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APC Begins Membership Registration Nationwide

APC-LOGO-17-4-13
The All Progressives Congress on Wednesday began fresh registration of members nationwide, with reports from many states saying the exercise could not start due to logistic problems.

The News Agency of Nigeria reports that many states experienced late arrival of materials while in others the training of personnel was still going on at the time of filing this report.

In Sokoto State, NAN reports that registration materials were handed over to 23 local governments’ caretaker committee chairmen of the party in the state on Wednesday.

The nine-man committee in each of the 23 local governments was saddled with the responsibility of handling the registration at the council level.

The Chairman of the Registration Committee in the state, Alhaji Nasiru Dantiye, told NAN the party would conform with the registration guidelines set out by the national headquarters.

Dantiye said APC was determined to ensure that the 10-day exercise was conducted in conformity with the nation’s constitution

In Kano State, the registration did not commence as scheduled as people were awaiting materials and personnel as at midday on Wednesday.

Sources at Gwagwarwa, Gawuna and Kaura Goje polling units told NAN that prospective members started arriving since 8 a.m., but they were dispersed when it was clear nothing was going on.

A Special Assistant to Gov. Rabiu Kwankwaso told NAN that the party executives were holding a meeting to map out ways for the smooth take- off of the registration.

However, Dr Mustapha Inuwa, the Chairman of APC Registration Committee in Kano State, said the training of officials was ongoing now.

“We are expecting proper registration to commence later in the day or tomorrow (Thursday),’’ he said.

Similarly, in Bauchi State, APC membership registration had not started as at 2 p.m. due to lack of prompt distribution of materials to local government areas.

The Interim Public Relation Officer of the party, Alhaji Bappa Tafida, told NAN the exercise had been shifted to begin on Thursday due to delay in the distribution of materials.

He said preparations were underway to send all the materials to relevant officers of the party in the local government areas.

“We have experienced delays in the distribution of the registration materials to the local government areas.

“They will however be delivered today (Wednesday) and the exercise proper will commence on Thursday.

“We are appealing to our members to exercise some patience as we are making all necessary arrangements to deliver the materials to all the 20 local government areas in the state,” Tafida said.

However, some of the party members told NAN that they were not discouraged by the development.

They said they would register whenever the exercise began.

In Lagos state, Gov. Babatunde Fashola urged interested Nigerians to register as members of APC.

Fashola made the remark when he kicked off the APC membership registration in the state.

He had arrived the State Junior Grammar School, Itolo, Surulere area of Lagos with his wife, Abimbola Fashola, where he registered as member at exactly 10.40 a.m.

The governor said the APC was moving forward, adding that the registration was a process which would identify individuals making up the party.

“The registration is open and transparent. After this, the party will hold its elective congress which all members are free to contest in as it will be free and fair,” he said.

The Lagos State Chairman of APC, Chief Henry Ajomale, who registered at his unit in Isolo, said the registration would hold in 8,500 units in the state.

However, some Lagos residents called for more publicity and enlightenment on the ongoing APC membership registration.

Mr Kunle Iyiola, a civil servant, told NAN that enough publicity ought to be put in place to sensitise the members because many were not aware of the exercise.

NAN reports that some areas in Alagbado, Abule-Egba and Agege recorded low turnout of people as the residents went about their normal business.

Mrs Lola Akande, the Deputy Leader, Lagos State House of Assembly, said efforts had been put in place to ensure many people participated in the exercise.

Mr Bisi Yusuf (APC-Alimosho I) also told NAN that majority of residents in the area had registered as party members after the exercise commenced.

He said that over 700 residents had registered in Ipaja Ayobo Unit A, while a large number of people had also been registered in Ward B under Alimosho Local Government Area.

In Rivers, NAN reports that the exercise was being conducted in 4,442 centres.

Chief Chukwuemeka Eze, the APC Publicity Secretary in the state, said there was a large turnout of people for the membership registration.

“Everybody is out to ensure that he or she is not left out in the movement into a brighter future,’’ Eze said.

NAN reports that in Okehi ward 11 in Etche Local Government Area, the turnout was encouraging without any problem or confusion.

Mr George Ukwuoma, a former Publicity Secretary of PDP, said the people of Okehi had spoken with one voice.

