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  • Gov. Sule Signs N115. 7, 2021 Budget of Economic Recuperation into law

    Gov. Sule Signs N115. 7, 2021 Budget of Economic Recuperation into law

    By Abel Leonard/ Lafia

    Nasarawa state governor, Engr. Abdulahi Sule has signed N115,722,814,343.31, 2021 appropriation bill, ‘Tagged budget of Economic Recuperation’ into law.

    The governor signed the budget today 30th December, 2020 in government house, after returning from United State of America where he went on vacation and to see his old time Doctor for a routine medical check up.

    You would recall that daybreak news report that his excellency had presented the 2021 budget to the  House of Assembly, saying the 2021 budget proposal is predicated on the National and State assumptions, with  Oil Benchmark of $40pb, foreign Exchange rate of N379/US$, Oil Production Output of 1.86mbpd, Inflation rate of 11.95%; an average SRA of N2.9 billion monthly, Average VAT of N991.7 million monthly, Average Exchange Gain of N185.8 million monthly, average Special Allocation of N383.5 million monthly.

    The governor also added that an average Independent Revenue (IGR) of N1.33 billion monthly, Recovery of FG Personnel’s PAYE totaling N8.5 billion, Discovery of additional Federal Government Ministries, Department & Agencies not initially in the tax net yielding N2.5 billion, recovery of taxes from banks and other 

    entities N0.9 billion, Expected Grants from UBEC, SFTAS, Save One Million Lives, Ecological fund and TETFund of over N16.2 billion as well as Borrowing (Deficit Financing) from Domestic loan, CARES, NEWMAP & ANRiN of over N14.4 billion.

    Engr. Sule further stressed that the assumptions has informed the  submission of a budget size of One Hundred and Twelve Billion, 

    Nine Hundred and Twenty-three Million, One Hundred and Seventy-four Thousand, Five  Hundred and Forty-three Naira (N112,923,174,543) only. 

    The Budger however is further broken down into Fifty-one Billion, Fifty Million, Four Hundred and Fifty-six Thousand, Eight Hundred and Seventeen Naira (N51,050,456,817) only, representing 45.21% of the budget as Recurrent Non-debt expenditure consisting of both personnel and overhead costs

    Sule also said, Fifty-four Billion, Eight Hundred and Fifty-four Million, Nine Hundred and Eighty-five Thousand, Six Hundred and Ninety- five Naira (N54,854,985,695) only, representing 48.58% of the total budget was however,  earmarked for Capital Expenditure, while Seven Billion, Seventeen Million, Seven Hundred and Thirty-two Thousand, Thirty-one Naira (N7,017,732,031)only, is allocated to Consolidated Revenue Fund Charges for debt servicing, pension and gratuity representing 6.21% of the total budget.

    In a contrast Development, the governor said the Honourable House of Assembly, after a thorough scrutiny of the of the budget passed a total budget of One Hundred and Fifteen Billion, Seven Hundred and Twenty-two Million, Eight Hundred and Fourteen Thousand, Three Hundred and Forty-three Naira, Thirty-one kobo (N115,722,814,343.31) only, for 2021 which he gave assent to saying the  figure represents a 2.48% increase from the initial budget proposal submitted.

    The governor also added  that the  new budget figure therefore, consists of Fifty-three Billion, Eight Hundred and Seventy-four Million, One Hundred and Fifty-six Thousand, Eight  Hundred and Seventeen Naira(N53,874,156,817) only, for recurrent expenditure, representing 46.55%. Fifty-four Billion, Eight Hundred and Thirty Million, Nine Hundred and Twenty-five

    Thousand, Four Hundred and Ninety-five Naira # (N54,830,925,495) only, for capital expenditure, indicating 47.38% and Seven Billion, Seventeen

    Million, Seven Hundred and Thirty-two Thousand, Thirty-one Naira (N7,017,732,031) only, for Consolidated Revenue Fund Charges which represents 6.06%.

