Nick Vujicic, an Australian Christian evangelist and motivational speaker, and his wife Kanae, have become proud parents of identical female twins.
Vujicic, who was born with tetra-amelia syndrome, a rare disorder characterized by the absence of arms and legs, made the announcement through his verified Facebook account.
According to the post, his wife put to bed on Wednesday, and both mother and babies are in good health.
“Our Identical Double Blessing from Our Gracious and Almighty God! Born Dec 20th – Olivia Mei Vujicic (red bow, 5lbs2oz @ 7:54am) and Ellie Laurel Vujicic (yellow bow, 5lbs14oz @ 7:56am) !!! Mommy (Kanae Vujicic) and Girls doing wonderful,” Vujicic wrote.
“Thank you all for your love and prayers! Babies Olivia and Ellie were born on Mommy’s Birthday, 5 pounds 2 oz and 5 pounds 14 oz. Mommy is well and so are the girls. Thank You God!” he had written in an earlier post.
Vujicic got married to his wife, Kanae, in February 2012. They have four children, including the newly born twins.
Edetaen Ojo, Chairman of the African Freedom of Expression Exchange (AFEX), says leaders of African countries must show greater commitment to the fight against violence and impunity on journalists.
Ojo made this known during a one-day stakeholders’ dialogue on Journalists’ Safety held in Juba, South Sudan, as part of activities to mark this year’s International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists (IDEI).
Ojo, who is also the Executive Director of Media Rights Agenda (MRA), a Nigerian-based non-governmental organization, expressed sadness that journalists in Africa continue to face numerous challenges, sometimes life-threatening, in the course of carrying out their responsibilities.
“As we all know, the media community is under relentless attack. Not just in South Sudan or in Africa, but globally,” said Ojo, who was represented at the event by Felicia Anthonio, Coordinator of the AFEX network.
“Such attacks include killing, torture, enforced disappearance, arbitrary arrest and arbitrary detention, expulsions, intimidation, harassment, threats and other forms of violence.
“These issues remain a central part of international discussions due to the unending crimes and impunities against journalists.”
Although Ojo was expressed delight that the ugly situation is being tackled by the international community, he noted that leaders of African countries ought to be in the lead of such measures.
Therefore, he urged African States to abide by the terms of the several resolutions they are signatories to, especially those that require them “to ensure that measures to combat terrorism and preserve national security or public order are in compliance with their obligations under international law and do not arbitrarily or unduly hinder the work and safety of journalists, including through arbitrary arrest or detention or the threat thereof”.
“These are some of the responsibilities which South Sudan and other countries on the African continent and, indeed, around the world now have with respect to ensuring the safety of journalists and combating the problem of impunity in this regard,” he said.
The African Freedom of Expression Exchange (AFEX) is a continental network of some prominent freedom of expression and media rights organisations in Africa.
The network is currently made up of 12 organisations spread across West, East, Central, and Southern Africa.
The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) says it has generated more than N1 trillion in 2017, the highest amount ever since its coming into being in 1891, for revenue collection and accounting, and curtailing anti-smuggling activities.
Joseph Attah, Public Relations Officer of the Customs, made this known at a media briefing in Abuja.
According to Attah, the sum is N241.68 billion higher than the N770.57 billion target the NCS set for itself for 2017, adding that the feat was achieved with about five working days remaining before the end of the year.
The NC generated a total amount of N898.67 billion in 2016 .
“With dogged implementation of the presidential mandate to restructure, reform and raise revenue, Nigeria Customs Service has recorded the highest revenue collection ever of N1,012,259,006,779.94 with five more working days to the end of 2017,” Attah said.
“It is imperative to state that the service would have performed better if not for the paucity of funds.
“Despite this difficult situation, NCS strives to deliver, sometimes even at the risk of sustaining serious injuries and even death.”
Attah added that “in the process of enforcing the laws, six officers fell in the line of duty this year”.
He described the performance of the NCS in terms of revenue generation as remarkable, given the economic recession witnessed in the country and the low volume of imports due to some import restrictions.
Attah also said that illegally-imported goods worth over N11 billion were seized by the Service, including 2,671 pump action rifles, dangerous drugs, rice and vehicles among others.
He reserved special praise for Hameed Ali, the Comptroller-General of Customs, “whose leadership qualities made the record possible”.
Rochas Okorocha, Governor of Imo State, says civil servants who are yet to receive their payments for November and December should direct their complaints to the Ministry of Happiness and Purpose Fulfillment.
This was contained in a statement issued by Nnamdi Obiaraeri, the State Commissioner for Information, who further added that the move was a demonstration of Okorocha’s resolve to ensure that workers in the state have a stress-free Christmas celebration.
“This is to announce that the Governor of Imo State, Rochas Okorocha, has approved the immediate payment of the November and December 2017 salaries of Imo workers,” the statement read.
“This is to enable our esteemed Imo workers to celebrate seamless Christmas. Payments have duly commenced.
“Any worker encountering any difficulties with the approved payments should not hesitate to contact the Ministry of Happiness and Purpose Fulfillment for immediate intervention.”
The newly-created ministry of happiness and purpose fulfillment in Imo State, headed by Ogechi Ololo, Okorocha’s biological sister, has generated heated controversy among Nigerians, as many believe the ministry is not necessary.
Nasir el-Rufai, Governor of Kaduna State, says Abubakar Atiku could not have won the presidential ticket of the All Progressives Congress (APC) even if President Muhammadu Buhari was not seeking re-election.
El-Rufai made these comments on Thursday during an interview on Voice of America (VOA) Hausa station.
He said that Atiku came third during the 2015 APC presidential primary election, behind Rabiu Kwankwanso of Kano State, and as such, even if Buhari was not in the race, he would still have lost out on the ticket.
El-Rufai further said that Atiku’s claims that he funded the Buhari presidential campaign in 2015 was false, as he (el-Rufai) was part of the leadership of the campaign organisation and knows who brought what.
“Atiku had seen that we in the APC, especially the APC governors, had made up our mind to support President Muhammadu Buhari to run again in 2019. That is why he left APC since he was only looking for where to contest for president,” el-Rufai said.
“Even in the 2015 APC primary election, Atiku didn’t come second; he was floored by Kwankwaso. So, even if President Buhari decides not to contest, Atiku knows that the APC ticket is not sure for him.
“Majority of the APC governors have endorsed President Buhari as our candidate for 2019, and God has continued to improve the health condition of the President. Each time I see him, I thank God and I still pray that God continues to give him sound health.
“So, by 2019, we are waiting to see Atiku contest; we are waiting to contest against him and see what happens. I cannot lose sleep because Atiku wants to contest because, by God’s grace, this is the reign of President Muhammadu Buhari.”
El-Rufai also said he never heard Atiku’s name as having donated “a dime” to Buhari’s election campaign in 2015.
