Saturday 5 April 2014

Female Footballers and their Coaches recognized

Female Footballers and their Coaches recognized by Peps-Pean Productions


Pepsie Adiukwu, CEO of Peps-Pean Productions and a leading figure within female football in Nigeria has confirmed that she has arranged a female football match on Sunday 6th April 2014 to honour female footballers and their coaches.
Sunday 6th April is the International Day of Sport for Development and Peace.
Launched by the UN at the initiative of the International Olympic Committee, the first ever ‘International Day of Sport for Development and Peace’ will take place on Sunday 6th April 2014.
The event represents a unique opportunity to mobilize, join forces, encourage and bring to light projects for peace and development through sport.
Peps-Pean Productions is joining this major celebration of sport for peace by organizing a football match onSunday 6th April 2014 at the National Stadium Surulere practice pitch.
The goal of this event is to celebrate sport as a tool for development and peace and encourage members of the public to raise awareness and rally support for initiatives in their local communities. 
Joël Bouzou, President and Founder of Peace and Sport stressed the importance of the event: “By establishing 6 April as the International Day of Sport for Development and Peace, the UN and IOC are paying tribute to the unique role of sport in our society and honouring its constructive and positive values,” he said.


Director of FCT Water Board Redeployed

Director of FCT Water Board Redeployed
The Hon. Minister of FCT, Senator Bala Abdulkadir Mohammed, CON, has approved the redeployment of the Acting Director of FCT Water Board, Engr. Jiniya B. Anto.  He was relieved of his position over incompetence, insubordination and a vote of no confidence passed on him by members of the Governing Board of the FCT Water Board led by their Chairman, Alhaji Alhassan Gwagwa.
The Board members accused the Acting Director of “failure to seek and refusal to seek and provide vital and necessary information to enable the Board perform the statutory functions it was appointed for”. They also accused him of “disobliging attitude, disdain and disregard for Board members, their decisions, requests and directives”.

Following his redeployment, the Deputy Director, Quality Control of the FCT Water Board, Mr. Michael O. Adebayo has been directed to oversee the affairs of the Agency on acting capacity pending the appointment of a substantive Director. The Hon. Minister has also directed that an interview should be conducted as soon as possible for qualified senior officers for the appointment of a new Director.

TROOPS CLEAR 3 BENUE LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREAS OF ARMED GANGS

TROOPS CLEAR 3 BENUE LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREAS OF ARMED GANGS, RECOVERED ARMS

Formation commanders of the Nigerian Army have moved to the various states in their area of responsibility to conduct the operations aimed at addressing deteriorating security situation in parts of the North Central.  Troops deployed in Benue state have already cleared camps of all armed gangs in three Local Governments of the State.  Normalcy have been restored in Guma, Gwer West and Agatu Local Government Areas.  Some arrests and recoveries have been made in the process.

Tagged ‘Operation Restore Peace’, the mission has also resulted in the destruction of militant camps, arrests as well as recovery of arms in Shendam area of Plateau State.  2 AK 47 rifles were recovered after an encounter with troops of Special Task Force and the armed gangs in their enclaves in Shimanker in Plateau State.   In Kaduna State, militants camps in Ladduga near Kachia were destroyed while arms were equally recovered in Maigungume Hills in Niger State.

General Officers Commanding (GOCs) are directly supervising these operations in their Area of Responsibility in Benue, Plateau, Nasarawa, Kaduna and Niger States as troops comb forests in the mission to apprehend members of armed gangs and destroy their enclaves.

ECOWAS ANTI-MALARIA MEETING ENDS

CALL FOR MASSIVE SENSITIZATION, MOBILIZATION BEHIND ECOWAS MALARIA ELIMINATION CAMPAIGN

The first in a series of region-wide national sensitization meetings preparatory to the application of biolarvicides under the ECOWAS Malaria Elimination Campaign has ended in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire with a number of recommendations including the call for the organization of national conferences to harmonize and deepen public knowledge before the commencement of the application.

The meeting which was attended by ECOWAS and Member States' officials, financial, health and environment experts, armed forces of Member States, parliamentarians, religious and community leaders, as well as development partners among other stakeholders, also called for a roadmap for the mobilization of national armed forces and the establishment of a network of regional parliamentarians behind the campaign.

