Saturday, October 25, 2025
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Niger State Governor Calls For Decisive Actions Against Bandits

Chairman North Central Governors’ Forum and Governor of Niger State, Abubakar Sani Bello says government needs to take drastic action against armed bandits as amnesty offered them has failed.

Governor Abubakar Sani Bello stated this when he interacted with Media Practitioners shortly after a meeting with COVID-19 Taskforce Committee in Niger State and other stakeholders at the Government House, Minna.

“It has become clear and obvious that the amnesty programme for some of the bandits is not working”, he stated.

He said government must assert itself to its responsibility by using whatever means available to end the bandits nefarious activities as they have tolerated their recklessness for a long time now.

According to him, all civilised approach engaged by the government, even providing the bandits with a way of life to stop their activities has hit the rock.

The Chairman of the North Central Governors’ Forum who decried the way and manner the bandits have continued to unleash mayhem on the Communities noted that the objective of seeing banditry end and people provided with a safe environment for normal and economic life to thrive is not in sight as banditry is continually increasing with perpetrators denying the locals access to their farms due to incessant attacks and cattle rustling.

This he says if not checked and stopped, will lead to severe consequences…

“The danger here is that the bandits have refused to let our local people, our farmers to operate…we are heading towards famine and starvation”, he said.

He said that a teleconference is being organized with the governors of Niger, Zamfara, Kebbi, Kaduna, Sokoto and Katsina States that share common boundaries and are being terrorized by bandits to review stands and come up with a policy on how best to end bandits havoc within the shortest possible time.

FCT Administration Reiterates That All Schools Are To Remain Closed Till Further Notice

…..No 3rd Term Resumption

The Federal Capital Territory Administration Education Secretariat said its attention has been drawn to information that some private Schools in the FCT are disseminating information to parents and students indicating the resumption the 2019/2020 3rd term calendar online and parents were therefore expected to pay schools fees for this term prior to the purported resumption.

In a press release signed by the Ag. FCTA Secretary For Education, Umaru Marafa,he said that the Education Secretariat wishes to remind School proprietors, parents and the general public that the directive closing all schools at the outset of the Covid-19 pandemic explicitly stated that this directive was in effect “until further notice” which implies that no academic activities in all Schools in any form shall commence until a notice to reopen is approved and conveyed by the Secretariat.

The statement read, “the Implication of this is that when the Schools will be reopened, adequate notice of the fact that 2nd term was inconclusive will be factored into the academic calendar which will dovetail into the 3rd term accordingly. Any action taken otherwise is likely to negatively distort the academic calendar of the schools involved.

“In light of the above, any School purporting to reopen for 3rd term before the approved calendar for opening of School post Covid-19 is doing so against the provisions of the extant guidelines on the establishment and operation of Schools in the FCT.

“School proprietors are therefore, advised to maintain the status quo and keep their schools closed and not re-open in any form while they await further directives from the FCTA. Violators of this directive will face the full wrath of the law.

“The FCTA Education Secretariat has however concluded plans to introduce e-learning platforms to include lessons on radio and television channels to keep the students constructively engaged while the lockdown lasts, the statement concluded.

Two Of A Kind: How Timipre Silva And Mele Kyari Are Changing The Oil & Gas Industry

The two are from diverse backgrounds but seem driven by the same passion- the desire to make things better. Timipre Silva, Minister for State for Petroleum and Mele Kyari, the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) are two of a kind.

The two were appointed to their respective offices by President Muhammadu Buhari almost at the same time. Kyari came in July 2019 while Silva came on board in August of the same year. But the two have been able to forge a rare collaboration that has brought synergy to operations in the oil and gas industry and ensured calm in the highly combustible Niger Delta.

This is an extraordinary accomplishment in view of recent history where rivalries and insubordination have defined relationships between the minister of state petroleum and the GMD of NNPC. These are two different people who have found common grounds and aggregate a progressive vision for the oil sector. The two are perfectionists who’re known not to compromise and who;re willing to go the extra mile to achieve their ambitions.

Kyari, a geologist who has spent his working life in the oil and gas industry, was born in Maiduguri, Borno State. Silva trained as a linguist and was born in Okpoama-Brass, Brass LG of Bayelsa. But Silva cut his teeth at the Shell Petroleum Development Company where he did his National Youth Service Corp and developed interest in oil and gas. He later became a special assistant to the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Edmund Dakouru, in 2004.

