Saturday, 3 November 2018

Debts/Liabilities inherited by Buhari Admin in 2015:



Pension/Salary Arrears: N740bn

Oil Subsidy Debt: N350bn

Paris Club Overdeductions: $5.4bn

JV CashCall Arrears: $6.8bn

Contractor Debt/EEG Debt: N1.9 Trn

Refunds to States for Roads: N488bn

Total: 7 TRILLION Naira
You can’t understand where we are today without understanding where we’re coming from. At least 7 TRILLION Naira in unpaid debts/liabilities, accumulated between 1999-2015, inherited by Buhari Administration.

All now being paid/settled. Even amidst relatively-low oil prices.
Look at Salaries/Pensions arrears. Examples abound: Nigerian Airways staff laid off 2003/4,unpaid until 2018. Delta Steel Co, Ex-Biafra Police Officers (pardoned since 2000)

See this thread from earlier this year by former Finance Minister @HMKemiAdeosun: https://t.co/3XwNmwr1Qz

Refusal To Pay N975M Was The Beginning Of My Problem With Health Ministry, Says NHIS Boss

The suspended Executive Secretary (ES) of the National Health Insurance Scheme  (NHIS), Professor Usman Yusuf, claimed yesterday  that his refusal pay the Federal  Ministry of Health N975m for a job NHIS was not aware of was responsible for his current ordeal.
He told  a House of Representatives  investigative public hearing on the crisis rocking NHIS that a  probe panel set up by the Health Ministry was meant to indict him.
He alleged that the panel was  paid N19m from NHIS account.
Yusuf, who made his presentation at the final day of the  Nicholas Ossai-led investigative  ad hoc panel  also regretted that Health Management Organizations  (HMOs) have not added value to the scheme despite drawing hugely from the funds.
Health Minister  Isaac Adewole, in his submission through  the Permanent Secretary, Abdulaziz Abdullahi, said Yusuf was initially investigated and suspended on the strength  of petitions from workers and other stakeholders.
He said the ES was accused of the unauthorised appointment of staff into the scheme,  incurring expenditures without due process, giving approval  above the threshold of the ES, flagrant disregard for due process in procurement matters, financial irregularities and award of contract with impunity.
HMOs also accused Yusuf of blackmailing them into refunding monies that legally accrued to them back to  NHIS, in addition to the entire 59 HMOs being forced to patronise one insurance brokering firm.
The HMOs also accused Yusuf of mismanaging  Information and Communications Technology  (ICT) fund meant to automate the activities of the organization.
In his response, Yusuf said reference to the first investigation by the minister was an “ambush” because it had been dealt with.
He, however, expressed  reservations over some of the allegations raised against him.
Saying that his refusal  to release N975m to the Ministry of Health was the beginning of his problems with the ministry, the ES added, “This led to the setting up of a panel to probe me and the panel delivered as the panelists were given N19m and even the security too were given money.
“My suspension was a preemptive coup against transparency. Why was I suspended on October 18 and not  October 19?   October 18 was the day I was going to present a result of the forensic audit of the activities of HMOs.
“October 18 was nothing but preemptive coup at the NHIS. It was a gang-up to stop my fight against corruption”.
He also refuted HMOs’ allegation of being blackmailed into making a refund to NHIS that was tied to accreditation as well as being forced to patronise a single brokering firm.
According to him, the Department of State Services (DSS) had been investigating NHIS for corruption due to payments made in 2012 and that by 2017, he was sent a letter by DSS that the money should be recouped and should no more be paid to the HMOs and the ICT Department fixed to prevent future occurrence.
“That’s what informed my vigour in collecting that money, ” he added.
The suspended ES also explained that some tough measures adopted against HMOs were necessitated by the manipulation of the funds whereby the HMOs, since inception, have failed to bring in more people on board other than civil servants.
He also said the policy of patronising a brokering firm was not his idea, adding that it was initiated before his assumption of duty in 2016.
He said: “Why are the health providers not being paid by HMOs despite accessing money from NHIS?
“I saw a huge number of insurance firms and I asked how come we have HMOs presenting to us advanced payment guarantee that will insure what we gave them.
“How come they are not paying hospitals and we are having debts, N400m, an HMO is not paid, N300m in some cases?
“I was curious, if you present me an advanced payment guarantee and I give you money, if you don’t pay, my problem is not with you but with the insurance company that gives that.
“We have not been activating the advanced payment guarantee. So we looked at the consortium and what they used to do is to give the HMOs a N100m for an insurance of N10.00. Worthless.
“On the ones we picked, there was a due process and a new consortium was put in place.
“It was done in 2016 and a management deceit before I came”.
He also refuted allegation of disregard for due process on financial management and procurement,  saying after the organization’s funds were swept into the Treasury Single Account (TSA), he had to open five sub accounts for the organisation for transparency.
To further throw light on the issue, the  panel has summoned  the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Boss Mustapha, and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, to give account of all they know about the agency.
Chairman of the investigation panel, Ossai,  pledged  that the report of the exercise would be fair to all concerned.

