Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Tensions run high as Nigeria's economy nose dives

Young men became entangled in a swirl of flying fists. Gas station workers swatted away boys hoping to fill their plastic cans. A mother with a sleeping baby in her minivan was chased off, rightly accused of jumping the line. A driver eager to get ahead crashed into several cars, the sound of crunching metal barely registering amid the noise.

Nigerians were getting used to days like this.

But then came the ultimate insult to everyone waiting at the Oando mega gas station: A bus marked Ministry of Justice rolled up to a pump, leapfrogging no fewer than 99 vehicles. “Service With Integrity” was painted on its door. A gas station supervisor who calls herself Madame No Nonsense stepped aside to let it fuel up before anyone else. The crowd howled at the injustice.

Plummeting oil prices have set off an economic unraveling in Nigeria, one of the world’s top oil producers, and the collective anger of a fed-up nation was pouring out.

“Starvation in the land of plenty,” said Tony Usidamen, a public relations consultant waiting for fuel.

For months, many Nigerians have endured painfully long lines for gasoline and power failures that last for days — with no fuel for backup generators. Scant power means water cuts for homes that rely on electricity to pump it. Everyday items are missing from stores, and those that remain cost more than usual.

In this country of rampant inequality, the poor have long been desperate, and the rich are still able to buy their way out of problems. But the situation in Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, is having an outsize impact on the expanding middle class, which has become accustomed to air-conditioning, owning a car and going out for Domino’s pizza. Now, even a bottle of Perrier is too expensive for many.

President Muhammadu Buhari is urging patience, noting that when he took office last year he inherited a corruption-plagued mess.

“We are experiencing probably the toughest economic times in the history of our nation,” Mr. Buhari told Nigerians on Friday. “I cannot promise you that this will be an easy journey.”

Low oil prices are not helping. The resulting shortage of dollars means less cash for imports, including fuel to power the nation. Though Nigeria produces millions of barrels of oil a day, it has long had to ship its own crude oil out of the country to be refined into gasoline.

Imported fuel has been arriving in Lagos, a city of 20 million, by tanker truck, a trip that takes a week. Old trucks and bad roads cause delays. Trucks sometimes disappear across the border, where thieves sell the fuel and pocket the cash, and militants keep blowing up oil platforms and pipelines.

The lines at gas stations ebb and flow, depending on the day. But the government says the supply is getting better. It has finally fired up Nigeria’s three rickety oil refineries, and the wait in Lagos improved drastically last week. Eventually, officials say, Nigeria will make all of its own gasoline.

“A certain amount of pain must be endured,” said Garba Deen Muhammad, a spokesman for the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation. “Everybody must make sacrifices.”

At the gas station in Lagos, Olafay Segun and Abu Bellow tried to sleep away the pain of losing a morning of valuable fares in their yellow minibus. They joined a huge line of vehicles backed up along the expressway. Both men stretched across the old metal seats. In the beating sun, it was like sleeping inside a TV dinner.

Suddenly, the car in front gave up on the wait, pulling out of line and leaving a gap. Mr. Bellow bolted for the driver’s seat, turning the key. Nothing happened. Long seconds passed as both men panicked that someone would pull in front of them. He tried the key again. Success. The bus jolted ahead a few feet.

They wound up behind Adeanike Oso, whose mind was on her chickens. As the owner of Oso Farms, a 3,500-bird operation outside Lagos, she worried they might not have enough food and water.

That morning, Ms. Oso had dropped off her children at school before heading to the farm, but her Nissan Pathfinder was running low on fuel so she pulled into line. That was two hours ago.

Toward the front was Toyin Adeniyi, who was on her way to work as a school administrator. Three hours after arriving at the station, she was still waiting.

As midmorning arrived, young men holding plastic gas cans gathered. “There’s no light, there’s no water, there’s no anything,” said one, Michael Tungi, venting about Nigeria. “Everything is spoiled.”

The station was not allowed to sell gas to Mr. Tungi, to prevent fuel from slipping onto the black market. People had been filling jerrycans and selling gas at high prices to drivers looking to skip long lines at filling stations. Mr. Tungi and the others were optimists, hoping to sneak a few liters.

First they would have to get past Nike Olorunfemi, 50, the station supervisor. Wearing a straw hat and bright yellow vest, she hollered, sometimes with a bullhorn, to let them know they were waiting in vain.

“That’s why they call me Madame No Nonsense Action Lady,” Ms. Olorunfemi said. “I don’t take nonsense.”

The day had started out orderly and calm. Drivers inched forward. The procrastinators, the planners, the innocents — the line absorbed them all, having mercy on no one.

“I’m late already,” grumbled Peter Ademola, a swimming pool maintenance man. He had hopped into a minibus, heading to a repair job, but it was low on fuel. Now he was stuck in line, wiping his brow. Tiny beads of sweat formed above the purple lipstick of the passenger next to him.

“What can I do?” Mr. Ademola said.

Another driver, Ify Ezeobi, a shopkeeper, figured every hour of waiting cost him $100 worth of business at his store. “I’m sick and tired of this,” he said.

It was almost noon when the line stopped altogether. The station’s supply had run dry. Vehicles squealed away to search for fuel elsewhere. It was anyone’s guess when the next fuel truck would arrive.

Some drivers made use of the empty hours until more fuel came. A policeman read over a stack of witness statements. One driver repaired a busted side mirror. A doughnut saleswoman paraded alongside the vehicles. Old friends found one another in line, their reunion an upside to the otherwise grim day.

The hottest part of the day came and, with it, stress. A mother made the calculations of every busy parent — if she waited, would she get to school in time to pick up her children? Three energetic boys bounced in the back seat of another car, hanging out the windows and slugging one another. It was the first day of vacation and their father needed gas to reach their grandparents outside the city.

A billboard with a man clutching his head taunted the stalled motorists: “Need pain relief?”

Ms. Olorunfemi — Madame No Nonsense — was still trying to chase off the people holding gas cans. She snatched a can from one man’s hand and threw it onto the freeway.

“Anybody jumping the queue, they call Action Lady and I send them out,” she said. “I hate cheating.”

But by afternoon, cheating was in abundance. Some drivers employed a fried-chicken strategy: gaining entrance inside the station’s parking lot by claiming they were patronizing the adjoining KFC.

At 2 p.m., a fuel truck rolled in, eliciting a cheer. But unloading its 33,000 liters would take hours.

Two men lugging a heavy generator rested it on the driveway. Three elementary-age boys, sent by their mothers, arrived after school with plastic cans to try their luck.

At nearly 5 p.m., fuel was finally in the pumps again. Drivers started their engines. Wheels spun in the dirt. Station employees blocked off the cars at the KFC, dashing the hopes of line jumpers. Workers gathered around Madame No Nonsense for a pep talk.