However, NAN reports that in Katsina State, there was a delay in the distribution of registration materials which stalled the commencement of membership registration.

The Chairman of the APC Interim Management Committee in the state, Alhaji Ahmad Dangiwa, told NAN that registration materials had been brought to the state.

Dangiwa, said the party would begin with the training of registration officials who would in turn go to their respective local government areas to train other officers at the ward level and polling units.

He said the party would ensure that the materials were distributed to all the 34 local government areas of the state on Wednesday so that some centres would start registration on Thursday.

Reports from Osun indicated that the exercise had taken off across the state with little hitches.

The state APC Director of Publicity, Mr Kunle Oyatomi, in an interview with NAN said reports received at the secretariat had indicated there was a good turnout of people to register.

“Our feedback mechanism across the state has shown that the enthusiasm of our people is so high.

“Enough materials have already been dispatched to all registration units across the state to take care of all those who want to identify with the APC.

“We have organised the exercise in such a way that from the units to the wards, up to the state level, competent hands have been selected as registration supervisors,’’ he said.

NAN reports that there were clusters of people around many registration units in Ilesa, Ile-Ife, Ikirun and Osogbo, among others.

The non-availability of registration materials in the 11 local government areas of Gombe state delayed the take-off of the exercise on Wednesday.

NAN reports that at Madaki, Buba Yero and Jeka Da fari wards in Gombe metropolis, the potential members were waiting for the officials as at 1.30 p.m.

At Kashere ward in Akko Local Government Area of the state, hundreds of would-be members were waiting for the officials to bring the registration materials.

The Kashere ward supervisor, Malam Hamma Bala, said they were waiting for the materials to be brought from Gombe.

The supervisor of Pindiga ward in the area, Malam Yakubu Adamu, told NAN that they were ready for the exercise but there were no materials.

The Interim Chairman of the APC in the state, Mr Magaji Doho, told newsmen at 2 p.m. that the materials would be distributed to the 11 local government areas on Wednesday.

In a related development, all members of the Ekiti House of Assembly went on a short recess to enable them partake in the nationwide membership registration of the APC.

The Interim Chairman of APC in the state, Chief Jide Awe, expressed delight at the pace of the exercise.

Boko Haram Hideouts In Borno Destroyed By The Nigerian Air Force

The Nigerian Air Force in Maiduguri said that it had destroyed suspected Boko Haram hideouts following a raid in some parts of Borno.

In a statement, spokesperson of the group, Squadron Leader Chris Erondu said the raid followed surveillance in the certain areas of the state.

Erondu stated, “Sequel to intelligence reports, the 79 Composite Group, in conjunction with 75 Strike Group, Yola, carried out air surveillance interdiction and raid on identified Boko Haram hideouts.

“‘The operation was conducted in Bulabulim, Yujiwa-Alagarno, all located around Damboa axis of Borno State”

“The results of these air operations have been remarkable as the insurgents have retreated to neighbouring countries of Cameroun, Chad and Niger Republic and have suffered heavy casualties.

“The groups have also maintained constant security watch on Maiduguri and neighbouring communities to prevent future attack”, he added.

APC Will Defeat PDP At The Presidential Elections – Kawu Baraje

Alhaji-Kawu-Baraje
The former acting National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Alhaji Kawu Baraje says the All Progressives Congress will defeat PDP from ward to presidential elections in Nigeria.

Baraje in an interview with journalists in Ilorin, Kwara State, on Wednesday, he said the APC has been widely accepted by Nigerians.

He said the APC legislators in the House of Representatives were not blocking the debate or passage of 2014 budget.

More to follow…

Fred Ajudua Remanded In Kirikiri Prison For Defrauding Gen. Bamaiyi

By Henry Ojelu

Fred Ajudua has been remanded in Kirikiri Prison for allegedly defrauding former Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Ishaya Bamaiyi (retd.), of about $8.395m (about N1.3 billion).

Justice Justice Oluwatoyin Ipaye ordered on Wednesday that he should be remanded in prisons custody following a fresh 13-count charge of fraud brought against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.

The EFCC in the fresh charges dated 14 October, 2013, alleged that Ajudua, along with others still at large, defrauded Gen. Bamaiyi of $8.387m between November 2004 and June 2005 while in prison.

Ajudua is the only defendant in the fresh charges as others who allegedly committed the offences along with him are said to be at large.

