Home Blog Page 2278

FUOYE protest: NANS releases findings, demands compensation for families of late, injured students

0

By Vincent UFUOMA


THREE weeks after a violent clash between students and security agents claimed the lives of two students and left others injured at Federal University Oye-Ekiti, FUOYE, the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has released a report on the incident.

The national union of students led by Bamidele Danielson, on Thursday condemned the killings and attacks on students by security agents in Ekiti.

NANS said officers of the Counter-Terrorism Unit (CTU) were in the convoy of the state’s first lady, Bisi Adeleye-Fayemi, and not the operatives of the Special Protection Unit designated for the protection of dignitaries in the country.

The student body accused the Ekiti State government of wrongly blaming the students’ actions for the violence.

“The Ekiti State Government hurriedly, without verification and due diligence, through the Commissioner for Information, Orientation and Culture, Mr. Muyiwa Olumilua laboriously attempted to pull the wool off the eyes of the public by dishing out dishonest views with respect to what transpired; all were aimed at covering up the stark reality of their misdeed,” the union said.

“The subtle plans to negate the occurrence and paint a picture of political attacks were soon distorted by on-the-spot video recordings of the brutality.”

Contrary to insinuations that the crisis was caused by men of the Nigerian Police in Ekiti, NANS said it found that the CTU officers who were responsible are not under the control of the Police Command in Ekiti.

“While many believed that Police officers at the Ekiti State Command precipitated the crisis, NANS’ investigation revealed that the CTU officers attached to the wife of Ekiti State Governor are not under the control of the Police command,” it said.

NANS demanded that the Ekiti State Government compensate the families of the deceased and those injured, that the first lady apologise publicly, that the CTU officers be named and prosecuted, and transformers should be supplied to the campus surroundings to facilitate power supply—all before October 10, 2019.

Demands made by the association include:

  • That it is incumbent as a ‘moral duty’ on the wife of the Ekiti State Governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi to make available the list of Counter Terrorism Unit officers attached to her person and office.
  • That Erelu Bisi Fayemi should tell the entire public why she moves in a convoy of CTU officers instead of Special Protection Unit officers designated for the protection of VIP such as her likes.
  • That an apology letter be written by Erelu Bisi Fayemi; published in at least 5 national dailies, 6 television stations with wide coverage and 12 radio stations spread across the six geopolitical zones of Nigeria and 20 online news medium.
  • That the Ekiti State Government should without delay retract statements credited to the Commissioner of Information, Orientation and culture claiming that the wife of the governor and her convoy were attacked by FUOYE students.
  • That beyond condolence visits paid to families of Kehinde Dada and Joseph Okonofua, practical effort should be made by the state government to deliberately assuage the grieving families through; 1. Employment into the state civil service at least 2 members of each of the families of the deceased students deemed employable. 2. Immortalization of the slain students. 3. Immediate release of CTU officers attached to the wife of the Ekiti State Governor for prosecution in accordance with the laws. 4. That a judicial commission of inquiry involving all stakeholders including the students, members of the host communities and the deceased families be set up immediately to unravel the cause of the incident with a view to forestalling future occurrence. 5.  The Ekiti State Government should immediately pay the gratuity and pension of the parents of Kehinde Dada which they have not paid for Seven Years after retirement. 6. That all the medical bills of the survivors be paid with Twenty million Naira (N20m) each as compensation.
  • That the Ekiti State Government should as a matter of urgency provide transformers to communities hosting the Federal University, Oye-Ekiti to facilitate regular supply of electricity.
  • That the Benin Electricity Distribution Company should show efficiency and ensure supply of electricity to the campuses of FUOYE both at Oye-Ekiti and Ikole-Ekiti and other communities where the students reside.
  • That no attempt should be made at pointing accusations at the Students Union Government of FUOYE, any of her executives and or any students in relation to the protest which is entirely not connected with the brute of the overzealous CTU officers attached to Erelu Bisi Fayemi.
  • That the IGP should as a matter of urgency reconstitute the Police Students Relations Committee who can interface and nip in the bud the incessant killing of innocent Nigerian students by trigger-happy Police officers and create a student’s friendly police.
  • That the Police authorities should bar police officers such as SARS, CTU e.t.c other than the regular police from meddling in student matters especially on campuses or communities hosting students.
  • That the NANS hereby places a ban on the wife of Ekiti State Governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi and her spouse from entering, attending or participating in any activity(ies) on any campus of any Tertiary Institution in Nigeria pending the resolution of all issues in contention.
  • That NANS’ demands that all of these demands are met before 10th October 2019.