“Don’t sell to anyone with a can,” she said. “Be nice to all your customers.”

Horns started blaring. A security guard in T-shirt and jeans, with an AK-47 slung around his chest, stepped in front of the vehicles. The station’s gates scraped open.

“O.K.,” Madame No Nonsense said. “Let’s go.”

Monday, May 9, 2016

Video - Nigeria to enact capital punishment law for kidnapping




Nigeria may soon have a law that will prescribe capital punishment for kidnappers. Kidnapping for ransom is becoming rampant in the country and the Nigerian Senate now says it will commence the process of enacting a law that will punish convicted kidnappers with the death penalty. But there is still no public agreement on the issue.

Nigeria to fully deregulate petrol

Barring any last-minute change in plans, the federal government will, in a few days, introduce policy changes heŕalding the full deregulation of the downstream sector of the Nigerian petroleum industry, officials well briefed on the matter have told PREMIUM TIMES.

Nigerians may have to brace up for a minimum of 27.17 per cent hike in fuel price nationwide, the officials said.

The policy, they say, is likely to push the pump price of petrol to about N110 per litre at NNPC-owned filling stations and higher at other independent outlets.

Amid fears of a possible backlash reminiscent of the reaction by Nigerians in January 2012 when former President Goodluck Jonathan attempted to introduce a similar measure, PREMIUM TIMES learnt that no formal announcement of the policy would be made by government.

Industry sources familiar with the plan said government was on the verge of discreetly giving permission to petroleum products marketers to gradually adjust their pump prices as early as midweek to signal the formal take-off of deregulation in the country.

The sources, who asked not to be named because of the sensitive nature of the matter, said government resorted to that drastic decision to end the vicious cycle of fuel scarcity crises and avoid subsidy payments.

Unlike the situation in 2012, the sources said government appeared to have successfully wooed organised labour and its affiliate unions to its side.

That claim could not be independently verified by PREMIUM TIMES. The General Secretary of the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, Peter Ozo-Eson, said he was unable to respond to the reporter’s enquiries, as he was in a meeting. He did not also respond to the text message sent to his telephone on Sunday.

Also, , the acting Executive Secretary, PPPRA, Sotonye Iyoyo, did not respond to calls, and a text message.

Insiders well briefed on the matter said top level secret meetings had been going on all week to weigh the security implications of the possible fallouts of the policy.

One of the meetings was held at the headquarters of the State Security Service in Abuja where the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, and his counterpart in the Ministry of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, met with heads of security agencies to finetune possible security response should Nigerians pour into the streets to protest the policy.

Official spokespersons for key petroleum industry agencies were evasive when asked for comments Sunday afternoon.

NNPC spokesperson, Garbadeen Mohammed, said reports of the planned introduction of deregulation by government was new to him.

Full deregulation policy, which involves opening up the downstream petroleum industry for participation by all players, particularly the private sector, is widely considered the panacea for the incessant fuel supply crisis in the country.

With full deregulation, there will be fair competition, with the burden of petroleum products supply and distribution shared between private investors and government, with both having equal access to all aspects of industry operations, ranging from refining, sourcing, to marketing and distribution.

While government will continue to monitor and enforce compliance with established standards, products pricing will be determined by the prevailing market forces in an atmosphere of competition.

Over the years, government bore the burden of subsidy payments on petroleum products consumed in the country.

Under the arrangement, landing cost of fuel, plus the distribution margins included in the Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) pricing template have always imposed on government the extra burden of shouldering all costs in excess of a fixed retail pump price of N86 per litre as subsidy.

Until January this year when the price of crude oil at the international market dropped to less than $28 per barrel, government was paying subsidy in multiples of billions of Naira annually throughout the period of high oil prices.

With the introduction of price modulating mechanism by government, Nigerians experienced for the first time a situation where marketers had to refund to the PPPRA costs recovered for importing fuel at a landing price lower than government approved price band of N85.50 per litre for NNPC mega stations and N86 for other stations.

With crude oil prices gradually picking up in recent times, Nigerians have begun to hear reports of the return of subsidy payments by government.

A review of the latest PPPRA fuel pricing template for April 28 showed that retail price for petrol stood at N99.38, showig a fresh subsiďy level of between N12.08 and N13.08 per litre.

Our sources said government felt there was no better time than now to implement the decision, particularly when the price of crude oil, which stood at about $41 per barrel at the close of trading on Friday, was still low.

In January 2012, the NLC successfully mobilized Nigerians to shut down the country’s economy for five days to oppose the attempt by the Goodluck Jonathan administration to remove fuel subsidy, which resulted in hike in fuel prices nation wide.

That action by labour forced government to rescind its decision on the issue.

Nigeria bans anauthorised use of drones

The Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, NCAA, has banned the launching of Remotely Piloted Aircraft, RPA, in the Nigerian airspace without its permit and that of the Office of National Security Adviser, ONSA.

This is contained in a statement issued by the General Manager, Public Relations, NCAA, Sam Adurogboye, in Lagos, yesterday. The statement said the move was part of the safety guidelines issued by the regulatory agency to drone operators, following the proliferation of the technology in the country. 

According to the statement, “in recent times, RPA/UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) are being deployed for commercial and recreational purposes in the country without adequate security clearance. 

“Therefore, with the preponderance of these operations, particularly in a non-segregated airspace, there has to be proactive safety guidelines. “The development of the use of RPA nationwide has emerged with somewhat predictable safety concerns and security threats.” 

According to the statement, the International Civil Aviation Organisation, ICAO, is yet to publish Standards and Recommended Practices, SARPs, as far as certification and operation of civil use of RPA is concerned. 

The statement said the NCAA had put in place Regulations/Advisory Circular to guide the certification and operations of civil RPA in the Nigerian airspace. 

It said this was contained in the Nigerian Civil Aviation Regulations (Nig. CARs 2015 Part 8.8.1.33) and the Implementing Standards (Nig.CARs 2015 Part IS.8.8.1.33). 

It said: “Therefore, no government agency, organisation or an individual will launch an RPA/UAV in the Nigerian airspace for any purpose whatsoever without obtaining requisite permit from the NCAA and ONSA. “The NCAA wishes to reiterate that all applicants and holders of permits to operate RPA/Drones must strictly be guided by safety guidelines. 

“In addition, operators must ensure strict compliance with the conditions stipulated in their permits and the requirements of the Nig. CARs.”

Friday, May 6, 2016

Video - Nigerians react to Leicester historic premiere league title win




Reactions have continued to pour in from across the world over Leicester City's remarkable feat. Fans in football crazy Nigeria which has one of Africa's highest followers of the EPL also shared their views.

Getting Nigeria to become a global player in the $10bn shea industry

As the push for economic diversification intensifies, Chief Executive Officer of Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Mr. Segun Awolowo, has suggested that Nigeria should leverage its nature-endowed comparative advantage in shea butter production and export to replace oil as major revenue earner.

