Saturday, November 5, 2016

Buhari- Nigeria Would Be Great Again

Muhammadu Buhari
Punch Newspaper- President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday assured Nigerians that despite the enormous challenges facing the country, Nigeria would be great again.

 Buhari said this in an address he delivered at the inauguration of 500 housing units at Kalambaina Housing Estate, Sokoto. He said his administration had resolved to overcome all challenges and bring positive changes to all Nigerians.

The President said, “Looking forward, despite the enormity of the challenges facing us, we are optimistic that by the grace of God, our nation is destined to achieve greatness. “Today’ economic recession is affecting our economy. But we are resolved to overcome challenges, fight corruption and ensure good governance for the benefit of our citizens. “Our administration is poised to bring positive changes to all Nigerians.”

 Buhari also said all the challenges facing the county should be addressed through disciplined and committed leadership. While speaking on the 10th anniversary of the Sultan of Sokoto, Sa’ad Abubakar III, the President urged traditional rulers and all patriotic Nigerians to continue to work for the peace of the country.

 He said, “The 10th Anniversary of His Eminence, the Sultan and events of its kind are not simply held for merriment but to provide opportunity for sober reflections.

 “I am speaking in the context of the challenges which our dear nation needs to address through exemplary, disciplined and committed leadership in order to accomplish our aspirations for a strong and virile polity that will be a source of pride to present and future generations. 

 “It is an indisputable fact that in the 60s, 70s and even in the early part of the 80s, Nigeria was reputed for its peaceful coexistence between the different ethnic and religious groups; the culture of discipline and patriotism was also highly safeguarded.

“Commitment to national development by all key players in governance was also visible. “However, the situation as we all know, has unfortunately changed. Events associated with the anniversary and importantly the relevance of value of the Caliphate system must be base for progressive and self-reliant nation where, every citizen, irrespective of creed or tribal affiliation is given opportunity for self-actualisation.

 “In this regard, the Sultan and our highly esteemed Royal Fathers, our traditional institutions and indeed all patriotic citizens of this country have to continue to work for peace, religious harmony and sustainable development of our country. “Every government has the sacred responsibility of addressing the welfare of the governed in all possible ways. Provision of shelter to the teeming populace is in this context a priority for a purposeful leadership.”

 Buhari commended the Sultan for what he described as his invaluable contributions to the development of the country. He said the Sultan had consistently proved himself worthy of his ancestors. “He has continuously worked to promote peace and unity in the country. He has remained a leader, treading the path of his revered ancestors in building bridges of understanding amongst diverse ethnic and religious groups in the country. 

Friday, November 4, 2016

Justice Ngwuta: APC Chieftain Faults Afenifere’s Call On Onu, Amaechi To Resign

A legal practitioner and chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, Barrister Tony Odey has condemned the recent call on the Ministers of Science, Technology and Transportation, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu and Rotimi Amaechi to resign their appointments following a bribery allegation. 

Recall that on the heels of his arrest on alleged corrupt practices, Justice Sylvester Ngwuta of the Supreme Court of Nigeria accused the two ministers of approaching him to influence the court panel on Ebonyi and Rivers governorship elections.

How I Increase My Blokos Size & Stopped Premature Ejaculation Issues 

Following the allegation, Afenifere, a pan-Yoruba socio-cultural group called on Onu and Ameachi to resign while investigation is on. But in a statement in Abuja, Barrister Ode who was a former member of the defunct All Nigerians Peoples Party, ANPP which was chaired by Onu stated that the call was preposterous. He said that what Afenifere needed to do was to thoroughly investigate the matter before taking their position. Recalling his affinity with Onu in ANPP days, the APC stalwart said that the Minister is a man of great integrity. 

Describing Justice Ngwuta as a drowning man who was bent on pulling down everything to survive, Ode called on Ohaneze Ndigbo, a pan Igbo socio-cultural organization and South South Council of Elders to rise in defence of their own. He said: “Justice Ngwuta had alleged that the Honourable Minister of Science and Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu had approached him to influence the judgment of the Ebonyi State gubernatorial election in favour of the Labour Party candidate. 

“The allegation of Justice Ngwuta in my considered opinion is short of the truth and further reveals the ranting of a drowning man who under survival instinct can hold on to anything whether it is helpful or not. “As a former member, Board of Trustees of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party, ANPP, who had worked closely with Honorable Minister who was also a statutory member of the Board then, being the National Chairman of the ANPP the, I believe strongly that Dr. Onu would not do anything that’s capable of diminishing his hard-earned and long established integrity. “He is one gentleman whose character and reputation, I can vouch for. In fact, it is on this note that the good people of Yala Local Government Area in Cross River State, where I come from, considered him worthy for a highly revered chieftaincy award-“Okumade 1 of Yala Nation”, meaning “a pace setter of Yala Nation. 

“I considered that Justice Ngwuta just as usual must have been used to reduce the high profile and status of Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu. In this highly political times, it would not be a surprise to see the emergence of the likes of Justice Ngwuta as willing tools in the hands of fifth columnists like Afenifere. “Unfortunately, Afenifere initially known to be a highly respected socio-political organization and a voice of the Yoruba Nation has swayed off course and has now condescended to the status of patronizing cheap blackmail. 

“For instance, for the socio-politcal organization to call for the resignation of the highly revered Dr. Onu who has a track record of integrity beyond the shores of this nation is most uncharitable and further speaks of the low status the Afenifere has assumed. “It would have been more honorable for the Afenifere to first of all investigate to know where there is merit in Justice Ngwuta’s allegation before calling for the resignation. 