In their six-point resolution, the participants also recommended effective sensitization campaign for attitudinal change and the collaboration of religious and traditional leaders, the media and the private sector in support of the anti-malaria campaign.

MILITARY RETIREES SUPPORT ANTI- TERRORISM FIGHT

MILITARY RETIREES  SUPPORT ANTI- TERRORISM FIGHT  
Retired military officers of the Nigerian Armed Forces have offered to lend their support to the fight against terrorism and other similar threats to national security. This was conveyed by a delegation of retired senior military officers led by Air Commodore Michael Ekwere (Rtd) during a courtesy visit to the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh in his office.

The retired officers used the opportunity to congratulate the CDS on his appointment and subsequent elevation to the rank of a 4 Star General in the Nigerian Armed Forces and also gave a pat on the back to the security forces for the successes recorded in the fight against terror.

Air Commodore Ekwere emphasised that Nigeria had a rich repository of human resources waiting to be tapped.  He likened his group to PAE America, a private outfit of mostly retired military personnel who are appointed to head logistics and administration departments while the military was allowed to concentrate on its core functions of fire and manoeuvre.

OMALE’S GROWING FIXATION WITH ODUAH by Yakubu Dati

OMALE’S GROWING FIXATION WITH ODUAH
Yakubu Dati

There is a sense in which people like Capt Dan Omale, a self-appointed gadfly of Nigerian Aviation do not give up, even when it is apparent they are on a wrong trajectory. Sadly, if only Omale had applied such doggedness to his business, he would have been more successful.

Omale recently wrote a barrage of wild and unfounded allegations against the leadership of the Ministry of Aviation and in particular, the ex-minister, Princess Stella Oduah. In it, Omale, an unlicensed charter aircraft operator insinuated that the latter was still ‘manipulating’ things,even after her exit. I took the trouble to write a reaction which debunked all his wild allegations in that article published in Leadership Newspaper titled ’Oduah’s Invisible Hands Still at Work in Aviation ?’.

But rather than accept the glaring facts and reality canvassed in my rejoinder, Omale has written a rejoinder to my rejoinder, in which he simply resorted to attacking my person, instead of tackling my points.

For someone who claims to be passionate about aviation, Omale spent the first three paragraphs of his so-called rejoinder attacking my person, rather than address the issues at stake, which I raised in my earlier response. He wrote:

“After his failure to pursue a meaningful political career in his home state of Plateau, he gained respite with a job in FAAN.”

This is very interesting. I am not the issue here. But suffice it to say that, by the grace of God, between 1999 and  2007, I served as elected Local Government Chairman,  Special Assistant to the Governor, Commissioner for Youths and Sports, Commissioner for Information all of Plateau State. I was also Special Adviser to the Hon Minister of State for Commerce and Industry... I can go on and on. So, the failure here is only in the befuddled mind of Omale.

Another allegation which shows the confused mind of Omale is his claim that” In just three years as the Minister of Aviation, Oduah, in search of a puppet, changed three different director-generals of the agency — unprecedented anywhere else in the world. With such a high turnover of the heads of the NCAA, instabi.

Yakubu Dati, Coordinating spokesperson, aviation parastatals writes from Lagos.

Friday 14 March 2014

STOP ATTACK ON SECURITY FORCES’ MORALE-VIDEO-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uIJ50vyHLQ4

This Committee has also noted with great concern the orchestrated attack on the morale of the Nigerian security forces engaged in the fight against terrorism by a section of the political elite. They make frivolous and unfounded claims and allegations on welfare of soldiers under the pretext of being more caring for the welfare and condition of Nigerian soldiers but their intention is to encourage indiscipline and ultimately mutiny.
General Chris Oukolade
Nigerian Defence Spokesperson
Watch video here.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uIJ50vyHLQ4

Womens March Against Killing of 29 Students in Yobe

Womens March Against Killing of 29 Students in Yobe.The march held at the Unity Fountain Park in Abuja

Sudan: Half a million civilians forced to flee as violence intensifies in Darfur

Sudan: Half a million civilians forced to flee as violence intensifies in Darfur 

Almost half a million people have been forced from their homes over the last year as violence intensified in war-torn Darfur, said Amnesty International in a report published today.

The deliberate targeting of civilians accompanied by looting, rape and murder are documented in the Amnesty International report, We can’t endure any more”: attacks against civilians in Central Darfur. It includes first-hand testimony from the recent wave of victims of Darfur’s 11-year conflict.