Today, Silva his occupying the position of his former boss and showing he’d had some extraordinary tutelage under Dakouru. He’s showing remarkable capacity as minister of state for petroleum in an industry driven by knowledge, technical competence and transparency.

This perhaps is why he and Kyari have been able to forge a productive partnership that is transforming the industry. In the last one year they’ve been in the saddle, the two have combined positively to chart a new course for the NNPC and the oil and gas industry.

It started off with NNPC developing a five-step approach to attain global excellence via the TAPE agenda (Transparency, Accountability and Performance Excellence), with the active support of the minister of state who has acted has a bulwark for Kyari;s transparency initiatives.

The TAPE agenda has led to well defined processes benchmarked to World-class Oil & Gas company standards, right cost structure that guarantees value realization and profitability, Goals, priorities and performance guarantee, among others.

Among achievements they’ve shared together is the completion of Phase1 of the Port Harcourt Refinery Rehabilitation exercise and the re-opening of OML 25 flow station in Rivers State after two years of inactivity as a result of community issues between the host community/Belema Oil and Shell Petroleum Development Company.

Kyari, working with Silva, was able to restore oil production in the community and get youths of the area engaged, thereby bringing peace and stability to a hitherto volatile community. It is easy to downplay the significance of that development, but when you think of how many years production had stopped in the area and what Nigeria and the community were losing, then the impact of the action would be better appreciated. The reopening of the oil station would add 35,000 barrels of crude oil per day to Nigeria’s daily production.

In a statement issued by the NNPC after the historic peace agreement, Kyari acknowledged the role of the minister of state in ensuring the settlement of the dispute, and said Silva had shown alignment with the vision of President Muhammadu Buhari. He said the minister was working tirelessly to ensure harmonious relations between host communities and oil industry operators in the country.

The two, together with stakeholders, have also worked to address challenges in the upstream and downstream oil sector in a manner that has promoted transparency and industrial harmony. Unlike previous years, the industry has witnessed better synergy, a situation has also promoted investment into the sector.

It is the existence of this kind of productive collaboration that led to the recent unprecedented rally of international and local oil companies in the country to support Nigeria’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic. s NNPC and its partners mobilized a N21 billion intervention fund to support federal and state governments in the country. The money went into the purchase of ambulances for emergencies, medical equipment, including donation of fully equipped intensive care units to states which have recorded high cases of the pandemic. Every state in the country received at least one ambulance from the fund.

The intervention was mobilized within days of the pandemic and the purchase and delivery of the items kicked off a few days after it was announced. This synergy between the minister and the GMD has been glaring during the cross country tour to deliver the intervention items. The two were often seen together in the same delegation with each taking turns to make a speech.

Silva is not a minister just enjoying the cruise. Neither is Kyari. Both share a passion for the people. The people are the centre of their universe. Before his appointment as GMD, Kyari had been a unionist, fighting the cause of those working in the industry. He built a reputation for transparency, diligence and commitment.

Silva is no different. Sylvia’s life has been about people. He first demonstrated this trait when appointed Executive Secretary of the National minority Business Council, Port Harcourt, where he saw to the creation of employment opportunities for his people. This was the passion that led him into politics where he became a hero for the youths of the Niger Delta.

Silva’s political acumen and capital have combined admirably with Kyari’s industry capacity and reputation. One complements the other without false airs. Unlike in the past when efficiency was compromised by unnecessary rivalries, the two are focused on the same agenda and not working at cross purposes. The industry is no doubt the better for it. And Nigeria, the ultimate beneficiary.

-Linda Joseph writes from Gwagwalada, Abuja

Your Counsel To Wike On Hostility Towards FG Is Diversionary, Inconsequential, Half-hearted ‘Eye-service’, Eze Tells Abe

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Happy that Wike understands the meaning of Abe telling him publicly to be wise
…Describes Abe’s damage control as lifeless as he helped foist Wike on Rivers people
…Assures Abe that APC, FG will survive Wike and his misguided attacks

A chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in the South-South region and former National Publicity Secretary of the defunct New People’s Democratic Party (nPDP), Chief Eze Chukwuemeka Eze, has dismissed as inconsequential, Senator Magnus Abe’s open counsel to Gov Nyesom Wike over his unguarded utterances and spurious claims against the APC-led Federal Government in his widely criticized State-wide broadcast.

