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Sambo promises resuscitation of Kaduna industries

Sambo promises resuscitation of Kaduna industries

The Federal
Government is working towards the resuscitation of ailing industries in
the Kaduna State, Vice President Namadi Sambo said yesterday in Zaria.

Mr. Sambo, who
spoke at an event organised by the Emir of Zauzzau, Shehu Idris, in his
honour, stated that out of the N100billion provided by the federal
government for the revitalization of textile industries in the country,
N24billion is for industries in Kaduna State.

“I can confirm that
out of the N100b approved for the resuscitation of textile industries
in the country so far, N24billion has been approved for the industries
in Kaduna State,” he said.

The former Kaduna
State governor also disclosed that N15billion has been released by the
federal government to facilitate electricity generation at the Galma
dam in the state.

“It is highly
appreciated that the President has approved the immediate release of
funds to provide additional 200mw of electricity in Kaduna State,” Mr.
Sambo said.

He asked the people
of the state to support President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration in
order to benefit from the federal government, describing it as “a
government of the people and for the people”.

“I want to call
upon all of you to support this gesture so that we can create jobs for
our youths and drive away poverty in our midst. We will give support to
all the institutions that are in Zaria and the state, so that Kaduna
State can go back to its former glory.”

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Rep indicts Kano on poor education

Rep indicts Kano on poor education

The educational
backwardness of Kano State is a cause for concern as the state could
not develop without a well trained citizenry, member of the House of
Representatives, Farouk Lawan has said.

Mr Lawan, who is
chairman of the House committee on education, and a governorship
aspirant on the platgform of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), said
it is shameful that Kano state is far behind all the states of the
federation in the area of education; and referred to the recent
assessment of states performance on education carried out by the
Universal Basic Education Commission which indicated that the state
performed poorly.

Adamawa State
emerged the 2008 overall winner, and won N900m out of the N3.9billion
earmarked for the 2007 and 2008 Universal Basic Education good
performance grants. In the 2008 category, Katsina State came second;
Jigawa State, third; Bauchi State, fourth; Federal Capital Territory
(FCT), fifth; and Kogi state, sixth with a cash reward of N450m, N350m,
N250m and N150m respectively.

Mr Lawan said the
poor score should be blamed on poor leadership in the state since 2003
when the All Nigeria Peoples’ Party (ANPP) government, headed by
Governor Ibrahim Shekarau assumed the helm of affairs of the state. The
lawmaker spoke shortly after he formally informed the leadership of the
state PDP of his intention to contest the governorship seat in 2011.

“This is a very big
problem, in a society where majority are not educated,” he said. “What
baffles me is that the government of the day is not doing anything on
education. What did they do with the whole money they have been
collecting in the last seven years? This should be a lesson for us so
that we can elect people who have value for education.”

Mr. Lawan, who was
a former registrar of the Kano State Polytechnic, assured that a
PDP-led administration would wake up to its responsibility of providing
quality education to the people of state.

Be fair to all aspirants

He also pointed at
the prevalence of drug abuse among the youth in Kano as another
indictment of the ANPP-led administration, and added that the existence
of both problems indicates that the state government was not proactive
in youth development in the state. “Kano is at a risk of remaining a
laughing stock in the comity of progressive states in the country,” he
said.

Promising to tackle
these problems if elected in the 2011 polls, Mr Lawan pledged to revive
the lost glory of Kano as the leading commercial centre in the country.

“This can be
achieved through the provision of basic infrastructure like power,
security, agricultural incentives to farmers and employment
opportunities to the teeming population of the unemployed in the
state,” he said.

He urged the Farouk Iya-led leadership of the state executive of the
party to be fair and just to all aspirants in the primaries, and
enjoined supporters of the party to close ranks to ensure the defeat of
the ANPP in the 2011 polls.

