists at Dutse Market in Bwari Area Council that meeting their family needs was becoming increasingly difficult due to lean resources.

Mohammed Rabiu, a buyer, said it was unfortunate that he could not afford the feeding needs of his family due to the high price of food items.

Mr Rabiu pleaded for government intervention by using relevant instruments and institutions to lower the cost of goods.

“A lot of people are ceasing the economic situation to dupe others and blame it on fuel subsidy removal.

“I witnessed how somebody will keep what she bought previously at a certain amount but refuse to sell those items.

“Let the government monitor the market to control the prices of goods. This will help a lot in curtailing the rising cost of things,’’ he said.

Similarly, when asked how she was coping with the economy, Amina Bawa, another buyer, said, “When I hear prices of foodstuffs, I feel like committing suicide. But I can’t because it is not a good thing to do.

“I can’t remember the last time I ate to my satisfaction; I only eat to survive,” she said.

Another respondent, Idris Bello, urged government agencies to see the need for a regulatory system in the country to avoid the unnecessary hike in food items and all goods and services.

However, a vegetable seller, Mallam Yahaya, said, “I am just trying to find happiness in my business since I don’t want to be idle. Making a profit in this business is now a herculean task.”

Another petty trader, Hajiya Hassana, told journalists that the prices of foodstuffs were now determined by what wholesalers sell to retailers.

“I know some buyers may blame us because they don’t know how we get these goods from the wholesalers; the challenge is transporting them to the market.

“It has not been like this before; things just changed automatically since the removal of the fuel subsidy,” she said.

Nevertheless, Ms Hassana said she was trying to satisfy her customers and ensure she made some gains.

(NAN)

Sunday, June 16, 2024

Buhari spent $1.5b monthly to defend naira, borrowed massively to cover costs — Presidency

  
The Presidency on Sunday pushed back on claims that Nigeria is going through the worst economic crisis in a generation caused by the policies of President Bola Tinubu, pointing out that the administration inherited the problems.

In a rejoinder to a New York Times (NYT) article titled “Nigeria Confronts Its Worst Economic Crisis in a Generation,” published on June 11, the presidency highlighted the causes of the economic woes and the efforts by the present administration to stem the tide.

According to the rejoinder written by Bayo Onanuga, Special Adviser to President Tinubu on Information and Strategy and made available to correspondents on Sunday, fuel subsidy regime had gulped $84.39 billion between 2005 and 2022 while the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) amassed trillions of naira in debts for absorbing the unsustainable subsidy payments.

The rejoinder asserted that last the administration had spent the sum of $1.5 billion monthly to defend the naira.

It said with the past administration servicing debts with up to 97 percent of its revenues amid serious infrastructure deficit, it resorted to massive borrowing to cover costs.


The presidency stated the NYT reflected the typical predetermined, reductionist, derogatory, and denigrating way foreign media establishments reported African countries for several decades.

According to it, most significant about the report is that it painted the dire experiences of some Nigerians amid the inflationary spiral of the last year and blamed it all on the policies of the new administration.


It said the report, based on several interviews, is at best jaundiced, all gloom and doom, as it never mentioned the positive aspects in the same economy as well as the ameliorative policies being implemented by the central and state governments.


The presidency added: “To be sure, President Tinubu did not create the economic problems Nigeria faces today. He inherited them.

“As a respected economist in our country once put it, Tinubu inherited a dead economy. The economy was bleeding and needed quick surgery to avoid being plunged into the abyss, as happened in Zimbabwe and Venezuela.


“This was the background to the policy direction taken by the government in May/June 2023: the abrogation of the fuel subsidy regime and the unification of the multiple exchange rates.

“For decades, Nigeria had maintained a fuel subsidy regime that gulped $84.39 billion between 2005 and 2022 from the public treasury in a country with huge infrastructural deficits and in high need of better social services for its citizens.


“The state oil firm, NNPC, the sole importer, had amassed trillions of naira in debts for absorbing the unsustainable subsidy payments in its books.


By the time President Tinubu took over the leadership of the country, there was no provision made for fuel subsidy payments in the national budget beyond June 2023.

“The budget itself had a striking feature: it planned to spend 97 percent of revenue servicing debt, with little left for recurrent or capital expenditure.

“The previous government had resorted to massive borrowing to cover such costs.

“Like oil, the exchange rate was also being subsidized by the government, with an estimated $1.5 billion spent monthly by the CBN to ‘defend’ the currency against the unquenchable demand for the dollar by the country’s import-dependent economy.

