Archive for nigeriang

Downstream industry operators to get content guidelines

Downstream industry operators to get content guidelines

The Nigerian
Content Development & Monitoring Board (NCDMB) is to issue
guidelines for operators in the nation’s downstream petroleum industry.
The guidelines are meant to regulate their compliance with the
provisions of the Nigerian Content Act, Ernest Nwapa, Executive
Secretary of the Board, said at the weekend.

Speaking during a
meeting with chief executives of downstream companies, Mr Nwapa, said
the provisions of the Nigerian Oil and Gas Content Development Act also
cover activities in the downstream sector, contrary to the belief by
some stakeholders that it is intended to regulate upstream operations
alone.

According to him,
the essence of the meeting with the operators was to get their views
and take them into account in the formulation of the Nigerian Content
Regulations for that sector of the nation’s petroleum industry, which
the Board is to release shortly.

Emphasising the
need to fully comply, Mr Nwapa said: “These regulations would have
obvious implications and could be disruptive to business operations in
downstream sector if key stakeholders do not key in to the
requirements.”

He also said the
successful implementation of the Nigerian Content Act requires strict
compliance by indigenous operators as its primary focus goes beyond the
international operating companies (IOCs) and their service counterparts.

Mr Nwapa explained
that the Nigerian Content Development & Monitoring Board expected
the operators in the downstream sector to prove that they have the
capacity to engage Nigerian service providers in the acquisition and
maintenance of their assets, comply with the Cabotage Act in their use
of marine vessels as well as meet the training and employment
aspirations enshrined in the Act.

He explained that
it was wrong to believe that existing indigenous operators in the oil
and gas industry are already in compliance with the Nigerian Content
Act on the basis of their ownership of businesses and employment of
Nigerians.

Multiplicity of players

Mr Nwapa also
directed downstream companies to ensure that genuine Nigerian owned
marine vessels that meet technical requirements are fully utilised in
their operations, particularly in the lightering of products before
foreign owned vessels are engaged to satisfy the “first consideration”
requirements of the law.

“The Nigerian
Content Act seeks, among other things, to increase the participation of
indigenous companies in the Nigerian oil and gas industry and promote
the ownership of marine vessels and equipment by Nigerians,” he said.

Other opportunities
for the maximisation of Nigerian Content in the downstream include the
fabrication and maintenance of tank farms in Nigerian fabrication yards
and the manufacture and maintenance of retail pumps and other
accessories in-country, he said.

To ensure that the
multiplicity of players in the downstream does not make regulation
difficult, Mr Nwapa said the Board will develop a unique framework
adapted to the downstream industry and create a Nigerian Content
template which will help operators achieve compliance.

Representative of
Honeywell Oil & Gas, Ekpeyong Etim, admitted that there are cases
where downstream companies use foreign flagged vessels in the
lightering of imported refined products.

He blamed the practice on the failure of most Nigerian owned vessels
to comply with standard conditions required for vessels that will work
in the oil industry, like having insurance cover and requisite
certification.

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Obasanjo recalls prison experience during dedication

Obasanjo recalls prison experience during dedication

Former president,
Olusegun Obasanjo, yesterday said he knew the late military ruler, Sani
Abacha, would not live to witness his release from prison, just as he
added that he was optimistic that he would regain his freedom.

Mr. Obasanjo spoke
at the dedication service of Chapel of Christ The Glorious King,
Abeokuta, which he built to thank God for sparing his life. He recalled
that the bitter experiences as a prisoner turned him to a preacher in
the four walls of prison.

Mr. Obasanjo and
some other retired military officers and civilians were jailed in 1995
by the military government of Sani Abacha, after he was found guilty by
a military tribunal of plotting to overthrow Mr. Abacha’s
administration, and were released after Mr. Abacha’s death in 1998.

“Before I left
prison, I said if I get out of prison, I would divide my time into
four. I would buy a Landrover and trailer and use it for evangelism,”
he said.

Unwilling candidate

The former
president, who is the chief promoter of the church, said that was part
of how he thought he would live the rest of his life outside the
prisons. He, however, said this did not work out as, when he came out
of jail, pressure mounted on him to join the race to be president of
Nigeria.