“It is agreed that in politics if you lose even only one person, it should worry you, but the utterances of the former Vice President that APC used his money… who did he give the money to?” el-Rufai queried.
“For me, I know those that supported us with their money and property that we used during election, and I never heard the name of Atiku that he brought a dime. If Atiku said he brought money, who did he give it to? Let him come and say it and how much did he give and what was it used for?
“And, in fact, if Atiku brought money, I ought to know, because I was part of the leadership of the party and during campaign, along with former Governor Rotimi Amaechi. We were at the centre of the presidential campaign. Therefore, we are supposed to know. So, let him mention whom he gave the money and how much?”
El-Rufai agreed that some “greedy people” could follow Atiku, “but if people will consider how we can work for the progress of our country, everybody knows that you cannot compare Atiku with President Muhammadu Buhari”.
Seven years after its inception and with a huge amount of money already allocated to it by the federal government, the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) is yet to meet its mandate of capturing all Nigerians on its database and issuing them with valid identity cards, clearly setting the stage for an unending journey to the national identity card programme, as was the case with its predecessor, the Directorate of National Civic Registration.
Although it was officially set up in 2010 and empowered to capture all Nigerians into a database and issue them with permanent national identity cards, the National Identity Management Commission( NIMC) has only been able to scratch the surface of the assignment so far.
As a clear sign of its inability to carry out the task of identifying all Nigerians and issuing them with national identity cards for the purpose of planning and development and improving national security, NIMC has largely been making more noise than taking concrete actions to deliver on its mandate.
For instance, while it has within seven years received a whopping N80.2 billion from the federal government, the commission has only been able to capture about 25 percent of Nigeria’s 180 million population into its database while not more than five percent of those captured have been issued with the National Identification Number (NIN), which is soon to become a compulsory document for all Nigerians residing in the country.
President Buhari registering for his National Identity Card
The commission got an initial N30 billion in 2010, three years after the enactment of the NIMC Act No. 23 in 2007, which conferred on it the mandate to assign a unique National Identification Number known as NIN, issue a General Multi-Purpose Card and produce an all-encompassing National Identity card for every Nigerian.
The commission got N17.9 billion in 2011, N12.35 billion in 2012, and N7.19 billion in 2014, while it received N6.276 billion in 2015 and N6.535 billion in 2017.
The amount received does not translate to concrete achievement in terms of card production and distribution, leaving eager Nigerians in search of the vital document with a sour taste in their mouths. As it is, while it takes raw grit for Nigerians to be registered by NIMC, being able to collect the NIN card from the commission comes with even greater stress.
So far, only a handful of powerful and sometimes lucky Nigerians have been given the cards with majority of Nigerians still waiting anxiously for the precious document. NIMC records show that between 2010 and 2017 less than one million Nigerians have been issued with the NIN. As a result, the various offices of the commission are more of ‘centres of complaints’ than production centres capable of meeting the national expectations in the production and delivery of cards to Nigerians.
In most of the centres, there are no basic materials to work with while erratic power supply and poor cash backing for the necessary assignments have become recurrent. Overall, there are more Nigerians in all the centres across the country than the number of capturing machines, which do not normally work due to power failure.
But while the NIMC has been very slow in capturing all Nigerians into its database and producing NIN cards for them, it has been very fast in expending cash made available to it by the federal government without accomplishing any tangible results to appease the financiers.
This recklessness in spending public funds without proper accountability and transparency and achieving little or no result has irked the Auditor-General of the Federation, who has questioned such opaque expenditure and asked for immediate answers yet to be given by NIMC.
For instance, in 2015 alone, NIMC was queried by the AuGF for mismanaging a whopping N3.5 billion on questionable procurements and project execution. The report from the AuGF said the expenditure violated all known procurement rules and extant financial regulations of Nigeria.
Giving a breakdown of the contracts which failed due process and accounting principles, the auditor general asked NIMC to urgently reply to the query. The report pointed out that the NIMC awarded a N16.5 million contract to a company in 2014 for the deployment of VSAT to local government areas on the 1st August 2014 and 100% down payment (contrary to extant regulations) made to the company five months before the award.
All the money was paid to the contractor on 31 March 2014. A contractor was engaged by NIMC to supply, install and maintain 19 No. Garret PD65001 walk-through metal detector at a total sum of N48.944 million via a letter referenced NIMC/LS/VGSNL/12/12 and dated 28th November 2012, which translates to N2.5 million per detector and the contractor, was paid in full without any completion date stated in the contract paper.
There was also no Advanced Payment Guaranty, APG, given by the contractor as demanded for such contracts. The shipment order and performance bond were not also attached as required by extant rules. An examination of the metal detectors showed that they were low quality materials bought at the cost of N750,000 each as against the N2.5 million per unit.
It was then established that the contract of N48.9 million had been inflated by N30.4 million. As if that was not enough, NIMC also awarded a contract for the supply of 600 units of HP Flatbed scanners to a company at a price of N12.1 million through a letter referenced NIMC/LS/MLS/1/13/3 and dated 9th April, 2013 with no completion period.
Examination of payment vouchers showed that the total contract sum was paid to the contractor in instalments of 15% and 85%. The APG backing the initial 15% was not sighted in all the documents produced for audit verification.
President Buhari being issued his National ID card. Millions of Nigerians are not that lucky.
The second payment of 85% amounting to N10.2 million was made without any covering bond or evidence of execution in form of Stores Receipt Voucher (SRV). The payment of 85% was made on a mere memo written by an officer to the DG/CEO stating that shipment order was placed by the vendor as detailed in the inspection report.
“This payment procedure is contrary to the Procurement Act 2007 which states that ‘No further payment after Advance payment shall be made to contractor without evidence of work done/supply,” it read.
Next, the agency engaged consultant to conduct market study on the smart card industry in Nigeria at a price of N22.6 through a letter referenced NIMC/LS/A&CO/1/13/1 and dated 7th June 2013 with no completion period. An examination of payment vouchers revealed that the total contract sum was paid to the consultant beginning with the initial 15% payment at inception report; while the 2nd and 3rd payments were made on an alleged 2nd draft report.
However, copies of all these reports were not produced for verification, raising suspicion that the job was never done. Following on the heels of that, the commission engaged and paid a media vendor as an agent on the strength of a mere memo written by an aide to the DG/CEO on 10th June 2014 to provide it with newspaper/magazine campaign at a price of N21.9 million per annum.
This job was neither advertised nor approved by the Tenders Board and Procurement Planning Committee of the commission. The same memo that initiated the award of the job was the same that sought for the initial payment of 25% or N5.4 million as mobilization.
The DG/CEO’s minutes approved it without recourse to the Tenders Board. In the end, there was no evidence of publication in the Newspaper on the activities of the commission, as this could not be seen in the entire document sighted or written evidence of the various dates when the publication was made.
