Tuesday, 13 September 2016

THE CHANGE WE NEED

*A very humble request to all. Send this message at least to five persons and ask them to further send to five persons and keep the chain going*_

🔖 *1. Don't throw garbage on the roads/streets*

🔖 *2. Don't spit on roads and walls*

🔖 *3. Don't write on walls and currency notes*

🔖 *4. Don't abuse and insult others*

🔖 *5. Save water and electricity*

🔖 *6. Plant a tree*

🔖 *7. Follow traffic rules*

🔖 *8. Take care of your parents n grand parents, take their blessings & always respect them*

🔖 *9. Respect women*

🔖 *10. Give way to ambulance*

📣 *We got to change ourselves and not the country. Once we change ourselves the country will automatically change*

🔊 *If we want our kids to live in a clean and safe environment then pledge to follow these in your everyday life.*

🎙 *Whether it's  APC or PDP no person or leader can change the country &, it's you & me who can change our beloved nation by changing ourselves*

_Kindly forward this important message to every single Friend or Group so that it reaches every citizen of Nigeria._

*Thanks. *

Friday, 9 September 2016

The Ochi-Doma must created more districts



The Speaker of Benue State House of Assembly, Hon. Terkimbi Ikyange has urged the Och'Idoma and Idoma Area Traditional Council to create more districts in the area. The Speaker stated this during the passage of the Benue state Council of Chiefs and Traditional Councils amendment Bill 2015 into law.

His words, the Idoma Area Traditional Council should key into the restructuring of the traditional stools in the state especially as it concerns the creation of a district for each Council ward which is meant to broaden grassroots participation rather than insisting on the original 22 districts that existed in Idoma land during the colonial era.

Similarly,the long awaited appointment of the Tiv Paramount ruler, Tor Tiv the fifth, may soon come to an end as the Benue State House of Assembly on September 9th 2016 passed the bill for a law to make provisions for the Amendment of Benue State Council of Chiefs and Traditional Councils,  2016.

The passage followed two days of marathon sessions of the House and clause by clause consideration of the bill in the Committee of the Whole chaired by the Speaker, Hon. Terkimbi Ikyange.
 
Shortly before the passage, the Assembly had resolved to refer the issue of determining the true descendants of the two major component units of Tiv i.e Ichongo and Ipusu back to the the Supreme Council of the Tiv people known as “Ijir Tamen”  so as to guarantee peaceful coexistence.

By this resolution, Schedule 3 to Section 16 of the proposed amendment to the Council of Chiefs and Traditional Councils bill has been reduced to Ichongo and Ipusu so that their component units (descendants) will be determined by the Supreme Council of the Tiv people known as the “Ijir Tamen” to guarantee peaceful coexistence.

Furthermore,  the State lawmakers  agreed that the Selection  Committee for the Tor Tiv stool is to comprise of Six  First Class Chiefs, 14  Second Class Chiefs and the 28  Third Class Chiefs in Tiv land to bring the total number of the Committee members to 48 for fair and equitable representation in line with the Tiv custom and tradition.

The House took these decisions while debating the report of its joint committee on Local Government, Security and Chieftaincy Affairs and Judiciary, Ethics and Privileges on the Benue State Council of Chiefs and Traditional Councils amendment bill.

Speaker, Hon. Terkimbi Ikyange who read the resolutions of the House stated that the sharing formula where the two Tiv sons coexist should be between Ichongo and Ipusu, and not by geopolitical division or Electoral Constituencies.