    He further appreciated the Honourable Speaker, Principal Officers and, other Honourable Members for according the 2021 appropriation bill the desired relevance and attention resulting in the early passage of the proposal into Law, commending the synergy and partnership of both legislature and the executives towards ensuring collective responsibility to provide quality policies and programmes for the progress and development of the State.

    Engr. Sule also drew the attention of the public on the second wave of the Corona Virus pandemic, which is already ravaging lives and economic prosperity of the people, reminding residents of the state on the new variant of  the virus saying it is real,  appealing to the people of Nasarawa State to continue to comply with the protocol for the control of the spread of the virus by constant wearing of facemasks, regular hand washing, persistent use of hand sanitizers and maintenance of social distancing, among others.

    In his  closing remarks, the governor further assured the people of Nasarawa State that his administration will strictly adhere to the provision of the budget to ensure successful implementation for the benefit of the good people of Nasarawa State.

  • Kidnapped Auxiliary bishop has not been killed – Owerri diocese

    Kidnapped Auxiliary bishop has not been killed – Owerri diocese

    The Archbishop of Owerri Catholic, A. Obinna, has described as false the news making the rounds that the auxiliary bishop of the archdiocese, Moses Chikwe, who was kidnapped on Sunday in Owerri, the Imo state capital, had been killed by his abductors.

    There were reports on Tuesday evening that the corpse of the prelate was allegedly found somewhere at the Ngor Okpala Local Government Area of the state, causing panic in the state.

    But the archbishop of the archdiocese in a statement swiftly issued by Rev. Fr. Nnaemeka Njezi, who is the assistant secretary of the Catholic Archdiocese of Owerri, stated that there was no truth in the death rumour.

    The statement, which described the news as misleading, asked the Catholic faithful to be prayerful.

    It stated that the archdiocese was hopeful that the abducted prelate would be released unhurt.

    The statement read, “His grace, Most Rev Anthony Obinna, Archbishop of Owerri, hereby requests all Christ’s faithful and people of goodwill at large to disregard the purported news feed by one Useni Yusuf at AJ press on the killing of the auxiliary bishop of Owerri Archdiocese, Most Rev Moses Chikwe.

    “This information is unconfirmed, misleading and does not come from the Catholic Archdiocese of Owerri.

    “We continue to appeal that (we) all join the archbishop in prayers for the release of Bishop Chikwe and Mr Ndubuisi Robert, his driver.”

  • A’Ibom community sacks Monarch for alleged criminality

    The village head of Ikot Obio Inyang community, Etinan local council of Akwa Ibom Chief Emem Akpan has been denounced by the community on allegations of fraud and other criminal activities.

    The community has also ordered that Akpan be stripped of his position and be handed over to the Police to face his pending police cases and criminal prosecution.

    In a 14-point resolution by the Ikot Obio Inyang Development Association (IKODA), made available to newsmen in Uyo on Wednesday, the community accused the village head of sabotaging the water scheme provided by the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    The resolution signed by the President of Ikot Obio Inyang Development Association Enefiok Umoh and 89 other members of the community recalled a Police report of February 17, 2020, which indicted the village head on the said vandalization, and therefore passed a vote of no confidence on his leadership.

    IKODA said the report revealed that Akpan removed the solar pump controller, solar panel and other components in the water project, sold and used the money for his personal benefit without the knowledge and approval of the village council and community.

    ” This led to a petition to the state police commissioner who ordered an investigation into the matter. The police investigation indicted Chief Emem Okon Akpan, the village head for vandalism,stealing and conversion of community solar water facilities.

    “Chief Emem Okon Akpan collected compensation for Ekom Iman-Etina Road due Ikot Obio Inyang people and never gave to the rightful beneficiaries.” IKODA said.

    The community lamented that, “flif Chief Emem Okon continues ruling as the village head of Ikot Obio Inyang, the community would meet an irredeemable soon and untold hardship in all spheres of the community life. Enough us enough!”

