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The Press Lodge We ᴘᴜʙʟɪꜱʜ ɴᴇᴡꜱ & ᴘʀᴇꜱꜱ ꜱᴛᴀᴛᴇᴍᴇɴᴛ ɪɴ ɪᴛꜱ ᴏʀɪɢ

26/09/2023

Fulani herdsman's side of the story: the best interview of the decades. A must watch for you.
An interview by Shortcut Comedian

THIS IS THE MOST ACCURATE ACCOUNT OF THE HAPPENINGS. I WONDER WHO THIS DANNY KWANGOGO IS?. DOES ANYONE KNOW HIM? - Nasir...
12/08/2023

THIS IS THE MOST ACCURATE ACCOUNT OF THE HAPPENINGS. I WONDER WHO THIS DANNY KWANGOGO IS?. DOES ANYONE KNOW HIM? - Nasir

*El-Rufai: All the Underhand Dealings Revealed

By Danny Kwangogo

Not a few Nigerians have been taken aback by the decision of the Senate not to clear former Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai and two others as ministerial nominees, citing “security checks”. But, of the three, the one that has generated the most controversy and sent tongues wagging is El-Rufai’s and this is obvious. His contributions to the emergence of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu as candidate and president are all in the public domain.

El-Rufai opposed the plan of the former National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Senator Abdullahi Adamu, to retain power in the North and led the team of Northern governors who insisted that power must shift to the South.

At the heat of the campaign for APC’s presidential ticket, Aisha, the wife of the immediate past President, Muhammadu Buhari reportedly asked him to speak with the other governors who were running for the presidential ticket to step down for Tinubu. He went about the task and a good number of them, especially from the North, stepped down and supported the Tinubu candidacy.

Fast forward to the 8th of June, 2022 when Tinubu emerged as APC’s Presidential candidate.

After his emergence, the former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele and the so-called cabal in the then Federal Government came up with the currency swap initiative.

The Kaduna State Government under the leadership of Mallam Nasir El-Rufai and two other state governments sued the Federal Government, the CBN and others, to challenge the policy at the Supreme Court. Later on, other state governments joined the suit; and they won. That was how the currency swap policy and the hardship it brought were mitigated.

Then in October 2022, Tinubu publicly said he would not leave the stage at the Kaduna Investment Summit until El-Rufai rescinded his decision to retire from public office and pursue other private endeavours. He said he needed him to stay and work with him.

In deference to Tinubu, who was his guest at the time, El-Rufai went on stage to meet him and said he would work with the then incoming government even if it was on part-time basis.

After emerging victorious at the poll, President Tinubu reportedly invited El-Rufai and told him that one of his campaign promises to Nigerians was uninterrupted power supply and that he had looked round and decided that El-Rufai was the man who could deliver for him on that promise.

At first, El-Rufai was said to have hesitated in accepting the offer. Over time, it took the interventions of some patriots and well-meaning Nigerians who allegedly prevailed on El-Rufai to accept the offer.

But, before he accepted the offer to serve, El-Rufai was said to have informed the President that based on his past experiences, it was imperative for gas to be under the same roof with the Federal Ministry of Power since gas was a critical component for electricity supply in this time and age, coupled with the drive for clean energy and climate change. It was said that if the proposal was accepted by the President, the new ministry would be known as Federal Ministry of Energy.

Informed sources also hinted that El-Rufai proposed the setting up of a National Energy Council under the Chairmanship of the President with representatives of the relevant ministries, agencies and departments, such as Federal Ministry of Finance, Federal Ministry of Petroleum, Federal Ministry of Environment and others.

With all these, it was gathered that the idea was for the President to drive the initiative for uninterrupted power supply while El-Rufai would implement it as Minister of Energy. The President consented and asked him to assemble his team and get to work immediately.

So, with the Presidential directive, El-Rufai assembled a team and began working about three weeks before his name was sent, alongside others, to the Senate for screening on the 27th of July, 2023.

Surprisingly, when El-Rufai appeared before the Senate for the screening, a Senator from Kogi State, Sunday Karimi, after commending El-Rufai for his achievements in public office, said he had a petition against him that bothered on "security, unity and cohesiveness". He urged the Senate to consider the petition while the screening the nominee.

When El-Rufai wanted to speak to the petition, the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio said he should not bother.

