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Monday, 19 January 2015

Stop whipping up hatred against Buhari – APC warns PDP


The All Progressives Congress (APC) has accused the ruling
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of breaching the peace
accord it entered into last week with its violent attack on
APC’s flagbearer, Gen Muhammadu Buhari.
A statement issued by APC’s Director of Strategic
Communications, Mr. Dele Alake, the party stated that PDP’s
desperate attempt to demonize Buhari contradicts the peace
accord entered into by the political parties.
“It is shocking that rather than explain itself over the multiple
crises it has engendered or has failed to respond to; or offer
panaceas to these challenging troubles, the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) candidates and spokesmen have
stuck to the tactics of demonizing the All Progressives
Congress (APC) candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, using all
sorts of red herrings, abuses, foul temper to whip up hatred
against his person,” the statement said.
Alake pointed to the attempt by the PDP’s spokesmen to
paint Buhari black with the allegation of corruption and
favouritism during Buhari’s days as the chairman of the
defunct Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) and the orchestrated
attempt to link him with the activities of Boko Haram.
“But a few days ago, former President Olusegun Obasanjo,
who was supposed to have commissioned the investigation
into the PTF activities, disclosed that he was in possession of
the report and nothing untoward was established against the
APC candidate.
“To the astonishment of all right thinking persons, the PDP
has chosen not to believe in the authority of President
Obasanjo who ordered the investigation and has final say on
it, but prefers to allege that the man who has the fact is
dead! Can there be a worse tragicomedy than this? Who really
is fooling who?
“It is true Gen. Buhari ruled as a military Head of State. But it
must also be acknowledged that General Olusegun Obasanjo
also once ruled as a military Head of State. Yet, that did not
prevent the PDP from nominating and presenting him as its
presidential candidate in 1999 and 2003 general elections.
“Gen. Buhari was himself a victim of Boko Haram attack, and
has also lost some relatives to the sect’s violent activities. He
has denounced the sect, and has signified his preparedness to
take on the militants on a much firmer and intelligent basis
than President Jonathan has done in four years,” the
statement read in parts.
APC urged PDP and its hatchet men to focus on the main
issues and proffer solution to the challenges facing the
country and stop the aggressive attack on the person of
Buhari.
“It is clear that President Jonathan’s aides, ministers and
hatchet writers base nearly all their accusations against Gen.
Buhari on his period as military head of state. They have
nothing on him since then, except fishing for other
commentators’ views on the retired General; views that were
either politically inspired or else taken out of context. The PDP
refuses to acknowledge that the times have changed and that
the dynamics of Nigerian politics and the grave challenges of
the moment have made the APC candidate’s style, views and
discipline precisely the pressing need of the moment.
“The fact is that the PDP has consistently avoided the main
issues of this campaign. Apparently, it has no answers to
them. The party prefers to focus on personal attacks, dreg up
unsubstantiated records of the General during his military rule,
make wild imputations of his motives, and label him
atrociously in order to hang him. Nigerians, happily, have
recognized that the country has little time left to tackle the
grave economic collapse facing it, and the even more critical
security challenges threatening the entire country. The country
is rallying to the side of the APC, to the side of Gen Buhari,
and to the side of posterity. This is an idea whose time has
come, which no one can stop, not even with all the abuses
possible and all the tendentiousness the PDP can muster,” the
statement noted.

He has cancer–PDP


The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign
Organisation has alleged that the presidential candidate of the
All Progressives Congress (APC), General Muhammadu Buhari,
is suffering from prostrate cancer.
Addressing newsmen yesterday in Abuja, Director of Media
and Publicity of the PDP Presidential Campaign Organisation,
Femi Fani-Kayode, said his party was worried over the rumour
that General Buhari was suffering from prostrate cancer.
Fani-Kayode said: “The rumour that he is suffering from
prostrate cancer is exceptionally worrying and it is incumbent
upon each and everyone of us to pray for him if this rumour is
true.
“Once again, we wish to emphasize the fact that it is vital
that we have full disclosure about the status of his health.
This is made all the more important given our recent history.
“The truth is that the Nigerian people deserve to know the
truth before they make their choice about who they will vote
for as their president in February. The days of hiding things
like a presidential candidate’s health status from the Nigerian
public are long over and we would urge General Buhari to
acknowledge this.”

Probe threat against Mrs Jonathan–TAN


The leadership of the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria
(TAN) has urged security agencies to investigate the threat
against the First Lady, Mrs Patience Jonathan.
A group, Bayelsa Youth Vanguard, had asked Mrs Jonathan to
stay away from the presidential rally in Yenagoa, the state
capital, slated for February 5 if she does not retrace her steps
of allegedly ganging up against Governor Henry Seriake
Dickson.
According to TAN, since the alleged cold war between the
governor and the First Lady, more groups in the state have
become emboldened to disrespect the President’s wife.
In a statement issued by TAN’s Director of Publicity, Chief
Nathan Egba- Ologo, the investigation of the group and those
behind it would stop others that might want to disrespect the
First Lady.
Despite the explanation by the Chief Press Secretary, to the
governor, Mr Daniel Iworiso- Markson that the sack of some
political appointees was purely done to strengthen the
machinery of government, TAN believes it has political
undertones
The statement reads in part, “while we strongly condemn the
threat by the group, the statement by the group is
unwarranted. TAN believes that such probe will not only
expose those behind the shameful act, but will also serve to
deter others who might want to toe the same line. We have
noticed that since the alleged cold war between the state
government and the First Lady,became a topic for public
discourse, more individuals and groups in the state have
become emboldened to make statements that are clearly
disrespectful to the office and person of the First Lady, the
recent sack from the state Executive Council of associates of
the First Lady such as the former Commissioner for Local
Government, Mrs. Marie Ebikake and the former Special
Adviser to the Governor on Federal Projects, Chief Remi Kuku,
who is also the Deputy National Co-ordinator of the First
Lady’s NGO, Women For Change Initiative, did not help
matters.
“In addition to the above, the TAN state’s Director of
Logistics, Chief Abel Ebifemowei, has been removed as
Chairman of the State Environmental Sanitation Authority, as
well as a top civil servant, Mrs. Irene Digitemie, who has also
been recommended for compulsory retirement for allegedly
associating with the Women for Change Initiative. In spite of
the foregoing, TAN would like to appeal to the First Lady to
accept this indiscretion as part of the price for leadership and
forgive all those who may be found culpable, as the mother of
Nigerians.”

Presidential rally: PDP, Rivers trade words over venue


The Rivers State Government yesterday condemned threats by
the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to force itself to use the
Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium in Port Harcourt to flag off its
South-South presidential rally scheduled for January 28.
The state’s Chairman, Felix Obuah, at the weekend, told
journalists that the Rotimi Amaechi administration had
refused its request to use the stadium to host President
Goodluck Jonathan for the rally.
Obuah said: “The facilities of Rivers State are owned by all of
us: all of us who pay tax. The Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium
is built with money belonging to Rivers State. The stadium is
not meant to be used only by General Muhammadu Buhari’s
campaign.
“We dare him because it is not his personal property, come
January 28, we are going to use that place. We have made
official reports to the police, Directorate of State Security
(DSS) and all the other law enforcement agencies”.
Reacting to the PDP’s insistence, the Commissioner for
Information and Communications, Mrs. Ibim Semenitari, said
the statement “shows that the PDP has penchant for violence.
“The attention of the Rivers State Government has been drawn
to the statement credited to the Peoples Democratic Party
that it will force its way into the Rivers State Government-
owned Adokiye Amiesimaka Sports Complex to hold its Rivers
State Presidential Rally.”
“At a different time and under different circumstances the
Rivers State Government would have ignored the PDP ranting,
but with the violence and recent bombings of people and
property all over the state, it is pertinent that the Rivers State
Government raises this alert and sounds a note of warning to
the PDP that the Rivers State Government will not trifle with
its responsibility to guarantee the safety of lives and property
irrespective of whom is affected.
“The matter of the Adokiye Amiesimaka Sports Complex is a
simple one. The complex is still under construction. As a work
site, it is an unsafe environment for use at this time. The PDP
makes reference to the fact that the APC had held its rally at
the same venue. What they failed to mention is that the
contractor was moved out of site during the time the APC rally
held and remobilized to site right after that rally.
“With less than five months to go to the end of its tenure, the
Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi administration is working on
ensuring the completion of all its projects before the hand-
over date of May 29”.
Semenitari said: “With that being the case, the River State
Government cannot move its contractors out of site at this
time. Unlike the PDP that has consistently refused the APC the
use of stadia and other facilities in Abuja and other states
where it is in control, the Rivers State Government has
magnanimously offered the PDP the use of the Liberation
Stadium Elekahia, which is also a state facility.
“The resolve of PDP to unlawfully break into the Adokiye
Amiesimaka Stadium is therefore, a clear determination to
create chaos, cause breakdown of law and order and perhaps
fulfill the threat issued by some of its members that they will
burn down the complex,” the statement added.

