Archive for newstoday

LG donates cow to Igbo community as Xmas gift

LG donates cow to Igbo community as Xmas gift

The Mashi Local Government Council in Katsina State has donated a cow to the Igbo community in the area as Christmas gift.

Speaking while
presenting the gift to the community in Mashi on Monday, the Chairman,
Sirajo Mohammed who was represented on the occasion, by the Head of
Personnel, Ma’aruf Abubakar, said that the gesture was part of the
Council’s contribution towards ensuring the welfare of the Igbos living
in the area.

“The Igbos have co-existed peacefully with the people of the area
and do contribute to the socio-economic development of the area hence,
the need for the local government to appreciate their contributions.”
He said. He gave an assurance of the Council’s continued support to the
Igbo community, urging them to continue to live in peace in the area.

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Extractive industry regulator to expand operations into solid minerals

Extractive industry regulator to expand operations into solid minerals

General data collection processes of the Nigeria
Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) are to go live on
an automated platform in the new year, the executive secretary of the
agency, Zainab Ahmed, said in Abuja at the weekend. Mrs Ahmed, who was
reviewing the challenges and progress of the agency in the outgoing
year, said though it is gradually overcoming its challenges, NEITI is
looking forward to the best of times in 2011 as it remains positive
that enough has been achieved for Nigeria to be granted full Extractive
Industry Transparency Initiative (EITI) Compliant status.

“This is part of the processes to ensure accurate
data collection and timely auditing as well as reporting of revenue
receipts and payments of the extractive industries,” she said, pointing
out that “this will aid the speed of dissemination of quality
information about the revenues in the extractive industry to the
Nigeria public.”

While acknowledging the support of various
stakeholders, including government agencies, civil society
organizations (CSOs) and international development partners, she
assured that NEITI is now on course to fully deliver on its assignment.

“NEITI has acquired a new suitable office complex it
plans to move in next year. We have already commenced comprehensive
plans on public communication, technical services and management
programmes to meet national and international expectations in the New
year and beyond,” the NEITI boss said.

Fighting resource-curse

NEITI chairman, Assisi Asobie, who noted measures by
the National Stakeholders Working Group (NSWG) to strengthen the NEITI
secretariat, said the Board has responded positively towards meeting
the conditions set by the EITI Board for validation as full compliant
member-country.

Mr Asobie traced the high level of poverty associated
with natural resources-endowed countries to the common syndrome of
resource-curse, saying at the heart of the problem are issues of good
governance, transparency and accountability. He said because of the
nature of natural resources such as crude oil, the tendency for corrupt
practices and mis-governance is always high among countries endowed
with them, resulting in the paradox of poverty in the midst of plenty.

“The management of revenue accruing from the extractive sector in a
transparent, prudent and accountable manner is the panacea for resource
curse. But this has proved such a huge challenge in countries such as
Nigeria, though association with EITI has helped to provide the
technical know-how and the strategic direction to confront it,” he
said. Announcing that the 2006-2008 oil and gas industry audit report
is to be published early next year, Mr Asobie said the process to
commission the 2009 audit has already commenced, while that of 2010
would be commissioned in 2011 as NEITI moves into the solid minerals
sector.

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Ogun governor challenges predecessor to debate

Ogun governor challenges predecessor to debate

About five months
to the end of his tenure as Ogun State governor, Gbenga Daniel at the
weekend challenged his predecessor, Olusegun Osoba to a public debate
on which of them performed better as governor of the state. Mr Daniel
threw the challenge at a public debate organized by the ruling People’s
Democratic Party {PDP} for all its aspirants ahead of 2011 polls held
at the June 12 Cultural Centre, Abeokuta.

“I am ready to
engage Osoba in a public debate, whether partisan or not. I am ready
for the open debate to be conducted anywhere. We should put on the
scale our account of stewardship. Let’s appear and present ourselves to
public domain to weigh our performances,’ he said.

Mr Daniel defeated
Mr Osoba, then of the Alliance for Democracy {AD} now Action Congress
of Nigeria {ACN} in the 2003 governorship election. But there has been
increasing condemnation of the performance of his government by Mr
Osoba and the leadership of the Action Congress of Nigeria {ACN}. The
governor also defended himself against accusations of promoting
violence, accusing the opposition Action Congress of Nigeria {ACN} of
masterminding violence in the state.

He also said
allegations of corruption leveled against his government by the
opposition was unfair, saying, “In Nigeria, how many governors openly
declare their assets as I did on assumption of office? It shows we are
transparent and I challenge anybody to fault this claim.”