Other suspects said to be on the run, are Alumile Adedeji (a.k.a Ade Bendel), Mr. Kenneth and Princess Hamabon William.

Ajudua, along with other suspects, were said to have defrauded Bamaiyi at the Kirikiri Maximum Prisons, where he and the other fraud suspects were on remand for various crimes.

EFCC claimed that the suspects had fraudulently collected the money from Bamaiyi instalmentally, falsely claiming that the payments represented the professional fees charged by

Chief Afe Babalola (SAN) to handle Bamaiyi’s case in court and to facilitate his release from prison.

The anti-graft agency also alleged that Ajudua and others fraudulently claimed that $1m out of the total money collected from Bamaiyi was for financial assistance for the treatment of Justice Olubunmi Oyewole’s father. Justice Oyewole was then presiding over Bamaiyi’s case in court.

The suspects were said to have told Bamaiyi that Oyewole’s father was admitted at Saint Nicholas Hospital in Lagos and the $1m was meant to assist the judge in treating his father.

When the charges were read to him today, he pleaded not guilty to the allegations.

His bail application was however not heard as the presiding judge adjourned the matter till 20 February, 2014.

Ajudua is also standing trial in another court for allegedly defrauding two Dutch businessmen, Remy Cina and Pierre Vijgen, of $1.69m (about N270m). The matter has been on since 2003.

#NewsAnalysis: Boosting Ante-Natal Care Through Conditional Cash Transfer

A News Analysis by Franca Ofili, News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)

The Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) scheme is an innovative mechanism built into the SURE-P Maternal Child Health (MCH).

It aims at increasing the people’s access to Primary Health Care (PHC) services by paying women who attend antenatal clinics, as part of designed efforts to address the rising menace of maternal mortality.

The CCT scheme was introduced by the Federal Government, to enhance health care delivery in the country and provide adequate incentives for indigent families in the rural areas.

The scheme aims at reducing poverty by initiating welfare programmes which make it imperative for the government to transfer money to needy persons who meet certain criteria.

The SURE-P programme was introduced to ensure effective management of the financial resources that were generated from the partial removal of fuel subsidy in 2012.

The SURE-P MCH is particularly aimed at reducing maternal and child mortality, in line with Millennium Developmental Goals (MDGs) 4 and 5.

The CCT scheme, therefore, uses cash incentives to encourage pregnant women to patronise ante-natal clinics, modern child delivery services, post-natal services and family planning services at primary health care facilities.

The SURE-P MCH is designed to run for four years (2012-2015) and it is aimed at reducing maternal and infant mortality in the country, with a particular focus on rural and under-developed communities.

The total package of the financial incentives for each woman is N5,000 and the money is paid to mothers who meet certain preconditions.

These conditions include ante-natal care, involving at least four visits to the hospital, child delivery handled by skilled birth attendants and instant visits for post-natal care.

The scheme is expected to encourage pregnant women to access good health care facilities, thereby reducing the incidence of maternal and child mortality.

Dr Ugo Okoli, the Project Director of Sure-P MCH, said that mothers’ attendance of ante-natal clinic in the FCT appreciably increased from about 300 visits every month to more than 1,000 after the introduction of the CCT scheme.

She said that from July 1, 2013 to Aug. 30, 2013, for instance, a total of 3,274 women registered for Ante-Natal Clinic (ANC) at the five FCT facilities.

“ANC visits and bookings have increased; averaging monthly at 156 per cent above baseline.

“The baseline ANC booking in FCT was about 300 women a month before the CCT started and it is now over 1,000 bookings every month,’’ she said.

She said that the programme had also begun in some health facilities in nine states so as to ensure a reduction in maternal and child mortality in the country.

Okoli, however, emphasised that the programme was only meant for rural areas, where women found it difficult to attend ante-natal clinics due to paucity of funds.

Dr Abdullahi Mohammed, the Director of Primary Health Care System Development, National Primary Health Care Development Agency, said that the Federal Government earmarked N15 billion out of SURE-P funds for SURE-P MCH.

He said that the funds would also be used to employ additional 2,000 midwives for the scheme.

Mohammed, nonetheless, said that the health care delivery system had the supply side intervention and the demand side intervention

“The key elements involved are not just bringing more midwives alone; there is the other component, called the demand side intervention.

