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Showing posts from July, 2017

Senate probes N726bn E-West Road awarded by Obasanjo, Jonathan

ABUJA—THE Senate has commenced investigation into the 675km dual-carriageway East-West Road which has gulped N726 billion and is yet to be completed. The Senate also urged the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency, FERMA and Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, to intervene in the rehabilitation and directed the Ministry of Niger Delta to ensure the completion of the East/ West Road particularly the section that links the multi-national investment within the 2017 budget year. It also mandated its Committee on Niger Delta to investigate the contract and report back within four weeks. According to the Senate, the abandonment has disrupted economic activities in the country, noting that the road project was awarded by former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2006 at the value of N211 billion, but the project could not commence in 2007 as arranged because it was not included in the 2007 Appropriation Act, adding that during the late former President Umaru Yar’Adua, nothing ...

Kerosene explosion kills female lawmaker in Abia

ABA— A female councillor in Obingwa Local Government Legislative Council, Abia State, Mrs Obioma Ali, has died over multiple burns she sustained from a kerosene explosion at her home. Ali, who represents Isiala Itu, Ward 12, was said to have been refilling her lantern with kerosene when the substance, suspected to have been adulterated, exploded and burnt her badly. Family sources told Vanguard that the incident affected her hands, face and other parts ofher body. The lawmaker reportedly died at Abia State University Teaching Hospital, ABSUTH, Aba, where she had been receiving attention. Chairman of the Obingwa Local Government Area, Chief Hanson Amaechi, during a condolence visit to the deceased’s family, said her death had created a vacuum in the struggle for female political representation in the area, stressing that she died at a time her experience was highly needed. Amaechi added that the councillor, who was the deputy chief whip and chairman, Committee for Wo...

APC Chieftain cautions Kalu over comments on Buhari’s HealthABUJA – A founding chieftain of the All Progressives Congress APC in Abia state, Prince Paul Ikonne has cautioned a former governor of the state, Orji Uzor Kalu to avoid comments that could portray the party as incapable of keeping to its words. Ikonne was speaking against the backdrop of the former governor’s declaration that ailing President Muhammadu Buhari would return before June 12, urging him to refrain from acting as the president’s unofficial spokesman. “Last time, Dr Orji Uzor Kalu told Nigerians that President Buhari would return soon and he is not the spokesman of the President. Till now, the President is yet to return. He should keep quiet and learn to live like an elder statesman, not trying to take the job of the president’s spokesmen”, he said. Speaking with journalists Thursday in Abuja, Ikonne who was a governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria ACN, said 95 percent of the people of Abia are not happy with the way Kalu governed Abia for eight years.

ABUJA – A founding chieftain of the All Progressives Congress APC in Abia state, Prince Paul Ikonne has cautioned a former governor of the state, Orji Uzor Kalu to avoid comments that could portray the party as incapable of keeping to its words. Ikonne was speaking against the backdrop of the former governor’s declaration that ailing President Muhammadu Buhari would return before June 12, urging him to refrain from acting as the president’s unofficial spokesman. “Last time, Dr Orji Uzor Kalu told Nigerians that President Buhari would return soon and he is not the spokesman of the President. Till now, the President is yet to return. He should keep quiet and learn to live like an elder statesman, not trying to take the job of the president’s spokesmen”, he said. Speaking with journalists Thursday in Abuja, Ikonne who was a governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria ACN, said 95 percent of the people of Abia are not happy with the way Kalu gover...

Inland port: Shippers Council gives 18 months commencement ultimatum

T HE Nigerian Shippers Council, NSC, has given 18 months ultimatum to owners of Inland Container Depots, ICDs, across the country to commence work at their various sites or face sanctions, even as the Executive Secretary of the NSC, Hassan Bello, disclosed that ICD project in Jos, Plateau State is 65 percent completed. Bello, who disclosed this in an exclusive chat with Vanguard in his office, said that government is very serious about the development of these facilities not only because of its capacity to bring development to their area of operation but also the ability to creation jobs for the army of unemployed youths in the country. He explained that as a result of the importance of the ICDs to opening up of the economies of the states where they are located, the minister of transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, is working seriously to ensure that these projects come on stream as soon as possible. The NSC boss said that all is set for the commissioning of that of K...

