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Niger State Government To Dualise Tunga-Round About To Imani Hospital Junction For About N1.3Billion

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Niger State Government has approved the dualization of 2.4km Tunga-Round-About to Imani Hospital Road junction at the cost of over N1.2b.

This was made known during post-Executive Council Briefing held at Government House Minna.

The commissioner for Works and Infrastructure, Ibrahim Mohammed Panti, explained that council agreed that the contract for the project will be awarded immediately and would be completed within 18 dry months to reduce the heavy traffic being witnessed on the road.

The council while noting that roads and provision of electricity play vital roles in the standard of living of the people also decided that some other six roads be approved for construction in addition to the ongoing construction projects ongoing in Kontagora.

The council also noted that the role of infrastructure is compelling which is the reason the present administration is poised to deliver on infrastructure to the people.

Journalists were informed of some of the resolutions reached, during the council meeting, council directed Ministry of Commerce and Investment to set up a committee that will checkmate the activities of microfinance banks in the State for effectiveness and efficiency.

Ministry of Investment also presented a memo proposing for investment attraction with a Canadian trade development partner, as well as approved the review of procurement advertisement under open competitive bidding in the state.

This council means, that any contract under any ministry has to go through procurement processes.

Council then constituted a committee for the smooth and effective running of the government and the committee is expected to come up with a robust strategic plan for the state agricultural sector.

The committee has the Secretary to the State government, Alh. Ahmed Ibrahim Matane as the Chairman while Commissioners of Agriculture, Investment and Planing are to serve as members.

Gov. Diri Signs Amended Procurement Bill, Two Others Into Law

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Bayelsa State Governor, Senator Douye Diri, on Thursday, signed into law three bills passed by the state House of Assembly.

They are the Public Procurement Amendment Bill, Fiscal Responsibility Amendment Bill and the Debt Management Office Bill.

With the signing of the bills into law, Bayelsa is now among states in Nigeria that adhere to the International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS).

While signing the bills, the governor was quoted in a statement by his Acting Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Alabrah, that the laws would check the excesses of those saddled with the responsibility of procurement in government’s Ministries, Department and Agencies (MDAs).

His words: “The Public Procurement Law at the federal level came into existence in 2007. As a member of the Public Procurement Committee in the House of Representatives, there was so much that was exposed by that committee.

“Before the Public Procurement Law was enacted, the United Nations observed that for every one naira spent in Nigeria, about 60 kobo was being wasted.”

The governor stressed that an effective procurement system cannot be achieved without transparency and the active participation of the citizens in the budgetary process.

He added: “It is very necessary to bring out a bill that will check the wastefulness and excesses of those who are in charge of procurement because this is going to be a warning to all of us who are involved in the procurement processes.

“You must adhere strictly to the amendment that has been signed into law today. And this is to safeguard even those involved in the procurement processes. This would check wasteful expenditures if we keep to all the rules and all the regulations of the amended public procurement law.”

He commended the lawmakers for painstakingly deliberating on the bills.

“Let me commend the state assembly for being workaholics and for being committed to serving the people that elected you. The spirit with which you passed the 2020 budget is the same spirit with which you have passed this three amendment bills.

Earlier, the Speaker, Rt. Hon. Abraham Ingobere, assured the governor of the commitment of the House to the well-being of people of the state.

He said the legislative arm would continue to work hand in hand with the executive in order to accelerate the socio-economic growth of the state.

Ingobere disclosed that the House received the executive bill on May 13, 2020 and it was able to conclude the process within seven days.

“We carefully studied the bill, the amendment section and it is in the best interest of the state,” he said.

COVID-19: Gov Diri Lifts Ban On Burials In Bayelsa, Releases Guidelines

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Gov. Douye Diri of Bayelsa on Thursday lifted the ban on funerals with stringent COVID-19 protocols as a measure to decongest mortuaries in the state.

Diri had in an Executive Order aimed at containing the spread of the Coronavirus, outlawed social activities like marriages, burials and social gatherings.

Diri who announced the approval on Thursday during a meeting of the Bayelsa COVID-19 Task Force which he chaired, directed the mortuaries to get an undertaking from residents to comply with the COVID-19 protocols.

According to the governor, such burials must be conducted without attracting crowds and devoid of receptions, adding that those who insist on conducting burials the usual way should wait till the COVID-19 pandemic is over.

“The approval is subject to obtaining of guarantees and undertaking from families willing to bury relatives to ensure strict compliance with protocols for COVID-19 prevention, avoiding crowd and observing social distancing.

“Anyone who insists on conducting burials with overnight and daylight parties with ‘Owoigiri Dances’ should wait until the Coronovirus leaves us,” Diri said

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) the approval was sequel to requests by public medical institutions in the state to the government to avert a crisis situation.