‘All passengers sweating like Christmas goat’… man laments Dana Air’s poor service

0

By Vincent UFUOMA [Student reporter]


A PASSENGER who flew using Dana Airline, on Wednesday, expressed his dissatisfaction with the management and staff’s customer relation service on Twitter.

Ayo Bankole, the convener of Lagos SME Bootcamp, and other passengers had boarded the plane at the Murtala Muhammed Airport in Lagos. He complained that the air conditioners in the Abuja-bound aircraft, with flight number 9J353, were not functioning.

“I’m on this Dana flight. All the air conditioners are not working. All passengers are sweating like Christmas goat, everyone screaming and fanning. Yet, the flight is preparing for take-off. Anyhowness will not kill us in this country,” he wrote.

The pilot, according to him, was unruly and unprofessional in his approach when passengers told him he must put on the air conditioners before take-off. Instead of addressing their concerns, he taxied back to park the aircraft with them locked inside.

“So while the pilot was announcing take off, everyone screamed NO!!! and requested they fix the AC, as it was terribly hot. The pilot, instead of apologising and explaining, announced that there are some ‘unruly passengers’ and taxied irresponsibly around, then went back to park,” he narrated.

“It is totally unacceptable for Dana and its pilots to risk the lives of passengers in the hands of a pilot throwing temper tantrums with a plane. The engine has been on for a while, after taxing, still hot. Everyone is up, asking to get out. The pilot has locked us in. No go in, no get out.

“We are in an extremely hot plane. All passengers require is a reassurance that the plane is fine and we will get AC working. But no, the pilot and the crew are displaying some rude and arrogant verboseness. Again, failure of regulatory oversight, failure of standards. Failed country.”

“The Pilot is the nastiest, most arrogant and most unprofessional pilot I’ve ever flown with. If this represents Dana’s culture, then Dana has no business flying Nigerians. Even the hostesses are confused. Total madness,” Bankole added.

When passengers requested to change the pilot after they were told to disembark, the management addressed them very rudely and insisted that they must fly with the pilot, he said.

“Passengers have disembarked. @DanaAir is addressing us rudely, insisting we board with the same pilot who couldn’t manage his emotions and was mentally unstable with the way he taxied. We are insisting pilot be changed.”

He later informed other Twitter users that it appeared the pilot was later replaced and the air conditioners of the same aircraft were put on.

“We’re back on board. Plane is cool. I think pilot was changed. I wonder what has been done to cool the plane that couldn’t be done before,” he said.

He called on the Consumer Protection Commission (CPC) to help investigate the incident and to ensure Nigerians are well treated with dignity by airline operators in Nigeria.

“Finally landed safe and sound. Not the best of flying experience in my entire life. But at least, I’ve landed. @TundeIrukera and his team at CPC can help investigate and help restore some dignity to how Nigerians are treated by airlines,” he urged.

Isaac Dorcas, another passenger on the flight, corroborated his account.

Responding to Bankole’s complaint, also on Twitter, Dana Airlines apologised for the inconvenience due to the pilot’s response to the issue.

“This will be looked into immediately. Kindly see this as a one-off miscommunication,” it added. “Please rest assured we would take necessary and decisive action today. We value our guests and we would stop at nothing in ensuring that our guests get value for their money.”

It also wrote: “The time between the change of power and when the aircraft will eventually taxi and fly, there will be temporary discomfort (heat) which will eventually go off as soon as the aircraft is airborne.”

Here are some of the reactions to Bankole’s thread:

Meet Chukwuedo, corps member who transformed Ekiti library

0

By Daniel Whyte [Student reporter]


MEMBER of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Favour Chukwuedo, 25, commemorated the completion of his Community Development Service with the digitisation and renovation of the Ekiti State public library. 