His words: "I have to inform all of you that I have received similar petitions from some people against other nominees, but this is not where we are to deal with petitions. Our job here is to screen. And, of course, we can refer petitions to where petitions will be dealt with.

“They are nominees of Mr. President. If it is something where there is a formal petition before the Senate, we will look at it formally. But there are certain petitions we have to refer to the Presidency or security agencies to look at, and that has nothing to do with us. By the time we go into confirmation, we will be so advised. So, I want my brother to take a bow and go, and don’t bother to explain the petition.”

However, discreet investigation has revealed that the petition was allegedly given to Senator Karimi by Akpabio on the morning of the screening exercise. He was only asked to present it. This, perhaps, explains why he was recognized by Akpabio immediately he raised his hands.

Reliable sources in Abuja said Senator Karimi has reportedly apologized to El-Rufai for the embarrassment. Other prominent leaders and politicians from his home state of Kogi have allegedly tendered unreserved apologies and distanced themselves from the petition and the acts of the senator.

Meanwhile, it has been revealed that the petition, which formed the basis of the non-confirmation of El-Rufai, is the subject of a libel suit which the former governor instituted against the petitioner, one Gloria Mabeiam Ballason, from Southern Kaduna.

Again, contrary to the insinuation that El-Rufai had been banned from holding public office in Nigeria, independent checks have revealed that there is no such resolution. It was a mere recommendation of a Committee of the House of Representatives over 20 years ago. The recommendation has been quashed by a court of competent jurisdiction. Besides, El-Rufai has since become a two-term governor of Kaduna state with outstanding records of performance!

A source at the Senate said even the letter that the President of the Senate relied on to stop the confirmation of El-Rufai and others was not addressed to him. Rather, it was addressed to the Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters (Senate) and signed by one Aminu Yusuf, a Director in the office of the Director-General of the State Security Service (SSS). The President of the Senate was merely copied. This is against the protocols on Communication between the Executive and the Legislature which forbids the National Assembly from acting on any communication that is not signed by the President, much less one that was not addressed to it.

What has now emerged is that the National Security Adviser, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, working in cahoots with the Chief of Staff, Mr. Femi Gbajabiamila, allegedly got a Director in the office of the DG, SSS, to sign the letter when the helmsman of the secret service purportedly refused to do the hatchet job.

Reliable sources alleged that Vice-President Kashim Shettima, Ribadu and Gbajabiamila feel threatened by El-Rufai, especially if he is able to deliver on the task. They do not want him to serve in the government and succeed because they are already planning for 2027 or 3031, as the case may be and they see him as a potential threat to their aspirations.

They are also being allegedly propelled by other forces outside the government.

Some stakeholders in the Power Sector who have been paid between N2billion and N3billion as subsidies for electricity are afraid that with El-Rufai coming onboard, the free money will stop.

They allegedly lobbied the President not to make El-Rufai the Minister of Energy because they contributed to his campaign.

There are political foes like Shehu Sani and some elements in the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) and even some sponsored Muslim clerics are allegedly part of the gang up.

On Tuesday, it was said that El-Rufai requested to see the President. When they met and El-Rufai expressed his reservations about all that happened, the President reportedly asked for 12 hours to investigate the matter and resolve it. On his part, El-Rufai allegedly said 24 hours was ideal given the President's busy schedule.

It was 24 hours on Wednesday, 9th August, 2023, when the media reported that El-Rufai was at the Presidential Villa to meet with the President.

The meeting, it was gathered, was actually for the team assembled by El-Rufai to make a presentation to the President on their activities and plans to reform the power sector. But surprisingly, at the meeting, the President allegedly began to query some of the things they had agreed on weeks ago about the bringing of Gas under the same roof with Power and to be renamed the Federal Ministry of Energy and other reform initiatives. It seemed the appointing authority has had a change of mind. Hence, all the avoidable drama that dogged the screening and confirmation.

At the end of the meeting, a source at the Presidency said El-Rufai asked the President if he could see him one-on-one in respect of the other matter that the President said he would get back to him on.

The President reportedly said he needed to see some persons who were waiting for him and that the Director of Protocol would call him to schedule a meeting. The meeting has not held. But, sources close to the former Kaduna state helmsman say he is already at the verge of rejecting the ministerial offer.