“Initially, those
calling me to contest I cursed. Primate Sunday Mbang also joined me to
curse them, but, as time went on, I left the matter in the hand of God,
and God eventually had His way.”

Mr. Obasanjo, who
spent three years behind bars, recalled that while in Yola prison, he
became an unordained pastor and converted many, including a convicted
armed robber whose name was Baba Alli.

He said he assured
Mr. Alli, then the leader of an armed robbery gang called Arewa Boys,
that he would send him to Bible College, which he did after regaining
freedom. He said as at today, the ex-convict robber is now an ordained
pastor in Abuja.

Dignitaries at the dedication ceremony included Ayo Oritsejafor;
Sunday Mbang; Ola Makinde; Samson Ayorinde; Tunji Olurin; Adebayo
Alao-Akala; Segun Agagu; Ojo Madueke; Christopher Kolade; Ayoka
Adebayo, among others.

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Jonathan, Ribadu, and Buhari rank high

Jonathan, Ribadu, and Buhari rank high

Five months to the
next general elections, incumbent president, Goodluck Jonathan; former
anti-graft boss, Nuhu Ribadu; and former head of state, Mohammed Buhari
are ranked by Nigerians ahead of other contenders for the presidential
contest, NOI Polls, a non-partisan and non-political polling
organisation, has revealed.

The organisation,
which released the result of its October snap polls, said it used a
representative sampling of phone-owning Nigerians and surveyed the
preferences of some aspirants who have declared their intention for the
presidential race.

The results
revealed that 99% of the people polled said they were aware of Mr.
Jonathan’s intention to contest the presidential elections.

Of this, 87% of
respondents said they feel he should run for office, citing his right
as a Nigerian, experience, innovativeness, and his representation of a
new generation of leaders as their reasons. Some 22% of the respondents
said he should not run, citing a desire for a new generation of leaders
and a respect for the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) zoning formula as
their reasons.

Some expressed a
“general dislike,” while others cited the “recent mishaps in the
country” and the difficulty of the electoral agency to conduct a free
and fair election under a incumbent president as a contestant.

About 86% of
respondents acknowledged the intention of former anti-corruption chief,
Nuhu Ribadu to contest the polls, while just a little over half (55%)
think he should run and 41% think otherwise. Some of his supporters see
Mr. Ribadu as a new generation of Nigerian leader, whilst 59% of those
who do not want him to run cite his inexperience as their reason, with
13% generally disliking him.

Mr. Buhari’s
candidacy has the support of 41% of the people surveyed, while 58% said
he should not run. His experience and integrity were the reasons stated
for supporting his candidacy, while 34% of those who said he should not
run mentioned a preference for other candidates and the desire for a
new generation of leaders and his inability to “provide the positive
change need in Nigeria.”

Also in the race

While nearly 97% of
those polled were aware that Ibrahim Babangida is running for the 2011
presidential elections, only 27% think he should run for office on
claims of being a good man and competent to run for the office. But 69%
do not want him to run, citing his reputation as being corrupt.

Another contender
that was ranked is former vice president, Atiku Abubakar, for whom only
27% of the 90% of those aware of his ambition think he should run. Some
21% of those who think Atiku should not run maintain that he is
corrupt, 19% do not like him, and 18% think he has a bad reputation,
while another 18% think he cannot provide the positive changes needed
in Nigeria.

Kwara State
governor, Bukola Saraki’s candidacy had 35% support, while 62% said he
should not run, with 3% being indifferent. Mr. Saraki’s antagonists
cited incompetence and bad reputation, as well as an inability to
provide the positive change needed in Nigeria as their reasons.

NOI Poll said 1058
people took part in the telephone interviews. The organisation said the
poll is part of the ongoing snap poll exercise conducted to rapidly
assess public opinion on various electoral events.

It is a Nigeria-based opinion research organisation which works in
technical partnership with Gallup Polls (USA), to conduct periodic
opinion polls on various socioeconomic issues in Nigeria.

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Supporters honour former governor of Ekiti

Supporters honour former governor of Ekiti

Former governor of
Ekiti State, Olusegun Adebayo Oni, was on Sunday treated to a heroic
welcome when he visited his home town of Ifaki-Ekiti, his first since
he left the state after the ruling of the Court of Appeal, Ilorin, that
ousted him from office.

