Ayade seeks amnesty for militants in Cross River

Ayade seeks amnesty for militants in Cross River


Ben Ayade
Cross River State Governor Ben Ayade has pleaded with the Federal Government to grant amnesty to Bakassi militants.Ayade spoke on Monday at the commissioning of the Nigerian Security Element Project 2 (NICEP), a special monitoring system to check crude oil theft, illegal transfer at sea, poaching, piracy and sea robbery at the Eastern Naval Command in Calabar.He said: “Today, the militants are ready for peace and have returned arms seized from the military in some encounters. With the intervention of some well-meaning Nigerians and international friends, who we shall not name for now, we have again offered to lay down our arms, embrace peace and work with government to ensure Bakassi people and their problems bordering on refugee, slavery, rape, foreign exploitation, lack of means of livelihood and total abandonment by government can be addressed.
“We are doing this as a mark of faith and demonstration of seriousness on November 8, 2016 by 16.30 hours; we returned all the weapons our fighters captured during the last confrontation with the Nigerian Army at the agreed drop-off zone. We call on the whole world and United Nations (UN) to note this unilateral declaration of ceasefire and return of captured weapons while we remain vigilant and wait for a response from the Nigerian government.”


“We have already witnessed the successes from the actions you have taken so far. But those brothers and sisters of ours that have been practicing this militancy will have to find an alternative means of livelihood because Falcon Eye will pick them. And because that is real, anthropologically, it is the responsibility of the government, which is a bigger partner in the security structure to ensure that we provide an alternative in the first instance. “I, therefore, plead that there should be haste to ensure that Cross River State is integrated into the amnesty programme. It is critical for us because I believe that it is when people are pushed to the wall that criminality becomes an alternative livelihood.
“Therefore, if government provides a platform for most of these people to have an alternative, I am sure they will turn away from criminality. It is, therefore, a passionate appeal from the people of Cross River State that the amnesty programme had not in actual sense captured Cross River State.
“If you study it very well, a lot of the criminality that has occurred in the state is not orchestrated by Cross Riverians but people who have migrated from areas where they have superior military power and have moved into Bakassi and have made it unbearable. Therefore, an amnesty programme that will enhance all of these people will help us create even a safer environment for us to work.”


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lohyV2
via IFTTT
Amaechi warns Governors against ban on okada

Amaechi warns Governors against ban on okada


Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi has warned that a nationwide ban on motorcycles and tricycles will have an adverse effect on the country’s economy.

Amaechi stated this while speaking at the celebration of the national day of Amalgamated Commercial Tricycle and Motorcycle Owners, Repairers and Riders Association of Nigeria (ACOMORAN) in Abuja on Tuesday.
The former Rivers Governor, however, advised riders to get trained, so they could reduce their recklessness.
“I don’t think we should ban Okada because if we do, it will affect the economy; they only need to be trained to obey rules and regulations.
“The issue of security, safety and regulation should be dealt with at the state level; state governments should train Okada riders.
“We know you play a vital role in the economy: Not all buses, taxis can access our roads for agricultural purposes; a lot of Nigerians depend on you because your services are cheap.
“The economy cannot only grow through white collar jobs; everybody doesn’t need to depend on government and what you have done is to be self-employed to feed yourselves,” the Minister said.
He warned that a nationwide ban on motorcycles and tricycles would have an adverse effect on the country’s economy.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2laAg7F
via IFTTT
Local oil firms execute $1.6b projects for IoCs

Local oil firms execute $1.6b projects for IoCs


The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu PHOTO: Ladidi Lucy Elukpo
Nigeria set to produce three million crude daily by 2020 Nigerian companies’ participation in oil and gas contracts has increased by 180 per cent from 15 Nigerian Content Compliance Certificates (NCCCs) worth $396,103,336.38 issued in 2015 to 42 NCCCs valued at $1,645,233,425.59.
The Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, who made this disclosure yesterday at the on-going Nigeria Oil and Gas (NOG) conference in Abuja, said this was only possible due to the success of the country’s local content law.
Kachikwu said daily crude oil production of Nigeria is projected to hit three million mark by 2020.He was however, quick to explain that hitting the target is dependent on getting the ‭required‬ ‭investments ‬flow ‭in ‭and ‭the planned ‭‭deep-water projects realised ‬‭to achieve an ‬incremental reserve of ‬at ‭least one‬ ‭billion ‭barrels ‬and half ‬‭a ‬‭million barrels‬ ‭in incremental production ‬capacity‬ ‭per‬ ‭day.


The Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Maikanti Baru, disclosed that daily crude oil production has hit three million, as against 1.5 barrels per day in July 2016, a development he linked to the ongoing negotiations with Niger Delta stakeholders. The Secretary-General of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Dr. Mohammed Barkindo, commended Nigeria for exiting the Joint Venture Cash Call debt (JVC).
The Managing Director and Chief Executive of Exploration and Production of Total, Nicolas Terraz, said the company was set to add 200,000 barrels to national production when its well begins production in 2018.
He disclosed: “We are building two gas pipelines to supply the domestic market. We have started supply the power sector gas since October 2016.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lnSQEv
via IFTTT
Rivers government takes over prosecution of PDP chieftains

Rivers government takes over prosecution of PDP chieftains


The Publicity Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in Rivers State, Samuel Nwonosike, has been arraigned before the Port Harcourt Magistrate Court for alleged violation of the Electoral Act.

Nwonosike was arraigned alongside over thirty others, including Rowland Sekibo, Odiari Princewill and Darlington Orji, who were arrested during the conduct of the supplementary elections in Etche and Omuma local government areas last Saturday.
The accused persons were slammed with three counts of misdeamenor, unlawful assembly and act capable of causing fear and panic during the elections.
They all pleaded not guilty to the charges. While Nwonosike and three other former local government chairmen were granted bail on self recognition, the other accused persons were granted bail in the sum of one hundred thousand naira each.
The Presiding Magistrate, Sokari Andrew-Jaja also directed the accused persons, with the exception of the four former government officials, to provide three sureties and two passport photographs each.
The Magistrate also granted an application by the Director of Public Prosecution, Ibikiri Oturubio, for the Rivers State Government to take over the trial of the accused persons.
Sighting some sections of the constitution, Ibikiri said the Rivers State government had the right to take over the prosecution of the accused persons.
“We have taken over the matter. The law allows us to do so. You heard when I quoted some relevant sections of the constitution.
“The matter is no longer with the police. We will prosecute this matter the way it is supposed to,” the DPP said.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lxkrUI
via IFTTT
Lagos Politicians Woo Electorates With Loan Facilities Ahead Of LG Polls

Lagos Politicians Woo Electorates With Loan Facilities Ahead Of LG Polls



Ahead of the proposed local government election in Lagos State, there are lots of intrigues among politicians in the Centre of Excellence to outsmart one another during the poll.

At present, some strategic locations in Lagos are wearing new looks; courtesy of chairmanship and councillorship aspirants painting the town red with their banners, billboards and posters to woo party members and electorate to their side.
Politricks gathered from reliable source that one of the chairmanship aspirants on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) is going extra mile in his quest to govern his council.
To get the needed support for his chairmanship ambition, the aspirant has started mobilising people within his local government with different empowerment schemes.
The aspirant is presently networking with a cluster of people within the council to woo them to his camp and the bait he is using is a promise of one year financial loan with five per cent interest rate.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2mrwmHO
via IFTTT
Heavy rains kills 117 people in Zimbabwe

Heavy rains kills 117 people in Zimbabwe

Heavy rains kills 117 people in Zimbabwe
At least 117 people have died due to torrential rains in Zimbabwe, while 106 others have been injured by lightning, Department of Civil Protection Unit (CPU) reported on Monday.
It was also reported that more than 1,930 houses and rural huts have been damaged countrywide, leaving 635 families homeless.
A total of 71 schools, five health institutions and 71 dams had their walls breached while several roads and bridges were washed away due to the incessant rains.
Zimbabwe has been receiving torrential rains since January, which is causing serious flooding.
Just last week, the country was hit by the downgraded Cyclone Dineo, particularly in the  Tsholotsho District, where at least 850 people including children and the elderly have been displaced by flooding.
The villagers have been safely evacuated and are currently being housed at a local primary school.
According to the deputy director of CPU, Sibusisiwe Ndlovu, she said they would soon embark on an exercise to draw up mitigation measures to reduce flooding and its effects in future.
Source: Herald.co.zw

from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lV1Qme
via IFTTT
FG to Enforce Buying of ‘Made in Nigeria’ Products

FG to Enforce Buying of ‘Made in Nigeria’ Products

Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed 
Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed
  • FG to Enforce Buying of ‘Made in Nigeria’ Products
The Federal Government says it has put plans in motion to enforce the buying of Nigerian products by government agencies.