INEC deploys 14 new RECs to states

Abuja – The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), has approved the posting of 14 newly sworn-in Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) to states, according to a statement by its Secretary, Mrs. Augusta Ogakwu. The statement made available on Friday in Abuja, showed that Prof. James Apam from Benue was posted to Kogi, while Dr. Nentawe Yilwatda from Plateau was posted to Benue. It said that Halilu Pai from FCT was posted to Plateau, Umar Ibrahim (Taraba) to Gombe; Ahmad Makama (Bauchi) to Taraba; Ibrahim Abdullahi (Adamawa) to Bauchi; and Prof. Godwill Obioma (Abia) to Ebonyi. Dr. Nwachukwu Orji of Ebonyi was posted to Anambra; Dr Iloh Chuks (Enugu) to Abia; Emeka Joseph (Imo) to Enugu State and Francis Ezeonu (Anambra) to Imo. The commission also approved the posting of Obo Effanga (Cross River) to Edo; Dr. Briyi Frankland (Bayelsa) to Cross River; and Agboke Olaleke (Ogun) to Ondo. NAN reports that the posting was released immediately after the ne...

Background of the National Auto Policy

THE National Automotive Industry Development Plan, NAIDP, was introduced in October 2013 by the President Goodluck Jonathan administration to revive the ailing Nigerian auto industry. It was originally intended to encourage local manufacturing of vehicles and discourage importation of cars as well as gradually phase out used cars popularly known as Tokunbo. It was on account of this that the policy came with prohibitive tariff on imported fully built vehicles, while offering tariff rebate for SKDs meant for assemblage of vehicles in the country. Essentially, the objective of the automotive policy is to restore assembly and develop local content, thus creating employment, acquiring technology and reducing pressure on the country’s balance of payment. By the year 2014, about five of the country’s previously existing automobile assembly plants were upgraded and soon resumed operations, while seven dormant plants were resuscitated. Among the early starters were VON, PA...