Dr Alawode Kehinde, a Consultant Pathologist, Federal Medical Centre, Yenagoa had in an interview with NAN, appealed to the Bayelsa government to lift the restriction on burials as the mortuary was filled to capacity.

Kehinde said that the hospital had written to Gov. Diri to relax the restriction on burials to allow people to evacuate corpses.

According to him, if the request is granted, such burials will be done under strict compliance to social distancing and other COVID-19 prevention protocols.

He said that the morgue could no longer admit new corpses in the past week, reached its full capacity following the executive order restraining burials to check the spread of the Coronavirus in the state.

He also said that when heavy rains set in, it would be extremely difficult for burials given the swampy topography of the state.

Kehinde, however, allayed the fears of mass burial of corpses in the FMC Morgue, adding that the hospital was aware of the present circumstances faced by the people as a result of COVID-19.

He said for those who were supposed to have evacuated corpses but were unable to, due to the restraining order, might get a concessionary discount on payable fee.

(NAN)

Worgu Boms’ Verbal Assault Against Amaechi, Signs Of Mental Breakdown – Eze

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……He’s bitten the very finger that fed and nurtured him to limelight and his case is irredeemable
……a bitter little man who has failed at his calling as a lawyer and AG.
……Counsels him on how to seek appointment from Wike

Freedom of expression is one of the fundamental rights we have in Nigeria, however, that right should neither be misconstrued nor abused; it should be exercised accordingly.

Freedom of expression simply put is the right a citizen has to express his opinions on Social, economic and political issues. It can also be said to be the right to criticize given undesirable events with the view to restoring sanity in society.

Perhaps, it was this very right that the former Rivers Attorney-General and Justice Commissioner under the administration of Amaechi, Worgu Boms, attempted to exercise in his recent ironic and satire-filled piece, laced with mean pusillanimity and sheer jeremiad against the Hon. Minister for Transportation and his major benefactor, Rt. Hon. Chibuike Amaechi. His diatribe has continued to attract severe condemnation from people of conscience.

In a statement made available to media houses, Chief Eze Chukwuemeka Eze described Mr. Boms as an ingrate haunted by his sense of ingratitude to a man who raised him from the pit of nothingness to public recognition, opulence and political stardom.

Eze pointed out that each time former information commissioner in the state, Austin Tam-George, criticizes his former boss and governor of Rivers State, Gov Wike’s aides usually condemned him on grounds of the moral and ethical requirement that an aide must not speak against his former boss. “It is surprising that these same aides encourage those who were raised into public relevance and opulence by the Rt Hon Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi such as Magnus Abe, Igo Aguma and Worgu Boms to daily insult him”.

Eze, an erstwhile National Publicity Secretary of the defunct New Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP) and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress, expressed disappointment over Mr. Boms continued public exhibition of thankfullessness, stressing that the former Attorney-General is grossly worthless in character and defective in reasoning.

Dismissing Boms diatribe as merely infelicitous, the party chieftain stressed that his defence of Gov. Wike can be easily fathomed: it may be that the erstwhile Justice Commissioner is on a ‘favour shopping’, attracting undue attention to himself, possibly to be considered as a replacement for Late Simeon Nwakaudu, Gov. Wike’s Senior Special Assistant on Electronic Media, who died just few days ago.

Eze describes Mr. Boms as embodiment of ingratitude and recalls with nostalgia why Wike had always boasted, during the battle between him and Amaechi, that he was always one step ahead of Amaechi in his strategy knowing every move Amaechi wants to take before he even takes it just because of the likes of wicked agents like Worgu Boms who was feeding him with all that Amaechi was doing. Nothing can be worse than ones lawyer/chief legal adviser romancing with the enemy. This fact was the reason why Boms stated that Amaechi would have been sacked if the Court was opened for one day but God frustrated his plot against a man who lifted him from his inglorious past.

Eze further stated that it was Wike who assisted Boms to be the NBA Chairman but was the first to betray Wike when the State wanted to appoint his Wife a Judge but Amaechi in his usual magnanimity later prevailed and appointed Wike’s wife as a Judge in the State to the dismay of Mr. Boms

Although Mr. Boms deserves some compensation for his undisputable contributions towards the emergence of the PDP and Gov. Wike to the detriment of APC and the people of Rivers State but he remains grossly unfit to replace Nwakaudu, given his poor intellectual habitude and leaning.

Counselling Mr. Boms to keep mute on issues concerning the Transportation Minister and the Rivers APC, Chief Eze tasked Boms to concentrate and exert more energy in his pursuit of reward from Gov. Wike, on whose soil he has sowed bountifully and wherein lies his harvest but revealed that Mr. Boms is a disgrace to humanity that even Wike that he is currently courting will never give him any appointment knowing him very well.

