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Competition Opens For Innovative Health Reporting In Africa

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Journalists and editors from around the African continent can benefit from the second round of $1 million story challenge, a pan-African journalism competition on health reporting by African Media Initiative, AMI

 

The African Story Challenge, an AMI initiative encourages innovative, multi-media storytelling that aims to improve the health and prosperity of Africans.

 

The competition opens for entries and the theme is Diseases: Prevention and Treatment.

 

Twenty projects shortlisted for the final prize will be awarded grants of up to $20,000 each to produce health narratives that use innovative journalistic storytelling techniques around the theme of diseases prevention and treatment in Africa.

 

Grantees who produce the best stories published or broadcast in media that reach African audiences will get a major international reporting trip and additional grant. The winning journalist will also have the opportunity to work with other journalists in a renowned international media establishment anywhere in the world.

 

Winners of the first round of the grant programme, which opened in May 2013 and focused on agriculture and food security, will be announced later this month. Other themes to be launched next year include business and technology.

 

Shortlisted stories will focus specifically on issues such as sanitation and water-borne diseases, infectious and non-infectious diseases, neglected diseases, vaccines and immunisation.

 

Submissions should include investigative, data-driven stories that employ multi-platform approaches and engage the public through social media and other digital tools.

The African Story Challenge advisory council comprising senior journalists and editors will oversee the short listing process.

 

The finalists will be brought together for intensive sessions to improve their project ideas.

 

Participants can apply in partnerships but if they win, the prize is to be divided between the team. There can only be one entry per individual or team.

 

An independent international panel of editors and media experts will judge the entries.

 

AMI Chief Executive Amadou Mahtar Ba said that it supports innovation in the telling of more and better stories on health and development in Africa and committed to support the media to expand coverage of fundamental issues that matter to Africans and the building of a strong media sector.
A former BBC Africa Editor, AMI content development director and former Knight International Journalism Fellow, Joseph Warungu, also said that the project will preempt journalists from daily routine job.

 

“Without good health there is no wealth. This competition is aimed at encouraging journalists and media organisations to break away from the routine issues on the daily agenda and pitch to us bold and creative ideas on health,” said Warungu.

The story challenge  is a  two-year pan-African project that seeks to challenge the media to expand coverage of fundamental issues that matter to Africans focusing on building a strong media sector able to deliver content that matters to the African public.

 

The project is supported by an $800,000 grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Other supporters include African Development Bank, the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, AGRA, and the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation, NORAD.

 

Click here for information on key dates on submission and deadline.

Blame CP For Any Harm On Governor Amaechi – Rivers Gov’t.

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The Rivers State government Thursday accused the commissioner of police, Joseph Mbu, of taking actions detrimental to the safety of governor Rotimi Amaechi, adding that it would hold him responsible for any harm to the state’s chief executive.

 

The commissioner Of information and communications, Ibim Semenitari, said in a statement thatMbu has been prying into the activities of the governor to get prior Information on his movement for reasons that are unclear.

 

“This sudden interest of CP Mbu regarding the daily movement of Governor Amaechi cannot be borne out of love. We suspect that the request for daily prior briefing on the Governor’s movement may be to furnish strange persons with necessary details of his movement and, thereby placing him in harms’ way,” the statement said.

 

It noted Mbu has not hidden the fact that he holds Amaechi in disdain and would stop at nothing to either harm him or aid those planning to do so.

 

Semenitari said the fact that the CP waited for the governor to travel out of Port Harcourt before inviting the policemen attached to the government house for questioning is curious and indicative of his ulterior motives.

 

“If his intentions were noble and above board, CP Mbu has Governor Amaechi’s telephone number and could have reached him directly to make the request of prior briefing of his movements,” the statement noted.

 

It said alternatively, the CP could have written officially to the secretary to state government to make the same request.

 

Semenitari alleged that Mbu redeployed the escort commander in charge of the convoy of the governor citing his refusal to furnish him with prior information on the movement of the governor.

 

Afterwards, Mbu directed the camp commandant of Government House, Port Harcourt, to give him prior briefing on the governor’s daily movement, the commissioner stated.

 

In addition, she noted, the Rivers State Police Command on Tuesday declared  Amaechi’s ADC, who is said to be receiving medical attention, a deserter.

 

The statement said the government of Rivers State is most uncomfortable with these developments and their implications for the security of governor Amaechi.