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Succession crisis rocks Anambra town unions

Succession crisis rocks Anambra town unions

The ranks of the Anambra State
Association of Town Unions have been polarized following the succession
crisis that has hit the 177-member body.

Last weekend, the state government
stopped the conduct of an election aimed at producing a new executive
for the union, citing the union’s flouting of its constitution.

A state official, Obuekwe Okoli, head
of department of the ministry of chieftaincy and town union matters,
had stunned a large gathering of union members who had come to elect a
new leadership at the Amawbia Town Hall, Awka, with the announcement
that the election had been postponed indefinitely.

He said the union could not conduct the
election because some members had carried out amendments in the
constitution without registering same with the Corporate Affairs
Commission, the way the former constitution was registered.

“Today’s election has been postponed
because government has directed that the election must conform to the
Union’s constitution,’ Mr. Okoli said.

He also explained that government’s
intervention was occasioned by the invitation of the association that
it should supervise the conduct of the election, as a stakeholder in
the activities of the union.

But the government’s decision has been
criticised by some members of the union. Rob Ezeife, younger brother of
a former Anambra State governor, Chukwuemeka Ezeife, said he suspected
foul play and infusion of politics into the activities of the union.

Mr Ezeife, who is contesting for the
chairmanship of the body as the candidate from Anambra South, expressed
doubts that the directive actually emanated from the governor whom he
described as a stickler to the rule of law.

“The outgoing executive could not claim
ignorance of the amended constitution, as they were elected on the
basis of that constitution,” he said. “What they are doing now is an
attempt to shift the goal post in the middle of the game.”

Against tenure elongation

The drama trailing the postponement
was further heightened when, shortly afterwards, a group which claimed
to be members of the union’s Board of Trustees and which said it spoke
on behalf of the BOT chairman, Chimezie Ikeazor, alleged that the
postponement was a climax of the plot by the dissolved Innocent
Onwubuya-led executive to elongate its tenure.

Alex Okoli, who said he was secretary
of the union’s trustees, said the tenure of the executive headed by Mr
Onwubuya expired on December 4 last year and was dissolved through an
appropriate motion to that effect. Owing to this, he pointed out, any
action carried out by Mr. Onwubuya will be deemed illegal.

He accused Mr Onwubuya and the last
executive of purposely trying to jettison aspects of the amended
constitution that did not favour them, especially the issue of zoning
which, Mr Okoli said made it clear that it was now the turn of the
south to produce the chairman.

Mr. Okoli also expressed surprise at the announcement by the government official, saying his actions were suspicious.

“First of all, he told us he had come
as an observer. Then he said he had come to conduct the election,
before finally saying he had been mandated to stop it,” Mr. Okoli said.

He said the board of trustees had
decided to verify the alleged government directive but maintained that
the union had no executive currently and the board had taken over the
leadership pending the conduct of a credible election in the nearest
future.

“The Board of Directors has taken over
the leadership in the interim. We urge all the town union
presidents-general to remain calm as peace will soon be returned to our
union. The trustees are working assiduously to ensure the conduct of
credible elections very soon,” Mr. Okoli said.

Mr. Onwubuya could not be reached for
his reaction as he hurriedly left the venue and had refused to answer
several calls made to his line.

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Edo to destroy century old building for mall

Edo to destroy century old building for mall

Anguish, despair and lamentation were the lot of
traders at the famous Agidigbi building, located in the heart of Benin
City as they were forced to move out their goods at the weekend as
government prepares to demolish the building.

The state government had apparently acquired the more
than 100-year-old building from the Agidigbi family for the purpose of
constructing a shopping mall on its grounds.

Some of the occupants of the building, which houses
about 450 people, are said to have resided there for the past 25 years.
They also claim that they were given only seven days quit notice.

The unhappy traders had barely settled down for the
day’s business when state government officials arrived at the building
to direct them to pack their belongings from the house in readiness for
its demolition.