Mr. Oni told the
gathering that he never had penchant for amassing wealth, but has
always been concerned with serving the people and would continue to
render services to humanity.

While speaking
during the thanksgiving service held at the Methodist Church,
Ifaki-Ekiti, Mr. Oni, who was in the company of his wife and some of
his former aides, said he was aware that some people were blaming him
for not amassing wealth for himself.

“I want to testify
to the goodness of God because He has made me a man that does not covet
riches, power, and even comfort. I only covet one thing, and that is
service,” he said.

Beyond opposition

In a statement
issued by his chief press secretary, Wale Ojo-Lanre, the former
governor also said the PDP in the state is “too big to be an opposition
to anybody. We will applaud anything that is done in the interest of
the people and vehemently go against anything that is done against the
people.”

He thanked the king
of Ifaki, Oluwole Agbaje, and the people of the town for honouring him
and his wife with the title of Asiwaju and Yeye Asiwaju of Ifaki.

The bishop of the
Methodist Church of Nigeria, Oyo Diocese, Ayo Ladigbolu, eulogised Mr.
Oni, describing him as a worthy ambassador of the church and a proud
son of Ifaki. He said God’s vision for the former governor as regards
the future is bigger than that of the present.

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Cleric wants leaders to make the masses their focal point

Cleric wants leaders to make the masses their focal point

The only way
forward for the nation is for those in positions of authority to
improve the welfare of the poor through the execution of
people-oriented projects, the Primate of the Anglican Church of
Nigeria, Nicholas Okoh, said at the weekend.

Mr. Okoh, who spoke
when he visited the governor of Ondo State, Olusegun Mimiko, said most
politicians fail to fulfil their promises when they are elected.

He urged Nigerians
to vote out leaders who loot government treasury to enrich themselves
and family members, saying the nation would have a greater future if
leaders see themselves as servant-leaders and not bosses to the people
in all their dealings.

“Politicians should
not make looting their priority; they should focus welfare of the poor
through the execution of people-oriented projects,” he said.

“The nation’s
leaders should make the welfare of the masses their focal point by
embarking on projects that would impact positively on their lives.”

The cleric
commended Mr Mimiko for his achievements in the provision of basic
infrastructure, charging him not to derail in his determination to
bring succour to lives of the poor majority who prayed fervently for
victory at the poll .

Mr. Okoh equally
clarified the issue of criticism of government activities by religious
leaders, stating such criticism is meant to achieve a positive change
in the interest of both the government and people.

Working for people

Mr Mimiko thanked
the cleric for his visit and assured the people of the state and
Nigerians of his administration’s continued determination to embark on
projects that would benefit the majority of the people.

“I can assure you
sir that our administration will continue to embark on programmes that
have direct impact on our people. And I want to say that the interest
of the majority of our people will always be the focus of our
administration,’ he said.

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Arik says it invested $4million on security

Arik says it invested $4million on security

Following security
threats in the country and globally, Arik Air, Nigeria’s largest
commercial carrier involved in domestic, regional and intercontinental
air transport business, over the weekend, said it invested about
$4million for the detection of explosives and hard drugs on board
aircraft.

Speaking at a
briefing to commemorate the carrier’s four years anniversary at its
headquarters in Lagos, Chris Ndulue, the Managing Director of the
airline, said that the motive for such investment was solely aimed at
ensuring safety of lives and properties. “This is to enhance aviation
safety following the events of terror scare and terrorism that we hear
nowadays,” he said, adding that the carrier is working to ensure that
passengers are adequately screened before boarding any of its 26
aircraft, whether those on domestic or international routes.

Mr Ndulue also
revealed that over 5.8 million passengers were airlifted to various
destinations by the airline in four years. “We have carried 5.8million
passengers in these four years, but infrastructure as a major challenge
is inhibiting our expansion,” he said.

Arumemi Ikhide, the Chairman of the airline, while speaking on the
development, expressed hopes that the government will approve the
carrier’s request to develop the General Aviation Terminal (GAT),
located at the Murtala Muhammed Airport (MMA), Lagos. “We want to
develop a terminal that will be owned by government and operated by
FAAN (Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria), but we are yet to get
approval from government on this and it has been a challenge,” he said.