 

It noted that this would be the first time since Amaechi assumed office in 2007, that a police commissioner would be requesting prior information of his movement.

 

The state government spokeswoman recalled that in May this year, the CP allowed ex-Militants to barricade the gate into the Government House after parading major streets of Port Harcourt and has at several other times compromised the governor’s security and safety.

 

“He even personally led an attack on Government House, Port Harcourt on July 10, 2013” she said, added that “As Commissioner of Police, CP Mbu, refuses to brief the Governor, who is the Chief Security Officer of the state on the state of security in Rivers State.”

 

Semenitari said nothing has been done despite a formal report by the Governor to the Police High Command concerning his worries about the CP.

 

“We therefore wish to alert Nigerians and the rest of the world that CP Mbu should be held responsible should anything evil happen to the Governor of Rivers State Rt. Hon. Chibuike Amaechi, any principal officer or top government functionary in Rivers State. We believe that his current actions are sufficient warning to us,” the statement said.

Obama, Putin Fail To Agree Over Syria

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U.S. President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, held “candid” talks Friday on Syria on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in Russia.

However, the two leaders remained far apart in views about Syria after a 20-minute one-on-one talk following a tense group discussion on the civil war over dinner late on Thursday.

Both Obama and Putin hold opposing views on whether military action should be taken against the Syrian government over its alleged use of chemical weapons on its own people.

While the US believes that troops loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad carried out a poisonous gas attack which killed over 1,400 people in rebel-held suburbs of Damascus on August 21, Putin has maintained the attack was most likely carried out by the rebels in order to provoke outside military intervention against Assad.

“We hear one another, and understand the arguments but we don’t agree. I don’t agree with his arguments, he doesn’t agree with mine. But we hear them, try to analyze them,” the Russian President said after the meeting.

Obama too acknowledged that Putin was unlikely to shift his position on military action against Syria, but they could both agree to work toward a political resolution to the crisis.

The US President is seeking to rally domestic and international support for military strikes on Syria, while Putin,  a determined ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad,  has challenged the assertion that regime forces were behind the attacks.

The dispute over Syria has deepened strains in U.S.-Russian ties because of differences over human rights and Moscow’s hosting of Edward Snowden, a spy agency contractor who revealed details of U.S. surveillance programs.

Putin said Obama had not requested Snowden’s extradition on Friday, adding that it would be impossible anyway.

Tukur Asks Court To Imprison Baraje, Oyinlola, Jaja

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The national chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Bamanga Tukur, has filed a suit before a Federal High Court in Abuja, against officials of the splinter group of the ruling party includingKawu Baraje,  Olagunsoye Oyinlola  and Sam Sam Jaja.

This move contradicts earlier claims by Tukur that the party would resolve its family crisis through internal laid down mechanisms, saying that “There will always be internal wrangling. But there will always be solutions through our established internally-built crisis resolution mechanism”.

In the suit with registration no: FHC/ABJ/504/2013 filed on his behalf by his counsels Adebayo Dayoand Semiu Sodipo, the party chairman said the defendants had shown flagrant disrespect to the court for going against an order that sacked Oyinlola as the national secretary of the party and prescribed a procedure for his replacement.

He said that the suit became imperative because Oyinlola had failed to abide by the procedure the court laid down by which he could reclaim his seat as the national secretary of the party.

Oyinlola was named national secretary of the factional group that emerged last Saturday. Barajewas elected chairman while Jaja emerged as the deputy national chairman.

Tukur has also urged the court to commit the defendants to prison for at least a year and is seeking an order nullifying the appointment of Oyinlola, just as he asked the court to grant “further orders as it may deem fit to make in this circumstances.”

Addressing a press conference on Wednesday, the chairman declared the other faction led byBaraje as an impostor and has threatened that any lawmaker who aligns with them would lose their seat.

“There is only one lawfully recognised PDP and I am firmly in charge. Let me state categorically that the PDP as the sole custodian of the sacred mandate of over 160 million Nigerians and who in the last 14 years has lifted high the banner of democracy will not fold its arms while some undemocratic and unpatriotic elements destroy our common destiny by causing divisions and confusion among the people,” he said.

In addition, Tukur said: “All persons elected on the platform of our great party at all levels who identify with these enemies of the oneness and greatness of our party shall have their seats declared vacant as required by law.”