In a statement made available to media houses on Monday, Eze said Senator Abe merely tried to divert attention from his crafty mien and antecedent in a failed attempt to present himself clean and unblemished to the public. Eze said Abe merely wants to disassociate himself from his bosom friend and political partner who is at the verge of imminent downfall, saying such was Abe’s stock-in-trade; always ditching friends in distress and finding a way to join a winner.

Abe had, in a statement made available to Media Houses, said; “Now is not the time to settle issues of supremacy between elected and unelected functionaries of government”. He went further to state: “I want to use this opportunity to publicly appeal to the Rivers State government to immediately seek and secure back channel lines of communication, and resolve any outstanding issues with the federal government through dialogue”.

Did Abe not seek to spike his new friend, Wike, by telling him in public that he (Wike) was not ‘wise’ in his actions? To tell your so-called friend in public that: ‘Wisdom is not weakness’ is simply to tell him in a nice way that he is not wise.

Abe told Wike publicly: “It is one thing to have a political dispute with an individual whose attitude and conduct a lot of people may not approve of, but it is a different matter for sub-national entity like Rivers state to challenge the sovereignty of Nigeria at this time when we should all be working together to combat an unseen but deadly enemy”. What is Abe attempting to do here? To turn the almightiness of the Federal Government against our own brother, this is the highest height of hypocrisy.

Abe had gone on to tell Wike: “I had earlier stated my determination not to be party to any action that will politicize our ability to confront the corona virus pandemic as a people and I maintain that position”.

Chief Eze reminded the reading public that it was Senator Abe, who connived with Gov. Wike and the PDP to deprive Rivers APC the opportunity of fielding candidates for the 2019 elections through a floodgate of litigations laced with injunctions and denied the electorate their chances of electing their preferred representatives in the parliament and in other positions in government.

Turning around to counsel one’s evil accomplice on civility and good conduct without self-contrition is merely pretentious, diversionary and unacceptable, Eze said.

Eze wonders if Abe have forgotten his group’s slogan insinuating that PDP is more organised than APC to warrant their movement to PDP “If we, too, after so much and nothing is happening, decide to move, that won’t make us bad people. If we can no longer organise ourselves and the powers-that-be are not helping matters, we will look at those who are organised if we must continue to play the game. There will be realignment of forces”. This was before the massive movement of Abe’s Group to PDP but let me ask, does it mean with Abe’s recent attack that Wike is no longer more organised?

Eze tasks Abe to tell Nigerians the fate of Senator Barry Mpigi, Peter Meedeh, Bariere Thomas, Alwell Onyesoh and several others whom he led to PDP and Wike after frustrating the electoral chances of the APC in Rivers State.

The APC chieftain said Abe is coming out now to criticize Wike because the deal he struck with him has been frustrated with the emergence of Austin Opara, as the preferred PDP guber candidate for 2023.

Eze cautioned Abe to continue enjoying his Wike, as his sudden criticisms and counsel only portray him as grossly unstable. Many already have the foreboding feeling that it may be terrible for Senator Abe if at the end he is neither a force in the APC nor in the PDP in 2023.

One wonders if Abe’s counsel to Wike is out of ignorance; whether he no longer know the antecedents of Wike and his type of politics for him to have yielded to the offer of such a satanic collaboration from a character like Wike to frustrate his acclaimed home, the APC, from fielding candidates and participating in the 2019 general elections. Or, is he expecting Wike to change at this period knowing very well that Wike is un-teachable.

Abe would not be regretting what Wike has turned Rivers State into today if he had allowed reasons to prevail and support APC during the election. It is too late for Abe and those that guided him into this misfortune and political wilderness as nothing will stop Wike from continuing to torture Rivers State and her people from misguided governance style of the governor and the attendant lack of peace.

Eze wondered the premise on which Abe is advising Wike and sought to know whether Wike, out of magnanimity, appointed him one of his Special Advisers, or the feeling of frustration from the reckless abandonment he suffers from the governor after using him to achieve his selfish aim of making Rivers State a mockery and laughing stock among the States in Nigeria due to his visionless agenda has caught him up.

If by his utterances, Abe has fallen apart with Wike, Eze tasked the ex-lawmaker to explain to Nigerians what the fates of Chief Allwell Onyesoh and thousands of APC loyalists would be; those who out of his prompting joined PDP and the Wike administration.