“By keeping the rate low, arbitrage grew as a gulf existed between the official rate and the rate being used by over 5000 BDCs that were previously licensed by the Central Bank


“What was more, the country was failing to fulfil its remittance obligations to airlines and other foreign businesses, such that FDIs and investment in the oil sector dried up, and notably Emirate Airlines cut off the Nigerian route.

“President Tinubu had to deal with the cancer of public finance on the first day by rolling back the subsidy regime and the generosity that spread to neighbouring countries. Then, his administration floated the naira.

“After some months of the storm, with the naira sliding as low as N1,900 to the US dollar, some stability is being restored, though there remain some challenges. The exchange rate is now below N1500 to the dollar, and there are prospects that the naira could regain its muscle and appreciate to between N1000 and N1200 before the end of the year.

The Presidency on Sunday pushed back on claims that Nigeria is going through the worst economic crisis in a generation caused by the policies of President Bola Tinubu, pointing out that the administration inherited the problems.

In a rejoinder to a New York Times (NYT) article titled “Nigeria Confronts Its Worst Economic Crisis in a Generation,” published on June 11, the presidency highlighted the causes of the economic woes and the efforts by the present administration to stem the tide.

According to the rejoinder written by Bayo Onanuga, Special Adviser to President Tinubu on Information and Strategy and made available to correspondents on Sunday, fuel subsidy regime had gulped $84.39 billion between 2005 and 2022 while the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) amassed trillions of naira in debts for absorbing the unsustainable subsidy payments.

 
The rejoinder asserted that last the administration had spent the sum of $1.5 billion monthly to defend the naira.

It said with the past administration servicing debts with up to 97 percent of its revenues amid serious infrastructure deficit, it resorted to massive borrowing to cover costs.


The presidency stated the NYT reflected the typical predetermined, reductionist, derogatory, and denigrating way foreign media establishments reported African countries for several decades.


According to it, most significant about the report is that it painted the dire experiences of some Nigerians amid the inflationary spiral of the last year and blamed it all on the policies of the new administration.








It said the report, based on several interviews, is at best jaundiced, all gloom and doom, as it never mentioned the positive aspects in the same economy as well as the ameliorative policies being implemented by the central and state governments.


The presidency added: “To be sure, President Tinubu did not create the economic problems Nigeria faces today. He inherited them.

“As a respected economist in our country once put it, Tinubu inherited a dead economy. The economy was bleeding and needed quick surgery to avoid being plunged into the abyss, as happened in Zimbabwe and Venezuela.



“This was the background to the policy direction taken by the government in May/June 2023: the abrogation of the fuel subsidy regime and the unification of the multiple exchange rates.

“For decades, Nigeria had maintained a fuel subsidy regime that gulped $84.39 billion between 2005 and 2022 from the public treasury in a country with huge infrastructural deficits and in high need of better social services for its citizens.


“The state oil firm, NNPC, the sole importer, had amassed trillions of naira in debts for absorbing the unsustainable subsidy payments in its books.


“By the time President Tinubu took over the leadership of the country, there was no provision made for fuel subsidy payments in the national budget beyond June 2023.

“The budget itself had a striking feature: it planned to spend 97 percent of revenue servicing debt, with little left for recurrent or capital expenditure.

“The previous government had resorted to massive borrowing to cover such costs.

“Like oil, the exchange rate was also being subsidized by the government, with an estimated $1.5 billion spent monthly by the CBN to ‘defend’ the currency against the unquenchable demand for the dollar by the country’s import-dependent economy.

“By keeping the rate low, arbitrage grew as a gulf existed between the official rate and the rate being used by over 5000 BDCs that were previously licensed by the Central Bank.

“What was more, the country was failing to fulfil its remittance obligations to airlines and other foreign businesses, such that FDIs and investment in the oil sector dried up, and notably Emirate Airlines cut off the Nigerian route.

“President Tinubu had to deal with the cancer of public finance on the first day by rolling back the subsidy regime and the generosity that spread to neighbouring countries. Then, his administration floated the naira.

“After some months of the storm, with the naira sliding as low as N1,900 to the US dollar, some stability is being restored, though there remain some challenges. The exchange rate is now below N1500 to the dollar, and there are prospects that the naira could regain its muscle and appreciate to between N1000 and N1200 before the end of the year.