He assured that no stone will be left unturned in ensuring that any individual who attempts to subvert the leadership of the PDP “shall reap in full, the consequences of such actions”, adding that the party has adequate mechanism for internal conflict resolution and encouraged all aggrieved members to channel their complaints through the appropriate medium.


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About 22 senators and 57 members of House of Representatives have allegedly joined the Baraje-led faction led which was formed last Saturday during the party’s special convention.

Meanwhile, Baraje has called Tukur’s threats mere bluffs that further show he is unfit to lead the party.

“To wake up and threaten that he is going to recall members supporting us, shows that he is not fit to be national chairman of PDP. They are all jokers. In any case, the process of declaring seats vacant or recalling members of National or State Assembly is well known in the constitution,” he said.

Kenya Seeks To Leave International Criminal Court

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Ahead of the trial of President Uhuru Kenyatta and Vice-president William Ruto for crimes against humanity, the Kenyan parliament is debating pulling out of the International Criminal Court, ICC

 

The court will next Tuesday start Ruto’s trial while it will November 12 open the trial of the President Kenyatta , who faces five charges of crimes against humanity, including murder, rape, persecution, deportation and other inhumane acts perpetrated during the post-election unrest.

 

If the plan eventually pulls through, Kenya would be the first to revoke its membership from the ICC.

 

Citing the fact that the United States is not a member, the majority leader of Kenya’s National Assembly, Adan Duale, Thursday argued that Kenya should withdraw from the statute that created the ICC.

 

Duale told a special session of parliament that U.S. Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush both argued against the United States becoming a party to the Rome Statute, which regulates prosecutions for war crimes and crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court.

 

He said Clinton and Bush refused to join the ICC in order to protect U.S. citizens and soldiers from potential politically-motivated prosecutions.

 

“Let us protect our citizens. Let us defend the sovereignty of the nation of Kenya,” Duale said in arguing for a vote to withdraw.

 

Another legislator, Asman Kamama in support of the withdrawal said: “Any law in this country or internationally like the Rome Statute can be repealed and can be amended. It is not cast in stone and we want to be the trail-blazers in the continent.”

 

However, there are indications that the withdrawal of Kenya from the ICC will not in any way affect the upcoming trials as the legal proceedings have already commenced against Kenyata and Ruto.

 

“Withdrawing from the Rome Statute has no impact on cases already open, it does not affect investigations, proceedings or trials which have already started,” ICC spokesman Fadi al-Abdallahhas said.

 

Vice President Ruto is expected to face trial next Tuesday for allegedly organising the 2007-2008 post-election unrest that killed at least 1,100 people and displaced more than 600,000, about two months ahead of Kenyatta’s.

 

The Hague-based court was set up in 2002 to try the world’s worst crimes, and countries voluntarily signed up to join.

 

Legislators will debate a motion on whether to pull out from the ICC, but any actual withdrawal requires the submission of a formal request to the UN, a process that would take at least a year.

Landslide Buries Nine In Calabar

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No fewer than nine persons were buried alive while many others sustained injuries in a landslide at Edim Otop community in the Calabar, Cross River Srate, on Wednesday.
David Akate,  director of  information, Cross River State Emergency Management Agency, made this known to the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN, in Calabar on Thursday.
NAN reports that the landslide occurred after heavy rains which lasted for more than five hours.
Akate, however, said having warned residents of flood-prone communities of impending flooding, state government expected them to vacate such areas.
“We have been talking to members of that community for several years now to vacate from there. We have been telling them that the place is not only a ravine but a flood-prone area, but they refused to take our advice,” he said.
Akate said the government had taken responsibility for the treatment of the survivors, whom he said, were responding to treatment, while the corpses of the deceased have been deposited at the state General Hospital mortuary.
An eyewitness, Eno Akpan, said he and others were discussing the down pour when “suddenly we saw trees rolling down from the top of the hill”.
“Within a twinkle of an eye, it collapsed on the building and buried the entire occupants,” she explained.
Akpan added: “At that time there was nothing we could do because everybody started running away in confusion, and we were hearing cries and shouts of some of children from within the house. But by the time help could come, the family was gone and only three were rescued.”

Police Compensates Families Of Slain Officers

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The Nigeria Police Force has compensated the families of 91 officers who lost their lives to terrorist activities of the banned Boko Haram sect in Kano State.