Alfred Onyenaka, chairman of the traders’ association
at the building said that the government has not been fair to his
colleagues, whom he said have been denied engaging in their business,
thereby putting them and their families at the risk of hunger.

He said with the development, the state government is
breeding more criminals and kidnappers, “Government don do their best.
They don keep us for hungry. We no get power pass government. Person
wen they remove something from him mouth go hungry now. So make we take
the thing as we see am now. For now, me I dey go to my house where I
dey live. If possible, I fit go to my place of origin because nobody
wen no come from him state,” he said.

Another leader of the traders, Chima Francis said his
group has been trying to see the state governor, Adams Oshiohmole in
order to appeal to him to give them up to December this year to enable
them find an alternative place.

“The people in the building are unhappy because they
don’t have any other place to go,” he said. “We appeal to the state
government to give us a place, even if we would spend our money to
construct the area.”

In public interest

But the Edo State Commissioner for Lands and Survey,
Didi Adodo said the state government bought over the building “for
public interest”.

He also debunked the allegation that traders were
given a week notice, saying the government had acquired the building
and others around the area, gazetted the acquisition and published it
in national newspapers since last year.

Clem Agba, the state commissioner for Environment,
also said the takeover of the area was part of government’s effort to
modernize the city.

“It is part of the enhancement of the beautification going on
around the King’s square area.” Mr Agba said. “The Comrade governor
wants to set standard in terms of buildings to be seen around the
area.”

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Nigeria needs fresh anti-corruption approach, says Ribadu

Nigeria needs fresh anti-corruption approach, says Ribadu

The federal
government will introduce a fresh approach to tackle corruption which
remains a source of insecurity to the nation, Nuhu Ribadu, former
chairman of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission, said yesterday
in Ilishan Ijebu, Ogun State.

Mr. Ribadu, who was
attending his first public appearance after returning from an 18-month
exile last Thursday, made this call during the 8th Convocation Ceremony
of Babcock University in Ogun state where he was conferred with an
honorary Doctor of Laws degree.

“There is merit in
the argument that new times call for new strategies and that a
sustainable anti-corruption programme in Nigeria must wear a new look,”
he said. “In the reality of our nation today, an anti-corruption
programme must get an elevation to be located at the very core of
national security imperative.”

Mr. Ribadu said all
the resources deployed at building a virile nation will come to nought
if “we do not put all our development efforts in the context of a new
economic management model that correctly annotates corruption as most
crippling factor in our development effort.”

Recounting his
experience during the 18 months he was in exile, Mr. Ribadu said it
provided him an opportunity to reflect on what he had done in the five
year he was a member of the country’s economic management team.

“Such modest
anti-corruption efforts as we saw in the very recent past produced
result, created fundamental change and offer hope of national
restoration,” he said.

Mr. Ribadu also
said despite the “pains and discomfort” which his exile engendered, he
draws solace in the fact that his four years of anti-corruption
campaign has been validated. “If we had the opportunity to do it again
today, it might be worth repeating,” he said.

Educational values

Mr. Ribadu also
highlighted the core values of the university, which is to build people
for leadership, transform lives and impact society for positive change.

According to him,
these core values are imperative and “we must continue to seek to
transform our country towards a just, fair, equitable, peaceful and
truly free society.”

He also advocated
that the country must move from the present practice where more than
N1.1 trillion was spent on education in the last five years, with
little result, to the practice where education is brought to the
“doorsteps of citizens” just like India and china have done. As a
gesture of honour, Mr. Ribadu was also called upon to conduct the
foundation stone laying ceremony of the Pastor Laz Otti Memorial
Virtual Library at the institution.

The former anti-corruption czar expressed his gratitude to the school management for deeming him fit of such honour.

“You can truly
understand how humbled and appreciative my family and I are by the kind
invitation to join the ranks of the honoured,” he said.