“What about Senator Barty Mpigi who is now a Senator under the PDP banner?” Eze queried. “What will be the fates of Dr. Peter Meedeh and Bariere Thomas who are Abe’s allies and are today Commissioners and members of the Rivers State Executive Council. Will they drop from the Wike’s administration because their mentor cannot be criticizing Wike from the outside while they remained in the inside. Gov Wike would think they are leaking government secrets to their mentor to warrant those public attacks. Or, does Abe and his cohorts think Wike is dump to consider what he said as harmless advice? Be sure Wike will clearly read the signs and understand the meaning of your so-called advice” Eze further opined.

The party Chief counseled Abe thus: “You can’t eat your cake and have it. If Chief Nyesom Wike is the Wike that I know, he has moved on and if he has promised making you a Governor by 2023, forget about it as Chief Austin Opara has already been handed over the flag of PDP for 2023″.

“The damage you have caused Rivers State and her people will live with you.” Eze lamented.

Eze urged Abe not to bother to help President Buhari and his administration in the hands of Gov Wike. He highlighted that Wike’s confrontation and onslaught against the Federal Government or the APC doesn’t make any meaning either to the Party or the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari as his attacks would not prevent the Federal Government from impacting on the lives of the people of Niger Delta region and Nigerians at large.

Eze maintained that all those who defiled every sound reasoning and conspired to put Wike into power against the sound leadership that APC would have provided will ever live the rest of their lives in torment and woe.

The media mogul counseled the people of Rivers State to continue to endure the hardship occasioned by the lack of direction and plans by the Wike administration as efforts are being made to assemble quality leadership that would take the state back to the golden rule of the Amaechi era.

COVID-19 Oil & Gas Intervention: Kano Receives Package

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… As Industry Moves to Build Permanent Medical Infrastructure Nationwide

Despite the supply chain constraints involved in simultaneous nationwide delivery and distribution of medical items at this period, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)-led Oil and Gas Industry coalition is determined to extend the Industry intervention to all states of the federation, with Abuja, Rivers and states in the South West having benefitted from the initiative.

Hon. Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, weekend in Kano, disclosed this while presenting medical consumables, equipment and an ambulance to the Kano State Government, a release today in Abuja by NNPC Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Dr. Kennie Obateru, has stated.

The release said the items were handed over to the Kano State Governor, Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, on behalf of the NNPC and its partners – Chevron Nigeria Limited (Upstream) and Bovas & Company Limited (Downstream).

From Left: Honourable Minister of State, Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation’s, Mallam Mele Kyari at the presentation of medical equipment to the Kano State Governor, HE Abdullahi Ganduje in Kano on Saturday.

Other items donated to the state included a Toyota ambulance, two full kits ventilators, one smith RescuePac ventilator for emergency and transport, ten pulse oximeters, 10,000 nose masks and 5,000 Nitrile examination gloves.

Others are 250 face masks, surgical splash/fluid resistance face shield, 250 N95 respiratory valve, 100 PPE overall full kits, 100 PPE shoe covers, 2,000 PPE disposable caps and 500 Medimec surgical face masks.

Chief Sylva said ed that items were part of the USD58million (N21bn) intervention initiative by the Oil & Gas Industry, expressing the hope that they would go a long way to stemming the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic in the state.

The Hon. Minister of State for Petroleum Resources explained that the initiative covers three areas: provision of medical consumables, deployment of logistics and in-patient support system and delivery of medical infrastructure, disclosing that donations were outside the regular Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiative routinely deployed by NNPC and the participating companies.

He said all commitments under the scheme were collected in kind through a clear, well-established and transparent governance framework.

“I commend NNPC, the donor companies and other participants in this initiative for standing up to be counted at these trying times,” Chief Sylva stated.

Also speaking at the occasion, NNPC Group Managing Director, Mallam Mele Kyari, hinted that the Oil & Gas Industry was planning to build permanent and sustainable medical infrastructure in each of the nation’s geo-political zones.

“We have a plan to deliver permanent medical infrastructure to every state of the Federation and a specific intervention in the six geo-political zones. We are selecting 14 locations to construct the permanent infrastructure.

Kyari added that as a socially responsible corporate citizens, the Oil and Gas Industry operators were focused on bequeathing some of the finest medical infrastructure that would outlive the COVID-19 pandemic.

On his part, Governor Ganduje, who lauded the Oil and Gas Initiative to combat COVID-19, said the intervention would go a long way in fighting the pandemic as well as complement the state government’s efforts.