“In the light of the ugly situation, Justice Nguwta has found himself, I wish that the entire Igbo race and indeed, Nigerians as a whole should vehemently reject and ignore the call of Afenifere as it lacks of a genuine interest group that seeks the good will of the entire nation. “On Chief Rotimi Amaechi, the Honorable Minister of Transportation whose role goes with the sobriquet “the lion of the tribe of the South South”, I am no longer surprise that his role in the last political dispensation that brought the change to perfection would hav attracted the recent blackmail by those bent on pulling him down as one of the leading lights from the south south zone. “Ohaneze Ndigbo is supposed to have woken up to protect their own especially as it concerns one of their leading lights in the person of Onu. Ditto Amaechi in the case of South South Elders Forum.”


Federal Govt. Pays Pension Arrears

Pensioners
Punch Newspaper- The Federal Government has paid 81 months pension arrears which were incurred from 33 per cent pension increment, but left 87 months outstanding.

The money was paid to Police, Customs, Immigration, Prisons  and civil service pensioners.

A detailed  breakdown of paid pension arrears and outstanding months were made available to journalists in Abuja, when the Senate Committee on Establishment and Public Service, chaired by Senator Emmanuel Paulker, visited the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate for its oversight functions.


According to the documents, three months of 33 per cent increment were paid to Police Pension Department, leaving outstanding of 39 months to Customs, Immigration and Prisons Pension Department which had all its 42 months arrears paid off.

The Parastatals Pension Department had its 12 months arrears paid leaving 30 months outstanding.

The Civil Service Pension Department was paid 24 months leaving 18 months outstanding.
Similarly, the 33 per cent pension payment came as a fall out of the upward review of the minimum wage to N18,000 in 2010.


Monday, October 31, 2016

The Cabal; Facts You Need To Know

Buhari and yar'adua
Tribune- UNLIKE what obtains now, the term, ‘Kaduna Mafia’, was very popular in the nation’s socio-political circles, some 40 years back. It was said to have been coined by Mvendaga Jibo, the Benue State-born journalist, academic and politician who was a regular columnist with the Daily Times in the 1970s. Then, the term was derisive as the impression (either rightly or wrongly) was that a small group of people, based in Kaduna, the former capital of Northern Nigeria, were manipulating the levers of political power for their personal economic benefits and also in pursuit of the northern political and administrative hegemony within the Nigerian federation.

Many historians and social commentators alike also traced the origin of the Kaduna Mafia to the mid-1960s, following the first military coup that effectively put an end to the nation’s first attempt at democratic government during the First Republic. The loss of many northern leaders in the failed Major Kaduna Nzeogwu-led military putsch was said to have prodded a group of civil servants as well as technocrats of the northern origin to rally people of like mind and oppose the new government of General Aguiyi Ironsi


The group, later known as the Kaduna Mafia, was a diverse mixture of aristocrats and civil servants who were predominantly Muslims and was based in Kaduna. Two common denominators in their coming together was having their base in Kaduna and having their education at the famous Barewa College in Zaria and the Government College, Keffi. To the pro-northern cause, members of the group demonstrated a level of intelligence and managerial competence higher than that of some of their older contemporaries.
Membership of the Kaduna Mafia consisted of people who were coordinated and highly efficient, working behind the scenes to dictate the political and economic climate of the nation. They were both feared and respected both within and outside the nation. Their members are made up of some of the most powerful and richest men in the nation and they all make Kaduna their stronghold.

Members of the Kaduna Mafia were known and more fearfully respected for their commitment to the traditional values and socio-political interests of Northern Nigeria. They could be found in the various sectors of the national life, with many of them being bank directors, ministers, top military officers (the rank of the colonel being the highest during the formative years of the group), established business entrepreneurs and a growing class of intellectuals, all of northern origin.

Though of varied economic interests, their various professions and common educational background served as a major driving factor in their pursuit of a common goal, vis-a-vis the Northern agenda. The group was able to achieve much through an elaborate and effective network of power alliances among northern aristocrats and government sympathisers who were favourably disposed to the pro-northern and Islamic bent.

Using Kaduna mostly as their meeting point, members of the group were said to have been able to effectively network, spreading the gospel of the Northern agenda to the entire parts of the region. The cause was further helped by the fact that the Nigerian Army, after the Civil War, became populated predominantly by northern officers. The organic unity engendered by the fact that most of them were mates at the North’s few secondary schools of the 1950s and 1960s, greatly helped in making the former capital of the old Northern Region a fertile and veritable “centre for generating, refining, propounding, coordinating and disseminating the Northern agenda”.

The Aguiyi-Ironsi-led military regime, undoubtedly altered the existing geopolitical arrangement as the three former regions, Northern, Eastern and Western, were broken into states in 1967, while the six northern states were further broken into 10 states in 1976. This however did not diminish the aura of Kaduna as the political capital of the Northern Region. The Kaduna Mafia, through their established network and continued governmental patronages, all through the years, were able to maintain their meetings, pursuing the northern interest and agenda till the advent of the current democratic dispensation, and even beyond, with the unity of Northern Nigeria being the ultimate goal.

To lend credence to the myth and secrecy built around the group, names of members of the Kaduna Mafia are not often meant for public consumption. Nevertheless, some names do usually come up as the sponsors and proponents of the ideals and principles of the group.

Such names purportedly included Liman Ciroma; Adamu Ciroma; Musa Bello; Mamman Daura, Dr Mahmud Tukur; the late Sultan of Sokoto, Ibrahim Dasuki, Alhaji Tijjani Hashim; Hamza Zayyad; Alhaji Umaru Mutallab and Alhaji Aliko Mohammed.