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POLITICAL MANN: Nobel prize and symbolism of a chair

POLITICAL MANN: Nobel prize and symbolism of a chair

The Chinese
government may have unwittingly given the world a new symbol of
opposition to oppression, an empty chair. But there’s another piece of
furniture that’s suddenly empty too and it delivers a different message.

The chair belonged
to Chinese author and activist Liu Xiabo, the laureate of the Nobel
Peace Prize for 2010, imprisoned for his writings and prevented from
travelling to Oslo to receive his award. It was placed instead on the
chair he would have occupied to mark his absence.

It’s quickly become
an iconic image and empty chairs have begun appearing in Chinese
Internet traffic. Cyberspace is closely policed in the People’s
Republic by thousands of censors. Within hours even the use of the
phrase ‘empty chair’ was being wiped from the web.

There is also an
empty table though, and that’s getting a little less attention. Norway
is a tiny nation of fewer than five million people that had been
negotiating Europe’s first free- trade agreement with China, an
exploding economy of more than a billion.

When the Norwegian
Nobel Committee honoured Mr Liu, Beijing suspended the negotiations.
The deal is at least temporarily off the table, potentially an enormous
blow to a range of Norwegian businesses and jobs.

Norwegian Foreign
Minister Jonas Gahr Store told me that his government has no influence
on the Nobel Committee and values the committee’s tradition of
independence. He said that Norway’s government wouldn’t sacrifice its
principles to please Beijing.

Norway is an
affluent country, with enormous oil and gas reserves that China and
many other nations are eager to buy. With or without the free-trade
agreement, its economy is in an enviable position.

But for governments without those assets and the assurance they
bring, the empty chair isn’t the only piece of furniture to remind them
of China’s reaction to this year’s Nobel Prize. There is also that
empty table.

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Sambo leads PDP campaign in Ekiti

Sambo leads PDP campaign in Ekiti

The Vice President,
Namadi Sambo, is expected to lead Peoples’ Democratic Party leaders to
Ekiti State, for the final rally before next week’s bye-election for
the state House of Assembly in the state.

The Constituency I,
Moba Local Government Area election will be conducted to get a
replacement for the former deputy speaker, Saliu Adeoti who died some
months ago.

According to the
State Chairman of the party, Bola Olu-Ojo, in a statement issued in
Ado-Ekiti on Sunday, the party will approach the bye-election with all
the weapons in its political arsenal.

“We are not leaving
anything to chance as far as the bye-election is concerned. That is why
the campaign is going to be led by no less a personality than the Vice
President himself.

“As at yesterday
(Saturday), we have been to all the towns in the Constituency, except
Otun-Ekiti where the grand finale, which is going to be the mother of
all rallies, will be held on Monday (Today),” he said.

Banking on the
peoples support, Mr. Olu-Ojo said, “in Osun-Ekiti in particular, we
could see revenge on the faces of the people. One of their own, Adeleye
Awolumate, who was also our chairman for Osun Ward, was murdered in
broad daylight by the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) thugs and they
are rearing to vote against the party that killed their son.”

The Vice President
is expected to be accompanied by the Minister of State for Federal
Capital Territory, Caleb Olubolade, former governor of Ekiti State,
Olusegun Oni; a serving senator, Ayo Arise; House of Representatives
Member representing Ekiti North Constituency II, Duro Faseyi; PDP Vice
Chairman (southwest) Tajudeen Oladipo; the state Chairman of the Party,
Bola Olu-Ojo; and three former deputy governors including, Sikiru Tae
Lawal, Abiodun Olujinmi and Paul Alabi among others.

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Fashola approves loan to agric scheme graduates

Fashola approves loan to agric scheme graduates

The Lagos State governor, Babatunde Fashola, has
approved a total of N500 million micro finance fund for disbursement to
the first 100 graduates under the Agriculture Youth Empowerment Scheme.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the scheme, which is
being executed in collaboration with Dizzengof West Africa Ltd and the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, was conceptualized to address the twin
problems of youth unemployment and food security. In an interview with
NAN on Saturday, Mr. Fashola said the loan was repayable in five years.

He said the scheme was one of several practical
solutions by his administration to tackle the challenges of youth
unemployment. The governor said the scheme was not limited to farming
alone as other components of the agricultural value chain such as
packaging and marketing were also incorporated.

“I am happy doing this because I see the birth of
a proper economy rooted in agriculture that supports
industrialization,” he said.

According to him, the scheme will be executed in
three phases spanning a period of five years with a target of producing
1,000 modern farmers. A cross section of the graduates described the
scheme as a practical solution to youth unemployment. They said they
were exposed to world class theoretical and practical training in
poultry, aquaculture, vegetable farming and business management as well
as the use of modern farm implements.