The Governor stated that the state had three functional isolation centers and that it has commenced distribution of palliatives to 50,000 households in the state.

Led by the NNPC, the Oil and Gas Intervention against the COVID-19 pandemic has membership drawn from International Oil Companies (IOCs), Indigenous Petroleum Producers, Major Oil Marketers, Crude Oil and Products Traders, Depot Owners and Petroleum Products Marketers.

Ex-Gov Dickson Urges Bayelsans To Support Gov Diri’s Measures Against COVID 19

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…Donates N10m to State COVID Committee

The Former Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson said his attention has been drawn to the fact that the new NCDC statistics include a confirmed COVID 19 case in Bayelsa State.

In a press release personally signed by the former Governor of Bayelsa State, Henry Seriake Dickson, he said that this is in spite of all the sacrifices the people of Bayelsa have made, and the efforts that the Governor has made in trying to keep Bayelsa out of the COVID 19 web. This is indeed regrettable.

The statement read, “However, this shows that COVID 19 is now in Bayelsa and it is now time for all the leaders and the people to give concerted support to the Governor and state officials in the coordinated action against this deadly virus.

“I want to lend my voice to call on the good people of Bayelsa to respect and abide by all the protocols outlined by the World Health Organisation, the Federal Government and the Government of Bayelsa State with respect to personal hygiene, social distancing and avoiding crowded places.

“This pandemic is a worldwide threat to the human society. All the segments of the Bayelsa society should join hand to support the Governor to educate our people on the danger this pandemic poses to our people so that we can minimize its spread as much as possible and reduce avoidable loss of lives.

“If we restrict movement and respect the protocol, it would be easy for the state Government to work for our lives to come back to normal again. We should note that if more cases are discovered, the lock down will be in place for a longer period.

“In addition to the several support measures I have given to individuals and groups across the state, the Henry Seriake Dickson Foundation is supporting the state COVID 19 Committee with the sum of N10 million.

“Once again, I call on all leaders to support the Governor in the various measures he has taken. I also urge all the traditional rulers, religious leaders and opinion leader to encourage our people to abide by the protocol.

“These measures come with a lot of inconveniences which are all regretted. Elsewhere in Abuja, Lagos and others, the situation is not different, the statement concluded.

Bayelsa Index Case: Food Markets, Banks, Others Exempted From Stay-At-Home Order

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The Bayelsa State government has given clarification about those exempted from the stay-at-home directive of the governor, Senator Douye Diri.

Governor Diri in a state broadcast on Monday directed residents to stay at home for one-week except those rendering essential services and duties.

This followed a reported case by the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) of a 49-year-old female that tested positive for the COVID-19 in the state.

The index case is on admission at the isolation centre of the Niger Delta University Teaching Hospital in Okolobiri.

The governor’s acting Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Alabrah, in a statement on Monday night, however, explained that banks, foodstuff sellers in markets and vehicles conveying foodstuff, supermarkets as well as petrol and gas stations were exempted from the stay-at-home directive.

Others are pharmaceuticals outlets, telecoms services operators, oil and gas services firms, medical and health personnel, civil servants on grade level 13 and above, and, of course, the military and other law enforcement personnel.

The governor’s aide stated that the clarification became necessary to reduce panic buying and to douse tension among residents.

He said the preventive measures taken before the report of an index case and even the fresh directive of the governor were all geared toward protecting the health of Bayelsans.

“These measures are not punitive. The government is on top of the situation and would take the right decisions to ensure the health and wellbeing of all citizens of the state are protected at all times. Therefore, there is no need for anyone to panic,” Alabrah said.

Kano Deaths: A Half Truth Is A Whole Lie

By Bala Ibrahim

At last, Kano state government has admitted the reported cases of mass deaths in the state. Also, in response to public agitations, the government is embarking on verbal autopsy, to ascertain the causes of the deaths, in order to enable it take all measures necessary to bring the problem to an end. Good, very good, Kano state. It’s better late than never.

According to a statement delivered by the Commissioner of Information, Muhammad Garba, Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje has directed the state Ministry of Health to conduct a thorough investigation into the immediate and remote causes of the deaths.

This is indeed a good step taken in the right direction, albeit belatedly. By admitting to investigate, the government is acknowledging the problem and also admitting that it was initially economic with the truth, when it denied the magnitude of the deaths, and accused a segment of the media, of trading in fake news. Half the truth is now revealing the whole lie.