The Minister of Information, Culture and Tourism, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said that the Act establishing the Bureau of Public Procurements would be reviewed to enforce the buying of Nigerian products which would, in turn, boost the economy.
Mohammed said this on Monday at a town hall meeting held at Umuahia on Monday.
He said, “Talking about Made-in-Nigeria products, let me use this important national platform to announce that the Federal Executive Council has already approved measures to sensitise Nigerians to patronise such products.
“These measures include the approval given to the Bureau of Public Procurement to increase the patronage of Made-in-Nigeria good and services through a review of its Act.”
While commending the Abia State Government for its ingenuity in the production of Nigerian products, the minister said the Nigerian military was already wearing boots made in Abia State.
He said the production and sale of such products would help diversify the economy which is still dependent on oil.
Mohammed said, “Patronising Made-in-Nigeria goods and services is also key to the success of the policy. In this regard, I can boldly say that Abia State is a pacesetter. Today, the state supplies high-quality military boots to our military and that is just one of such impressive ventures by the state.
“So, while the state is boosting local production of goods and services, the military is patronising Made-in-Nigeria goods. It’s a symbiotic relationship, and there is no better way to give teeth to the economic diversification policy.”
Mohammed added that the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council, which is presided over by the Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo, had approved a 60-day national action plan for ease of doing business in Nigeria.
The reforms, he said, include “making it possible for new businesses to be registered online from start to finish without having to visit the Corporate Affairs Commission office, streamlining the number of agencies operating at the nation’s ports to just six, introduction of Visa on Arrival, Tourist and Business Visas and 48-hour Visa processing procedures by the Nigeria Immigration Service, reducing the number of forms required to incorporate a business in Nigeria from seven to one, and opening of additional 28 offices for issuance of Residence Permits in Nigeria, thus bringing the issuance of Combined Expatriate Residence Permit And Aliens Cards closer to the doorstep of employers of expatriates in all 36 states and the FCT.”


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lS43Rf
via IFTTT
CBN Black Market Attack is Just a Stopgap Until Nigeria Floats the Naira

CBN Black Market Attack is Just a Stopgap Until Nigeria Floats the Naira

VIEW FROM ABROAD
Don’t be fooled by the biggest black-market gain in a year for Nigeria’s naira.

The rally, sparked by increased sales of foreign exchange forwards and looser capital controls, is contingent on the central bank continuing to sell down its reserves. And until it devalues or makes a clear switch to a free-floating currency, Africa’s most-populous country will struggle to lure back foreign investors, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Renaissance Capital.
Forwards suggest more declines to come, investors are shunning naira assets, and a web of alternative exchange rates only adds to the confusion over the currency’s real value.
After sales of $600 million of one- and two-month forwards last week, the naira’s black market rate rose 13 per cent to 460 per dollar from an all-time low of 520. It appreciated another 2.2 per cent to 450 on Monday after the central bank sold $100 million of 60-day forwards. That narrowed the gap with the official rate, which the central bank has kept at around 315 since August, to the smallest since September.
The number of exchange rates in the country “further complicates” an already convoluted system, according to John Ashbourne of London-based Capital Economics.
Nigeria, which has always managed its currency tightly, charges people different prices for foreign exchange depending on their needs. Last week, Nigerians going on business trips abroad or paying overseas medical and school bills were lured away from the black market with a rate 20 per cent above the official interbank level, equating to about 370 per dollar.
Even after the rebound, the currency remains 32 per cent weaker on the black market than on the official one. Naira forward contracts maturing in three months trade at 357 per dollar, suggesting the currency will drop 12 per cent in the period. Naira six-month contracts are quoted at 385.
Nigeria’s Eurobond yields have dropped to the lowest since May 2015, showing that investors are keen to get more exposure to the nation amid higher oil prices and waning pipeline attacks by militants in the Niger River delta. It’s a different story for naira-denominated assets. Local-currency bonds average 16.4 percent, the second highest after Egypt among 31 major emerging markets tracked by Bloomberg.
It’s the same story with equities. Nigerian stocks, languishing near a 10-month low, are the cheapest in Africa, with a price-to-earnings ratio based on estimates for the next 12 months of 7.6, barely half the level of South Africa. Yet the market capitaliSation of the dollar-based Global X MSCI Nigeria Exchange Traded Fund, listed in New York, has more than doubled in the last year to $35 million. That suggests investors are keen on Nigerian stocks, just not in naira.
• Culled from Bloomberg


