Home Blog Page 3002

House Of Rep Members’ Sex Scandal Hearing Stalled Due To Absence Of US Ambassador

0
US Ambassador to Nigeria, James Entwistle
US Ambassador to Nigeria, James Entwistle

A public hearing scheduled by the House of Representatives to look into the allegation of sexual misconduct brought against three members of the house by the US government could not holdon Thursday due to the absence of the US Ambassador to Nigeria, James Entwistle.

Entwistle had promised to come with video evidence of his allegation against three Nigerian lawmakers who attended a US sponsored leadership programme in Cleveland, Ohio.

Speaker Yakubu Dogara had constituted a panel to investigate the allegations following a petition by Entwistle in which the ambassador alleged that the three lawmakers sexually harassed hotel workers in Cleveland, Ohio, while on the leadership programme.

The legislators involved vehemently denied the allegations and one even threatened to sue the US government for character assassination.

The committee headed by Nicholas Ossai in its effort to find out the truth invited Entwistle to a public hearing, as well as the seven other members of the house that attended the leadership programme alongside the accused.

Entwistle reportedly said he would provide video evidence of the incidences as proof to substantiate his allegation; but at the hearing on Thursday, the ambassador was not present and no reason has so far been given for his absence.

The public hearing has been adjourned till July 20.

Oil Constitutes Only 13 Percent To GDP – Finance Minister

0
Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun
Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun

Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, has said that even though crude oil gives Nigeria over 70 percent of its revenue, it constitutes only 13 percent to the country’s Gross Domestic Product, GDP.

The minister said this was a situation that must not be allowed to continue, stressing that it is the reason why the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari was focusing on non-oil revenue generation.

Adeosun made this assertion on Thursday, in Kano State, during the opening ceremony of the National Revenue Retreat with the theme: “Enhancing Revenue Generation for Sustainable National Development”. The retreat was attended by state officials from Lagos, Kano, Jigawa and Edo states.

She stressed that Nigeria must improves her revenue collection efforts as ‘revenue to GDP in the country is one of the lowest in the continent.

Adeosun stated that Nigeria’s tax to GDP is only 6 percent versus 26 percent in South Africa and 21 percent in Tunisia, stressing that the ministry of finance has committed itself to focusing totally on revenue generation.

She however said ,”our revenue focus will not burden Nigeria ,but will ensure that all revenue due to Nigerians ‘s government ,irrespective of the source ,is collected with high degree of efficiency ,fully receipted and properly accounted for,

“The days when revenue generating agencies acted as autonomous entities outside of the budget cannot be allowed to continue. Whether the funds are from fees and fines, from taxes or from projects, the law is clear that every naira must be paid into Consolidated Revenue Fund.”

She stated that discipline and accountability in the spending of public money is a trademark and policy focus of the President Buhari-led administration.

The minister posited that citizens will not willingly pay revenues if the funds are seen to be leaking or are being wasted, adding that all spending must start with revenue and therefore “we have commenced the work of plugging the leakages of government revenue.”

FG Reviewing Infrastructure Masterplan – Minister

0
Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma
Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma

The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma, has dismissed rumours that the federal government had dumped the National Integrated Infrastructure Master Plan,NIIMP, rather, he said the government was reviewing the document to make it conform to current realities.

A statement signed by Akpandem James, Media Adviser to the minister, said speculations that the plan might have been abandoned was fueled by poor appreciation of the essence of the NIIMP and lack of knowledge about recent developments regarding the document.

The statement reads: “For effective implementation of the NIIMP, the current administration embarked on a number of related key activities including developing a framework for identifying priority projects with infrastructure-heavy MDAs to form part of the 2017 Budget, as well as signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Infrastructure Bank which will act as the Budget and Planning Ministry’s Advisor on NIIMP implementation.

“Also, a two-day pre-summit workshop was hosted by the Ministry with critical Stakeholders to prepare a roadmap for the implementation of Public, Private Partnership,PPP, projects; while also engaging with private sector industry players, especially on PPPs.

“The Ministry is in the process of concluding reality checks on the NIIMP document to address current developments in the global economy; and work is in progress on the development of the first Medium Term Delivery Plan for the NIIMP, which is expected to adequately capture priority areas of the current administration.”

The minister explained that the 2016 budget accorded priority attention to infrastructure development and allocated a substantial proportion of the first full-year budget of the administration to the sector.