We’ve lost confidence in Oshiomhole’s NWC, say aggrieved Edo APC women


Alexander Okere, Benin
Some aggrieved women of Edo State chapter of the All Progressives Congress have passed a vote of no confidence on the National Working Committee of the party for allegedly promoting nepotism and tyranny in the party.
Addressing journalists in Benin on Friday, the women accused the leadership of party, led by its National Chairman and former governor of the state, Adams Oshiomhole, of allegedly subverting the aspirations of female party members with impunity.
They also said that the controversial primaries conducted by the NWC “without recourse to equity, justice and fair play” exposed the APC as “a party of hawks, swallowing chickens as its prey.”
The coordinator of the aggrieved group and State Organising Secretary of the party, Aisosa Amadasun, noted that female aspirants across the state were not only subjected to harrowing experiences, by being charged exorbitant fees for the collection of nomination forms, but also screened out, even when they were “eminently qualified.”
Amadasun lamented that about 10 women from the three senatorial districts were denied tickets by the national leadership of the APC, in spite of their sacrifices.
She said, “The level of impunity has assumed a frightening dimension under the leadership of our national chairman, who once prided himself as an apostle of change and the curative medicine to ‘godfatherism’.
“The primaries conducted so far by the leadership of the APC across the 36 states of the country are not only shameful, disgraceful, undemocratic, and a charade, but also threw many states into mayhem and shocked the foundation of the party and out it on the edge of a precipice.
“Any party that fails to recognise the inputs of women and reward them with positions commensurate to their painstaking efforts to ensure victory is not only doomed but will suffer defeat.”
She, however, vowed that the women would no long play second fiddle to the men who used them as “campaign tools”.
She also called on President Muhammadu Buhari to take pragmatic steps to remedy the injustice done to them, adding that proper reconciliation was needed to ensure victory for the party in the 2019 general elections.

Military discovers illegal security training camp in Taraba




The 20 Model Battalion of the Nigeria Army located in Serti, Taraba, said it had discovered an illegal security training camp in Serti locality.
Commanding Officer of the battalion, Lt.-Col. Sani Adamu, who stated this on Thursday in Serti.

Sani disclosed that the Special Adviser on Security to Taraba Governor, Col. Agyo Wapan (retd), had been invited as part of an investigation on the issue.
He said that the discovery followed calls by concerned citizens, who disclosed that no fewer than 300 youths were being trained in a public primary school in the area.
He said that on the receipt of the calls, he promptly responded by visiting the site and found over 300 young men were undergoing military training.

https://www.tribuneonlineng.com/171658/?fbcli

Friday, 2 November 2018

BREAKING: WAEC presents certificate to Buhari


Olalekan Adetayo, Abuja
The West African Examination Council has presented attestation certificate and confirmation of school certificate result to President Muhammadu Buhari.
The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, disclosed this on his Twitter handle, @FemAdesina, on Friday.