    In view of those allegations, the community resolved to reject and denounce Akpan as their village from that December, 26, 2020.

    ” The entire men, women, youths and social groups in Ikot Obio Inyang pass a vote if no confidence in Chief Emem Okon Akpan” and he be stripped of his position as village head of Ikot Obio Inyang.

    “Chief Emem Okon Akpan be handed over to the police to face his pending cases and criminal prosecution.” The community said.

    A police report on the case of vandalism of the community water scheme as made available to a national daily had indicted the village head of refuseing to direct the police to where he sold the solar panels.

    “The village refused to disclose the amount he sold the solar panels as the real.orice of the panels are not known due to the fact that the project was done by th NDDC which is always based on contract.

    When contacted, the embattled village head declared the position of Ikot Obio Inyang Development Association as invalid.

    Okon who declared the Association as opposition said such position needed to have been endorsed by family heads, and the letter headed paper of the village council used, to make it valid.

    “They are not members of the village council, but opposition. That is why you did not see any of the family heads sign the letter, and that is why they did not also use the letter headed paper of the village council. They are politicians, their position is not valid”. He said

  • Ugandan Opposition presidential candidate, Bobi Wine arrested

    Ugandan Opposition presidential candidate, Bobi Wine arrested

    Ugandan presidential candidate, Bobi Wine, has been arrested along with his campaign team.

    This is according to a post shared on his official Twitter account on Wednesday, December 30, 2020.

    “Bobi Wine and his entire campaign team arrested in Kalangala! Media blocked,” the post said.

    The arrest comes days after Wine announced the ‘murder’ of a member of his security team, Francis Senteza Kalibala.

    Wine who is a Member of Parliament representing Kyadondo County East constituency alleged that Kalibala was run over by a “military-police truck.”

    “I regret to announce the murder of my security team member Francis Senteza Kalibala aka Frank,” he wrote on Twitter.

    “He was deliberately run over by a military-police truck, No. H4DF 2382 which blocked us in Busega on our way to Rubaga to get Kasirye Ashraf emergency medical attention.”

    In an interview with CNN’s Christine Amanpour, a few weeks ago, Wine opened up on the challenges his presidential ambition has been facing.

    The musician turned politician who is running against incumbent President Yoweri Museveni said he faced assassination attempts and that he has been prevented from his rights as a citizen.

    He also said that there is no level playing field in the coming election in Uganda.

    He said, “I’ve survived two assassination attempts in the last two weeks where bullets have been shot in my car and on the tires and the windscreens.”

    He added, “That’s the ground that President Museveni calls level.”

  • US Rep Elect, Luke Letlow, dies of Covid-19

    US Rep Elect, Luke Letlow, dies of Covid-19

    U.S. Representative-elect Luke Letlow of Louisiana died on Tuesday of COVID-19, his campaign said.

    Letlow, 41, announced on Dec. 18 that he had tested positive for the novel coronavirus.

    “Congressman-elect Luke Letlow, 41, passed away this evening at Ochsner-LSU Health Shreveport due to complications from COVID-19”, his campaign manager, Andrew Bautsch, said.

    “Letlow was admitted into a Monroe hospital on December 19 after testing positive for the coronavirus and was transferred to Ochsner-LSU Health on Tuesday, December 22 and placed in intensive care”, he added.

    Letlow, a Republican, won a runoff election on Dec. 5 for the 5th District seat, which represents Northeast and Central Louisiana, and was due to be sworn in on Sunday. He is survived by his wife and two children.

    Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards and U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi were among those that expressed sorrow and paid tribute to Letlow.

  • FG plans suspension of  Passports Of 100 Passengers refusing Post arrival COVID-19 test

    FG plans suspension of Passports Of 100 Passengers refusing Post arrival COVID-19 test

    The federal government has stated that it will suspend passports of passengers refusing to take their post-arrival COVID-19 test.