Photos: Buhari, Osinbajo, Tinubu visit IBB at his home in Minna

APC presidential candidate and his vice, Gen. Buhari and Prof Osinbajo, APC chieftain Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Rivers State governor Rotimi Amaechi paid a courtesy visit to IBB at his Minna, Niger state home this afternoon. More pics after the cut...



Photo credit: Lola Shoneyin

Photos of Governor Fashola dancing during campaign rally today

Lagos governor Raji Fashola pictured dancing to Dorobucci during a campaign rally at Oworonshoki today

Meet the soldier who has become the army's 1st transgender officer

Captain Hannah Winterbourne (right) is the first transgender officer in the world. She was born a man and spent the first few years in the Army as a man before deciding to undergo a sex-change operation while serving in Afghanistan and began her transition in 2013. Now she's the Army’s most highly ranked transgender soldier and the only one to become an officer. She's now in charge of 100 soldiers

 

From UK Mirror

“I think initially it was a bit of a shock to some people, they weren’t really expecting it because it’s not something you come across every day in the Army. However I think people soon realised that it didn’t make a difference to my job. At the end of the day I can still do all the things I could do before I transitioned.
“That’s what the Army respects because we’re all about capability and output. That’s what matters.”
Hannah said of her decision to become a woman: “It’s about finding that courage to do it. And that’s not the easiest thing in the world. “I was acting for everyone around me. There was no let up where I could stop that act.” she said
Hannah said that it was impossible to spend time on her own and be honest with herself while serving in Afghanistan.


She added: “That was a nudge which eventually ended up with me coming out and changing myself and my way of life.”
Hannah, the Army’s most highly-ranked transgender soldier, revealed that the battle with her gender began when she was a young lad.
Determined to pursue a career in the Army, she enrolled at a residential college designed for students to enter the Forces.
The Army then sponsored her Electronic Engineering degree at Newcastle University, from where she went on to Sandhurst.
Hannah said: “The point where I realised I was a woman but my body was wrong was around the age of 23 at Sandhurst.
“After I was posted to Germany I decided to go to the doctors and told them. And that’s when my transition process began.”
Hannah has refused to reveal her previous male name, describing it as a ‘label’.
She is now a rep for other transgender servicemen and women and said: “Despite being perceived as a very masculine, old school, organisation the Army’s actually very forward thinking.”
Hannah was commissioned from Sandhurst in 2010 after being selected for officer training aged 15.          
Despite the difficulties of coming out as transgender she said the Army had been “a fantastic employer”.

“I came out as a trans soldier about a year and a half ago when I was in Germany and since then I’ve become the highest ranking, openly serving trans soldier serving in the regular army.
“One of my additional duties is that I’m the transgender representative in the British Army, which sees me dealing with education, welfare and dealing with any issues that trans soldiers may have.


“The British Army is a fantastic employer for trans soldiers. We’ve had policies since 1999 and it’s all really, really clear.”
A film featuring Hannah’s life has appeared online and is due to be broadcast by Channel Four as part of a series of short films about transgender people.

Aspiration of Akwa Ibom PDP guber candidate, Emmanuel,receives divine endorsement


The aspiration of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)
gubernatorial candidate in the next month’s elections, Mr,
Udom Emmanuel, yesterday received divine blessings,
following the dedication of the project into God’s hands.
The event, which took place at the Qua Iboe Church, Ikot
Ekpene Road, Uyo attracted a large crowd of PDP faithful, the
business and political class, various political and socio-
cultural groups who came to show solidarity to the
governorship candidate.
Addressing the people, Deacon Udom Emmanuel said he did
not come to the church to campaign, but led his team to
consult and seek divine blessings in view of the assignments
before him.
“We did not come to campaign because we know that God is
with us, and as Christians, we must always invite Him to
guide us in our aspirations,” the governorship candidate said.
Drawing inspiration from Psalm 37:5 which says; “‘Commit
your way to the Lord, trust also in Him and He shall bring it
to pass,” Emmanuel urged the people to always seek the
consent of God in their affairs.
He assured that as a believer in God’s precepts, he was of the
belief that without the divine backing, his aspiration would be
in vain.
The governorship candidate, who used the occasion to urge
all Christians in the state to support God-fearing leaders
through the PDP, noted that the party was the only one that
placed God at the centre of its activities.
Earlier, the Director General of the Campaign Council Otuekong
Idongesit Nkanga, had advised the Christian faithful to support
the emergence of Emmanuel as a God-fearing leader with
needed managerial and intellectual capacity to lead the state.
Nkanga, who traced good leadership to godly men from
biblical times, called on all Akwa Ibom people to vote for
Udom, whom he described as a man after God’s heart.

‘Whether Jonathan or Buhari wins, there’ll be no change’