Mr. Ribadu was on
May 25, restored as a retired Assistant Inspector General (AIG) by the
Police Service Commission after he was stripped of his promotion from
an Assistant Commissioner of Police to AIG and subsequently sacked from
the Nigerian Police Force for alleged indiscipline, insubordination and
absence from duty in December 2008.

He later went into exile after several attempts on his live. He has
been a visiting fellow at the Center for Global Development, Washington
DC

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Activists condemn lawmakers on constitution review

Activists condemn lawmakers on constitution review

The Society for
Preservation of Rotation Convention (SPRC), a group in support of the
zoning of political offices in the country, said on Sunday, it is
outraged over the handling of the recently concluded amendment of the
1999 Constitution.

The group, in a
statement by its national coordinator, Osita Okechukwu, said the review
falls short of the expectations of Nigerians.

“SPRC is outraged
over how the National Assembly (NASS) unpatriotically embarked on
voyage of self service and self glorification, evaded and smashed the
high expectations of Nigerians for genuine Electoral Reform, hence
converted the First Amendment of the 1999 Constitution into self
service and self glorification,” he said.

“SPRC is of the
candid view that Nigerians, for the avoidance of doubt, harbour a very
nostalgic memory and gravitas of giant of Africa; but daily bemoan how
shambolic, do-or-die national, state and local elections had tainted
our image, mashed our national pride and dwarfed our ratings,” the
statement said.

The group said it
is unhappy that the legislature, as well as President Goodluck
Jonathan, did not act on the core recommendations of the Muhammed Uwais
report.

It said the Uwais
report was borne out of national consensus and therefore rated as an
article of faith and guiding principle in any genuine attempt to
reconstruct a truly Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

The activists also
regretted that the amendment exercise failed to address issues such as
Electoral Reform and the restructuring of the federation.

It said in deleting
Section 66 of the constitution, which forbids those indicted for
corruption from contesting elections, the National Assembly has
demonstrated a self service spirit to sustain their jumbo allowances
and protect looters.

Self-glorification

The group also described as self-glorification the amendment of Section 81 to put the federal legislature on first line charge.

It said: “Section
81 – in a self glorification bid, the NASS in granting
First-Line-Charge to INEC like the Judiciary, opportunistically joined
NASS the list of those whose budget will paid be directly from the
Consolidated Revenue Fund. While at the same time deleting the Uwais
recommendation that insulates the president from appointing key
officers of INEC; which could have made INEC truly independent. Of what
use is directly funding a surrogate INEC?

“Section 65 –
Upgrade of Educational Qualification, from school certificate to
Diploma; as if the poor performance of last eleven years is because of
illiteracy”.

SPRC also said it
was at a loss as to how Mr. Jonathan’s call for free, fair and
transparent 2011 elections will be achieved without genuine Electoral
Reform.

“On the broad outline, we call on the State Houses of Assembly to
jettison the so-called amendment, place national interest above petty
and narrow interest. For a greater Nigeria is a win-win situation,” the
group said.

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Alao- Akala wants reduction in litigations

Alao- Akala wants reduction in litigations

The Oyo State
governor, Adebayo Alao-Akala, has urged judges in the state to use
their powers to influence settlement of cases outside the court in
order to save time, cost and reduce litigations in the courts.

Mr Alao-Akala, who
made the recommendation in Ibadan while commissioning an ultra modern
mediation centre at the state’s ministry of justice, reiterated his
government’s commitment to saving the time of courts across the state
by getting them to shed such litigations that could be solved through
mediation.

Besides, the
governor said, the government is reacting to the global trend which
favours peaceful resolution of conflicts to ensure that relationship
between and among parties remain unhurt after the settlement.

“Part of the
reasons why my administration has shown keen interest in this Mediation
Project is that it will go along way in decongesting our courts and
prisons,” he said. “We envisage that if the concept is fully understood
by our people, only very serious civil cases will be taken to court and
as such our courts will concentrate more on criminal matters and very
intricate civil cases which they are created.”