Northern elements screen 12 contendersLESS than two years to the 2019 presidential poll, the polity is astir as stakeholders and politicians have commenced intense posturing. The ill-health of President Muhammadu Buhari, who is currently in London on medical vacation, has only deepened and widened the jostling for the nation’s top office. But for Buhari’s health challenges, there would have been no question over who will fly the ticket of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC. Now, there are moves to ensure that Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, does not run for the post, if Buhari is not in a position to do so. Proponents of this move, who are mainly from the North, said that part of the country must be allowed to complete its eight-year tenure and that what happened in 2011 when the zone lost out to the South, after the late President Umar Musa Yar’ Adua’s demise, must not be allowed to recur. Apart from becoming acting president after Yar’Adua’s death in 2009, Dr Goodluck Jonathan contested and won the 2011 election. Thereafter, Jonathan sought for a second term in 2015, which led to a bitter contest that was won by Buhari. Bala Mohammed, Duke, Owie and Fayose Since assuming power, Buhari has been battling health issues for which he has gone abroad thrice for medication. On each occasion, he transmitted a letter to the National Assembly to enable Osinbajo function as acting president. In spite of Buhari’s constitutional actions, some officials loyal to him appear to have constituted themselves into a cabal in a bid to whittle down the powers of the acting president. Indeed, the simmering face-off between Osinbajo and the Senate over the confirmation of nominees and threats to impeach him are perceived as part of the build-up to 2019. On Wednesday, the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mallam Abubakar Malami, openly disagreed with the acting president, saying the Federal Executive Council, FEC, did not take a decision before Osinbajo claimed the executive arm of government could re-present a nominee to the Senate for confirmation after rejection. The senators want the executive to stop Alhaji Ibrahim Magu, who they have rejected twice, from Acting as the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC. Until that is done, the lawmakers have resolved to stop screening nominees for appointments. Osinbajo, on Thursday, said that as long as he remains the acting president and Buhari’s mandate as president subsists, Magu will continue in office as the Chairman of the EFCC. He made the declaration in Kaduna at the commissioning of the Zonal Office of the EFCC. According to Osinbajo, “he (Magu) will remain the EFCC Chairman as long as I remain the acting president and as well as Muhammadu Buhari remains the president.” With this stand, the stand-off between the executive arm and the legislature festered and may take a dangerous dimension, if not resolved. If the problem deteriorates to the point of impeachment of Osinbajo, Senate President Bukola Saraki will become the acting president, which also has deep implications for the 2019 election. Currently, a host of aspirants from across the country are on the prowl for the 2019 contest. They include former Vice President Atiku Abubakar; former Jigawa State governor, Alhaji Sule Lamido; Ekiti State governor, Mr Ayo Fayose; former Cross River State governor, Mr Donald Duke; Alhaji Tanimu Turaki, and a chieftain of the APC, Chief Charles Udeogaranya. Many governors, former governors, ministers and senators are currently working underground to emerge as presidential or vice presidential candidates of the leading parties. ADP cedes 2019 presidential ticket to the North To gain advantage at the poll, the newly registered Action Democratic Party, ADP, has started wooing the North and the South-East by zoning its presidential and vice presidential tickets to the two zones. South-South zonal coordinator of the party and former Chief Whip of the Senate, Senator Rowland Owie, said the party had concluded plans to cede its 2019 presidential ticket to the North and vice-presidential ticket to the South-East. Owie, who spoke in an interview with Vanguard, said: ‘’For 2019, we have zoned our presidential candidate to the North and our vice presidential slot to the South-East because where there is no justice, there can be no peace. In 1987, it was to be the turn of the South-East to produce the president after Shehu Shagari, but it was aborted. The south-easterners have been the bedrock of development of this country, so their rights must be given to them. After the North has finished its slot and presidency returned to the South, it will go to the South-East. ‘’You cannot continue to deceive the Igbo. So, the truth is that we now know those who destroyed PDP, we now know those who destroyed ACN that is now APC. Certainly, even though the nation’s Constitution says that nobody can stop anybody from entering a political party, we know those to stop; so the issue of hijacking will not come up.” Northern elements screen 12 contenders, short-list Bala Mohammed To forestall a repeat of the 2011 scenario when the North lost the presidency to the South on account of Yar Adua’s death after about two years in power, the Northern Youth Leaders’ Forum, NYLF, last month, declared its readiness to ensure that the North produces the president in 2019. Frowning at what it described as the ‘scheming’ and ‘manoeuvres’ in the country suggesting southern interest in the 2019 presidency, the forum, through its Leader, Comrade Elliot Afiyo, said: “We want to reiterate and clearly warn that the North will not the presidency to move to the South in 2019.’’ Noting that they had made their position known on June 6, 2017 in Abeokuta during a meeting with South-West political leaders, the forum said: ‘’The experiences of 2011 and 2015 still remain fresh in our minds. To show our commitment towards this goal, the Northern Youth Leaders Forum has short-listed and screened candidates for the 2019 presidency. ‘’Those short-listed and screened during our NEC meeting in Kano on April 16, 2017 are: Senator Bukola Saraki, Alhaji Sule Lamido, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, Governor Nasir El-rufai, Senator Bala Mohammed, Alhaji Tanimu Turaki, Senator Musa Rabiu Kwankwaso, Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo, Senator Ali Modu- Sheriff, Governor Ibrahim Shettina, Governor Abdul’Aziz Abubakar Yari and Governor Aminu Tambuwal. ‘’Out of these 12 persons screened by our Political Committee, the following were short-listed and endorsed by the NEC during our meeting in Kaduna on May 17, 2017: Senator Bala Mohammed, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, Alhaji Tanimu Turaki (SAN), Gov. Ibrahim Dankwambo. We sent the endorsed persons to our patrons and the leadership of the 42 affiliated organizations who screened and endorsed only two candidates who were considered during our meeting in June 2017 in Kano. ‘’Out of the two that were endorsed, that is, Senator Bala Mohammed and Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, Senator Bala Mohammed was finally endorsed and was also accepted by our patrons. We believe, and strongly too, that Senator Bala Mohammed is a detribalized Nigerian who does not attach sentiments of religion and ethnicity in his dealings with any citizen. He also has goodwill and acceptability both nationally and internationally. His credibility is unquestionable and his loyalty and interest of the North within the national interest is surely not in doubt…

LESS than two years to the 2019 presidential poll, the polity is astir as stakeholders and politicians have commenced intense posturing. The ill-health of President Muhammadu Buhari, who is currently in London on medical vacation, has only deepened and widened the jostling for the nation’s top office. But for Buhari’s health challenges, there would have been no question over who will fly the ticket of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC. Now, there are moves to ensure that Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, does not run for the post, if Buhari is not in a position to do so. Proponents of this move, who are mainly from the North, said that part of the country must be allowed to complete its eight-year tenure and that what happened in 2011 when the zone lost out to the South, after the late President Umar Musa Yar’ Adua’s demise, must not be allowed to recur. Apart from becoming acting president after Yar’Adua’s death in 2009, Dr Goodluck Jonathan cont...