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2m6bncm
via IFTTT
Jonathan, key to Osinbajo’s fruitful tour of Niger Delta

Jonathan, key to Osinbajo’s fruitful tour of Niger Delta


Goodluck Jonathan
The successful tour of some Niger Delta states by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo was achieved due to former president Goodluck Jonathan’s earlier visit to Gbaramatu kingdom.A coalition of Niger Delta militant groups, the Joint Revolutionary Council (JRC) said this in a statement issued to newsmen yesterday.The JRC spokesperson, Cynthia Whyte said: “In the past few months, Osinbajo had said the right words and a good number of people in the Niger Delta have expressed satisfaction with his utterances. We will continue to watch with cautious optimism. We however, wonder: Where were all these intellect and wisdom when his principal was in the saddle?
“It is important that we commend former president Jonathan for watering the ground before the trip by VP/AP Osinbajo. It was Goodluck Jonathan who made Osinbajo’s trip a success.


The militants claimed that when Jonathan visited Gbaramatu kingdom, he acted like a true statesman by advocating tolerance and co-operation with other sections of Nigeria as a strategy for bringing about peace and development in the region. His utterances, they claimed, created the right atmosphere for the warm reception Osinbajo got in the region.In December 2016, former President Goodluck Jonathan was in Gbaramatu for the presentation of staff to the new paramount ruler of Gbaramatu, Oboro Gbaraun II, Aketekpe Agadagba by Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa.
While commending the tour of some Niger Delta states by the acting president, the JRC stated that Osinbajo had shown good intellect and a great measure of wisdom.
The JRC spokesperson, Cynthia Whyte said: “In the past few months, he had said the right words and a good number of people in the Niger Delta have expressed satisfaction with his utterances. We will continue to watch with cautious optimism. We however, wonder: Where were all these intellect and wisdom when his principal was in the saddle?
“It is important that we commend former president Jonathan for watering the ground before the trip by VP/AP Osinbajo. It was Goodluck Jonathan who made Osinbajo’s trip a success.
“It is truly difficult to understand why a Goodluck Jonathan, whose tenure had been so vilified, wants to work for the success of the same people who have continued to try so hard to denigrate him. The Niger Delta may be angry with Goodluck Jonathan, but that same zone may erupt in violence because of Jonathan,” Whyte said.
The JRC blamed Buhari government’s failure to put things right in the Niger Delta on “the antics of satanic elements within the rank and file of agitating groups in the Niger Delta.”


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lanZjk
via IFTTT
Dangote Tomato Signs Deal With Farmers in Sokoto, Gombe

Dangote Tomato Signs Deal With Farmers in Sokoto, Gombe


tomato paste
  • Dangote Tomato Signs Deal With Farmers in Sokoto, Gombe
The Dangote Tomato Processing Company, Kadawa, Kano state has concluded arrangement to purchase fresh tomatoes from farmers in Gombe and Sokoto States.