While applauding the government for waking up, and rising to the occasion through verbal autopsy, a section of the government’s statement is still displeasing, viz: “Reports from the State Ministry of Health has shown that most of the deaths were caused by complications arising from hypertension, diabetes, meningitis and acute malaria, and Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje is earnestly waiting for the final report from the State Ministry of Health so as to take necessary action”

If indeed government’s findings have pointed accusing fingers at the above complications, why is the government waiting for the final report before it starts addressing those problems? Do we have to set up another committee to stampede the other committee to submit it’s report? Do we have to wait for a final report before taking a decision? What guarantee is there, that the need would not arise, for the setting up of another committee, to review the report of the previous committee, or committees? By which time, more than half the people of the state are gone.

If there is a preliminary report, why not take preliminary action, and save lives, pending the arrival of the final report for final action? More so, when the disease is not giving out any preliminary notice, and the people are dying daily.

Although as Muslims, we believe in predestination, the doctrine that Allah has measured out the span of every person’s life, but may be, only may be, had the government acted fast, based on the preliminary report before it, the pain suffered by some of the dead, might have been minimized.

Most painful is the fact that everything is being done by the same ministry of health, under an inexperienced commissioner that was brought by an inexperienced colleague, whose greatest qualification is the privilege of being the daughter of the governor. For a state like Kano, with more than enough experienced, tested and trusted doctors, this is a big slap on the face. Nepotism should not be played on the high way of public safety.

If we look at the story of China, although it had acted fast, the situation would have been worse, had the authorities not bypassed the protocols of setting up committees and waiting for reports.

In December 2019, the authorities in China, after noticing some deaths and the circulation of a mysterious viral pneumonia in Wuhan, quickly launched an investigation into the cases. China reported the cases to the World Health Organization, WHO, on the 31st of December. But WHO experts were only abled to visit China and investigate the outbreak on 10 February, by which time the country had more than 40,000 cases.

Without waiting for the approval of the WHO, and without wasting time on reports, China commenced action on the likely cause and quickly found it to be Covid-19.

If china had waited for reports after reports on the initial cause of deaths in Wuhan, coronavirus would have wiped out the country or even the world before we know it. Today, while the world is locking down, China is opening up. And it was the epicenter.

“In an epidemic, one has to work with rumour and suspicion, and any observation of people should be taken seriously and also investigated scientifically,”-Dr Usman Bashir of Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital (AKTH).

And this is exactly the ambition of planning, especially when planning for public salvation. Leaders must take public comments seriously, even if they are rumours. They must think ahead, look ahead and see the future, through the prism of today. The future depends on what we do in the present.

When a disease occurs in greater numbers than expected in a community, it is considered an outbreak. Using the memories of the past, especially the experiences in other epidemics like meningitis, cholera and recently Lassa fever, Kano is competent to draw a roadmap that can bail out the whole of Nigeria.

But that is possible only, when square pegs are put in square holes. Anything to the contrary, would lead to telling a half truth, which is equal to a whole lie.

Gideon Orkar: The Man Who Saw Tomorrow

By Tunde Odesola

Tick-tock, tick-tock, both hands of the clock tiptoed to 12midnight. It was December 31. Hunger and anger waved at the year 1983 which said its goodbyes and trudged towards the calendar door. Economically, 1983 was bad for Nigeria and her naira. The masses had nothing but the skin covering their bones. Stuffed up to the throat with corruption, apathy and impunity, the nation held no hope for the citizenry.

But the masses were thankful. Thankful for surviving the year and the ‘austerity measures’ imposed by the prodigal Shehu Shagari administration, which swept into power in October 1983 on the wings of a violent election. Like an answer to an anxious prayer, a young Fulani soldier, Muhammadu Buhari, jumped on Dodan Barracks, Lagos, near the stroke of midnight with his band of bumbling, self-righteous soldiers and kicked out Shagari and his focusless National Party of Nigeria. The nation broke into wild jubilation, hugging Buhari’s New Year present.

After just one year and eight months in the saddle, however, Major General Buhari was booted out of office by the man who ran the bloodiest military junta in the history of the country, General Ibrahim Babangida. No regime in Nigeria’s history recorded a higher number of deaths of military personnel and civilian activists than Babangida’s murderous regime.

