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Government approves N10bn contracts for transport, agric, others

Government approves N10bn contracts for transport, agric, others

The Federal
Executive Council, which was presided over by vice president, Namadi
Sambo, yesterday awarded contracts worth about N10 billion
(N9,674,65,018.62) covering the transportation, agriculture sectors,
the Federal Capital Territory, and ministry of foreign affairs.

Other contracts
approved by FEC includes the importation of 60,000 units of 240 litres
of waste disposal units, in the sum of N927,600,000.00 for the Federal
Capital Territory (FCT). The contractors, Messrs Pentagon Group of
Companies Limited, have 12 weeks to deliver.

Briefing State
House correspondents after the FEC meeting, the Minister of Information
and Communications, Dora Akunyili, alongside her counterpart, Labaran
Maku, said the council also approved the supply of heavy equipment –
one wheel loader, landfill compactor, and a Skid Street Leader CAT –
for waste management in FCT in the sum of N186, 514,650.00 and one D7R
Series 11 track type bulldozer and two Pay-loader in the sums of
N118,950,000.00 and N149,480,000.00 respectively, with delivery period
of 14 weeks.

Also speaking, the
Minister of Agriculture and Water Resources, Ahmed Abdallah, said
council also approved contract for the supply of one 36.30M Demersal
and Pelagic Deep Sea Oceanographic and Fisheries Research and Fishing
Combination Vessal for the Nigerian Institute for Oceanography and
Marine Research (NIMOR) in the sum of 8,070,000.00 Euros, with the
completion period of 15 months.

Mrs. Akunyili also
said council approved N1,956,593,550.89 for the completion of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ new headquarters complex in Central
Business District, Abuja, in favour of Messrs Bulet International
(Nigeria) Limited.

Got approval

Also briefing
journalists, the Minister of Transport, Yusuf Sulaiman, said his
ministry sought and got approval for the revalidation of six projects
of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA).

“Council, after
deliberation, approved the supply of six Fire Engines (Mercedes Benz)
with Foam Tenders in the revised contract sum of 2,721,032.15; plus
N70,586,775.00, with the completion period of 48 weeks; and six Land
Rover Fire Tenders in the revised contract sum of 844,368.75 Euro plus
N21,903,918.75, with the completion period of 20 weeks,” he said.

In addition, council approved the supply of two Marine Tug Boats
(types 1 and 2), in the revised contract sum of Euros14,770,039.88 plus
USD 710, 742.13, plus N398,784,566.08, with the completion period of 12
months and supply of two Mercedes Benz fire fighting trucks with aerial
platform in the revised contract sum of Euros 1,147,500.00; plus
N29,767,500.00, with the completion period of 20 weeks.

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Saraki organisation says Nigeria is in danger of failing

Saraki organisation says Nigeria is in danger of failing

Nigeria is in
distress and could fail if not rescued immediately, the Abubakar Bukola
Saraki Campaign Organisation (ABS) said yesterday.

Udenta Udenta, the
director general of the campaign, said at the organisation’s maiden
conference in Abuja that there is an urgent need to put in place
concrete policy and package to transform the country.

He said the
governor of Kwara State and presidential aspirant, Bukola Saraki, is
adequately prepared to undertake the task, as his aspiration represents
both generational and ideological change. He added that his principal
has already put together a package for the ultimate transformation of
the country.

According to him,
the change being worked out by the governor “would mobilise Nigerians
as nationalists, to support real change. Change that does not replace
old prejudices with new discrimination. Change that does not incite
Christians against Muslims, or vice versa. Change that does not divide
the minority from the majority groups. Change that does not
sectionalise power,” Mr. Udenta said.

Generation change

Mr. Udenta
described Mr. Saraki as an expert in providing power, infrastructure,
and social services, aside from the agricultural revolution, which, he
said, has been done in Kwara State.

“Our movement is a
social democratic project to empower women and youth and free the
masses from underdevelopment,” he stressed.

“Our think-tank
consists of some of the best brains in Nigeria, who have already
developed a concrete policy paradigm and package to transform Nigeria.
We condemn elite manipulation of ethnicity, religion, and region in
order to divide and oppress the people,” he said.

The campaign
manager said Mr. Saraki hails from the centre of Nigeria, and
therefore, represents all Nigerians, irrespective of their
socio-cultural background.