“It was the largest of such allocation since the country returned to democratic governance in 1999; and clearly showed a determination by government to improve basic infrastructural facilities across the country,” he stated.

It could be recalled that integrated infrastructural development was only second to Economic Reforms in the ranking of the six pillars of the present administration’s Change Agenda. Others are Social Development, Governance and Security, Environment, and States and Regional Development.

 

The statement further stated that the first five years of the NIIMP document provides that energy, transport, social infrastructure and housing should be given priority due to their current relative level of under-investment; and the 2016 Budget gave priority attention to these sectors, with further room for enhancement in the planned 2017 Budget.

The NIIMP takes stock of existing infrastructure and identifies the required investments to bring them in line with the country’s aspirations. It also establishes sector targets, priority programmes and critical enablers for effective implementation.  

Some of the major provisions of the NIIMP document include that priority attention should be given to:

  • investments directed at the roads sub-sector in order to refurbish cross-national highways as well as expand the regional road network and linkages to other modes of transportation,
  • electricity generation capacity and expansion of transmission infrastructure, as well as construction of supporting gas infrastructure,
  • expansion of mobile network capacity and the broadband fiber optic network,
  • increasing the number of housing units in order to close the current and projected housing deficit,
  • construction of facilities for education, hospitals, women and youth development, and sports, as well as,
  • investments in national vital registration system and construction and rehabilitation of facilities for all security institutions.

The minister stressed that the NIIMP estimated an annual allocation of N6.5 trillion for infrastructure development but that it became unrealistic in the face of contemporary economic realities, as the entire national budget for 2016 was just N6.06 trillion.  

Boko Haram: Amnesty International Accuses Cameroon Of Human Right Abuses

0
Boko Haram suspects
Boko Haram suspects

By Tajudeen Suleiman

Amnesty International, the global human rights body, has accused authorities in Cameroon of violating human rights and denying citizens justice in the fight against the Boko Haram insurgency.

This accusation is contained in its latest report on human rights and justice in Cameroon, which the organisation says has been forwarded to the government in Yaoundé.

The report alleges that the human rights violations are significant in scale and that hundreds have been arbitrarily arrested on suspicion of being Boko Haram and held without access to lawyers, with many of them dying in custody.

“In seeking to protect civilians from brutal attacks that Boko Haram militants have launched in the Far North region of the country, Cameroon’s authorities and security forces have committed human rights violations on a significant scale. They have arbitrarily arrested hundreds of individuals accused of supporting Boko Haram, often with little or no evidence, and detained them in inhumane, often life-threatening conditions,

“Many of the detainees have been held in unofficial detention centres, with no access to a lawyer or their families, and often subjected to torture. Some have died in custody as a result of torture; others have been subjected to enforced disappearance, and their fate remains unknown to date. In cases when authorities bring these detainees to trial, their rights are routinely denied, and the use of anti-terrorist legislation and military courts leaves them with virtually no procedural guarantees,

“More than 100 people, including women, have been sentenced to death since July 2015 in deeply unfair trials, often based on little evidence. The context for these violations a significant growth in brutal attacks on civilians by Boko Haram in the Far North region of Cameroon throughout 2015 and into early 2016. Amnesty International has extensively documented crimes under international law, including international humanitarian law, committed by the armed group throughout this period.

“In response, the Cameroonian authorities have deployed thousands of security forces aiming to prevent such attacks and, in December 2014, the government passed a new anti-terrorism law. Between July 2015 and July 2016 Boko Haram conducted at least 200 attacks, including 46 suicide bombings, in the Far North region of Cameroon, killing over 500 civilians. 67 members of the security forces have also been killed since 2014. In over half of these suicide attacks, Boko Haram used girls to carry and detonate the explosives.”

The report, released Thursday morning, says Boko Haram has deliberately targeted civilians through attacks on markets, mosques, churches, schools and bus stations.

Amnesty International says that the report is based on more than 200 interviews conducted in 2016 and that it has documented incidents in which more than 160 people have been arrested on accusations that they support Boko Haram, and collected detailed information on 82 individual cases.

The report also says that Amnesty International researchers have analysed satellite images of one village in which houses were burnt by security forces, observed trials at Maroua’s military court, and consulted court documents.