Only a few weeks away from the presidential election slated
for February 14 and barely four months before a new
government is formed in Nigeria, Prophet Melchizedek Oged of
the Messiah Christ Mission, Ajah Lagos, has said that whether
the new government is formed by the sitting president, Dr.
Goodluck Jonathan, or his rival, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari of
the All Progressives Congress (APC), it would be business as
usual as far as governance is concerned.
The man of God, who acknowledged that there was high rate
of corruption in the land, declared that President Jonathan
was a victim of the dynamics of the end times, insisting that
neither the president nor Buhari had the will to effect any
meaningful change.
He also said there would be violence after the presidential
election, but gave assurance that God would take control of
the situation, as he said: “The wonderful thing about this
nation is that God has chosen it to be the last frontier to
propagate the second coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. And
that is also why, in spite of all the challenges facing this
country, the grace of God has always made it sufficient.”
He speaks on the activities of the Boko Haram Islamist sect
and the United States America’s latest position that Nigeria
will no longer break in 2015, among other issues.
Excerpts:
The presidential election is only a few weeks away, with so
many predictions that there would be crisis if President
Goodluck Jonathan wins. What is God telling you?
Of course, there will be trouble but it shall be contained.
Can you give Nigerians an idea of the magnitude of the
trouble to be expected?
The magnitude of the trouble that will follow the elections will
depend on the power to contain it but one thing is sure and
that is that Nigerians are one of the most resilient people in
the world. They have always had the grace of God to pray.
Already, prayers are going on and the wonderful thing about
this nation is that God has chosen it to be the last frontier to
propagate the second coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. It is a
covenant power of the most High God that is at work in this
nation and that is why this nation has continued to remain
one. And that is also why, in spite of all the challenges facing
this country, the grace of God has always made it sufficient.
The whole world knows the strategic position that God has
mapped out for Nigerians. In the spiritual realm, Nigerians are
like the Jews during the time of their sojourn in Egypt when
God chose them; everybody was against them. If you travel
abroad, you will know that Nigerians are some of the most
exceptionally brilliant people in the whole world. Of course,
they are also the most targeted people in the whole world. If
you carry the green-white-green passport, you will have a
problem because of the falsehood, the crimes and lawlessness
perpetrated by some Nigerians. So, the end result is that
God’s purpose for Nigeria is able to contain the forces that
may want to cause the crisis.
Where do you see Nigeria after the elections, specifically
from May when the new government would be formed?
What will happen is that there will be a new crop of
technocrat, which I believe would be deployed by any
government that comes on board then. If you look back in our
history, you would remember a time when you had to wait for
months to be able to get a vehicle. You would also remember
a time when you had to get import license to import goods
and it was the norm; but suddenly a man just came up with
the idea to open up the system. So, there are challenges and
there are creative solutions that will come. The only thing we
ask is that the men that will be put there should have the
uncommon courage to be innovative and do whatever that
needs to be done. We are living in a digital age, where there
are methods of evolving economic issues. We are living in a
time when globalisation is almost driving the economies of
the world.
In the 1980s and 1990s, the economy was not pushed to be
able to maintain what is called global best practice. You find
out now that the concept of being able to have a front that
measure up to integrity on the global scale will force Nigerians
to begin to be more transparent. That does not mean that
things won’t go wrong, but there is going to be a measure of
increasing sanity and that will make it possible for a whole lot
of reforms to take shape. If you look back, during the June 12,
1993 crisis, a lot of things went wrong and those things that
were wrong began to be corrected when the civilian
administration came up. I remember those days, between
1990 and 1999, when I used to wait at the NITEL office for
hours trying to fix my phone. But today, the story has
changed. There is a technology that is changing. The Bible
says that knowledge is increasing and because knowledge is
increasing, nations that are able to manage the information
age and digital device in the system are able to get more
strategic in their governance. Hitherto, there was nothing like
data-mining; it is a new concept.
Data-mining can take your bank account, the purchases you
make every week, how you spend your money and where you
spend it and by the time they collate it; if you have criminal
intent, what items you bought can be zoned over. That is
exactly what happened in France last week. By the time those
pieces of information get collated and the data-mining editors
look into it, they can begin to form what is called an idea of
who you are. Of course, there is another side to it, which is
called the Big Brother Surveillance. Every call you make as
well as every short message you send has a record. So,
technology will come to a point where everybody can be seen
naked.
So, if the nation is able to contain the violence; that will be
the basis at which they move. The only problem is that
according to the Bible, the heart of man is desperate and
wicked above all things. Lawlessness will not stop. The
falsehood in all realms will not stop; it will increase.
Cybercrimes will continue and at the end of the day, you find
out that it is only the few, who control the technology that
will control the wealth, the bank and the politics. They are the
power brokers. In the book of Revelations chapter 17 to 19,
the Bible calls it ‘Corporate Babylon.’ We are going to a point
where the end result is to enthrone the anti- Christ. As an
end-time prophet, I can tell you that God has planned all
these, for the Bible says that at the end of time, lawlessness
shall increase leading to total tyranny.
When you look at global breaking news, you see that every
day, more terrible things are happening. What we have is that
the whole world is geared towards ‘Mutually Assured
Destruction’ (MAD). Bring that back to the political system we
are running and you find that those who determine that they
will do whatever it takes; bribe whosoever and kill whosoever
to get to the position will win.
Are you saying that the most violent will win the election?
The most strategic and the most violent; the one who is able
to pay the most money will win. It is like what I call, ‘kill
them all and stand up alone,’ in this election. Some people
have armed all their thugs and got hired assassins all over
the place and very soon, you will see them working out.
What prophetic message do you have for Nigerians in this
2015?
The prophetic message is that God has a remnant. God’s
remnants are those who are determined to stay within His due
divine order. His remnants are those who know that He is
determined to raise a people for Himself; the church of Jesus
Christ; they are those who are blood-washed; those who have
taken seriously the fact that a man cannot by himself attain
anything; those who will study to have the right choices of
God and live a holy lifestyles; those who will study to enter
into the covenant of God’s presence, peace, protection and
prosperity. The Bible says that the spirit of God will equip
them and fight their battles for them. There are those who are
God’s friends; those who have the mark of Jesus.
In 2003 elections, we cried out to God and He gave us a word
in Psalm 92 verse seven, which says: ‘if the wicked seem to
succeed and flourish, they will be destroyed forever.’ Now,
some of the key players that the judgment was targeted
against are still functioning because, according to God, the
anointing given to prophetic men is like a bazooka but the
people you shoot it against are like the butterflies and
mosquitoes. For instance, if you go to God’s court and secure
a judgment; the judgment is like a bazooka and the mosquito
or the butterfly you are aiming it against goes to God to say,
‘I am sorry.’ The story of Ahab in the Bible explains this point.
There was a judgment against Ahab but he repented. So, the
key factor is for people to repent and cry on to the Blood of
Jesus to forgive them. God is long suffering and because He
is long suffering, the Bible says in Ecclesiastes chapter eight
verses five to 13 that because the wickedness of the wicked is
not instantly judged, men will continue to be wicked. But then,
the Bible also says that if the wicked man lives up to 100
years, it will never be well with him.
What do you have to say about the activities of Boko Haram
Islamist sect?
Book Haram is like a war declared onto people. The military,
for so many years, were trained for such insurgence. The
intelligent network; most of the men who are strategists in the
military are not versed in what is going on. The spirit of Boko
Haram is part of the end time destructive spirit set loose over
the world.
Is it then right to say that Boko Haram is politically
motivated?
Of course it is political as well as religious and economic. It is
a grievance of a sect against what they believe, which is that
western education has not helped. The Lord says that the
heart of man is desperate and wicked above all things. When
you mix that desperation with racial conflict and the spirit of
economic determinism, you will see a sect that believes that
they have lost out of the national cake and so, you have a
bonfire coming up. But, on the spiritual realm, because of
what is called radicalised Islamist, they are the same group
that is forming ISIS; they are in Kenya; they are the AL
SHABAB and like you have over the years, the forces of
nationalism believing that it is by being able to take by force
that you can impose your own government or your religion. Of
course, people believe in divide and conquer to rule. So, it is a
multi-faceted input that is going on in Boko Haram. There is a
local side; there is the religious side and there is the external
force because some of these people are not just Nigerians.
Do you see an end to the Boko Haram activities soon?
Soon depends on the level of firepower for firepower. Soon
depends on if the whole northerners are determined to really
put an end to it. Soon depends on the whole lot of factors,
which like they say, are multifaceted. So, if you can bring
those factors under control, it shall be sorted out. The cause
of all these is lack of love and mistrust. People have the spirit
of dog-eat-dog in corporate politics, just as you see them in
the market place and until human beings get to submit to the
spirit of Christ; the spirit of laying down your life for your
brethren, the problem will persist.
Corruption is believed to be on the rise in Nigeria. So many
people believe that the present government is not serious in
fighting corruption. Do you agree and what message do you
have for President Jonathan in all of these?
President Jonathan is a victim of the dynamics of the end
times. Between June 12, 1993 and when the late Gen Sani
Abacha began to clamp down on micro-finance houses; the
statistics of capital flight from this country was at its peak.
That was the situation, which Jonathan inherited. Before the
June 12 crisis, people were satisfied stealing N1 million. At
that point before Abacha came, one dollar exchanged for N50;
Abacha pegged it at N85 per dollar. But because of the
confusion in the nation, even good Christians had to take their
money and flew to London because they were not sure if the
nation was going to survive. So, when you have turbulence in
the system, that is what you get.
I wonder if America would have developed the way it is today
if they all had to flock to London or Paris every summer. That
is the problem here; everybody wants the naira to be
translated into Dollar and Pounds and the pressure continues
to make people to be so greedy. One of the most difficult
things that the Bible addresses is a greedy man. Unfortu­
nately, we are living in the end of time where there is a group
of very sharp minded financial trade brokers also known as
‘the greed is good generation.’ They use all kinds of
economics to buy back debts and increase debts making
people to borrow money and all kinds of things. When greed is
not able to be contained, you can jail all the people in Nigeria
and nothing is going to happen. So, Jonathan is a victim and
the victim is such that in the end time, ruthlessness since
1950s is increasing to the point where until the saviour
comes, it is going to get from bad to worse.