During the Babangida years, journalist Dele Giwa was shredded by a parcel bomb, over 150 senior Nigerian military officers crashed midair and perished in a Lagos swamp; poet-soldier, Maj.-Gen. Mamman Vatsa, whom Babangida was best man to, wasn’t spared by the little man now marooned on Minna hilltop. Vatsa was tied to a stake and shot to death in 1985 over an alleged coup plot along with many other brilliant soldiers. The gun of Babangida’s misrule dripped with blood.

On Sunday, April 22 1990, about five years into Babangida’s bloody rule, a junior soldier, Major Gideon Orkar, led the most audacious coup in the annals of the country by attempting to oust the fiercely-corrupt Babangida from power. The Orkar coup demystified Babangida, who fled, tail between legs, to Abuja, where he relocated the seat of power to from Lagos after escaping being killed through the courage of his ADC, Colonel UK Bello, who spirited him and his family out of Dodan Barracks via the backdoor. Bello later returned to the barracks to face the coup plotters but was killed inside an armoured tank. Subsequently, the coup was foiled and the plotters were arrested. Orkar, a Tiv from Benue State, and 41 other soldiers were shot to death on July 27, 1990.

Babangida abandoned power in 1993 when he couldn’t bear the local and international backlash resulting from his cancellation of the June 12 presidential election won by the late MKO Abiola. Sani Abacha, arguably, the only major general Babangida was taller than, later demolished the sandcastle Babangida foisted on the nation and christened Interim National Government, side-footing the weightless interim President, Ernest Sonekan, out of Aso Rock – after just three months in power. Abacha was nothing but greed. IBB was everything but good. The lucifer of deception embraces the devil of greed.

The Orkar coup clocked 30 years four days ago. So much water has passed under the Nigerian bridge. During the coup, Nigeria was headless for many hours as senior military officers rallied troops and engaged the revolutionary junior soldiers in a fierce battle to control Lagos. Never in its 53 years of existence had Lagos witnessed the amount of ammunition fired on the day as soldiers fought in the trenches on April 22 through 23, 1990. Lagos went into a cardiac arrest with the heavy artillery bombardment.

After seizing power, Orkar accused the Babangida government of corruption, nepotism and killings. In his nationwide speech, Orkar cut off Sokoto, Kano, Katsina, Borno and Bauchi from the geographical expression called Nigeria. He said, “On behalf of the patriotic and well-meaning peoples of the Middle Belt and southern parts of this country, I, Major Gideon Orkar, wish to inform you of the successful ousting of the dictatorial, corrupt, drug baronish, evil man, deceitful, homosexually-centred, prodigalistic, unpatriotic administration of General Badamosi Babangida.”

He continued, “We have equally commenced their trials for unabated corruption, mismanagement of national economy, the murders of Dele Giwa, Major-General Mamman Vasta, with other officers as there was no attempted coup but mere intentions that were yet to materialise, and other human rights violations.

“The National Guard, already in its formative stage, is disbanded with immediate effect. Decrees Number 2 and 46 are hereby abrogated. We wish to emphasise that this is not just another coup but a well-conceived,­­ planned and executed revolution for the marginalised, oppressed and enslaved peoples of the Middle Belt and the South.

“Our history is replete with numerous and uncontrollable instances of callous and insensitive, dominatory, repressive intrigues by those who think it is their birthright to dominate till eternity the political and economic privileges of this great country to the exclusion of the people of the Middle Belt and the South. They have almost succeeded in subjugating the Middle Belt and making them voiceless and now extending (the) same to the South.”

It’s 30 years since Orkar and his men stormed the Dodan Barracks by 1:40am. It’s 54 years since Majors Chukwuma Nzeogu and Emmanuel Ifeajuna hatched Nigeria’s first coup on January 15 1966, killing 22 people, including the Prime Minister, Tafawa Balewa. It’s 56 years since northern officers launched a ‘July Rematch’ countercoup that killed the Head of State, General Aguiyi Ironsi, and many other leaders.

However, not even during the military bloodiness did clannishness dominate governance as Nigeria is currently witnessing under the Muhammadu Buhari presidency. This is the first time in the life of Nigeria when herdsmen will kill Middle Belt and southern Nigerian citizens while the Federal Government does absolutely nothing to check the ethnic cleansing. It’s the first time the Federal Government will openly say herdsmen are right to kill and plunder if Middle Belt people and southerners do not give out their lands to herdsmen for ruga. It’s also the first time that all service chiefs and all paramilitary organisations, except two, are northerners. World Bank President, Jim Yong Kim, disclosed in 2017 that Buhari urged the bank to concentrate development in the northern region of Nigeria. The non-appointment of an Igbo into the National Defence Council and the National Security Council is in breach of Section 217(3) of the constitution which says the composition of the Armed Forces must reflect federal character.