Others allegedly included Dr Ibrahim Tahir; Ahmed Joda, Alhaji Ibrahim Damcida, Alhaji Tatari Ali; Alhaji Audu Abubakar; Professor Ango Abdullahi; Alhaji Sani Zangon Daura; Alhaji Aminu Tijjani; a former national chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dr Ahmadu Ali and Professor Jibril Aminu, while the like of the late General Shehu Yar’ Adua and the incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari were seen as the arrowheads of the military wing of the Kaduna Mafia.

However, it will be out of place to claim that the Kaduna Mafia and its members represented the entire face of the North. A clear line of distinction was made between ‘Kaduna Mafia’ and the North’s political elite in 1983 when it was alleged that the late General Shehu Yar’Adua led the military wing of the Kaduna Mafia to oppose the successful bid of former President Shagari for a second term of office.  And, for all intents and purposes, the term, ‘Kaduna Mafia’ became less heard from the early 1990s, only to be replaced by a new, phrase, “the Northern Caliphate”.

It will however be entirely wrong to assume that the Kaduna Mafia has died. The fact remains that most of its members are still around and they remain active in shaping and determining the fate of the country. Their seeming silence may be due to some extraneous factors: One, Kaduna, though still regarded as the political capital of the Old North, has been overshadowed by the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja which, without any air of pretense, is the centre of focus in the scheme of things.  But with unfolding events across the country, it may not be out of place to say that the members of the group are just lying in the shadows and monitoring the course of events and waiting to step, once again, into limelight and the corridors of power.

Another group which enjoyed almost same prominence as the Kaduna Mafia in the national political history is the Langtang Generals. Its members, included a rumoured clique of military men from Langtang in Plateau State who had variously held top and high positions of power in successive administrations in the country. The group particularly gained prominence during the administration of the self-styled President Ibrahim Babangida, between 1985 and 1993. Prominent members of the group were said to include General Joshua Nimyel Dogonyaro, General Jeremiah Useni, General Domkat Bali and Brigadier-General John Shagaya.

Langtang is a town in Plateau State. It was more commonly known as the home of the Generals, having produced the like of Generals Bali, Joseph Garba (deceased), Useni, Dogonyaro, John Shagaya, Jonathan Temlong, Musa Gambo, Ishaku Pennap, Air Marshal Jonah Wuyep and Air Commander Bernard Banfa. It also boasts of elder statesmen, including Chief Solomon Lar (the first civilian governor of the state and a former PDP national chairman), the late Chief Ezekiel Yusuf (the first chairman of Langtang Local Government) and Reverend Canon Selchang Miner. But unlike the Kaduna Mafia which was predominantly a Muslim grouping, the Langtang Mafia drew its membership from among Christians as Langtang is a Christian community, with some elements of adherents of the African Traditional Religion (ATR) and Tarok being the major tribe.

Following the footsteps of the perceived precursors of the terms, ‘mafia’ and ‘cabal’, are those who may be regarded as the young Turks who have taken over all aspects of the national life since the advent of the Fourth Republic in 1999 to date. This set of men and women have come to be seen as the “faces behind the new mafia that runs Nigeria”.

However, unlike the old order where the two afore-mentioned groups were regional in nature, the new mafia holding sway in the country cuts across all the geopolitical zones, breaking all ethnic barriers and occupying the top echelon of all the most lucrative sectors. They are also described as hawks who can hold any government by the jugular to achieve their aims.

In the business sector there are individuals like Alhaji Aliko Dangote, the Kano businessman once voted by Forbes Magazine as Africa’s richest man; Chief Mike Adenuga, the introvert multi billionaire owner of Glo; Femi Otedola, who is an established voice in the nation’s oil sector; Abdulsamad Rabiu, the sugar merchant; Wale Tinubu, the CEO of Oando, and the current Emir of Kano, Alhaji Sanusi Lamido Sanusi who, as a former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), wielded an enormous power in the banking sector, just to mention a few.

These men have their women counterparts who played very prominent roles in the life of the former President Goodluck Jonathan administration. They included former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke, former Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah and former Minister of Finance/Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mrs Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who was a prominent member of the Federal Executive Council during the Jonathan administration.


Badaru Cuts Govt House Feeding Allowance, Uses Extracts Gained on Abandoned PROJECTS

The Nation- Jigawa State Governor Badaru Abubakar has cut the Government House’ feeding allowance to N500 million as against N1.6 billion by the former administration of Sule Lamido.

Abubakar, who attributed the success of his administration to the pruning down of government’s expenditure, spoke at the weekend at the launch of the Birnin Kudu/Buji House of Representatives Constituency Office and scholarship to indigent students.

The governor said his administration spends N500 million on food for the Government House while only N200 million is expended on security in the state.

He said the protocol department spends N30 million as against N370 million Lamido administration spent, adding that “this prudence is the secret behind our success in sustaining salary and other activities.

Governor Abubakar assured the people his administration would complete abandoned projects initiated by the previous administration, saying over a 100 kilometre span of roads were completed within two years.

According to him, his government inherited N14 billion owed contractors, which he has started paying.

House of Representatives member Magaji Da’u Aliyu has begun the disbursement of scholarships to indigent students, who secured admissions into tertiary institutions, and distributed tricycles to disabled persons.

We tried the lonely road, it was not the same – Peter says P-Square back together

Peter & Paul Okoye

There are indications that the rift between popular Nigerian R&B group, P-Square duo, has been resolved.
From the news of change in management to alleged unsettled family disputes which lingered for a long while, the duo went their separate ways and has been working independently.

Peter Okoye has, however, lamented that the road has been lonely and tough working solo


.

He tweeted: “My dear fans, P-Square is back. Ours is a journey that started from our mother’s womb. It was a journey that started from Primary School, continued to St. Murumba College, to when we were in University in Abuja. It was a journey in which we shared childhood memories and grown-up dreams.