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POLITICAL MANN: Two dreadful years head for Obama

POLITICAL MANN: Two dreadful years head for Obama

Barack Obama was
elected president two years ago by harnessing the hopes of his
supporters. But now, he finds himself at the close of a very different
campaign trying to manage disappointment and discontent.

“Let’s not fool
ourselves,” he said. “This is a tough election. This country has gone
through one of the most difficult periods of our history.”

American voters
will go the polls Tuesday to elect national lawmakers and state
leaders, with two wars, high unemployment, and record deficits on their
minds.

The president
himself isn’t on the ballot, but he’s working hard because as the race
goes into its last weekend, his Democratic Party is facing a debacle.

Pollsters predict
it will lose dozens of seats in the House of Representatives, giving
Republicans majority control. In the Senate, the Democrats are expected
to be reduced to such a slim majority that they won’t be entirely in
control there either.

Obama hasn’t had an easy two years. Now his term is half over and
when the results are in next week, he may find the hardest part still
ahead.

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Smooth FM Jazz Festival

Smooth FM Jazz Festival

Radio station
Smooth FM is set to regale music Nigerian lovers in its upcoming Jazz
festival, holding in Lagos on November 12. Tagged ‘Love Music, Love
Life’, the festival will showcase an impressive line-up of Nigerian and
international musicians.

African American
soul singer and songwriter Angie Stone of ‘Mahogany Soul’ fame and Jazz
Saxophonist Gerald Albright will be performing alongside Nigerian
musicians Bez, Tiwa Savage, Pure and Simple, and others.

A major highlight
of the festival is the inclusion of Richard Bona, who will be jamming
on the same stage with Jazz guitarist, Mike Stern. Born Bona Pinder
Yayumayalolo, Richard Bona has performed alongside the likes of Manu
Dibango, Salif Keita, Jacques Higelin and Didier Lockwood.

A rising star of
the international music circuit with appearances on many continents,
Bona was born in 1967 in Cameroun into a family of griots and singers.
He lived in Germany and France before settling in New York; and met
Mike Stern when he relocated to the United States and did some musical
stints with him.

The Camerounian has four albums under his belt and has collaborated
with Harry Belafonte and John Legend. The Smooth FM Festival will hold
at the Expo Hall of the Eko Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos on November
12.

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Abuja exhibition showcases local artists

Abuja exhibition showcases local artists

The city of Abuja
will play host to ‘Art in Nigeria: She Moves On’, an exhibition
intended to symbolise the country’s victory over the many vicissitudes
that have befallen her since independence.

The organisers, the
Casalinda Gallery and Iroko Art and Culture, say they are creating a
platform for local artists to display their talent and culture. In a
press release, the organisers say they are keen on championing the
growth and appreciation of the visual arts in Nigeria. To this end,
they are pursuing long-term plans to achieve the goal, the coming art
exhibition being just one.

Casalinda Gallery
proprietor, Gandi Obiefule, says the exhibition is part of a new
revolution which would make Nigerian visual arts a talking point in the
world of art discourse.

His organisation is
working in partnership with Iroko Art and Culture to bring about what
they describe as ambitious goals for the development of art in the
country.

Artists whose works
will be on display during ‘Art in Nigeria: She Moves On’, include the
following: Uchay Chima Joel, Ankeli Christopher, Ndidi Emefiele,
Adetunji Tobi, Iyke Okenyi, Uche Agonsi, Abiola Idowu, Rasaq Abdul,
Chike Emembo, Chukz Okonkwo, Baba Shettima and Kehinde Dada.

‘Art in Nigeria: She Moves On’ is scheduled to run for ten days at
the Casalinda Gallery, situated at No 8, Colorado Close, Off IBB
Boulevard, Maitama, Abuja. It opens to the public on November 5, while
the official opening ceremony will hold on November 6 at 2pm.