Top government officials in Cameroon, including the Minister of Justice, the Minister of External Relations and the Minister of Defence, as well as military judges and prosecutors, and prison authorities were interviewed.

According to human rights body, the main findings of the report were also sent in writing to the authorities on 7 May 2016, but no response was received.

It accused security forces of carrying out hundreds of arrests – there are currently more than 1,000 people accused of supporting Boko Haram in detention – usually without warrants or even explanations, and often using excessive force.

“In one example, members of the Rapid Intervention Battalion unlawfully killed at least seven unarmed civilians during an operation in the village of Bornori in November 2014, and arrested 15 men, before returning in the following weeks to burn houses.

“In another example from July 7 2015, soldiers from the regular army rounded up and assaulted approximately 70 people in Kouyapé, while in the same month a soldier shot a 19 year-old student from Koza in the leg when he could not provide a code for his telephone when stopped by an army patrol one evening.

“Security forces frequently appear to rely only on secret and unverifiable denunciations by informants or circumstantial information, such as the lack of an identity card or a recent trip to Nigeria, rather than a reasonable suspicion of the commission of a crime. For example in Kossa, in February 2015, 32 men were rounded up and arrested based on accusations that the village was providing food to Boko Haram,

“Amnesty International documented 29 cases where people were subjected to torture. For example, Radio France International (RFI) journalist Ahmed Abba was stripped and beaten while detained at the DGRE, with no access to a lawyer or his family for over three months. The Minister of Communications, Issa Bakary, publically claimed that Abba’s lack of access to a lawyer was “in conformity with the antiterrorist law“, and that “his lawyer will have access to him when his interrogation is finished.”

The report reminds the Cameroonian authorities of their obligation to take all lawful and necessary measures to protect civilians from abuses committed by Boko Haram and bring the perpetrators of these abuses to justice, but doing so “while respecting the human rights of those it seeks to protect.”

This, it states, “would be consistent with commitments made by President Paul Biya to ensure that efforts to combat Boko Haram be carried out in full respect of Cameroon’s international human rights obligations.”

The report calls on the Cameroonian authorities to, among other things, put in place procedures to ensure that people are only arrested on the basis of a reasonable suspicion of having committed a crime, and are allowed immediate access to a lawyer and to receive family visits once detained.

It also the government to end the practice of holding and interrogating people at unofficial detention sites and provide unhindered access to human rights organisations and the International Committee of the Red Cross to all detention site, as well as sites such as military bases alleged to be used for unofficial detentions.

In addition the human rights organisation advocates the establishment of a centralised register of all persons arrested and detained, accessible to family members, and identify the whereabouts of all detainees.

Nigerian Authorities Charged On Just Tax Regime

0
Participants at the lecture
Participants at the lecture

The Nigerian government has been urged to ensure an inclusive, simplified and automated tax regime in the country.

The appeal was made on Wednesday by speakers at the 8th Wole Soyinka Centre Media Lecture Series held in Lagos.

The lecture series is an annual event organized by the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism and this year’s edition – with the theme: Tax Education, National Development and The Seminal Role of the Media – drew participants from different sectors of the economy.

Lead speaker, the first female president of the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria, CITN, Adebimpe Balogun, said that the problem of taxation in Nigeria is with the administration of the system. She gave an example with the difficulty to get tax refund in the cases of tax credit in the country.

In his own remarks, the chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, FIRS, Babatunde Fowler, represented by the agency’s head of Communication and SERVICOM department, Wahab Gbadamosi, said that journalists should be better informed on tax issues and should take advantage of available data in order to educate their audience.

He said the FIRS is putting everything in place to ensure people pay their taxes effectively.

Edobong Akpabio, a discussant at the lecture and Vice President of the Nigerian Employers’ Consultative Association, NECA’s Network of Entrepreneurial Women, NNEW, stated that 97% of businesses in Nigeria are from Small and Medium Scale Enterprises, SMEs.

She said due to varying challenges, one of which is taxation, many SMEs in Nigeria die before their fifth birthday.

Akpabio stated further that another challenge with the payment of tax in the country was the lack of communication and proper customer service orientation exhibited by tax officials at agency outlets; adding that, “tax offices should be conducive for tax payers and free of miscreants”.