“On the demand side intervention, what do we need to do for clients to be able to access our services? It means we must remove the financial barriers.”

Also speaking, Gen. Martin Luther Agwai, the Deputy Chairman of SURE-P, said that the aim of the SURE-P MCH scheme was to reduce significantly the unacceptable high maternal rates and under-five mortality and morbidity indices in the country.

He said that as part of efforts to achieve these goals, the MCH component of SURE-P would be targeted at rural communities, where the problems were more pronounced.

“SURE-P MCH have given Nigerian women and children reasons to reaffirm their belief in the project, as this is simply a case of `a promise made and a promised fulfilled’,’’ he said.

“The programme has the supply and demand components,’’ he added.

Agwai said that as at Oct. 31, 2013, the CCT had a total of 10,563 registered beneficiaries in eight states and the FCT, while N6.5 million had been disbursed to 2, 893 beneficiaries.

Some women, who benefited from the programme, stressed that it was a very good initiative, adding that their husbands now encouraged them to attend ante-natal clinics.

Fatima Abdulsalam, a mother of five from Kuje Area Council in the FCT, said that she benefitted from the programme during her last pregnancy. She advised other women to avail themselves of the programme aimed at improving their health and that of their children.

She said that the ante-natal and post-natal care she received under the programme had made her to appreciate the value of accessing quality health care facilities.

“I did not find my previous pregnancies and childbirths at home easy but I registered for ante-natal care during my last pregnancy; I found the exercise worthwhile and I have not been having problems with the baby after birth,’’ she said.

Abdulsalam conceded that her husband had been very supportive, adding that he sometimes accompanied her when she went for ante-natal clinics.

She urged pregnant women, particularly those in rural areas, to embrace the idea of giving birth to their babies in the primary health care facilities.

An expectant mother, Mrs Ifeoma Obiaku, said that after discussions with her husband, they both agreed to use the CCT stipend to buy warm clothing for the baby.

“At least, when use the money to buy clothing like sweater, that one will be out of our budget. N5,000 is not much but it is quite handy,’’ she said.

Analysts commend SURE-P for creating pragmatic opportunities for expectant mothers to access good ante-natal care without having fears about paucity of funds for treatment.

They particularly note that the CCT scheme has proved to be a vital tool in efforts to reduce maternal and infant mortality rates in the country.

However, the analysts’ commendation appears somewhat plausible, as the National HIV/AIDS Reproductive Health Survey indicates that maternal mortality in Nigeria has reduced to 224 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2012, as against 545 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2010.

Anuoluwapo Adebayo: How To Apply Foundation, Concealer To Get The Desired Looks

Have you ever wondered why two ladies may use the same products but come out with different looks? Beyond the quality of products, there is the technique of application which influences the result.

After you have sought professional help to get the right foundation, concealer and powder for your skin tone and texture, the next thing to consider is your application tool; fingers, sponges or brush. It’s advisable that you try out these options in order to determine which one really works and importantly whatever tool you decide to use must always be clean.

Always prep your skin before you begin applying products; cleansing, moisturizing, using a sunscreen, primer protect your skin, make application easy and help your makeup last longer.

Concealer: Apply concealer to only particular and needed places; to cover under eye circles, to cover blemishes, scars, wrinkles or lines and to highlight certain areas like the bridge of your nose, under your lip.

Use a concealer brush or gently tap product into the skin with your fingers. Most people tend to drag product as they apply it however this doesn’t guarantee proper coverage and tends to stretch the delicate skin (especially under your eyes).

The type of concealer you use (liquid or cream) will be subject to how much you’re trying to cover; heavy scars, discoloration, red marks caused by broken vessels will require a more dense product.

Foundation: The aim of foundation is to ensure you have an even skin tone therefore ‘less is more’. A little goes a long way and you don’t need to come out looking like you’re wearing a mask.

Whatever application tool you decide to use, ensure you apply using gentle and even strokes equally distributing products across your cheeks, forehead and other parts of the face. Ensure you take foundation all the way to your neck, into your hair line and ears to avoid demarcation lines and to create a natural effect. The drier the sponge or brush you use, the heavier the effect so wet (not soak) sponge or brush before using to smooth foundation on face. Wait for the product to set into the skin.