Eze recalled that under Boms as Rivers Attorney-General and Justice Commissioner, the Ministry faired poorly and the justice delivery system was in a mess save the intervention of Rt. Hon. Amaechi. He described Boms as a fantastic example of an incompetent workman during his days in the Ministry of Justice.

Eze further recalls that it was Boms that engineered the closure of the courts during his infamous term as Attorney General of Rivers State and supported the bid to stop Daisy Okocha from being sworn in as a CJ after approval by the NJC and he took volumes of pages in National dailies casting NJC, OCJ and anybody who have contrary view. It is sad that Boms has diminished himself so much that he can now being graded among men that cannot defend their actions or stand by it therrby eating their vomit.

Eze highlighted that Boms has no electoral value back home here in Port Harcourt where he was appointed the Leader of the party. A one chance man, an opportunist, noise maker seeking for favour from Gov.Wike who should bury his face in shame for all the dark roles he played during his tenure as AG.

Eze maintained that the former Attorney-General was never deserving of an appointment, considering his political irrelevance and electoral worthlessness in his unit, but was highly favoured and ought to be full of praises to Rt. Hon. Chibuike Amaechi, whose magnanimity brought him to limelight despite his numerous deficiencies.”

Eze noted thus; “All the same, any man that bites the finger that fed him, or any aide that wants to relocate his loyalty by openly insulting and denigrating his former boss is never given Grade A trust by the new master. In the spy world, such agents are seen as double dealers and will never be trusted. They can only be used and dumped. They are often eliminated after being used by their new master.”

Fire Outage At NIPOST Headquarters Effectively Contained – Franklin Alao

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The Posting and Industrial Relations Unit of the Human Resource Division of NIPOST Corporate Headquarters gutted by fire at 8:35am was effectively contained.

In a press release signed by the General Manager, Corporate Communications
Nigerian Postal Service, Franklin Alao, he said that the smoke that snowballed into the fire was first noticed coming from the window of the office of at the second floor of the building.

Also further said that the Nigerian Fire Service was quickly contacted and the officials responded immediately arriving after the fire started.

“The fire was contained just in the only office where it started without spreading to any other part of the adjoining offices.

“Normalcy has indeed been restored.There is no cause for alarm over the fire incident.

“We commend men of the Federal Fire Service who responded promptly and contained the fire into just one office.

“We equally thank Nigerians from all walks of life for their concern over the incident, the statement concluded.

For Comrade James Crentsil

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By Edwin Madunagu

When my mobile telephone rang around 4 a.m. on Wednesday, April 15, 2020, I knew, before checking it, what news I would receive: the death, at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH), of James Kolawole Kwame Crentsil, popularly known as Comrade James Crentsil in and outside Calabar and in and outside the Nigerian Socialist Movement. He died at the age of 63, a unique member of the set of classical “cadres” or “foot-soldiers” of the post-Civil War Calabar socialist formation.

The general and particular meanings of these key defining terms –”cadre”, “foot-soldier”, “classical” and “unique” – will become implicitly clear in the course of this composite but brief tribute to Comrade James Crentsil and, through him, to the Calabar Group of Socialists and the Nigerian Left, both of which he served with uncommon faith and exemplary dedication for more than 35 years. Like most of us, the surviving members of the Old Guard of the Nigerian Left, Comrade James Crentsil, though younger than our average age, had been aging and ailing for quite some time, long before the present pandemic.

Students of history of modern revolutions will recall that at the beginning of the 20th century, a fierce debate on party formation arose in the communities of exiled Marxist revolutionaries in Europe, particularly the Russian exiles in central and western Europe. The debate was around the most appropriate type of organization that was demanded by the socialist revolution that was generally believed to be fast approaching. The serious choice was between a “mass party” and a “cadre party” – a military-type formation, in concept and in operation. Of course, these were approximations because there were “cadres” in mass parties and mass participants in cadre party activities. But we are talking of essences, rules and methods.

Another crucial debate was on the first step in the socialist revolution and the exact theoretical characterization of that first step. This twin-disagreement was the main dividing line between the Bolsheviks and the Mensheviks in the Russian Marxist revolutionary movement. Be that as it may, it was the Bolsheviks, the faction led by Vladimir Lenin, which advocated cadre-party formation and actually formed one, that won the debate through its leadership of the 1917 Socialist Revolution.