“The economy recorded a trade surplus of N6.52 trillion in Q1, as against a deficit of N1.4 trillion in Q4 of 2023. Portfolio investors have streamed in as long-term investors. When Diageo wanted to sell its stake in Guinness Nigeria, it had the Singaporean conglomerate, Tolaram, ready for the uptake.

“With the World Bank extending a $2.25 billion loan and other loans by the AfDB and Afreximbank coming in, Nigeria has become bankable again. This is all because the reforms being implemented have restored some confidence.

“The inflationary rate is slowing down, as shown in the figures released by the National Bureau of Statistics for April. Food inflation remains the biggest challenge, and the government is working very hard to rein it in with increased agricultural production.

“The Tinubu administration and the 36 states are working assiduously to produce food in abundance to reduce the cost. Some state governments, such as Lagos and Akwa Ibom, have set up retail shops to sell raw food items to residents at a lower price than the market price.


“The Tinubu government, in November last year, in consonance with its food emergency declaration, invested heavily in dry-season farming, giving farmers incentives to produce wheat, maize, and rice.

“The CBN has donated N100 billion worth of fertiliser to farmers, and numerous incentives are being implemented. In the western part of Nigeria, the six governors have announced plans to invest massively in agriculture.

“With all the plans being executed, inflation, especially food inflation, will soon be tamed.”

The presidency was of the view that

Nigeria is not the only country in the world facing a rising cost of living crisis.

“The USA, too, is contending with a similar crisis, with families finding it hard to make ends meet. US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen raised this concern recently. Europe is similarly in the throes of a cost-of-living crisis. As those countries are trying to confront the problem, the Tinubu administration is also working hard to overturn the economic problems in Nigeria.

“Our country faced economic difficulties in the past, an experience that has been captured in folk songs. Just like we overcame then, we shall overcome our present difficulties very soon,” it pointed out.

SOURCE: Nigerian Tribune online

Emirate Tussle: It Doesn’t Matter If Another Governor Deposes Me — Emir Sanusi

Speaking with Saturday Sun, Sanusi said only God knows how long he will stay on the throne.

He said: “For me, even now that I am here, only God knows how long I will be here. I can die tomorrow. Another governor can come tomorrow and say that he has removed me, it doesn’t matter.

“But I am happy if he does not touch the emirate. I am happy that I will not leave a history that it was during my time that these 1000 years of history was destroyed.

“So, I am grateful to this government, grateful to this Assembly that they have corrected that, that we have the emirate restored to what it was and Insha’Allah that when I die or when I leave, the person who inherits will inherit what we had. It’s about the system, not about me or about any individual.”

On the lessons he learnt while away from the throne in the last four years, the Emir said: “Life is always a continuous process of learning and relearning. And for me, I had always believed, as they say, that we should not waste a crisis. So, anytime I have a crisis, it’s an opportunity to do something else.

“In the last four years I’ve not been idle. In fact, I had just completed writing a PhD Thesis in the University of London, a week before I returned to Kano. I will be going back next month to conclude some things, because I will be graduating in September.”

Saturday, June 15, 2024

Osimhen expresses loss of respect for Finidi George

SPORTS NEWS

THE SOUTHERN POST
Published 15/06/2024
1minute Reads


Napoli striker Victor Osimhen has expressed his disappointment with coach Finidi George, stating that he has lost respect for him due to comments made about his commitment to the national team.

Finidi, who reportedly resigned as head coach of the Super Eagles, was quoted as saying he wouldn't beg Osimhen to play for the national team after the player withdrew from the last two 2026 World Cup qualifiers due to injury. Osimhen was sidelined for four weeks and replaced by Kenneth Igboke from Enugu Rangers.

After Nigeria's underwhelming performances against South Africa and Benin Republic, reports surfaced that Finidi used Osimhen's absence as an example of players' poor attitude towards the national team during a meeting with Sports Minister John Enoh in Abuja.

Osimhen responded to the comments in a live Instagram video, explaining the circumstances of his injury and withdrawal from the national team. He revealed that he had informed Finidi and his doctor about the situation and offered to join the team despite his injury.

Expressing his frustration, Osimhen shared his disappointment with Finidi, stating that he had lost respect for the coach. He also mentioned that he would provide evidence of his communication with Finidi to clarify the situation.

In Finidi's debut game as Super Eagles coach, Nigeria drew 1-1 with South Africa and suffered a 2-1 defeat against Benin Republic, leaving them with three points after four games in the qualifying series. Following reports of Finidi's resignation and the NFF's plan to hire a foreign technical adviser, the former Enyimba coach was said to have stepped down from his position with the national team.

