Archive for nigeriang

Lagos to fine building owners over disability challenges

Lagos to fine building owners over disability challenges

The
Lagos State government may soon start fining owners of public buildings
that do not have entry points for physically challenged people.

This was made known yesterday by the former Deputy Speaker of the state’s House of Assembly, Funmilayo Tejusoho.

The legislator made
the disclosure during the plenary session on Transportation (Road,
Rail, Water, Air): Infrastructure, Institution and Operations at the
ongoing 5th Lagos State Economic Summit at the Eko Hotel and Suites.

Mrs. Tejuosho said
that a bill on people with disabilities is already before the Assembly
and will soon be passed into law. She said the bill demands that “all
public buildings within the state will be given five years to put
everything in place that will allow easy entry for people with
disability to gain entry into the building.”

According to Mrs
Tejusoho, “the House recently got hold of reports of how a bank denied
access to a disabled person because the fellow had metals on his body.

“Once the law is
passed, it becomes an offence for any owner of a public building such
as the banks not to provide alternative or necessary entry points for
people with disabilities. The offender will be fined a fee of N20,000
per day till the bridge is appeased,” she stated.

The former Deputy
Speaker was reacting to a question posed to her by a member of the
Association of People with Disability in Nigeria, who alleged that the
state is neglecting physically challenged people in its infrastructural
development. According to him, the Bus Rapid Transport scheme in the
state does not provide for people with disabilities.

The Managing
Director of the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA),
Dayo Mobereola stated that “provisions are also being made in all
infrastructures being developed in the state to give access to the
physically challenged.”

He noted that
“highways and bridges that are being constructed are done with this
precaution in mind” assuring that the next set of BRT buses that will
soon be launched will have adequate provision for the disabled.

The official stated
that “the agency in the last two years has being conducting a study on
how to address the disability issue and the impact of the study will
soon be seen across the state.”

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Party decries bribery charge against tribunal members

Party decries bribery charge against tribunal members

As disputing parties continue to accuse members of
the Ekiti State Election Petitions Tribunal of taking bribes, the state
chapter of the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties has warned
against the spreading of unfounded allegations.

The party’s chairman Tunji Ogunlola and its
secretary, Victor Akinola, said yesterday in Ado Ekiti that these
unfounded accusations could distract the five-man panel hearing the
petition.

The state government had alleged that a former
governor of Lagos State tried to sway the panel members with financial
inducement to favour the Action Congress.

“ We are urging the panel to pay no attention to
any disruption aimed at its way, we are also begging all the parties in
the state to desist from any action capable of worsening the tension in
the state,” the party said.

The party said it views with disdain the wild
allegations of inducements for tribunal members, which is capable of
heating up the polity unreasonably.

“It is our opinion that Ekiti people don’t need
these diversionary accusations at this period; rather, all parties must
await the judgment of the tribunal and depend on the evidence they have
presented to prove their case,” the statement said.

Strange attacks

The party also criticised the alleged
assassination attempt on the life of Kayode Fayemi, the gubernatorial
candidate of the Action Congress, by suspected thugs. Mr Fayemi is
challenging the election of the state governor, Segun Oni, at the
elections tribunal.

It noted that this kind of attack was strange to
Ekiti and appealed to those behind it to stop in the interest of peace
and justice.

“We were all in this state when Ekiti State,
twice, won the most peaceful state in Nigeria award and we wonder what
went wrong that we have now almost become the most violent state in the
country. We are supposed to build on the enviable award of a peaceful
state and not to negate it,” the party said.

It expressed hope that the judges will do their job fairly so that all the tension in the state can be resolved.

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Sacked workers seek Jonathan’s help on pension arrears

Sacked workers seek Jonathan’s help on pension arrears

Some
former staff of the Federal College of Agriculture, Akure, yesterday
made a passionate appeal to the Acting President, Goodluck Jonathan, to
compel the office of the Head of Service to pay their gratuities and
pension arrears dating from 2008.

The workers,
numbering about 31, were disengaged from service on April 16, 2007, as
part of the federal government’s reform of the public service in 2007,
through its monetisation policy.