Jega, Fayemi, Mamoud, others eulogise Momoh at memorial lectureFormer Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Prof. Attahiru Jega and his successor, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu were among other dignitaries who yesterday poured encomiums on the late Director General of the Electoral Institute of Nigeria’s Independent Electoral Commission, INEC and human rights activist. Speaking at a memorial lecture in honour of Prof. Abubakar Momoh in Abuja yesterday, Jega said ‘‘There is absolutely no doubt that we have lost an intellectual, brilliance, humane, selfless, passionate and committed patriot to progress and development in the country. ‘‘His willingness to sacrifice his time and energy and resource to promote good courses was not in doubt. Abu inspired me as the ASUU President. He is one of those who made personal sacrifices for the progress of the country. ‘‘For me, it was also a personal lost. Abubakar stood for certain values, values of integrity, values of selflessness, values of service to the country and service to humanity, doing all these with clear head and ideas for societal transformation and it is a unique combination of values brought into application in the individual. He was a gift of God, but it was also cultivated through learning and inspiration. Yakubu ‘‘We pray that many other Abubakar Momohs because it is such people that are agents of change and progress in our nation, that have the intellectual capacity and brilliance, articulation and passion and selflessness to get ideas to be transformative. Abubakar was all of that. ‘‘He was ASUU treasury and kept the money with integrity and made sure it was judicially utilized. It is very important that we begin to revive hope in our nation and we continue to be optimistic about progressive changes in our country, it is possible. We have able and capable young men and women out there, all they need is opportunity to contribute to the development of this country. He used to say that the youths are in the majority demographically but they are in the minority politically. We need to cultivate those right values, attitudes and passion and bring them to bear because the youths over the years have been transformative agents of the countries. ‘‘In our own country, we underrate them, we do not give them good education, they don’t get employment, they apply their creative abilities to criminality. We have to change this, and it is very important to the progress and development of the society. ‘‘The challenge for all of us today is to use every opportunity to bring out those values he fought for and inculcate them in our youths. We need so many Abus to address the challenges of our country and in deed the challenges of Africa. We have lost many people and there are many Nigerians who died with unfinished businesses. We need to support the good courses they stood for, if we want our country to progress.’’ On the proposed Solidarity Fund, Prof. Jega urged the trustees to ensure judicious use of the fund as an extension of legacies instituted in memory of late Abubakar Momoh. ‘‘We must set up mechanism for effective management of the Solidarity Fund as another legacy to remember Abubakar Momoh,’’ he added. In his own tribute, the Minister of Solid Mines and Solid Mineral, Dr. Kayode Fayemi described the late Abuabakar Momoh as a trusted friend and patriotic Nigerian who sacrificed his time and energy for a just and fair society. ‘‘He was a great comrade who I have known over 30 years ago. He was a very disciplined and selfless man who was not interested in power but ready to defend the course of justice.

Former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, Prof. Attahiru Jega and his successor, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu were among other dignitaries who yesterday poured encomiums on the late Director General of the Electoral Institute of Nigeria’s Independent Electoral Commission, INEC and human rights activist. Speaking at a memorial lecture in honour of Prof. Abubakar Momoh in Abuja yesterday, Jega said ‘‘There is absolutely no doubt that we have lost an intellectual, brilliance, humane, selfless, passionate and committed patriot to progress and development in the country. ‘‘His willingness to sacrifice his time and energy and resource to promote good courses was not in doubt. Abu inspired me as the ASUU President. He is one of those who made personal sacrifices for the progress of the country. ‘‘For me, it was also a personal lost. Abubakar stood for certain values, values of integrity, values of selflessness, values of service to the country and s...

Senate session: Drama, confirmation saga & final showdown?

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In what is increasingly becoming indecipherable, leaders of the All Progressives Congress, APC, in both the executive and legislature, appear bent on dragging the nation through another season of crisis with the confrontation over confirmation processes. This report will show why both arms of government need to calm down and resolve their differences in the interest of the Nigerian masses. Particularly, the legislature, which suffers public opprobrium, needs to reassess the basis of its engagement with both the executive and the public, if only to disembark from its perceived posturing of serial antagonism. Similarly, the executive would do well to shoot down the antics of meddlesome interlopers in its midst. The Senate resumed on Tuesday, July 4, 2017, from its two-week break, and immediately went into a standoff with the presidency, resolved to defend what it described as its integrity and vowed to stand down all requests for confirmation into exe...

1 Dead, 8 Wounded When Men Open Fire On Gender Reveal Party: Cops

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A joyous occasion became a bloodbath in Ohio this weekend when cops say two men opened fire on an expectant mom's gender reveal party. The horror unfolded Saturday when Colerain Township Police say the shooters fired handguns in the living room of the home, where the baby's gender was to be revealed. Watch: Dad Killed During Shooting At 6-Year-Old's Kindergarten Graduation Party Instead, Colerain Township Police Chief Mark Denney said at a news conference Sunday that one woman was killed and eight people were injured, including three children ages 2, 6 and 8. The fatally shot woman has been identified as 22-year-old Autumn Garrett of Indiana. None of the three children or five other wounded appeared to have life-threatening injuries, he said. However, the pregnant woman told WKRC-TV she lost her baby af...