Awolowo is seeking more focus on the non-oil export sector, particularly agric products such as Shea. This, he said, would lead to a surge in Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

At a conference in Abuja, Awolowo said global demand for shea butter was estimated at $10 billion, with a projection of hitting $30 billion by 2020. He noted that if the product is fully harnessed and quality control and standardisation of processing addressed, Nigeria might take a chunk of the huge global market.

He said with 16 Shea producing states in Nigeria, the sector’s value addition to the economy in the form of inclusive and sustainable growth and wealth creation will be huge. He emphasised that if Nigeria becomes a competitive global player in shea production, it would give impetus to the current industrialisation push and lift millions out of poverty.

These are not empty claims. Nigeria literarily seats on a shea butter goldmine. At the last count, for instance, Nigeria produces 325,000 Metric Tonnes (MT) of shea nut, making her world’s largest shea nut producer, according to Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

However, despite its capacity to earn foreign exchange, reduce poverty, empower women, and generate employ through the establishment of Small and Medium scale Enterprises (SMEs), Shea production and export, like many other agric products in the non-oil sector, remained neglected.

Why shea industry is rebounding

But a new thinking in favour of positioning Shea production and export to lead the renewed diversification drive may have taken centre stage. The Nation learnt that some developments both in the local and international scenes prompted hope of a possible rebound of the sector. One of them is the European Union (EU) directive that five per cent of shea must be added to all confectionaries particularly chocolate.

The fact that up to five per cent Shea content by weight is allowed under EU regulations in chocolate, other confectionaries and margarine, created a larger international market for shea products. And with wildly grown shea trees predominant in 21 states across the country, the belief is that Nigeria is on good stead to convert her comparative advantage in Shea product to competitive advantage.

The United State (U.S) government, through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has also stepped up its support for Nigeria’s Shea industry. USAID does this through the Global Shea Alliance, which includes leading retail brands, Shea butter manufacturers, research institutions, ministries, regulatory bodies, and Shea butter producers and exporters.

That is not all. The Nigeria Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC) has also indicated its readiness to partner the USAID/Nigeria Expanded Trade and Transport (NEXTT) project and Technoserve to facilitate investments in Shea clusters. The essence of the partnership was to provide necessary processing facilities to the shea clusters spread across the 19 states where the shea trees are predominant.

On the local scene, Shea butter, The Nation learnt, will feature prominently as one of the products for the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) initiative by the US government. AGOA, which allows import of agricultural commodities from eligible African countries including Nigeria to the US duty free, was recently extended by 10 years.

The trade policy was supposed to have expired on September 30, last yaer, but the US Congress extended it for an additional 10 years until September 30, 2025. With the 10-year extension – the longest in the programme’s history – Shea butter is said to be one of the products Nigeria hopes to push to the US market.

Perhaps more importantly, shea butter is one of the products that has been selected for the NEPC One-State-One-Product (OSOP) initiative, which seeks to develop one exportable product per state by leveraging on the area’s comparative advantage.

Private sector operators to the rescue

Apparently encouraged by the increased local and international focus on Shea production and export, PZ Cussons Foundation, last week, boosted the sector by formally handing over the PZ Nasara Shea-Butter processing facility to a women co-operative group in Tungan Wawa in Kontagora Local Government Area of Niger State.

The facility consists of raw material store, structures for drying, roasting, blending, finished goods store, borehole and other equipment and machineries. According to the Foundation’s Trustee and former First Lady of Nigeria, Justice Fati Lami Abubakar, the project, executed by the Foundation, was an intervention to empower women economically through encouragement of rural enterprise.

She explained that the new facility will help upgrade their traditional method of production and make them internationally competitive. It will also bring local processors under one umbrella and organise them into a more formal structure as enterprise.

Niger State governor, Alhaji Abubakar Sani Bello commended the Board of Trustee of the Foundation for sitting the project in the state. He said it will support government’s effort at diversifying the state’s economy by enhancing productivity in agro allied endeavours at rural levels, help in poverty eradication and employment.

The governor, who promised to encourage other corporate bodies to do the same, had earlier unfolded plans to distribute new improved shea seedlings to encourage more cultivation. The state government has also intensified efforts at sensitising private sector players and other development partners to awaken rural populace, especially women to tap into the huge potential in Shea production.

For Director-General, Niger State Commodity and Export Promotion Agency, Mohammed Kontagora, the development of large-scale production of Shea butter in Nigeria would put Nigeria on the right path to diversifying the economy through strategic focus on the commodity’s export business.

Kontagora, a member of Global Shea Alliance (GSA), said Nigeria, which presently accounts for 57 per cent of the global Shea market, could address its challenge of poverty through Shea butter export. “Nigeria stands a better chance of improving its economy through the processing and sale of Shea butter,” he said.

He said one way to improve economies of communities is to take comparative advantage in Shea butter production by promoting Shea butter as a food and cosmetic product, noting that EU’s directive that five per cent of Shea must be added to all confectionaries particularly chocolate in the zone could effectively upscale the profile of the commodity’s business.

“Shea butter has the potential to eradicate poverty. This is the sector I believe we all have to go back to,” the DG said. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Shea Origin Nigeria project, Mrs. Mobola Sagoe, has already done that. The Lagos-based entrepreneur has since carved a niche in the business of promoting beauty products. She has even gone a notch higher by assisting women get involved in shea butter production.

Sagoe has been smiling to the bank by supplying cosmetics and export Shea butter to the United Kingdom (UK) and the U.S. The professional esthetician (skin care therapist), with 28 years’ experience, said the use of shea butter has been increasing in recent years as consumers are demanding better quality natural, minimally processed ingredients in personal care items and food.

The budding entrepreneur said internationally, 90 per cent of Shea nuts are used in the food and confectionary industry for the production of cocoa butter equivalents or to improve confectionaries and margarines. She identified continued rising demand for cocoa butter equivalents (CBEs) due to rising world consumption of chocolate, high prices for cocoa, and strong demand for natural cosmetics and soaps as principal factors driving the demand for Shea.

Sagoe said Nigeria is a leading producer of shea nut. This must be why, as part of her commitment to promoting a sustainable shea industry, she commenced the implementation of a pilot project to help women gather the Shea nuts and process them into butter. She has since taken over the shea processing centre in Saki, Oyo State to train villagers, mostly women, on how to pick and process Shea nuts and make a living from them.

Sagoe is being supported by USAID Nigeria Expanded Trade and Transport Programme (NEXTT). The entrepreneur, whose firm strives to lift women and their families out of extreme poverty through improved Shea production, said an investment of about N50, 000, prospective entrepreneurs could venture into nuts gathering for big merchants.