 

Presenting the cheques totaling N35.7 million to the beneficiaries on Thursday, assistant inspector general of police in-charge of Zone One, David Omojola, urged them not to see the sum as a way of paying for the loss as no amount of money could bring back their dead, but as a way of assisting them.

 

He said further that the money which is an insurance coverage for the officers and men was meant to alleviate the sufferings of the families of the deceased and those who sustained injuries at various times in the course of their duties.

 

Omojola also advised them to invest the sum wisely.

 

He announced that the recipients were the third batch of victims’ families being assisted by the command.

Boko Haram Continues Attacks, Kills 20 In 48 Hours

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Boko Hara terrorist attacks have continued to resurge in Borno State, with the latest claiming the lives of 20 persons in two separate incidents in the last two days.
In a daring attack reminiscent of a time when the sect put fear in the minds of even security men, the insurgents on Wednesday attacked the police station, the local government secretariat as well as the market at Gajiram in Nganzi local government area
Heavily armed Boko Haram members stormed the town around 10.00 am and laid siege to it for over four hours, eye witnesses said, killing 15 persons and injuring many others.
Many residents are said to have fled the town, many running into the bush and refusing to return since the attack.

In another operation on Thursday morning, the insurgents attacked Ngaura, in Konduga local government area, killing five persons.

The Borno State governor, Kashim Shettima, who was away in Abuja, the federal capital when the incidents occurred, is said to have dispatched the attorney general and commissioner for justice, Kaka Shehu Lawan to Gajiram and Ngaura to commiserate with the people.

The spokesman of the military Joint Task Force, JTF, Sagir Musa, said he did not have any information on the attack yet at the time of filing this report.
The Boko Haram and Ansaru sects were outlawed on June 4 by President Goodluck Jonathan who also declared a state of emergency in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states.
A major clampdown by the military to dislodge the insurgents from their camps and hideouts had been touted as a huge success, with many of the sect members reportedly killed or fleeing into neighboring countries.
However, leader of the Boko Haram sect, in a recently released video, refuted claims that members of the sect had been defeated, saying that the Nigerian government did not have the capacity to deal with it.
“You soldiers have claimed that you are powerful, that we have been defeated, that we are mad people; but how can a mad man successfully coordinate recent attacks in Gamboru, inMalumfatori, slaughter people in Biu, and kill in Gwoza and in Bama where soldiers fled under our heavy fire power. We have killed countless soldiers and we are going to kill more. Our strength and firepower has surpassed that of Nigeria. Nigeria is no longer a big deal as far as we are concerned. We can now comfortably confront the United States of America,” Shekauboasted.
Claiming responsibility for  recent attacks in different Borno and Yobe communities includingMalumfatori, Bama, Biu, Konduga, Gamboru Ngala, Gwoza, and Damaturu, the Boko Haramleader threatened that the sect will carry out even more deadly attack, as is now being done inBorno State.

Bayelsa Oil Belongs to Jigawa

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[youtube width=”420″ height=”236″ video_id=”9c6GGPu286U”]

Only 1% Take 90% Of Our Revenue – Nasarawa Gov

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Compared to other states created along with it, Nasarawa still remains largely undeveloped. Why?

It is a great pity that since the state was created the people that handled the affairs lost sight of the kind of vision citizens of the state had in the agitation for it to be created. That loss of vision has denied us the benefit of achievements that ought to have been realised by now. Nasarawa state has a peculiarity that distinguishes it even from its peers which were created at the same time.

Of all the five states created along with it, Nasarawa was the most rural in the sense that it did not benefit from any effect of urbanisation. Gombe, Zamfara, Ekiti and others had things going for them. They had the basic infrastructure that is the basis of any kind of development.

So, my predecessors were busy making glittering projects that do not add value to the quality of lives of the people. Social services are very necessary but basic infrastructure is what makes those social services effective or functional. The reason why the state has stagnated is because there was no basic foundation from which it could spring. This springboard are the three basic infrastructures which I think if my predecessors had invested in, we would not be at the level we are now.

These foundations are roads, power and water.. Before I came in there was no single kilometre of asphalt road that was constructed by the state government.

Since the state was created, any asphalt road you find in the state was constructed by the federal government. And there is just this major trunk A road which is a federal road.