Bringing religion into politics is dangerous – PastorAdefarasin


Pastor Wale Adefarasin is the General Overseer of Guiding
Light Assembly, Parkview Estate, Ikoyi, Lagos. In this
interview, he allays fears of possible disintegration of the coun­
try and other issues about Nigeria and the world in general.
You were the national secretary of PFN. Could you share your
experience with us?
Well, serving in that capacity gave me the opportunity to work
with most of the leadership of the Pentecostal Churches. It
also exposed me, because as the PFN secretary, I was on the
national executives of Christian Association of Nigeria. It also
gave me the opportunity to relate with the leaders of the five
blocs of CAN. I thank God for that opportunity because I was
able to see, sometimes, first hand, some of the things that
happened and I was able to build relationships with a lot of
the leaders in the Church, our national leaders and leaders in
the local areas of the Church.
One key desire of God expressed by Jesus is that the Body of
Christ be united as one. Do you see that oneness in the
Church today?
Well, to be honest with you, I don’t see it today. I believe it
will come, but it may not come unless we face persecution.
Persecution has a way of bringing people together. I think the
problem we have today is that every man is building his own
thing and nobody is building God’s thing, building God’s
kingdom. So, our ministries always seem to take priority over
God and His kingdom.
We have alarming figures of internally displaced persons, as
a result of the insurgency in the North-Eastern part of
Nigeria. Is this an opportunity for the ‘Body of Christ’ to rise
up to do something for the Lord?
I do know that there are lots of displaced people as a result of
the ongoing insurgency in the North. Some have their homes
burnt and their means of livelihood destroyed; others, out of
fear have had to flee from home. Is it an opportunity for the
Church to rise? I assure you the Church will arise. When I say
Church, I am not looking at the institutions we know as
churches. I am looking at the Body of Christ. The people, who
truly know God, love Him and have a love for mankind. So,
you’ll find there are already people doing something at these
camps. Their collective efforts may not be making much
impact now, but I assure you, we will find more people getting
involved.
There are so many things Christians should be getting
involved in. There are many people being orphaned in Liberia,
Guinea and Cote d’Ivoire because of Ebola. The Church needs
to get involved. We need to get involved wherever there is
human suffering. This is what Jesus did. He fed the hungry;
he healed the blind; he opened deaf’s ears, and he had pity on
mankind. If you are Christian, you should get involved in every
good work. These are opportunities through which people
should give and hope it would eventually get to the desired
people.
Let us look at CAN now. In the recent past, people have
thrown invectives on the CAN leadership over the controversy
surrounding the private jet belonging to the association’s
president. There are talks about money laundering, arms
deals and lots more. What can you say about this?
I have known Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor personally. He is a man
of God with integrity. I am satisfied with the explanation he
has given, that he was not in any way involved in the carriage
of money, even though his jet is used. I think that is all I am
going to say about that.
You earlier said we can’t really say there is oneness in the
Body of Christ, what do you think can be done?
I think that first and foremost we need to put our own agenda
aside. When people come together over a common agenda, it
is always more powerful that when they all have personal
agenda. I think we need to set aside our own agenda and
think about the things that need to be done by the Body of
Christ. As a matter of fact, the Bible says that God commands
His blessings, when brethren dwell together in peace and
unity. It’s really a question of setting aside personal agenda.
How do you see Nigeria in 2015, politically?
I am confident that Nigeria will not disintegrate this year.
However, 2015 portends to be a very difficult year. I can say
this, having studied the analysis of world-class experts and
those in position to make reasonable predictions. The oil price
may fall as low as forty dollars per barrel. That will put
Nigeria in hardship and austerity is indicative. When there is
austerity, there would be loss of jobs. As it is today, about 8,
000 graduates leave our universities every year and only 10
per cent of them are able to get jobs. This is quite poor.
Saudi Arabia is going to be affected by the slump in oil prices,
but because they have already developed their infrastructure,
they are not readily going to suffer much. What they receive
from oil is just a top up on what they have already developed.
For us in Nigeria, we have already wasted all those years of
boom spending money crazily, buying and owning private jets.
We will come to the crunch in 2015. We have to diversify our
economy; we have the need to build infrastructure, which are
very necessary for our survival. I hope that those who have
benefited immensely from the proceeds of oil largesse will see
the need to bring back the money to invest in Nigeria. So, this
is the background to our general expectations in 2015.
The biggest challenge Nigeria will face this year, in view of an
economy that is seriously challenged, is in dealing with the
monster called corruption. We have to deal with corruption
because the economic waste, as a result of corruption, is
phenomenal. We cannot play around it; corruption has to be
dealt with frontally. Anybody who steals public funds is not
just stealing government’s money; he is stealing our money.
It belongs to the commonwealth of Nigeria.
Can we look at the Church vis-à-vis, poverty? What can be
done and do we not have poverty in the Church?
I can assure you we have poverty in the Church. I have seen
many people come to me and say, Pastor, I can’t pay my
children’s school fees and these are not people you will see in
the streets and say they are poor. But these are people who
have come into hardship because of difficult times. That’s one
level. There’s another level where there are people who
cannot feed. There are people also who would rather beg.
I want to refer to something that is being done in Osun State.
The governor of Osun State said, all children in state’s
schools would, at least, have one good meal every school day.
You’d be amazed at the number of jobs created as a result of
that policy, because farmers now are on their toes to meet
with the demand for their bananas, eggs and so on. In fact,
they couldn’t meet up with demands. They had to source from
neighboring states. What is my point? Government can create
jobs. In Thailand, farmers are encouraged to produce palm
products because if they can’t finish selling, government would
buy the excess from them at an agreed price. So they know
there is market for their products. We can do the same in
Nigeria.
There has been clamor for Christians to occupy elective
positions in the land. A Christian is there in Aso Rock and
the two major contenders for governorship in Lagos are
Christians from the two main parties, that is PDP and APC.
Do you see the electorate faring better should Christians
remain at the top?
To be honest, you can have bad Muslims and bad Christians.
You can also have good Christians and good Muslims. I think
the issue of religion in governance is a dangerous game our
people are playing with. It should not matter in a nation that
is probably 50-50 in the ratio of religious indices. It should
not matter what the person’s religion is, so long as that
person will do justice, govern well and see himself not as the
leader to Christians or Muslims, but a leader to all. I think we
should begin to disabuse our minds on that.
What happened with that clamour was a situation when we
had a Muslim ruling the people for the past 16 years, and so,
people began to think it was deliberate and an attempt to
sideline the Christians. It is very important to try and preserve
a good understanding between the faiths. And that is why I
believe, the Church said, Lagos State has had 16 years, don’t
tell us that after 16 years there is no Christian that is
competent enough to ascend to the office of governance and
that is why both PDP and APC presented Christian candidates.
I think it is a good development because it corrects the
imbalance. However, I think we should begin to talk, so that
we do not allow a situation to emerge that could promote
mistrust between the faiths.
I am a Christian. Nothing can make me change. I am not
going to insist that someone who is not a Christian must do
as I say. We need to understand ourselves to promote
understanding that can promote change. Let me tell you one
of the changes I think about. Our constitution says that there
should be no state religion. When Christians come into the
office, they build a chapel and when Muslims come they build
a mosque. And now you have a chapel in government house
and you have a Mosque. I think we should do away with all of
those things. Let the government officials go to the nearest
church or mosque to worship because these things are
sending the wrong signals. I think we can change.
The youths can easily be lured to destruction because of the
elections. What is your advice to them in view of the coming
elections?
About 70 percent of Nigerians are under the age of 35. These
are the youths. In the next 20, 30 years these are people that
must be at the helm of affairs; we cannot neglect them. All I
can say is go on your knees and pray for them to get sound
education, so that they can contribute their quota to the
society. Let us pray for jobs. I like one of the programmes I
have heard so far from one of the parties. One of the parties
is offering to help farmers sell their products, should they be
elected to power next year. This will create jobs and people
will go back to farming because making money is guaranteed.
They will not come to the cities for the sake of riding okadas.
I say to the youths, in 2015, please shun violence. The
political parties will come to use you as tools; don’t accept.
They will offer you money and rice in exchange for your votes.
Take the money, take the rice, invariably they are yours
anyway, but remember the money will finish and the rice.
Make sure, in spite of these inducements, vote only your
conscience.
What would you say about the coming elections?
Let me just say this. Many people have asked me, who I am
supporting in the various elections; I feel that it is not my
place as a Church leader to be partisan. I definitely know who
I will cast my votes for. It’s a secret ballot. I will cast my vote
the way I feel led to do. I think the Church should not support
a particular candidate. I don’t think as a body, the Church
should

Why PDP must win in Lagos –Agbaje


Governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP) in Lagos State, Mr. Jimi Agbaje, has said his party will
take over Lagos State from the ruling All Progressives Con­
gress (APC), because, “APC government has not achieved the
basic ingredients required for a mega city.”
Agbaje, who stated this at a media interactive session in
Lagos yesterday, alleged that, “Lagos has collected up to N4
trillion over the years,” but what the government had achieved
was not enough for the money collected.
He, therefore, promised that a PDP government would rescue
the state from “the hands of vested interests” that had been
pulling the state backward, assuring that, “the Lagos chapter
of the PDP is united to salvage the state from misgovernance
of the APC government.”
Stressing the need for paradigm shift in Lagos, Agbaje raised
the alarm that, “with the reduction of oil price, Nigerians are in
for a tough time,” but pointed out that, “it is when the going
is tough that there is the need for the tough ones like us to
come in to get going.”
On the 37 controversial local council development areas
(LCDAs) created by the ruling government, the PDP flagbearer
said even his party, “recognizes them in its structure.”
He stated emphatically that he had no godfather in politics
that would influence or hamper service delivery to the people
if elected as governor, informing that his campaign for next
month’s election was predicated on change in the affairs of
the state.

2015: Don’t be selfish, insensitive, Igbo elders urgepoliticians, leaders


Igbo elders, under the aegis of Council of Alaigbo Development
Foundation (ADF), have urged the Igbo politicians and leaders
to desist from self-serving political and economic activities, as
well as insensitivity to the predicament of Ndigbo in the
country.
The council made the call in a 12-point communiqué issued
after its emergency meeting in Enugu at the weekend and
jointly signed by its President, Prof. Uzodinma Nwala;
Chairman, Board of Trustees (BoT), Dr. Dozie Ikedife; Vice
Chairman, BoT, Elder Kalu Uke Kalu; Assistant Secretary, Dr.
Onyemuchechi Gbujie; and Publicity Secretary, Col. Justino
Ezeoke (retd).
The ADF council reminded Igbo politicians of “the immense
state of suffering and poverty, unemployment and
disorientation of the Igbo youths, infrastructure decay, and
high rate of male school drop-out in their zone,” and urged
them “to always bear in mind that politics is about service –
organizing the people to improve their welfare through their
collective endeavour under conditions of peace, stability and
unity.”
The group also advised Ndigbo to collect their permanent
voter cards (PVCs), and ensure they cast their votes during
the general elections while urging them to vote for only
candidates and parties that would guarantee the
implementation of the United Nations and African Union
Charters on Human Rights and provide basic infrastructure,
especially power and transport to promote the commercial
and industrial development of the Igbo.
The group noted that the religious and spiritual lives of the
Igbo were very important to them, advising all Igbo to,
therefore, vote for candidates who would not prevent them
from worshiping their God.
“Ndigbo warns that it takes seriously, the lopsided distribution
of PVCs to Ndigbo. This is a tactical removal of Ndigbo from
voting,” the group noted, urging the Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC) to allow Ndigbo to use the
temporary voter’s cards if it could not distribute the PVCs.
The ADF also advised Ndigbo to stay away from areas that
were prone to post-election violence, saying experience had
shown that neither the federal nor state government would
render adequate security of persons and property in the event
of crisis. It reminded them that they remained the main target
of such post-election crisis.
The group, therefore, called on all Igbo leaders, religious,
social, political, intellectual, to help in the sensitization of
Ndigbo at various levels of their security, economic and
political interests.