She said she intends to ensure that companies source products directly from producers in the villages, where villagers are involved through manually collecting, sorting, crushing, roasting, grinding, and separating the oils from the butter and shaping the finished product.

The raw nuts collected from them are processed into unrefined Shea butter. The villages also make money by selling the raw nuts to companies that extract, refine and export the oil abroad for cosmetic purposes.

Apparently in recognition of her exploits, Sagoe’s firm has been selected as global supply partners for Shea Radiance, an international organisation that supplies communities with locally fabricated equipment to help increase production output, relieve physical labour on production and provide a consistent and improved quality of Shea butter.

Shea origin centres on a community-based cooperative and seeks to improve the livelihoods of women Shea nut producers by offering training, greater ownership within the supply chain and access to improved technology.

However, the consensus of experts is that the success or otherwise of the current public-private sector collaboration and involvement in positioning shea butter production and export business to drive the ongoing economic diversification agenda depends largely on how far government encourages and sustains the initiative through deliberate policies, provision of necessary infrastructure and enabling environment.

Report by CHIKODI OKEREOCHA and DAN ESSIET 

Militants attack major Chevron oil facility in Nigeria

Armed militants attacked a major Chevron oil and gas facility off Nigeria’s southern coast, the military said Friday, and the U.S.-based multinational said it was forced to shut production there but its exports will continue.

A new group called the Niger Delta Avengers said it bombed Chevron’s Okan platform on Wednesday and warned international companies that “the Nigerian military can’t protect your facilities.”

“This is what we promised the Nigeria government. Since they have refused to listen to us, we are going to bring the country’s economy to zero,” a statement said, threatening more attacks including in Abuja, the capital, and Lagos, the commercial centre.

Security forces launched an offensive this year after militants renewed attacks that forced the closure of two oil refineries and a major export terminal. President Muhammadu Buhari last week ordered military chiefs to the region and vowed to treat “vandals and saboteurs” as terrorists. The military has denied reports of extrajudicial killings but more than 10,000 civilians have fled the fallout.

Nigerian Navy spokesman Commodore Chris Ezekobe said Friday that the attack occurred Wednesday near Escravos terminal in the southern Niger Delta. He refused to comment on reports from witnesses that a security guard was killed in the attack. They spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

Chevron spokesman Deji Haastrup said the facility was shut down but would not say how much oil production is affected. “It will not affect our commitment to export crude,” he said.

The militants want a greater share of oil profits for communities whose fishing and agricultural grounds have been ravaged by oil pollution. They also object to the government winding down a 2009 amnesty program paying 30,000 former militants. The amnesty ended attacks that cut Nigerian oil production by 40 per cent.

Chevron is the third-largest exporter in Nigeria, which is Africa’s biggest oil producer.

President Buhari wants the rest of the world to quickly return Nigeria's stolen loot

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari is demanding greater international cooperation in returning hundreds of millions of dollars in Nigerian funds hidden abroad.

Buhari was elected in March 2015 on an anti-corruption ticket and has pledged to reclaim billions of dollars allegedly lost to dodgy dealings and mismanagement. The West African oil giant has endured decades of endemic corruption, with state funds being secreted abroad by public figures including ex-military ruler Sani Abacha. The late general, who led Nigeria between 1993 and his death in 1998, is suspected of looting up to $5 billion in public funds during his reign. Switzerland recently agreed to return $321 million Abacha had hidden there, though the former ruler may have stored up to $2.2 billion in European bank accounts.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry also pledged in March that authorities would trace stolen Nigerian funds circulating in the U.S. financial system, which Kerry said could total “billions of dollars.” Nigeria’s Information Minister Lai Mohammed said in January that the country had lost 1.34 trillion naira ($6.8 billion) in stolen public funds between 2006 and 2013.

Nigerians are “becoming impatient” with the process of repatriating stolen public funds, which has “become tedious,” Buhari said on Thursday at a meeting in Abuja with the executive secretary of the United Nations Office for Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Yury Fedotov. “We are looking for more cooperation from the EU, United States, other countries and international institutions to recover the nation’s stolen assets,” said the Nigerian president, specifically mentioning the stolen proceeds from the sale of crude oil. Nigeria is Africa’s biggest oil producer and the sector accounts for more than 90 percent of the value of the country’s exports.

In response, Fedotov said that the UNODC would give Nigeria its support and cooperation in fighting corruption.

As well as the efforts to recoup funds from abroad, the Buhari administration has ordered the country’s anti-corruption agency to investigate scores of retired and serving military officials over alleged arms procurement fraud and has culled thousands of ghost workers from the Nigerian civil service.

A number of high-profile public figures from the previous administration of Goodluck Jonathan have been put on trial, including ex-national security adviser Sambo Dasuki, who is accused of orchestrating the theft of $2 billion in government funds earmarked for fighting Boko Haram. Dasuki denies the charges against him. The opposition People’s Democratic Party has accused Buhari’s government of undertaking a witch hunt against its members.

U.S. to sell Nigeria attack aircraft to combat Boko Haram

The U.S. administration is seeking to approve a sale of as many as 12 A-29 Super Tucano light attack aircraft to Nigeria to aid its battle against the extremist group Boko Haram, U.S. officials say, in a vote of confidence in President Muhammadu Buhari's drive to reform the country's corruption-tainted military.

Washington also is dedicating more intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets to the campaign against the Islamist militants in the region and plans to provide additional training to Nigerian infantry forces, the officials told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the administration's plans.

The possible sale -- which the officials said was favored within the U.S. administration but is subject to review by Congress -- underscores the deepening U.S. involvement in helping governments in north and west Africa fight extremist groups.

U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Michael Franken, a deputy commander of the Pentagon's Africa Command, told a Washington forum last week that there now are 6,200 U.S. troops - most of them Special Operations Forces - operating from 26 locations on the continent.

The widening U.S. military cooperation is a political victory for Buhari, who took office last year pledging to crack down on the rampant corruption that has undermined the armed forces in Africa's most populous country.

"The Buhari administration I think has really reenergized the bilateral relationship in a fundamental way," one U.S. official said.

The previous Nigerian government of Goodluck Jonathan had scorned the United States for blocking arms sales partly because of human rights concerns. It also criticized Washington for failing to speed the sharing of intelligence.

The souring relations hit a low at the end of 2014 when U.S. military training of Nigerian forces was abruptly halted.

That is changing under Buhari, whose crackdown on corruption has led to a raft of charges against top national security officials in the previous government.

"Buhari made clear from the get-go that his number one priority was reforming the military to defeat Boko Haram ... And he sees us as part of that solution," a second U.S. official said.