Trump trolls Chelsea Clinton in defense of letting Ivanka take his chair at G-20

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President Trump defended his daughter Ivanka Trump after she was ridiculed for filling in for him at a G-20 summit meeting in Hamburg, Germany. In her defense the president invoked both German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Chelsea Clinton, the daughter of his former opponent, Hillary Clinton. “When I left Conference Room for short meetings with Japan and other countries, I asked Ivanka to hold seat. Very standard. Angela M agrees!” Trump tweeted Monday.

5 Best Practices to Transition from Legacy Voice to VoIP

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Running voice over IP (VoIP) has changed how we interact on the phone by introducing advanced calling features and mobile integration. VoIP offers IT leaders cost savings, increased security and less maintenance, but starting and finishing the transition is not without its challenges.

Future of Work: Recruiting and Retaining Employees in the Government IT Workforce

Recruiting and retaining government employees is certainly not a new issue. Attracting talented workers to all levels of government is a challenge public sector leaders have been grappling with for at least the last 10 years. And while some agencies have made progress during that time, workforce remains a top issue for most local government CIOs, according to a 2017 study by the Center for Digital Government. So what can governments do to finally overcome this lasting issue? Start by downloading this paper for practical advice, strategies and insights from public sector leaders on how to attract and retain today’s tech workers.

Navigating Government’s Digital Transformation

Government IT is undergoing a fundamental transformation in how it operates, engages and serves citizens. New forces are driving CIO interest in modernizing legacy systems, consolidating and optimizing IT environments, strengthening data management and analytics capabilities, adopting cloud services, and improving security and risk management. This paper highlights the results from a research survey that used the NASCIO 2017 Top 10 Priorities for State CIOs as a framework to help determine IT leaders’ perspectives and priorities related to technology, procurement and planning as part of their IT transformation. In addition, it discusses how commercially supported open source technologies can support transformation and drive better performance and increased efficiency at a lower cost.

Washington County, Ore., Adds Facial Recognition to Suite of Investigative Tools Facial recognition tech was previously seen as something only the CIAs and FBIs of the world would have access to. But now, in 2017, smaller jurisdictions are deploying it as part of an everyday suite of crime-fighting tools.

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  In Washington County, Ore., a new facial recognition tool is giving law enforcement a leg up when it comes to identifying criminals in their jurisdiction. For the last six month or so, the Washington County Sheriff’s Department has been leveraging face-searching tech as a way to drum up leads in criminal investigations. What initially started as a conversation in November of 2016 about how to make the agency’s mugshot database searchable resulted in the December 2016 adoption of Amazon’s Rekognition technology, which layers onto existing databases. Chris Adzima, a senior information systems analyst with the county, said the tech seemed to fit the bill. RELATED Delta Bets on Facial Recognition, Self-Service Kiosks at Twin Cities AirportSelf-Service Facial Recognition Baggage Stations to Debut at Minneapolis AirportTrio of Cops Launch Facial Recognition System so They Could Prevent Crimes vs Investigate Them “Our team was thinking that there should be a way ...

Trump defends Western civilization – and media call it racist

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President Trump spoke proudly of the Western world pursuing innovation, cherishing art and writing symphonies – but the only instrument a Washington Post writer heard was a dog whistle. Trump’s Thursday speech in Warsaw was largely acclaimed – even by longtime critics – as the president took Russia to task for destabilizing actions around the world and praised the Polish resistance during World War II as a model for cultures fighting existential threats. But several left-leaning outlets – including The Post, The Los Angeles Times, Salon and The Atlantic – decried the speech as an ode to white nationalism and anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant rhetoric. The Washington Post headlined an opinion piece from editorial board member Jonathan Capehart “Trump’s white-nationalist dog whistles in Warsaw.” Capehart’s biggest gripe centers around the section where Trump touted Western accomplishments and that began with the line, “We write symphonies.” ...

Red Carpet Flashback! 15 Years of Spider-Man Movies

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Here comes the Spider-Man. Again. This week sees the arrival of  Spider-Man: Homecoming starring Tom Holland, the latest iteration of Marvel’s iconic superhero. The Sony-produced franchise has grossed nearly $4 billion since it launched in 2002. From Tobey to Andrew to Tom, we take a look back at all the Spider-Men who web-crawled the red carpet over the last 15 years.