Author: Day Break

  • Lagos-Ibadan Rail Officially Connected To Apapa Port – CCECC

    Lagos-Ibadan Rail Officially Connected To Apapa Port – CCECC

    China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC) has announced that the Lagos-Ibadan Rail has been officially connected to the Apapa port.

    The construction company disclosed this in a tweet on Monday.

    “On the morning of Jan. 25, 2021, with the successful pouring of the last 25-meter monolithic track bed superstructure of Apapa Port Break Bulk Line, the Lagos-Ibadan Railway was officially connected to the Apapa Port in Lagos.

    “The Apapa Port Spur Line of Lagos-Ibadan Railway starts from the Mobolaji Johnson Station, Ebute Metta and extends southward to Apapa Port, with a total length of 8.72km,” CCECC disclosed.

    It added that the linking of the rail to the port is crucial and will enhance the import and export of goods.

    “As a crucial channel linking the mainline of the Lagos-Ibadan Railway to the port, it has become an important transportation passage for the import and export of goods and now serves as a significant guarantee with regards to the comprehensive operational efficiency of the Railway,” it added.

    It explained further the construction process noting that it was “an extremely tough nut to crack because of its dense underground pipelines, high underground water level, complex geological conditions, and numerous ground constructions.”

    The project according to the company took nearly three years of unremitting efforts and working around the clock.

  • My govt inherited gratuity debt of N28bn, disbursed over N3bn to 76 retirees for 2012 – Seyi Makinde

    My govt inherited gratuity debt of N28bn, disbursed over N3bn to 76 retirees for 2012 – Seyi Makinde

    Daily Post Nigeria

    Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State on Monday said his government has paid gratuity to seventy-six (76) retirees in the state.

    Three billion, four hundred and twenty million Naira was paid to the retirees to clear the 2012- 2013 unpaid gratuity.

    Commissioner for Establishment and Training, Siju Lawal presented the cheques to the retirees on Monday.

    Lawal spoke on behalf of Makinde while presenting the cheques to the beneficiaries at the Ministry’s Conference Hall in Ibadan.

    The commissioner while speaking added that the State Government inherited unpaid gratuity debt of about N28 billion from the previous administration as outstanding for the year 2012, up until May 2019 when the present administration received the mantle of leadership in Oyo State.

    He maintained that the monthly release of N180 million has helped pay the whole of year 2012 gratuity.

    He noted that the payment has stretched to the month of August 2013, as it is always paid according to merit.

    Lawal also advised beneficiaries to invest wisely with their money.

    He advised the retirees to be prudent in spending and live peacefully with others to enjoy a healthy and fulfilled life.

    “This is another day of joy to our retirees that are benefiting from this quarter’s payment of their gratuity.

    “We believe they have gained one thing or the other from training given by the government about life after retirement and how to survive the life of investments and private businesses.

    “As demanded by the governor to aid accountability, avoid loss of vital data and to make the processing of documentation faster, we are starting electronic computation of the data soon.

  • EFCC arrests Gusau university VC for N260 million contract scam

    EFCC arrests Gusau university VC for N260 million contract scam

    The vice chancellor of Federal University, Gusau, Professor Magaji Garba is currently in the custody of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, (EFCC).

    He was detained by the anti-graft agency on Thursday January 28 after he honoured an invitation in relation to his involvement in a case of abuse of office, corrupt practices and contract scam.

    A competent source at the anti- graft agency disclosed that the had fraudulently obtained the sum of Two Hundred and Sixty Million Naira (N260, 000,000) from a contractor, Alhaji Shehu Sambo, owner of Ministaco Nigeria Limited, on the pretext that the University was going to award his company a contract worth N3, 000,000,000 (Three Billion Naira) for the construction of perimeter Wall Fence around the institution which never materialised in 2018.

    The VC is still being grilled by investigators of the EFCC, who are interested in knowing what happened to the money.

    Spokesman of the EFCC, Wilson Uwujaren, confirmed the arrest but did not give further details at the time of filing this report.

  • Kano records 118 new leprosy cases

    Kano records 118 new leprosy cases

    Kano State has recorded 118 new cases of leprosy -an infectious disease caused by a bacillus mycobacterium leprae, which affects the skin, peripheral nerves, mucosa of the upper respiratory tract and eyes.