Battles we fought to improve port efficiency – VickyHaastrup, Chairman, STOAN/EVC, ENL Consortium


When Princess (Dr.) Vicky Haastrup, Executive Vice Chairman/
Chief Executive Officer of ENL Consortium, took over as a
concessionaire in charge of terminals C and D of the Lagos
Port Complex (LPC) in April 2006, little did she know the
extent of rot that had almost drowned the terminal.
As she settled down to the task, she appreciated the fact that
she had to win several battles ranging from poor port
equipment to protracted labour issues.
Haastrup also knew she had to bravely take on entrenched
interests who feed fat on the rot if any meaningful
achievement is to be recorded.
According to her, the battle took several forms including
unabated campaign of calumny orchestrated by maritime
cabals against the operators in a bid to gain relevance and
perhaps return the ports to the old order.
The ENL boss, who also doubles as the Chairman of the
Seaport Terminal Operators Association of Nigeria (STOAN),
says the ports today are far more efficient than they were in
2006 when the concessionaires took over.
In this interview, she talks more about the company, the
Nigerian maritime industry and more.
Excerpts:
Port efficiency
The improvement in efficiency at the ports cannot be over-
emphasised. Eight years ago, we all can remember how things
were then. We remember how difficult it was then to do
business at the Nigerian seaports. The dwell time of ships has
reduced drastically from 10 days to about three days. I
remember the first rice ship we did in conjunction with the
Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) because we had a one-month
handover period when we took over, it stayed 45 days at
berth. It was a rice ship and I will never forget that. There
was a particular one that stayed 60 days.W e can discharge
those ships for 12 days today. When a ship enters into
demurrage, it costs money. So, that we’re able to handle
ships efficiently and practically knock down the dwell time of
the vessels at berth is clear reduction in operations cost.
Since the terminals operators took over in 2006, there has
been tremendous improvement in the way operations are
conducted within the Nigerian seaport terminals. This is quite
evident in the volume of activities we have experienced in all
the terminals in Nigeria. For example, the volume of activities
was 13 per cent higher than the previous year. All the
terminals have done about 250 per cent increase in cargo
throughput from 2006 till now. There is no better way to
express this than to say something good is happening at the
seaports. Jobs are being created, there is significant
improvement in efficiency, there is better service delivery, there
is development going on here and there, among others. Just
go to the terminals and see how they have done in port
development. We may not be where we want to be, but we’re
making significant progress. We all know that when you have
an old and dilapidated building, it’s challenging to modernise
it. It’s not the case when you start from the scratch and input
all you want into the structures from the onset like a terminal
such as Greenview, for instance. The company built what it
wanted for its operations from the scratch. For us, we took
over run-down buildings. They were just completely run out,
to say the least. We saw some structures and wondered how
NPA managed to discharge ships when they don’t even have
equipment; where there were deep craters within the ports
that could swallow even a trailer. There were lots of pilferings,
no gears to handle the ships, there were labour issues and
many more anomalies. It was challenging to fix that because
a whole lot was required. We surmounted all these and got to
where we are today. That has brought in a lot of confidence in
our operations and that is why we are experiencing this jump
in ship traffic so to speak. Concessionaires in the seaports
have done very well and I’m very proud of that, no matter
what anybody says. We certainly know what we took over.
Investment
I think ENL has invested a lot. We have not updated in the
last six months but as at the middle of 2013, we had put in
invest ment worth about $28.5 million. That figure has
certainly risen significantly because there is a whole lot that
we have done between then and now.
Challenges
The access road is really congested. In fact, that is about the
greatest challenge facing us here. If you look at the whole
Apapa, you see a lot of containers occupying the roads,
causing horrific traffic snarl on a daily basis. They are at the
highway, they are also at the adjoining roads all overA papa.
It’s horrible. It shows the level of congestion. Port access is a
major problem. Those coming in to take delivery of cargo and
those going out face hell. It’s quite frustrating and that is
why we are not able to discharge as much as we should do
just because the trucks cannot easily access the terminal. A
lot of businesses situated in Apapa not supposed to be here.
Take for example, the tank farms, people don’t like it when I
talk about it but that is the truth.T he tank farms are just too
close to the Nigerian seaports where other cargoes are
discharged. They are just too close to themselves. Granted
that Apapa is an industrial area, it has tremendously increased
vehicular traffic. It’s a clog in the wheel of progress and quite
frustrating.
Again, we have the problem of power supply. The public power
supply is still zero. So, we generate our own power to handle
our operations. All the terminals (not ENL alone) still run 90
per cent of their operations on generators and this makes
business very expensive. That adds to the cost of doing
business in Nigerian seaports. You know what the cost of
diesel is today. All the terminals are generating their own
power.
Yes! NPA is supposed to provide us power as stated but the
issue of poor electricity supply is a national challenge and not
really NPA’s fault, though I’m not holding brief for them. The
power is simply not supplied by the Power Holding Company
of Nigeria (PHCN). So, that’s why I said I won’t blame them
and there is no way NPA would want to be operating
generators for us and so they leave that to us.
Train services
It’s completely skeletal. The percentage is low. It’s about one
per cent. So poor. To me, the rail service is not working. In
fact , to me, there is no rail service at the seaports . If APM
Terminal transports only 40 containers a week, then the rail
service is simply non-existent. That is not what happens in
other parts of the world. That is why all our roads spoil
quickly because of the pressure from these trucks when some
of the cargoes should have gone by rail to various parts of the
country. That is also why Lagos imposed wharf landing fee
because the surface of their roads are constantly damaged. I
don’t think the roads were built to withstand such pressure.
You can’t blame the Lagos State government because they
are spending so much to fix the roads. That is why we have
container-laden trucks falling over themselves and that is also
why the roads are constantly congested. So, we simply don’t
have rail transport yet.
Arbitrary charges
It’s more expensive to run Nigerian seaports than ports in
other countries. Republic of Benin, for example, has electricity
supplied by the government. Nigerian government was
providing them electricity before. But what is happening
today? They are simply self-sufficient. Look at Ghana, they
barely experience power failure there. Nigeria is still dependent
on self-power generation and not the government. You know
how much diesel is sold per litre here. Even as an individual,
you know how much you spend on petrol or diesel almost
everyday because the power is not there and you provide 90
per cent of the power you need. That is what terminal opera­
tors are facing here in Nigeria. We spend so much on power
alone. So, how do we recoup that? But having said that, I
want to tell you that the concessionaires are not increasing
costs. In fact, it’s very difficult for us to recoup what we have
invested in running the ports because the truth of the matter
is that, it’s more expensive to operate here. There are several
anomalies here that actually build into higher operational cost
for us. There is the issue of double taxation slammed on us;
there is also all manner of levies heaped on us. Ask any
industrialist too. The cost of production in Nigeria is high and
at the market, the imported goods may be cheaper. That’s
just to tell you it’s not easy to do business here.
Again, there are other factors that make doing business at the
ports costly. Let’s start from the Customs duty on rice, which
is 110 per cent today. In Republic of Benin, it’s 7 per cent, in
Cameroon, it’s 0 per cent tariff. Look at steel and all
categories of cargo in Nigeria; the duties are high compared to
other climes. I’m not blaming the Customs but I’m just
highlighting the fact that cost of doing business in Nigeria is
generally high. Also, you have the shipping agents, clearing
agents; who’s looking at what these stakeholders are
charging? When you keep the container longer than necessary,
you have to pay for that. It’s not the concessionaire that
collects levies or fees on empty containers. It’s not us. It’s
the shipping agents. As terminal operators, we are only
collecting our statutory charges as contained in our
concession agreement. Since we took over in 2006, what has
been our increase or what percentage of increase have we
imposed? It’s not commensurate with the increase in the cost
of doing the business. When we took over, diesel from
Otedola’s tank farm was N65 a litre. Today, it’s N155. That’s
300 per cent increase. In the area of plants and equipment,
gears have increased by at least, 150 per cent since we took
over. In fact, it increases every year due to inflation. The
environment is there, you have to maintain it. You also have
to develop the ports. What of cement cost? How much did it
cost in 2006 and how much is it today? It’s gone up by more
200 per cent. So, if we have all these inflationary costs, how
do you recoup it because you’ve got to? But then, we’ve not
really increased to make it commensurate with realities of
today. Simply put, terminal operators are the ones bearing the
brunt of it. We’re the ones running the seaport terminals. It’s
not shipping agents or clearing agents. In fact, you can be a
clearing agent without having an office. The overhead is
carried by us. After carrying all these, who pays for it? But
we’re bearing the pain because if we are to charge what we
should charge to cushion our challenges, it’ll kill the Nigerian
people. Why are people screaming that terminal operators are
responsible for high cost of doing business at the ports? It is
because they made more money when we were not there than
now. We have come and blocked all the loopholes. People,
hitherto, benefited from a completely run-down system. So, we
are the enemies of such people because it’s not business as
usual at the Nigerian seaports. They were part of the battles
we fought to enthrone efficiency at the ports. You can no
longer bring in ship without being detected and without
paying. That’s no longer possible. It’ll be captured in the
system and you have to pay accordingly. Again, the era of
under-declaration of cargo is over. Today, we get the right
tonnage of cargo. If you under declare, I’ll find you out and
impose charges three times the cost you ought to have paid if
you were honest. It’s like a penalty. Today, the labour issues
have been addressed. If we really want to be objective here,
we the terminal operators have tried. To address the issues at
the ports, we have to be holistic. We have to look at
government up till the least person in the chain.
Security
We’ve been providing security for our waterfront since 2006.
As a terminal operator, if you don’t protect your waterfront,
you’re done for. How many times did pirates come into ENL
and enter ships at berth and attack them? In fact, there were
instances where ships’ crews were almost killed. All these
happened a long time ago, they don’t happen anymore. It
happened mainly in 2008 and 2009. It actually stopped a long
time ago. But attacks on ships and vessels at sea or at
anchorage rarely happen. That’s why those ships always go
very far like 200 nautical miles. If they don’t, they’ll attack
them. That still happens. So, if you do this call up of vessel, it
may probably not be able to come as you want her to come
in. This is because they are far away. Attack at seafront has
stopped. We have done what we needed to do. We put
adequate security to man our waterfronts.
Server breakdown
I won’t sit here to judge Customs. The Pre-Arrival Assessment
Report (PAAR) is good but it’s new. Every new thing has its
teething problems. Don’t forget the Customs is just replacing
the RAR with PAAR. Probably, they need some time to settle
down and things will be fine. It’s just like when terminal
operators took over, there were teething problems as well. I
believe they are doing everything possible to give stakeholders
the best. I’m not speaking for them but only being objective.
Yes, the delays will be borne by importers like storage and all
that. They will pay. Terminal operators are doing the best we
can to help the importers, Customs and other stakeholders.
Rice smuggling
Don’t believe what you see in some maritime media that
shiploads of rice now come in at the seaports. Those saying
rice-laden vessels have been calling at our terminal are not
getting their facts right. There’s no iota of truth in it. I’ll tell
you one thing. In 2013, the Republic of Benin handled 2.2 mil­
lion tonnes of cargo in rice. Out of that 2.2 million tonnes, 1.6
million tonnes was parboiled rice. It’s only Nigeria that eats
parboiled rice in the sub-region. I just can’t recollect how
many ships berthed in the Republic of Benin and Cameroon.
We at ENL do like 1.6 million tonnes yearly and those figures
recorded in other ports find their way back into the Nigerian
market where they are sold. This is because it is far cheaper
for rice ships to be discharged in Republic of Benin and
Cameroon than in Nigeria. Like I said, it’s 7 per cent in Benin
Republic and 0 per cent duty in Cameroon. But the unfortunate
thing is that those shiploads of rice are still coming in. I’m
not afraid to say it. The trailers are coming every night. So,
what government was trying to do is penny wise pound
foolish. Government is talking about increasing the capacity of
local rice producers, but we’re not doing it well because those
rice are still coming in on a daily basis and the Nigerian
government is losing huge amount in revenue because of that.
It runs into several billions of naira annually. The Nigeria
Customs Service (NCS) can actually attest to that. They know
how much they have lost in terms of Customs duty on rice.
So, to me, it doesn’t really make sense. The approach of gov­
ernment on the matter should have been gradual where we get
to a level where we are fully self-sufficient in production of
rice locally.
Right now, the volume of rice, which local farmers are
producing in Nigeria cannot feed 170 million people. So, if that
is the case, rice will always come, whether you allow it to
discharge at the Nigerian ports or not. It’ll always come in
and by extension, the Nigerian government will be losing a lot
of money in revenue. Customs has lost over N100 billion and
far more in a year due to this policy of 110 per cent levy and
duty on rice. That income is going to our neighbouring
countries. I think the Republic of Benin is the happiest country
right now. We have ships that have been declared to us in the
last two months that cannot berth because they still cannot
afford to pay that 110 per cent Customs duty. The importers
have incurred a lot of demurrage on the ships running into
several millions of dollars. We’ve not handled any rice
shipment since January last year.
This policy just gave some people opportunity to make money
because it is tempting and hard to resist the bribe to allow
trailer load of rice to enter into the country. We know how
much the importers pay, but I’m not going to tell you here.
The policy should come up once our local capacity meets our
demands. Then, it would be no more attractive importing rice
since people would be eating our own rice. It should be a
gradual thing. I’m not against supporting local content but it
should be done gradually. The quality and quantity has to be
superb. It’s not rice that you’ll buy and still winnow to remove
the stones and all that. With parboiled, I don’t have to and
until our local rice meets that standard, imported rice will
remain in high demand.
Port operations
The government ordered all ports to operate round the clock.
But I can tell you that there are certain factors like security,
the environment militating against achieving that. In fact,
there are certain ships you can’t just discharge at night. Even
if you discharge, the truck will not leave the terminal. Let me
give you an example of what is obtainable in my terminal. For
instance, rice cargo, because of security issues, when you
discharge such cargo, what the trucks do is just park within
the terminal. They can’t move because of security challenges.
If they attempt to move at night, they’ll be attacked on the
road, that much I can tell you. So, government needs to
address the issue of security. Again, the environment is not
conducive.
Terminal operators are doing 24 hours really and some
agencies like Customs are there working 24 hours, but I can
still tell you that the 24 hours is not really 24 hours. If you
discharge a ship and it cannot move out of the terminal, it
remains there. So, what we do is that when we come in the
morning, the first thing we do is clear the backlogs, including
those trucks that have been loaded. So, we discharge the
ships, but they won’t want to move out of the terminal. So,
it’s not really complete 24 hours until the security challenges
are addressed.
Clearance of goods
The 48-hour clearance of goods at the ports is feasible but
certain things have to be put in place. The operating
environment plays a major role here. How easy is it for trucks
to come in and move out of the ports? That’s a major
problem. Apapa is always jam-packed. Traffic is another
nightmare. So, when the owner of the cargo tells you I’m
coming to load, we sit there, we don’t see them. Perhaps
they’ve been held up at Mile 2 or Tin Can or some place.