Chukwuedo from Delta State said the decision to take on the task of transforming the electronic section of the library at the Old Governor’s Office, Ado-Ekiti, was influenced by a desire to promote digital literacy in his host community. 

“I wanted to address the need of my host community,” he told The ICIR.

In March 2019, he started a digital literacy and STEM education engagement that targeted 2000 students in underrepresented communities with low income public and private schools in Ekiti with a preference for the girl child.

Some of the schools he and his team visited were Divine Touch International School, Treasured Heritage Schools, Bluecrest International School, Olaoluwa Grammar School, Holy Child Catholic School, and Shepherd International School.

It was during this engagement he administered training survey forms to the students and active users of the library, from which he discovered that they long for a conducive learning environment.

The process of renovating and digitising the library took 34 days, lasting from August 23 till September 26 when it was finally commissioned. Chukwuedo noted that this wouldn’t have been possible without the help of Director of the Library board Mrs. Adeyeye, the Deputy Director, the Secretary and community members.

E-library section before the renovation

The project didn’t come without its challenges. 

“The challenge I faced, among others, was shuttling between my place of primary assignment (Ministry of Information) and the library, trekking distance sometimes when he could not afford to pay transport fare

Didn’t spend a dime

Chukwuedo didn’t have to spend out of his own pocket to execute the project. All the materials were provided by community members while staff members of the library provided the laptops with which the e-library was equipped.

Also, the artisans he engaged didn’t collect any fee for workmanship. Money was, therefore, not a challenge. He, however, noted that he was able to get the community members on board because of his track record of getting things done.

Chukwuedo receiving a special recognition award from the first lady of Ekiti State, Mrs.Erelu  Fayemi

“I believe that the STEM engagements paved the way for me. People saw the consistency in my previous projects even without asking them for support. So they were eager to get involved in my library renovation and digitisation project because they were sure of results from me,” he explained.

Speaking on how he felt after the completion of the project, he said, “The same feeling a doctor gets when an operation is successful was what I felt during the commissioning and reopening of the library.”

An advocate of STEM  education

Chukwuedo is a STEM educator, software engineer, and advocate for Sustainable Development Goal 4 on Quality Education.  In 2012, he graduated from Ekiti State University’s Computer Engineering department. He also obtained a Mathematics degree from Evangel University, Ebonyi State, finishing top of his class.

He established Tech Quest Club Ekiti to champion the quality education advocacy engagements through STEM Education. The team comprises corps members and youth of the community.

STEM is a combination of four subjects: science, technology, engineering and mathematics. It is a curriculum-based approach to learning that aims to teach these specific subjects together rather than as separate subjects. It is particularly aimed at young children and it shows how practical knowledge of science or scientific methods can be applied to real-life situations.

Speaking on his current plan, he said, “I’m drafting a strategic work plan to run a free STEM Hub for kids in low-income communities within the state. The goal of the project is to complement traditional academic learning with an in-depth introduction to STEM education in a fun and collaborative learning environment; through the empowerment of individuals (teachers and volunteers), schools and organisations with content, resources, and tools needed for STEM education.”

Upon completion of the project of renovation and digitisation of the library, he was offered a letter of commendation by the state’s library board which he said “means a lot” to him.

How Maina was arrested in Abuja, as son attempted to escape

DETAILS of the arrest of former Chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team (PRTT), Abdulraheed Maina, on Wednesday have emerged as his son, Faisal, crashed a bullet proof Range Rover SUV in an attempt to escape arrest.

Operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS)have confirmed they arrested Maina and his 20-year-old son at the Pennsylvania Avenue Hotel, Utako, Abuja following a request by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to the agency to assist in apprehending the suspect.

A security source told The ICIR that Maina’s son, Faisal, a final year student at the Canadian University of Dubai, attempted to escape with the SUV and rammed against the hotel gate, causing dents and burst tyres on the vehicle.

The source said that security operatives had been on Maina’s trail for a few days as he moved from one hotel to another in the nation’s capital. On Wednesday, when the DSS agents moved in to arrest maina, he was said to have given himself over without any resistance.