The aggrieved
workers, in a letter made available to reporters in Akure, also urged
the federal government to make sure that the pension board paid them
three months salary in lieu of notice of sack.

They faulted the harsh way they said the federal government handled their dismissal, describing the action as an injustice.

Spokesperson of the
affected workers, Samuel Idowu Alejo, said the affected workers
deserved to be paid gratuities and pensions, having spent up to 10
years in service. He said it is wrong for the federal government to
neglect them when their colleagues in other states were being paid
their entitlements on a monthly basis. He also accused the Federal
Pension Board of short-paying some of his colleagues whose dates of
service were changed to deny them of their benefits.

“In line with the
federal government pension decree 1979, as amended, we are entitled to
monthly pensions because we fell within the old scheme which guaranteed
retirees either voluntary or compulsory pension,” he said.

“One expects
government policy to be interpreted uniformly because as of 2007 when
we were disengaged, the old policy on pension schemes covered us and
this put us in advantage of monthly pensions because the old scheme
terminated on June 31, 2007. It is important to note that most of our
colleagues in sister institutions are enjoying their monthly pensions
without hindrance. We beg the acting president to urgently wade into
the matter, so that our demands can be met.”

Living in penury

Alejo added that
despite different letters written to the office of the Permanent
Secretary and Pensions in the office of the Head of Service of the
Federation, nothing meaningful has been done about the issue.

He pleaded with the
office of the Head of Service of the Federation to direct the
Accountant General’s Office to pay their pension arrears because some
of the disengaged workers are living in abject penury.

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Ibori remains at large, say police

Ibori remains at large, say police

The
Nigeria Police, yesterday, said it was still making efforts to arrest
the former governor of Delta State, James Ibori, even after the
expiration of the 48hours deadline given to the arresting team led by
an Assistant Inspector General.

The Force Public
Relations Officer, Emmanuel Ojukwu, said Wednesday that the police was
still hunting for the wanted man. “We are still on his trail. All I can
say is that we will get him very soon,” he said.

Attempts to arrest
Mr. Ibori on Tuesday failed after the joint police and Economic and
Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) team were overpowered by a gang of
well armed local youth at Oghara, the hometown of Mr. Ibori in Delta
State. The order for his arrest followed the decision of the EFCC to
declare him a wanted man, following his refusal to obey an invitation
to visit the commission.

However, when asked
what the police is doing to ensure the arrest, despite the initial
media report that Mr. Ibori was guarded by heavily armed individuals,
Mr. Ojukwu said: “we are trying our best, that is all I can now tell
you. But he has not been arrested.” Recounting the attack on the police
yesterday by the armed group, Mr. Ojukwu said “So far, I am not aware
of any casuality.” He said the 48 hours time frame is a working guide
and not a specific deadline as to when the arrest should be made.

The spokesperson
for the EFCC, Femi Babafemi, also told NEXT that Mr. Ibori has not yet
been arrested. He, however, refused to say how much effort the
commission has put into ensuring the arrest.

Persona non grata

Meanwhile, the
opposition Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP), and the
Delta State Elders group, on Wednesday, condemned the action of the
youth and the refusal of Mr. Ibori to surrender himself to the police.

Kayode Ajulo,
counsel to the Delta State Elders who sent the petition against Mr.
Ibori to the EFCC, said Mr. Ibori’s argument that he has a court order
stopping his arrest was faulty.

I want to, “on
behalf of our client, state clearly that the reported resistance and
argument canvassed for, is not only a misconception of the court’s
status quo order, but also untenable, irrational and a deliberate
flagrant violation and disregard to constituted authorities and
directives.” Mr Ajulo said the EFCC and other law enforcement agencies,
including Nigerians, are duty-bound to arrest the ex-governor in the
extant circumstances, “as the much touted statuesque order by the
Federal High Court, Asaba only complement, reinforce as well as fortify
the warrant of arrest earlier issued on Mr. Ibori..” Mr. Ajulo also
explained the meaning of status quo in Nigerian jurisprudence.