That is saying a lot. Are you saying that previous administrations never constructed roads in the state? That is unbelievable.

Not a single kilometre of road. I am saying that on my honour. If there is, let anybody challenge me. Any asphalt road you see is constructed by the federal government or certain interventions by development partners.

I am the one who started building roads and in Lafia alone we have constructed at least 25 kilometres of roads to unbundle the gridlock in the capital.

The second important infrastructure is power. The state requires about 40 megawatts to power its economic and social activities. But before I came in we had less than 12 megawatts. We were virtually being illuminated by the national grid but what got to the people was not more than candle night.

In my first 100 days in office, we embarked on the “Power In 100 Days Initiative” and we bought more than 100 transformers. We have installed them in many places. At this point in time we have been able to increase power supply to about 20 megawatts and we are still continuing, especially with our collaborations with NIPP and PHCN.

We are even planning for a more robust power infrastructure by constructing a 30 MVA substation which will carry new lines to come from Enugu and pass through Jos. If we are able to get that substation, then we will be able to meet our required needs in terms of power.

As for water, the state is not too dry so people manage with boreholes, wells and streams. But as a responsibleadministration, we feel our people should have the benefit of modern facilities to improve on the quality of life they enjoy. We looked at urban areas with a high population density where water supply has become an emergency. These are places like Keffi, Nasarawa, Nasarawa Eggon.

In Nasarawa Eggon, since 1985 there was a plan to build a waterworks in the town. Two years later the waterworks was built. But to do the connection and make it work … that has never happened until just two months ago. When I came in, I committed myself to making the water works to function and, as we speak, it is supplying pipe borne water to the people of the town.

The same goes for Nasarawa town where contracts have already been awarded. Of all the local government headquarters in the state, Nasarawa town has the most critical need for water. There is a N2 billion water contract which was not financed but I took it up and it is now on the verge of completion.

But in order to meet immediate needs, as a stopgap, we had to reactivate the small, old analogue waterworks in the town which is now supplying the people with water while the main waterworks is being constructed.

By the end of the year the new waterworks should be completed to provide water to the entire metropolis of Nasarawa.

Nasarawa earns very paltry sums from the federation accounts. Could that not also have accounted for the low level of development and what are you doing in terms of growing internally generated revenue?

Yes. It is true that paucity of funds has affected our development because Nasarawa and Ekiti states jostle for the last position in revenue allocated from the federation account. So that might be one reason for the slow pace of development.

How much does the state get from federal purse?

It is about N2.7billion every month on the average. Regarding internally generated revenue, so much had been said about the state’s inability to access revenue especially with our closeness to the federal capital. But it does not work like magic like that. You have to have the platform by which you can access the revenue.

Yes it is true that because of our proximity to the FCT, we are sitting on a gold mine but we cannot tap it because we do not have the needed equipment. Two things are very important here. First, our land value is close to the FCT’s and we can earn a lot from land administration and fees.

Second, the number of people working in the FCT and are residing in Nasarawa is another hefty source of internally generated revenue. But we do not benefit because we do not have the platform.

When I came into office, I got my people to sit down so that we could see what needed to be done to earn us revenue from that advantage we have. We realised that we could not get the real value for land without changing the system of land administration so we embarked on a complete overhaul of the system to a computerised, digital one.

That is why we set up the Nasarawa State Geographical Information System, NAGIS. Any state that wants to get maximum revenue from land cannot but computerise its system so that it is automatic.

It took N2.7 billion to set up NAGIS. Every land within the urban centres of the state is computerised. It is just like what you have in Abuja. In fact the surveyor general of the federation recently commended Nasarawa for having the most sophisticated land system in the whole of the country.

Better than the one in Abuja?

More than even AGIS in Abuja. And so we are getting better revenue from land administration now. Before, we were getting only about N5 million per month in the axis close to Abuja but even though our NAGIS is only 80 % complete; revenue from there has improved to between N60 million and N70 million per month. Before the end of the year we are sure that axis should be able to bring us something quite substantial.

The other way we lose substantial revenue is PAYE tax that should accrue to us from people working in the FCT but living in Nasarawa. About 30% to 40% of the people who work in Abuja live in Nasarawa but their PAYE never gets remitted to us.

So what have you done to redress the situation?