However, it was gathered that when his father was taken downstairs, Faisal was asked to stay back to witness a search of the room. According to the source, rather than wait in the room, the boy ran downstair to the Range Rover SUV and locked himself in. He then made to escape, smashing into the gate. TheDSS operatives on the hotel premises are said to have demobilised the car. In the process, the source said that Faisal pulled out a gun and shot at an operative before he was “demobilised.

Nobody was, however, injured in the incident but a picture of the Range Rover exclusively obtained by The ICIR showed that there might have been a gun duel between boy and the operatives.

A side of the vehicle shows gunshots that could not penetrate as it was a bullet proof car and a burst rear tyre, apparently hit by a bullet.

A statement from DSS spokesman, Peter Afunanya confirmed that Faisal Maina, unsuccessfully tried to resist the arrest.

He said “the lad even pulled a pistol against the security agents involved in the operation.”

“He was, however, disarmed and arrested. He is a final year student at the Canadian University of Dubai where he is studying Telecoms Engineering,” He said the items recovered from the suspects include a pistol with live ammunition, a bullet proof Range Rover SUV, a BMW Saloon car, foreign currencies, a phantom 7 drone and sensitive documents. He said the suspects and the recovered items will be handed over to the EFCC for further investigations and appropriate necessary actions.

Afunanya said it is instructive to note that the operation is as a result of a renewed inter-agency collaboration among security and law enforcement agencies.

He said the Service has always subscribed to such collaboration believed to be important in national security management and therefore, hopes to sustain the initiative in mitigating the current threats against public safety and national critical assets.

Both Maina and his son are currently in the EFCC custody. The ICIR source said he is to be prosecuted for illegal possession of firearm and corruption.

Maina was a Director at the Customs, Immigrations, and Prisons Pension Office (CIPPO) in the Ministry of Interior before he was appointed PRTT Chairman by Steve Oronsaye, then Head of Service of the Federation, in 2010.

But Maina and Oronsaye also got enmeshed in the pension fraud they ought to be fighting, mindlessly looting the pension coffers of billions of naira.

After he escaped from the country, news filtered in that Maina has re-entered Nigeria and was also reinstated.

In October 2017, President Muhammadu Buhari ordered his disengagement immediately after news broke that the fugitive had been secretly recalled into the federal civil service and promoted as a Director in the Ministry of Interior.

Buhari also queried the Head of Service of the Federation, demanding an explanation as to what led to Maina’s recall. The report was submitted to Abba Kyari, Buhari’s Chief of Staff, on Monday evening. But its contents remain unknown.

Since the news of Maina’s reinstatement broke, the Ministry of Interior has been trading blames with the office of the Head of Service and the Civil Service Commission over who authorised the move.

Maina has since been handed over to the EFCC and he and his son are believed to have spent the night in the anti corruption agency’s detention centre.

Apart from the corruption charges against him, a top EFCC source said that the police might also be brought in to investigate him and his son and possibly prosecute them for illegal gun possession.

 

Malabu Scandal: U.S. Department of Justice closes probe on Eni/Shell involvement due to lack of evidence

0

THE U.S. Department of Justice, DOJ, on Wednesday, clarified that shutting down the probe into the alleged OPL 245 bribery scandal perpetrated by Italian oil giant Eni due to lack of evidence did not mean the case has been closed according to a Reuters report.

The US legal body hinted that closing the probe was not absolute but the investigation could be re-opened if circumstances surrounding the case changed.

According to the report, a trial attorney for the DOJ said that in light of the “misleading implication” of a lack of evidence highlighted by the prosecutors, he was sending them a copy of the DOJ’s original communication with Eni’s counsel in the United States.

The acting chief of the DOJ’s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act unit in the letter said the inquiries had been closed because Italian authorities were prosecuting the case.

“If the circumstances noted above change, the Department may reopen its inquiries,” he said.

In 2011, the federal government had facilitated the controversial OPL 245 deal for Malabu Oil and Gas which was interested in the oil field.

Shell and Eni also wanted to buy the oil block from the Nigerian company instead of paying the required a signature bonus of $210 million to the federal government, they also paid  another $1.1 billion to buy 100 per cent stake in the oil block from Malabu

They transferred the $1.3 billion to the account of the federal government in London, UK, from where Malabu was paid off its $1.1 billion.