$350bn required to resuscitate power sector –Nebo


Minister of Power, Prof. Chinedu Nebo, has stated that the
country would require about $350 billion to effectively develop
its power sector in the next 15 years.
He also announced that the Federal Government has con­
cluded arrangement to facilitate the provision of over one
million meters to electricity consumers in its determination to
address the issue of estimated billing by the electricity
distribution companies (Discos).
Speaking Thursday during a Town Hall Meeting organised by
the ministry in Abuja, he noted that power sector was the
most capital intensive sector of the economy.
Expatiating on the huge financial resources required in the
sector, Nebo said, “when you just talk about one megawatt of
power, what is the least cost to get one megawatt? It is about
$1.5 million. At the rate of naira to US dollar exchange, you
are talking of somewhere very close to N300 million to get
one megawatt.
“Nigeria needs about $350 billion to continue to grow power
up to 2030. Multiply that by over 185 and you will see how
many trillions of naira you will end up having.
“Actually, this goes beyond trillions of naira. We are here
talking of trillions of naira and those of you who don’t know
that after trillion, you go to quadrillion. And I don’t think
anybody has thought of a budget of quadrillion in Nigeria. But
that is what we need. It is a very expensive sector.
“And it takes long to deliver. For gas project – to find a gas
field, to develop it and begin to produce gas from it will take
about 36 months. Sometimes it takes five years, sometimes
seven years. These things don’t come by wishful thinking.
They come by planning, doggedness, determination to make
sure that what you plan is realised,” he said.
The minister, who unveiled the new power generation plan for
the country in the next two years, emphasised on more
collaboration with security agencies for the protection of gas
pipelines and other power infrastructure.
The government, according to him, will develop the 700MW
Zungeru Hydro Power Plant and complete the 17 small and
medium Hydro Power Plants, that is the 40MW Kashimbilla
and 34MW Dadinkowa Dam within the period.
Nebo said government would commence development of the
3050MW Mambilla Hydro Plant and fast track Operation Light
Up Rural Nigeria project and rural electrification as well as
implementation of the National Renewable Energy and Energy
Efficiency Policy.
power supply to Lagos, the nation’s commercial nerve center.
The transformation at the nation’s largest generation plant
commenced following its acquisition by Sahara Power working
through a number of Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) in
collaboration with its technical partner, Korea Electric
Corporation (KEPCO).
The Sahara Power/KEPCO partnership has produced an
unprecedented level of innovativeness, professionalism, human
capital development and continuing investment in new
technology at Egbin Egbin Power Plc. Its Chief Executive
Officer, Engr Mike Uzoigwe, said the company considers the
rehabilitation of ST Unit 6 to be a major breakthrough, noting
that huge resources were deployed into achieving a complete
tear down overhaul of the unit.
Uzoigwe noted that in spite of the fact that the electricity
market in Nigeria is not yet bankable, Egbin has in
collaboration with KEPCO continued to achieve laudable feats
for the benefit of this country. He added that KEPCO had
begun the overhaul of unit ST-04 as Egbin continues its quest
to ensure Egbin operates in compliance with globally
acclaimed standards.
“When we took over Egbin Power Plant in November 2013,
there was a sworn declaration to deploy all of our available
resources required to transform the plant into a centre of
excellence. We are happy that this is being achieved through
the expertise of our staff and KEPCO and we are delighted to
say we are on course towards achieving our object of being a
foremost power generation plant in Africa,” he said. According
to KEPCO’s Mr. Gyoo Yeom, the unfolding plan for Egbin is
aimed at replicating in Nigeria the success which KEPCO is
renowned for in the global power sector.
Yeom said Egbin has its sights on “further expansion of the
plant as the new management continues to embark on
achieving its vision of attaining 2, 670 megawatts by 2017
and total capacity of over 10, 000mw in the next decade, if the
demand permits.