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Video - U.S. ends imports of Nigerian gas




Nigeria's economy has been sliding into deeper trouble as its Natural Gas exports to the US hit the Zero mark. The US is the biggest buyer of Nigeria natural gas but decided to stop importing natural gas and instead opting to use domestic gas resources. Losing that market means Nigeria will miss out on billions of badly needed dollars.

Video - Michael Jackson's family to open music school in Nigeria




Michael Jackson's brother Jermaine says his family wants to nurture musicians in Nigeria. He's planning to open a music academy in the West African country.

FIFA pays tritbute to Nigerian football star Rashidi Yekini

World football governing body, FIFA, on Wednesday paid tribute to former Super Eagles striker, Rashidi Yekini, who died exactly four years ago.

Yekini, 48, died in Ibadan, Oyo State on Friday 4 May 2012, after a brief but serious illness.

FIFA recalls that "Nigeria's record goalscorer (37 goals) ensured his name went down in the history books when he scored the Super Eagles' first ever FIFA World Cup goal at the 1994 finals in the USA in the 3-0 group stage win over Bulgaria."

"Yekini who played for several clubs in Spain, Greece, Portugal and Switzerland, could hardly believe he had scored and spontaneously grabbed the net, shaking it in celebration.

"The photo of the 58-time Nigeria international captivated the world and even today the former striker, who in 1993 was the first Nigerian to be voted African Footballer of the Year, remains a respected figure in the global football family.

"Rasheed Yekini was one of the best players at the 1994 FIFA World Cup in the USA," said former FIFA President Joseph S. Blatter when he learned of Yekini's death. "Against Bulgaria he scored Nigeria's first ever FIFA World Cup goal, a strike that will earn him a place in the annals of Nigerian football. He will be sorely missed," the website wrote.



Nigeria loses $1.5bn monthly to sea pirates and fuel fraud

Amb. Michele Sison, U.S. Deputy Representative to the UN said that Nigeria is losing about 1.5 billion dollars a month to piracy, armed robbery at sea, smuggling, and fuel supply fraud.

Amb. Sison, made this known in New York at the UN Security Council Open Debate on Peace Consolidation in West Africa with the theme “Piracy and Armed Robbery at Sea in the Gulf of Guinea.’’

Sison said illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing also generate a sizable income loss in the hundreds of millions of dollars a year, for many countries and communities that depend on this sector to survive.

She disclosed that earlier this month on April 11 at 7.56 p.m., pirates attacked a cargo vessel off the coast of Nigeria, adding that the pirates waited for darkness before ambushing the vessel and boarded with force.

“The captain and crew sounded the alarm and hid in a protected space on the ship only to discover when they emerged the following day that two of their crew were missing. A second officer from the Philippines and an electrician from Egypt; both are still missing.

“This was neither the first pirate attack of the year, nor even the first attack that day. Earlier on April 11, the very same day, pirates had attacked a Turkish cargo ship off the coast of Nigeria, kidnapping six of the crew, including the vessel’s captain.

“Those men are also still missing. Piracy and armed robbery in the Gulf of Guinea are increasing at an alarming rate, with some industry experts recording at least 32 attacks off the coast of Nigeria alone in 2016, affecting many Member States, including the U.S.

“The economic consequences for the people of the region are devastating. According to a Chatham House report, as much as 400,000 barrels of crude oil are stolen each day in the Gulf of Guinea,’’ she said.

She added: “We have spoken many times in this chamber about the root causes of piracy, ineffective governance structures, weak rule of law, precarious legal frameworks and inadequate naval, coast guard, and maritime law enforcement.

“The absence of an effective maritime governance system in particular hampers freedom of movement in the region, disrupts trade and economic growth, and facilitates environmental crimes.

“We have also acknowledged in our resolutions and in the presidential statement adopted this morning that the solution to these root causes lies in greater African stewardship of maritime safety and security at the continental, regional, and Member State level.

“Strong political will from African governments and leaders is needed to pursue and prosecute crimes at all levels within criminal enterprises”.

She explained that maritime crime flourishes under ineffective or complicit governance structures, but was diminished when rule of law was effective.

She decried the absence of African ownership and action from national and local governments to tackle maritime security challenges, stressing that there was little reason to believe that attacks in the Gulf of Guinea would decline.

She acknowledged the Yaoundé Summit documents, which articulated a comprehensive view of maritime safety and security, including combating illegal fishing; trafficking of arms, people, drugs, and maritime pollution.

She commended the UN offices of West and Central Africa for providing capacity building and technical assistance to governments in the region as well as sub-regional organizations, including the Gulf of Guinea Commission, the Economic Community of Central African States, ECCAS, and the Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS.

Sison called on the Member States of the regional and sub-regional organisations to make the Inter regional Coordination Centre fully operational.

According to her, the U.S. was doing its part to support the efforts of its African partners in the Gulf of Guinea, stressing that the U.S. approach was based on three guiding principles: the prevention of attacks, the response to acts of maritime crime, and enhancing maritime security and governance.

“On prevention, we are supporting ECOWAS and ECCAS efforts to strengthen regional maritime strategies, including the completion of their Memorandum of Understanding and Code of Conduct for Central and West Africa.

“We are also encouraging nations to fully implement the Yaoundé Code of Conduct and the 2050 AU African Integrated Maritime Strategy.

“We encourage states in the region to further enhance security by establishing pilot maritime Zone ‘E’ covering the coasts of Nigeria, Niger, Benin, and Togo, an area where the majority of attacks occur,” she added.

She said that the establishment of the Zone, would provide the means for an integrated approach to coordinating joint patrols, naval drills, training programs, and intelligence sharing among the naval forces of countries in the zone.

Commenting on acts of maritime crime, she said, the U.S. trains, equips, and conducts exercises and operations with African maritime forces through its African Partnership Station.

To enhance maritime security and governance, she added that the U.S. is assisting with strengthening the judicial sectors of Gulf of Guinea nations and regional capacity to address impunity for piracy and related maritime crime.

She also said that Technical assistance helps these countries put in place the necessary criminal laws to effectively prosecute armed robbery at sea and piracy cases.

Sison underscored the importance of a comprehensive regional approach to addressing maritime insecurity. Adding that a comprehensive approach would help to reduce the loss of national revenue, support socioeconomic development and expand environmental protection in the region.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Video - Crackdown on illegal buildings in Lagos, Nigeria




It's not just Nairobi that's plagued by poor building controls. Lagos in Nigeria is struggling with similar problems. And there, the state governor also has vowed to crackdown.

Video - Jobless in Nigeria to benefit from government stipend




Nigeria's presidency has announced that will provide a stipend to 1 M of the most vulnerable Nigerians. In a statement, the authorities said the 5000 Naira stipend, which is worth worth about $ 25 at the official rate, and $ 15 at black market rates, will be implemented by World Bank and the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation.

