Wednesday 31 October 2012

Jonathan appoints Power Minister, reshuffles cabinet

Goodluck Jonathan
Dr. Goodluck Jonathan
Godswill Orubebe has been appointed the Minister of Power. Until his appointment, he was the Minister of the Niger-Delta.
Reuben Abati, the president’s spokesman said this on Wednesday.
The president also made a minor change to his cabinet by swapping the Minister of State for Power, Gauis Dickson, with the Minister of State for Niger Delta, Zainab Kuchi. The change takes effect from next week.
LibertyReport

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala donates proceeds from her book to flood victims


The Coordinating Minister of Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has pledged to donate some part of the proceeds from the public presentation of her book, Reforming the Unreformable: Lessons from Nigeria, to flood victims across the country.
The minister’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and communication, Mr. Paul Nwabuikwu in a statement quoted Dr. Ojkonjo-Iweala as saying that she was making the donation because “their plight reminds us that the work of improving the lives of our people is a never ending one”. The amount was, however, not stated.
Dr Okonjo-Iweala said time was ripe for the de-politicisation of oil price benchmarking, while calling for the establishment of a body of experts to determine the appropriate oil price benchmark in the formulation of national budgets, observing that the strategy has worked successfully for Chile which earns huge revenues from copper.
Those present at the book launch include: Vice President Namadi Sambo; Chief Emeka Anyaoku; Governor Peter Obi, Anambra State; Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa; Chief Sunny Odogwu; Publisher, Vanguard Newspapers, Mr. Sam Amuka; Vanguard Editor-in-Chief, Mr. Gbenga Adefaye; Ministers of Labour, Chief Emeka Wogu; Works, Mike Onolememen; Commerce, Dr. Segun Aganga; Minister of State FCT, Olajumoke Akinjide and Alh. Aliko Dangote.
DailyPost

Armed robbers kill car dealer in Onitsha


Four armed men on Monday robbed and killed a middle-aged car dealer, Chief Emeka Ekwerendu, at Modebe Avenue Junction in the commercial city of Onitsha, Anambra.
The Divisional Police Officer at the Central Police Station, Onitsha, Mr. Temitope Fahugbe, confirmed the incident to newsmen, adding that he had not yet received details of the incidence.
An eyewitness said the late Ekwerendu was shot by a four-man armed robbery gang at about 8:30 a.m. a few metres away from the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Odoakpu, Onitsha.
“The gang operating in a light green Toyota Siena without a vehicle number plate trailed their victim from a primary school close to the church, after he had dropped his children at school.
“As he was driving out in his black Land Cruiser SUV, he was shot dead and an undisclosed amount of money taken from the boot of his vehicle.
“The gang armed with four Ak-47 rifle shot sporadically into the air to scare the people away as they escape he said.
 DailyPost

NBA faults Constitutional Ammendment Course




The Nigerian Bar association (NBA) has faulted the process implemented by the National Assembly to review the Constitution.

The NBA’s President, Chief OkeyWali (SAN), while inaugurating the NBA Committee on Constitutional Review and Law Reform and the NBA Rule of Law Action group committee in Abuja yesterday said, they have serious issues with the process adopted by National Assembly to review the constitution.

He said there is no clear agenda or known methodology in the ongoing process.

Besides, he said the November 10 public hearing session  scheduled to hold simultaneously in the 360 federal constituencies as proposed by the House of Representatives, cannot produce anything reasonable  to the amendment of the 1999 constitution.

“We have decided to attend but without prejudice to our reservations on the inadequacy of the process and on any attempt to any claim to legitimacy if Nigerians are not given the opportunities in the future to effectively participate in the amendment of the 1999 constitution.”

“We will continue to call for referendum, at the final stage of the process, thereby giving the average Nigerian a say in the amendment”, he said, adding also that, “Only then could any legitimate claim be made to it being a constitution by we, the people of Nigeria”.


According to him, NBA believes that the 1999 constitution, as it is, cannot sustain the present democracy in the country, “the 1999 constitution contains good provisions however, it also contain weak and obnoxious provisions and equally admits of several lacunae. Above all, the constitution has legitimacy burden.”

Wali said the NBA knows that putting in place an appropriate legal framework is a vital part of sustaining reforms and economic development and charged the committee to formulate new ones that will aid economic development as well as identify laws that have become outdated and formulate new ones that will aid economic development.


The Charles Edosomwan’s (SAN) led  twelve-member committee, is expected to look at the devolution of power, strengthening institutions that consolidate democracy, judicial and justice sector reforms, electoral systems reform, local government system reforms, state creation, federalism, socio-economic rights, regionalism, fiscal federalism and supremacy of the constitution.
BusinessNews

Ayobami Oyalowo: Nigeria’s DemoCRAZY… And the madness continues


“Remember, democracy never last long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy that did not commit suicide.” -John Adams.