“We are back because brothers do not let each other wander in the dark alone. We are back because we have tried the lonely road and it was not the same.

“I want to take responsibility for what has happened and sincerely apologise to you our fans. For supporting us throughout this journey. We owed you so much more than what you have had to endure and I apologise for that.

“We are embarking now on a new journey with exciting new management (Jude Okoye), new music and new ideas.

“We cannot thank you enough for all your prayers and support throughout this difficult period.

“Maya Angelou once said that brotherhood is a condition that people have to work at. We will continue to work on that and you can be prepared to be blown away by this new phase of P-Square.

God bless you all and be assured that you have not seen anything yet,” he added.

Meanwhile, his twin, Paul, is yet to react to the new development.

Daily Post

Ondo guber tussle: Buhari sponsoring Jimoh Ibrahim – PDP chieftain, Babatope

Jimoh Ibrahim
Daily Post Reporter,Ameh Comrade Godwin in his report has said that;
 A member, Board of Trustees, Peoples Democratic Party, Chief Ebenezer Babatope, has accused President Muhammadu Buhari of being the brain behind the controversial emergence of business mogul, Jimoh Ibrahim, as the candidate of the opposition party in the forthcoming Ondo State governorship election.

Babatope claimed that Buhari had manipulated the political events in Ondo State in order to favour Ibrahim and set the state on the path of dictatorship.

He called on Nigerians to resist what he described as President Buhari’s ploy to destroy democracy in the country.


Speaking with Punch, Babatope said the declaration of Ibrahim as the governorship candidate of the PDP in Ondo State was championed by Buhari and the All Progressives Congress to rig the governorship election.

The former minister of transport warned that the future of the nation’s democracy was fraught with danger with the way the Buhari administration was going about governance.

Specifically, Babatope maintained that the disqualification of Mr. Eyitayo Jegede (SAN), whom INEC had upheld as the governorship candidate of the PDP in Ondo, was designed by Buhari.

He said, “President Muhammadu Buhari must be prevented from destroying democracy in Nigeria. The recent declaration in Ondo State has Buhari’s connections.
“The disqualification of Jegede, the Ondo PDP candidate, is designed by President Buhari and the APC to electorally manipulate the Ondo State governorship election.”

In another development, a former Deputy National Chairman of the PDP, Chief Bode George, has called on President Buhari to ensure that justice prevailed in the intra-party political crisis in Ondo State.

A statement by George on Sunday said disqualification of Jegede was one of the most disturbing interventions in Nigeria’s political space since 1999.

He said, “The decision by INEC to recognise Mr. Jimoh Ibrahim as the PDP governorship candidate in Ondo State is, perhaps, one of the most unsavory and disturbing interventions in our political space since the dawn of democracy. The decision is not only wrong; it is an inexcusable assault upon justice, fairness and morality.

“The Justice Okon Abang ruling which had forced the hands of INEC has now created tension and deep-seated uncertainties everywhere. I appeal to President Buhari as an officer and a gentleman to ensure that justice invariably prevails in Ondo State.

“Though the case is now before an appellate court, the body language of our President is equally important in ensuring the preservation of our democratic tenets. Justice must not only be done in this case, it must be carrie


Saturday, October 29, 2016

Devil Incarnate; Gunmen Invaded Kogi Wuro Miyetti-Allah Association Chairman's House

Gunmen
The Chairman, Kogi Chapter of Wuro Miyetti-Allah Association, Alhaji Ibrahim Abubakar, has been assassinated by unknown gunmen who invaded his residence in the early hours of Saturday. The unknown gunmen numbering about eight, invaded the Peace Community, Road 3, Ganaja road, Lokoja residence of Abubakar at about 2:05am on Saturday to carry out the dastardly act.

 Residents of the area, who spoke with newsmen, said they were gripped with fear when they started hearing gunshots from the residence of the chairman of Fulani socio-cultural group in the operation that lasted over an hour. They said the gunmen passed through “unfamiliar routes” to gain access into the deceased’s residence beating the ‘C’ Division Police Station route where they could have been spotted and questioned.

 A neighbour who identified himself simply as Musa, said there were some strange faces in the vicinity much earlier before the incident, not knowing they had a sinister motive. Musa said the gunmen shot at the door to the room of one of the deceased’s two wives and gained access into the house, cut him in the neck with a machete and other parts of the body and later shot him severally.

 A medical practitioner with the Federal Medical Centre, Lokoja, Dr Sam Alhassan, who lives a stone-throw from the victim’s residence said: “I was in my room which is just steps away to his house and I started hearing gunshots. “Then I rose up from my bed and looked through the window. I saw a group of bandits in two lines. At least I saw eight people, and they started shooting, shooting and shooting. “The next thing that I saw was that a bullet hit the overhead tank and water started running down. Later I and my family went quiet for a while; then the wife of the deceased came out shouting, ‘they have killed my husband.”

 Alhassan said he later came out with his landlord and went into the deceased’s house to ascertain the truth; only to find him lying in the pool of his blood with machete cuts and bullet holes in his lifeless body. The medical practitioner said it was unclear if the gunmen took cash or property from the house. The Police Public Relations Officer, ASP Williams Aya ,told NAN that the command had got the report, adding that the incident was a clear case of assassination. Aya said investigation into the matter had commenced adding that the Police was yet to make any arrest in respect to the assassination.
Punch News

"Are You Going To Tweet That I Am Back?" -Abba Kyari

Buhari And Abba Kyari
 Daily Post correspondent,Wale Odunsi in His report has said;The Chief of Staff to President Muhammadu Buhari, Alhaji Abba Kyari, has denied speculations that he was suspended by his principal.