As a prelude, El-Rufai has reportedly submitted the Curriculum Vitae of a senator from Kaduna state as a replacement for him since Kaduna state has no representative in the soon-to-be composed Federal Executive Council (FEC).

Sources hinted that the former Governor of Kaduna state has since jetted out of the country to ward off pressures from party stalwarts and concerned Nigerians who are worried about the turn of events, wondering how those who lobbied him to come and serve would turn round to rubbish his enviable public records!

But sources say, whatever is the case, the bulk stops on the President's desk.

"If he really means well and wants El-Rufai to deliver for him on constant power supply, he knows what to do to get him confirmed as it happened in the case of Festus Keyamo.

"Recall that during Obasanjo's administration, El-Rufai had an issue with the lawmakers when he alleged that some of them were demanding bribe from him. Obasanjo intervened and the matter was resolved and the Senate cleared him," one of the sources said.

It remains to be seen what the President would do in the next couple of days: to keep his words or pander to inanities and thereby sacrifice proven competence and capacity.

*Danny Kwangogo wrote from Abuja.

21/06/2023

LIST OF AGENCIES, PARASTATALS, INSTITUTIONS AFFECTED BY PRES. TINUBU’S BOARD DISSOLUTION.

The dissolution means until the affected government establishments get new heads, the president has a duty of handling pressing issues that ideally would have been the responsibilities of the boards in addition to his normal role.

In the spirit of the reorganisation of public service operations, all but 14 governing boards of the Nigerian government’s parastatals, agencies, institutions, and government-owned companies have been disbanded.

There are strong indications that the sizes and number of the institutions may shrink further in the days, with the merger of key revenue-generating agencies on the cards.

A roadmap to Nigeria’s economic revamp for the new administration, drawn by a presidential advisory team last month, proposed the unification of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, the Customs, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency into a single entity to be known as the Nigerian Revenue Service (NRS).

The NRS will help the new government ease the receipt of direct and indirect taxes, in addition to levies.

■Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON)
■Social Security Administration of Nigeria (SSA)
■Budget Office of the Federation (BOF)
■Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE)
■Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP)
■Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
■Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC)
■Debt Management Office (DMO)
■Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS)
■Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN)
■Fiscal Responsibility Commission (FRC)
■Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC)
■National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)
■National Council on Privatisation (NCP)
■National Insurance Commission (NAICOM)
■National Pension Commission (PenCom)
■National Planning Commission (NPC)
■National Sugar Development Council (NSDC)
■Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC)
■Nigeria Customs Service (NCS)
■Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC)
■Nigeria Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC)
■Nigerian Export – Import Bank (NEXIM Bank)
■Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC)
■Oil and Gas Free Zones Authority (OGFZA)
■Nigeria Export Processing Zones Authority (NEPZA)
■Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
■Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON)
■Small and Medium Enterprise Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN)
■National Board for Arabic And Islamic Studies (NBAIS)
■Nigeria Gas Company
■Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB)
■National Examination Council (NECO)
■National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN)
■National Teachers Institute (NTI)
■National Universities Commission (NUC)
■Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria (TRCN)
■National Business and Technical Examinations Board (NABTEB)
■Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC)
■West African Examination Council (WAEC)
■National Commission for Colleges of Education (NCCE)
■National Library of Nigeria (NLN)
■Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA)
■Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC)
■Electricity Management Services Limited (EMSL)
■Energy Commission of Nigeria (ECN)
■National Power Training Institute of Nigeria (NAPTIN)
■Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC)
■Nigerian Content Monitoring and Development Board (NCMDB)
■Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited (NNPCL)
■Nigerian Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NNRA)
■Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA)
■Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN)
■Rural Electrification Agency (REA)
■Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN)
■Federal Environmental Protection Agency (FEPA)
■Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria (FRIN)
■National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA)
■National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA)
■National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA)
■Environmental Health Officers Registration Council of Nigeria (EHORECON)
■National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS)
■National Institute for Pharmaceutical Research and Development (NIPRD)
■National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA)
■National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC)
■National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA)
■Nigerian Institute of Medical Research (NIMR)
■Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC)
■National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA)
■Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA)[87]
■State Security Service (SSS)[88]
■National Intelligence Agency (NIA)
■Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU)
■National Judicial Institute (NJI)
■Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA)
■Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA)
■Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC)
■Broadcasting Organisation of Nigeria (BON)
■News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
■Nigerian Press Council (NPC)
■Nigerian Television Authority (NTA)
■National Agency For Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI)
■National Biotechnology Development Agency (NABDA)
■National Centre for Remote Sensing (NCRS)
■Sheda Science and Technology Complex (SHESTCO)
■National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion (NOTAP)
■National Space Research and Development Agency (NASRDA)
■Nigerian Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NNRA)
■Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC)
■Nigerian Communications Satellite Ltd (NIGCOMSAT)
■National Centre for Technology Management (NACETEM)
■Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA)
■Nigerian Integrated Water Resources Commission
■National Water Resources Institute (NWRI)
■River Basin Development Authorities (RBDA)
■Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilization (CBAAC)
■National Automotive Design and Development Council (NADDC)
■Federal Computer Professionals Registration Council of Nigeria (CPN)
■Consumer Protection Council (CPC)
■Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
■Federal Housing Authority (FHA)
■Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC)
■Industrial Training Fund (ITF)
■Legal Aid Council of Nigeria (LACoN)
■National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP)
■National Boundary Commission
■National Council of Arts and Culture (NCAC)
■National Economic Reconstruction Fund (NERFUND)
■National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA)
■National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NaHCON)
■National Human Rights Commission (NHRC)
■National Identity Management Commission (NIMC)
■National Institute for Hospitality Tourism (NIHOTOUR)
■National Lottery Regulatory Commission
■National Orientation Agency (NOA)
■National Poverty Eradication Programme (NAPEP)
■National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission (NSIWC)
■National Sports Commission (NSC)
■Nigeria Extractive Industries Transprency Initiative (NEITI)
■Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS)
■Nigerian Building and Road Research Institute (NBRRI)
■Nigeria Institute of Building (NIOB)
■Nigerian Christian Pilgrim Commission (NCPC)
■Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC)
■Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC)
■Public Complaints Commission,
■Nigeria Surveyors Council Of Nigeria
■National Lottery Trust Fund
■National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA)
■Nigeria Communications Satellite Limited (NIGCOMSAT)
■Nigerian Broadcasting Commission (NBC)
■Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC)
■Nigerian Postal Service (NIPOST)
■National Frequency Management Council
■Nigerian Television Authority (NTA)
■Galaxy Backbone (GBB)
■Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN)
■Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA)
■Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA)
■Nigerian Safety Investigation Bureau (NSIB)
■Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET)
■Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT)
■Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria (CRIN)
■National Agricultural Extension, Research and Liaison Services (NAERLS)
■National Veterinary Research Institute (NVRI)
■Nigerian Agricultural Insurance Corporation (NAIC)
■National Root Crops Research Institute (NCRI)
■Agricultural Research Council of Nigeria
■Nigerian Institute for Oceanography and Marine Research
■Nigerian Institute for Oil Palm Research (NIFOR)
■Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS)
■National Horticultural Research Institute (NIHORT)

FG KNOCKS ORTOMSTATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASEPRESIDENT BUHARI’S BENUE RECORD SPEAKS FOR ITSELF. LET THE PEOPLE OF BENUE SPEAK...
20/04/2023

FG KNOCKS ORTOM

STATE HOUSE PRESS RELEASE

PRESIDENT BUHARI’S BENUE RECORD SPEAKS FOR ITSELF. LET THE PEOPLE OF BENUE SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES TOO

“In a series of apparently syndicated editorials, this country’s newspapers – the Daily Trust and ThisDay – have attempted to lay the blame of the dire security situation in Benue State entirely at the feet of the outgoing president. As for the man who has actually presided over Benue State for the past eight years, its outgoing governor Samuel Ortom, the editors of those publications, in their near identical articles, elected to give him a free pass.

“Fortunately, the people of Benue State know the truth. After all, it is they who have suffered under Ortom’s “leadership” – if one can call it such. It is they who have experienced first-hand the mass killings, the torture, the litany of atrocities as Benue’s security situation plummeted ever further. It is they who buried their loved ones while watching their careless, irresponsible and incompetent governor politicise on those freshly dug graves.

“And it is they who turned to the last privilege they had left: their democratic privilege, to resoundingly kick out Ortom and his so-called People’s Democratic Party in favour of a new governor, Reverend Father Hyacinth Iornem Alia from Buhari’s party, the APC.