Nigeria is a country of absurdity. The more you look, the less you are likely to see. Governance is shrouded in mystery & secrecy. Everything, including simple issue like salaries and emoluments of elected & appointed public officials is shrouded in mystery, in the guise of public interest or national security. Health and well-being of public official is always shrouded in mystery, leaving room for speculations, innuendoes and rumour mongering.
Nothing is ever as it appears in Nigeria. Simple informations that ought to be available for the benefit of the people are often treated like classified information by public officials, thereby orchestrating monumental paucity of necessary information and statistics which in turn make it impossible for scholars, researchers or interested citizens, to make informed and accurate opinion about most if not all national happenstance.
The general hoarding of information in Nigeria is responsible for several scams and politically motivated financial heists of unimaginable proportion. For instance, the approved Budget for the year 2011 was N4,971,881,652,689 as passed by the national assembly, N250billon was budgeted for as fuel subsidy, but as at today nobody knows the exact figure spent on that cesspool of corruption aptly nicknamed fuel subsidy scam 2011. Same problem is noticeable in the administration or pension in Nigeria. Billions have either been mismanaged or outrightly stolen but as I type, nobody can confidently give accurate figure nor does any Nigerian have the foggiest idea of what transpired and what have been done to ensure perpetrators are brought to justice and the reoccurrence is forestalled.
While information has consistently been hoarded by the Nigerian government officials to aid and abet them in their criminal plundering of the Nigerian commonwealth, another noticeable conundrum is the absence of strong institutions to ensure that things are properly done and in case of any proven laxity to correct and if possible sanctions errants. Nigeria currently operates like a jungle where the stronger can get away with any offense, no matter the magnitude, it is a known facts that those who have been accused of stealing billions are either friends of the government or are even members of the cabinet. For instance, the current senate of Nigeria has a huge number of former governors, majority of whom have been accused and even tried of monumental mismanagement of funds belonging to their states, although not any of those cases have been diligently pursued, in fact a few of them are just free on bail.
It is a well know fact that most ministries, departments and agencies (MDA) of the federal and even state government have a bloated and poorly executed budget. In the recent past, a few ministers, some permanents secretaries and other seniors officials have been tried and found guilty of falsification of budget figures, just to accommodate enough money for sleaze and outright embezzlement. This has led to situations where some item have been consistently budgeted for year upon year, yet nobody have ever been arrested nor found guilty of falsification and embezzlement. For instance Benin-Ore expressway have been consistently budgeted for, for several years, yet not only has the road not being fixed, it stands as a constant death traps to hapless Nigerians who ply that road daily.
A democracy is supposedly a government put in place by the people to cater to the need and welfare of both the rich and poor, the strong and weak, the secure and the vulnerable members of the society. But the Nigerian brand of democracy is a queer one. It is a democracy bereft of any scientific analysis.
For instance, governors who came into government as average men, becomes overnight multimillionaires and rather than calling them to account, such men either become senator or ministers and “power brokers”. Elections are supposed to be a time when ordinary citizens either reward good perfomance or or punish racalcitrance & irreponsibilty in leadership. But in Nigeria, elections are generally a mere charade. People who wish to serve, will stop at nothing to win elections, even to the point of murder, all in the name service.
The reason for the above is not farfetched. Winning an elective position in Nigeria automatically translate to a positive change in financial fortune of the winner. In fact the common people derides anyone who leaves public office and does not have a fleet of cars, palatial mansions scattered allover the country and at times, choice places all over the world. This change in financial and pecuniary fortune has made a mess of commonsense in Nigeria.
Those in power, either by election or appointment, becomes alienated from reality. They talk down on those on whose back they rode to power. The view of the ordinary citizens never counts anymore, since the overlords in power have arrogated to themselves power of the immortals, who knows better and should deciders for lesser mortals, not minding the fact that those lesser mortals were the donkeys whom the politicians rode unto power.
The mismanagement and outright greed of the rascals with state powers have seen several abandoned projects, and this present government in Nigeria has defined a new low in kleptomania and shameless embezzlement of public funds and as usual most law abiding citizens wither do not know or do not care what happens to the Nigerian commonwealth. In the ministry of the Niger Delta Affairs, for instance, three phantom projects were executed in the last year budget and as usual no many Nigeria, knew, nor raise an eyebrow. The phantom projects are:
1. Contract for the canalization of Odoubou-Bololou creek project-Ogbaba-Gbene, Burutu Local Governmet for the sum of N1,259billion.
2. Contract for Land reclamation shoreline protection at Ogbobagbene for the sum of N2, 431
3. Contract for canalization training of Foupolo -Bibu Ndoro Creek project -Burutu for the sum of N370
These projects above are phantom and nonexistent, yet the money involved have been fully paid by the ministry of finance.
It is very clear from the forgoing that top level secrecy is constantly being maintained by those in the government of Nigeria, presumably because they are not only greedy and corrupt thieves, they also have no interest of the masses at heart. A case in point of their selfishness is the handling of the accident of Pilot Suntai, who have been flown to Germany for treatment, while his aides who were with him in the ill fated plane crash are being treated in the national hospital Abuja and you wonder whether the lives of those aides are less important than the life of the governor.
The government of Nigeria will remain a kind of a secret cult as long as graft and sleaze is the sole purpose and main reason of those who either contest elections or were appointed into political position.
As the madness continue and the greed of those in power thrives and fester, it is obvious that secrecy will remain the watchword of the government but as John Adams said in the quote above, I hope Nigerian rulers wake up and smell the coffee so that the young Nigerian democracy do not fade off. The amount of sleaze and greed is monumental, but equally devastating is the cover ups, in the name of secrecy and national security. As at today, no ordinary Nigerian knows how much as been expended in the current year’s budget, meanwhile they are already appropriating another budget for next Year 2013.
2015 is another year for Nigerian citizens to make a statement and free themselves from the shackles of ruling greedy fiefdom, but if the apathy, docility and outright political illiteracy among the teeming populace continues and the madness in government circles thrives unabated…… I fear if there would be a 2015…… But…..
 DailyPost