Former President Goodluck Jonathan registering for his National ID card
The vital evidence of publication as the basis for this contract payment was not made available to the audit team. Next on the line of looting spree, a contractor was engaged by the NIMC to provide Affina Enterprise Smartcard Life Cycle Management System (a software) at a contract price of $1.4 million at the exchange rate of N170/Dollar. But the contract award letter was not provided for auditing.
Examination of payment vouchers showed that 80% of the contract sum amounting to N191.5 million was paid upfront without the mandatory APG. There was also no evidence of receipt of the software and delivery before the last payment of 20% which was the yardstick for the payment. There was no detail of the software volume, date of issuance, validity period and serial number. The IT department could not produce record of usage of the software despite repeated demands.
A consultant was engaged by the NIMC to provide 8 modules licenses for the NIMC Enterprise Monitoring System through a letter referenced NIMC/LS/SWSE/1/14 and dated 7th April, 2014 at a price of $104,895 equivalent to N16.9 million.
A memo from a staff to the DG/CEO on the same day of award of contract (7th April 2014) sought for a 100% payment of the contract sum and the DG/CEO minutes approved the memo without asking for evidence of performance or a covering bond. The total contract sum was paid to the consultant vide PV. No. NIMC/236/CA/14.
There was no evidence of performance of this job in the entire documents sighted as there was no evidence of receipt of the license certificate showing date of issuance, volume, and validity period in the Commission. The record at the Data Center did not show the entrance of this contractor to execute this task in the entire system of the Commission. Based on the above therefore, the job was adjudged not executed.
Next, a vendor was engaged by the NIMC to provide tripwire via security information and event monitoring tools (SIEM) and SCM License fees, implementation training, first year support and maintenance. The award letter for the job was not provided for audit verification. Two different memos were written by a member of staff to the DG/CEO on 6th and 7th March 2014 seeking for payment of 15% and 65% of the contract sum amounting to N23.5 million.
In similar manner, the DG/CEO in his minutes approved this payment without evidence of performance or Advance Payment Guarantee (APG) to safe guard public funds. “This negates the provisions of Public Procurement Act 2007. Examination of payment vouchers showed that the contractor”.
Similarly, five contractors were paid the total sum of N90.2 million for awareness campaign on the need for national identification enrolment across the six geo political zone of the federation on behalf of the commission.
But an examination of the documents presented for audit showed no evidence of contract execution like placement of advertisement in any print or electronic media on behalf of the commission or receipts indicating that slots for airtime were booked.
Few weeks after registering, Jonathan celebrates as he was able to withdraw money from an ATM using his national ID card; on the contrary, it’s been tales of woes for ordinary Nigerians.
While the commission has been very active in spending approved funds, it has remained comatose in delivering on the issuance of NIN to Nigerians, causing a serious altercation between its officials and aggrieved Nigerians. The trouble rings all over Nigeria.
A survey of its offices in the six geo-political zones, taking Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt, Kano and Enugu reveal common problems and failure exhibited by NIMC. Findings show that the acclaimed offices and operations of the agency in the states and local government areas across the country rarely exist. In fact most of the rural dwellers were surprised to hear about the ‘existence of such offices and the operations claimed by NIMC. They wondered where the offices are located and who actually runs them and what type of services they render to the public when told that the NIMC offices and registration centres are everywhere and easily accessible.
As a result of the rules that guide the civil service, officials of NIMC, declined to comment on their operations, referring our correspondent to Abuja where they said, ‘our bosses are’. Where they agreed to speak at all, they deliberately avoided any direct answer to the issues raised and the malfeasance noticed in their areas.
In Lagos which is the West Regional Headquarters of NIMC, not much activity was going on the day our team visited, while many were seen struggling to get service from the officials. As a result, a long queue of people with a chaotic scene formed around the Lagos office throughout the day and not much could be accomplished for that day.
Bolaji Adesanya, a Lagos resident, who had been registered and captured since 2014, said he had given up on the identity card matter since the commission continued to dribble him over the production of his card till date. He kept waiting for the text message or call from the commission.
Bolaji is not alone on this as hundreds of Nigerians have the same story to tell. The disappointment being experienced daily by Nigerians in the hands of NIMC was adequately captured by Bola Ogunseye, a Development Economist, who spoke of his frustration on Channels television programme, ‘Sunrise Daily’.
“It is really sad that the commission cannot still get things done right many years after it was set up and a lot of money spent by the government of Nigeria,” Ogunseye said.
“I registered since 2014 and have been to their office severally trying to get the card because what I have is just a slip. Just recently I was there; they still asked me to go and hold on that as soon as my card was ready they would notify me through a text message”.
But the Head of Administration at the Lagos office of the NIMC, Mr. Kayode Adegoke, declined to answer any question on the state of affairs there, saying that the State Coordinator of NIMC was barely a month old on the beat and would therefore need more time to familiarise himself with the vital information relating to the office before being able to offer any explanation on the way things were going.
In essence, the Lagos office was unwilling to disclose anything concerning their activities during the investigation as some persons were also spotted sitting unattended to for hours. The story of disappointment, failure and outright attempt by the officials of the agency in Lagos to dribble disgruntled Nigerians, who are fed up with their antics and ineptitude, is the same in the Enugu office, Kano, Port Harcourt and the FCT, the nation’s capital which serves as the South-East Zonal headquarters and is being thronged daily by Nigerians in search of their vital cards.
As in other zones, many residents of towns and communities hardly come in contact with registration officials of NIMC for the purpose of being captured not to talk of receiving their completed identity cards.
At the Obunofia-Ndiuno community in Ezeagu Local Government Area in Enugu state, a member of the community, Chinwe Okpara, said she was unaware of any registration centre there, having never sighted any of their officials. “I don’t think they have any form of exercise going on here,” Okpara said.
Similarly, Chigbo Anyanwu, who was at the Enugu office to collect his card having been registered and captured since 2015, was asked to return home until the card was ready. He fumed in frustration. Meanwhile, in the few available centres in the state, thousands of Nigerians were struggling to be registered, a sign that no serious arrangement had been put in place for a seamless exercise.
But the Zonal Coordinator in the South East, Chizoba Ogboko, would not want to speak on any matter related to the NIMC when confronted by this reporter.
However, the story is slightly positive at the Port Harcourt Office of the agency. Things seem to move faster there and Nigerians were happy with the rate of registration and production of their cards.
Perhaps, as a sign of improvement in service delivery, hundreds of people were seen here struggling to ascertain if their cards were ready for collection while others were making effort to be captured with the few available machines.
Others, whose cards were ready for collection, also queued to be attended to by the few officials on hand. As a sign of the serious work done already in registering, capturing and producing cards for Nigerians in the zone, the Port Harcourt office of NIMC was virtually flooded with cartons of printed cards ready to be distributed to those who had registered.