In a lead debate, Co-chairman of the Committee, Mr. Benjamin Nungwa among other things  said that Schedule 3 of Section 16 (1) which has to do with the descendants of Ichongo and Ipusu has generated unhealthy debate capable of causing disharmony in Tiv nation.press

Two ways women can be inspired, choose 1

10,000 soldiers for dismantling Niger Delta militants




 The Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur  Buratai, has said the Federal Government will deploy 10,000 troops in the Niger Delta in 2017.
He said so far, the government had deployed 3,000 military personnel as part of its operation, codenamed, ‘Operation Crocodile Smile’ in the region.
Buratai stated this when he paid a courtesy visit to the Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson, at the Government House, Yenagoa on Thursday.
The Army chief said his visit was part of the OCS operations.
He said, “The army has deployed about 3,000 officers and men, as well as equipment for the exercise.
“The number of personnel will be increased to 10,000 by next year.”
Buratai added that the exercise was aimed at training officers in marine combat operations “because the state is largely riverine and borders the Atlantic ocean and therefore prone to external aggression.”
He said the exercise was to also prepare the army against external and internal aggression.
The COAS explained that the military had also been engaged in promoting civil, military relationship in the areas of medical outreach to citizens, road maintenance and education.
He added that the military took its rules of engagement seriously, even during conflicts.
Buratai assured the communities in the Niger Delta that the ongoing military exercise was designed to protect them.
He told the communities to remain calm, noting that troops involved in the exercise understood the rules of engagement and would strictly adhere to them.
In his remarks, Dickson appreciated the military for their selflessness in discharging their duties.
The governor also commiserated with them over the death of some soldiers in a boat mishap that occurred in the state.
He, however, urged them to adopt dialogue as a means of fighting criminality in the region.
Also, the Joint Task Force, Operation Delta Safe, said there was no iota of truth in a report that soldiers invaded Peremabiri community in the Southern Ijaw, Bayelsa State.
The outfit said the report that soldiers destroyed buildings and carted away cash and valuables was false and should be disregarded by members of the public.

We must reduce the number of aircraft for Mr president

Senior Special Assistant to President Buhari on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, yesterday disclosed that a committee has been set up to reduce the number of presidential jets.

EFFC takes Orubebe for 1.965bn fruad.

The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) has arraigned the former Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Elder Godsday Orubebe, before a Federal Capital Territory High Court, sitting in Maitama, for allegedly diverting N1.97 billion meant for the compensation of owners of properties on Eket Urban section of the East-West Road in Eket, Akwa Ibom State.
 
Orubebe, who had failed to appear in court on two previous occasions, is facing a six-count charge before Justice Olukayode Adeniyi, alongside an Assistant Director with the Ministry of Niger-Delta Affairs, Mr. Oludare Davis Alaba, and the Director of Contracts, Gitto Costruzioni Generali Nig. Ltd., Mr. Ephraim Towede Zari.
 
Counsel to ICPC, Ekoi Akpos, said before the court that their offences contravened Sections 25 (i), (b); 19, 22(5); of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act 2000 and Sections 96, 312 and 323 of the Penal Code laws of FCT 2006.
 
Part of the charge reads, “Diverting the sum of N1, 965,576,153.46 out of the sum of N2, 320,686,826.00 initially released by the Federal Government meant for the compensation of owners of properties on Eket Urban section of the East- West Road”
 
‘Conferring unfair advantage upon Gitto Costruzioni Generali Nig. Ltd, by circumventing the approval of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) for the dualization of the Eket Urban road where the former Minister`s decision to rehabilitate the road instead of dualization falls contrary to the award letter No.WR14522/VOL.1/55 dated 28/09/2006 as approved by the FEC; and making false statements to operatives of the ICPC where he mentioned in his written statement that the decision to rehabilitate the Eket Urban road was taken after he had left office as Minister of Niger-Delta Affairs.’ The ex-Minister and the co-accused pleaded not guilty to the charge when read to them.
Their counsel, F. Zimuan, representing Orubebe, K. Asunogie, representing Alaba and Kanu Agabi (SAN), representing Zari, who is a Lebanese, pleaded with the court to grant their clients bail on liberal terms. Zimuan specifically urged the court to grant Orubebe bail on self- recognition, having served as a former Minister.
 
The trial judge, Justice Adeniyi admitted the ex-Minister to bail in the sum of N10 million and a surety who must be resident in Abuja, with evidence of three years tax clearance.
He further admitted Mr. Alaba to bail in the sum of N20 million and a surety who must be an employee of the Federal Government not below the rank of an assistant director.
 