“Born of a Muslim
father and a Christian mother, a hybrid of different Nigerian cultures,
he is a true and detribalised Nigerian,” he said.

Mr. Udenta said that the governor’s campaign would engage
competitors on issues as well as the country’s priorities and ideology,
just as he noted that the contributions of past leaders would be
respected.

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Court investigates coercion in Al-Mustapha trial

Court investigates coercion in Al-Mustapha trial

Mojisola Dada, of
the Lagos High Court, Igbosere, yesterday fixed November 23, 2010 to
determine whether a statement dated September 10, 2000, made by Lateef
Shofolahan, a former aide of Moshood Abiola, was made voluntarily or
under duress.

Mrs Dada fixed the
date shortly after parties in the suit adopted their written addresses.
The Lagos State government had sued Hamza Al-Mustapha, the Chief
Security Officer to the late Head of State, Sani Abacha, and the former
Head of the Police Mobile Unit at the Presidency, Aso Rock Villa, Rabo
Lawal, for attempting to murder a former Director of Sports in Delta
State, Isaac Porbeni, and the Guardian Newspapers publisher, Alex Ibru.

Under duress

The core of the
trial-within-trial is to determine whether a statement dated September
10, 2000 made by Mr Shofolahan, a former aide of Mr Abiola, was made
voluntarily or by means of torture. At the resumed hearing of the
matter, defence counsel, Olalekan Ojo, while adopting his 22-page
written address, urged the court to refuse the purported statement
since it was not made voluntarily. The court will also determine
whether the prosecution has provided requisite evidence to justify why
Mr Shofolahan was handcuffed and leg-chained during the period of his
detention, particularly in the interrogation room and when the alleged
statement was obtained.

Part of the submissions of the defence counsel is that putting
fetter on the legs and hands of suspects in detention is against their
fundamental rights. The defence counsel argued that suspect in custody
should not be subjected to torture or any dehumanising treatment by the
detaining authority.

The defence also submitted that no suspect should
be hand-cuffed or leg-chained in the interrogation room either
routinely or to gratify the pleasure of the interrogator. He maintained
that it is settled in law that any departure by the interrogators or
investigator from acceptable rule has to be justified by the
prosecution. Mr Shofolahan, a former aide to the late Kudirat Abiola
was sentenced to 31 years imprisonment with hard labour for his
involvement in the plot to kill the late leader of Afenifere, Abraham
Adesanya.

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‘Nigeria has the highest number of children out of school’

‘Nigeria has the highest number of children out of school’

In ranking Nigeria
amongst the worst place for a child to be in 2010, a report by the
Global Campaign for Education (GCE) has stated that Nigeria has more
children out of education than any other country in the world.

The report claims
that an astounding 8.2 million children are not provided with adequate
education in Africa’s most populous country. Comparing the nation’s
wealth with the apparent low standard of education, the report claims
that “the report is made all the more appalling by the fact that
Nigeria is far from poor, by African standards. On paper at least it is
among the continent’s richest countries, the world’s sixth largest
producer of crude oil. But decades of failure to invest in education
have left the basic school system hardly functioning, especially in the
country’s impoverished north.”

For Primary
education, the report claims many students drop out of the school in
their first year of education due to ‘unequal provision of education’
and this it argued, is caused by the lack of political will to address
and arrest the issue. “A lack of political will is a major factor in
the country having the highest number of children out of school in the
world. Gross inequality in the provision of education has led to 8.2
million children out of primary school with many more dropping out
within the first year.”

Poor attendance, imbalanced education

The report
particularly criticised the northern region of the country for an
abysmal amount of children denied good education. “Over half of these
children are in the north of the country, with girls suffering the most
with many receiving just six months of education in their lives. In the
largely Muslim north of Nigeria……….attendance rates are below 50%
at primary school and of those only one in every three pupils is female
(nationwide, the proportion is five boys to four girls)” it noted.

The GCE report is
coming just as the National Education Council of Nigeria (NECO) on
Monday released the 2010 results and over 79% of the students that sat
for the examination failed in English language; the nation’s official
language.

While over 80% of the students failed the entire exam last year.