Contouring and highlighting with creamy products should be done at this stage in order to properly blend. Note that darker shades of foundation will be used to hide imperfections or ‘minimize’ appearance of parts of the face; side of the nose, hollow of the cheeks, jawline, under the chin, temples, crease of the eyes. While lighter shades can be used on the bridge of the nose, inner corner of eyes, forehead, cheekbones and in the Cupid’s bow and under the bottom lip.

The ‘magic’ to having a flawless contoured smooth look is blending. The products you use must blend perfectly together; no obvious marks or lines that reveal where one product starts and another ends.

Powder: Applying powder after concealer and foundation will set the products, giving a matte finish and hold coverage. Press powder into your face then brush off excess in a downward motion. You can also apply loose powder with a brush in a circular motion all over your face.

You can use translucent powder, mineral based loose powder or pressed powder. You can choose to use a mineralized finish or bronzing powder which is advised not to be used all over the face because of its shimmering effect; can be used on T-zone and cheekbones.

Always apply makeup where there is sufficient light and using a clean mirror in order not to miss any spots or errors made.
Wash your brushes often to avoid dirt and oil that builds up and causes pimples or other skin infections. Wash with a brush shampoo or mild liquid soap, rinse thoroughly and leave to air dry.
Always take note of changes in your skin and respond according; if any skin problem persists after making suitable changes then see a dermatologist.
You should be praised for having flawless skin and not how obviously smooth or brown your foundation is; the essence of mastering the art of a perfect foundation and powder application is to know how to make it look as natural as possible; make them believe ‘you were born this way’.

Send your beauty questions to [email protected] or @Anu_Chayil on Twitter

We Will Not Sleep Until Nigerians In Borno Can Sleep – Jonathan

NAN
President Goodluck Jonathan said on Wednesday that he, as Commander-in-Chief along with the new service chiefs, would work assiduously to ensure peace in the North-East region.

Jonathan, who made the declaration at the decoration ceremony of the newly appointed service chiefs at the State House in Abuja, said the new new military top brass must prepare for the arduous tasks ahead.

He charged them to work in harmony to win the war against terror. “I do not know whether I will congratulate you or I will sympathise with you because of the circumstances of the moment.

“That reminds me, when I was in secondary school, I read one article written by late Dr Tai Solarin and there is one clause he said ‘I wish you what I wish myself every year; May you have a hard time this year.

“So, I think I will wish you what I will wish myself every year; may we have a hard time this period.

“This is because, none of us will sleep until the Nigerians in Borno State can sleep.”That is why I say today is not a moment for making statements.

“We will be having talks from time to time but definitely Nigerians will tell you what they expect from us.

“We must not fail this country and I believe this team will work together to be assisted by other intelligence services because the war against terror must be won in this country,” he said.

The President congratulated the new service chiefs and their spouses and charged them not to betray the confidence reposed in them.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the high point of the ceremony was the decoration of the officers with their new ranks by the President, Vice President Namadi Sambo and their respective spouses.

Those decorated were the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Marshall Alex Badeh, Chief of Army Staff, Maj.-Gen. Kenneth Minimah, Chief of Naval Staff, Rear-Adm. Usman Jibrin and Chief of Air Staff, AVM Adesola Amosu.

Badeh, who responded on behalf of others, thanked the president and said they were aware that their appointment was a call to greater service.

He commended the president for respecting statutory provision by sending their names to the National Assembly for confirmation.

Badeh attested to the fact that the military had never had it better as in the civilian regime and pledged subordination to the constitution and elected government officials.

The CDS said they would work in harmony to fight the scourge of terrorism, kidnapping and oil bunkering in the country.

Badeh also pledged that the military would continue to defend the nation’s territorial integrity and ensure security and peace in the country.

“Security challenges are inimical to development because security means development and without development there can also not be security.

“When a nation’s military is at war, the whole nation is at war, therefore every Nigerian must sacrifice,” he said.

NAN reports that until his appointment as CDS on Jan. 16, Badeh, who was born in 1957 in Adamawa State, was the 18th Chief of Air Staff.

Minimah the new Chief of Army Staff was born in Rivers State in 1959; Jibrin, the new Chief of Naval Staff was also born in 1959 in Kogi State while Amosu, the new Chief of Air Staff was born in Lagos in 1958.