In a cadre-party every member, male or female, young or old, high or low, was a “cadre” or a “foot-soldier” or at least had a definite action-based assignment – in addition to the general responsibilities of party membership. The Calabar Group of Socialists (CGS) formed in August 1977 – just like the Anti-Poverty Movement of Nigeria (APMON) and the Revolutionary Movement for the Liberation of Nigeria (REMLON) which I mentioned in my tribute to BJ and KK in January 2020 – was a grand-heir of this aspect of Leninism. In its development through the decades the Calabar Group of Socialists had to shed some of its original attributes. But it retained some, and partly retained a particular one: the cadreship (or “foot-soldiery”) phenomenon. Our departed compatriot, Comrade James Crentsil, was an eloquent statement and unique symbol of that phenomenon.

Put simply and directly: For more than 35 years and with his base in Calabar, Comrade James Crentsil remained a consistent, selfless, frontline and indeed unique “cadre” and “foot-soldier” of the Nigerian Left and the Calabar Group of Socialists. He was unique in the sense that at least in the last decade of his life he remained virtually alone in the role our history had placed him and which he neither regretted nor betrayed.

Comrade James Crentsil was not a foundation member of the Calabar Group of Socialists. The foundation members of the group included Eskor Toyo, Ebony Okpa, Bene Madunagu, Bassey Ekpo Bassey, Assim Ita and myself. James Crentsil was admitted in the first half of the 1980s in one of the big waves of mobilization and admission that characterized the first decade of the group’s existence. The waves included the “Ali Must Go” students’ protest of 1978, the celebration of Zimbabwe’s independence (1980), the May 1981 general strike, the formation of the National Democratic Movement (against fascism) (1981), with Comrade Dipo Fashina as a prominent frontline mobiliser and organizer, the National Political Debate (1986), the formation of the Cross River State-based Directorate for Literacy (DL) and Calabar-based Citizens for Community Action (CCA) (1987), and the formation of the Labour Party (1989).

At the time Comrade James Crentsil came into the Nigerian Socialist Movement through the Calabar Group of Socialists the latter had transformed from a unitary formation governed by the Leninist principle of “democratic centralism” to a formation resembling Yugoslavia’s ruling revolutionary party under Comrade President Broz Tito. Students of the history of socialist revolutions will recall that the structure of the Yugoslav party – for better or for worse – reflected (or was reflected by) Yugoslavia’s federalism and federal state structure. The transformation of the Calabar Group, a product of its own “earth-shaking” internal struggle between late 1977 and early 1978, was in two directions – partly resembling the Yugoslav experiment: a shift from “unitarism” to “federalism” and a significant relaxation of the categorical demands on cadres and “foot-soldiers”.

The uniqueness of Comrade James Crentsil in this transformation was, first, that he chose to be and remain a cadre of the Calabar Group of Socialists as a whole rather than that of one or a combination of some of the various micro-tendencies and sub-formations of the Group; and, secondly, that he also chose to remain a cadre or “foot-soldier” in the original Leninist sense of complete integration of labour for personal material sustenance and unpaid work as “cadre” or “foot-soldier” of the revolutionary movement. In this integration the latter was dominant; the latter took precedence over the former.

I shall return to the attribute sketched above because that was Comrade James’ defining character as a revolutionary socialist. But, in the meantime, I propose that just as the Nigerian Left and, following it, the Calabar Group of Socialists had “organic intellectuals” in the sense of Antonio Gramsci – a phenomenon younger Leftists justifiably celebrate – the Nigerian Left and Calabar Group of Socialists also had “organic grassroots leaders” of whom Comrade James Crentsil was a shining example. Thus, Comrade James Crentsil’s workshop as a printer in Calabar became a special, but popular operational headquarters of all tendencies and sub-formations of the Calabar Group of Socialists and all spheres of our popular-democratic struggle in which the “grassroots” were involved. And Comrade James himself remained the physical controller of this headquarters from the late 1980s until he died in Mid-April 2020.

When I returned to Calabar from The Guardian, Lagos, in September 1994, I noticed that some of the older comrades, including my spouse, Bene and Bassey Ekpo Bassey referred to, and hailed Comrade James Crentsil as “Baba Isale”, a Yourba sociocultural term which I may give a modern political translation: “grassroots leader” or “grassroots godfather”. Rather than ask for explanation, I decided to watch and see. I knew, to begin with, that the comrades could not simply be alluding to Comrade James’ Lagos-Ghana mixed parental origin. Such allusion to national or ethnic origins would be strange in the Calabar Group of Socialists and stranger still in older comrades. It did not take long for me to confirm that the name “Baba Isale” given to James by members of the Old Guard referred to his stature and role as one of our most respected and effective grassroots mobilisers in Calabar.

The conventional wisdom in all tendencies of the Calabar Group of Socialists was that if you conceive a mass political action or radical intervention you first discuss the viability with Comrade James Crentsil, the “Baba Isale”. He might then tell you, “Comrade, give me two days”. It is his preliminary report and advice at the end of that period – after he had “hit the grounds” with some other “foot-soldiers” under his “command” – that will suggest to you whether to move fast with minimum publicity or just move forward and table the idea in a group meeting or simply bury the idea – permanently or for the meantime. The movement had paid dearly whenever it violated this simple rule given to us by our own history.