Salami Babajide, one of the graduates said the scheme had provided
him the opportunity for further training in Israel, adding that it
would guarantee him stable income. Another beneficiary, Blossom Onome,
said she left her teaching job to attend the training because of its
prospects.

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Association wants endowment fund for theatre practitioners

Association wants endowment fund for theatre practitioners

Gregory Odutayo, the president of the National
Association of Nigeria Theatre Arts Practitioners (NANTAP), on Saturday
urged the federal government to approve the long-awaited endowment fund
for theatre practitioners.

Mr. Odutayo told the News Agency of Nigeria in
Lagos that the fund would enhance the development of the theatre
industry and make it more vibrant in promoting Nigeria’s culture. He
said that NANTAP had earlier made a representation to government on the
need for such a fund, adding that the proposal then received a positive
response.

“It is only an endowment fund that can make the
theatre industry thrive well. No amount of money which the government
releases can strengthen the industry except an endowment fund because
the funding must have a structure in which the money will be given out
to the practitioners,” he said.

Mr. Odutayo, however, appealed to the government
to manage the fund for the artists for better efficiency whenever it
was approved. He said that NANTAP had been working assiduously to
ensure that the government established the fund, urging other
stakeholders to collaborate with the association to foster the
fulfillment of the aspiration. Mr. Odutayo said that the $200 million
fund, which the federal government recently announced for the art
industry, was already causing problems among the practitioners even
though they had not received the money.

“How this money will be distributed among the arts genres is what is causing problems,” he said.

Mr. Odutayo, nonetheless, said that until such a structure like the
endowment fund was put in place for the theatre profession, the
industry would continue to remain stagnant.

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Orji Kalu’s sureties lose confidence in him

Orji Kalu’s sureties lose confidence in him

A federal high
court in Abuja will, today, hear an application by sureties for the
former governor of Abia State, Orji Uzor Kalu, who are asking the court
to discharge them because they no longer have confidence in him. Uche
Chukwumerije, a senator and a traditional ruler, Eze Gaius Ihejiamaizu,
citing a lack of confidence in Orji, approached the court to vacate
their pledges over Mr Orji.

Mr Ihajiamaize, in
an affidavit, said: “…Sometime in July 2007, I stood as surety to the
first accused person [Orji Uzor Kalu] in this charge. That part of the
bail condition included the deposit of my certificate of recognition as
a traditional ruler [Eze] in Abia State issued on November 16th 1998 by
the State Government. That I entered as surety to the accused person
because of the confidence I had in him then. I no longer have
confidence in the 1st accused person and will not stand as surety for
him anymore. That for now the 1st accused and myself have not been
associating with each other and I can no longer vouch for him, being
unaware of his movements and actions. That it would be in the interest
of justice to discharge me as a surety to the 1st accused person and
return my said certificate of recognition to me.”

Law abiding

The court presided
over by Adamu Bello will today decide whether to discharge the surety.
Mr Ihajimaize’s counsel, Anthony Agbazure, told newsmen in Abuja that
his client showed that he was a law abiding citizen by going to the
court to say he no longer has confidence on the former governor and
should be discharged from the burden of being his surety.

“If the man elopes, my client would not be held liable,” he said.

The EFCC had slamed a 107-count charge of money-laundering against
Mr Kalu, including mismanaging over N5billion belonging to the Abia
State government. Two other accused persons standing trial alongside Mr
Kalu including Ude Jones Udeogu and Slok Nigeria Limited.

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Groups task corporate bodies on environmental friendliness

Groups task corporate bodies on environmental friendliness

A coalition of environmental nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) have expressed their concern on how corporate
bodies have continued to increase the mountainous load of used and
end-of-life mobile phones all in name of an aggressive promotion. This
concern was addressed at a strategic tripartite meeting of NGOs working
on e-waste organised by the Sustainable Research and Action for
Environmental Development (SRADev) Nigeria who came together to
brainstorm on best environmental practices with regards to
environmentally sound management of e-waste.

The meeting also aimed at addressing the dismally
lacking national regulation on e-waste and to apply pressure on the
government over their failure to address contamination in electronic
products and the delay in passing into law the National Electrical and
Electronic Sector Regulation.

“In Nigeria, we advocate for the Individual or
Corporate Producer Responsibility which is becoming the practice world
over,” said Leslie Adogame, Executive Director, SRADev Nigeria.

“This means that producers must become responsible for the collection and the recycling of their branded products.