Nigeria Begin Implementation Of UNEP Report On Ogoniland

The Federal Government has started implementing the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) report on Ogoniland by addressing some emergency measures to provide alternative facilities for the affected communities.

Mr Peter Idabor, the Director-General of National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Wednesday.
Idabor said that government had initiated a Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HPRP) to provide alternative facilities for the Ogoni communities.

He said: “What we are dealing with now are emergency measures that UNEP has requested to start with – providing alternative sources of drinking water, putting signs to ward off people from having their bath in dangerous areas.

“Trying to set up a hospital registry to determine if there is any correlation between the number of deaths and oil activities in Ogoniland.

“I think those things are being done but the Federal Government set up a body called HPRP of which the Federal Ministry of Environment is part of the Governing Body, including NOSDRA.

“Our job is to regulate and to effectively make sure that Ogoni is cleaned up,’’ he said.

Idabor said that NOSDRA, as a member of the committee (HPRP), was charged with the mandate to regulate the process of remediation and restoration of the land.

The director-general said that the HPRP had started the first step in implementing the report by carrying out emergency measures to make the communities safe for people to live in.

NAN recalls that the UNEP report on Ogoniland was released on Aug. 4, 2011 confirming claims by local communities and civil society groups that there exists an ecological disaster in the area.

The report also showed hydrocarbon pollution in surface water throughout the creeks of Ogoniland and up to eight centimetres in groundwater that feed drinking wells.

According to him, one of the recommendations in the UNEP report is for a committee to be constituted by the Federal Government to oversee and handle the process of remediation and restoration.

Idabor, however, called on the people involved in illegal bunkering of petroleum to desist from the act to avoid polluting the environment, saying that most oil companies that caused pollution now hide under the cover of illegal bunkering.
He said: “Most of the oil companies now have a good place to hide under. Anything that happens, they say the oil that is being spilled into the environment more is coming from sabotage to oil theft; they use that as a cover.

“If our people will learn that this issue of doing bunkering and refining crude and oil theft, if they can stop it, it becomes clear who is really polluting the environment.

“It is becoming very difficult for oil companies to deny that they will pay compensation because anything that happens now, they come under that canopy (bunkering) and say they cannot be held responsible.

“That oil spillage in Nigeria is caused by human factor not necessarily by equipment failure, whereas some of them have their pipelines that are already aged,’’ he said.

NAN reports that NOSDRA was established by Act No. 15 of 2006, to address environmental degradation and devastation of the coastal ecosystem, especially in the oil-producing areas of the Niger-Delta region.

Selena Gomez Blames Her Rehab Stint On Justin Bieber

Selena Gomez went to rehab last month and sources connected with the singer say she blames Justin Bieber for her predicament, TMZ reports.

The report says Gomez went to The Meadows in Arizona for 2 weeks of treatment.

Sources say Selena went for a combination of problems, including alcohol, pot and prescription Ambien. Selena blames a lot of her problems on the excesses she was exposed to by being around Bieber and his buddies.

The 2-week program at The Meadows is called DAWN … specifically designed for people between 18 and 26. DAWN specializes in substance dependence, trauma, family dynamics, mental health and relapse prevention.

I Love Controversy, Says Sanusi Lamido Sanusi

By Obinna Chima

Credit: NAN
Credit: NAN

Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi has said that the disagreement over the alleged non-repatriation of oil revenue to the Federation Account by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) will in the long run bring about accountability and good governance.

In fact, Sanusi who spoke at the 2014 Standard Bank West Africa Investors’ Conference dinner in Lagos Tuesday night said: “People must not see controversy and noise as necessarily bad. I love controversy.”

Details to follow

2014 Budget: APC Lawmakers Stall Debate

The debate on the 2014 Appropriation Bill was stalled by members of the All Progressives Congress in the House of Representatives on Tuesday.

The leadership of APC had ordered its members to block all legislative bills particularly the budget until the impunity in Rivers state is taken care of

The development appeared to be the first phase of the lawmakers’ compliance with the directive of the national leadership of their party to “block” all Executive bills, particularly the budget.

On Tuesday, APC leadership had in a meeting with the party members in Abuja, restated its directive to them to ensure that the Appropriation bill was not passed.

Events appeared to be progressing normally until the speaker, Aminu Tambuwal requested that the majority leader, Mrs. Mulikat Akande-Adeola should lead the debate on the general principles of the N4.6tn budget.