In the late 1980s when the military dictatorship under General Ibrahim Babangida was executing a convoluted, strait-jacket transition-to-civil rule programme with fascist methods, Comrade James Crentsil became a member of a self-constituted Security Committee of the Nigerian Left in Calabar. The committee was not armed and did not direct any armed formation or activity. So, what did it do? Let me answer with a Nigerian proverb which may be translated thus: “A mother hen says that when she makes noise on the approach of a hawk, the purpose is not to scare away the hawk, but to alert the world to what is about to happen to her, or is happening to her”.

In like manner, the Security Committee of which Comrade James Crentsil was a prominent member was created not to confront the Nigerian state, not even to defend the Left or the masses, but to raise the alarm when a danger was apprehended. Older members of the Calabar Group of Socialists, visiting Leftists from other parts of the country, activists of the labour movement and popular-democratic organizations may recall a number of “narrow” escapes, sudden postponements of meetings, shifting of venues and disappearances of comrades during the Babangida and Abacha dictatorships. Most of these occurrences were results of alarms raised by members of the Security Committee.

Now, what factors-biographical, occupational, educational, objective and subjective – enabled Comrade James Crentsil to play the roles he played in the Nigerian Left in general and in the Calabar Group of Socialists in particular? First, James was the product, on June 10, 1956, of a union between a Ghanaian father and a Nigerian mother. Secondly, he had an all-round technical secondary education in Ghana and an all-round technical tertiary education in Nigeria (Kaduna Polytechnic) (1975-1978).

In the latter he specialized in Building and Printing technologies. Thirdly, he was somehow radicalized as a teenager both in Ghana and in Nigeria. Fourthly, he had the benefit of living in the barracks in Lagos and Kaduna after the Civil War with a maternal aunt who was an officer of the Nigerian Army. This partly explains the discipline he exhibited in private and public life. In the fifth place, with his decision to settle in Calabar from about 1980, he was spotted by a revolutionary formation, the Calabar Group of Socialists. Finally, Comrade James Crentsil was fortunate to enjoy what several comrades of his generation did not enjoy: a relatively non-turbulent family life.

In summary, how will the Nigerian Left and the Calabar Group of Socialists remember Comrade James Crentsil? What, in other words, is the essence of this tribute? The answer can be tentatively given under two broad headings: the “Highlights” of Comrade James’ revolutionary career as a “foot-soldier” and “Baba Isale”; and the “Examples” of Comrade James.

Under “highlights” we remember Comrade James’ role in workers’ participation in the 1986 national political debate in the old Cross River State which included the present Akwa Ibom State; his role in the formation and endeavours of the working class-based Directorate for Literacy which emanated from this debate; his role in the Citizens’ for Community Action (CCA), his role in the 1987/1988 non-party local government elections which the Left won in Calabar Municipality and in Biase and Obudu Local Government Areas (in central and northern parts of Cross River State respectively).

The Left creditably ran the three local governments for the periods they existed. We also recall Comrade James’ role in the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) Workshop held in Calabar in April 1989; the formation of the Labour Party (LP) later that year; Left politics during the long years of Babangida-Abacha dictatorship; the prolonged protest over the “June 12”, 1993 election annulment; and Left resistance during the Abacha-instigated coup hysteria of late 1997 to early 1998. All these were before the Fourth Republic which began in May 1999.

In the last two decades we may list the following: Comrade James Crentsil’s role in the mobilisations around the funerals (other than burials) in Calabar, of several comrades-in-arms, including Ola Oni (2000), Ita Henshaw (2004), Assim Ita (2009), Gani Fawehinmi (2009), Eskor Toyo (2016) and Eyambi Akpet (2019); and his courageous role during the state persecution, and then, personal tribulations of Comrade Bassey Ekpo Bassey in the period: (2000-2010). In all these, and more, Comrade James Crentsil rose to his fullest height as “foot-soldier” and “Baba Isale”.

Finally, what are the “Examples” of Comrade James Crentsil? These can be articulated and simply stated: Beyond his exemplary revolutionary understanding and practice of commitment, service and sacrifice; faith and loyalty; humility and proletarian taste; kindness and humanist passion; friendship, comradeship and solidarity, we may underline the immediate material implication of his being a Leninist “cadre” or “foot-soldier” of the Nigerian Left and Calabar Group of Socialists. By this I mean the implication on his material life of his decision to subject his work for family sustenance to the demands of his unpaid revolutionary duty. This particular choice of his put an absolute limit on his material comfort, talk less of personal material accumulation, however good or productive he might be as a commercial printer and all-round technician.