When I came into office I did not only insist that the PAYE of those working in Abuja but living in Nasarawa must be paid to us, I went beyond that. The people working in the FCT and living here are so many and causing so much dislocation and stress on our social services and facilities and we do not get any money in terms of tax to help sustain these utilities.

So I have even insisted that the 1% paid to the FCT from the federation account to help contain the stress of influx of people to the federal capital, we should also partake in the sharing of that allocation because a substantial percentage of those flooding into or working in the FCT live in Nasarawa and Niger states

How much really is your internally generated revenue? And Nasarawa is blessed with mineral resources and a fertile land. Why is government not investing in these two key areas to improve on IGR?

Nasarawa state is one of the most fertile states in the country. We have the same soil and topography with Benue State which is called the food basket of the nation. But, to get the maximum benefit from agriculture you have to open yourself to investors. The traditional farming can only sustain food security. In terms of making it a real business you need to commercialise agriculture which entails attracting investors who have the money and know how.

When we came we had only one or two foreign investors. But we have been able to attract foreign investment into that field. We have a Singaporean company that is now cultivating one of the largest rice farms not only in Nigeria but in Africa.

We have given them 4,000 hectares and they have already cultivated 1,000 hectares. And if the farm gets to full capacity Nasarawa will become one the biggest rice producers in the country and beyond. We intend to get more investors interested in commercial agriculture and we are giving incentives such as tax holidays and so on.

In the area of mineral resources, it is a sector that is misunderstood because it is in the exclusive legislative list. So there is very little we can do in terms of developing the mineral resources here except if we want to go commercial. However, our experience shows that the state as an institution is not the best to handle commercial ventures because of bureaucracy bottlenecks that go with government work. We are walking away from involvement in commercial activities that will not work.

However, we have a mineral development company in the state and its job is to scout around for entrepreneurs and investors that might want to come and do business in Nasarawa. If we do not directly collaborate with them we can give them sites and provide the enabling environment to so that they can bring employment to our youths.

Bloated workforce is a major constraint of the resources of many states. Nasarawa too appears to have a problem with the civil service gulping most of the revenue from the federation account.

I would say it is a paradox. We want to be part of the international community by keying into the rave of the world which is democracy. But our democracy comes at a huge cost if you look at the arms of government and the amount they get viz what goes to the populace. And you may wonder if the democracy is worth it. Take my state for instance, where 1% takes more than 90% of the revenue accruing to the state.

How do you mean?

If you look at the salaries, emoluments and allowances of officials of the executive, legislature, judiciary, civil service and so on and put the cost together and compare it with what is left for development you will discover that it is 5 % or less. And all the people benefitting from this are less than 1% of the population.

Of the N2.7 billion monthly allocations we get, our wage bill first charge is about N2.4 billion. So we have only N300 million to spend on everything else, including building infrastructure and taking care of security challenges. In fact, at the end I have only about N100 million left for capital projects if not for internally generated revenue that has improved.

When I came there were even months when I had less than N100 million for capital projects. I realised that I was just a paymaster. Once the end of the month comes, all we do is give out monies because these are statutory payment. How can we then develop? And I cannot overnight change statutory allocations to any arm of government.

Our case was even worse before. More than a year before I came into office, the state could not pay salaries unless it took loan of about N850 million to augment the federal allocation. When I came I said this must stop and refused to take the N850 million facility.

Not only that, two months into my coming into office, we were faced with the issue of paying the minimum wage of N18,000 which doubled our overhead. So, the first thing I did was to set up an audit and biometric analysis of the workforce. When we did that we discovered a bloated workforce with ghost workers and leakages which we blocked. We identified moribund agencies and departments that had continued to draw salaries from the allocation.

In my first year in office, I commissioned four audits – the civil service, the local government, pension and the State Universal Basic Education board, NUBEB.

So you are not looking at taking loans to pursue development programmes?

We have already gotten our fingers burnt before. When I came in we discovered that the state was indebted to the tune of about N29 billion or N30 billion. But before the end of my first year in office some hidden debts started coming up and by the end of 2011 we saw that we were indebted to about N35 billion to N40 billion. That has become a deterrent for me to borrow.

So we have been saddled with the responsibility of paying off this debt instead of meeting our promises to the people. As I speak to you now, we have paid off about N30 billion of our debt.