“If producers have to pay for the recycling of
their own products, the incentive to produce products that are less
toxics, have a longer life-span, and are easier to recycle will
increase, because this will reduce their recycling costs.”

There are overwhelming evidence that e-waste
contributes to adverse health effects such as cancer, neurological,
respiratory disorders and birth defects; according to the groups, and
also on the environment unless they are managed soundly. The concerned
NGOs are SRADev Nigeria, Friends of the Environment, Waste Management
Association of Nigeria, and the Environmental Rights Action.

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Meeting Anthony Enahoro

Meeting Anthony Enahoro

On the phone recently, a friend let slip that he was going to a
meeting in a matter of days at which Chief Anthony Enahoro would be present. My
mouth fell open but no sound came, a quiet hysteria gripped me. Here was my
chance to brush fleetingly with indestructible history. To have my existence
validated by this meeting of paths, as a small stream is validated by its
confluence with a mighty river. It was my chance, and it was slipping away.
Then came a lifeline as my friend said, ever so casually: “You can come
along if you want”. I seized upon it, and blurted out: “Of course I
would love to come!”

We walked into the hotel on the day and saw Taiwo Akinola,
Secretary of the National Reformation Party (NRP) Europe Chapter. He was
weighed down by six or so hardback copies of Enahoro’s 1965 book Fugitive
Offender
. Akinola waved goodbye to a lady from the book’s publishers, who
had helped source these used copies from various libraries in England. We
proceeded further into the hotel until I could make out Chief Enahoro’s figure
further ahead in a reception area. My smile masked the butterflies in my
stomach as I forged ahead with my two companions. I heard my name announced as
I took the Chief’s hand, my knees lowering in courtesy.

I took a seat on another table from where I could catch some of
Chief Enahoro’s conversation, conducted sometimes in English, sometimes in
Yoruba. I was pensive as I contemplated the moment. No words could adequately
capture my feelings about seeing this man whose life has been closely
intertwined with Nigeria’s history; whose actions helped shape the course of
that history. To me he was like an oracle, on whose person is written epochs I
could not even begin to imagine.

Soon others arrived, including Dr Philip Idaewor, head of NRP
Europe. He had read some of my writings and shook my hand warmly, saying:
“Ah! The lady who destroys people with her pen!” This he said with
great conviviality, and one does not defend oneself against a compliment. I was
the only female present, and when I wondered aloud whether it would be
appropriate for me to “put my journalist’s hat on”, Chief Enahoro
jokingly replied: “It would have to be a journalist’s gele”. There
was a benevolent atmosphere to the meeting, during which we mere mortals spoke
freely in the presence of a great man who made one feel at ease. It dawned on
me that true greatness needs not assert itself. It can simply be.

Dr Tony Kakhu, a research fellow at London’s Imperial College, was
also a first time observer in the group. He wanted to know the party’s plans
for regrouping ahead of the 2007 elections. Chief Enahoro’s definition of a
political party differs somewhat from that of the INEC, which places more
emphasis on the number of seats held by parties. To Enahoro, a political party
does not have to contest elections: “A party can be about ideas, and
Nigeria lacks ideas”. His is a long-term vision in which it matters not
that the NRP is not in power today; it can be in 10, 20 years time, or as he
explained, the big parties can adopt NRP’s ideas. “Politics is a game of
ideas. If a game of numbers, China would rule the world”, he declared.

There were concerns about external forces seeking to influence the
emergence of a Nigerian leader in 2007. It was noted that similar policies in
the fifties and sixties had resulted in the elimination of progressive African
leaders like Lumumba and Nkrumah to be replaced by despots like Mobutu and Idi
Amin. All agreed that the monetisation of Nigerian politics further exacerbates
the problem, and should be resisted.

The group reiterated its position on a Sovereign National
Conference at which all groups in Nigeria would be represented. Chief Enahoro
recalled the Conference held before Nigeria’s independence, for which the
British had initially asked for the three leaders only – Awolowo, Azikiwe and
Balewa. “We wrote a stinker”, said Enahoro, smiling at the memory;
“it was my honour to take the stinker to the Consul General”. The
“stinker” informed the British that they would need more than just
the three leaders for a Sovereign National Conference, and the colonial power
was forced into rethinking the process. The Chief also shared his views on party
composition: “You can no longer sell the idea of a party based purely on
ethnicity. Even in Yorubaland, people don’t want that. They like the idea of
members in Calabar and other places.”