A tax Partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Emuesiri Agbeyi, said Nigeria’s tax system is one of the most difficult globally. She suggested that the tax system should be made simple and easy for comprehension.

She also emphasised the need to simplify the language used in tax laws to understandable English as most of the laws were written in the sixties.

A civil society representative, Abubakar Jimoh, who is the Communication, Information and Public Officer of the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre, CISLAC, added that tax authorities need to have effective response to tax payers if they intend to get more revenue.

The Publisher of The Cable Newspaper, Simon Kolawole, stated that the country had been distracted up until now by revenue from oil. According to him, the media’s role in taxation is to educate government and the society. He added that taxation is a tool of relationship, thus it is the prosperity of businesses that can build compliance.

The Executive Director, Systemspecs owners of Remita, Deremi Atanda, said the use of technology would help reduce the cost of tax collection, but she lamented the lack of e-payment law in Nigeria, adding that a bill to that effect has been neglected for many years in the National Assembly.

While opening the event, the chair of the board of the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism, Ropo Sekoni enjoined all participants to play their role in ensuring there is a successful tax regime in the country, saying that the media also has the duty of ensuring the discussion on tax is left on the front burner to ensure the needed effect in the society.

Motunrayo Alaka, the Centre’s coordinator, lauded all speakers and participants for being part of the vibrant conference. She expressed optimism that the discussion would continue, most especially amongst the general public who are the most hit by the challenges of taxation.

 

2016 Budget May Not Be Fully Implemented – SGF

0
SGF, Babachir Lawal
SGF, Babachir Lawal

The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, SGF, Babachir Lawal, has said that the federal government may not fully implement the 2016 budget due to a sharp drop in revenue by over 60%.

He stated this when he appeared before a joint senate committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions and that of Appropriation and Finance.

Lawal was summoned by the lawmakers to defend his comments in an interview that the 2016 constituency projects as captured in the budget would not be implemented.

He blamed the drop in revenue on the activities of militants in the Niger Delta region, saying that the oil benchmark of the federal government has been drastically affected as the country was only producing about 800,000 barrels of crude oil per day.

Lawal said, “The statement is correct. That is my statement (referring to the interview). We cannot guarantee the implementation of constituency projects in the 2016 budget. As a government, constituency projects are championed by members of the National Assembly. Like the legislature, members of the executive are politicians who canvassed for votes.

“Lawmakers are aware that oil barrels had dwindled to about 800,000 per day. This has led to the inability of government to finance the budget. It is the duty of government to prepare the minds of Nigerians ahead that there will be challenges in implementing the budget,” he said.

The SGF reminded the lawmakers that government based its principle on zero budgeting this year, and funds will be released to finance key projects in line with the implementation plans of the government.

He said the country was now earning about 50 percent or 60 percent of what was projected in the budget, adding that some ministries, department and agencies, MDAs, might find it impossible to implement projects appropriated in their budgets.

“We have to re-prioritize. I like us to understand that this is the background upon which I made that statement,” Lawal said.

Buhari Sends Troops To Zamfara

0

Buhari soldier

President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the deployment of 1,000 troops to tackle armed gangs that have reportedly taken over a forest in Zamfara State.

The President gave the directive when he visited Gusau, the Zamfara State capital, to flag off the 2016 Army Day Celebrations.

According to the Minister of Defence, Mansur Dan-Ali, about 1,000 troops would be deployed immediately, with more joining later to tackle the armed gangs who have been terrorizing villages in some local governments of the state.

Residents have been killed and others forced to flee their homes as a result of the violence and there are fears that fighters from Islamist militant group, Boko Haram, may have joined the gangs in Zamfara.

Nigerian troops are currently engaged in clearance operations against Boko Haram terrorists in the North east but other security challenges stare the country in the face, including the incessant cases of herdsmen/farmers clashes, cattle rustling, militancy in the Niger Delta as well as kidnappings.

It would be recalled that suspected herdsmen have killed hundreds of Nigerians in Benue, Enugu and Plateau states, and have continued to threaten lives of Nigerians in these areas.

President Buhari had ordered an investigation into the clashes between herdsmen and indigenes of communities in Benue and Enugu States, while also ordering security agencies to bring the carnage to an end.