After repeated denials, it recently came to light that northern states have long been benefiting from the Federal Government’s Conditional Cash Transfer programme while states like Lagos and Delta didn’t benefit. Buhari’s state, Katsina, has the highest beneficiaries with 133, 227 indigenes getting cash transfers. Katsina is followed by Zamfara (130,764), Jigawa (99,044), Kano (84,148), Plateau (78,430), Kebbi (76,026), Kogi (62,129) and Benue (58,943). Also, Nasarawa (48,687), Kaduna (35,348), Kwara (32,218), Gombe (26,532), Akwa Ibom (24,929), Yobe (24,814), Bauchi (23,305) are on the list of top beneficiaries. The number of beneficiaries in Osun, Oyo and Cross River states are 15,572, 13,811 and 11,998 respectively while Edo, Bayelsa, Rivers, Abia, Anambra and Imo have 11,368, 9,805, 9,596, 9,347, 8,105 and 7,220 beneficiaries respectively.

Babangida’s administration, which Orkar sought to overthrow, clearly appears to be a saint when compared with the Buhari administration in areas such as fairness in appointments, security and infrastructural development. Without a doubt, Buhari’s place as Nigeria’s most cliquish leader is sealed in infamy and this mortal failing will be the everlasting memoriam of his presidency. Truly, Nigeria deserves Orkar’s pity. Orkar deserves a posthumous national award.

NB: This column goes on break next week. Will be back in two weeks’ time by His Grace.

Goodbye!

Written by Tunde Odesola and first published in The PUNCH of Monday, April 27, 2020.Email: tundeodes2003@yahoo.com

Gov. Diri Threatens To Demolish Illegal Structures In Bayelsa Markets

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…….Gives Swali Traders Two-Month Grace

Bayelsa State Governor, Senator Douye Diri, has given traders in Swali, the largest market within the Yenagoa metropolis, a two-month grace to demolish illegal structures in compliance with the state government’s directive to restore sanity and public health in all markets.

Governor Diri stated this on Saturday shortly after an unscheduled inspection of the market accompanied by top government officials, members of the COVID-19 Taskforce in the state and the market leaders.

In a press release by his Acting Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Alabrah, the governor said at the expiration of the period, all illegal structures yet to be demolished by the government would give way.

He described as unacceptable the manner illegal structures had been erected and taken over the roads into the market despite the fact that there were over 600 unoccupied stalls built by the government.

His words: “As a result of the ravaging COVID-19 pandemic, we needed to ensure that our markets are clean and should not be death traps from where various diseases could be transmitted.

“I appeal to those in the market to comply with the government’s directive. I commend the market chairman and the woman leader for their cooperation with government in ensuring that we bring back sanity and public health in this market.”

Senator Diri warned that traders who occupy illegal structures and shanties in other major markets at Opolo, Kpansia and Tombia in Yenagoa should take a cue from the demolition exercise at the Swali market and take them down on their own to ensure safety of their wares.

He explained that the move became imperative to reduce overcrowding in markets in the event of an outbreak of the virus, which he described as a warfare with an unseen enemy.

“If we have a dirty, shanty market and any person contracts the COVID-19 disease, it would spread to everybody. That is what we are trying to avert.”

Diri assured the traders that more stalls would be built at the Swali market as well as pipe-borne water and other sanitary facilities provided.

He also assured that the request from the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Investment to sandfill the swampy portions within the market would be approved.

Speaking on the order on restriction of inter-state movement, the governor said after his unscheduled visit to the border towns with neighbouring states of Delta and Rivers on Friday, additional measures have been put in place to ensure that the lockdown was complied with.

In their separate remarks, chairman of the Swali Ultra Modern Market, Mr. Jackson Bobra, and the market women leader, Ebiere Ebiotu, commended the governor for the visit and for trying to ensure sanity in the market, saying it was unprecedented.

They thanked him for his exemplary leadership and foresight, adding that within a short period of his assumption of office he had demonstrated the will to govern the people rightly.