My 140 days in kidnappers’ captivity in Zamfara State, by NYSC member

My 140 days in kidnappers’ captivity in Zamfara State, by NYSC member

By ETIM ETIM

In the evening of August 17, 2023, twelve Akwa Ibom persons were abducted along Sokoto-Zamfara expressway as they travelled to Sokoto. Eleven of them were young men and women reporting for their NYSC camp for the mandatory one-year service, while one was the driver of the Akwa Ibom Transport company-branded bus in which they were travelling. Months passed, and one by one, the captives were released as the abductors received huge sums of ransoms from the families of the abductees. By the middle of June, 11 abductees have been released. I have followed this story with the keenness of a brain surgeon. On November 27, I wrote a piece titled, ‘’100 days in captivity: the story of the abducted corps members’’. I followed it up with another one on December 23. I asked the authorities, including the NYSC management, to do all in their power to get them out.  I argued that the government of Akwa Ibom State had a moral responsibility to intervene and facilitate their release since they were only going to serve their motherland. I also made efforts to reach the NYSC DG and hear from him on what the agency has been doing.

Last week, I met with one of the abducted girls. It was facilitated by one of her professors. Outwardly, she looks like any other young Akwa Ibom lady, but inside, she carries a scar, an emotional wound. She sobbed intermittently as she recalled the traumatic experience in vivid details. For obvious reasons, I will conceal her identity. Her story:

‘’I graduated in business administration in 2021 and was called up in 2023 for the NYSC scheme. I was posted to Sokoto State and I really looked forward to serving the country. I love the NYSC scheme; the khaki trousers and white vest; the parades; the drills; the opportunity to travel to other parts of the country, meet other Nigerians and see the vastness of the country and all that. We boarded the bus at the AKTC terminus in Uyo in the morning of August 16. We were all would-be corps members; some of us were heading to Abuja and Kano, but 11 of us were going to Sokoto. We arrived Abuja in the evening and spent the night at the AKTC terminus there. Early the following morning, August 17, we set off to Kano where some people disembarked; and eleven of us proceeded to Sokoto.

‘’Around 7.40 pm, on the Sokoto-Zamfara expressway, we ran into a roadblock mounted by kidnappers, on both sides of the expressway. They fired sporadically into the air and ordered all 12 of us (11 would-be corps members and the driver) out of the vehicle. As we were being marched into the bush, three of us escaped, leaving nine of us (four men and five women) with the captors. We walked all night in the bush till we got to their camp where there was a hut, but we slept in the open, on the ground, in the bush, in the rain and sunshine, day and night. I was released on December 7, after spending three months and two weeks with the kidnappers in captivity. I turned 27 in captivity on Friday, December 1. It was the worst experience of my life. We were beaten every day, mostly in the mornings, with iron rod; fed once in two or three days with rice which we cooked without ingredients – just white rice no salt; no pepper; nothing. We slept on the bare ground in the bush, in the same clothes that we had on when we were captured. We had our baths once in two or three weeks in a stream about a kilometer away.  A lot of us fell sick and nearly died. I was very sick too.

On December 7, I was released with another girl - two of us. They led us back to the expressway. I was very sick and could barely walk. On the road, NYSC officials and military personnel were waiting for us. They came in armoured military vehicles, picked us and took us to a hospital in a nearby town where we spent two days before we were taken to a military hospital in Kaduna where we spent about three weeks.

 I enrolled in the NYSC scheme after I left the hospital and I am now serving at (name withheld). I understand that the bus driver was released early this year.

My father is late, but my mother is alive, dealing in petty business. My elder brother raised money, sold things and borrowed money to pay for the ransom. He travelled to Zamfara twice, bringing the money to designated point along the expressway for the abductors. We were released randomly as the kidnappers did not even identify the abductee on whose behalf ransoms were paid.

I thank God for keeping us alive and rescuing us from captivity. I still suffer from trauma. I feel unsafe and I’m always afraid, anxious and apprehensive. I salute the NGOs, activists and journalists like you who worked for our release. I have not been contacted by any official of Akwa Ibom State government, but I am grateful to the management of the NYSC for doing all they could to rescue us. I pray for the remaining person in captivity’’.

GOV ENO CELEBRATES IBOM AIR AT 5...assures of continuous support for airline

GOV ENO CELEBRATES IBOM AIR AT 5

...assures of continuous support for airline

By The Southern Post

Governor Umo Eno has joined Akwa Ibom people, stakeholders in the aviation industry across Nigeria to celebrate the fifth anniversary of the Nigeria's foremost airline, Ibom Air.