Kidnapped former Minister rescued

A former minister and senator, Iyabo Anisulowo, who has kidnapped Wednesday in Ogun State has regained her freedom.

Police said on Tuesday evening that Mrs. Anisulowo was rescued at Gbegbelawo village, a suburb of Olorunda town, located in Yewa North local government of the state.

The Ogun State Command Public Relations Officer, Muyiwa Adejobi, told PREMIUM TIMES that the 65-year-old was rescued at about 7.00pm.

He said two suspected kidnappers were arrested during the rescue operation.

Mrs. Anisulowo was abducted six days ago while returning from her farm in Sawonjo in Yewa South local government area of the state.

Her kidnappers demanded N200million as ransom, while the Nigeria Police offered a N5 million reward for information leading to the former minister's rescue.

Details of how the former minister regained her freedom are yet unclear.



Nigeria begins oil production in Lagos

A Nigerian firm has said it has started oil production from an offshore field in the commercial city of Lagos, the first output outside the country’s oil hub in the Niger delta. 

“Yinka Folawiyo Petroleum Co. Ltd (YFP) is pleased to announce that it has commenced production of crude oil from its Aje field located in block OML 113 offshore Lagos,” it said late Tuesday. 

YFP did not disclose the volume of current output from the field but said the company has capacity to produce 40,000 barrels per day. 

“Oil produced from the Aje field will be stored on the Front Puffin which has production capacity of 40,000 barrels of oil per day and storage capacity of 750,000 barrels,” it added in a statement. 

Production began after more than 25 years of exploratory, appraisal and developmental activities in the field, making Lagos — Nigeria’s commercial capital — an oil-producing state. 

Nigeria’s oil and gas industry is concentrated in the southern delta states but the region has been dogged by unrest and disruption from militants demanding a fairer share of revenue. Pipeline attacks and illegal refining or “bunkering” as it is called locally have hit output, which is currently estimated at about 1.8 million barrels a day, according to OPEC. 

Nigeria is reliant on oil revenue for its economy but crude earnings have been depleted drastically since the slump in global prices that started in mid-2014.

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Video - Workers in Nigeria demand increase in minimum wage




As the International Labour Day was being marked around the world, in Nigeria, workers rallied around a demand to raise the country's minimum wage by nearly 300%. In Abuja, the seat of the country's central government, thousands of workers and government officials added their voices to the call for a drastic shift in Nigeria's minimum wage policy.

Nigeria loses $15bn in arms procurement fraud

Nigeria's Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has accused the previous administration of stealing some $15 billion (13 billion euros) of public money through fraudulent arms deals.

Osinbajo said the huge sum was “lost... to fraudulent and corrupt practices in... security equipment spending during the last administration”, according to a statement released by his office on Tuesday.

The figure is more than half of Nigeria's current foreign exchange reserves of $27 billion, he said on Monday in a speech in the southwestern city of Ibadan.

President Muhammadu Buhari took office in May last year vowing to crack down on endemic corruption and impunity in government and has set about bringing offenders to book.

The most high-profile figure arrested and charged so far is Sambo Dasuki, who was national security advisor under Buhari's predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan.

Dasuki is accused of diverting money earmarked for military procurement to fund Jonathan's presidential election campaign, in bogus arms deals totalling billions of dollars.

Former chief of defence staff Alex Badeh is also on trial, accused of fraudulently diverting $19.8 million from salaries meant for service personnel for his own use.

Buhari has previously complained that Jonathan's administration left government coffers “virtually empty”, worsening economic difficulties caused by a slump in global oil prices.

Information Minister Lai Mohammed said in January that just 55 people stole some $6.7 billion in public funds between 2006 and 2013.

Buhari, a former army general and military ruler, has vowed to recover “mind-boggling” sums of cash stolen by the corrupt elite over decades.

Osinbajo said there would be consequences for the corrupt and that “no public officer can steal the resources of this country and expect to escape”.

Instead of shamelessly stealing public funds with impunity, Nigeria's elite needed to set an example.

“Society fails when the elite abdicates its role,” the vice-president added.

Monday, May 2, 2016

Video - Real Estate booming in North East Nigeria after Boko Haram retreat



Property prices are booming in northeast Nigeria where Boko Haram fighters have been forced to retreat.

There's a scramble for land and homes in the city of Maiduguri, where homeowners who've already bought at cheap rates are enjoying the rewards.

Video - Nigerian army targets Boko Haram stronghold in Sambisa forest




The Nigerian Army has set out to destroy all camps and hideouts of members of Boko Haram in Sambisa forest, the sect's stronghold. The country's Minister of Defense, Mansur Dan'ali said the troops are now at the verge of entering the forest to flush out the insurgents terrorizing some states in the northeast. He said tremendous success had been recorded in the fight against Boko Haram since the beginning of the present administration. The Nigerian government said in December 2015 that Boko Haram had been technically defeated and was no longer capable of conventional warfare, instead resorting to guerrilla attacks on soft targets.

Video - 359 police officers killed on duty over the past 2 years




A new report indicates that 359 policemen were killed on duty in Nigeria between January 2014 and April 2016. Nigeria's police chief said 272 policemen sustained various degrees of injuries within the same period.He added that police personnel required diverse skills to tackle modern crimes, especially since criminal elements are arming themselves with more sophisticated weapons. The killing of police personnel had steadily been on the rise since 2009 due to terrorist attacks by Boko Haram insurgents in the North-East.

Video - Nigeria might ditch costly fuel subsidy




Nigeria could ditch fuel subsidies in favour of private sector led fuel supply. The country's spending billions on subsidized fuel. And the head of the national oil company says it's simply too expensive.

Nigerian police deploy 2 helicopters to search for kidnapped former Education Minister

The Nigeria Police Force has deployed two helicopters to Ogun State to help in the rescue of a kidnapped former education minister, Iyabo Anisulowo.

The spokesperson of the police in Ogun, Muyiwa Adejobi, said the helicopters will help in ensuring the Mrs. Anisulowo is rescued alive.

The former minister and senator was abducted on Wednesday while returning from her farm in Sawonjo, Yewa South Local Government Area of Ogun State.

PREMIUM TIMES had exclusively reported how the kidnappers demanded a N200 million ransom to set her free.

Mr. Adejobi, who briefed journalists on the rescue effort, said the helicopters arrived Ogun State on Saturday and were already being used to patrol suspected hideouts of the kidnappers. He said high profile police chiefs led by the Assistant Inspector General of Police, Zone 2 Command, Bala Hassan, were part of the rescue efforts.

The Ogun State Police Commissioner, Abdulmajid Ali, who spoke on behalf of the rescue team, said all efforts would be made to ensure she is rescued alive and her abductors arrested.