Copies of Fugitive Offender lay on the table. One, bearing
the sticker and stamp of the House of Commons Library, had come from the many
copies of the book in the British Parliament. I sniffed at it, wondering if the
Nigerian Legislature had a copy, or valued its importance at all. It was my
first time seeing the book and Taiwo Akinola informed me that this was by no
means unusual; 95 percent of Nigerians had never seen it either. I leafed
through the pages. A photograph of a young and handsome Enahoro in traditional
dress – he could have been the prince of some ancient kingdom. Awolowo and his
beloved HID on one page, Zik of Africa smiled on another, and so on – each page
suffused with history.

There are plans to publish a second edition of Fugitive
Offender
later this year, to give younger generations the opportunity to
know about the book, and the man. This is important, Akinola said,
“because of his relevance in Nigerian life and politics”.

Official meeting ended, I moved across to Chief Enahoro’s table to
ask him questions over drinks. He was feeling peckish but all the hotel could
offer by way of snacks were chips, which the Chief called by their American
name, French Fries. A plate of chips duly arrived and he motioned for me to
join him as he tucked in. I looked at the chips but held back, not wanting to
break the spell of this enchanted hour.

I asked for Chief Enahoro’s views on the way forward for Nigeria.
“The way forward to where?”, he asked. I certainly didn’t know. But
he was forthcoming: “We need to recreate Nigeria on the basis of a
restructured federation and it should be a federation of nationalities. Each
nation should itself be a federation of the sub-nationalities. This should
accord with our natural existence. It would be easier to build a democracy on
that basis”. News of Chief Aminosoari Dikibo’s killing had broken in
London but the details were still sketchy, so Chief Enahoro did not want to
comment. But on the spectre of high-profile assassinations in Nigeria
generally, he expressed the view that the system we are operating “is
contributing to this outbreak of violence”. He believes the easier it is
to remove people from office the more senseless it is to seek to eliminate them
because there is no other way.

Chief Anthony Enahoro had been away from Nigeria for two months,
preoccupied with the “daunting task” of writing his memoirs. He hopes
to complete the project in the next 15 months. The new edition of Fugitive
Offender
will be followed by a collection of his speeches through the
years. The final part of the memoirs will be mainly political, covering major
events in Nigeria from 1963 to the present. In undertaking the project, Enahoro
believes his task is to report and interpret the events for the benefit of the
post-independence generation. In so doing, he is “not trying to lecture
them, just stating the particulars of life” as he recalls them.

Our chat over, I moved along to allow others the chance to talk to
him. There were still plenty of chips left but the Chief seemed to have had his
fill, so I pulled the plate close to me. These were historic chips, and I was
determined to get some inside my belly. I wolfed them down with relish, though
I wasn’t hungry.

Then it was time to go. “Ee pe fun wa Sir”, I said to
Chief Enahoro in Yoruba as I shook his hand in farewell, wishing him plenty
more years this side of heaven. “Why do we write things down?”,
someone asked in print recently. “To make them real, perhaps”, she
sought to explain. The friend who took me to the meeting, NRP Europe official
Dele Ogun, knew instinctively that I would write of the experience.
“Somehow, the chips will find their way into the recount, I’m sure”,
he speculated. “You bet”, I felt no shame confirming. When you have
eaten from the same plate as the man who moved the motion of Nigeria’s
independence, you don’t let the matter rest.

What a burden it must be for men like Chief Enahoro, for almost
every person you meet to look at you as a living relic of a valiant past, which
must of necessity point the way forward. I remembered a documentary I saw last
year about Nelson Mandela. In one scene, the Madiba was leaving a function at a
hotel in South Africa when suddenly a kitchen maid appeared in the lobby,
plastic cap and apron still in place. Forbidden perhaps from leaving the
kitchen, she heard that Mandela was passing by and, unable to help herself,
broke hotel protocol. She wept and tore at herself as she wailed after the
hero, yet made no attempt to approach him. Her words about what he meant to her
were subtitled for us in English at the bottom of the screen. Mandela, who must
get this kind of thing daily, did not look back. “Mandela! Mandela! I have
waited for this moment!”, shouted the kitchen maid as the old man made his
way slowly to the lift, burdened by history.

If Chief Anthony Enahoro is burdened by history, or the constant
gaze of an endless stream of people like me, it didn’t show. Enahoro is now an
octogenarian like Mandela. There are no sweeping comparisons to be made between
the two, but it could be argued perhaps that certain parallels exist. In
Enahoro’s presence I knew something of what that South African kitchen maid
must have felt on seeing Mandela, only I was not weeping or tearing at myself.
Unlike her however, I had not waited for the moment. Quite simply, I never thought
I’d see the day.

First published in The
Guardian (2004)

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