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Interrogating Chinua Achebe and our humanity

Interrogating Chinua Achebe and our humanity

Someone once told
me that the depiction of women in Chinua Achebe’s, Things Fall Apart
understates the role of women in Igbo communities. I am at a loss as to
what that means. Is it any narrower than the stereotypical fiction of
swashbuckling women in the West bossing snivelling male weaklings?
Indeed in that sense, is it not a less stereotypical portrayal? Have
you read Buchi Emecheta’s novels? Does she invite you to draw
conclusions based on her lived life and the testimony in her novels?
And why would any researcher worth his or her salt draw conclusions
about a people’s way of life based on just one novel? And what are we
talking about anyway?

Political
correctness threatens to distort the lived life. What we would like to
see is different from what happened. As for the bit about women being
empowered and getting chieftaincy titles etc, some of that is true and
Achebe has addressed this in some of his books (with mixed success
because rather than focus on his work, he was trying to be sensitive to
accusations of misogyny). What is true is that the fate of the vast
majority of women and children in today’s Nigeria makes their fate in
‘Things Fall Apart’ heavenly. We invest in mimicry and say all the
right things about women empowerment, blah, blah, blah. But the truth
stares us in the face. Today in Nigeria, many of our women and children
are mostly second-class citizens in a country dominated by powerful
patriarchs, men that have bastardised a cultural past and turned it
into the patriarchy from hell. Just like their “institutions of higher
learning,” “democracy,” and other perversions of mimicry, they clothe
aberrations in the power of empty words.

The notion that
Achebe has to travel the length and breadth of Igboland in order to
write the definitive epic on women empowerment is, to be honest with
you, silly. He has written a story based on a rich slice of Igbo life;
he has not drawn any conclusions. It is up to the reader to draw his or
her own conclusions. Why should that now translate into an acceptable
criticism of his work? It is one thing to say that Achebe’s worldview
is narrow; it is another thing to suggest that his depictions are
false. We can’t have it both ways: Should fiction document the lived
history or is fiction free to distort life?

We must be wary of
being ambushed by the fiction that denies our humanity, or that
italicises us into “the other.” I shake my head when I read thinkers
describing ‘Things Fall Apart’ as an Igbo novel, whatever that means.
It would never occur to them to describe a John Updike tome in such a
limiting fashion. Because Updike is human and Chinua Achebe is, well,
‘the other’. Things Fall Apart is of course more than an “Igbo” or
“African” novel. It is a novel about our humanity and how we adapt (or
don’t) to change. The compartmentalisation of our humanity is
relentless, despite loud protestations. Jerry Guo of Newsweek recently
did a semi-illiterate interview of Chinua Achebe (Chinua Achebe on
Nigeria’s Future, Newsweek, July 5, 2010). Sample blurb: “Although best
known for his 1958 masterpiece, Things Fall Apart, about a simple yam
farmer in tribal Nigeria, novelist Chinua Achebe is still writing about
Africa a full half century later. The 79-year-old author and social
critic spoke with Newsweek’s Jerry Guo about recent developments in his
home country and politics on the continent.” It is news to me that
Things Fall Apart is “about a simple yam farmer in tribal Nigeria.” We
are in the year 2010 and Things Fall Apart is being described in such a
hideous fashion. It gets worse: Here are sample questions asked of
Achebe: “Why do you think Nigeria has such a bad reputation?” “So how
did notoriously corrupt African states like Nigeria become that way
while others such as Botswana and Ghana went down a different path?”
“There’s been an uptick in ethnic violence between the Christians and
Muslims in Nigeria. Are you afraid of radical Islam taking root there
and spreading?”

Newsweek’s interrogation masks the usual clarity of Chinua Achebe’s
thinking. The questions force the responses to be pedestrian and that
is too bad. Once more Newsweek misses a grand opportunity to encourage
new thinking, shed new light on persistent challenges. There is nothing
new here from Achebe that many of us have not previously engaged and I
do not blame him. There are too many things to worry about. Again,
think of your favourite great white author, anyone of Achebe’s stature
and imagine him/her being taken through the indignity of this absurd
interview. For one thing, the questions would have been researched and
fielded by a senior ranking editor, not just a wretched stringer who
does not know how to read books. And can you imagine the author
responding to questions so parochial, they belong in medieval times? It
is not just disrespectful, it is an outrage.

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