 

Nigerian Army Injects New Life Into Counter-Insurgency Operations

0

Nigerian troops

By Samuel Malik

Despite successes recorded in the fight against insurgency in the North east, the Nigerian Army is leaving no stone unturned in its effort to rid the region of terrorists. The www.icirnigeria.org has learnt that five battalions involved in the fight against Boko Haram have been rotated, as the army seeks to inject fresh hands into the operation.

The rotated units include 192 Battalion, 103 Battalion, 72 Battalion, 311 Battalion, and Army Headquarters Task Force Battalion, AHQ TF Bn. This brings the total number of units changed from the North east so far to six.

Early this year, 243 Battalion, which had been in the operation since 2009 when the insurgency started, was replaced with 242 Battalion from Badagry in Lagos State. Also, in June this year, 113 Battalion was replaced by 145 Battalion from Ohafia in Abia State.

As part of efforts to quell the Boko Haram insurgency, the army concluded plans in January to replace troops who have spent more than two years in the operation.

“In order to rejuvenate and boost the morale of troops deployed for Operation Lafiya Dole, plans have been concluded to rotate troops that have spent upwards of two years in the theatre of operation in phases,” a document signed by YB Abubakar, a Major General, on behalf of the Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, a Lieutenant General, stated.

The document, dated January 20, 2016 and sighted by this website, added that due to the army’s desire to inject fresh troops into the operations, “all hands must be on deck to ensure a successful and hitch free exercise.” It also stated that the timetable for the rotation must be strictly followed.

Army spokesman, Sani Usman, a Colonel, explained that although rotation is important in troop deployment, it is equally vital that is it done strategically.

“Injecting fresh hands into the war is important and that is why it is not done abruptly, there is a gradual transiting. A lot of people will think it is slow but it is steady in the sense that it is just a matter of time before each and every unit is rotated. We have a tabulated timeline for the rotation, unless the security situation does not warrant it, and in that case it will be explained,” he said.

During his operational tour in June this year, the General Officer Commanding, GOC, 7 Division in Borno, Victor Ezugwu, a Brigadier General, had assured troops that the army was serious about the issue of rotation. He said four units would be rotated annually, one every quarter.

However, it seems the army is stepping up the exercise, with at least six units so far ushered out of the theatre in the last two quarters.

In more than ten locations Ezugwu visited, our reporter, who was given an exclusive access to troops, observed the strain of battle on the faces of soldiers. Most of them had given up hope of leaving the battlefield, with some spending more than four years in the frontlines.

Despite the excitement of seeing their commander, it was obvious they were desirous of going home to their loved ones. When some of the soldiers recounted their battle experiences to the reporter, it was not difficult to appreciate why rotation of troops is a morale booster for the army. They recounted incredible tales of what they had seen and gone through and it would not surprise anyone if some of them had lost their emotions or respect for human lives..

To shake off the strain of battle, some got married to locals, despite having families back home, and some took to drugs and alcohol.

Worst still, some lost control and took the lives of their colleagues and defenceless civilians and injured others. There were also others who deserted the army to be with their loved ones because they could no longer take the uncertainty surrounding their withdrawal from the operation.

“The fatigue of battle is beginning to reflect in the soldiers. So, they need to be relieved,” Emure T., a Captain and Operations Officer for 114 Task Force Battalion in Bita, a former Boko Haram stronghold, said.

“I am not too happy being away from my family. This is my four years here in this operation. We have to go to Pulka to get network and talk to our families,” Adedamola O., a Warrant Officer stationed at a strategic crossing point used by the insurgents to get to Pulka from Bama, said.

With Boko Haram largely decimated, it is obvious that the army is keen to prevent the loss of its troops to post-traumatic stress disorder. Thus, in addition to withdrawing them from the battlefield, the soldiers are made to go through a mandatory two weeks rehabilitation process at the Nigerian Army School of Infantry, Jaji in Kaduna State, before being allowed to reunite with their families.

“We keep them in Jaji for two weeks rehabilitation because of possible post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSD. You have been in the northeast and seen what these guys go through. Their psychological makeup is a bit antagonistic, so it is pertinent that we do not allow them to go to their respective units without providing counselling and psychological treatment,” Usman explained.

“The whole essence of the Jaji exercise is to recondition the troops so that they fit seamlessly back into the society,” he stated further.

Some of the soldiers who spoke to our reporter applaud the army’s decision to rehabilitate them.