According to him,
the state has specially trained legal officers under it to administer
the centre, adding that it is also established to develop the field of
alternative dispute resolution system of justice ‘to show other states
of the federation the right way to do it.

“The goal of
mediation is not fault finding, but fence mending. Its language is more
amenable to our culture and tradition,” he said, as he enunciated part
of the essence of the centre.

The foundation of
the centre, which costs the government N71. 1 million, was laid in 2006
during the governor’s 11 months stint in office.

Try mediation

Abdulsalam Ladi
Abdulah, the state attorney-general, sought for the assistance and
cooperation of private legal practitioners and judicial officers in the
operation of the centre.

He observed that
many of the cases in court are suitable for mediation and not
litigation for which the courts are created, asking the lawyers to
refer them to the mediation centre for appropriate action.

He said further that the officials assigned to work in the centre
will be exposed to periodic trainings that will keep them abreast of
information and happening in the field of mediation across the globe.

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Blast from the banking past

Blast from the banking past

At the age of 77,
S.B Falegan is still very much on the ball. If he had gone into a rip
van winkle type cat nap and then woken up today, Mr. Falegan would have
been hard put as to what to make of it all.

When he joined the
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in 1961 with first and post-graduate
degrees in economics, it was a totally different ball game. In fact, a
million years away from the age of the information super highway.

In the CBN of 1961,
everything was manual; the typewriters being standard colonial relics.
It didn’t matter though, for a largely pioneering staff had been
brought up to be fastidious. A lot of the process was experimental, the
structures were just evolving. It was a staid sort of situation, in
which everyone played it strictly by the book.

Finding themselves

The early 1960s,
Mr. Falegan recalls, were very much like “trying to build a
non-existent system. In the process we found ourselves learning all the
time”.

In the course of
events much of today’s foundation was constructed. Mr. Falegan went on
to become Director of Research at the CBN, a director of Standard Bank
(Now First Bank Plc) and the pioneer Managing Director of the Federal
Mortgage Bank of Nigeria.

Looking back, he
cannot help noticing the enormous differences in operations. He
cautions over and over again, that it is an exercise in futility, “to
compare incomparables.”

This is a very sensible precaution. For a start, the numbers of banks in operation then, were few and therefore manageable.

The ethical base of
the value system was totally different. Indeed, incomparable. The
society was intolerant of deviance and corruption. “Irrational
exuberance” would have been totally out of place and treated with stern
disapproval.

Mr. Falegan blames
the uncontrolled explosion in the number of licensed financial
institutions for much of what subsequently went wrong. If banking
licenses are handed out like confetti at a wedding, it cannot be
entirely surprising if, in his own words, the system attracts “the
good, the bad and the ugly”.

Predictably, it was to a one way route to disaster.

A disaster foretold

Mr. Falegan
observes that the Nigeria Depository Insurance Corporation (NDIC) was
put in place precisely to checkmate a disaster foretold. The
corporation was midwifed during the tenure of Ola Vincent as governor
of the CBN.

Mr. Falegan is, not
surprisingly, highly enthusiastic about the potential of the new Asset
management Company (AMC). He believes the AMC will be quite pivotal in
complementing banking reforms. He is of the view that this will help to
facilitate and produce a whole new set of professionals.

In an old fashioned
sort of way, he places great faith in moral suasion, believing that a
reorientation in ethical values will be of value in restoring order. He
is also perturbed about the present quality of the entre and recruiting
standards into the banking industry.

He is aghast at the
often naïve recruitment of non-economic graduates wholesale into the
operational departments of the financial institutions. Much of the
entre appears not to have been based on any latent interest but rather
on the attractiveness of the pay structure of the financial services
structure, according to him, and he believes that specialisation is the
key now to bringing enhanced value into the system and should be a key
consideration in recruitment.