Nigeria targets additional 40,000bpd by Q4 2015


Despite tumbling of crude oil prices in the international
market, Nigeria is targeting an additional 40,000 barrels of
crude oil per day (bopd), the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) has said.
The 40,000bpd, according to the Group General Manager of
National Petroleum Investment Management Service (NAPIMS)
, a subsidiary of NNPC, Mr. Jonathan Okehs, is expected from
fresh project from oil multinational, Total.
Okeh, in a new year message to members of staff obtained
from the company’s website, equally stated that 57,000bpd is
expected in 2016 and another 200,000bpd in 2017 is being
expected from additional new projects.
The NAPIMS boss said despite the dire security situation in
the Chad Basin area, NAPIMS, through Frontier Exploration
Services (FES), has continued to explore the frontier areas of
Nigeria to increase oil and gas reserves.
He also raised optimism that the domestic gas market will
record tremendous growth, as gas supply is expected to
increase to over 80 million standard cubic feet per day
(mmscfd) by the first quarter of 2015. “NAPIMS has also
continued to explore for new opportunities to increase our
reserve base and daily production. Under the Production
Sharing Contract (PSC), new green fields were discovered by
some of our partners like Newcross in OPL 283 while some
others have already commenced production. Other projects
such as Ofon Phase 2 are near completion with expected
production of 40,000 bpd by Q4 of 2015.
“In July 2014, we commissioned the multi-billion dollar
Escravos Gas-to-liquid (EGTC) plant. This created over 1,500
jobs with about $4 billion projected income to the economy. In
August 2014, the multi-billion dollar Bonga North Deepwater
Project dropped its first oil and has added 50,000bpd to our
national crude production,” he said.
In pursuit of the Federal Government’s gas to power agenda,
Okeh said the corporation has maintained gas supply of three
billion standard cubic feet per day (bscfd) to the Nigerian
Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) and between 750 and
800mmscfd to the domestic market.
“We also ensured the supply of gas to Independent Power
Plants (IPP) thus supporting stable power supply to Nigerians
and reducing gas flares. The latest gas project, the Alakiri AG
solution, being developed by SPDC joint venture is currently
supplying 45mmscfd to the domestic market and will increase
to over 80mmscfd by the first quarter of 2015,” he added.

Dwindling oil price: FG gives priority to 13 non-oil exportproducts


The Federal Government, in a bid to salvage the economy from
total collapse, has marked out 13 National Strategic Export
Products (NSEP) to complement the petroleum products,
which prices have continued to tumble on the international
markets.
Minister of Trade and Investments, Mr. Olusegun Aganga,
noted that this was part of the moves by the government
towards reviving the dwindling national economy with em­
phasis on rapid growth of the non-oil sector for exports.
Aganga, during an inspection and a meeting with the Executive
Director of Nigerian Exports Promotion Council (NEPC), Mr.
Olusegun Awolowo, and members of the management team in
Abuja listed the 13 NSEP in three categories to include agro-
industrial palm oil, cocoa, cashew, sugar and rice; mining-
related cement, iron ore/metals, auto parts/cars, aluminium
and oil and gas; industrial products – petroleum products,
fertilcement, iron ore/metals, auto izer/urea, petrochemical
and methanol.
He stated that originally 12 products were identified, but that
the number got increased because the Executive Director of
NEPC made a strong case for the inclusion of cashew in the
list.
Aganga, however, charged NEPC to deploy its capacity for
kick-starting the diversification of the country’s economy in
line with the government’s agenda.
Aganga said he chose NEPC and SMEDAN for his first visit in
the new year because of their potential and strategic
importance for diversification of the economy, job creation,
poverty alleviation and inclusive growth.
The strategy to be deployed in that regard, according to him,
requires that NEPC identifies products that are being imported
by countries from other exporting nations and to develop the
products with sound logistics built around them.
The essence, the Minister stressed, is to deliver them cheaper
to neighbouring countries, being an export oriented investment
strategy.
He said, “in doing this, we must recognise our neighbours’
developmental needs, support them and collaborate with them
in areas of their comparative advantage.”
He added: “For you to have sustainable relationship, there
must be symbiotic in relationship.
“The new strategic focus is not just agriculture but rather
commodities-based industrialisation. This will help our
economy to diversify quickly and become sustainable. Such
strategy will help build an industrial sector that can diversify
our economy in just few years.”
The Executive Director, NEPC, Awolowo, said that NEPC under
his leadership had long recognised the need to develop the
non-oil export sub-sector and had in the process held series
of strategic meetings with stakeholders for the development of
ideas aimed at improving the foreign exchange earnings by
Nigeria through different avenues.

Ogunjimi leads 60 officials to Mobil sports in Uyo


Renowned Athletics Scholar and coach, Professor Lucas
Ogunjimi is at the head of 60 Officials who have been invited
to take part in the 14th AKS/NNPC/MPN Schools Athletics
Championships billed for Uyo on Saturday, February 7 2015.
In a release made public by the National Athletics Technical
Officials (NAATO) Akwa Ibom State branch, Professor Ogunjimi
is listed as the Competitions Director
Professor Ogunjimi is no stranger to the competition as he
has been physical present in the last eight editions and
counting.
Also listed is Deaconess Utitofon Nkantah (FRM) as the
Technical Director, and two other Professors, Track Referee
Professor Ignatius Uduk and field referee Professor Ini Jonah
Deaconess Utitofon Nkantah ( Nee Uko) who is the NAATO
president in the state said she is happy with the quality of the
officiating crew which will be reinforced by the National body.
“ ….If you go down the list you will notice that ex national
track stars Eno Smart Ekpo, Dorathy Asangusung and
Menyene Nkwo head the track, field and Time Keeping crew
respectively.
“….There is nothing like school sports when it comes to
officiating. You don’t lower standards. In fact you are more
careful and thorough because you want to make sure that
times and distances recorded are exact in order to guide the
sate and national body in tracking the potentials available for
future observation and use.” Deaconess Nkantah said.
The State Director of Sports Coach Aniedi Dickson and his
Secondary Schools sports Directorate counterpart Elder
Samuel Umanah will also be on hand to superintend the
Championship that is one of its kind in the Federation.
For the State Director of sports, the competition could not
have come at a better time. “….Last year the training that the
student were subjected to in Calabar helped us greatly to
triumph at the National Junior Competition in Abuja.
“With the National Sports Festival just months away I will be
following the competition very keenly” Coach Aniedi Dickson
declared.

OGUNJOBI TO OSHOALA: Go back to school now!