She was  barely done when Emmanuel Ejime, an APC member from Benue State raised a point of order strictly on grounds of law.

He claimed that the budget estimates breached Section 21 (I,II,III) of the Fiscal Responsibly Act, 2007.

He claims the Act provides that the government corporations listed under Section 21 “shall not later than six months from the commencement of this Act, submit the estimates of expenditure for the next three years” to the National Assembly.

Mr Jime revealed that the law requires the Minister of Finance to attach the estimates of the corporations to the national budget presented to the National Assembly.

He continued his argument saying while saying he had gone through the budget estimates and found out that the estimates of the corporations were not attached as required by law but only had an abridged versions of the budgets of the corporations

He went on and on as his argument got deeper.

“The pattern of presenting this budget has breached our laws; the House should not allow itself to do the wrong thing because we want to satisfy the comfort of the moment”, Jime revealed.

Aggrieved PDP members had this point shouted him to sit down.

“Point of order”, “point of order, Mr. Speaker”, Mr. Nedo Karibi from Bayelsa State screamed as some other PDP members joined him as they asked Jime to sit down.

The Speaker, Tambuwal however made it clear that in compliance with the rules of the House, a member speaking on a point of order must finish his remarks before another point of order could be taken.

The Chairman, House Committee on Appropriation, Mr. John Enoh of the PDP (Cross Rivers) responded however

“I disagree with the indication that the budget is in breach of any law whatsoever.”

“The standing Committee on Banking and Currency for example, will call the CBN to ask questions on all issues while looking at their budget”, he stated.

While the Cross Rivers state lawmaker spoke, APC lawmakers shouted him down wit chants of , “no”, “no”; “it is not true.”

Tambuwal revealed he would set up a six-man advisory committee to examine the issues raised by Jime and Enoh. The committee is expected to give the house a feedback within 24 hours.

The Speaker, Mr. Aminu Tambuwal continuously advised the aggrieved lawmakers to exercise decorum.

Adagbo Onoja: Is Nigeria Negotiable?

On the eve of President Goodluck Jonathan’s version of the circuitous strategy of an emergency national conference resorted to by virtually every recent past Nigerian president confronted with succession roadblock, Chido Onumah’s book, Nigeria is Negotiable is a timely read. This is so for one major and two minor reasons. Let’s take the two minor reasons first.

The book is a collection of his newspaper articles on the many issues, people, drama and events that dominated Nigerian politics spanning the last segment of the IBB years/the June 12 impasse and the Abacha regime. What this suggests is that in this book is concentrated an imagination of Nigeria by someone who was not just involved but involved from the vantage position of the politics of street barricades against retreating authoritarianism in the 1990s. Meaning that the menu on offer stretches from interrogation of bad leadership to politics of federalism in Nigeria and the associated advocacy for restructuring via a Sovereign National Conference, the hydra headed issue of corruption and the likes. This kaleidoscopic nature of the content makes it very fascinating to read and re-read because it does not tie the reader to one theme from the first to the last page.

The second minor attraction is the activist language in which the author anchored his delivery. What is so great in the activist language? It is the ‘irreverence’ or boldness or lack of silliness in saying what the author wanted to say. In other words, this author, like the activist he was or still is, didn’t tremble before any temple of finesse or any deceptive niceness in saying what he had to say. So, he ended up being more piercing than most peddlers of so-called cultured narratives. But his is not a pointless or abusive bluntness. Rather, it is the analytical clarity that comes with praxis and commitment typical of a student activist of those years when the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) was NANS and had not been taken over by some government sponsored and ideologically incoherent ‘students’.

The major attraction is the overarching theme which defines the book and that is the negotiability of Nigeria as a way out of the chaos that reigned when the book was published mid last year and still reigns. In fact, it is in search of a way out of the total confusion that the president is conveying a national conference or whatever it is called between April and June later this year. But it is not a Sovereign National Conference as this book is demanding, though they are all variants of the ideology of re-negotiating Nigeria.

Against this thematic background, the point to harp on in any serious review of this well titled book is the contextual issue regarding this ideology of negotiability of Nigeria rather than a mediocre chapter by chapter summary of the content. And so, I get on to that.