    Endemic Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) such as river blindness has also been found in 18 local government areas, trachoma in 10 councils, while bilharziasis/schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis and soil-transmitted helminthes are endemic across the 44 councils of Kano state.

    Commissioner for Health, Aminu Ibrahim Tsanyawa, announced this at a press conference marking the commemoration of 2021 World Leprosy and Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs).

    He, however, said no death was reported from leprosy throughout last year, adding that the 118 affected persons have been enrolled for treatment in government facilities.

    Tsanyawa said a total of 202,189 new leprosy cases were detected globally, while the African region detected a total of 20,209 new cases, of which Nigeria has the highest number with 2,424 leprosy cases, constituting 1.2 percent and 10th position of the global figures.

    He added that the country currently occupies 4th position of the 20 high leprosy burden in Africa.

    According to the Health Commissioner, the theme for the 2021 World Leprosy Day is: ‘Beat Leprosy, End Stigma,’ while the theme for the 2021 World NTDs Day is: “Face NTDs, End the Neglect.”

    Tsanyawa hailed the Ganduje administration for its significant efforts in reducing the burden, socioeconomic impact and transmission of leprosy and NTDs in addition to health promotion and rehabilitation of persons affected.

    He disclosed that 526 leprosy patients among 4,734 poorest individuals with disabilities have been enrolled to access free healthcare services under the Basic Healthcare Provision Fund through Kano state Contributory Healthcare Management Agency (KSCHMA).

    On river blindness, he said the administration treats over 910,000 people annually against river blindness in 18 endemic local government areas of the state, using Mass Administration of Medicine (MAM).

  • Army Refuses To Release Bodies Of Soldiers Killed By Boko Haram To Families, Plans ‘Secret’ Burial In Borno

    Army Refuses To Release Bodies Of Soldiers Killed By Boko Haram To Families, Plans ‘Secret’ Burial In Borno

    The Nigerian Army will on Tuesday give soldiers recently killed on the front in the fight against insurgency a ‘secret and undignified burial’, multiple military sources

    About three soldiers were killed on Friday when the insurgents engaged the military in a four-hour battle to take control of Dikwa town in Borno State.

    The attack happened few hours after Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai handed over to Major General Ibrahim Attahiru as the Chief of Army Staff.

    The gun battle, which started around 6:00pm and lasted till around 10:00pm, claimed many casualties, including soldiers.

    On January 22, 2021, the group ambushed and fired machine guns at a Nigerian army patrol in Borno State, killing seven soldiers and injuring others. Also, an ATV and ammunition were captured by the gunmen.

    The attack occurred barely five days after the gunmen activated seven IEDs against a Nigerian Army convoy of Armoured Personnel Carriers and other vehicles, escorted by a foot patrol in Gorgi in Borno State.

    According to military sources, over 30 soldiers were killed during the ambush. The gunmen also destroyed three vehicles and an armoured vehicle.

    However, a major in the army told our Reporters that plans had been concluded by the military authorities to conduct a ‘secret’ burial on Tuesday for some of the dead soldiers whose bodies are still in the mortuary.

    He accused the army authorities of failing to open up on the fate of fallen soldiers to their families.

    “They will be buried on Tuesday at a cemetery here in Maiduguri. Unfortunately, the military failed to open up on the fates of most of these fallen soldiers to their families. The army authorities have yet to inform families of some of these dead soldiers who they plan to bury tomorrow, how will you bury someone whose family members think is still alive? Even those that were informed were not given the bodies of their loved ones,” he said.

    A brother of one of the dead soldiers told SaharaReporters that the family got to know about his death from his colleague as the army authorities initially failed to inform them. 

    He said, “The army initially didn’t inform us. It was one of his colleagues that told me he had been killed by Boko Haram, so I spoke to someone from our town who is a major general, I think he made some moves. So we got a call from them on Saturday night informing us he is dead. Imagine, without his colleague telling us, we wouldn’t have been aware at all.

    “So we asked them the process to move his corpse back home for burial but they told us they wouldn’t release his body to us. We explained to them it’s a taboo in our village to be buried in a foreign land but they insisted his body would not be released to us. It was later they informed us that his next of kin and one other family member should come to Maiduguri cause he would be buried on Tuesday.”

    In 2019, a US newspaper, Wall Street Journal reported how the military had been secretly dumping the remains of soldiers killed by Boko Haram in unmarked mass graves.