“Deliberate attacks in civilian areas with the intent of killing and injuring people is a war crime and demonstrates a disregard for the most basic principles of international humanitarian law,” said Michelle Kagari, East Africa Deputy Director at Amnesty International. 

The report documents how fighting between two tribes in Central Darfur, the Salamat and the Misseriya, have left whole communities homeless and scores either dead or injured.  Amnesty International found that civilians were deliberately targeted by both sides. 

Eyewitnesses described large attacks carried out by armed militias, including members of Sudanese paramilitary forces, targeting civilians in and around Um Dukhun locality, Central Darfur.

TERRORISTS ATTEMPT TO FREE DETAINED COLLEAGUES FOILED IN MAIDUGURI

TERRORISTS ATTEMPT TO FREE DETAINED COLLEAGUES FOILED IN MAIDUGURI

Pockets of terrorists apparently in a move to boost their depleted stock of fighters this morning attacked a military location in Maiduguri with a view to freeing their colleagues who are being held in detention.

The attack has been successfully repelled with heavy human casualty on the terrorists.  Some of the victims of the terrorists’ fire in their efforts to break into the detention facility, included those they came to rescue.  Many of the terrorists and their weapons have been captured.  Four soldiers were wounded and are being treated.  Hot pursuits by land and air operations are ongoing along with cordon and search of surrounding localities. 


No institution has been reported attacked, although the effect of firing from the encounter could be noticed in surrounding facilities in Maiduguri.  Details will be given later.

It is believed that this terrorists attempt is in response to the intensity of attacks on their strongholds in camps at Talala, Monguzum, Sambisa forests, Gwoza, Mandara mountains as well as the general area of Lake Chad.  The camps have been destroyed and many insurgents killed.

INT'L WOMENS DAY:ECOWAS SUPPORTS UN ON WOMENs RIGHTS

The President, Management and Staff of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) celebrates with women all over the world on the occasion of the March 8th International Women’s Day. We use this opportunity to re-affirm our commitment to the United Nations’ theme for the 2014 International Women’s Day - “Equality for Women is Progress for all".

Gender equality and women’s economic empowerment promotes progress for the family, community, nations and the world. In this respect, women’s issues deserves to be given adequate attention on the basis of human rights, economic efficiency and social justice.  


We particularly celebrate the West African women for their untiring efforts to support the regional integration agenda of our region, in all spheres of our social, cultural and economic development. We salute the women in West Africa for their strong resolve to work and support all efforts in the promotion of good governance, peace, security; and post-conflict re-habilitation and re-integration.

