Sunday, 16 June 2013

Bayelsa Destabilization Army: Ahead of 2015: Dickson Recruits 10,000 Cultists


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Gov Seriake Henry Dickson of Bayelsa State on Saturday stunned the public and observers of political developments with the announcement of enlistment in a youth empowerment programme of 10,000 of the 11,000 youths who reportedly renounced cultism.
The governor, who was speaking an elaborate ceremony at the Bounquet Hall in Yenagoa, said he had set aside N1 billion for the programmes to ensure they become self-reliant.
“If we do not help to build you all, then our future will not be assured,” he told them.  “You are all aware of what our Restoration Government is doing; building schools, roads, hospitals, investing in security and making our state safe, talking to people to come here to invest so that we can create jobs for you.
“All of these will come to nothing, if we don’t help to equip you with the skills that you need to partake in the economy to protect our future.”
He promised that the exercise is just the beginning, and that his team will conduct a meticulous verification exercise to select the 10,000 beneficiaries, local government by local government.
“When we are through with all of these, we are going to engage you in a special youth empowerment programme. A total of 10,000 youths will be engaged” Dickson said.
The announcement however caused a stir among those youths who were not part of the 11,000 that earlier registered to renounce cult participation.
The state government had announced the provision of free transportation from the eight council areas, a development that caused several thousands of youths to join the bandwagon.
One of the so-called “repentant cultists” told our reporter that he was lured to join the group because of the empowerment attached to it.
“I can tell you that most of us here are here for the money, since the government is rewarding the lawless and punishing the lawful we have to play along, first it was the militants, now it is the cultists, may be armed robbers and kidnappers will be the next.
“This same government just increased tax burden on civil servants and has announced it will impose additional levies on citizens for refuse disposal.  Since there is nothing for the law abiding ones, we have to survive, that is the game,” said one of them.
It was however learnt that Dickson bought into the idea for calculated political gains ahead of the 2015 general elections and his re-election contest in 2016.
Said a resident, “This is just an exercise to worsen the spate of violence, we all know the history of militancy, the initial cache of arms they used were remnants from election duties and that was what took us to where we are today. It is rather unfortunate that we are all sitting on a keg of gunpowder by this policy of government. Let them wake up if they are dreaming.”

NewsRescue

UK Angry with Nigeria’s Gay Bill, Cameron Threatens to Withdraw Aid


peter ugwu
National Assembly to ban same-sex marriage in the country is irreversible.
David Cameron, British Prime Minister, said that his government might consider cutting off aid to Nigeria over same sex marriage bill passed by the House of Representatives on Thursday after the Senate had passed its own version in November 2011.
Cameron had in October 2011 threatened to cut off aid to countries which ban gay and lesbians.
David Mark, Senate President, however said that the decision of the National Assembly to ban same-sex marriage in the country is irreversible.
But the British Prime Minister said he would take up the issue with President Goodluck Jonathan soon while voicing his government’s strong objection to the passage of the bill.
Cameron, a guest at British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) programme while reacting to a question by a Nigerian resident in London, Bisi said “When we meet with Nigerian politicians and leaders, we will be clear about those things we agreed on. We have to be clear where we disagree. We will make clear where we stand on those issues,” he said.
When asked whether Britain would consider stopping a projected 50 per cent increase in aid to Nigeria or cutting it outright, Cameron said, “Nothing is off the table. We need to have these conversations. We also have some very important objectives with Nigerians, for instance on how to deal with the appalling rates of poverty in Northern Nigeria, which are part of the problems confronting the country.”
Britain and some Western Nation had previously expressed opposition to the bill.
As Cameron spoke, Mark, Nigeria’s Senate President said the bill, which had been approved by both chambers of the National Assembly, would not in anyway infringe on the human rights of Nigerians.
“The law against same-sex marriage is an approval of the wishes of the generality of Nigerians, who are desirous of living within our cultural bounds.
“The law is not designed to infringe on the human rights of Nigerians in any way. Also, wherever you go in our country today, our people are completely in support of the National Assembly, because the practice of same-sex, as you all know, is alien to us,” he said at a dinner hosted in his honour by the Nigerian community in Prague, Czech Republic.