  Kyari spoke yesterday with State House correspondents. He said he was only on vacation and had resumed.
 “Are you going to tweet that I am back?”, he asked while coming out from the president’s office.
On social media reports that he was suspended, he asked: “Can’t I go on leave?”
Asked to speak on camera, he said: “I don’t talk to the press. You know my job doesn’t allow me to talk.”

Buhari was said to have ordered the probe of Kyari for allegedly receiving N500m from MTN to facilitate a reduction of a fine handed the telecommunication firm by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC). Recall that the NCC had also ‎denied receiving bribe from MTN. Minister of Industries, Trade and Investment, Okechukwu Enelamah, has also denied any involvement with the alleged repatriation of $13.9bn by MTN.
Daily Post


Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Marketers insist FG increase PMS to N151.87/litre

FG increase PMS to N151.87/litre, marketers insist
PMS to sell for N151.87 per litre
Though attempts have been made to assure Nigerians that there are no plans to increase the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit, popularly referred to as petrol, The PUNCH has gathered that the actual price at which the product should sell at filling stations is N151.87 per litre.

Our reporter gather that the original price is more than the maximum N145 per litre fixed by the Federal Government on May 11, 2016 when it liberalised the downstream oil sector, marketers with knowledge of the market and the pricing mechanism told one of our correspondents on Tuesday.

This, they said, was basically due to the continued scarcity of the United States dollar, adding that the true price of petrol was N151.87 litre, judging by the current ex-depot price of the commodity.
 There is a looming hike in petrol price, dealers explained that the ex-depot price of the product was N133.28 per litre and that the marketers were doing their best to manage the situation.

They stressed that the dollar hit an all-time high last week, as it exchanged for N400 at the parallel market, and called for urgent steps to address the situation in order to sell the PMS at the approved rates.

In a move to avert a price increase, it was learnt that the government conveyed a meeting of stakeholders in the downstream oil sector on Tuesday, which was held at the headquarters of the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency in Abuja.

One of our correspondents gathered that participants at the meeting included officials of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the PPPRA, Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria, Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association, Nigeria Association of Road Transport Owners, as well as other concerned persons.

Explaining that the actual cost of the PMS had increased beyond the N145 per litre fixed rate, an oil dealer who attended the meeting stated that when the distribution margin for petrol was added to the ex-depot price, the real cost of the commodity was N151.87 per litre.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the subject, said, “Since the ex-depot price is around N133.5 per litre and the selling price is N145 litre, when you remove the ex-depot cost from the selling price, you’ll get about N12. Now, from this N12, consider the distribution margin and other costs from the depot; if all these costs are less than N12, then the marketers are making profits and there will be no complaint.

“But if the reverse is the case, then they have a complaint. I want you to find out what is the marketers’ margin, transporters’ margin, bridging fund, Petroleum Equalisation Fund, administrative charges and more. When you add all these together, you will realise that truly, the marketers are doing all they can to hold the pump price at the N145 per litre band.”

Investigations by our correspondents from the PPPRA showed that when the various costs highlighted by the oil dealer were added together, the result was a margin of N18.71. By adding this to the N133.5 ex-depot price, the final figure is N151.87.

For specifics on the distribution margin for every litre of petrol consumed across the country, retailers charge N6; transporters’ allowance is N3.36; bridging fund, N6.2; dealers’ charge, N2.36; marine transport average, N0.15; and admin charge, N0.3; making a total of N18.71.

When asked to state how the marketers had been coping and who is paying the extra considering the fact that some stations were even dispensing petrol at rates lower than N145 per litre, another dealer said, “We met with the government and we made it clear to them that the situation is precarious. The competition has made many of us do things that may be considered unusual in some sense, all in a bid to stay afloat.

This competition has made the marketers to come up with ingenious ways to source forex, which is why some stations still sell below the N145 per litre price in order to attract customers and make turnover in bulk. But the market is not friendly and cannot be sustained.”

On the meeting between government officials and the marketers, a senior official of the Petroleum Resources ministry stated that the government might either subsidise the product again or consider some form of concession to the marketers with respect to the cost of the dollar.

The issue of forex has been a challenge to both the government and the oil marketers. All of a sudden, the dollar hike to about N400 and the product we are concerned with here is an international product. So, if they are bringing in the product by buying dollar at N350, then it is obvious that they are really working hard to remain in business.

“For if we are in a truly deregulated market environment, then the price of the product should have increased beyond N145 per litre; there is no doubt about that. Meanwhile, there was a highly confidential meeting between the management of the PPPRA and stakeholders in the sector on this matter.

I may not be able to tell you the resolutions that were reached concerning the issue of pricing of petroleum products, but the body language of those who participated in the meeting suggests that the government may be considering some form of concessions to the oil marketers as it did for the Muslim pilgrims. We know that Federal Government cannot afford to increase petrol price again, not at this time.”

The Group Managing Director, NNPC, Maikanti Baru, told journalists in Abuja on Tuesday that he had not received any directive to increase petrol price.

He explained that the corporation had enough stock and that all was being done to meet the forex needs of the marketers.

However, the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers and the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria have described the news of a looming increase in the pump price of petrol as unwelcome and worrisome.

The Chairman, NUPENG, Lagos Zone, Alhaji Tokunbo Korodo, said, “It is a bad idea to say petrol price will increase again. Nigerians will not welcome any further increase. Truly, we saw the foreign exchange crumbling on daily basis, but its not an excuse.

He said if the government could subsidise forex for pilgrims, it should also be prepared to subsidise whatever increase that would come from any crisis the marketers might be having concerning the fuel price.

Mr.Korodo further explained, “Government should not take us for a ride because nobody is going to take it the way the marketers are thinking.