The postmodern context of politics today makes everything negotiable although it is an unsettled issue whether the postmodern applies to Africa since what is understood as modernity is a product of the Enlightenment temperament, a uniquely European experience. I would, therefore, be wary of a wholesome applicability of the concept of postmodernism to sub-Saharan Africa even as that does not mean that Africa is not caught up in the postmodernist traffic, the most important attribute of that traffic being the culture of interrogating and negotiating any and everything under the sun because postmodernism does not recognize any centre of gravity. Hacking down all such centres and masquerades is its intellectual mission. But it is only an intellectual because post modernism has no political mission.

To the extent of the postmodern culture of hacking down all evil spirits, all ‘egwugwus’ in Nigerian politics, Nigeria is negotiable. In fact, there is a fascinating democratic import in the admirable pluralism that post modernism invariably calls forth. In Nigeria, that would involve calling numerous voices to the Abuja Village square to pose and demand answers to the “why” questions in Nigerian politics.

But, as things are today both in Nigeria and globally, can Nigeria negotiate itself without imploding unintentionally? Should it? What manner of negotiation would that be? Is it the type that will start from the context of the mass misery/poverty in which majority of our people subsist or one that will fool around with ethnic arithmetic of power which will soon be swept away by the dynamism of the world today? Is it the one that will concentrate attention on strategies of mass mobilisation and rapid industrialization or one that will waste everyone’s time around empty notions of federalism in a very dangerous world?

In this book, there are contending notions of the negotiation of Nigeria. There is a pervasive and persistent agitation against a felt over lordship of one section of the country against the other. The Sovereign National Conference strategy is, somehow, favoured by the totality of the sentiments in the book.

But, the autonomy of intellectualism functioned in the book in a way that equally brought out contrary arguments. In this, there is a way in which Kwesi Pratt, Jnr, in my view, struck the chord about it all. I just have to quote his appraisal of the book on the blurb in full if only to advertise and celebrate the clarity he has imposed on the debate against the fussiness of the constructivists and other debaters. According to Pratt Jnr, the Ghana born journalist, “This book reads like a thriller and yet it is the true account of a nation and a people who remain essentially victims of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, classical colonialism and a brand of neo-colonialism which is largely sustained by a kleptocratic elite. Onumah dwells on the history of Nigeria but he also focuses on today’s Nigeria which has no sensible excuse for the poverty and misery which confronts its people. Onumah and those who recognized the Nigerian problem in its full expression are few but it is their work like this book which will ultimately provide the enlightenment leading to real change”.

The import of Pratt’s intervention is the way it rescues the debate about Nigeria’s future from the ethno-regional frame of reference. That makes his a strategic intervention because he is basically and correctly saying that Nigeria’s pluralism is not a fundamental explanation for its misery. The more fundamental explanation is the political blindness of the kleptocratic elite he referred to.

Generally, the world itself is moving beyond the classical Westphalia state in favour of supra nationalism in which the capacity of the generic state will continue to be called to question, globally. If any evidence is needed to prove this, it is there in the volume of migration. It is true that much of migration today is substantially forced and unidirectional toward the northern hemisphere but even then, sufficient chunk of it embodies a transnational a global spiritedness. So, the idea of re-negotiating Nigeria around abstracted category and inward looking formula of their co-existence is a hopeless and miserable escapism.

The state everywhere is being hollowed out even before the ascendancy of the ideology of emancipation as articulated by radical scholars and theorists in International Relations pushing for polycentric referent objects of security of nations and their citizens. Nigeria cannot be an exception from this current. In our own circumstance, the African Union and the ECOWAS should begin to assume greater centrality beyond our current imagining of them. These are the arena our notion of negotiation of Nigeria at this point in time should be privileging.

As Professor Anselm Odinkalu, a contemporary of the author and the incumbent Chairperson of the Governing Council of Nigeria’s National Human Rights Commission stressed in the book, it is not every one who will agree with everything the author has written. That is almost obvious. Anyone familiar with the National Question in Nigeria knows that many will hack the author down with their pen when they read some of the arguments. There are so many arguments and Nigeria is so complex that no reviewer can make any serious list of which arguments will make the author a subject of a reader’s attack from which part of Nigeria. The more of such attacks, the more successful the book would have been.

Onoja is at the Politics Department, University of Warwick, UK