    It stated that effective from January 1st, 2021, passports of the first one hundred passengers that have failed to take their post-arrival COVID-19 test will be published in the national dailies and suspended till June 2021.

    The Chairman of the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19, Mr. Boss Mustapha made the announcement in Abuja on Tuesday during a briefing.

    Mustapha, also, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), said that the names of the passengers would be published on Jan. 1, 2021, while the suspension of the passports would last for six months.

    He also revealed that there are some additional quarantine protocols to be observed by travelers arriving from the UK and South Africa.

    The new protocols according to the task force who already predict that January 2021 will be a tough month, is to minimize the possibility of virus importation into the country.

    READ ALSO: 2023: Tinubu, Bakare not yet endorsed for presidency –Afenifere

    The SGF lamented the difficulties experienced in the national response, noting that the nation’s response is passing through a challenging phase due to the seriousness of the second wave of infections in Nigeria.

    “Week 52 has so far given us the highest number of infections in a single week to date. Our analysis shows that 16 out of every 100 tests carried out are positive.

    “We are also seeing increasing transmission among younger people and this is not considered good and safe. We must, therefore, exercise utmost restraint by taking responsibility,” he said.

    Mustapha said that the PTF had discussed two critical issues, Oxygen supply, and Case Management, and during the conversation with health authorities, CMDs of Federal Tertiary Institutions in Abuja, National Hospital; Jabi & Gwagwalada, the PTF directed that the level of Infections, Prevention and Control, as well as case management, should be prioritized immediately.

    “With the increasing number of infections and hospitalization, our objectives are to ensure that infection, prevention, and control (IPC) is properly instituted to minimize spread and exposure of health care workers to the virus;

    “Ensure that those who require hospitalization are well managed; those requiring medical attention for other ailments gain access to Treatment at medical facilities; and critical care is available and deployed, especially where oxygen is needed.

    “The situation in Abuja and its environs has been of concern to the PTF,” the SGF stated.

  • Gbajabiamila expresses sadness over Prof. Odekunle’s death

    Gbajabiamila expresses sadness over Prof. Odekunle’s death

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rep. Femi Gbajabiamila, has expressed sadness over the demise of Nigeria’s first professor of criminology, Femi Odekunle.

    Gbajabiamila said with Prof. Odekunle’s death, Nigeria has lost one of her finest scholars who toiled to give his best to the country’s education sector.

    He said the renowned professor, who until his death was a member of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), would be sorely missed by many, noting that he has left a vacuum in his field of study.

    Describing the late Prof. Odenkule as one intellectual Nigerian whose value to the country could not be quantified, the Speaker said the late professor lived a fulfilled life worthy of emulation by upcoming generation.

    Gbajabiamila sent his condolences to the Odekunle family and the government and people of Osun State over the loss. He wished Prof. Odekunle’s soul eternal rest.

  • Osun Govt. sets up clinic for depressed, abused women

    Osun Govt. sets up clinic for depressed, abused women

    Mrs Olubukoka Olaboopo, the Osun Commissioner for Women , Children and Social Affairs, on Wednesday, says the ministry has created a women clinic where depressed, abused women can get help, physically and psychologically.

    Olaboopo made this known during an interview in Osogbo.

    The commissioner explained that the ministry as a social welfare organ had been working toward protecting the interest of women
    and children.

    She added that the ministry had made it a duty to ensure that women and children received topmost attention and care in the state.

    READ ALSO: WhatsApp releases list of phones to blacklist from January 1

    She said “the women clinic is a new innovation of the ministry and we have lawyers, social workers, guidance counsellors, and clinical psychologists who attend to survivors.

    “Apart from survivors of Gender Based Violence (GBV), we also attend to any woman who feels that she is in need of care, assistance, counseling and others.