The company had already signed an agreement with Tomato Growers Association for the procurement of the commodity from the two states.
The Managing Director of the company, Alhaji Abdulkarim Kaita, said on Tuesday that the company found it necessary to go into the agreement following the non-availability of the commodity in Kano and other neighbouring states that produced it in large commercial quantities.
He noted that the CBN anchor borrower programme had adversely affected tomato the production this irrigation season, especially in Kano State where many farmers shifted to wheat and rice production.
He said, “The wheat and rice loans given to farmers this year have affected tomato production in the state.
“This is the reason why the product is still costly as a big basket which was between N400 and N500 last year, is now N3, 000 in the market.
“So we cannot buy it at the present price.
“When the price was between N400 and N500, we used to buy from farmers at N1, 200 per basket.”
He said that the company would continue to monitor the situation until it was satisfied that the commodity was available to enable the factory resume production.
“If we resume production now, the commodity will be scarce and once it is scarce, the price will go up. This is what we don’t want for now,’’ he said.
On why the company did not give farmers loan to produce the commodity as it did in the past, Kaita said that out of the 100 farmers that benefited from the loan, only 20 of them were able to repay the facility.
He said, “So we cannot give them another loan now since most of them have yet to repay the earlier loan they enjoyed.”
He said that as soon as the commodity was available for processing, the factory would resume normal production.
He said, “We are ready to resume production because all our machines are in good condition and ready for operation.”


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lRU6Dt
via IFTTT
South African website bans the sales of Donkey to prevent inhumane killings

South African website bans the sales of Donkey to prevent inhumane killings

South African website bans the sales of Donkey to prevent inhumane killings
South African e-commerce website, Gumtree on Monday, February 27, 2017, announced that it has banned the sales of donkeys to prevent inhumane killings of the animals. They wrote:
'Gumtree has decided to ban the sale of all donkeys and mules on the site, not just the hides and byproducts. We hope that this will play a small part in reducing animal cruelty,' the company said.
The ban comes after Donkeys were increasingly been slaughtered in the country, with smugglers believed to be exporting the skin to China, where they are being used for medicinal purposes.

Gelatin-rich donkey skin are reportedly used in traditional Chinese medicine to treat ailments such as insomnia, and is also an ingredient in a treatment said to delay menopause in women.

The move was also welcomed by the South Africa's National Council of Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. According to the organization, it would help raise awareness of the slaughter.
'It is a meaningful step in the prevention of cruelty to animals and the protection of them by removing a specific market or forum for those who trade in them or their parts,' the organization said.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lRUeCT
via IFTTT
FG to Attract $10bn Oil and Gas Investments – Kachikwu

FG to Attract $10bn Oil and Gas Investments – Kachikwu


Minister of Petroleum Resources, Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu 
Minister of Petroleum Resources, Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu
  • FG to Attract $10bn Oil and Gas Investments
The Minister of State, Petroleum Resources, Dr Emmanuel Kachikwu, has said that the Federal Government will attract more than $10bn investments to the oil and gas industry in the next five years.