“If we must ask
ourselves, what is in existence that is yet to be vacated before the
status quo order is a duly drawn Warrant of Arrest of Chief James
Onanafe Ibori,” Mr. Ajulo said. “As of now, and with the effect of the
order of warrant of arrest on Ibori, the ex-governor is a persona non
grata and an outcast whom all hands must be on deck to apprehend and
brought to justice in pursuance of the Abuja High Court’s Order.”

No one is above the law

The Conference of
Nigerian Political Parties described the ‘wall of resistance’ allegedly
put up by the former governor’s supporters as an irony of the
anti-corruption war.

The party’s
National Chairman, Maxi Okwu, told the News Agency of Nigeria in Lagos
that the people being protected against economic crimes and
deprivations had become a bulwark for perpetrators of such crimes.

“The law was made
to protect public funds from being looted, but now the same public has
turned round to fight for those accused of such crimes,” he said. “We
saw similar scenario in Bayelsa, when its former governor, Diepreye
Alamieyeseigha, was impeached and later arrested for embezzlement of
their funds. The same thing also happened when Olabode George was
arraigned and tried for misappropriating port funds. The spate of
demonstrations by the so-called supporters of public figures accused of
defrauding the nation have become so worrisome. Something must be done
about it.”

Mr. Okwu also said
although Mr. Ibori is presumed innocent until proven guilty, no effort
should be spared to arrest him to face the law.

“He should be
arrested no matter the cost to the nation. There is need for a serious
re-orientation of Nigerians on anti-corruption issues,” he said.

“Ibori is not above the law. If he thinks he is not guilty, then
there is no reason for him to go into hiding or look for legal
loopholes to evade arrest.”

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Power expert urges Lagos to ban use of generators

Power expert urges Lagos to ban use of generators

To
address the problem of power supply in Lagos State, the government
should set a target date to ban the use of generators and work towards
providing alternative source of power generation, the Managing Director
for British Gas Nigeria, Ademola Adeyemi-Bero, said yesterday in Lagos.

Mr. Adeyemi-Bero,
who spoke during a session on ‘Power Infrastructure, Institutions and
Operations’ at the ongoing 5th Lagos Economic Summit, urged the Lagos
State government to consider itself a city state within a country that
does not have power, and work towards resolving the problem to its own
benefit.

“I believe there is
a flaw in our thinking,” he said. “If we continue to do what we have
always done, we will continue to get what we have always gotten. We
need to have a mindset change.”

He debunked the
claim that Nigeria generates only 3,000MW of power, saying that Nigeria
actually produces about 20,000MW, out which 5,000MW is generated by the
Power Holding Company of Nigeria, and the remaining 15,000MW is being
produced by generators in Nigerian homes, offices, and industries.

“This isn’t too far
from South Africa’s level of generation. But we are spending way too
much in producing power by way of diesel and petrol,” he said.

The British Gas
boss said the state government, in its bid to build Lagos into Africa’s
mega city, must tackle, with urgency, the issue of power. To do this,
he said, the government should set a target date of about ten years
from now to ban the use of generators in the state.

“An emerging model
city will never happen if the state does not solve the power crisis,”
Mr. Adeyemi-Bero said. “Until we aim at something, then we will try and
work at getting to the target. And the ban must be backed-up with a
plan on how to achieve the aim.”

The energy expert
also recommended that Lagos designs its own power generation
master-plan, which must state the energy resources available in the
state, such as gas, wind, and waste.

“The master plan
must talk about what proportion is expected from each of the resources
or alternatives avaliable to the state,” he said. “When we go to
mega-cities around the world, we don’t see NEPA poles and over bearing
cables, so Lagos needs to develop a master-plan to dictate its plans.”

Looking for private support

He also warned the
state government to eschew the reliance on the sole supply of the
needed gas through the Escravos trough, noting that “nothing stops
Lagos from importing gas, as Japan does, if the cost of laying pipeline
from the Niger-Delta is a trouble that it has always been.”