“But since the Daily Trust and ThisDay may not be as well informed as their Benue compatriots, this blatant rewriting of history must be addressed. For their education, we humbly submit a list – far from exhaustive – of the steps taken personally by President Buhari to address the deteriorating situation in Benue. These were, in many cases, roundly ignored – if not outright obstructed – by former Governor Ortom:

“i. A number of in-person meetings with the Governor of Benue State and other community leaders, assuring them of the Federal Government’s commitment to protecting farmers and communities.

“ii. The establishment and funding of Joint Security Operations, code-named Operation Whirl Stroke (OWS). To date, the OWS Team remains in place. A number of OWS security agents have given their lives protecting the people of Benue. Many were endangered further by Ortom’s fake news and disinformation campaigns, and his unwillingness to engage with the project.

“iii. The deployment of special security forces to flash-points in the State including the Nigerian Army, Nigerian Air Force, Nigerian Navy, Nigerian Police Force, Department of State Services and other security agencies.

“iv. The deployment of an array of NAF fighter aircraft, Mi-35 helicopter gunships as well as Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance platforms.

“v. The Deployment of ten (10) Units of the Police Mobile Force, Ten (10) Units of Police Special Forces (Tactical Operation Units) and Aerial Surveillance Teams (Police Helicopters).

“vi. The Acquisition and deployment of modern military armaments.

“vii. The provision of timely and actionable intelligence to Ortom (which were routinely ignored).

“viii. The prompt provision of humanitarian support to victims via the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development.

“Despite these efforts, we know that the new Governor, Rev. Fr. Hyacinth Alia, has his work cut out. In his own words, he is inheriting a State that is in the Intensive Care Unit. Perhaps if disgraced Governor Ortom had been more concerned with doing his job than politisicing the tragedies so frequently taking place under his watch, the situation in Benue might be very different, like in any of its neighbours – Taraba, Nasarawa, the FCT – which all enjoy peace.

“Instead, Ortom stubbornly refused to engage with the detailed, holistic approach clearly spelt out by the Federal Government. He arrogantly chose his own, destructive path. He blamed the Fulani for every problem that arose. He ignored numerous intelligence reports passed to him for action. He rejected police findings into investigations that didn’t meet his egotistical worldview. He politicized every life lost on his watch.

“So, thank God the people of Benue rejected him so roundly at elections. His contract was not renewed. He failed a Senate election. Even the person he endorsed for Governorship was rejected.

“They know better than anyone else the true reasons for the situation in Benue. If anyone is looking for someone to blame, just ask the people of Benue.”

Garba Shehu

Senior Special Assistant to the President

(Media & Publicity)

April 19, 2023

Before It Is too late; An Advice For Lokoja-Koto Federal Constituency Come FebruaryBy Abbas YahayaWe are on the threshol...
17/01/2023

Before It Is too late; An Advice For Lokoja-Koto Federal Constituency Come February

By Abbas Yahaya

We are on the threshold of electing another set of political leaders into whose hands we are expected to entrust our future. Political leadership, in a parsimonious definition, refers to the impact on decision-making and political outcomes that result from actions by the holder of a political office. Thus, it is connected to leadership style and may be rooted in certain character traits of the leader’s personality, as well as the life metaphor of the elected political leader.

As we inch toward making that auspicious decision in the next couple of weeks, the onus therefore squarely rests on all of us to do the right thing by choosing those that are steeped in the nuances of quality representation.

We, the discerning, are in agreement with the unassailable fact that, for so long, since the demise of our late leader, Late Rt. Hon Umar Buba of the blessed memory, quality representation, especially at the federal house of representatives, has continued to elude the people of Lokoja-Koto Federal Constituency. Therefore, electing good political leaders is as sacrosanct as it is more than desirable.

The pertinent question to ask is, what makes a good political leader? In an attempt to provide answers, from my own perspective, I would opine that a political leader must have the following requisite credentials to qualify as one.

1-Good communicator.
A good political leader must have excellent written and verbal communcation skills, persuasive speaker in private and in public, as well as emphatic listener. We should not be guided by sentiments in deciding who represents us at all levels. Provision of food items and other palliatives are laudable but not enough. House of Reps is a “talk shop” where members ventilate and articulate, sometimes with vitriolic fervour, the feelings of their constituents. It’s not for bench warmers or “kurmaye”. English language is the medium of communication.