“Marketers are telling us what the government is planning to do, because on their own, they cannot just increase the price. They are only playing the script of the government and we are not going to succumb to such blackmail.”

The Chairman, TUC, Rivers State Chapter, Mr. Chika Onuegbu, said the government had made it clear that the price of petrol would not be more than N145 per litre.

Mr. Chika even said that at this point when the government made the agreement, we knew that it was making excess profits and it admitted to that fact. So, the government should be able to cushion the impact of the forex challenge marketers are facing.

“I think the government had an understanding with the marketers regarding the exchange rate that they will apply for importing their products.”

Onuegbu said it would be unfair to Nigerians for the price to be increased, adding, “We were told that at N145, things would be easy for the marketers.

“When they (marketers) were making super profits, they didn’t tell anybody. That was why as soon the price was increased, there was fuel in every filling station. The problem now is that they are not making as much profit as they used to make; therefore, they must punish Nigerians.”


Saturday, August 6, 2016

Giant Telecom, MTN Group records $357m loss

Giant Telecom, MTN Group records $357m loss
MTN Group Loss
A day after it reported a first-ever per-share loss as a public company due to a record fine in Nigeria and weaker earnings in South Africa, Africa’s biggest mobile phone operator, MTN Group Ltd. reported a $357 million half-year loss on Friday and cut dividend payouts,
Founded with the South African government’s help after the end of apartheid in 1994, MTN agreed in June to pay N330 billion ($1.05 billion) fine in settlement with Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) for missing a deadline to cut off unregistered SIM cards from its network.
MTN said the fine, a third of the initial penalty, wiped off 10.5 billion Rand, 474 cents per share, from headline earnings, South Africa’s main measure of profit that strips out certain one-off items.
MTN’s headline loss came in at 4.9 billion Rand ($357 million), or 271 cents per share, in the six months to end-June. This compared with headline earnings of almost 12 billion Rand, or 654 cents per share, a year earlier.
The company, which has more than 230 million subscribers, cut its dividend by almost 50 percent to 250 cents per share for the half year.
MTN has said its Nigerian business would pay the fine in local currency. The penalty was worth $1.7 billion when it was announced, but the naira has fallen sharply since then, cutting the equivalent dollar value by about $500 million.
The company also said the results were affected by unfavourable currency swings, underperformance in its home market and in Nigeria, where it had to cut off another 4.5 million SIM cards to comply with the local regulator’s user registration requirement.

House of Reps Chief Whip -Ado-Doguwa Alhassan Opens-Up on Budget Saga

House of Reps Chief Whip -Ado-Doguwa Alhassan opens up on budget saga
Chief Whip of the House of Repressentative Mr. Ado-Doguwa Alhassan is one of the officers accused by former Chairman, Committee on Appropriation. Mr. Abdulmumin Jibrin, of 2016 "budget padding"

With all sense of humility and responsibility, I want to say that all the allegations that he has made public against the four principal officers of the house, especially in the manner he has them, are basically unfounded, untrue and baseless. Jibrin is one very crafty and cunning individual that can take advantage of circumstances; distort facts, mutilate them and present them in a manner that could seamlessly be perceived by the members of the public as true. The issue of padding, for instance, which he has alleged was initiated by four principal officers could not have been true even from the context of common sense. Imagine a budget amounting to N6.06tn, involving a highly-populated country like Nigeria, within a very sophisticated and critical economic period, and in an assembly that has 360 members on one arm and more than a 100 members on the other arm, being manipulated and inflated by only four principal officers to their advantage. It is baseless; it is not true and I want to call on Nigerians to disabuse their minds and not believe Jibrin because what he is saying is unfortunate. 

When the budget is brought to the House, under the normal proceedings, it would be presented by the President and laid on the table. It will go through first and second readings and we will debate on the general principles and thereafter commit the budget to the Committee on Appropriation, which is the final committee in terms of appropriation. Don’t forget that appropriation is a process, it is in the same manner like any other bill. Appropriation comes into the parliament as a bill from the executive arm of government, which is usually call money bill.

 When this bill pass pass through the first and second reading, we debate the generality of the bill. After that, the bill is pass to committee member whereas other committee members in the house is automatically become sub-committee that will collate and compile other report coming from other committees to come up with a clean copy of what is refers to a draft budget either in the House of Representatives or in the Senate.

When the committees finished their engagements with the ministries and agencies, they will come up with a clean sub-committee report and they are bound by the rules of operation governing the House that every committee after finishing its engagement with the ministries and agencies, will forward their report to the appropriation committee. 

I am the Chief Whip of the House of Representatives; Yakubu Dogara is the Speaker and the presiding officer, and under the laws of our operations in the House, he does not have any right to belong to a committee. So under this circumstance, a principal officer cannot make any contribution at the committee level, just like all other members do. That is why we have a window as principal officers to write from our own offices by way of request because I am not only the Chief Whip; I am also representing my constituency. What I am going to tell you is something that was based on mutual consent and mutual understanding, not only among members of the House, but also the Senate. Under mutual consent, principal officers are also given some window to make requests as regard what they want in the budget to cover their immediate constituencies. And under this circumstance, the Speaker is under this obligation to write and make requests to the office of the appropriation committee chairman.

So when I wrote to the appropriation committee with a list of requests that I wanted to be sited in my own local government or constituency, it was the same thing for all the 10 principal officers. The Speaker wrote and so did the Deputy Speaker. I want to emphasise here that the Majority Leader of the House, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, also wrote and submitted it to the appropriation committee chairman.

These requests are not binding in any way; they are subject to the availability of funds based on the envelope that we have. So we all wrote to Jibrin, just like the committees were passing reports to him. These are the documents that have now offended him as far as he was concerned, having been relieved of his duty. We removed him with great sense of passion. No principal officer has any excuse whatsoever to regret the removal of Jibrin; we all collectively agreed that the time had come, based on the so many atrocities he had committed against the parliament, against the leadership of the House and the membership of the House committee on appropriation.