I was shocked, but could do only very little to ameliorate the situation, when, about a decade ago, Comrade James Crentsil told me that what he charged any comrade who brought a job to him (in his capacity as a printer, builder, electrician, plumber or mechanic) was based on “communist costing”, rather than “capitalist costing” – where the latter was at least twice as high as the former! Put differently, when Comrade James Crentsil printed a book, journal, pamphlet, calendar or programme, built a house, dug a borehole, repaired a machine or electrical fittings for a comrade he did this not as a contractor but as one of his own paid workers utilizing “unpadded” market purchases.

The critical aspect of this story is that practically everyone who brought a job to Comrade James Crentsil came as a “comrade” who should enjoy “communist costing” and for whom James should work as an ordinary worker and not as a contractor. To deepen the contradiction and worsen the situation, the many people (comrades and non-comrades) who continually made material demands on him would not, on such occasions, consider him an ordinary worker that he considered himself and who he was in objective material terms. No wonder Comrade James Crentsil died in personal material penury!

Comrade James Crentsil must have derived his concept and practice of “communist costing” from the “direct labour” and “communist” costing principles with which the Calabar Group of Socialists, through its popular-democratic formations, ran the non-party Calabar Municipal Government (under Comrade Bassey Ekpo Bassey) from March 1988 to May 1989. James served that government whose territory has since been split into three local government areas as a tireless, but unlisted, unpaid and self-effacing “cadre” and “foot-soldier” committed to our common burning desire to produce the best-run local administration in the country.

And so, it was. Comrade James Crentsil was one of the heroes of that successful Calabar experiment in Leftist governance.

Madunagu, mathematician and journalist, writes from Calabar, Cross River State, Nigeria.

House Of Reps Resolves FCT Health Workers’ Salary Delays

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The leadership of the House of Representatives has resolved the issues surrounding the delays in the payment of the salary of some health workers in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

This is according to a communiqué by Lanre Lasisi Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the Speaker, House of Representatives.

He noted that consequently, some of the health workers under the aegis of Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) and the Assembly of Healthcare Professionals would receive their salary on or before May 22, 2020, which will be Friday.

The issues were resolved at a meeting, on Wednesday, between the leadership of the House, led by Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila, and the Minister of the FCT Mohammed Musa Bello, Minister of Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, the Accountant General of the Federation, Ahmed Idris and officials of JOHESU, led by their chairperson in the FCT, Comrade Deborah Yusuf, among others.

In his remarks at the meeting, Gbajabiamila expressed dismay that some health workers in the FCT, who have been at the frontline of the fight against COVID-19, did not receive their salary and allowances since January.

The Speaker, who said he considered the meeting “extremely important because there is the potential that lives are at risk,” noted that the House would not fold its arms and watch the health workers embark on strike, as they threatened to, on May 28.

Gbajabiamila said from the information at his disposal, the issues had to do with the office of the Accountant General of the Federation, saying equity and diligence must be adhered to in dealing with such issues.

He commended the health workers for their sacrifices and patience over the past few months and assured that the House would always prioritize their welfare.

Speaking, FCT Minister, Bello, while thanking the Speaker for his intervention, said the FCT Administration had always paid salaries as and when due, but that with the introduction of the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS), they have been experiencing some hiccups.

However, he noted that following the intervention of the House leadership through the Committee on Healthcare Services, all the issues were resolved with the office of the Accountant General of the Federation.

On his part, Minister of Health, Ehanire, thanked the Speaker for the good leadership he has been providing and for championing the cause of the Nigerian masses.

Giving an update on the issue, the Accountant General of the Federation, Idris, said all issues have been resolved and that the FCT health workers would get their salary on or before May 22.

Narrating how the problem came about, he said after the FCTA approached his office for enrollment into the IPPIS sometime in 2018, over 25,000 workers of the administration were enrolled in over 12 months.

However, he said it was later discovered that more than 500 of them, mainly health workers and teachers, were not captured and that the process of capturing them was delayed due to the lockdown necessitated by COVID-19.

“As we speak, we’ve done the payroll and payment will be made on or before the 22nd of this month. Today is 20th, I can assure that they will get their salary before the 22nd,” he said.

Earlier, the chairman of the House Committee on Healthcare Services, Rep Tanko Yusuf Sununu, briefed the meeting about the actions taken by the House through his Committee, which included series of meetings with the relevant authorities since March.

The chairman of the JOHESU in FCT, Mrs Yusufu, thanked the Speaker for his intervention as well as the two ministers for their concern. She also thanked the Accountant General for the actions taken so far.

She said the Speaker has been a father to the FCT JOHESU and that he has now become an honorary member of their union, saying they were not against IPPIS, but that all they desire was for their salary and allowances to be paid on time.