    The paper quoted families of fallen servicemen as saying that the military was untidy in its handling of the tragic deaths of their loved ones.

    It said on the eve of President Muhammadu Buhari’s visit to Borno, army commanders secretly moved corpses of soldiers from a morgue to unmarked graves.

    “When President Buhari visited the Maiduguri base in November, commanders rushed to bury bodies they had collected at the morgue from the recent attack on the base in Metele and several others, according to several soldiers at the base,” the report read.

    “They moved the bodies from the morgue into the unmarked graves under cover of darkness.”

    A soldier was quoted as saying: “We could see the headlamps and the torches of the engineering division digging the graves.”

  • Civil servants allocate N1.2m to inspect N40m project- lawmaker

    Civil servants allocate N1.2m to inspect N40m project- lawmaker

    A member of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Adefisoye, has revealed how civil servants are inflating amounts for nominated constituency projects.

    Adefisoye, also known as Small Alhaji in a tweet on Monday disclosed details of a N40m project he nominated.

    According to him, the bill of quantities reveals some details about the project, and he vowed to take on the matter.

    He reveals that N1.5million was allocated for inspection and N400,000 for fueling of operational vehicles. Also, N700,000 to be spent on procuring generator to power the project after completion.

    Adefisoye who is a first timer in the House disclosed that N2m is set aside for contingency fee.

    “While going through the BOQ of a nominated project that is only worth N40m, one will nearly cry for Nigeria. Sadly, contingency fee is N2m, inspection fee is N1.5m, fuelling of operations vehicle is N400,000 and Service Charge is 5% of the contract sum.

    “Vat is 7.5 % and Tax 5 % of the Contract sum But, Generating Set that will power the same project after completion costs N700,000. Corrupt civil servants. I will have to take up this case. I hope you all can see why we have abandoned projects everywhere

  • Our budget too low to address Nigeria’s problems – FG

    Our budget too low to address Nigeria’s problems – FG

    A former Chairman of the Governing Council, Council for the Regulation of Freight Forwarding in Nigeria (CRFFN), Alhaji Hakeem Olanrewaju, has berated the federal government over the way and manner the council is being managed in recent times.

    Olanrewaju expressed dismay that the government was spending huge sums of money on the council without commensurate returns.

    He wondered why the council has not been meeting its statutory roles and responsibilities despite the fact that more money has accrued to the council over the years.

    According Olanrewaju, who is also the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Talod Oceanair Limited, in a statement issued at the weekend, noted that: “Approximately, the amount used to kick-start the administrative life of the CRFFN between 2008 to 2012 (of the first and second Governing Council) is in the average of N200 million to N250 million.

    “Out of this approximated amount, workers were recruited and salaries promptly paid; official vehicles were purchased, capacity buildings and programmes were conducted, membership with FIATA formalised, office structures were rented across the zones, and operation head offices rented in Lagos and Abuja, international professional exchange programmes were attended among other things.”

    He averred that experience has shown that administering a professional council of this size has never been a rocket science, just as he flayed what he called “the massive and over bloated yearly budgetary provisions” of the council.

    He said: “As a professional regulatory council, and from what is obtainable elsewhere in the comity of freight forwarding nations, we do not really need all this gigantic edifices (tagged headquarters and zonal administrative offices and institutes) being put in place. What governs a professional council is the principle of discipline, transparency, moderation and prudency especially when it comes to financial management, and not the spirit of negligence, squandering and recklessness.

    “Ideally, in a viable and competitive freight forwarding profession, most of the said ongoing projects are actually projects that the practitioners through visionary leadership of the CRFFN can easily attract through international donations via our international participation in the global freight forwarding advancement programmes and empowerment schemes. In the local front, with an ideal financial administration, this said projects are achievable subject to professional administrative planning, budgeting and execution via visionary leadership.”

  • 7 elderly men allegedly gang-rape 12-year-old mentally disabled girl in Sokoto, brag they have high profile politicians behind them

    7 elderly men allegedly gang-rape 12-year-old mentally disabled girl in Sokoto, brag they have high profile politicians behind them

    Family Seeks Justice For 12-Year-Old Sokoto Rape Victim

    The Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice in Sokoto State, Suleiman Usman, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), on Friday, said the state government had put in place, a formidable team of lawyers to prosecute a rape case involving a 12-year-old girl.