Home-grown

In the 1960s, the
CBN was virtually under the control of the Federal Ministry of Finance.
In that experience, there was no place for an independent central bank
like for example, The German Bundesbank. In such a relationship,
Felegan recalls that “the CBN was buried in the belly of the elephant”.
Prudence of course had to be the watchword. Fiscal policy had to be
cautiously designed to contain inflationary pressures.

Today’s CBN has a latitude which would have been unthinkable in the 1960s, he says.

Mr. Falegan is
however not enamoured with the prospect of hiving off the banking
supervision arm from the CBN as has been done in the United Kingdom.

He believes that home grown alternatives should be sought in
prescribing solutions itotackling fiscal and monetary issues. “Let us
look at our own domestic environment,” he said.

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Two months of Jonathan’s new cabinet

Two months of Jonathan’s new cabinet

On April 6 2010,
Goodluck Jonathan, then the acting president, inaugurated a new cabinet
after prolonged speculations and lobbying, injecting much needed
authority into the federal administration as he faced a wavering
political system created by his late boss’s illness.

It is two months
since then today, and barely a year left to serve if they do not have
other political ambitions. A random overview of selected ministries’
decisions within the past 60 days however shows that, while not much
has been remarkable, there has been steady progress.

Ministry of Finance

Within two months,
the new minister, Olusegun Aganga, and the Minister of state, Remi
Babalola, have promoted a renewed effort against a total dependence by
the states on the federal excess crude account, highlighting the
already known extreme risk the national economy may face as a result of
such continued depletion of the account.

Mr. Aganga has
challenged the states to evolve newer ways of sourcing funds, leading
to a stalemate at the Federation Account Allocation meeting last month
where finance commissioners left without any money for their states.
The decision was however later overturned by the president.

The former Goldman
Sachs Managing Director, is also credited with advising Mr. Jonathan to
order the audit of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation – the
first in years – while also urging the National Assembly to review the
2010 budget which he has said contains unrealistic benchmarks and
assumptions.

Mr. Aganga also
admitted that the federal government lost over $19 billion to the
global economic crisis, leading to depleted reserves – the first such
admittance by a top government official.

Ministry of Petroleum

The first female
head of the ministry, Diezani Allison-Madueke is credited with the
prompt launching of the Nigerian local oil content law passed by the
National Assembly and signed into law by Mr. Jonathan. The law is
expected to increase the participation of Nigerians in the oil
industry, with the creation of an estimated 30,000 jobs in five years
and saving of about N2.7 trillion.

Within the past two
months also, the ministry said the nation’s gas supply has reached
1billion scf, – a far mark from the previous level – and supply to
power stations have accordingly improved. The ministry has also
released new regimes for gas price. The pricing is expected to
reinforce investors’ trust and promote production that will help deal
with Nigeria’s perennial power challenges.

Ministry of the Federal Capital Territory

On assumption of
office, the former senator now in charge of the ministry, Bala
Mohammed, dissolved the past council cabinet and vowed to deal with
corruption. No official has been prosecuted yet, though.

He revoked several
questionable land allocations made since 2007 and merged the Federal
Capital Territory Administration and the Federal Capital Development
Administration.

Perhaps the most
notable of Mr. Bala’s efforts is reversal of his predecessor’s (Adamu
Aliero) decision to erect speed breakers on the expressways. The
controversial bumps drew the ire of the National Assembly members and
other residents of the city. But the decision has been mired by
allegations that the contract for the removal was awarded at a cost
four times more than the amount used in constructing them.

Ministry of Education

In a rapidly
decaying educational system, Ruqayya Rufa’i, the new minister and
former Jigawa state commissioner of Education, said on assumption of
office that her administration would be concerned with raising the
quality of education in general, and ensuring the excellence of
examination bodies.

After the nation
recorded over 90% failure rate in the last Senior School Certificate
Examinations, she admitted the government was embarrassed by the
results and gave a four-week order to the bodies to re-position, work
against mass failure and ensure quick release of results.