The state coordinator’s office was a beehive of activities, as Nigerians came to pick their cards, returning with some smiles on their lips as if they won a jackpot. The Rivers State Government was also known to be assisting with publicity and enlightenment, asking its citizens to register for the vital cards.
Apart from the state government, traditional rulers also mobilised their natives to take advantage of the exercise to be registered. The Rivers State Coordinator of NIMC, Amonia Oghenekaro, explained that 16 out of the 23 LGAs in the state had been covered by the commission while efforts were being made to extend the same level of coverage to the remaining areas so as to make the cards readily available to all Nigerians in those places. She said she had to personally visit and enlighten people on the importance of the exercise in the hinterland parts of the state on a weekly basis and that the people were responding positively.
But the good work notwithstanding, there were still pockets of complaints from those who were yet to receive their cards, many years after being registered and issued with temporary ID cards in the form of a printed paper.
One of them, Fortune Tamuno, complained to our correspondent that since she was told in 2014 to await an sms after being captured in 2014, she had not received a notification for the card, a development that bothered her.
Tamuno, said, “I started getting worried about it last year after I graduated from the university and had no other means of identification. Since then, I have been coming here to check if mine was ready but I was always welcomed with the same story”.
In Kano and Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, the story is the same: complaints everywhere you turn. The citizens appear to have lost faith in the commission and its officials going by the way the registration and production of their cards is being handled.
Aliyu Aziz, NIMC Director General
A resident of Kano, Adamu Zango, told our reporter than since he registered with NIMC in 2014, and was issued with a temporary paper as an evidence of his registration, his name was wrongly spelt in the paper and he has been battling with the officials to get it corrected but to no avail.
Zango said he had to give up because since it took him many years to get his name corrected, he did not know how long it would take him to get the card printed for him.
“I am here to correct my name, which was misspelt in 2014 when I registered but that has not been done till date and I am discouraged,” Zango lamented.
Jane Idoko, a resident in the FCT, also narrated her experience: “I am tired of waiting for my card, I do not even need it anymore. I have left it with them and as it is whenever they are ready they should let me know so that I can pick it up. I can assure them that I won’t make any personal effort anymore.”
But Mohammed Jalal, Head of Administration in the Kano Office of NIMC, explained that each of the 44 LGAs was well staffed and had what he called ‘strategic and specialized centres’ in markets and tertiary institutions.
However, when contacted, the Director General of NIMC, Aliyu Aziz, declined to speak on why the commission had not been able to produce identify cards for Nigerians seven years after the inception of NIMC.
Azis however admitted that he received a query from the Auditor-General on the mismanagement of funds and said that he had replied the query and copied the two chambers of the National Assembly.
It must however be pointed out that Aziz, who has just been appointed as the head of NIMC, was not on the saddle when the fraudulent contracts, for which the Auditor-General of the Federation raised the queries, were awarded. He merely inherited the big mess from his predecessor.
But NIMC’s Head of Public Affairs, NIMC, Loveday Chika Ogbonna, noted that the agency had made progress in its assignment by registering 21.9 million Nigerians and legal residents on the National Identity Database (NIDB). Ogbonna boasted that the commission had also produced above one million cards while a sizeable number of Nigerians had collected their cards.
Clearly, with the outright mismanagement of the resources so far allocated to the agency and the evidence that it is yet to get its acts right despite the passage of time, Nigeria and Nigerians have become the major losers in terms of cash, security, national planning and development while a few powerful persons, who drive the process, have made a fortune out of the place and buried the vision of the founding fathers of a seamless identity management agency.
The national identity card system was initially conceived in 1977 but the project did not see the light of the day.
In 2003, a new scheme managed by the Directorate of National Civic Registration (DNCR) was initiated and about 54 million Nigerians were registered, however, the scheme failed to meet official expectations and was also hampered by allegations of corruption and embezzlement of funds.
This Investigation was carried out with support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the International Centre for Investigative Reporting, ICIR
Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein of Jordan gestures after a press conference on October 16, 2014 in Geneva (Photo credit: FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images)
“After reflection, I have decided not to seek a second four-year term. To do so, in the current geopolitical context, might involve bending a knee in supplication; muting a statement of advocacy; lessening the independence and integrity of my voice — which is your voice.”
This was the message staff of the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights received from their boss, Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, in an email marking the end of the year, according to Foreign Policy.
Zeid’s four-year tenure ends in 2018 and, though he is eligible for another term, he’s decided against it. The Jordanian prince’s decision to step down further thrusts the UN into the spotlight, with many fearing the global body is not doing enough to protect human rights.
In September, the BBC reported that the UN leadership in Myanmar had tried to prevent the Rohingya crisis from being discussed with the government, and also discouraged human rights organisations from visiting parts of the country affected by crisis.
The biggest and clearest hint that the UN dances to the tunes of powerful and donor countries came in 2016 when then Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon said he was pressured and threatened with funds withdrawal to remove Saudi Arabia from a blacklist it was on because of its role in the war in Yemen, which has been called the biggest humanitarian crisis right now.
Ban Ki Moon said the decision was “one of the most painful and difficult” he had had to make, adding that the decision was made because millions of children faced real threat if countries decided to stop funding UN programmes.
Additional reports by Damilola Ojetunde and Victoria Nwaziri
Abiola Ajimobi, Oyo State Governor, presents the 2018 budget at the state house of assembly
Twenty states that have so far presented their 2018 budgets are proposing to spend a total sum of N6.1 trillion.
When the remaining 16 states present theirs, the proposed total expenditure by all the states would definitely be higher than the Federal Government’s N8.6 trillion budget.
The budgets of Cross River and Lagos states account for 38 percent of this N6.1 trillion, as they are the first states in the country’s history to hit a trillion threshold in the annual budget.
The concern in this seeming competition among the states to present higher budget is how they will get the money to fully implement their budgets, knowing their revenues either come from federation account allocation or internally generated revenue (IGR).
As of October, the combined total allocation to all the states from the federation account was N1.4 trillion, higher than the N1.3 trillion of 2016. The average allocation to a state this year is N38 billion while last year’s was N36 billion.
The IGR from all the states by the third quarter of this year was just 546 billion, while they made 801 billion in 2016.
As indicated by the federation account allocation and IGR in 2016 and 2017, the combined total revenues for all the states in 2018 cannot exceed 3 trillion. With this projection, the total revenues by the states will be less than 40 percent of their budgets.
Therefore, if the budgets of the states will be implemented fully, nothing less than 60 percent will be borrowed. This budget deficit is unrealistic..
All the states that have presented their 2018 budgets have a deficit but some states have taken theirs to absurd and unrealistic levels.
The most unrealistic budget is the N1.3 trillion ‘Budget of Kinetic Crystallisations’ presented by Ben Ayade, Governor of Cross River State. But what has changed in the state for such additional N1 trillion, given the state’s 2017 budget was N301 billion?