Thursday 13 March 2014

Celebrating Mediocrity in Nigeria-Femke van Zeiji

I used to think corruption was Nigeria’s biggest problem, but I’m starting to doubt that. Every time I probe into one of the many issues this country is encountering, at the core I find the same phenomenon: the widespread celebration of mediocrity. Unrebuked underachievement seems to be the rule in all facets of society. A governor building a single road during his entire tenure is revered like the next Messiah; an averagely talented author who writes a colourless book gets sponsored to represent Nigerian literature overseas; and a young woman with no secretarial skills to speak of gets promoted to the oga’s office faster than any of her properly trained colleagues.
Needless to say the politician is probably hailed by those awaiting part of the loot he is stealing; the writer might have got his sponsorship from buddies he has been sucking up to in hagiographies paid for by the subjects; and the young woman’s promotion is likely to be an exchange for sex or the expectancy of it. So some form of corruption plays a role in all of these examples.
But corruption per se does not necessarily stand in the way of development. Otherwise a country like Indonesia—number 118 on Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index, not that far removed from Nigeria’s 139—would never have made it to the G-20 group of major economies. An even more serious obstacle to development is the lack of repercussions for underachievement. Who in Nigeria is ever held accountable for substandard performance?
Since I came here, I have been on a futile search for a stable internet connection that does what it promises. I started with an MTN FastLink modem (I consider the name a cruel joke), and then I moved on to an Etisalat MiFi connection (I regularly had to keep myself from throwing the bloody thing against the wall), and now I am trying out Cobranet’s U-Go. I shouldn’t have bothered: equally crap. And everyone knows this. They groan and mutter and tweet about it. But still, to my surprise, no one calls for a class-action suit against those deceitful providers.
A one-day conference I attended last year left me equally puzzled. Organisation, attendance and outcome left a lot to be desired, if you ask me. But over cocktails, after the closing ceremony, everyone congratulated each other over the wonderful conference—that started two hours late, of which the most animated part was undeniably lunch, and in which not a single tangible decision had been made. This left me wondering whether we had attended the same event.
I thought these issues to be unrelated at first, but gradually I came to see the connection. Nigeria is the opposite of a meritocracy: you do not earn by achieving. You get to be who and where you are by knowing the right people. Whether you work in an office, for an enterprise or an NGO, at a construction site or in government, your abilities hardly ever are the reason you got there. Performing well, let alone with excellence, is not a requirement, in fact, it is discouraged. It would be too threatening: showing you’re more intelligent, capable or competent than the ‘oga at the top’ (who, as a rule, is not an overachiever either) is career suicide.
It is an attitude that trickles down from the very top, its symptoms eventually showing up in all of society, from bad governance to bad service to bad craftsmanship.
Where excellence meets no gratification, what remains to be celebrated is underachievement. That is why it is not uncommon to find Nigerians congratulating each other with substandard results. It is safer to cuddle up comfortably in shared mediocrity than to question it, since the latter might also expose your own less than exceptional performance. Add to this the taboo of criticising anyone senior or higher up and it explains why so many join in the admiration of the emperor’s new clothes.
I have been writing this column for the last year, and after ten months I realised my angles were getting more predictable and my pieces less edgy. I figured newcomers do not remain newcomers forever and therefore decided to round up the ‘Femke Becomes Funke’ series this month, a year after it started. Ever since I announced the ending, tweeps have been asking me to change my mind and in comments on the columns and through my website I get songs of praise that make me feel my analyses of Nigerian society are indispensable. If I had no sense of self-criticism, I might be tempted to reconsider my decision to discontinue the series and start producing second-rate articles. Who would point this out to me if I did?
The hardest thing to do in Nigeria is to continue to realise there is honour in achievement and pride in perfection. I imagine the frustration of the many Nigerians who do care for their work, who take pride in their outcomes and who feel the award is in a job well done. When you know beforehand that excellence will not be rewarded, you are bound to do the economically sane thing and limit your investments to accomplishing the bare minimum. This makes Nigeria a pretty cumbersome place for anyone striving for perfection.

Africa’s Willing Taxpayers Thwarted by Opaque Tax Systems, Corruption

A majority of Africans see tax-generated government revenue as an important national
development resource, Afrobarometer's unprecedented survey of 29 countries show.
1

However, six in ten people say it is difficult to know how much tax they pay and a seven in ten
do not know how the government spends the taxes, according to the survey, with a sample of
43,500, representing the views of half the African population.

Perceived corruption also plays a role in people's willingness to pay their taxes. More than one in
three say most or all tax officials are corrupt; four in ten say at least some tax officials are. Distrust
in tax officials increases tolerance for tax avoidance in principle and reported non-compliance
with tax obligations in practice.
Key Findings

 Two-thirds (66%) of the people interviewed say citizens must pay taxes for their countries
to develop. A majority (52%) favors paying higher taxes in exchange for better services;
just one in three (35%) who would give up services in favor of keeping taxes low.
 Seventy percent say authorities have the right to make people pay taxes. Across 16
countries2 tracked since 2002, this figure has increased from 64% to 71%. Half (49%) say it's
wrong and punishable for people to avoid paying the taxes they owe government.
 Large majorities report that tax systems remain opaque: 62% say it is difficult to find out
what taxes they owe; 76% say it is difficult to find out how governments use tax revenue.

 More than one-third (35%) says that ‘most’ or ‘all’ tax officials are corrupt, and another
39% think that at least some of them are. Perceived corruption among tax officials
appears to undermine commitment to the integrity of the tax system. Distrust in the
conduct of tax officials increases tolerance for tax avoidance in principle, and reported
non-compliance with tax obligations in practice.

NO MONEY MISSING FROM POLICE PENSION FUND-Nigeria's Finance Minister

NO MONEY MISSING FROM POLICE PENSION FUND
Contrary to media reports, the sum of N24 billion is not missing from the Police Pension Fund.
As the Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told the Senate Joint Committee on Pensions Administration at a public hearing in March 2012, she ordered the account frozen to prevent fraud based on reports of suspicious transactions.
Of the amount in the account, N24 billion was discovered to be an over-estimation of pensions arrears.
The money was subsequently returned to government coffers as is the standard practice.