Panama Papers reveals secret assets of Chairman of Etisalat Nigeria

A portion of the wealth owned by former Chairman of the United Bank for Africa (UBA), Hakeem Belo-Osagie, is domiciled in trusts and shell companies in some notorious tax havens around the world, with some in Jersey in the Channel Islands, PREMIUM TIMES can authoritatively report today.

The Channel Islands are a tax haven and an archipelago in the English Channel, off the French Coast of Normandy.

Mr. Belo-Osagie, now Chairman of Etisalat Nigeria, was listed by Forbes Magazine as the 41st richest man in Africa with a net worth of $600 million as at November 2014.

One of the tax-haven Trusts in Jersey is known as the Belo-Osagie Trust 2 which actually is a front office for a shell company called Clerkenwell Management Limited.

The relationships of these two entities and other offshore subsidiaries are buried in a complex layers of secrecy.

This information came to the fore as PREMIUM TIMES continued to scrutinise the over 11 million Mossack Fonseca documents contained in the sleaze dossier now known worldwide as the Panama Papers.

Documents show that Clerkenwell Management Limited is "an entity 100% owned by the Belo-Osagie Trust 2 (the "Trust")".

However, Mr. Belo-Osagie is not listed as a trustee. The trustee of this Trust is a company named Chesham Limited which registered office is given as 13 Castle Street, St. Helier, Jersey JE4 5UT, Channel Islands.

Chesham Limited was incorporated in Jersey on September 7, 2007, with registered number 98642.

It has as its directors Charles Guy Malet de Carteret, Christopher John Blunt, Hugh Duncan Cathcart, Simon Paul Alan Brewer and Wendy Joy Burnett. These people appear to be nominee directors.

In tax havens arrangement, nominee directors are usually used as fronts for beneficial owners of entities.

Mr. Belo-Osagie "of 21 Ikoyi Crescent, Ikoyi Lagos Island, Nigeria" is listed in the documents as the settlor of the Trust .

The Etisalat chairman and his Ghanaian wife, Myma, are named as beneficiaries of the Trust.

But in a convoluted and confusing legal arrangements, the same documents which described the couple as "settlor" and "beneficiaries", state that Mr. Belo-Osagie and his wife "are not direct owners and are members of a discretionary class of beneficiaries. The ultimate controlling party is the Trustee (Chesham Limited)." That kind of arrangement and claim, PREMIUM TIMES has found, are in line with offshore shell companies practices where things are never straightforward.

Former Nigerian ambassador Hamzat Ahmadu passes away at 92

One of the nation's exemplary diplomats, Amb. Hamzat Ahmadu, died yesterday at a private hospital in Lagos.

It was learnt from family sources that prayers for the deceased and interment would be performed this morning by 10:00 a.m. at the Sultan's Palace, in Sokoto, according to Islamic rites.

Reacting to the news of the death, the Governor of Sokoto State, Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, described Ahmadu as an accomplished diplomat and technocrat.

Tambuwal also described him as peace-loving and committed family man who gave invaluable contributions to the unity and development of Nigeria.

"As an elder statesman, his wise counsel served both the older and younger generation of leaders not only in Sokoto, but in Nigeria as a whole," a statement from the Governor's Office by Malam Imam Imam, quoted Tambuwal as saying.

Ahmadu, who until his death was a consultant to the Editorial Board of The Guardian , started his working career with the Nigerian Secretariat, Kaduna Provincial Office, Kano and Lugard Hall, Northern Nigerian Legislature Kaduna, before he proceeded to the United Kingdom for further studies.

Ahmadu rejoined the Colonial Administrative Service at the end of his studies in 1958 and served as Private Secretary to the Premier of Northern Nigerian Foreign Service.

It is of note that besides his diplomatic postings, Ahmadu had the distinction of serving as Principal Secretary to three of Nigeria's Heads of State, Major Gen. Aguiyi-Ironsi, Gen. Yakubu Gowon and Murtala Muhammed (1966-1975).

On July 20, 1987, he was appointed Ambassador Extraordinary & Plenipotentiary to the United States of America. As one of Nigeria's most senior Foreign Service Officers, Ahmadu had a most distinguished diplomatic career of serving as Ambassador to the then USSR (Soviet Union) and the then German Democratic Republic (1975-1978); Ambassador to the Kingdom of Netherlands (1978-1981); and Ambassador to the Republic of the Cameroun (1982-1984), and High Commissioner to the Commonwealth of the Bahamas. He also had diplomatic postings to London and Bonn.

He played a major role in formulating, managing and implementing Nigeria's foreign policy, having served as Permanent Secretary and Head of the Diplomatic Service (1986-1987); Director-General of African Affairs (1984-1985); Director-General of Protocol (1981-1982); Director, Asia Division (1965-1966); and Director of Africa, Consular and Treaties Division (1964-1966).

Amb. Ahmadu was married and had children. His hobbies included reading .He spoke English and Arabic and was conversant with German and French.

Friday, April 29, 2016

Harry Redknapp might be Nigeria's new Super Eagles coach

The Super Eagles appointed Salisu Yusuf as interim manager this week to take charge of two upcoming friendlies against Mali in Paris on May 27 and Luxembourg on June 1.

But former Tottenham boss Redknapp has been approached to take over the national side full time.

A source close to the team revealed he could be named as the next permanent manager within a few days.

The role is widely seen as the biggest job in African football.

Redknapp is largely untested at international level after narrowly missing out on the England job to Roy Hodgson.

Last month Redknapp, 69, finished a two-game deal managing Jordan – reportedly a favour for the country's FA president Prince Ali bin al-Hussein.

Now Redknapp is free to prepare for Nigeria's opening African Cup of Nations qualifier in September.

Derby appointed Redknapp as an adviser earlier this year – but the ex-West Ham and QPR boss has said he did not want the job full time.

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Video - Nigerian sportswear entrepreneur competing with imported labels




A Nigerian entrepreneur is challenging traditional but imported sports apparel labels. Owu Sportswear is an indigenous Nigerian brand that creates apparel for local teams. The company is fast becoming the preferred sportswear brand amongst professional football clubs providing a cheaper, more affordable alternative to brands like Nike and Adidas.

Former Nigerian Minister of Education kidnapped

A former Minister of State for Education, Iyabo Anisulowo, has been kidnapped.

Mrs. Anisulowo was abducted late Wednesday in Ilaro in Yewa South local government area of Ogun State, police said.

The spokesperson for the state police command, Muyiwa Adejobi, confirmed the incident to PREMIUM TIMES at about 10pm Wednesday.

He said the police commissioner had deployed five teams to rescue the former minister.

Mrs. Ashimolowo was minister of state for education during the regime of late Sani Abacha. She later became a senator representing Ogun West Senatorial District. She is also a former governorship candidate in Ogun State.