Nigeria was however
not listed in the list of the bottom 10 countries that are worst for a
child. The countries which are predominantly African nations include
Somalia, Eritrea, Comoros, Ethiopia, Chad, Burkina Faso, Central
African Republic, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Liberia and Haiti. Tanzania and
Mozambique were however commended for halving the number of children
out of school, while Rwanda is said to have made strong efforts to
ensure that there are enough professionally trained teachers.

The report noted
that delivering education for all is highly achievable and brings other
poverty dividends such as reducing HIV deaths by seven million and
doubling child survival by 50% if mothers are educated.

The President of
the Global Campaign for Education Kailash Satyarthi in a statement to
political leaders warned “if scientists can genetically modify food and
NASA can send missions to Mars, politicians must be able to find the
resources to get millions of children into school and change the
prospects of a generation of children.”

GCE called on
leaders meeting at the United Nations in New York this week, to make
funding for education a priority in order to meet the target of
universal access to basic schooling by 2015.

It argues that
“poor countries should spend 20% of their national budget on education,
abolishing school fees and be supported to hire an additional 1.9
million teachers so that every child can have access to education.” It
called on rich countries to “direct their aid budgets at the poorest
countries or where inequalities of education are most extreme, rather
using their aid budgets to underwrite the University systems.

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We can’t conduct successful elections by January, says Ojudu

We can’t conduct successful elections by January, says Ojudu

His decision to go into politics

I have been in
politics for a while, but there was never a time I was really
interested in elective office. But in the last one year, I have
reflected on the events in the country, especially in Ekiti State, and
also my career. I now feel that if all of us that are critical of the
way things are going in this country stand aloof, if we allow the
people with no vision to rule over this country, things will continue
to be the way they are. That is why you find me doing what I’m doing
now.

Criticism of timetable for 2011 elections

I think the time
line is too close for the elections. If, by now, we have not done
registration, parties have not nominated their candidates, ballot
papers have not been printed and a lot of things have been left
untouched. There is no way we can do successful elections in January.
They have argued that the electoral act has specified a time. My
argument is that law is made for man, not man for the law. Those laws
are going to be impediments to free and fair elections. We could amend
those laws that have been passed. We could call the National Assembly
members together again to review, instead of hindering our election, or
we can suspend those laws for this election.

Challenges facing Ekiti State

If you look at
Ekiti State over the years, you will find that there has been a
collapse in the education sector. We have always seen education as an
end to needs, not as a means to an end. We have not used that education
to build industries and provide employment for our people. You can just
be acquiring degrees without adding to the value of the lives of our
people. People believe that to go to school and acquire degrees is the
end of the world. That is the kind of rebirth we want in Ekiti State.
We want to recreate and change the perspective of our people. It is
when other states see us from a good perspective that we will begin to
attract people from other states and these will bring good tidings to
our state.

His plans if elected senator

The problem facing
Ekiti State is the re-orientation of our people. We need to call
ourselves to the problem facing us. For example, all the roads in Ekiti
are not in good shape. We are going to vigorously call attention to all
these things.

If I get to the
National Assembly, I am going to network with my colleagues and lobby
those that can be lobbied. Because of my working here, I have also
discovered that there is so much ignorance, people not knowing what is
going on outside the state and people with degrees don’t even know
where to go for jobs. They don’t know that a lot of government
agencies, especially at the federal level, hire people annually on a
contract basis. They don’t have the knowledge of what is due to them.
We would organize seminars for our businessmen on where and how to take
opportunities of loan facilities. So those are the kind of things I
will do differently.

ACN’s chances in the elections

If you drive around
the town, opinion polls will show that ACN is the most popular party in
Ekiti State and you can also feel the popularity.

We shall be
vigilant and make sure that there is no rigging so that we can win our
elections. PDP do not love our people. We do not need to deceive
ourselves. At the national level, we will try as much as possible to
present a good candidate that is going to be well accepted by the
majority of Nigerians. If INEC will keep to its promise to conduct free
and fair elections, then why can’t we win? We can see the future is
bright for the party and we are waiting for it.

His confidence about his chances

I am not arrogant
and I’m always at home with the people. I am not a wealthy man and I am
not a silver spoon person. People have helped me in the past to be what
I am today. So why will I be arrogant? I could be self confident and if
that is what some people see as being arrogant, then I can’t help it. I
am self-confident and I don’t allow people to push me around. You can
accuse me of self-confidence and self-sufficiency, but not being
arrogant.