2-Honesty and Integrity.
Being honest means that you don’t pretend to be something you are not. With honesty, you can trust things to be as they appear. Integrity is standing up for what you believe is right and living by your highest values. What is our highest value as people of Lokoja-Koto Federal Constituency. We need a member that will defent it with gusto. All resources meant for constituency projects should be channelled for such purposes. This is integrity.

3-Decision maker.
This is the process of making choices by identifying a decision and assessing alternative resolutions. Our collective decision is to have a sense of belonging as a constituent part of Nigeria. People who are “settlers” should not be allowed to use our quota to their advantage at the expense of the Aboriginal people of Lokoja-Koto.
We need a member that is cerebral, mixes freely, that can build bridges and with street credibility.

4-Must be able to inspire others.
You can only inspire others by showing good character traits of selflessness and integrity, providing clear vision and making it plain for those climbing the ladder to succeed you. A good leader must have a succession plan by raising an army of prospective successors. The plan must be devoid of putting square peg in a round hole.

5-Must delegate tasks effectively.
Having an exaggerated or over bloated impression about your capacity is an invitation to failure. Remember that you can’t do everything if you must provide leadership. Delegation reduces stress.

6-Man with a vision and purpose.
At its core, political power comes from the ability to understand what other people fear or desire, and to use that understanding to influence their behaviors. A political leader must have a clear vision and purpose. The passion that drives your elected leader is his or her life metaphor. If the leader relishes having exotic cars he will use resources meant for you to buy exotic cars. Same goes for his love for real estate, hotels, women, etc.

7-Open door and unfettered access.
A good political leader does not run from people. While some people pay visits for pecuniary reasons (to collect), others will come to offer quality advice. Maintain an open door policy and be a cheerful giver (not from your wallet), direct from your pocket
VOTE WISELY.

© Abbas Yahaya
Multimedia and Investigative Journalist
Writes from Lokoja

10/09/2022
68 FCT communities still practice infanticide By Guardian Newspaper/Joke Falaju, Abuja28 August 2022 Despite enlightenme...
28/08/2022

68 FCT communities still practice infanticide

By Guardian Newspaper/Joke Falaju, Abuja
28 August 2022

Despite enlightenment and persuasion against the killing of twins and other children termed “evil,” indications have emerged that the primitive practice is still ongoing in about 68 communities across the Federal Capital Territory.

Some communities in the FCT still describe as evil, multiple birth children; children who grew upper teeth first; children who lost their mothers at birth or when they were still sucking breasts; children born with down syndrome or any deformity, and albinos as evil.

To ward off “such evil” from their communities, “the children are either poisoned or offered as a sacrifice to their gods, and in case of children that lost their mothers at birth, they bury them with their mothers.

The Operations Leader of The Vines Heritage Home, in Kuje Area Council Abuja, Stephen Olusola, said that the home offers shelter to such children, adding they have been getting hints that infanticide still takes place in some communities Even though some community members have denied it, some affected mothers are still secretly handing over their children to the outfit to avoid them being poisoned to death.

Olusola while speaking at the handing over of a five-year-old boy who lost his mother at birth and has been living in the home to his father said: “If the such practice was not going on, why would a mother willingly give us her child?”
He, however, informed that the situation has greatly improved through increased sensitisation. And with the support of ActionAid and the European Union, the children are no longer termed as evil, and their parents now come to visit them.

He pointed out that one of their major challenges is that some of the children are usually poisoned before they are handed over to them, thereby saddling them with the arduous task of battling to save the infants’ lives or battling other health challenges.

The leader of the home also said that feeding the minors constitutes a huge task noting that 98 per cent of the children brought to the home were infants who were yet to be breastfed. So, they are challenged with the provision of infant formula among others to ensure that they grow well.
He said that the home offers shelter to 177 children including 20 sets of twins, and 17 children have successfully been reunited with their families.
ActionAid Project Lead of Mobilising Action Towards the Abolition of Infanticide in the FCT (MATA) Ubong Tommy, said that ActionAid and the European Union since 2019 pulled funds together to raise awareness about the practice of infanticide in the FCT, and also put in place structures in the community to ensure that the children are successfully united with their families.

He said that they also carry out routine monitoring of children when they return to the community, and ensure that their welfare is properly addressed.

https://guardian.ng/news/68-fct-communities-still-practice-infanticide/

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