 
The third accused, Mr. Zari was equally granted bail by the judge in the sum of N20 million and one surety who must be resident in Abuja, under the jurisdiction of the court.
Justice Adeniyi, ruled at the end of the arraignment that all the accused persons be kept in ICPC custody pending the fulfillment of their bail applications and then adjourned the case to 10th November, 2016 for hearing.

The presidency is hungry too

In a new article he wrote for the back page of The Sun, Special Assistant to President Buhari on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, revealed that his income has been cut by one third since he came into office. He stated that as people complain of hunger in the land, he and others who have come to truly serve in government also face hunger as well and are not insulated from what is happening in the country.  

On the current economic recession, Adesina noted that many great countries have come out of recessions and have bounced to become great economic powers. He said Nigeria would do same as well as the government is working hard to get its economic policies right. Read his piece after the cut 

AFTER YE HAVE SUFFERED A WHILE.. 
Here comes the preacher. What does he want to tell us? Doesn't he know that we are hungry, and the din of hunger makes one deaf to reason? The rumble in our tummies, as the worms compete for the little food left there, will surely be louder than what anybody can say now. True? Not exactly. Come, let us reason together.
Father Ejike Mbaka, that fearless priest of the Catholic church, gave an illustration recently, which I believe was not revealed to him by flesh and blood. There is hunger in the land, with people severely famished. And there is ululation, loud enough to deafen the deaf all over again, and wake the dead from his eternal sleep. The wailers are wailing so loud, as if Bob Marley had resurrected with his band, the Wailing Wailers. But hear Fr. Mbaka: somebody came, looted your kitchen, carried away all the food. He did not even leave you crumbs to console yourself with. And then comes another person, trying to replenish your pantry, trying to restock your kitchen. And then you begin to shout; we are hungry o, we are hungry o, to the point of distracting and discouraging the new man. Who should you rather wail and rage against? The man that looted your kitchen, of course.
That is the exact similitude of the position of Nigeria. There is hunger, lack, and deprivation in the land. But is it a death knell? Not when the kitchen is being restocked, and we will soon feed till we want no more.
But what if we are dead before our kitchen gets replenished? What if we had been knackered by hunger, before the days of plenty come? That is the purpose of this piece. "But the God of all grace, who hath called us unto his eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after that ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, established, strengthen, settle you." (1 Peter 5:10).
Christianity is the religion I am most familiar with. But every religion must surely preach the virtue of godly patience. "After ye have suffered a while..." Let's look at it closely. You give a single thing, you get four in return. What a huge return on investment. You put in suffering (patience, if you like), and you get this cocktail of blessings : perfect, established, strengthened, settled. Buy one, get four free.
Hear who is preaching patience, from the cosy confines of the presidential villa. He has moved up, and from obscene comfort, he can preach. That was the insinuation my own brother, Dele Momodu, made in his Saturday column in Thisday a couple of weeks ago. He did not mention my name, but I knew he was talking of me. And I laughed. Obscene comfort, in a Muhammadu Buhari administration? Funny. Well, I do not know about those who can hustle, and gain advantage from holding public office. But I can speak for myself. The day God was distributing the ability to hustle, I probably was not at home, so I have not been given that ability. And the Good Book says no man does anything, except it is given to him from above. The sum total? I am on a national assignment that has cut my legitimate annual income by one third, so when there is hunger in the land, I go hungry too. Well, almost. When people talk of lack of money, I penny-pinch, too. Well, almost. Let nobody think those in government are insulated from what is happening in the country. At least, those who have truly come to serve. But those precious promises hold true any day. "In the days of famine, my people shall be satisfied." "The young lion may lack, and suffer hunger, but those that trust in the Lord shall not suffer any good thing." (Ride on, preacher!).
In Benin on Monday, President Buhari spoke at campaign rally of the All Progressives Congress (APC). He declared: "I assure you that we are going to get out of our economic problems. We are almost out of our security problem and we are going to make Nigeria great again. We are going to be very proud of our country once again." I believe it. Implicitly. If I don't, I am then simply wasting time in government, when I could fare a lot better outside it. But the Daura man needs people to believe in him. Count me in the number. I had always been, and will always be a believer in integrity, probity and accountability. It is good for our country.