“When you see some of us, you know they clearly need psychological treatment,” one the soldiers said from Jaji on condition of anonymity.

Rotation gives the troops a new lease of life, and many savour the “leave” from battle fronts. A soldier explained what it means to be out of the northeast: “I now believe we are in Nigeria because we are now among real people. There is no more ambush, sentry and sleepless nights due to red alerts. In fact, as I speak with you, we have all submitted our riffles. Almost three years in the bush, you can’t imagine how happy we are. We are 500 percent happy. There is celebration in my house back home and I can’t wait to get back to my family.”

It was gathered that some of the activities the soldiers will undergo during their rehabilitation include morning and evening sports, lectures and orientation.

“We hear they will teach us how to treat people differently from the way we treated Boko Haram members, and also how not to misbehave as we mingle with civilians,” one soldier said.

According to military sources, the troops deployed to the North east as replacement for those withdrawn were about 1,000 drawn from different units, many of them just returning from a United Nations Peacekeeping Mission in Liberia.

Despite their experience in UN peacekeeping, the army believes the Boko Haram insurgency presents a different challenge to whatever they faced outside the country. Thus, they had to undergo two weeks training at the Special Forces Training School in Buni Yadi, Yobe State. This, Usman said, was to get them to acclimatise to the peculiar nature of what they would be encountering back home.

“The essence of Buni Yadi is that it is within the theatre of operation, so the issue of realistic training comes into play because it is not enough to just train the soldiers in their respective units. They need to be trained in the environment where they will operate,” the army spokesperson pointed out.

While troops celebrate their departure from the North east, some of them spared some thoughts for their successors. According to them, the best thing for all soldiers is for the insurgency to end.

“We are praying for the insurgency to end so that every soldier will go back home. My brother, it has not been easy,” a soldier said. This is certainly the wish of Nigerians they are securing by risking their own lives.

Electricity Distributors Appeal Tariff Hike Reversal

0
Sunday Oduntan, Executive Director
Sunday Oduntan, Executive Director, ANED

The Association of Nigerian Electricity Distributors, ANED, which is the umbrella body of the 11 Electricity Distribution Companies, DISCOs, operating in Nigeria, has appealed the judgment of a Lagos Federal High Court which annulled the 45 percent increase in electricity tariff.

Sunday Oduntan, Executive Director of the association, said this on Thursday in a telephone interview with the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN.

A Federal High Court in Lagos had on July 13, annulled the increase in electricity tariff, which was announced by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, NERC.

Delivering judgment in the suit filed by human rights lawyer, Toluwani Adebiyi, Justice Mohammed Idris described NERC’s action as irrational, irregular and illegal, having been taken without regards to a court order to the contrary.

But Oduntan said the association had appealed against the ruling and would pursue the judgment to the Supreme Court if the need be.

“We have appealed against the ruling and asked for a stay of execution now. I can assure you that as a legal luminary, we will not stop until we get justice. If the Appeal Court judgment is not favourable, we will pursue the case to the Supreme Court which is the highest court in the land, so there is no cause for alarm,’’ he said.

The increase in electricity tariff was announced on December 15, 2015, and despite a court order and a National Assembly resolution against the policy, the hike became effective on February 1, 2016.

May Takes Over From Cameron As British PM

0
Theresa May greets Queen Elizabeth
Theresa May greets Queen Elizabeth

Theresa May has taken over from David Cameron as the new Prime Minister of the United Kingdom following the resignation of the latter in what has been quite an eventful few weeks in British politics.

May made her first speech as Prime Minister in front of 10 Downing Street, the official residence of the British PM.

The former PM, Cameron, who has been prime minister since 2010, announced he would resign after losing the EU referendum in June.

Cameron, while delivering his final speech, described the opportunity to serve as Prime Minister as “the greatest honour” of his life before leaving for Buckingham Palace where he officially tendered his resignation to the Queen.

Earlier Cameron was at the House of commons where he addressed parliamentarians and fielded questions from them for the final time.

Conservative lawmakers rose as one to applaud David Cameron at the end of his 182nd session with the parliament as prime minister.

Cameron told them that he intended to stay in public life and would be “willing them on”, saying “nothing is impossible”.

May, 59, becomes the oldest incoming prime minister since Jim Callaghan in 1976, and the country’s second female prime minister, following in the footsteps of Margaret Thatcher.