Ayo Gbeleyi, the
Director General of the Lagos State Public-Private Partnership, in his
speech, disclosed that the state has set a medium and long term goal of
generating between 12,000MW-20,000MW of power in collaboration with the
private sector. He noted that the failure of the federal governement to
meet the set-target of 6,000MW by December, 2009 has created a massive
opportunity for the private sector to come and invest in the sector.

He said that the
state would be needing the help of the private sector in a number of
projects it has initiated to make the state a model city in Africa.

The Director
General of Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, Mansur
Ahmed, said that for Lagos to achieve its dream of becoming Africa’s
model city, “we must address constitutional power of power generation
vested in the federal government.”

He also said that for Nigeria’s economy to grow to achieve its vision 202020, Lagos economy has to grow faster.

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ENVIRONMENTAL FOCUS: Electricity and other perennial priorities

ENVIRONMENTAL FOCUS: Electricity and other perennial priorities

Generic logic would
seem to suggest that when a problem mutates into a priority, which then
becomes a re-current objective, there should be a question mark over
the potential for lasting solutions to it. In recent months, Acting
President Jonathan has opted to wear a few more hats, including the
burning Stetson of the power sector. Cynics wish him good luck with a
wry smile.

Not many Nigerians
know this rather taciturn man. Jonathan had been sitting on the reserve
bench for a long time, perhaps sulking, but certainly observing and
mulling over the progress of the team’s attacking strength and tactics.
Suddenly, the coaching crew has called on him to replace the team’s
injury-prone striker, and also to wear the captain’s armband in green
and white colours. Instructions are specific – organise the midfield
and defence, score some badly-needed goals! A first back pass from the
new skipper is the statement in the US to CNN’s Christiane Amanpour,
that the power sector would be one of his priorities. The lady appeared
somewhat startled, but quickly regained composure before pinning
Jonathan down to agree he meant, “electricity.” Nobody suffering in
Nigeria would quarrel with that, but have we not repeatedly heard about
this priority in the last 50 years?

Did Awolowo and
Azikiwe not promise it in their 1959 and 1979 manifestos? So did Gowon,
Murtala, Buhari, Shagari, Babangida, Obasanjo, Shonekan, Abacha! Awo
and Zik were unfortunately condemned to the reserve bench as well, from
where they watched the destruction of a nation they freed from colonial
rule. In ‘The Problem with Nigeria,’ Chinua Achebe had written that the
country never plays its matches with the best eleven.

As always, when a
team is replaced in the federal or state governments of our nation,
ministers leave in a pique, some removing cars and the office air
conditioners in revenge. We then read in the tabloids that the handing
over was done amicably, and in 30 minutes! Why should anyone hand over
the national affairs of prioritised development objectives such as
power, water, health or agriculture so rapidly? What is the hurry to
destroy the development continuum by our public office holders?

There are now many
calling for this probe or that audit in the power sector, and in
particular, the NNPC. The thinking is to unearth misused funds and get
someone nailed. The NNPC was famous worldwide for awarding expensive
consultancies to foreigners or expatriates, which practice it believed
was commensurate with its high profile.

Foreign ‘expertise’

Unfortunately, not
every expatriate equates to an expert. In view of Nigeria’s shameful
energy predicament, either of two things or both happen at the NNPC –
taxpayers’ money and oil revenues are drawn down to pay charlatan
consultants who write fairy tales, or experts do a fantastic brief and
nobody reads or understands what subsequently gathers harmattan dust in
the ministerial vaults and presidential villa.

An audit or probe should also constitute finding out how published knowledge had been misused or ignored.

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Court jails man for stealing car radio

Court jails man for stealing car radio

An Abuja Senior
Magistrate’s Court, on Tuesday, sentenced to one month imprisonment
without an option of a fine, a Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps
personnel, Mathias Odeh, for stealing a car radio.

Mr. Odeh, 26, was
said to have committed the offence on April 8, while trying to force
open a car marked AG 908 KLU, belonging to one O.E. Esangbedo.

The Police
Prosecutor, Mohammed Ahmed, a corporal, told the court that the
complainant reported the convict to the Maitama Police Station the same
date the theft occurred.

Mr. Ahmed also said
that the police, during the course of their investigations, were able
the recover the said car radio from the convict.