Eni, the biggest foreign oil and gas producer in Africa, is currently on trial in Milan on graft allegations surrounding the 2011 acquisition of OPL 245.

The firm is also involved in a corruption case involving its previously 43 per cent-owned unit Saipem over alleged bribes paid to win contracts in Algeria.

A Milan court acquitted Eni last year but the decision is still subject to appeal.

The DoJ had been conducting its own investigation into the Nigerian and Algerian allegations independently of the Italian court cases.

On Tuesday, Eni issued a statement saying the DoJ had informed its management that the investigation had been closed with no action taken.

Eni issued a second version of the first statement stating that it removed a passage saying the DoJ decision confirmed investigations by independent advisers and Eni’s own controlling bodies that found no illegal activity.

An Eni spokesman said the original statement had contained a translation error and had been replaced as soon as possible. He emphasised that the DoJ’s statement that it could re-open the investigation if circumstances changed was in line with normal procedure.

“If the DoJ would decide to reopen its investigation based on events new and unknown, then Eni will cooperate again with the Department to further demonstrate that Eni and its management are not involved in any illegal conduct,” the spokesman said in a statement.

After increase in VAT, Nigerians to pay for using federal roads

WEEKS after the Value Added Tax (VAT) has been increased to 7.5 per cent , the Federal Government is planning to return toll fees back to federal roads.

Minister of Housing and Works, Bababtunde Raji  Fashola alongside the Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed announced that the Federal Government are concluding plans to establish cashless payment in toll plazas during a State House briefing at the end of Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting chaired by President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja before leaving for South Africa.

Fashola was quoted saying,  “There is no reason why we can’t toll, there was a policy of the government to abolish tolls or as it were, dismantle toll plaza but there is no law that prohibits tolling in Nigeria today. We expect to return toll plazas, we have concluded their designs of what they will look like, what materials they will be built with, what new considerations must go into them”.

He added that the government is working on acquiring more lands as the tolls are proposed to be about ten lanes.

Fashola noted that as other logistics are being worked on, the Federal Government are trying to conclude plans on how the back end runs and that the government is also considering to eliminate the payment of cash by introducing electronic  mode of payment.

This came barely a month after the Federal Government through the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, in a news report announced that the Federal Government would increase Value Added Tax to meet the new minimum wage obligation.

“This is important because the Federal Government only retains 15 per cent of the VAT, 85 per cent is actually for the states and local governments to enable them to meet the obligations of the minimum wage,” the minister had said.

Fashola also stated during the FEC meeting on Wednesday that the government has approved additional N15.765 billion for  Suleja-Minna-Lambata road and Ibadan-Lagere-Ilesa bypass.

He said the two road contracts approved on Wednesday came after another review of the initially approved amount for the bill.

On the 101km Suleja-Minna-Lambata road, he said FEC on Wednesday approved additional N12.6 billion and N3.165 billion for the Ibadan-Lagere-Ilesa bypass.

 

Queens College’s students are down with sickness, but authorities hide their condition

STUDENTS of the Queens College, Lagos, a federal government-owned school, are down with illness again, but the school authorities are doing everything to hide their condition from the public.

Parents said their wards are coming down with illnesses with same symptoms shortly after the resumption.

Queens College was also hit by an outbreak of bacterial infections in 2017 that led to the death of three students, while hundreds of other students were treated for diseases including typhoid and diarrhoea due to poor hygiene and lack of potable water.

The Chairman of the Parents and Teachers Association (PTA) of the school, John Oforbike, who spoke to The ICIR about the ongoing situation noted that many students were coming down with illnesses and hundreds of them have taken away by parents in three weeks of resumption.

“The environment is unkempt. Mosquitoes breed everywhere,” said Oforbike.

The school which resumed academic activities on September 15 was said to be admitting many students in the sickbay, while some parents were requested to pick up their wards.

Airborne diseases affect students — Principal, LASG

According to Oforbike, after complaints were taken to the school principal, Yakubu Olaloye, she said the situation was caused by the weather condition.