    “We are aware that there are many women in distress and many others who feel like committing suicide; so, the clinic is just a way
    of giving them a shoulder to lean on.

    “Some of them are not able to confide even in their pastors or imams for fear of stigmatisation. So, we operate in a highly professional way, as we cannot go
    about discussing personal issues, there is confidentiality and privacy.

    “When they talk to us, we look at how to assist them and sometimes give them legal aid, at no cost to them.

    “During the upsurge of GBV cases as a result of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) lockdown , we expanded the state toll-free line  — 293, so that
    anybody can talk to us 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and we promptly attended to them at no cost to them.”

    Olaboopo also said that the ministry was equally doing more to ensure that abused women, either sexually or physically, received justice.

    She noted that the ministry was collaborating with the Ministry of Justice and the Police, to ensure that perpetrators of GBV were
    brought to book.

  • Behind so-called ‘shining city upon a hill’ are growing divisions between rich and poor in U.S.

    By Ju Guang

    As the rich and poor are distinctly divided in the U.S. and the American government allows wealth to be controlled by a small number of people, the country now has the lowest rate of social mobility of any of the rich countries, and it comes as no surprise that “the American Dream is rapidly becoming the American Illusion”.

    “So far, that seems to be a lesson of this virus: it shows us who and what gets protected, as the ship sinks. On the Titanic, it was women and children. With Covid-19, it’s the wealthy and powerful,” said an article published on The Guardian in March. It sharply pointed out the disorder and injustice in the U.S. regarding the coronavirus testing.

    Up to now, the number of Americans seeking food assistance has increased significantly over the same period last year, and that of applicants for unemployment relief has continued to rise on a monthly basis. The underclass in the U.S. is faced with severe crisis of survival.

    Like a driving rain, the epidemic has made clearer the gap between the rich and the poor in the American society.

    In April, The Atlantic, an American magazine, observed that when lower-income people get sick, they oftentimes delay going to the doctor, not because they don’t want to get well, but because they simply don’t have the money.

    Philip Alston, the United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, warned that the poor in the U.S. are being hit hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Low-income and poor people face far higher risks from the coronavirus due to chronic neglect and discrimination, and a muddled, corporate-driven, federal response has failed them,” Alston noted.

    Under the attack of the epidemic, the U.S. has seen deeper divisions between rich and poor.

    The gap in the U.S. has reached its peak level since the Great Depression in the 1930s. It seems that the poor are trying to survive in stormy seas on driftwood, while wealth keeps flowing to the rich, helping whom create their “Noah’s Ark”.

    Data from Feeding America, a U.S.-based nonprofit organization, show that more than 50 million people in the U.S. may experience food insecurity, an increase of about 15 million from before the epidemic.

    The combined wealth of America’s billionaires stood at $3.5 trillion in June, $565 billion more than that in March, said a report released by the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), an American progressive think tank.

    In the second quarter of the year, the net worth of American households grew by nearly 7 percent compared with the first quarter, according to data released by the Federal Reserve System (Fed) of the U.S.

    However, such wealth mainly flowed to the richest families while still many people received lower incomes or even lost their jobs.

    Economic inequality is actually a stable and long-term trend in the U.S., and a widening gap amid the COVID-19 outbreak is merely a new phase of the long-term trend.

    As of the end of March, the richest 10 percent of Americans had gained more than two-thirds of the country’s wealth, and the top 1 percent of Americans held 31 percent of the wealth, the Fed pointed out.

    From 1989 to 2018, the bottom 50 percent of the population in the U.S. saw basically zero net wealth growth, according to data from the Fed.

    At the top, the financial crisis in 2008 could almost be considered a success, while all of the lasting pain was left in the middle and at the bottom, by Americans who had taken on debt and lost their jobs, homes, and retirement savings, said an article published on The Atlantic in March.

    What the article described is similar to the current situation where the epidemic has worsened the living conditions of the underclass in the U.S.