The total IGR by Cross River was N9 billion, as of the third quarter of 2017, while the state’s IGR in 2016 was N14 billion.
Cross River has received N18 billion from the federation account in 2017 and received N17 billion in 2016. The combined total revenues projection from federation account allocation and IGR for the state in 2018 is less than N50 billion.
In the past 10 years, from 2007 to 2017, Cross River State has only received N411 billion from the federation account allocation. Therefore, if the state borrows to spend N1.3 trillion in 2018, it may not earn this amount of money in revenue in the next 10 years!
Cross Rivers’ proposed budget is higher than Lagos, which made 302 billion from IGR in N2016 and had made N241 billion by the third quarter of 2017.
The states that have the lowest budgets for 2018 also have a huge deficit. Among the 20 states that have presented their budgets, Yobe and Ekiti have the lowest figures but they also have a high deficit.
Yobe’s 2018 budget of ‘Consolidation and Socio-economic Rejuvenation’ is N92 billion but the state’s revenue is less than N50 billion this year. The state has received N32 billion from the federation account in 2017, and it received N31 billion in 2016. Yobe’s IGR by the third quarter of this year is N2 billion and N3 billion in 2016.
Similarly, Ekiti’s 2018 ‘Budget of Accomplishment’ is N98 billion but the state’s revenue is less than N50 billion. The state has been allocated N30 billion this year from the federation account and also N30 billion in 2016. The IGR of Ekiti State by the third quarter of this year had hit N3 billion but was nearly N3 billion in 2016.
Based on their revenues, almost all the states have unrealistic budgets even if they are factoring allocation to local governments into their budgets. The total allocation to the 774 local governments from the federation account for 2017 is N1 trillion, with an average of N1.3 billion per local government.
The budget presentation has become an annual ritual for state governors to announce unrealistic figures. The budgets, although presented with fancy names, are never fully implemented.
From Adamawa’s ‘Budget of Hope and Empowerment’ to Oyo’s ‘Budget of Stabilisation’, the figures are not proportionate to their revenues. Probably, they are all going to borrow substantially to implement their budgets.
The reality is that not more than 15 states in the federation have the means to implement more than N100 billion annual budget but they will rather announce bogus and impressive budgets that are never implemented.
Toyin Street Ikeja, the streetlights are not working
By Anthony Akaeze
Despite huge budgetary provisions for its maintenance and sustenance, the Lagos Light Up Project is plagued by poor service delivery
Time was 6.35pm, October 19, 2017, at Ojodu-Berger pedestrian bridge, one of the projects of the Akinwunmi Ambode administration in Lagos State. The pedestrian bridge, when it was commissioned in May, improved the aesthetics of the area as the congestion and chaos common in the vicinity largely reduced, owing to the free movement of humans across the bridge unlike in the past. Added to the beauty of the bridge, and the adjoining lay-bys and bus park that came with it were the new electric poles that, at night, illuminate the area.
The newly-installed lights and electric poles at the bridge were in keeping with the state government’s promise to light up Lagos at night as part of efforts to improve security and commercial activities in the state. The project kicked off in December 2015 and was commissioned in April 2016 by Ambode. It has continued ever since and funds for its sustenance were voted and approved in this year’s budget.
On page 20 of the 2017 Abridged Annual Budget on the state’s website, the Lagos State government, through the ministry of Economic Planning and Budget, gave a breakdown of the 812.998 billion budget wherein under “2017 subvention/overhead cost,” the sum of 4,091,115,420 was voted for streetlight rehabilitation and maintenance. On page 46-47 of the document, under ‘roads and other infrastructure,’ the state government reveals that it proposes “to spend the sum of N141.692bn on road infrastructure” that includes “Marking and Community Traffic Initiatives, Advancement of “Light-Up” Lagos project through provision, rehabilitation, and maintenance of Streetlight facilities.” On page 9 of the same document, the Lagos State House of Assembly states that: “The Commissioner for Finance and the Accountant General shall promptly release the quarterly funds of the State Electricity Board to it for its optimal performance.”
At the time of its flag off, the light up project was hailed by many Lagosians as a good concept and was expected to be a continuation and improvement of previous effort by the past administration headed by Babatunde Fashola, to provide street lights in the state.
To some observers, Fashola administration’s effort in that regard was anything but excellent, and even in terms of coverage, Ambode’s is believed by some to be more expansive. Comparing the two administration’s efforts in street light provision, Adeniji Michaels, the Managing Director, CMSEAL International Ltd, an indigenous engineering and project management and construction firm, said, “there are noticeable difference especially installation of new lighting systems in the unreached areas by former Governor Babatunde Fashola within Lagos State.”
Third roundabout, Lekki, Lagos
But in less than two years, challenges are synonymous with Ambode’s light up project as many of the street lights across the state are not functioning well. For instance, that October 19, between 6:35 pm and 7:04 pm, the lights on the Ojodu-Berger pedestrian bridge malfunctioned three times – coming off and on.
For a project that was launched with fanfare eight months earlier, the malfunctioning witnessed at the Ojodu-Berger pedestrian bridge may come as a surprise to some people but the failures that night was not an isolated case as many familiar with the area since its commissioning know. On December 15, last week, it happened again as the lights suddenly went off at night.
The lights could go off without notice at any time and get restored anytime! The occasional blackout also extends to Ogunnusi Road linking the pedestrian bridge and many other streets across Lagos State, where the lights are supposed to work uninterruptedly from night until morning.
Investigations show that, at night, in many parts of Lagos, electric poles in major roads across the state, at times, fail to glow, and where they work, there’s no guarantee they could function seamlessly till the following morning. In some cases, electric poles within the same area, don’t function at the same time.
On September 28, 2017, at 7.20pm at GTB junction, Ogunnusi Road, a few minutes walk from the Federal Road Safety Commission’s headquarters in Ojodu, when the electric poles in the area ought to be on, they were off. But those installed within the Lagos State Works Corporation’s office and the pedestrian bridge, close by were working.
Heading towards Ogba that night, the reporter discovered that the stretch of road from the GTB junction to Excellence Hotel, Ogba, was dark, save for the light from moving vehicles that illuminated the road. But it was a somewhat different story at Yaya Abatan Street overlooking the Excellence hotel as some, not all of the streetlights, were working.
By 7.30pm, the reporter decided to return to Ogunnusi Road, and even before getting to the junction linking Omole Phase 1, he noticed that the lights were back. But it didn’t extend to the Federal Road Safety Commission or GTB area, instead, it terminated just before the Grammer School bus stop.
Two days later, an assessment of the same route reveals the same situation. By 7:15 pm, Ogunnusi Road from the GTB junction was dark. But the Lagos State Public Works Corporation’s axis was lit. Proceeding to Ogba, the lights were on from Omole Phase 1 beyond the Nigerian Institute of Journalism, NIJ campus. Abatan too, save for the faulty or unlit ones, were lit.