Her ministry also
mandated the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board to end the
practice of charging N10, 000 from candidates who doubt the results and
wish to access their answer scripts.

Back in Jigawa, the
minister’s pet drive was to raise the enrolment of girl-child in
school. Her administration has just introduced a project to improve
access to education across the country.

Ministry of Science and Technology

After inauguration,
the professor of biochemistry, Muhammed Abubakar, said his ministry
would be concerned with translating research into realistic results. In
a ministry where several agencies have existed for decades without
producing marketable products, Mr. Abubakar told the institutes to
leave the laboratories and liaise with investors in marketing their
inventions. He has given ultimatum to two institutes under the ministry
to produce marketable solar panels and solar cells respectively.

Ministry of Justice

The new Attorney
General, Bello Adoke, in collaboration with his colleague in the
Interior Ministry, has highlighted the issue of prisons reforms, with
more than 30,000 awaiting trial individuals locked up in prisons across
the country.

Mr. Adoke’s letter
to the Senate President, David Mark, helped resolve the protracted
refusal of the Senate to honour repeated court orders and swear-in
Alphonsus Igbeke to replace Joy Emordi.

Mr. Adoke has also
promised that the justice ministry is considering the now famous Okigbo
report on the missing $12 billion gulf oil windfall. He said the
government is checking for the veracity of the document and if it can
support criminal charges against the major personality involved, former
military ruler, Ibrahim Babangida.

Ministry of Foreign Affairs

The controversial
listing of Nigeria by the United States as a terror-promoting nation
was reversed under the watch of Odein Ajumogobia, the former Minister
of state for Petroleum, who is now in charge of Foreign Affairs. Mr.
Ajumogobia has harped on collaborating with the National Assembly for a
new foreign policy for Nigeria, and establishing the Diaspora
commission.

Ministry of Labour

The new minister,
Emeka Wogu, assumed office while a strike threat by workers awaited
him. The ministry has slowed the outbreak of renewed industrial crisis
and under his administration, the president announced a new wage regime
for workers will begin July, 2010.

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Senate to create more states

Senate to create more states

With the electoral reform aspect of the
constitution review nearing conclusion, the Senate now wishes to begin
creating more states with its remaining year in office.

The Senate spokesman, Ayogu Eze,
disclosed the plan on Friday. He said the various requests for state
creation will be considered to prove that states can be created in a
democratic dispensation.

A test for democracy?

“As we come to the
conclusion of this first phase, we are already getting ready for the
next phase of the amendment of the constitution because there is a need
for us to prove that our democracy have come of age and that we can,
through mutual discussion, dialogue and debate, restructure the
political frame work of Nigeria in a manner that will be useful and
beneficial and satisfy the aspirations of Nigerians,” Mr. Ayogu said.

He added that the request for new states will be considered based on their merits and chances of survival without rancour.

“We will be guided
by the evidential parameters such as viability, ability of such a state
to promote unity and harmony if created, and promote the growth of the
Nigerian state,” he said. “We will stir away from any state creation
that will be rancourous. Those who want to request for state must
organise themselves properly and do it consensually and come up with
request that accord with the provisions of the constitution –
hopefully, as amended.”

Mr. Eze however
said the Senate is still undecided about the number of states to be
created and also yet to choose a particular criteria for determining
which state to create.

Three options

The Senate is,
however, considering three options; including creating the states to
balance the inequality in the number of states in the six geo-political
zones in which case only one state will be created in the south eastern
zone.

“There are
suggestions that say let every state stand on its merit rather than
equality of zones,” he said, revealing the second option.

The third that the six geo-political zones should be given equal number new states.

The Senate has
begun a two week break to mark the end of its third year in office but
the spokesman said they are willing to break the recess if there is any
urgent issue of national importance that demands their attention.

“If there is any urgent assignment requiring our attention, we will
not hesitate to come back. We’ve done it severally and we will do it
again,” he said.

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