“She told me that one Dr Ojo has come to check on the children. And said there was nothing like epidemics,” the PTA chairman recalled his conversation with the school principal while speaking to The ICIR.

“It is an airborne disease affecting the children, not an epidemic. And the thing is, the children just came back from home, while some of them were beaten by rain on that day,” he quoted Olaloye as saying.

Oforbike said he visited the school, together with other executives of the PTA on Sunday to keep abreast of the situation. He recounted how he met a multitude of students at the sickbay with many trooping in, while some sat on the bench because the beds were filled up.

The students, he said, had complained to be suffering from catarrh, cough, headache, body pain, and sore throat.

“About 20 parents came to the sickbay to take their children while I was there,” Oforbike recalled. “I asked the nurse how many students have taken exeat due to their health condition. She said 700.”

But the nurse denied access to the record of students who have already taken exeats, he told The ICIR.

Describing the situation as “a problem” because of the large number of people affected, he said some parents who had been affected were treating their daughters of bacterial infections while others treated for malaria.

“Actually water has been a problem in that college,” he said.

“The issue that happened in 2017 was tied to water. It was their inefficiency and they could not provide social amenities. And so much money was released to build a new hostel, to have two or three industrial boreholes. But I still want to tell you that water is still a very big problem in school now.

“And the toilet is always messed up,” Oforbike added.

Similarly, a mother of two girls at the school (one in J.S.S three and another in S.S.S three) who requested that her name should not be disclosed in the report said her children regularly complained of the poor condition of the toilets, claiming they were “disgusting”.

“The toilet itself is horrible,” she said.

Her children, the mother said, had also confirmed that some of their mates were unusually going home in a short period.

She narrated how the students talked about the different kinds of water made available in the school, which they named “Fanta water, Coke water and Sprite water.” She explained that the orange-coloured water is used for bathing, cooking, and brushing of teeth.

“And that is why some are treating infections. The water is not good,” she said.

A screenshot of the Whatsapp message sent to the Principal of the Queens Collge that was left unreplied.

The ICIR placed calls to the principal of the school to know the school’s stand on the reported cases. Those calls were, however, not acknowledged.

An SMS sent to her was not replied. Similarly, WhatsApp messages sent on Monday did not get any response.

Professor Akin Abayomi,  Lagos State Commissioner for Health, on Tuesday, however, said a team comprising officials of the state epidemiology team, primary healthcare services and environmental health department of Lagos Mainland Local Government dispatched to unravel the cause of the pupils’ illnesses noted that 89 students were affected with airborne diseases within three weeks of resumption.

While reviewing preliminary reports of the investigations conducted by the team, he explained they identified “a sporadic increase in upper respiratory tract infection”.

“Findings, according to the review of health records in the school’s sickbay, revealed that 89 students presented to the clinic with influenza-like illnesses.”

According to the World Health Organisation, seasonal influenza is characterised by a sudden onset of fever, cough (usually dry), headache, muscle and joint pain, severe malaise (feeling unwell), sore throat and a runny nose. While some people recover from fever and other symptoms within a week without requiring medical attention, WHO said it could cause severe illness or death especially in people at high risk.

The commissioner added that an inspection of other facilities in the school revealed that environmental sanitation and water supply were optimal, but could be improved on.

He added that the “excess number of cases needed to be investigated.”

‘Contaminated water, unhygienic toilets could lead to diseases’ 

Laz Ude Eze, a public health physician and Executive Director of Pink Oak Cancer Trust, said that contaminated water could lead to water-borne diseases including typhoid fever, diarrhoea, cholera and worm infestation.

“If 60 persons should take some contaminated water, they are all bound to be infected due to bacteria and worm it contained,” Laz cited an instance on the impact of the use of contaminated water.

He also added that dirty toilets could cause urinary tract infections and genital tract infections. Laz noted that these infections are common in females than in males.

Samuel Oyejide,  a doctor of therapeutist in Ukraine agrees.

“They are prone to come down with bacterial infections through water,” he said. Samuel added it could also cause hepatitis A and E, while poor sanitation could breed mosquitoes, which in turns, resulting in malaria when an individual is bitten by female anopheles type of mosquitoes.