In his remarks at the celebration in Uyo, the Governor congratulated the management and staff for sustaining the momentum of operation and ensuring excellent service delivery for five uninterrupted years.

Describing Ibom Air as Akwa Ibom's pride, Governor Eno paid glowing tribute to his predecessor, Mr Udom Emmanuel, for conceiving the vision of the airline and audaciously pushing it through, together with other laudable projects in the state to actualization.

The Governor maintained that Ibom Air has recorded laudable milestones within its five years, and described the theme of the event, "Celebrating the Journey and the Milestone," as apt.

According to him, " I am sure in the years to come, Akwa Ibomites will remember that a governor came and took some giant steps that launched our state on the path of industrialization, and that is what we celebrate today. So we pay glowing tribute to Deacon Udom Gabriel Emmanuel who started and took on the vision."

He also commended the resolve and ingenuity of the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Ibom Air, Captain Mfon Udom, and his team for the continuous expansion of the airline, maintaining high standards in its operations and making an indelible mark in service delivery in the aviation industry, while challenging them to do more to keep the state's flag flying.

In his words, "On behalf of the government and people of Akwa Ibom State, I warmly and whole heartedly congratulate Ibom Air at five; scaling the hurdles and celebrating five years of excellence in the sky, redefining service delivery and winning awards across the sector. It has been a spectacular journey and you have helped put Akwa Ibom on the global map.

"We want to congratulate you. We want to congratulate your doggedness. We want to congratulate your result-oriented effort and strategic moves. We want to congratulate you for conquering the market."

He announced that the state government will soon take delivery of another of the ten A22 aircrafts that were purchased for the airline, adding that his administration will strive to ensure delivery of as many more as possible within its first term in office.

In his anniversary speech, Ibom Air's MD/CEO, Capt. Mfon Udom, said in his fifty years of operations in the aviation industry, the last five years, with Ibom Air, has been the most celebrated, affirming that the airline which started with a 5-man team has grown to boast of a 656-man staff strength among several other economic value it has added to the state.

Capt. Udom said with the smart Terminal Building at the Victor Attah International Airport set for operation, Ibom Air intends to sustain and reciprocate the goodwill and support it has enjoyed from Akwa Ibom people and Nigerians in its first five foundational years with expansions to cover critical West and North African destinations, with ease of domestic and international flight interface.

Highpoint of the celebration was the proposal of a toast to the "milestone of audacity, faith, limitless possibilities, anti-fragility and resilience" by Chairman of the airline, Pastor Imoabasi Jacob.

NASS’ll not recommend seizure of State, council funds over minimum wage – Senate

News

Chairman, the Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Adeyemi Adaramodu, on Saturday, denied a media report of an alleged plan by the Senate to include a clause for the seizure of States’ and local government councils’ funds in the  New Minimum Wage Bill to be proposed by President Bola Tinubu.

A national daily had reported that the National Assembly include in the awaited bill a clause to sanction states or LGAs that may refuse to pay the new minimum wage that would propose the seizure of statutory monthly allocation accruable from the Federation Account after the new minimum wage Bill is signed into law by the President.

Adaramodu, who represents Ekiti South in a statement in Abuja, however dismissed the report as unfounded.

He said that it would be wrong to insinuate that the Senate or the National Assembly would take a position on a Bill that hasn’t been transmitted to it for consideration and passage.

He said: “Mr. President in his national broadcast on Democracy Day only informed Nigerians that he would soon send the New Minimum Wage Bill to us (National Assembly).

During my interface with some journalists, as part of activities to mark the one year anniversary of the 10th National Assembly, I did not at any point, state that the allocations belonging to States and Local Governments will be seized.

“Nigeria is a federation, with sub-national governments that are autonomous. The misleading headline by the Newspaper that allocations belonging to States and local councils will be seized is false and should be disregarded.

“We are still awaiting the Executive Bill and once we have it, it will go through all Legislative stages and once this is done and it receives Presidential assent, it would become law. And it is law that can specify sanction, not the National Assembly.”

The Senate spokesperson reiterated that the report attributed to him by one of the national dailies was a misrepresentation of his interactive session with the newsmen.

He added: “My interview was well reported today in the national dailies. It was not exclusive to this particular paper. Other newspapers reflected adequately what I said. Why did the newspaper choose to misrepresent me?”
SOURCE: The Nation