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Duke to represent Queen at Nigeria anniversary

Duke to represent Queen at Nigeria anniversary

The British High Commission in Nigeria on Tuesday announced that Queen Elizabeth of the United Kingdom will be represented at our nation’s 50th independence anniversary by the Duke of Gloucester.

According to a statement from the commission, the Duke of Gloucester, Richard Alexander Walter George KG GCVO, will be visiting Nigeria from September 28 to October 3, 2010. “He will be representing Her Majesty the Queen and Her Majesty’s Government at the 50th Anniversary Celebrations of Nigeria as an independent nation.”

Nigeria got her independence from Great Britain in 1960, with the Queen in attendance.

“As part of his visit to Nigeria, the Duke of Gloucester will also undertake official engagements in both Lagos and Abuja,” the statement read. “As part of the United Kingdom’s contribution to Nigeria’s 50th Anniversary Celebrations, the Duke will visit Lagos and take part in the Presidential Fleet Review and undertake other naval training activities.”

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Cross River launches identity management project

Cross River launches identity management project

The Cross River
State government has signed a joint venture agreement with Interswitch
Limited for the implementation of the Cross River State Identity
Management and E-Payment Backbone.

The state governor,
Liyel Imoke, described the occasion as a reflection of a new way of
doing business in Cross River, stating that the government will
continue to partner with the private sector to improve on service
delivery, and help make a difference in the lives of the citizens. He
said the project will be a success story for the combined effort
between the public and private sectors.

Mr Imoke said the
project has great potentials to improve the people and the government
of the state, by providing a strong backbone for E-Payment, as well as
opportunities to gather information and data in identifying the
citizens of the state and determine the number of people required in
the civil service. He added that the goal of the project is to build an
operation that will deliver identity management and payment processing
at no cost to the state government. It will also improve the internal
revenue generation capacity of the state, as well as provide accurate
data and fail-proof identification of citizens for development
purposes, social services and planning, he said.

He urged the
operators to ensure that the contents of the agreement are adhered to,
for the people to enjoy the service which they provide.

The state government will provide the legislation and support,
whilst Interswitch will provide the technical expertise and funding.

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ENVIRONMENT FOCUS: A presidential debate on sustainable development

ENVIRONMENT FOCUS: A presidential debate on sustainable development

Nigerians imitate
so much from Americans that we resemble a US colony on the 50th
anniversary of our independence from the UK. All the same, I look
forward to that American tradition of moderated debates by presidential
candidates – this time, in Nigeria. Early days yet, maybe; but Jonathan
says it’s all God’s doing, Babaginda declares: the older the better,
and Saraki states it’s the turn of a new breed.

Slogans apart, a
would-be-president of Nigeria should confront and convince millions
within this country, as well as investors from outside, instantaneously
with an agenda of how he will pull the country out of the deep, dirty
hole we have lived in for 50 years. What plans, for example, do our
presidential aspirants have to combat the negative impacts of climate
change? What will they do about food insecurity? Some Nigerian
politicians are calling for a return to coal-mining to solve the energy
crisis. What is the opinion of Jonathan, or Saraki, Babangida, or
anyone else? Atiku, too. And if Nigerian coal miners got trapped 700
metres beneath the surface, what contingency plans would they have in
place to rescue them?

We often repeat all
those familiar statistics about Nigeria – forests gone, hundreds of
species endangered, rivers, lakes, coastal areas over-polluted and
over-fished, threats of erosion, floods, drought, the worst maternal
and infant mortality, the highest reported cases of snake bites in
Africa, thanks to Kaltungo Local Government in Gombe State. Do we have
someone who can turn things around, someone who will make a difference?

We need moving
rhetoric, ideas, plans and promises that will be kept, not patronizing
visits to re-assure the Igbo that they’ll give birth to the next
president, courtesy of a midwife called Babangida. Igbo people, like
other Nigerians, are more interested in when there will be light and
water, and jobs and health care, and no hankypanky and fraud in paying
pensions to the aged; no muggers and kidnappers, no policemen killing
drivers at checkpoints.