However, as in Abatan, some of the poles, within the area illuminated, had one, instead of two functioning bulbs. As the reporter made his way back to Ojodu-Berger that night, he counted no less than 83 bulbs without light. The fact that some of the electric poles had one, instead of two bulbs functioning, showed they were apparently dead.
On October 3, a drive at night from Agidingbi road to Ojota via Kudirat Abiola Road revealed that some electric polls were not functioning, while a couple others had one, instead of two bulbs working. Some of the poles without light on the night included those by the fence of the Lagos State television overlooking Coca-Cola premises.
Ojodu Berger Express road
On Ojota junction connecting Ikorodu Road and Ogudu, for the many bright lights on the night of October 3, at least five polls had one or two bulbs not working. A motorcycle ride from Ikorodu Road junction to the opposite end of Ogudu linking Third Mainland Bridge showed that 53 electric polls either had one or two bulbs dead or not functioning.
The situation on Third Mainland bridge isn’t different as driving through there to Victoria Island on dawn of September 21 revealed that many poles were without light.
On October 8, by 6. 35 pm, a bus ride from Ojodu Berger to Alaba International market, via Gbagada-Oshodi, a journey that lasted more than one hour, was mostly done in the dark save for lights of speeding vehicles that provided occasional glitter.
Only in Agboju, Mazamaza, First Gate was there streetlight. The rest was darkness. More than 200 electric poles, from the Alausa Expressway to Gbagada interchange had one or two bulbs either dead or not functioning that night.
Returning an hour and half later from Alaba, the streetlights at Agboju, First Gate, Mazamaza, had disappeared and everywhere was dark except at Cele bus stop and Oshodi-Isolo link way connecting the Murtala Mohammed International airport where electric poles illuminated the overhead bridge. Arriving Oshodi overhead bridge by 9.20pm, the reporter found that the lights were back.
Fourteen days later, on October 22, a ride through Toyin Street to Allen Avenue, Aromire Street to Acme and Wempco roads leading to Ogba, at night, revealed a number of dead lights. Another assessment of Oshodi expressway leading to Mile 2 on the night of December 4 was not unlike the one of October 8. Everywhere was dark but for lights of speeding vehicles. From Mile 2 to Costain, it was the same scenario as the expressway connecting Alafia and Orile down to Costain was dark that night.
Victor, who works at Cele bus stop area of Oshodi expressway, told the magazine that the road had been without light for many years. A commercial bus driver who plies the Mile 2 – Lagos Island route, also said that the area has not had light for as long as he could remember. “There’s no electricity in this road at night. It’s only in Mazamaza area that street light is available,” he said, adding however that a test run of street lights was carried out some two months ago on the Mile 2 – Lagos Island road but that nothing has been seen.
Though Costain roundabout had most electric poles working on December 4, a number of the bulbs were not functioning. And while the Costain-Ikorodu expressway was largely lit that same night, a number of electric poles failed to glow.
In some parts of Ebute Metta like Apapa Road, a motorcyclist told the magazine that the lights on the street extinguished about four months ago. Along Kano Road linking Oyingbo, some of the poles are of no consequence as they fail to brighten up the area. At the National Stadium, Surulere area, the lights weren’t on the night the reporter passed through there to Akerele Street leading to Lawanson.
Arriving Lawanson from a street terminating on Itire Road, was like a run on a dark alley as the streetlights weren’t functioning. A ride from there to Ojuelegba overhead bridge revealed the same thing: unlit poles. A motorcyclist told the magazine, in reply to a question, that the lights had been off for over two months. At Ojuelegba, another cyclist said that the electric poles along the road leading to Yaba had not been functioning for some time.
On December 12, an electric pole opposite MKO Abiola Garden, an estate in Alausa close to Lagos State Government House, was not functioning on the night. Ditto some poles at the overhead bridge garden leading to Ketu bus stop. From Ketu to Ikorodu, it was a case of light here, darkness there, in the more than 30 minutes drive to the town. Countless street lights were not functioning.
Ojodu Berger pedestrian bridge
Reaching Ikorodu roundabout, a number of electric poles were either not switched on or were faulty. A ride through Beach Road junction to NBC road junction showed the state of facilities as not a single electric pole was working.
Arriving Maryland at 10.12pm and headed towards Ikeja via Sheraton Hotel, at least six electric poles marred an otherwise glittering night. A walk from Ikeja overhead bridge to Oriyomi Street junction, and as far as the eyes could see, no electric poles were functioning on Oriyomi.
The next day, a drive through Falomo, Awolowo Road, Ikoyi to Victoria Island and Lekki, showed they were not exempt from the street light puzzle. The many otherwise bright lights on the night notwithstanding, a number of electric poles stood out for their lack of light.
But the situation at second to third roundabout area of Lekki was different as many poles on the stretch were not functioning. Returning from Lekki, the reporter found Apogbon and Iponri areas bereft of light. The situation at Iponri was unlike December 4, when it glittered with light and is more in tune with the situation along the Ikeja – Iyana Ipaja – Igando-Iyana-Oba route where the streetlights are consistently inconsistent in areas that they work.
That’s the scenario that many streetlights in Lagos present at night. In terms of performance, there’s no consistency and uniformity. Amos, who runs a cab business in Lagos, told the magazine that “the street lights work in some areas and don’t work in some areas.” The magazine’s investigations show that many electric poles in the state, which include new and previously installed poles by the Fashola administration, don’t function well at night.
Some of the bulbs are dead, some parts are missing, poles are unkempt, while some electric poles don’t function at all. As a result of the poor performance and state of facilities, many areas are poorly lit or not illuminated.
It was also observed that there’s no specific time the lights are switched on. For instance, on October 16, as early as 5.26pm, some electric poles along the Berger- Ojodu expressway were already glowing. On October 8, at 6.15pm, four electric poles, two of which were opposite First Bank at Ogunnusi Road, had been switched on while those of the nearby pedestrian bridge were off. The Ojodu-Berger pedestrian bridge, from the days it was monitored, came up anytime from 6.30 – 7.00pm, while many elsewhere come up just about anytime at night. There’s no guarantee when that could be, or when they could go off. The current situation, for some residents, is at variance with the euphoria that greeted the introduction of the streetlights in the state.
Speaking about the Lagos street light project in April 2016, Ambode said: “The Light Up Lagos initiative is an integral part of our administration’s programmes to put Lagos on the same pedestal and status as similar megalopolis in the world. This initiative is in line with our commitment to build a 24/7 economy that will create employment and wealth for our people. The Light Up Lagos project is also part of our security strategy to make our State competitive, safe and secure.”
He added that significant progress has been recorded since the initiative commenced on 9th December 2015. “There has been an increase in commercial activity in the areas where we have installed street lights. Driving on major highways and streets in Ikeja, Alausa Central Business District, Third Mainland Bridge, Iyana Oworo/Berger axis amongst others have become more pleasurable as a result of the improved illumination,” the governor said.