Yes, I wrote to Jibrin and requested for projects and I did that because I don’t belong to any committee. I could not jump the gun or go out to the ministries while they were proposing budgets and I could not also go to the President while he was preparing his budget on the other side to input my own interventions. I had to wait until that document is formally committed to the floor of the House where I am a member.

And I want to also say without any fear of contradiction that the moment the budget document is admitted and laid on the floor of the House, it is no longer the property of the executive arm of government; it has become the sole property of the legislature and whatever we do with it from the very day the President puts it on the table, to the last date when we pass it, is a process that is legitimate- a constitutional process. Of course, you may not rule out some sentiments and selfishness from the process because we are Nigerians and we are humans.

But as long as what we did was within the pipeline of the first day the budget was represented to us and when the budget was passed, as long as we have not transcended beyond the floor of the House and the confines of the National Assembly, whatever actions we might have taken, whether selfish or sentimental, is covered by law and it should be termed as appropriation and not any other term.

And that is why I want to say at this moment that the careless use of the word ‘padding’ is insulting; it is also what one can call malicious. You are maligning the institution of the legislature, creating a very bad name and placing the legislative arm of government in a very bad light and that has to be stopped.

What do you say to Nigerians who hold the view that the Speaker and the other three principal officers should step aside for proper investigation as it is done in other climes?

Under the normal tradition of Nigeria’s type of politics, especially the kind of politics we have in the legislature, the moment you have an allegation of this nature, if for any reason you want to sound like a gentleman or you want to sound like a super Nigerian or honourable, nobody will know whether the process of that investigation or the process of the resolution of that crisis will be as transparent or as honourable as you expect.

So right from day one when we knew that the allegations were unfounded, we must not give room for any contemplation, any strategic thinking, or for someone to even contemplate that we should resign. Why should we resign when his allegations are false? And also don’t forget the principle of the law that says allegation does not make you a criminal.

So no matter how weighty statements of allegation are, one is presumed to be innocent until when that is proven otherwise. So under the presumption of being innocent, until proven guilty, we will continue to maintain our seats.

And secondly, in a parliamentary arrangement like this, it is a platform that has a lot of internal mechanism of resolution of conflicts; it is not like every other conventional organisation.

So I want to tell you that we refuse to resign because we cannot go against the internal laws that we have that govern the operation of the House. We must wait until we are proven guilty. We still have the convention that we entertain and we also still control a significant number of supports from the 360 members of the House and our business is always about our members.

As long as the 360 members of the House still have confidence in us and in our leadership, which we know they do, one cannot unnecessarily resign or step aside and do nothing. The best example of such is the case that the Senate President is facing at the Code of Conduct Tribunal. If the issue of stepping aside would have been a good omen to an honourable person, it would have started with the case of the Senate President at the CCT. The Senate President continues to attend to court sessions and proceedings and remains the Senate President because he knows he may not necessarily be subjected to a free and fair investigation if he steps aside; so these are our reasons; one is a legal position, and the other one is political.

But, in this case, I will say no, because we are operating under a special platform. We are operating under an institution that has a lot of respect and protection by the constitution. Of course the constitution of Nigeria is the supreme document that governs every other activity, but even after the constitution, we also have some internal laws. These internal laws may come in contrast with an attempt to investigate the process of lawmaking. The legislature is a very special institution that is well protected by the law and the subject matter being discussed is a legal responsibility of members of parliament and we are protected by the law. So for anybody to imagine that a probe can be instituted against a member or the leader of the House because they participated in a legitimate process of discharging their constitutional responsibility is not the way to go.

I would have, on my own personal term, accepted anybody to come and probe me if this charge was against my person and if I was operating outside the purview of the parliament. We don’t have outright immunity but every member of the parliament, not even a principal officer, has absolute immunity in whatever he does on the floor of the House or within the confines of the National Assembly, especially in the discharge of his responsibility as a legislator.

So no amount of pressure from any quarter, whether from the press, the executive or from the judiciary can contemplate to investigate a parliamentary process that was taken on the floor of the House and in the process of appropriation, which is clearly stated in the constitution of the country. That would amount to what we call legislative contempt.

I heard that the Attorney-General of the Federation is now contemplating that. I am dismayed when I have high regards for somebody who is the chief law officer of the country and he is coming so low to contemplate something that is not even actionable.

Jibrin threw up a lot of figures like the frequently quoted N40bn he alleged the four of you inserted into the budget without the approval of the House. Can you react to that?

The whole matter that led to this was a matter that has been a tradition. It is a matter that has institutional history and it started during the tenure of the late President Musa Yar ‘Adua; when we heard in the process of our interaction with other national assemblies across the globe that some provisions were made in their budgets for intervention projects. We then found out that even in the so-called developed democracies like they have in the United States of America, the United Kingdom, you have these things that they call constituency interventions. Provisions are made in the national budget for members of parliament to also input some project interventions so that such projects can now be attracted to their respective constituencies because they are people’s representatives.

As long as a director or deputy director or a permanent secretary, sometimes even to the level of a clerical officer, in the preparation of budget at the executive level, could have a way to input projects, I don’t see anything wrong in having somebody who was elected by the people and has their mandate also come up with an idea as a member of the parliament. I do not see anything wrong if he also makes some inputs.

So Musa Yar’ Adua started it and he granted it when we approached him. I was not a leader then but our leaders approached him and suggested this idea and he accepted graciously. That was when a whooping amount of N100bn was injected into the budget right from the proposal stage, not even at the level of appropriation so that the funds can be implemented on the budget framework. It is not for members to have the money in their pockets and appropriate it, no, it is simply done through the budgetary framework.