NigeriaCommunicationsWeek

Saturday, 15 June 2013

Museveni: Africa Wont’ Let Egyptians Bully Ethiopia


Museveni
President Yoweri Museveni has sternly warned the Egyptian “government and other groups” against making “chauvinist and irrational statements” in the wake of Ethiopia’s decision to construct a multi-billion dollar electricity dam, Chimp Corps report.
“I have seen in the print media statements coming out of Egypt regarding the commendable work of the Government of Ethiopia of building dams for electricity in that country,” said Museveni.
“This is what the whole of Africa needs to do. That is one reason the economy of Ethiopia has been growing in double digits. It is, therefore, advisable that the new Government of Egypt and some chauvinistic groups inside Egypt should not repeat the mistakes of the past Egyptian Governments,” he added.
Museveni said Africa will not allow Egypt to continue hurting Black Africans, warning “Egypt should not repeat mistakes of past leaders.”
The President was speaking shortly after the reading of the 2013/14 national budget at Kampala Serena Hotel. Analysts say Museveni’s statement blew the cover off the simmering tensions between Uganda and Ethiopia on one hand and Egypt on the other.
Museveni said leaders of Egypt should not be victims of the “misguided policies of past leaders.”
He further stressed that threat of the Nile is not the construction of dams but the “lack of electricity and underdevelopment in the tropics.”
“The biggest threat to the Nile is continued under-development in the tropics i.e. lack of electricity and lack of industrialization. On account of these two, peasants cut the bio-mass for fuel (firewood – enku) and invade the forests to expand primitive agriculture. Here in Uganda, the peasants destroy 40 billion cubic metres of wood per annum for firewood. They also invade the wetlands (ebisaalu, ebitoogo, entobazi, ebifuunjo, ebisharara) to grow rice,” he noted.
“This interferes with the transpiration that is crucial for rain formation. Our experts have told me that 40 percent of our rain comes from local moisture – meaning from our lakes and wetlands,” said Museveni, adding, “That is why, for instance, West Nile and West Acholi have got more rain than Karamoja being on the same latitude notwithstanding. It is, apparently, on account of the huge wetlands in South Sudan, the forest in Congo and the wetlands in Uganda.”
Ironically, said Museveni, the Egyptians wanted to drain the wetlands in South Sudan through the Jonglei canal.
“It was one of the causes for the people of South Sudan to wage war against Khartoum, which was collaborating with the Egyptian Government’s misguided and dangerous policies of that time,” he added.
Therefore, said Museveni, the threat to the Nile is lack of electricity in the tropics and lack of industrialization thereof.
“Electrification so that people stop using wood fuel and industrialization so that people shift from agriculture to industry and services is the correct way.”
Museveni also pointed to unknown diplomatic efforts aimed at persuading Egypt not to pursue the path of war.
“I have given these views to the past Egyptian Governments and to the present one. Therefore, it is advisable that those chauvinistic statements coming out of Egypt are restrained and through the Nile Valley Organization rational (not emotional and informed statements) discussions take place.”
“No African wants to hurt Egypt; however, Egypt cannot continue to hurt black Africa and the countries of the tropics of Africa,” he concluded his speech.
Ethiopia boasts one of the most advanced and deadliest armies on the continent.
The battle-hardened army derives its unwavering determination to protect its strategic interests right from the late 1980s when it resisted the wave of colonialism that swept Africa.

Responding to Morsi’s threats recently, Ethiopia’s premier, Hailemariam Desalegn, the construction of the Grand Renaissance Dam would was “unstoppable.”
“All options include a war. I don’t think they will take that option unless they go mad,” warned Hailemariam, adding, “I urge them to abandon such an unhelpful approach and return to dialogue and discussion.”
Observers say Morsi is fanning anti-Ethiopia sentiments to divert attention from the resistance facing his unpopular domestic policies.
On Thursday evening, news came in that the Ethiopian Parliament had voted unanimously to repeal 1929 Nile water treaty that had granted Egypt the lion’s share of the Nile waters.
East Africa had criticized the treaty as a colonial relic considering that Egypt is guaranteed access to 55.5bn cubic metres of water, out of a total of 84bn cubic metres.
Interestingly, a Nile treaty signed by the upper riparian states in 2010, the Cooperative Framework Agreement, has not been signed by either Egypt or Sudan, as they claim it violates the 1959 treaty which gives Sudan and Egypt exclusive rights to the Nile’s waters.
The Nile Basin Initiative provides a framework for dialogue among all Nile riparian countries.
Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan established an International Panel of Experts to review and assess the study reports of the dam. The panel consists of 10 members; 6 from the three countries and 4 international in the fields of water resources and hydrologic modelling, dam engineering, socioeconomic, and environmental.
The panel held its fourth meeting in Addis Ababa in November 2012. It reviewed documents about the environmental impact of the dam and visited the dam site.