In a country long plagued by epileptic power supply, and where many residents across the country are more used to dark alleys and roads, an initiative like the light up Lagos is bound to lighten hearts but Lookman Oshodi, project director for Arctic Infrastructure, feels that street light as a concept ought not to call for any special celebration as it should be a part of road infrastructure.
“It is good to have street lights to illuminate urban spaces and promote security resilience, but I do not think it is necessary to develop a project around street lighting. Doing such will continue to strengthen the appellation of our city as “City of Third World Country”. Street lighting is an integral part of road infrastructure delivery in any city; therefore it should not enjoy any special project delivery vehicle.
However, years of inability to provide this crucial road equipment has made the launching of street lighting, a well celebrated project for the city of Lagos. The project is not totally different from any other public infrastructure project. Moreso, these are the roles for the local governments except for trunk A and B roads,” he said.
NBC road, Ikorodu, Lagos
Even then, there are those who feel the Ambode administration’s light up scheme is limited in scope as it doesn’t cover residential districts. Oluwafemi Alimi, who works with an international energy firm based in Lagos, said it would be good to extend the street lights to the residential areas rather than mainly major roads as is presently the case in Lagos.
“Yes, the highways are lit currently. I think the present government has tried in getting the highways lit but when it comes to residential areas, I think there’s a deficiency of streetlight. So, I think the government has to do more, maybe local governments this time around have to assist. They have to ensure street lights work 24 hours even in localities, not just the highways,” Alimi said.
Emmanuel Ayisire, assistant commander general, community policing, Vigilante Group of Nigeria, also thinks the local governments have a role to play. He told the magazine that the United States has millions of streetlights owned by municipalities and regrets that the local governments in Nigeria are not doing much.
While pointing out that the lit up project initiated by Ambode’s administration is a good idea, Ayisire advised that street lights should go beyond just illuminating areas.
“First of all, security in the modern world is close to being defined by light. Light is indispensable to security,” Ayisire said.
“It’s a wonderful idea that the governor came up with the project and I think that has come a long way. It’s encouraging.
“Lighting is integral to crime prevention. It’s not good for security when you have dark areas but in this modern age, street light plays multiple roles.
“In the USA, street lights are developed to achieve certain things: monitor weather, seismic activities, capture plate numbers, conversations and video of people passing by so you can imagine that.
“The western world has set the pace (technologically), we should move a step forward by providing street lights that have the ability to do a few things (like in developed countries).”
Oshodi also gave a similar view. Comparing the street light in Lagos with what obtains in some European countries.
“Sometime around 1824 when oil lanterns were replaced with gas powered streetlight poles in Aberdeen, Scotland, almost all the city’s residents jumped onto the streets in celebration,” Oshodi said.
“In Aberdeen today, street light poles are multi function in characteristics, they accommodate street cameras, WIFI system and box visual advertisement in addition to traditional role of providing light.
“In major global cities nowadays, the poles are housing the emission calibrating equipment while they are being considered as signal navigation tools for emerging driverless vehicles.
“Currently, street lights are not just road electrical infrastructure but are being classified as part of the cities’ intelligence infrastructure.”
Ayisire’s and Oshodi’s advice will in fact help in stemming theft of even the street light equipment which a staff of the Lagos State Electricity Board who asked that his identity be protected, complained about. It was part of his defence on the state of some of the streetlights that are either dead or post below average performance. Although the source declined to answer questions relating to contract and maintenance of the streetlights, he said that part of the problem the electricity board confronts is theft of electric equipment and the uncooperative attitude of some residents who fail to safeguard electric facilities in their domains. His response came as part of the magazine’s effort to unravel how the street light project is funded and operated. Sources told the magazine that most of the streetlights are powered by diesel generators and that the contracts relating to them are supervised by the Lagos State Electricity Board. As the budget document states, the agency responsible for the Lagos streetlight project is the Lagos State Electricity Board. But the general manager, Ibilola Kasunmu refused to respond to the magazine’s questions on the street light project.
The magazine had first reached out to the ministry of energy and mineral resources in October for an interview in regard to the light up Lagos project. There, the reporter was referred to the office of the Lagos State Electricity Board near old secretariat by the PRO of the ministry of energy and mineral resources, Moses Ogunleye. Reaching the office of the electricity company, the reporter was asked to write a letter to the general manager, stating his request. This was done but there was no response from Kasunmu.
A source in the agency told the magazine that the general manager refused to talk because of fear of the unknown. Umeh, the public affairs officer of Lagos State Electricity Board, on her part, referred the reporter to the ministry of energy and mineral resources, which she said is better positioned to provide answers to contract issues. Ogunleye, on his part, after failing to fix an appointment with Olawale Oluwo, Lagos commissioner for energy and mineral resources, invited the reporter to the 7th Annual LPG Conference and Exhibition holding at the Federal Palace Hotel, Lagos, on December 7, for the purpose of interviewing the commissioner who was billed to attend the event. Oluwo indeed attended but left shortly after making the opening speech without granting an interview. He told the reporter that he needed to leave for another appointment and would not be able to grant the interview at that point.
At the LPG Conference and Exhibition, Oluwo told the gathering that Lagos is already implementing a power sector reform and that the state government is targeting a 3000 megawatts supply for the state. According to information on Lagos State’s website, Lagos, with a population of approximately 24, 821,418 inhabitants accounting for over 60% of Nigeria’s industrial and commercial activities, is responsible for 45% of national electricity consumption. But questions arise as to how contracts for the supply and maintenance of the electric poles and equipment and supply of diesel for the running of the generators that power the streetlights are awarded.
A source who spoke on condition of anonymity told the magazine that poor service delivery by the light up Lagos project led to the sack of Kasunmu’s predecessor, Peter Okonji, by Ambode. Okonji was appointed to the position in July 2015 but did not last long. An entertainment magazine, Encomium, in a March 1, 2016, article, gave reasons why Okonji was replaced by Kasunmu.
“Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State has bared his fang on 12 officials of Lagos State Electricity Board for their inability to provide Street Light on Mobolaji Johnson Road, Alausa, Ikeja, for three days during the official visit of President Joachim Gauck of Germany,” the magazine reported.
“The governor was said to have been peeved by the total darkness the whole street was thrown into for these three days of the august visitors.
“He was said to have ordered that the General Manager of the agency, Engr. Peter Okenji (Okonji) be issued a query to explain why there was no light in that street for those three days. The response of the General Manager was not satisfactory to the governor and he, therefore, ordered the General Manager and 11 other senior officers of the agency be redeployed.”
The report further pointed out that: “the redeployment of these officers has no doubt generated mixed feelings amongst civil servants. Some are of the opinion that the contractor which handled the project should have been sanctioned rather than the civil servants”.