Adesina wrote, “WAEC presents attestation certificate and confirmation of school cert result to President Buhari. What will the naysayers say next?”: WAEC presents certificate to Buhari

Olalekan Adetayo, Abuja
The West African Examination Council has presented attestation certificate and confirmation of school certificate result to President Muhammadu Buhari.
The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, disclosed this on his Twitter handle, @FemAdesina, on Friday.
Adesina wrote, “WAEC presents attestation certificate and confirmation of school cert result to President Buhari. What will the naysayers say next?”

UPDATED: Court stops NLC, TUC’s planned strike

Ade Adesomoju, Abuja
The National Industrial Court of Nigeria has ordered the organised labour, comprising the Nigerian Labour Congress and the Trade Union Congress not to embark on its indefinite strike scheduled to commence on November 6.
Justice Sanusi Kado, on Friday, gave the order in a ruling on an ex parte application moved on behalf of the Federal Government by the Solicitor-General of the Federation and Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Justice, Mr. Dayo Apata.
Agreeing with Apata, Justice Kado ruled that if the strike is allowed it would lead to huge economic loss to both public and private institutions and could jeopardise the health of many Nigerians who would not be able to access health facilities during the period.
The organised labour had threatened to commence an indefinite strike action to press for the increase in the national minimum wage from the current N18,000.
READ ALSO:Youths are not leaders of tomorrow —Stella Oduah
The last meeting of the tripartite negotiation committee on the minimum wage had ended in deadlock after the Federal Government insisted that it could only afford to pay N25,000, while the governors under the aegis of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum had held on to N22,500 and the labour N30,000.
Apart from the NLC and the TUC, the NGF is also joined as a defendant in the suit.
Justice Kado adjourned the matter till November 8 for the hearing of the motion on notice seeking the interlocutory injunction to stop the strike.
The judge ordered that the court order and other papers be filed on all the defendants.
He ruled, “In view of all that I have been saying above, it is the overall interest of justice and stability of the society to grant the order of interim injunction against the 1st and 2nd defendants (NLC and TUC), their members, privies, agents, proxies, workmen, or servants from embarking on or taking part in the planned strike or industrial action scheduled to commence on November 6, 2018, in whatever form pending the hearing or determination of the motion on notice for interlocutory injunction which is pending before the court.
“It is also necessary to grant an order of interim injunction restraining the 1st and 2nd defendants (NLC and TUC), their members, privies, agents, proxies, employees, workmen, or servants from engaging or taking part in any conduct or act in contemplation or furtherance of the strike or industrial action scheduled to commence on November 6, 2018, pending the hearing and determination5 of the motion on notice for interlocutory injunction.”
The suit marked, NICN/ABJ/287/2018, was filed on November 1, 2018 in the name of the Federal Government and the Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Abubakar Malami, as the 1st and 2nd claimants, respectively.

More in Home

Trump threatens to shoot migrants who throw stones at US military


President Donald Trump on Thursday warned that soldiers deployed to the Mexican border could shoot Central American migrants who throw stones at them while attempting to cross illegally.
Trump told journalists at the White House that a group of several thousand migrants walking through Mexico towards the US border had thrown rocks “viciously and violently” at Mexican police.
“We’re not going to put up with that. They want to throw rocks at our military, our military fights back,” he said.
“I told them (troops) consider it (a rock) a rifle. When they throw rocks as they did at the Mexican military and police, I say consider it a rifle.”
Trump spoke during a presentation of his controversial policy on cracking down against what he says is uncontrolled illegal immigration.
Contacted for comment, Pentagon spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Jamie Davis said the military would not discuss hypothetical situations on the use of force “but our forces are trained professionals who always have the inherent right of self-defence.”
“I would also emphasize that our forces are in support of DHS/CBP, who are performing law enforcement activities,” he added, referring to the frontline Department of Homeland Security and Customs and Border Protection.
Trump has ramped up the rhetoric daily ahead of next Tuesday’s midterm congressional elections, accusing the opposition Democrats of wanting to throw open the borders to floods of “tough people,” “rapists” and other types of threats.
The current focus of the president’s repeated claim to be acting against “an invasion” is the dwindling group of a few thousand impoverished migrants trying to get north, but still far from the US border.
Trump said that from now on, the United States will stop its policy of allowing people to claim political asylum at the border unless they have first gone through an official border post.