The convict pleaded guilty to the charge, and the prosecutor urged the court to summarily sentence him.

Delivering judgment, Senior Magistrate Aminu Abdullahi, sentenced
the convict to one month imprisonment without any option of a fine.

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Group wants abolition of death penalty

Group wants abolition of death penalty

Human Rights
Writers Association (HRWAN), an NGO, on Wednesday criticised the
decision of the Federal Government to execute all convicted persons
serving death penalties as a way of decongesting prisons.

Emmanuel Onwubiko, the Chief Operating Officer of HRWAN, made the criticism while briefing journalists in Abuja.

Theodore Orjji, the
Abia State governor, had said on Tuesday after the 11th National
Conference of the National Council on Finance and Economic Development
that the Federal Government decided to carry out the execution to
decongest the prisons.

Mr. Onwubiko called
on Acting President Goodluck Jonathan and governors not to go ahead
with the policy, saying the execution would amount to an abuse of human
rights.

“Life cannot be restored after it has been terminated,’’ he said.

He recommended that the death penalty be replaced with life imprisonment with no option of fine.

“There is a need to rehabilitate these people, life imprisonment can be an option,’’ according to Mr. Onwubiko.

“The Association is demanding the implementation of section 33 (1)
of the 1999 constitution which reads that every person has a right to
life,’’ he said.

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Chrysler losses ₦600b but sees signs of improvement

Chrysler losses ₦600b but sees signs of improvement

Chrysler said
yesterday that it had lost $4 billion since emerging from bankruptcy
protection almost a year ago. But it also reported positive cash flow
and a small operating profit in the first quarter of 2010.

The results are the
first official look at the U.S. automaker’s finances since it came out
of bankruptcy June 10 under the control of the Italian automaker Fiat.

The chief executive
of both companies, Sergio Marchionne, said Chrysler is on track to meet
its 2010 targets, including a break-even-or-better performance, when
excluding one-time charges. On that basis, Chrysler earned $143 million
in the first quarter on revenue of $9.7 billion.

Counting one-off
charges, Chrysler lost $197 million in the first quarter, mostly due to
interest payments, compared with a $2.5 billion loss in the fourth
quarter.

Chrysler also said it had $7.4 billion in cash on hand as of March 31, about $1.5 billion more than it had at the end of 2009.

Separately, Fiat
reported a first quarter net loss of €25 million, or $34 million,
significantly narrower than the €410 million of a year earlier. But the
shares fell as many analysts had expected a small profit.

Sales rose to €12.9 billion, from €11.3 billion.

The figures were
released ahead of the presentation of Fiat Group’s five-year business
plan, expected to include a spin off of its automotive unit, which
produces the flagship Fiat brand.

The operating
profit at Chrysler occurred even as its sales in the United States
continued to decline, while many of its competitors began to report
large year-over-year gains. Chrysler’s market share was 9.2 percent in
the first quarter, down two points from a year earlier but up one point
from the fourth quarter.

Mr. Marchionne said he expects improvement in Chrysler’s sales and balance sheet in the coming months.

“This positive
operating result in the first quarter is a concrete indication to our
customers, dealers and suppliers that the 2010 targets we have set for
ourselves are achievable,” Mr. Marchionne said in a statement. “We are
also generating cash to finance the investments being made in our
product portfolio and brand repositioning.” From June 10 to Dec. 31,
the company lost $3.8 billion and had revenue of $17.7 million. It said
$2.1 billion of that loss was a charge related to the trust fund that
took over coverage of health care for United Automobile Workers
retirees on Jan. 1.

The rest was blamed largely on its steep decline in sales and “significant start-up costs.” Mr.

Marchionne said
Chrysler has been strengthening its liquidity since bankruptcy through
“improving trading margins, operational efficiencies and rigorous cost
discipline.” The company said it has $2.4 billion remaining in its
credit lines from the United States and Canadian governments.

Unlike General
Motors across town, Chrysler is not in a position to begin paying back
the money it borrowed from taxpayers and made no mention of repayment.
Mr. Marchionne has previously said Chrysler would pay back the loans by
2014.