    Usman said he would personally lead the team in order to ensure that justice is done for the victim, who is mentally disabled.

    He ruled out any favour to the suspects, who are alleged to be the “boys’’ of some high profile politicians in the state.

    Usman explained that the delay in prosecuting the case was caused by efforts to establish a strong case against the suspects.

    It was reported that the girl was allegedly raped by seven elderly men, who threatened to kill her if she exposed them.

    The mother of the girl, Hajiya Jamila Tudun Wada, told Daily Trust that the suspects took advantage of her daughter’s condition to violate her.

    Some of the suspects who allegedly committed the act were identified as Lele and Mohammed, who allegedly lured the girl to an uncompleted building.

    According to her, the suspects were earlier arraigned before a magistrate’s court, which remanded them as they awaited a legal advice from the state’s Ministry of Justice.

    “We did not know what happened thereafter, but we started seeing them in the streets.

    “Some of them even came to our residence, bragging that they were out and we would not do anything about it because they had some prominent politicians behind them,’’ she said.

    She was, however, optimistic that with the involvement of the commissioner, the suspects would get what they bargained for.

  • Nigeria, Others Seek Fair Price for COVID-19 Vaccines

    Nigeria, Others Seek Fair Price for COVID-19 Vaccines

    The Executive Director, National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA). Dr. Shuaib Faisal, has disclosed that the delay in the arrival of COVID-19 vaccines was because countries were negotiating price reduction, safety and effectiveness and required logistics to stop ongoing community transmission of the virus.

    Faisal stated this in a statement issued yesterday by the agency’s Head (Public Relations), Mohammad Ohitoto tiled: “Investment in COVID – 19 vaccines will strengthen PHC system in Nigeria”.

    This is coming as MTN has announced a donation of $25 million to support the African Union’s COVID-19 vaccination programme.

    Faisal said, “While the country appreciates the global effort through the COVAX facility to ensure low and medium income countries like Nigeria have fair and equitable access to the COVID – 19 vaccine, the delay in accessing vaccines means that eligible countries would have to explore all channels that can ensure fair prices, safe and effective vaccines for its populace. “

    “The expected engagement of additional healthcare workers to administer the vaccine and ensure non-disruption of routine services, the intensive capacity building and the acquisition of new and additional cold chain equipment will contribute immensely to strengthening the PHC system.”

    President and Chief Executive Officer of MTN Group, Ralph Mupita, in the statement stated, “The devastating impact of COVID-19 has been unprecedented and profound. Public and private partnerships are needed if we are to succeed in the fight against the pandemic and restore social and economic norms for our continent and our communities.”

    The statement added that: “In a unique public-private partnership, we announced a donation of $25 million to support the African Union’s COVID-19 vaccination programme, working with the Africa CDC (Centre for Disease Control) and the African Union Vaccination Acquisition Task Team (AVATT).

  • President Buhari, King Mohammed VI Confirm Warming Morocco-Nigeria Ties

    President Buhari, King Mohammed VI Confirm Warming Morocco-Nigeria Ties

    King Mohammed VI held a telephone conversation yesterday, January 31, with President of Nigeria Muhammadu Buhari, a statement from Morocco’s Royal Cabinet announced.

    During the call, the two heads of state welcomed the positive dynamic that bilateral relations between Morocco and Nigeria have witnessed since 2016.

    They recalled King Mohammed VI’s visit to Nigeria in December 2016, which marked the beginning of a new page in bilateral ties, as well as Buhari’s visit to Morocco in June 2018, which confirmed the new momentum.

    The two leaders expressed their common determination to pursue and materialize their strategic joint projects, notably the creation of the Nigeria-Morocco gas pipeline, as well as a Moroccan fertilizer plant in Nigeria.

    The Nigeria-Morocco gas pipeline is one of the most ambitious infrastructure projects in West Africa.

    When finalized, the pipeline would cover a 5,660-kilometer-long route, contouring the Atlantic coast from Lagos, in southwestern Nigeria, to Tangier, in northern Morocco. It would carry natural gas from Nigeria through 11 West African countries, up to Morocco and Spain.

    The project was first announced on the sidelines of King Mohammed VI’s visit to Nigeria in 2016. Morocco’s National Office for Hydrocarbons and Mines (ONHYM) and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) signed an agreement on the project in 2017.