As we have fulfilled those obligations, it is now time to look at what enduring legacies we can give our people which we do not have the money to execute. So we are now looking at the option of seeking loans and bonds. But I insist that the loans will be strictly used for the purpose for which they were taken not form political activities.

We are looking at taking loans amounting to about N30 billion. We have identified projects of critical needs and are looking for finance. We are likely to access the financing any moment from now.

You said N30 billion?

Yes. N20 billion in bonds and N10 billion in loans.

What are they for?

We intend to build a network of roads across the state. We intend to improve on water supply projects in all the largely populated towns in the state and we are also considering expanding our source of power by providing hydroelectricity in two of our rivers that are potential sources of power.

We also want to build a state secretariat that will house all ministries. We are also thinking of driving the process of effective youth empowerment through equipping technology and skills acquisition centres.

That informed our trip to Singapore to study their system at the Institute of Technical Education. We intend to replicate the system here so that all our youths who cannot have the benefit of universities can have access to technical vocational skills.

Also as part of plans to keep the youth engaged, we want to encourage those who have the potential to excel In sports … sports is going to take a chunk of the loan we are taking because we plan to build two stadia.

In a recent report, the PDP in Nasarawa challenged you to name the people you paid the monies to.

You must understand why the PDP would react like that because for 12 years they swept all the sensitive issues under the carpet. It is not a secret that we owe so much. They borrowed from the banks – and I don’t want to mention their names – and it is the banks that we paid to. There is nothing to show for all the loans they took.

Let me tell you what happened to the loans they took. Some of the loans they took, say N2 billion or N3 billion for a job to be completed in a year or two. And in the first three months more than half of the contract sum will be taken because they were reviewing contracts just like that. There was one contract that was reviewed three times within one month – a contract of N2 billion was reviewed and the sum went up to more than N4 billion.

There was this loan they took for farmers in the name of Badukos. They took loans and bought tractors and gave them to political supporters with conditions for payment fraudulently handled so that the farmers knew they were not going to repay. Now, the supplier’s business has collapsed because it was a project that was made the supply made to fail.

When we came we tried to recoup the debt from the farmers but it was not possible because the framework for repayment was not properly articulated. These were the kinds of indebtedness that previous administrations incurred that did not benefit anybody. All they did was to be giving their political touts N5,000 to placate them not to create problem. But these boys later became a problem because they insisted the money must be given to them.

Nasarawa state has a peculiar political configuration with the PDP having majority in the House and the CPC controlling the executive. It has been alleged that you have sustained your relationship with legislators by giving them bumper salaries and allowances

First, let me clarify one thing. It is true that the PDP has 19 members in the House while the CPC has five. But at the national level, of the eight members of the National Assembly, the CPC has five while PDP has three. So Nasarawa State is no longer a PDP state like before.

As to the salary of legislators, first, everything that I am implementing is what I inherited. Whatever package they receive is what I inherited so the question should be thrown to them. I am a person who obeys the rule of law and every commitment that I have inherited. What members of the state House of Assembly earn now is what they have always earned and I cannot come and simply because I am CPC change things.

It is also alleged that members of the House put a lot of pressure on appointees of government in exercising their oversight functions, making demands that impinge on the performance of agencies of the state. How do you react to that?

The issue of oversight function is constitutional although the way and manner it is exercised may vary. But it is the constitutional right of the members to use their oversight functions as a check and balance to the operations of the executive.

The issue of complaints here and there is natural but it is not something I can talk about. If you heard of complaints from any agency about the exercise of functions of members of the House you can find out from those agencies and the members.


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I know that even at the federal level, there is always friction on the issue of oversight functions not necessarily because of the statutory role but because of the manner such oversight functions are carried out.

Still on legislators, it is also said that one of the ways you appease them in order to maintain a cordial relationship is by giving them directly N10 million every quarter for constituency projects. In a poor state like Nasarawa?

I do not want to talk about details. I do not think it is me that should provide details. Like I said, I came and found conventions on ground. Some are statutory, some are as a result of the Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Commission allocation, some by resolution of the House which had been in operation before I came all of which I inherited. It is not for me to question any of them.

You will do me well… the members are there you can go and ask them. On our own part, we have been doing our own responsibility which we inherited. Having come from different political parties, I do not want to heat up the polity or inflame issues that will bring friction between the executive and the legislature. We have had frictions many times on matters of principle but we manage our differences in the interest of the people.