The panel submitted its preliminary report to the respective governments at the end of May 2013. Although the full report has not been made public, and will not be until it is reviewed by the governments, Egypt and Ethiopia both released details.
The Ethiopian government stated that, according to the report, the dam meets international standards and will be beneficial to Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia. According to Egyptian government, the report found that the dimensions and size of the dam should be changed.
At 4,132 miles from its source in Lake Victoria, the Nile is the world’s longest river with its main two tributaries – the White Nile and Blue Nile, flowing from Ethiopia before joining at Sudan’s Capital, Khartoum.
DiasporaScope

Friday, 14 June 2013

States walk out of FAAC meeting


States and local governments yesterday aborted the May 2013 Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) meeting. They walked out on Minister of State for Finance Dr Yerima Lawal Ngama and left Abuja without any cash.

The meeting is the forum where monthly allocation to the tiers of government is shared.
Commissioners of Finance Forum Chair Timothy Odaah (Ebonyi State) said there would no longer be FAAC meetings “until all the conditions are met by the Federal Government”.
He said commissioners were going back empty handed.
By implication, states that depend entirely on the monthly allocation from the FAAC meeting may not be able to meet basic obligations, like paying workers’ salaries and contractors.
Odaah gave the reasons for quitting the meeting to include: “The non-implementation of the decisions and resolutions taken in most FAAC meeting plenary sessions, especially the May 2013 resolutions which still remains inconclusive based on the fact that the arrears of February have not been paid.”
He also complained about the failure of the committee to pay “augmentation of last month (April Allocation) passed with a resolution.”
He said this augmentation has not been paid “and there is no clue as to why”.
Odaah lamented that “every month, returns from the states accountant generals appear to be shabbier than the previous one”.
He said states “have taken a lot of disappointment from the administration of FAAC which by intents and purposes has become templates of ineptitude”.
The states and local governments, he added, “have been bearing with the situation”. “Workers and contractors have to be paid, the various programmes of the state governments and local governments that are embodied in their various manifestos to carry the federation of Nigeria along with other obligations have to be met”.
The commissioners of Finance said they had decided to take the matter up with the President “ so that he and the state governments have to meet on these decisions that we have been hiding for them to put heads together with every other well meaning persons in the federation so that this problem will be resolved once and for all”.
Odaah noted that no member of the forum was absent from the media briefing, an indication that “this is a unanimous decision and resolution by all of the commissioners of finance”.
There were indications that trouble was brewing after the technical session when commissioners, while waiting for the arrival of the minister of state for Finance, told Accountant-General of the Federation (AGF) Jonah Otunla, that they would not accept any delay of the plenary session, the meeting that endorses the decisions of the state Accountants-General at the technical session which also ratifies the amount to be shared for the month.
Shortly thereafter, Ngama came in for the plenary and about 50 minutes later, the commissioners of finance started trooping out of the auditorium of the Ministry of Finance venue of the planned FAAC meeting and headed for Sheraton Hotel to address the media.
The Nation reported on Wednesday that the Federal Government was constrained to pay the arrears because it had initially released $1 billion to the states on request.
The Federal Government argued that since the $1 billion was drawn from the Excess Crude Account (ECA) and financing the February arrears will also be drawn from the same ECA, paying the February arrears would drastically dwindle the reserves in the ECA.
However, the Federal Government has agreed to offset the February arrears in installments through augmentation to allow the ECA recover from the $1 billion withdrawn from the account.
The February arrears is almost $1 billion, the amount advanced to the states from the ECA as a privilege extended to the states.
(The Nation)

Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai: For Nigerians, it may be time to panic


Consider these scenarios: 50,000 teachers cannot pass a basic test in elementary English; illiteracy rate of about 70%; only 10 out of 1.6 million candidates that sat for university entrance examinations scored a pass mark of 300 and above out of a possible 500. Add this to a situation where 10.6 million children are out of school – the highest school aged children out-of-school population in the entire world, then relate these to the fact that all these take place in a nation with a GDP growth rate higher than all other African nations except South Africa.
This conundrum is representative of the inherent contradictions in Nigeria, where the government keeps brandishing largely useless growth figures in our faces, but where people are confronted daily by an increasingly divided citizenry, deteriorating security conditions, decaying infrastructure, rising unemployment, unprecedented corruption, impunity and falling standards of education.
Ordinarily, the scenario depicted above would be hilarious if it wasn’t so serious. Unfortunately, for 170 million Nigerians who normally should set the pace for the rest of Africa in human capital development and educational attainment terms, the reality on ground is that they are plagued with a largely dysfunctional system that encourages an ever growing population of young people who would constitute an uneducated, unemployable generation with little useful roles to play in society.
The Ministry of Education would be quick to come up with excuses: attribute its many failures to a lack of finance and complain that it is not allocated some 25% of Nigeria’s national budget as is recommended by the United Nations. Yet of its dismal 1% budgetary allocation in 2012, the ministry only expended 20% of its capital provisions as at September the same year. This simply points to the fact that the ministry itself has no vision to accommodate the resources they often put forward as needed.
This immediately brings questions to mind, can this ministry that cannot implement a 1% budgetary provision wholly be trusted with 25%? Can the government afford to fund this ministry as much as it deserves? Is it not a fact that a former Education Minister, Dr Oby Ezekwesili admitted the above, and included the ‘Adopt A School’ program as part of Corporate Social Responsibility? Sadly, no sooner than she left office was her ‘Crisis’ reforms document thrown out too. What place does alternative education have in our current education system? How did our technical schools that served to train experts at skilled work loose relevance?
The truth is Nigeria’s education sector is in need of reforms and every Nigerian should take up this responsibility, demand an education revolution from our government. Peaceful protests like the Occupy Nigeria or the Project Cure rallies that have been beneficial for fuel subsidy as well as currency restructuring would do just as good for education. The creation of specialist universities may prove to be more beneficial than universities that aim to offer all courses. Would it not be a more informed thought if the President considered strengthening the capacities of existing universities as opposed to building new universities in every state?
Challenges abound with reforming our education system. Time for one; reforms would take a little more than 4 years focused on planning, training, implementing and some more training. Take China as example, the country has had over 50 years of mandatory 9 year basic education and various laws guaranteeing access to education for minorities, women and the handicapped, yet the country has not totally attained universal basic education coverage. Nigeria has not even started. Discouraging as this may be, it is not reason to delay the reform process that would benefit generations of Nigerians to come.
Yes, there is a Universal Basic Education Board and 35 other state versions called State Universal Basic Education Board but what are these SUBEBs doing? Take a state like Kaduna for instance with a school aged out of school percent population of 51.6%, the state SUBEB has a zero capital allocation for the years 2013 and 2014, while there is a recurrent expenditure of N116.5m and N128.2m respectively. In view of the above, you decide if this demonstrates political will to curb the education menace?
This lack of political will to train and develop the people we refer to as Nigeria’s future goes beyond formal education; we see it even in the field of technical education too. The 2013 National budget has a capital provision of N40 million set aside for the National Business and Technical Education Board while its recurrent provision is N1.2billion, also there is a N300million capital provision for the National Board for Technical Education Secretariat while its recurrent expenditure is N1.3billion- about 300% above Capital Expenditure. With miserable capital provisions as detailed above most technical schools are shut down, the few that function do not have updated curriculums and therefore offer training that is of very little relevance to modern trends and realities.
For Nigerians who belong to the dwindling middle class and are rich enough to afford foreign education or training for their children and perhaps feel like the dearth of education infrastructure in Nigeria should not bother them, they are sadly mistaken. I conclude with the tale as narrated below, it is my hope that from it we all have a rethink.
A man wise beyond his years once said, ‘the children we do not train now would kill those we have trained.’ He then explained how a Harvard trained student came visiting his parents in Lagos for a week and how on a hot afternoon made worse by the failure of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (P.H.C.N) to provide electricity, he decided to take a walk. As he walked, he saw a miscreant steal a lady’s purse and sought to challenge the man. The man simply pulled out a gun, shot this foreign educated student and rode off on his motorbike.
DailyPost