Checking through the federal ministry of education budget allocation between 2015 and 2019, a total of N328 million was the total capital fund allocated to the school. This does not include the 2017 budget allocation where the capital allocation was not specified. The school had received the highest capital allocation in 2018 where N126 million was budgeted. 

Meanwhile, no money was recorded to be disbursed to Queens College under the capital releases between 2015 and 2018.

PDP berates Buhari’s Independence Day speech

PEOPLE’S Democratic Party (PDP) has described President Muhammadu Buhari’s Independence Day speech as uninspiring and empty.

PDP in a statement signed by the PDP Spokesperson, Kola Ologboidiyan, said  Buhari’s speech was completely “unpresidential”, lacking in patriotic stance and replete with manifest inconsistencies, contradictions, paradoxes and false performance claims, which further confirm that Nigeria is in wrong hands.

The party said the president’s address failed to forcefully address the key issues of freedom, social justice, constitutional order, separation of powers, rule of law, human rights, credible elections, national cohesion, accountability and transparency in government, noting that Buhari’s administration had grossly violated all these principles.

“The party regretted that President  had no forceful reassurances on the challenge of escalated insecurity under his watch; he had no clear-cut and operable blueprint to revamp our economy, which his administration wrecked in a period of four years, resulting in so much hardship and despondency that Nigerians now resort to suicide and slavery abroad as options.”

The statement added that Buhari’s administration had only succeed in showing that his administration is not in position to deliver a credible, acceptable and satisfactory independence address because under his administration Nigeria has experienced the worst form of division, deprivation, human right abuse, constitutional violation and abuse of rule of law, disobedience to court orders, electoral malpractices, disrespect for separation of power and curtailing of press freedom.

“The dearth in foreign direct investment and the inhuman treatments being meted out on our citizens in countries where we were once held in very high esteem, are some of the injuries our nation is suffering under the Buhari administration.

“Due to the incompetence and legitimacy challenges confronting the Buhari Presidency, our nation is losing her voice and due regard in the international arena; as the administration has remained lacking in the required capacity and boldness to forcefully engage other world leaders on critical issues,” the statement read.

 

 

MacArthur gives over $6.3 million to ICIR, PTCIJ, others to tackle corruption

IN SUPPORT of projects that promote accountability and address corruption, the MacArthur Foundation has announced that it is giving a grant of over $6.3 million to nine media organisations including The ICIR.

In a statement made public on Wednesday, the private foundation, which funds non-profits in about 40 countries, said the grant is part of its project that supports work by media organisations “that strengthen accountability, transparency, and civic participation”.

Other beneficiaries are Bayero University Kano (BUK), Cable Newspaper Journalism Foundation, Daily Trust Foundation, OYA Media, Premium Times Centre for Investigative Journalism, Sahara Reporters, Tiger Eye Social Foundation, and Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism.

These organisations, MacArthur Foundation Nigeria Office Director Kole Shettima noted, have shown that citizens, media and civil society groups have a crucial role to play in fighting corruption and holding government accountable.

Among other things, the grant will generally aid investigative and data-driven journalism, help establish a television station at BUK, and fund town hall meetings between government officials and citizens.

Below is the full press release:

$6.3 Million in Journalism and Media Grants to Advance Accountability and Anti-Corruption Efforts in Nigeria

MacArthur announced today more than $6.3 million in journalism and media funding to advance anti-corruption efforts in Nigeria. The grants are part of the Foundation’s On Nigeria grantmaking, which seeks to reduce corruption by supporting Nigerian-led efforts that strengthen accountability, transparency, and civic participation.

The nine grants announced today are a continuation of the Foundation’s efforts to strengthen investigative and data-driven journalism in Nigeria and to reinforce the role played by independent media and citizens in revealing and documenting corruption. The grants will support a range of projects, including trainings for journalists on investigative fieldwork and data-driven reporting, assistance for independent media organisations working to develop sustainable business models, and new broadcast platforms to increase the reach and effectiveness of investigative reports.

“These organisations have proven that media, citizens, and advocates can play an important watchdog role to guard against corruption in Nigeria,” said Kole Shettima, MacArthur Foundation Nigeria Office Director. “With this continued support of key journalism and media organisations we hope to strengthen transparency, empower independent voices, and hold authorities to account.”