Some of the members we have here today who are green horns on the floor of the House may not know this. Some of us have what we call institutional memory. So where this current case started out was when Mr. President (Muhammadu Buhari) in his first budgetary presentation, came up with only N60bn as a proposal for constituency projects and zonal intervention funds, which means this N60bn would be shared among members of the House of Representatives and members of the Senate.

When N10bn, for instance, is provided to the North-West, that money would be shared between the House and the Senate at a ratio of 60-40. The Senate would take 40 per cent of the N10bn and it would be shared among the Senators of the seven states of that zone. Then the remaining 60 per cent would be shared among the members of the House of Representatives. It has always been like that, and because of our number in the House, we take 60 per cent while the Senate takes 40 per cent.

But another thing is that principal officers will not share with other members. For instance, I am from the North-West and I am the only principal officer, I would not be part of that sharing among my members of the House of Representatives in the North-West. For that reason, when we started, Yar’ Adua made it N100bn. So when 60 per cent was expended into the zones, the N40bn is what we then used to service and provide some funds under the same budgetary framework. It is not about sharing N40bn on a table or N40bn through our bank accounts, but to use the same budgetary framework like other members did, to write with a pen and paper that I would like a project sited in my constituency. I could ask for a 10km road or some blocks of classrooms. And do you know where we get even the ratings? The ratings are obtained from agencies of government because these projects are to be spread through agencies of government; it is not for the member to execute it himself. It is not for the Speaker or the staff of the National Assembly or the civil servant of the National Assembly to go and implement those projects. You will use your template to select the number of projects you want and also pick the items you want alongside their rates and these ratings are always provided by agencies of government.

If for instance, you want to site a primary healthcare centre in your constituency, then you are filling your form against the Ministry of Health template. If you want blocks of classroom, then you fill your form against the Ministry of Education template.

So it was this idea of not taking principal officers in the sharing formula of that N10bn to the respective zones that made us have a provision of N40bn for the leadership in the Senate and for the leadership in the House of Representatives. N20bn to the leadership of the House; N20bn to the leadership of the Senate.  It was not like the N20bn allocated to the House was shared by only four of us; it was shared from the head to the bottom and everybody got his share of it. When I say share, I don’t mean the volume of money given to the speaker, no, but quantum of projects injected in the budgetary framework for them to be implemented in the various constituencies. And in most cases, out of these chunks of money that were supposedly sent to us, we still went further to allocate more money to our brothers and colleagues on the floor because most of them did not get as much as we got. It is not as if I have taken all the N1.8bn allocated to me as a principal officer to my constituency.

Let me say this with due respect to all my colleagues in the northwestern region; I want to say for the purpose of clarification that out of my N1.8bn, I have only taken N1.1bn worth of project to my federal constituency in Kano. About the remaining N700m, I have also gone round to consolidate and support other members who might have gotten lean allocations because they are not leaders. Not all of them of course, I could not have shared to everyone.

He also made another allegation that projects worth 20bn, which he called “wasteful projects”, were requested by the four of you. Is that also not correct?

It is not correct because in the first place, the word wasteful or useful is a subjective thing. For instance, if you are representing a constituency in Enugu, if you decide to build a public beer parlour for your people in Enugu, it would be a great credit because there may be so many people who would want to drink in the beer parlour. But if you take beer parlour to a place like mine where we have some cultural and religious restrictions, will you get away with it?

So in the first place, I would say that also was not true because for me, anything useful or wasteful is also a subjective thing. So what may be useful to Jibrin may not be useful to me. So for him to now label our projects as wasteful or useful, I think it is also very unfortunate. He cannot take that definition.

People have asked that if you claim it was Jibrin that caused the issues with the 2016 budget, why did it take you so long to speak up?

You are not getting it right; we found him wanting him, we found him moving to lie at the Presidency, we found him operating in absolute exclusivity to his members. It was because of this high chunk of problems and claims that were heaped on his head that we started processing the idea of relieving him.

So that was what informed our decision and when we took that decision. We had acted within the internal mechanism of the leadership of the House to take necessary steps. He was basically a cancer in the appropriation system in the House  and we have successfully operated this cancer. We removed it and the chief physician was Dogara; and I was his assistant. All of us members of the House, including Femi Gbajabiamila, participated, supported and signed the decision to remove Jibrin.

I want you to react to this other allegation that the leadership makes monthly deductions from the entitlement of members for some mortgage arrangement, which members are alleged to be grumbling about. Are you aware of this mortgage arrangement and what is it intended to achieve?In this interview with JOHN AMEH

 Yes, I am aware of it but the fact is that it was not as if it was a kind of an official arrangement. It was a semi-formal arrangement, semi-formal because the institution was involved. We were approached as a House by estate developers but when we now agreed to discuss the matter, we subjected it to an informal discussion in an executive session. But, unfortunately, because we have rats like him in the system, he went and reported an executive matter. Under normal circumstances, this too is contempt of the parliament, you don’t have to go and report what you have discussed right in your bedroom; so it was an informal arrangement.

he lied. It was just a matter that was discussed and members accepted it that it is a fine idea and we are now at the level of further discussion as to how members can raise money to pay these developers and own houses in Abuja without tears.

Shortly after his former members of the committee on appropriation came out to disown him, Jibrin retaliated by accusing them of taking $20,000 bribe each from the speaker and the three others. What do you have to say to that?

That is also not true. All the issues you have raised so far are not true. There was no issue of bribing any member with $20,000. I can tell you that I have never come across $20,000 in this House in this dispensation.

Culled from: Punch