Nigeria Approves Siemens, Korea Electric Power Grid Bids


Engineers Inspect Supergrid
Nigeria approved bids from companies including Siemens AG (SIE) and Korea Electric Power Corp. (KEP) for 10 state-owned power distribution companies, marking the end of a five-year privatization process.
The successful bids were worth more than $1.3 billion, the Abuja-based National Council on Privatization headed by Vice President Namadi Sambo said in an e-mail yesterday. Siemens led a group of four companies that won with a $135 million bid for the Eko Distribution Co., and Korea Electric headed the winning offer for the grid in the Ikeja region of Lagos, it said.
Buyers are required to provide bank guarantees “for 15 percent of the transaction value within 15 days of notification from the Bureau of Public Enterpirses,” the council said in the statement. Payment should be completed within six months, it said.
Nigeria, Africa’s top oil producer, is selling majority stakes in power plants and letting private investors buy as much as 60 percent of 11 distribution companies spun out of the former state-owned utility as it seeks private investment to curb power shortages. Blackouts are a daily occurrence in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country with more than 160 million people. Demand for electricity in Nigeria is almost double the supply of about 4,000 megawatts and the government plans to boost output to 14,019 megawatts by 2013.

Structural Reforms

“This is an important step forward and probably the main area where the outlook for structural reforms is promising,” Samir Gadio, a London-based emerging markets strategist at Standard Bank Group Ltd., said today in an e-mailed response to questions. “What is encouraging is that the authorities have realized over time that the power sector would not be qualitatively reformed as long as a public entity remained the main player.”
Bids worth more than $700 million for five power plants were also approved by the privatization council, after the winners were announced on Sept. 25.
Other successful bids for power grids confirmed by the council were by companies including Meralco Industrial Engineering Services Corp., Aurecon Australia Group Ltd. and Copperbelt Energy Corp., Calcutta Electric Supply Corp. and Turkey’s Kayseri & Civari Elektrik TAS.
 BusinessNews

Group in Lagos organises rally for sovereignty of Biafra

Members of a group, the Biafra Zionist Movement (BZM), yesterday organised a peaceful rally in Lagos.
They said it was in lieu of their planned declaration of the Sovereign State of Biafra next Monday. The rally, tagged: Redemption at last, was held at Ladipo Oshodi. It lasted for about three hours. Scores of youths, especially Igbo, joined the rally.
They carried the flag of the defunct Republic of Biafra and the national flags of the United States of America, Israel and France.
The Biafra Republic agitators said they would also protest “Islamic banking, economic system, marginalisation of Biafra, lack of adequate security of life and property as well as neglect of infrastructure in the area”.
As early as 9am, the demonstrators were at the venue, chanting songs, such as The Elephant of Biafra; We’re marching to the promise land of Biafra.
Some of the demonstrators told The Nation that they had the backing of the other countries whose flags they were carrying.
According to them, they are tired of the neglect of the Oji Power Dam and River Niger Bridge, a lack of an international airport in the East, the neglect of the Enugu-Onitsha Expressway, the Enugu-Abakaliki Expressway and the killings of their people in the North by Boko Haram, among others.
Speaking with The Nation, leader of the demonstrators, Mr. Kingsley Anyaegbunam, said: “The Biafran journey started since early 1967 by our leader, the late Dim Odumegwu Ojukwu. Though he was unable to actualise his dreams, some other people have taken up the challenge. We have the support of other countries, such as Israel and America.
“We are tired of this failed country, with countless promises. We are no longer waiting for them. November 5 is the day of the official declaration, because we need to be independent as quickly as possible.”
Another member of the group, Comrade Emeka Onwane said: “Benjamin Onwunka, our leader, resides in London, but he came to Nigeria because of this Biafran freedom we are talking about. He has participated in various rallies and campaigns.
“The essence of this rally is to mobilise the Igbo, who are not aware of the Biafran struggle. We want them to know there will be freedom for us soon. We want them to join in the struggle because what we are talking about is not one man’s race. The sky is our starting point.”
One of the participants, Chidi Obi said: “This dream cannot be actualised without the full support of the people. We need to join hands to make our peaceful state a reality. The state, which has promised to be a state of milk and honey, is the right of every Igbo man, woman and their children.”
 DailyPost