”The Ogun State police command is aware of the kidnapping of Senator Iyabo Anisulowo in Ilaro area today around 6pm. The Commissioner of Police Ogun State CP Abdulmajid Ali has detailed five teams to the area to rescue her unhurt,” Mr. Adejobi said in a statement.

“The special Anti-Robbery Squad SARS, and Anti-Kidnapping Squad Commanders have been sent to the area by the CP to rescue the senator and apprehend the perpetrators. We have also embarked on scientific investigation of the matter,” he said.

The command, however, gave assurance that the kidnapped top politician would be rescued, with a call on residents of the state to give adequate support to the authority.

“We therefore assure the general public particularly the good people and Government of Ogun State that the kidnapped victim will be rescued very soon unhurt. We appeal to Nigerians and people of Ogun State to support the police command with useful information to assist the police,” Mr. Adejobi said.

President Buhari orders crackdown on cattle raiders

Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered the security forces to crack down on cattle raiders accused of killing hundreds of people this year.

Soldiers and police would "go after the groups terrorising innocent people all over the country", he said.

The raids are seen as the biggest security threat facing Nigeria after the Islamist-led insurgency.

Nomadic herders from the Fulani ethnic group and farming communities often clash for control of land and water.

The announcement comes after national outrage over the killing of at least 20 people on Monday in a raid on the Ukpabi Nimbo community in south-eastern Enugu State.

In a statement, Mr Buhari said he deeply sympathised with those who had lost their lives.

He had ordered Nigeria's army and police chiefs to "secure all communities under attack by herdsmen", Mr Buhari added.

"This government will not allow these attacks to continue," the president said.

In February, about 300 people were killed and tens of thousands left homeless in a tit-for-tat raid in central Benue state, local media reported.

Homes, food stores and churches were also destroyed, reports said.

More than 1, 200 people were killed in 2014 by different groups of Fulani herders, according to the Global Terrorism Index.

The Fulanis are believed to be largest semi-nomadic group in the world and are mainly based in West and Central Africa.

In Nigeria, there are two types: The semi-nomadic herders and those who live in the city.

Unlike the more integrated city dwellers, the nomadic groups spend most of their lives in the bush and are the ones largely involved in these clashes.

They herd their animals across vast dry hinterlands, something that often puts them at odds with many communities, especially farmers who accuse them of damaging their crops.

However, the Fulanis have sometimes been attacked and have their animals stolen by bandits, prompting reprisal attacks.

The conflict has been going on for about two decades, but following the upsurge in attacks this year the government is under increasing pressure to take steps to curb it.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Video - Nigeria struggling to treat malaria in remote areas




Africa's most populous nation, Nigeria, has over the years been working hard to contain the spread of malaria. But Nigeria struggles with treating the disease in more remote areas.

Nigerian professor becomes first African scholar to lecture at the University of London

A Nigerian academic, Professor Abiodun Alao, will today deliver inaugural lecture at King’s College, University of London, making him the first black African scholar to deliver such lecture since the institution was established in 1829.

Alao, a professor of African Studies, was conferred with professorial title about two years ago alongside his Nigerian counterpart in the institution’s African Leadership Centre, Prof. Funmi Olonisakin, making them first black Africans to attain professorial cadre at the institution since its establishment. 

The appointments have been confirmed in a letter by the institution’s President and Principal, Prof. Edward Byrne AC, justifying their elevations based on their contributions to African peace and security. According to a statement obtained by Vanguard yesterday, Alao had published several single-authored books, well-researched journal articles and occasional papers, among others, which findings and recommendations “have largely helped establish peace and boost security in many African countries.”

In an institution that produced 12 Nobel Laureates among its professors, the statement said Alao had distinguished himself, citing about 100 widely recognized 100 academic articles and encyclopedia entries he had published, all of which were assessed to accord him professorial title. As an academic tradition globally, the statement said the Nigerian academic would today deliver his inaugural lecture, titled, “Africa: A Voice to be Heard, Not a Problem to be Solved” at the Edward Safra Lecture Theatre at the college’s main campus. 

The statement said the inaugural lecture, holding at the institution’s Edward Lecture Theatre on the Strand, “will be attended by many people from different parts of the world, including from the United States, Australia, Kenya, South Africa and Nigeria.” Aside his academic contributions, Alao joined the long list of globally renowned academics the institution had produced and whose research works had produced answers to different challenges of humanity and society since its establishment. 

The statement pointed diverse assignments Alao had undertaken for international institution, which include the United Nations (UN), African Union (AU), European Union (EU), World Bank, ECOWAS and for many individual countries in Africa and beyond. It added that Alao was part of the 4-person team that undertook “a comprehensive threat assessment for Rwanda immediately after the 1994 genocide and was on the team of academic experts that advised former UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan on the civil war in Sierra Leone. “He also co-authored the Concept Note for the Common Defence and Security Policy for the Africa Union and was the co-author of the first post-Civil War National Security Strategy Framework for Liberia. 

He was a member of the team that worked on the Development of Donor Countries Effectiveness in Fragile States, the statement said. Ranking among the top 20 universities in the world, King’s College London holds a unique position in global scholarship, which the statement said, was evident in the landmark research works the institution’s professors and alumni had conducted since its establishment several decades ago. 

Among its landmark research works, the statement cited the research that led to the discovery of the famous genetic testing, DNA undertaken at the College by Prof. Maurice Wilkins, while another retired scholar of the institution, Prof. John Lister, developed Antiseptic Surgery. It cited the researches of Prof. Charles Wheatstone, who “invented the first working telegraphs line and Prof. James Maxwell, who began humanity’s first steps towards a unified theory of physics by bringing magnetism and electricity together in a research that paved way for radio, television, radar and mobile phones. “The College also has among its former Professors, Thomas Hodgkin, who discovered the Hodgkin disease that was named after him and John Danrell who invented the world’s first battery,” the statement added.

Vanguard

Former Nigerian MP sentenced to 154 years in jail for corruption

A court in Nigeria has sentenced a former local MP to 154 years in jail for corruption and money laundering.

Gabriel Daudu, from central Kogi State, was found guilty of 77 charges, Nigeria's anti-corruption body says.

But the judge ruled that the sentences would run concurrently, meaning Dauda will only spend two years in jail.

Corruption is endemic in Nigeria and so far the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has only managed to secure a handful of convictions.

President Muhammadu Buhari won elections last year, promising to tackle the problem.

A number of prominent officials from the previous government have been arrested and put on trial, but some accuse the president of only targeting the opposition.

The EFCC says Mr Daudu, who was put on trial in 2010, was involved in laundering about $7m (Ј5m).

Delivering the judgement in Kogi state capital, Lokoja, Justice Inyang Ekwo said the persecution had "proved its case beyond every reasonable doubt", the EFCC said in a statement.

It is not immediately clear whether Dauda will appeal against the ruling and whether any of the stolen money was recovered.