Gov Abubakar Bello Signs Three Bills Into Law

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Governor Abubakar Sani Bello has signed into law three bills passed by the Niger State House of Assembly.

The bills include the Niger State Tertiary Institutions Law, with an operational date starting from the 8th of May 2019.

The new law increases the retirement age of Academic Staff of the State-owned tertiary institutions from 60 years to 65 years.

The academic staff that have attained 60 years before the commencement date of the law and in active service or employed after, shall enjoy the provision of the law.

Another bill assented to is the Legislative House (Powers and Privileges) Law 2019, which has operational date from 21st January 2020.

The law empowers the Legislators to invite any member of the public for questioning and that no criminal or civil proceeding shall be instituted against a member either in written or spoken at the plenary session or committee proceedings of the House.

Also assented to is the Niger State Water and Sewage Corporation Law, 2020 which shall come into effect from the 25th of March 2020.

The essence of the water and sewage corporation law is to achieve a sustainable water system development in the State.

Spewing The Sins Of The Spin Doctor

By Bala Ibrahim

Every profession has its own hazards, but those professions that involve talking seem to suffer more, with journalism being the biggest whipping boy. Lawyers and politicians follow suit on the ladder of such scapegoatism, as professionals that are made to bear the blame for other’s mistakes, sometimes.

A video is currently going viral, vividly vilifying Mr. Femi Adesina, the Media Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari, over an article he wrote in his column of the Saturday Sun Newspaper of July 12th 2008, I suppose. In the article, which was a reaction to the appointment of Professor Ibrahim Gambari, as the chairman of a steering committee on the Niger Delta, Mr.Adesina scoffed at Professor Gambari, for supporting the atrocities of General Sani Abacha, particularly the killing of Mr. Ken Sarowiwa, the then leader of the Ogoni people.

Strong worded terms were used in the column to castigate Professor Gambari, one time Nigeria’s Ambassador to the United Nations, and one who has assumed office this week, as Adesina’s boss. The damning wordings include, “Gambari enslaved himself to please his paymasters, now 13 years after, the shackles are still tied around his neck, threatening to asphyxiate him. What an eternal lesson for fawning bootlicking grovelers to learn. When you are sent on a slave errand, do it as freeborn”. The question begging for answer in the video is, Would Femi Adesina be the new fawning bootlicking groveler to Professor Gambari?

That brings us to the issue of professional job hazard, with particular bias to the job of a spin doctor, who has a historical precedent of being a public commentator. As columnist or public commentator, concerns are always raised about contemporary issues, and you are called upon to comment. Sometimes the views may not necessarily be yours, they may be sold to you by politicians, captains of industry or the academics. What is important is for you to do justice to the issue, by making sure your comments do not constitute a spin intended to systematically bury the truth.

Many atimes, public commentators fall victims of playing fast and loose with the truth, depending on the issue at hand, along with the human factor weakness, and this brings them into conflict with the politicians and the public. It’s a job hazard that is sometimes inescapable. In that context, like many of us, Adesina had sinned, and the sins are spewed. But we should not hang him, because it’s a job hazard.

I once took a swipe at Mr. Kanu Agabi, who was twice the Attorney General and Nigeria’s Minister of Justice, for taking the brief of Senator Bukola Saraki, over the false asset declaration accusation. The accusation against Saraki started when Mr.Agabi was the Attorney General. The Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal, Danlami Umar, and the prosecutor in the case, Rotimi Jacobs, were at various times working under Mr. Agabi. Infact, different sources asserted that the accelerated promotion that Mr. Umar enjoyed in his career was partly due to Mr. Agabi’s support. And Mr. Rotimi Jacobs, the prosecutor, tenant in Agabi’s building, was introduced to the EFCC in the time of Nuhu Ribadu by Mr.Agabi. Mr. Umar and Mr. Jacobs made sure that the Code of Conduct trial ended with a no-guilty verdict for Saraki.

The matter went as far as the supreme court, but sources said, Mr. Agabi’s priority was to stop Mr. Jacobs from filing fresh charges related to a discovery, that Mr. Saraki continued to draw his full salary and entitlements from Kwara State government, several years after he ceased being the governor of the state. By virtue of the esteem with which I hold Mr.Agabi, I felt he had sinned, by acting contrary to conceived conscience. How can you at one time accuse, then come back to defend at another time, and by use of beneficiaries? It’s a spewed sin. But a lawyer friend said it’s normal, we should not hang him, because it’s a job hazard.

The first and the last time I took a gamble in my life was when President Muhammadu Buhari opted for partisan politics. I was on a duty trip in Nairobi Kenya, and while trying to file a report to London, my colleague, the producer, told me Buhari has chosen to join a political party, with the intention of contesting in an election. I said its impossible. We argued almost to the point of bitterness. Are you ready to bet, he asked. I answered in the affirmative.