Paul C Nwabuikwu
Special Adviser to the CME/Minister of Finance

Wednesday 12 March 2014

FAAN GETS NEW MD

Engr. Saleh Dunoma has formally assumed duties as the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) at the corporate headquarters in Ikeja today.
At a brief hand-over ceremony, the out-going Managing Director, Mr. George Uriesi applauded the appointment of Engr. Saleh as one of the best decisions taken by Government in recent past, adding that it was a boost for the Authority.
He extolled Engr. Saleh as a straightforward leader, whose humility and dignity never failed to marvel him.
Mr. Uriesi expressed appreciation for the great privilege he had working with Engr. Saleh and the entire staff over the past four years, first as a Director and later as Chief Executive Officer of the Authority.

Tuesday 11 March 2014

We have come under heavy terrorists attacks in Benue state-Suswam

We have come under heavy insurgents/terrorists attacks in Benue state in the past weeks killing and displacing our people. Just today, as I was setting off to visit the affected areas with the State Security Chiefs' I received a call that Uikpan (after Daudu) Guma LGA was under attack. We decided to go there with all the Security Chiefs to save the town. We met the town totally destroyed with six men butchered to death. We continued to Tse Anyeke leading to Tokula. There we met the terrorists with cows settled in the homes of the indigenes while burning down some. They shot at us but our security team repelled them pushing them inside while we proceeded to Gbajimba the LG headquarters. These killings are unacceptable to me as it's against our my Oath of Office to protect the lives and properties of our people. I sympathize with the families of the deceased persons and we are determined to use every powers at our disposal to bring these crisis to a permanent end. We are already looking into the plight of the displaced people and will ensure their safety wherever they are. This a war on innocent people and must be stopped immediately so our people will return to their normal lives. I attach the photos from my assessment tour (graphic content) GTS

"We're motivated by Golden Eaglets to win in Costa Rica"-Ann Chiejine

Assistant Coach of the Nigeria U17 women national team, Ann Chiejine,
has said that the success of the Golden Eaglets at winning the 2013
U17 World Cup in UEA have motivated the Flamingoes ahead of its FIFA
U17 women World Cup in Costa Rica.

Nigeria will begin its campaign against China in Group D at
the tournament.

Chiejine who spoke on the mood of the team ahead of its opening game
against China said the team is fully prepared for the challenges and
hope to take all games seriously.








PDM APPROVES MARCH 17 TH FOR MANUAL MEMBERSHIP REGISTRATION

Peoples Democratic Movement, PDM, has approved Monday, March 17th as the commencement date for its manual membership registration. This decision was arrived at during the just concluded meeting of the National Executive Committee of the Party which took place at the party's National Secretariat in Abuja on Monday, 10th March 2014. 
The approval of the March 17th date follows extensive preparations and sensitization for the exercise which is to take place between 8. a.m. and 5 p.m. everyday from Monday, 17th March to Sunday 23rd March 2014 simultaneously at each of the 8,812 wards throughout the states of the federation.
Distribution of registration materials, including membership cards, membership registers, pens, markers and other sundry items is already underway at the National Secretariat of the Party. Registration materials are to reach all states of the federation by Thursday, 13th March and all Registration Centres in the wards by Sunday, 16th March 2014.

It will be recalled that PDM had launched its Online Membership Registration at www.pdm.ng on 15th September, 2013 in Abuja merely a month after the Party was registered by the Independent National Electoral Commission. The online membership registration, which is still ongoing, was received by Nigerians with excitement and high expectations and is the first of its kind in Africa. More than than two million members have already registered online.

Senate committee praises Nigerian Football Federation

The Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria has heaped
plaudits on the Nigeria Football Federation for utilising the money
appropriated to it to bring countless laurels to Nigeria in year 2013.

Chairman of the Senate Committee on Sports and Social Development,
Senator Adamu Ibrahim Gumba, extolled the managerial virtues of the
NFF leadership, saying that despite not having enough money to play
around with, the Aminu Maigari-led NFF scratched the bottom of the
barrel to prepare Nigerian teams adequately for international
competitions and bring glory to the nation. The NFF received the sum
of N1.8 billion from the Government last year.

"I must commend the leadership of the Nigeria Football Federation. Our
National Teams won so many laurels from international championships
last year