Babangida is sadly
out of touch with the recent realities of public affairs in Nigeria. We
are now in civilian times and marching to a different music of debate
and innovative thought processes, not commands and decrees. Long
retirement and hibernation has taken its toll on a once dashing General
of the Nigerian army. If it is correct, and I don’t still believe it,
that he picked Peter Odili to run with him, then IBB is very likely to
be frozen on the starting blocks once more. It appears that he has not
seen the handwriting on the wall, and I don’t think he will hear the
starter’s gun either. A great pity, but then soldiers are no strangers
to hara-kiri! I still would like the young Saraki to tell us what
lessons he learnt about farming from those white Zimbabweans. Has any
agricultural knowledge or technology been transferred to Kwarans? Why
did Mr Saraki approve land so rapidly for the Zimbabweans when many of
us are not able to own a plot to farm in our states of origin, talk
less of doing so in another state within the country? Is that what the
Land Use Decree is all about? That a state governor can hand over
productive land to foreigners with such ease?

If Mr Saraki was
enterprising enough to start a football academy in Ilorin, why hadn’t
he thought of a college of agriculture at which his Zimbabwean pals
would be lecturing?

Yet on Monday, Bukola Saraki wrote that we need young Nigerians to fix things. Yes, I agree, but not old Zimbaweans!

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Agency completes payment of aviation company workers

Agency completes payment of aviation company workers

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Soludo’s criticism of economy alarmist, says Sanusi

Soludo’s criticism of economy alarmist, says Sanusi

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Sanusi
Lamido Sanusi, yesterday reacted to recent criticisms credited to his
predecessor, Chukwuma Soludo, on the management of the nation’s
economic policies, describing it as “alarmist.”

Mr Sanusi, who was briefing reporters on the
resolutions by the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting yesterday in
Abuja, said Mr Soludo could not have been right to declare that the
country’s economy was facing imminent collapse, considering the damning
situation the global economy is currently going through.

“I wish he (Soludo) was specific on some of those
things he thinks we should do to save the economy from the crisis or
collapse he is talking about, and give recommendations,” Mr Sanusi
said, adding, “I think some of those remarks were alarmist and did not
take full cognizance of the situation we are in today.”

Failing short of tracing the root of the present
crisis in the economy to Mr Soludo’s administration, the CBN Governor
explained, “We are in the middle of global economic crisis (where our
country’s) banking system has lost 66 per cent of its capital. The
reality is that if we had intervened in 2007 or 2008, when the warning
signals were becoming clear that the banking system was heading towards
a point of crisis, due to the opaque situation in the capital market,
we would not be dealing with the kind of crisis we are facing at this
moment.

“Once it became clear that the banks had lost
capital, because of margin loans and exposure to petroleum products
importation and very weak regulation and supervision, it was clear that
the banks cannot continue to lend at the rate they were used to,” Mr
Sanusi said.

“For that reason, I supported the decision of the
National Economic Council that government should draw down on the
Excess Crude Account in order to augment government payments. And if
credit is not flowing into the economy and government is not lending,
we will have a full blown recession.

“Excess Crude Account was saving for a rainy day. And
when price of crude oil crashed from $147 per barrel to $40, and output
crashed from 2.3million barrels a day to less than one million barrels
per day, it is not just raining, it pouring.

“One needed to have counter-fiscal condition. The Excess crude Account was used to fund that counter-fiscality.”

Playing politics

Mr Sanusi said Mr Soludo himself pursued
counter-fiscal monetary policy measures and reduced the liquidity ratio
from 40 to 25 per cent, and cash reserve requirement from 42 per cent.

“These were appropriate quality responses in the time
of crisis,” he said. “For me, the decision of government to implement
financial sector reforms was long overdue. The announcement that
petroleum products distribution should be deregulated over time is also
a very good decision that should be implemented.

“The focus of the Minister of Finance on employment
generation and industrial development policy are long overdue and
should be encouraged. The reforms in the capital market are good. We
are not exactly there yet, but in terms of taking the right steps, I
think the government has done all that is necessary to do.”

Mr Sanusi said some of the comments credited to Mr Soludo might be political.

“Soludo had contested an election some time ago, and
as a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), one does not know
how much his statement is economics and how much of it is politics. But
I am responding to the economic aspect of the discussion and not
involved in the internal PDP family political affair,” he said

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