We settled for a bet on two hundred pounds each, which I quickly agreed to, because I was damn too confident he would loose. I have heard Buhari say more than once, that he was not tailored for politics, that’s why when he finished his secondary education, despite the chance he had of going into professions that would turn him into a politician, he opted for the military, which does not play politics. Again, his disdain for the dirt in politics, which atimes breeds corruption, was responsible for his participation in the overthrow of the conceived corrupt Shagari regime.

Armed with these facts, and the attested righteousness of the General, I went to bed with an over confident zeal, that my wealth would swell by two hundred pounds the next day. Alas, I lost the bet, Buhari declared officially for the ANPP.

However, seeing the innocence of my mistake, my colleague decided to be magnanimous, by letting go the bet. What a magnanimity. On my return to Nigeria, along with a late colleague of mine in Kaduna, we visited the General at home, where I narrated to him my ordeal. He said indeed he had no intention in politics, and truly he detests political processes, at least the Nigerian way. But he was dragged into it by Alhaji Wada Nas or Alhaji Kanti Bello(all of them now late), I cant remember. I felt sad, because as far as I am concerned, he had sinned, by acting contrary to conceived conscience. How can you denounce something, and then come back to embrace it, because of the advise of some people?. It’s a spewed sin. But I refused to hang him, because it’s a job hazard.

Much as I believe Professor Gambari is an attested gentleman, whose experience and exposure must have taken him beyond the level of witch-hunt, a lesson is here for the media practitioners to learn.

Our calling, particularly the calling of columnists, calls for careful and constructive criticisms, but not callous or cruel comments, that could come back to make us look like the cold-hearted.

Gov. Diri Advocates Effective Community Policing

Inaugurates Advisory Bodies

Bayelsa State Governor, Senator Douye Diri, on Wednesday, emphasised that building mutual trust between the Nigeria Police and the general public is fundamental to effective community policing in the country.

Senator Diri expressed this view during the inauguration of the State Community Policing Advisory Committee and Community Policing Committee in Yenagoa, the state capital.

His Acting Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Alabrah, quoted the governor as commending the Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, for introducing the community policing initiative, describing it as critical in engendering peace, stability and development across communities.

His words: “The foundation of trust will allow the police form closer relationship with the community that will produce solid achievements. Without trust between the police, the citizens and communities, effective policing is practically impossible.”

Senator Diri, who stressed that eliciting public support is vital to crime prevention, called on the police to respect community principles.

“The government and people of Bayelsa State are happy with IGP Mohammed Adamu for bringing policing to the doorsteps of the people in the various communities and local government areas.

“I challenge the Nigeria Police Force to henceforth build that reputation to earn the confidence of the public. They should use force only as the last resort.”

In his remarks, the Inspector General of Police described community policing as a worthy innovation to enable the community take ownership of maintaining law and order.

Represented by the Deputy Inspector General of Police in charge of Force Intelligence and Investigation Department, Michael Ogbizi, the IG said community policing strategy would be adopted in every state of the federation, adding that the new approach to policing would be more transparent and accountable.

In his opening remarks, Bayelsa State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Nkereuwem Akpan, said due to the need for improved security across the country, the Inspector General of Police directed all state commands to commence community policing to ensure zero tolerance for crime.

Mr. Akpan emphasised that for robust security to be achieved, the citizenry must be carried along with round-the-clock information from the neighborhood to the force, which, according to him, was the overall goal of community policing.

In separate goodwill messages, chairman of the state Police Community Response Committee, Chief Ernest Samuel, and war veteran, Captain Samuel Owonaro (Rtd), both stressed that security was critical to peaceful co-existence and community development.

They noted that any security apparatus that does not involve people at the grassroots might not achieve its purpose and thanked the police boss for his desire to address the clamour for state policing.

Also speaking, the chairman of Southern Ijaw Local Government Council, who is also state chairman of the Association of Local Governments in Nigeria ALGON), Chief Kia Nigeria, pledged the support of the council chairmen to the Community Policing Committee and thanked Governor Diri for taking the security of the state a step further.

Responding on behalf of the committees, the Commander, Operation Delta Safe, Rear Admiral Akinjide Akirinade, expressed appreciation to the governor and the IG for the opportunity to serve towards bringing lasting peace to the state.

The State Community Policing Advisory Committee has Governor Diri as chairman while the Commissioner of Police, Nkereuwem Akpan, and His Royal Majesty King Alfred Diete-Spiff are co-chairmen.

Others include heads of security agencies and leadership of the Christian and Muslim groups in the state as well as representatives of the three senatorial districts.