    Thomas Piketty, author of Capital in the Twenty-First Century, noted that to reverse economic inequality, a country must establish a set of public mechanisms to ensure that capital serve the overall interests.

    However, more and more people have realized that the widening gap between the rich and the poor in the U.S. is the result of deep-rooted institutional problems. They believe that the U.S. politics has long been manipulated by interest groups so the government is unable to formulate and implement tax, industrial and social security policies that promote social equity.

    The Trump Administration has brought in massive tax breaks for corporations and the very wealthy, while orchestrating a systematic assault on the welfare system, according to a report released by Alston in May 2018.

    “The strategy seems to be tailor-made to maximize inequality and to plunge millions of working Americans, and those unable to work, into penury,” he said.

    The persistence of extreme poverty is a political choice made by those in power, the report continued.

    The U.S. Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy estimated that 27 percent of the benefits of tax cuts in the U.S. would go to the pockets of the richest 1 percent of Americans in 2019.

    During the first half of the year, the U.S. Congress rolled out the Paychek Protection Program (PPP) to provide financial assistance for small businesses, in a bid to help them pay their employees during the COVID-19 crisis. It didn’t take the public long to find out that quite a large amount of the financial assistance went directly to large enterprises.

    The increasingly intense money politics in the U.S. has turned the American government into a spokesperson for the rich, and many people don’t expect the gap between the rich and poor to be substantially narrowed in a short period.

    The image of the U.S. as “a city upon a hill” is disappearing, said Richard Haass, president of the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations, in an article in June.

    As the rich and poor are distinctly divided in the U.S. and the American government allows wealth to be controlled by a small number of people, the country now has the lowest rate of social mobility of any of the rich countries, and it comes as no surprise that “the American Dream is rapidly becoming the American Illusion” as Alston pointed out.

    How can such a country advertise equity and justice to the world?

  • Organised labour to begin protest in Ekiti  over minimum wage

    Organised labour to begin protest in Ekiti over minimum wage

    The organized labour in Ekiti State will begin protest in the first week of January to demand payment of minimum wage and consequential adjustment to public sector workers.

    Labour comprising Nigeria Labour Congress, Trade Union Council and Joint Negotiating Council rose from a meeting on Tuesday to insist on the payment of the minimum wage, as agreed between the state government and organized labour last Tuesday, and the implementation effective from January.

    Trouble started on Thursday last week when labour accused the state government of bringing in fresh proposal as against the one earlier agreed upon and billed to be signed that day following which the organised labour reverted to congress on Tuesday.

    READ ALSO: Kaduna commence strict COVID-19 compliance enforcement

    In the communique at the end of the congress made available to journalists on Wednesday, the organized labour, among others, resolved that “the agreed new minimum wage and consequential adjustment table should be sustained without any concession” and that “implementation should commence for payment in January 2021 with the accruable arrears from April 2020”.

    The communique was signed by the state chairmen, Kolapo Olatunde (NLC), Sola Adigun (TUC) and Kayode Fatomiluyi (JNC); and the secretaries, Mrs Akinyemi Taiwo (NLC), Kuloogun Lawrence (TUC) and Gbenga Olowoyo (JNC).

    The organised labour resolved that “failure on the part of the state government to implement the new minimum wage and consequential adjustment as negotiated, as well as various outstanding arrears, the organized labour should mobilise workers for peaceful protest in the first week of January 2021”.

    They resolved that “all arrears of promotions for years 2017, 2018 and 2019; arrears of leave bonuses for years 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020 as well as six years for local governments, subvented institutions and four years for state workers salary arrears and deductions should be paid in earnest”.

    Other resolution at the congress included that “the organized labour should with immediate effect report to the enlarged workers at the State Secretariat complex to allow adequate information to the generality of the workforce”.

    The Congress, on the occasion, passed a vote of confidence on the leadership of the organized labour in the state and resolved “to sustain the tempo of good leadership and followership”.