Wammako, Amaechi in discussion with CPC to join APC


Written by Yusha’u A Ibrahim, Katsina

Speaking at the inauguration of the CPC local governments interimGovernor Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko of Sokoto State and his Rivers counterpart Rotimi Amaechi are in discussion with Congress for Progressives Change (CPC) in preparation to leave PDP for APC, Interim Chairman of Congress for Progressive Change for Katsina State Alhaji Farouq Adamu Aliyu has disclosed.
committees in Katsina yesterday, Aliyu said the two PDP governors indicated interest in joining the APC and they will soon dump their party PDP for APC.
“More PDP governors, whom I don’t want to mention their names, have also indicated their interest in APC and I am sure they will soon come out and tell the world their intentions. Our door is open for any interested PDP governor to come and join the wagon of the APC.
“We will soon start receiving imminent personalities from the PDP in their quest to join the APC ahead of the conduct of the 2015 general election. This is to tell you that Nigerians are tired with PDP. Nigerians are ready to bring change in politics come 2015,” he said.
When contacted, spokesman of the Sokoto State governor Sani Umar denied that his boss is talking with the APC with view to dumping PDP.
“It is absolute lie. He should tell you where this talk was held. As far as I know there is no truth in what he is saying. You will recall that His Excellency said on Wednesday when he arrived in the country that he would not leave the PDP, but that he will continue to fight for justice,” he said. But Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State could not be reached for comments.
Meanwhile, the interim chairman said the CPC Board of Trustees has approved the dismissal of 30 members of the party in Katsina, saying “the affected party members will never be allowed joining APC even after it was registered.”
DailyTrust

PHOTOS: Mother And Her Three Children Strip Naked In Public

 

A woman who stripped naked along with three of her children outside a high school has blamed the psychotic episode on an adverse reaction to medication she was taking.
Sara Butler's lawyer said conflicting medications for lupus led the 44-year-old mother to think the world was ending.
On the morning of March 16, Butler drove to Upper Darby High School with her two adult daughters, Joanne, 23, and Bessie, 22, plus a 14-year-old son.
She had wanted to pick up another child, but the student wasn't released because - although Butler was the child’s biological mother - she was not the custodial parent.
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'During this psychotic episode, Miss Butler thought that basically the world was coming to an end, so she - caring for her family - decided to bring all of her children together,' said her attorney Sharmil McKee.
School district security ordered the family off the property, but they returned three more times, reports Delco Times. The last came at about 1 p.m., when they arrived in a van and stripped between two parked vehicles in the parking lot.
'In order to please the Lord, Miss Butler felt that she needed to exit the world in the same manner that Adam and Eve entered the world, and to do so she needed to be naked,' said McKee.
'When police got there, they were in a van and locked their arms in defiant protest,' said Upper Darby police Superintendent Michael Chitwood.
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'They were chanting, "Jesus is Lord." When we got them back to the police station we gave them their clothes and the mom refused to put her clothes on.'
Sara Butler does not have any underlying psychological problems and has never been in trouble with the law before, said McKee. She is currently seeing a therapist, who has discontinued the medication that triggered the episode.
McKee said the family had never seen their mother act that way before, but is now familiar with what a psychotic break looks like. All three women apologized and promised that the episode will not be repeated.
'I regret what happened that day and it will never happen again,' Sara Butler said.
Butler and her adult daughters pleaded guilty to indecent exposure and disorderly conduct, for which they each received one year of probation and were ordered to stay away from the high school.
Sara Butler also entered an open plea to simple assault and corrupting the morals of a minor, for which she was given a concurrent probationary sentence and ordered to pay a $500 fine.
Naij.com