Former Secretary-General of Nigeria Football Federation, NFF
and erstwhile chairman of the body’s technical committee,
Chief Taiwo Ogunjobi, has urged newly crowned African Queen
of the Year, Asisat Oshoala, to return to school for her to be
academically equipped for the future.
The chairman, Prime Football Club, opined that he was
shocked when he knew the Rivers Angels goal-poacher is a
Secondary School (SS2) drop-out; “I was shocked the day I
heard Asisat Oshoala is a drop-out despite her level of
intelligence,” Pillar of Sports in State of Osun said.
Ogunjobi, while giving Oshoala a fatherly advice said now that
the ovation is loud, she should return to school and further
her education.
“Education is important, football is temporary and if you don’t
leave football, football will leave you one day. I played football
to the highest level (Green Eagles) but education was what I
fell back on after my active football career.
“We live in a society where the ability of an individual to be
successful depends largely on their education. I am using this
medium to appeal to Asisat Oshoala to return to school so as
to get her future properly secured.”
Oshoala whose dream was to become a lawyer, incurred the
wrath of her parents when she dropped out of school to
pursue a football career.
Meanwhile, the former Sole Administrator of Shooting Stars
Sports Club of Ibadan, had congratulated Oshoala for
emerging as the African Queen and Young Player of the year
2014.

Abu Dhabi friendlies: Eagles ask for more, hails NFF


After two exciting friendly games against Cote D’ Ivoire In Abu
Dhabi and Yemen in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates (UAE),
losing the former 1-0 and winning the latter by 2-0, the Super
Eagles made up entirely of professional players from the
Nigeria Premier League have commended the leadership of the
NFF under Amaju Pinnick, for the friendlies even as the players
have asked for the sustenance of friendly games culture.
Speaking on behalf of his teammates, Skipper of the side,
Chigozie Agbim, said all the players were happy that they
were not redundant in January, following the mishap of non-
qualification for the ongoing Nations Cup championship in
Equatorial Guinea.
He said he was speaking the minds of his teammates, who
made the same remarks after the friendly against Yemen on
Saturday in Dubai. “All the players were unanimous in saying
that playing friendly games is a way of making the team blend
together and building the unity of the team, the coaching staff
and the ensuring that the players are active throughout the
year.
“What we want to demand is that this laudable development
should not be a one off thing. We want a sustenance of the
culture of friendly matches in the Nigerian soccer system, so
that we will get to know ourselves better and we will not have
the problem of blending when we have crucial qualifying
games like it happened in the ACN qualifiers”.
The team returned home on Sunday, with Assistant Coach,
Dan ‘The Bull’ Amokachi, like Stephen Keshi admonishing the
players to keep the same level of discipline and focus at their
various club sides if they hope to receive future invitations to
the national team. He praised the team’s level of
concentration during the friendlies and said it must be
sustained at their various clubsides in the course of building a
more virile national team.

Abia PDP primaries ruse (2)


Two corrections from the preface before today’s round-up:
Kingsley Emereuwa was Chief Press Secretary to Gov. T. A.
Orji of Abia State in his first tenure and not Special Adviser on
Media as inadvertently mentioned here last week. The kernel
of this intervention is a response to his vexatious article
entitled “Abia PDP Primaries and Doomsday Prophets” ven­
tilated by THISDAY of December 22. The second remedy is
that Gov. Orji has investment stakes in The Niche on Sunday—
and not defunct Next. Blame the printer’s devil for this faux
pas!
Let us take one of the lie blatancies of Aba-based Emereuwa:
“In all fairness to Gov. Orji, there was nothing to show that he
had a preference for any candidate. He maintained his mien
and stoic character in the face of all the horse-trading. Not
even from his body language did he let out any whiff of
suspicion as to his choice. If he had any preference for any of
the contestants, he kept same (sic) to his chest so as to
create a level playing ground for all.” How can any responsible
person in Abia State declare shamelessly that Gov. Orji did not
handpick the Peoples Democratic Party governorship
candidate, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu? I am sure that Gov. Orji will be
embarrassed by such falsehood brazenness by his former hire­
ling! If you must tell a lie in anticipatory beneficence, let it be
the one that is believable—not what they call black-and-white
lie.
Precedents to the emergence of the establishment candidate
were not hidden: even children still in diapers knew before the
primaries that the governor’s son, Chinedu, had anointed the
stooge long before the charade called primaries. Is Emereuwa
aware of the one-million-man march organized by Abia State
government officials in support of the last-minute lackey?
Does Emereuwa listen to the Broadcasting Corporation of Abia
(BCA) and also read The Ambassador, the state government-
owned newspaper? I have never seen this kind of professional
rascality, unfairness and compromise. Only Ikpeazu gets
mentioned in these public establishments funded with tax-
payers’ funds. I know full well that most government-owned
media agencies are usually biased in favour of governors and
their families as they cough and fart, but the parochial, in­
sensitive and unprofessional descent by the BCA is
unprecedented in Nigeria’s media history Is Emereuwa also
aware that the governorship candidate of All Progressives
Grand Alliance (APGA), Dr. Alex Otti, the most likely successor
to Gov. Orji, gets harassed and intimidated by agents of the
state government at every turn, while Ikpeazu is on an
electioneering roller-coaster facilitated publicly by the same
agents of government? The governor does not need to
chaperon Ikpeazu before we know his unseen hand and
desecration of incumbency power. Whoever does not know
that Ikpeazu is a surrogate candidate of Gov. Orji must be a
non-Abian.
Every time this matter comes up I ask myself why a governor
should be feverishly desperate to plant a lackey to take over
from him. Is it that there are things to be hidden? Does it
suggest that the governor has performed abysmally and needs
cover-up by whoever he positions as a replacement? Why
would Governors Ibrahim Shehu Shema, Sule Lamido,
Emmanuel Uduaghan and Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) of
Katsina, Jigawa, Delta and Lagos states, respectively, be
disinterested in who succeeds them? It shows their level of
confidence in their quintessential delivery of good governance
and general propriety/probity which other desperate, prospec­
tive godfather-governors lack.
Emereuwa finally satiates himself with this drunken self-
deception: “No candidate walked out of the exercise
(primaries). None alleged any form of manipulation.” This Eme­
reuwa fellow should be admitted to the Yaba Psychiatric
Hospital. Did he ever speak with the aspirants (excluding
Ikpeazu!) on the outcome of the ruse called Abia PDP
primaries? Does he have an idea of the issuance of
superfluous convertible currencies to “loyal” delegates?
With all sense of responsibility, professional candour, robust
subscription to profound existentialism and in my honour as a
devout Anglican, it is incontestable and unarguable that the
Abia PDP primaries held last month was a sham, a travesty
and a fluky slap on all Abians! The only way to clean the
Augean stables is for Abians everywhere to mobilize and
ensure that there is no perpetuity of blackout in the state by
voting en masse against government pikin Ikpeazu. Official
cousinship and unparalleled surrogacy have killed my state!
We have been mortally injured to painlessness by Ochendo!
Nobody should salt the festering anguish, please.
‘Debo rings Ochendo
He needs no introduction any more after this last time round.
His name is Yemi Adebowale, the Deputy Editor of THISDAY,
THE SATURDAY NEWSPAPER. In his Ring True Column of
December 20, 2014, Page 11, he wrote a terse, but incisive,
article entitled “Abia Elders Should Call Ochendo to Order”. I
lifted the advisory piece below because of its timeliness,
forthrightness and obvious dispassion—a departure from the
viral calumniation of this racy medium as the only searchlight
on the systemic decadence in God’s Own State since May 29,
2007!
“I can’t understand what is happening in Abia State in terms
of welfare of civil servants. The founding fathers of the state
should move in and call Theodore Orji to order. The governor
called Ochendo has not really been fair to Abia civil servants.
Workers in so many departments and agencies are being owed
salaries running into several months. Workers in several states
across the nation are facing similar problems but the situation
in Abia is horrendous. I don’t know what Ochendo stands to
gain by pummeling these hapless workers. Just on Monday,
leaders of the Abia State Council of the Nigeria Labour
Congress were forced to seal the office of the state’s
accountant-general and the sub-treasury because of the woes
of the civil servants. The state’s branch of the Trade Union
Congress joined the Abia NLC in solidarity during the protest.
Chairman of the Abia NLC, Comrade Sylvanus Eyeh, confirmed
the non-payment of salaries running into several months to
thousands of civil servants. Some departments and agencies
owe as much as seven months. Eyeh also complained of huge
outstanding gratuities and pensions as well as the non-refund
of the N2,000 charges paid by workers for the confirmation,
promotion exams (CONPRO) which he said never took place
since 2013. Other grievances of Abia workers include non-
payment of gratuity and pension to retired workers. Workers in
many parastatals are also being owed huge minimum wage
arrears. Abia State Health Management Board workers are
being owed about six-month arrears of salaries. ASUBEB owes
teachers six-month salaries, while most of the tertiary
institutions owe huge arrears of salaries. Ochendo: over to
you. You must sort out this mess before you leave.”
Once again, we need more Yemi Adebowales in the on-going
crusade to extricate Abia State from the current clutches of
darkness and the looming Armageddon in the state should
Ikpeazu be chaperoned into Government House by his
eclipsing benefactor. It is a scenario that would be worse than
the costliest mistake of Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu in foisting his
ungrateful successor and worst governor in Nigeria on Abians.