G.M. on Wednesday
said it has paid off its $8.2 billion debt to the United States and
Canada in full, five years ahead of its original repayment schedule.
The company’s chairman and chief executive, Edward E. Whitacre, planned
to make the announcement during a visit to G.M.’s assembly plant in
Kansas City, Kansas.

(Mr. Whitacre also
planned to reveal a $257 million investment in the Kansas plant and one
in Michigan to build the next version of the Chevrolet Malibu sedan.)
G.M. did not repay all the $50 billion it borrowed from the United
States. Most of that amount was converted to a 61 percent equity stake
held by the U.S. Treasury Department.

Chrysler is 10 percent owned by the U.S. Treasury.

The New York Times

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As British airports open, huge backlog remains

As British airports open, huge backlog remains

Airlines around the
world began to confront a huge backlog of passengers on Wednesday,
after six days of European airspace restrictions had forced the
cancellation of more than 100,000 flights and cost the airline industry
an estimated $1.7 billion.

While officials
said it could take weeks for some travel to return completely to
normal, some airlines in Europe and Asia said they were moving rapidly
to restore flights. Eurocontrol, the agency that coordinates regional
air-traffic management, said three-quarters of the 28,000 flights
scheduled for European airspace were expected to fly on Wednesday – the
highest proportion in days.

About two-thirds of
scheduled departures and half of arriving flights were operating at
Heathrow Airport outside of London. At Frankfurt International Airport,
about half as many flights as normal were taking off and landing.

A spokeswoman said
that airlines had added 90 supplementary flights in and out of Heathrow
since Britain reopened its airspace late Tuesday, becoming the last
major European country to do so after a huge plume of volcanic ash
spreading south and east from Iceland disrupted travel over much of the
continent.

But flights were
not resuming as quickly at other British regional airports. Only 10 per
cent of scheduled flights at Edinburgh operated on Wednesday morning, a
figure that was expected to rise to 50 per cent by the evening. In
Aberdeen, only 30 per cent of morning flights operated, while 65 per
cent were expected from 5pm.

The International
Air Transport Association (IATA), said Wednesday that the crisis had
cost airlines more than $1.7 billion in lost revenue through Tuesday.
At its worst, the association said, “the crisis impacted 29 per cent of
global aviation and affected 1.2 million passengers a day.” Before
restrictions were eased, the chaos had lasted twice as long as the
three-day closing of American airspace after the attacks of September
11, 2001, which devastated many airlines financially. By midday in
Paris, Air France said that it had been able to restore almost all
service across its entire network, and had flown more than 40,000
stranded passengers back to France since Monday.

The airline said it
expected to operate all its scheduled long-haul flights on Wednesday
and many European flights except for those to northern and northeastern
Europe, where some airports remained closed.

Aéroports de Paris,
which operates Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports, said all
intercontinental arrivals and departures and 75 per cent of European
and domestic flights were expected to operate Wednesday.

British Airways
planned to operate all of its intercontinental services from London’s
Heathrow and Gatwick airports on Wednesday, although many of its
domestic and European flights remained cancelled until at least
Wednesday afternoon.

Britain’s National
Air Traffic Service said it had handled roughly 130 flights in the
airspace over England and Wales between 1am and 7am on Wednesday and 35
flights in Scotland and Northern Ireland. British airspace would be
largely open on Wednesday, except for parts of Scotland with a “dense
concentration” of volcanic ash. Aer Lingus, the Irish flag carrier,
said it expected to resume a full flight schedule by early afternoon.

With their call
centres jammed by customers trying to re-book their flights, some
airlines found innovative ways to speed the process, including social
media networks.

The Dutch carrier KLM advised passengers on its Web site that re-booking could be done via Twitter or on its Facebook page.

According to
forecasts by Britain’s Met Office meteorological agency and the
Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre in London, winds were expected to continue
blowing the highest concentrations of ash westward toward the northeast
coast of Canada. By midnight Wednesday, the cloud was expected to be
largely clear of Europe, lingering over only Ireland and parts of
northern Scotland.

The New York Times

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