According to the source, since Okonji’s sacking, there has been no significant improvement in the provision of streetlight in the state. He said that part of the reason the street light project is bogged by challenges such as erratic power supply and breakdown of facilities is because the process leading to the award of contract for the running and maintenance of the project, had been compromised as contracts relating to the street lights were awarded to cronies and influential politicians in the state.
The light up project was flagged off after some energy experts met and deliberated on modalities for its operation.
Norbert Shialsuk
Norbert Shialsuk, chief operating officer of Sublime Oil and Gas told the magazine that he was part of the committee on the light up project, and that it was meant to fill an existing gap based on prevailing realities. “Regarding the light of Lagos, there was a panel set up, which sat for months last year and they are still sitting and that committee was set up by the ministry of energy comprising of GE, Siemens and other stakeholders in the industry. I was part of the team,” said Shialsuk.
Shedding light on the concept of the light up project, Shialsuk said the initiative was a proposition by the Lagos ministry of energy to provide electricity for Lagosians and fill the shortfall in electricity supply from the national grid.
“You know very well that the power available from the grid is not sufficient to meet the demand in Lagos and so the state government wants to step in to provide solutions that can bridge that gap and provide electricity which will be the alternative from the national grid,” he said.
“The first phase is supposed to deliver more than a thousand megawatts and ultimately they will increase that to three thousand megawatts, using various sources: the plant, LNG, LPG, coal and other efficient power generating solutions.”
“I think the Lagos state government has set a good example. All the streetlights have been powered so far. It has also been able to set up a lot of IPPs (Independent power plants).
“There’s a mainland power in Alausa. There’s also the Island power project in Lagos Island. There’s also Akute power, which powers water treatment plants in Lagos State.
“So Lagos State government has been successful in setting up small-scale power plants across the state and that experience is what the government wants to translate into now meeting the demand of the rest of the state. So I think it’s been a very good proposition and I know that the current governor is determined to see it through.”
Shialsuk further noted that maintenance is key to sustaining such project.
“It’s one thing to put the infrastructure in place, it’s another thing to ensure it’s operated and maintained. Operation and maintenance is key to sustaining any project,” he said.
“I’m not aware the extent of damage or maintenance required for all of these street light but maybe a few need maintenance here and there and there are blackout here and there but of course, with any system around the world, there are always system failures but you have to continue to replace the equipment and continue to ensure the diesel is supplied because currently some of the electric lights are powered by diesel.
“You have to change the light bulbs. If there are any faulty lines, you have to be able to fix them and also ensure that the power is regular.”
He pointed out that “the Island power in Lagos Island gets supply of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) from Niger Delta, and if there’s shortage of gas along the pipeline, of course, there won’t be power to supply the IPP’s and so there may be one or two breakdowns. They have backup power but they use diesel and of course, that becomes expensive. ”
Shialsuk advised that one of the ways the government can overcome the challenges of maintenance is by engaging the private sector. “Probably there are one or two areas of improvement in terms of operations and maintenance but that can be dealt with by privatizing. So basically, if you are able to have private contractors manage those street lights, then you will be able to ensure that any repairs are met at any point in time,” he said.
With regards to management of the street lights, Oshodi feels the local government can do it.
“One major advice is to build the capacity of local governments to be able to deliver on this crucial public infrastructure. This is ideal for the future of Lagos. I do not see the Lagos State Government giving due attention to this facility on long term because of capacity.”
Even at that, he advocates adherence to best practices by people or agency saddled with the responsibility. “The procurement processes for maintaining the street lights should not be enmeshed on patronage system, rather the professionals who are vast in the mechanism of public infrastructure management should be engaged and encouraged to take up the operations, management, and maintenance of the infrastructure,” said Oshodi, further noting that the focus should be more on the technical capacity of the bidding agencies. “What level of expertise do they have in development, operations, and management of public infrastructure? What model are they proposing to deliver and operate the lighting equipment? Do they have specific experience in a large city or developing country and most importantly, what is their business integrity background? These are some of the key criteria to be considered,” he noted.
Even then, Oshodi feels the light up project, as in Fashola’s time, is energy consuming.
“They are both based on fossil fuel operational model, that is refueling of diesel generators, as situation demands. This model is subject to frequent breakdown and this can be observed in some areas being plunged into darkness when the lights ought to work.” He suggests the adoption of cleaner energy options to power the project and for the government to “speed up the green energy capacity delivery to the city with a view to decommissioning the generators.”
Oluwafemi also wants the state government to begin to look at alternative sources of energy for the street light project. “We’ve seen that they use generators to power them but in terms of energy conservation and efficiency and all that, you would want to use renewable energy that we have in abundance like solar energy. That will help. If we can have more of these street lights powered by solar energy, it will help,” he said, pointing out that there were attempts in the past to adopt solar energy but it flopped. “We know that there had been attempts to install solar energy as sources of the street light but most times we see that they don’t last long probably because of quality. So, I think in the aspect of quality, the government needs to do more and improve on practices in terms of quality assurance when these contracts are signed with individuals. I think that quality aspect needs to be sorted out so that these projects can stand the test of time and last longer. Solar is in abundance in Nigeria.” He advised that a policy framework be initiated by government to adopt solar energy as energy source.
In an article published in African Business magazine in May 2016, Alvaro Sobrinho, the chairman of the Planet Earth Institute noted that “Africa has incredible renewable energy resources, as it can source an additional 10 Terawatts of solar energy, 1,300 GW of wind power, and 15GW of geothermal potential. Private companies have the financial resources and clout to significantly scale up investment in renewable energy.”
Whichever models are adopted, the key is to deliver the goal. According to the Project light up Nigeria, a civil group, “using high-quality street lights will eliminate situations where streetlights after a few months of installation fail to work because of their low quality thereby defeating the objectives of such projects. Project light-up Nigeria therefore recommends that henceforth project owners, in this case the Federal, State and Local Governments, should recommend and insist on brand of streetlight and other lighting material to be used by their contractors as leaving such decisions solely in the hands of contractors will lead to situations where contractors may use all sorts of low quality and cheap lighting materials in a bid to maximize profit. Project light-up Nigeria is of the view that using high-quality materials, even though naturally more expensive is cheaper in the long run.”
This investigation is supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the International Centre for Investigative Reporting.
An Italian judge has ordered oil majors Royal Dutch Shell and Eni to stand trial over alleged corruption in Nigeria, according to Reuters.
Eni executive, Claudio Descalzi, and his predecessor, Paolo Scaroni, will also face prosecution in the trial that will start on March 5 next year.
The oil companies are being persecuted for their role in the $1.3 billion controversial sale of OPL 245 oil block, an offshore oil block estimated to hold 9 billion barrels of crude.
Both companies are already facing prosecution in Nigeria over the deal, which was approved by Goodluck Jonathan, the former President.
All the parties involved have previously denied any wrongdoing.