The economy has fallen into recession, and after recession comes depression. Really? Why are some people too eager to believe negative projections, while shunning the positive? Yes, when you have negative economic growth for two consecutive quarters, there is business contraction, and the economy falls into recession. Depression is even worse. But recession is not Armageddon. It is not a death sentence. Leading countries of the world had fallen into economic recession at one time or the other, and they came out of it, to become strong and sturdy again. Why not Nigeria? The projection is that by the end of the fourth quarter, we would be on our way out of recession. I believe it. I do not spend my days expecting a thunderstorm, and render myself unable to enjoy the rain. "After ye have suffered a while..." Better days will come again, and under this Buhari administration. Yes, we shall soon be proud of our country again.
Do we forget so easily? No, we shouldn't. Buhari and his party rode to power last year on the wings of three main promises, among others: security, anti-corruption, and economic restoration. The first promise is being roundly and soundly fulfilled. You can't administer a country you have not secured, the President keeps saying. And so, from Sambisa to Sango, in Ogun State, from the creeks of Ikorodu to those of Niger Delta, even the crocodiles are smiling, knowing that the country is being secured. From Ogbunike, to Okigwe, and to Okporoza, the security agencies are proving their mettle. In the North East, internally displaced people are returning home. Ask people from Konduga, in Borno State. Roads that had been closed for five years are reopening. Emirs, who had fled their palaces for many years, have returned. "After ye have suffered for a while..."
Corruption is being given a bloody nose! You do the crime, you serve the term. A Daniel has come to judgment. In Nigeria, not only are officials corrupt, but corruption has become official, said Shehu Musa, a former secretary to the Federal Government. Well, not anymore. Do the crime, serve the term, is the new singsong. Stealing has now become corruption, and the battle has just started.
The economy is the third promise. But just as the promise is being kept on the security and anti-corruption fronts, the economy will also be turned right side up. After ye have suffered a while...
It is inevitable that we pass through this rough patch in which we currently find ourselves. Up to the end of 2014, we made an average of three billion dollars monthly from oil. We whacked everything, officially and unofficially, nothing put aside for the rainy day. It was a bazaar. Now the rain is falling, and it is beating us almost mercilessly. Monthly income from oil has dropped to as low as five hundred million dollars. From billions to millions. We are running soaked. But after rain comes the shine. Nigeria not only has a thrifty and prudent leadership, but also one that will not steal our money. You can't teach an old dog new tricks, so goes the saying. Some people are so rapacious that if you keep a boiled egg in their care, and knowing that a bite on the egg would be quite visible, they then lick it, so that the egg never goes scot-free. But the good news for us is that a man who did not bite our egg in his 30s, would not lick it in his 70s. Our treasury is safe, and we will beat recession. Better days are surely coming, "after ye have suffered a while..." We trusted Buhari and gave him our votes in 2015. Let us keep the trust, the confidence, and ride the storm. In quietness and confidence shall be our strength, not in wailing and throwing of tantrums.
In private, and in public, President Buhari has acknowledged the tough times in the land. But he is not throwing up his hands in helplessness. Problems are meant to be solved, and the government is doing just that. It's a time of national emergency that calls for cooperation, goodwill, best wishes, encouragement, even prayers. But some people rejoice, thinking the government would fail. Why do the heathens rage, and the people imagine vain things? Wasn't the siege on Samaria so terrible that they began to boil their children to eat? And then came Prophet Elisha, who told them, "Tomorrowabout this time, shall a measure of fine flour be sold for a shekel." Did it happen? It did. But the scoffers, the unbelieving, did not partake of it. Things will turn in Nigeria, and it would be for our good.(I can see everything turning around, turning around, turning around for our good).
If you faint in the days of adversity, your strength is small. Good Nigerians will not faint, rather, they will trust, pray and encourage the man restocking their kitchens. As sure as day follows the night, better things will come, and will not delay. The troubles of the present are not worthy to be compared to the glory that will be revealed, "after we have suffered for a while..."