Following is a list of grants announced today:

  • Bayero University, Kano (Kano): To enhance training, curriculum, teaching, and learning opportunities for the next generation of investigative journalists; and to establish a TV-station.
  • Cable Newspaper Journalism Foundation (Lagos): To support its Policy Radar Initiative and the investigative reports it produces; mobilise community action around its findings; and use social media and video to reach a broad audience.
  • Daily Trust Foundation (Abuja): To strengthen the capacity of journalists, media professionals, and students to conduct high quality investigative and data-driven journalism.
  • International Centre for Investigative Reporting (Abuja): To support in-depth field investigations and convene townhall meetings with government officials and anti-corruption agency representatives to answer questions from the public.
  • OYA Media (Lagos): To conduct high-quality investigative reports and present them in a talk show format that will bring policymakers and citizens together to discuss issues and possible solutions.
  • Premium Times Centre for Investigative Journalism (Abuja): To conduct investigations on budget, procurement, and government service delivery; to expand fact-checking operations for journalists, and continue building civic technology for citizens and journalists to collaboratively learn and produce multimedia reports related to corruption.
  • Sahara Reporters (Lagos): To train journalists on investigative and data-based journalism; support investigations into the education sector, and continue a civic media laboratory to engage citizens in public dialogue on corruption and other social issues.
  • Tiger Eye Social Foundation (Accra, Ghana): To strengthen investigative capacity of Nigerian media by training journalists in investigative techniques and supporting field investigations on corruption.
  • Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism (Lagos): To continue its investigative reporting on corruption in the education and electricity sectors; design sustainable reporting models for that reporting; and develop a radio show to improve reach and impact of stories.

Strategic priorities of the Foundation’s On Nigeria grantmaking include reducing corruption in the electricity and education sectors; strengthening the criminal justice system through nationwide implementation and enforcement of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act and complementary laws and policies; and supporting media and journalism to expose corruption and share information about anticorruption efforts. The grants announced today are intended to support this work by building and strengthening a system of accountability journalism in the country.

The Foundation also supports key government effectiveness initiatives, including the implementation of the 2015 Administration of Criminal Justice Act. MacArthur has been making grants in Nigeria since 1989, opening an office in Abuja in 1994 staffed by Nigerians. 

Senate calls for regulation of mining operation in states  

THE Nigerian Senate has called for legislative action against illegal mining activities spread across the country by developing a national legal framework.

The resolution was made during the Senate plenary session on Wednesday after Ya’u Sahabi, Senator representing Zamfara North, presented a report on the illegal mining activities across the country.

While speaking on the matter, Senate President Ahmed Lawan said the legislators need to “seriously” look into the solid mineral sector.  He added that the upper legislative should be at the vanguard of renewing the situation of the solid minerals and ensure the sector contributes to the national development.

“We will call a round table of stakeholder which I would chair so we can protect our resources rather than continuing to lament on how foreign nationals are illegally mining our resources,” said Lawan.

As illegal mining increases the rate of lead poisoning, Adamu Aliero, Senator representing Kebbi Central, noted that the issue of lead poisoning should be taken with much importance.  “It is happening virtually in all states where illegal mining takes place,” he said.

The Senate thus called on the Federal Government to clean up the affected areas of the lead poisoning in Zamfara State, Plateau state, Niger state and other states.

“Senate resolves to call on the Federal Government and other stakeholders to develop a national legal framework in response to illegal artisanal mining,” it added.

There have been several reported cases of illegal mining activities in Nigeria where both nationals and foreigners engage in the business.

Scores of Artisanal Miners at Odubale mining site, a distance away into the thick forest of Ifewara, Osun State. Photo credit: Gbenga Adanikin/ICIR in July 2019.

Studies show that illegal mining is capable of destroying the ecosystem and causes terminal diseases such as cancer, respiratory failure and untimely death of workers and residents around the mining communities.

Series of investigations conducted by The ICIR on illegal mining of the country’s solid minerals revealed that many health and environmental hazards are linked to artisanal mining.