Kachikwu said this on Tuesday in Abuja at the ongoing Nigerian Oil and Gas Conference tagged: “ Reforming and Repositioning the Oil and Gas Industry in Nigeria’’.
He said that the investments would address challenges facing the oil and gas industry, covering pipelines, refineries, gas and power, facility refurbishment and upstream financing.
The minister of state said that the objective was to bridge the infrastructure funding gaps in the Nigerian oil and gas sector.
He said, “Time has come to bring down the cost of crude oil production and have the right incentives.
“Three years ago, we have cost issues, technological issues but not issues of where the money would come from because of crude price regime.
“Between 2015to 2016, we took drastic measures on how to moderate prices, while between July 2016 and now, there have been lots of stability in the downstream economy.
“There are still some challenges but work is in progress.”
Kachikwu said that the major problem in upstream was $6bn Joint Venture (JV) funding debt and other litigations.
He said that an outstanding debt of $5.1bn would be paid over five years through incremental oil production volumes.
According to him, we now have new cash call model that would free government resources and help production stability.
He said, “There are still some governance issues to be addressed but once this is resolved, there is expected to be an improvement in oil production.
“We are left with options of bringing in investors that will help address the over $45bn infrastructure deficit.
“Government wants to be bold enough to take steps that have not been taken before. We have to release our assets to private investors.
“Either gas pipeline, crude pipeline, the time has come to move from government ownership to private ownership for efficiency.”
Kachikwu said that effort is ongoing in addressing the challenges in the Niger Delta region to boost oil production.
He said that government planned to grow oil production to three million barrels per day.
The minister of state said that government had commenced serious engagement with all stakeholders to achieve stability in the Niger Delta region.
He said talked about the Niger Delta crisis and reduced investments by oil firms.
Kachikwu said the cost of production was key and the issue of militancy was also key.
He said, “We have set a target of zero militancy for 2017 and it is achievable due to lots of community-based activities and motivation,’’ the mister of state said.
He said that the acting President had visited three states and was planning to visit Akwa Ibom State soon.
Kachikwu said that the oil sector could not wait for the political sector to find political solutions to issues.
He said, “We have to collaborate with the oil companies, state governments and see how we can capture some benefits that will come from this.
“We have been seeing engagement of youths and we expect more improvement day by day.
“The states must make their mini-economy agenda and they will work with security agencies.”
In his remark, the Secretary-General of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, Dr Mohammed Barkindo, commended Nigeria for exiting the Joint Venture Cash Call debt.
Barkindo said that the cash calls “are the counterpart funding which the Federal Government, represented by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, annually pays as its 60 per cent equity shareholding in various oil and gas fields’’.
It is operated by international oil companies in the country for more than four decades and indigenous oil firms and Nigeria owe arrears of $6.8bn.
Barkindo commended Kachikwu for securing the feat on behalf of the government.
He said, “I must single out the frontal approach on the lingering issue of funding our exploration as well as production, the JVC.
“Many of my colleagues, here that we served together, will testify that government after government, regime after regime, we have battled with this issue continuously without solution.
“This is a confession: the day you overcome this issue that had beleaguered this industry as well as government, you made my day.
‘’Same for the day of all participants who knew what the government had battled to stay afloat on the issue of cash-call.
“The approach has been innovative, the solution is very practical.”


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lnQGEP
via IFTTT
Boko Haram suspect who escaped from DSS custody rearrested

Boko Haram suspect who escaped from DSS custody rearrested


A suspected member of the Boko Haram sect, Mukthar Suleiman, who escaped from the custody of the Department of State Services (DSS) in 2015 after killing a police officer, has been rearrested.

Suleiman was arraigned before a magistrates’ court in Lokoja, Kogi State on Tuesday.
The prosecuting counsel, Mohammed Abaji, said Suleiman was arraigned on a three-count charge of criminal conspiracy, culpable homicide and belonging to a gang.
Abaji said Suleiman and his colleague allegedly killed another inmate before escaping and were planning to launch attacks on some places in Ankpa and Anyigba before he was arrested.
Chief magistrate, Levi Animoku, ordered that he should be remanded in prison.
“Culpable homicide is the highest crime in our legal system,” he said.
“Section 341(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC) simpliciter, precludes a court from granting bail to a person accused of such offence,” the magistrate held.
“Consequently, the accused shall be remanded at the Federal Prisons, Koton-Karfe and the case is adjourned till March 16, for mention”, he added.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2m6f3Lf
via IFTTT
South Africa to become first African country to legalise Cannabis

South Africa to become first African country to legalise Cannabis

South Africa to become first African country to legalise Cannabis
South Africa will soon become the first African country to legalise cannabis sativa, popularly known as marijuana for strictly medical purposes. In a letter sent to Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), who have been championing the legalisation of the Medical Innovation Bill, the Medicines Control Council (MCC) revealed that the proposed guidelines on cannabis production for medicinal use would soon publish.
'I wish to confirm that our office is working on a number of guidance documents to be shared with the public relating to the manufacture of cannabis for medicinal purposes'.
The Medical Innovation Bill was first tabled by late MP Mario Oriani-Ambrosini who died of lung cancer in 2014, the same year he introduced the bill in Parliament seeking for the legalisation of cannabis for medicinal purposes, due to his health.

When the guidance documents are ready and approved, South Africa will be the very first African country to legalise the use of Cannabis for medical purposes in the country.

from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2m6lP3t
via IFTTT
Government may begin hamonisation of biometric data bases Q2

Government may begin hamonisation of biometric data bases Q2


The Subscribers Identification Modules (SIM) cards, which gulped about N6.1 billion from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) purse and about N30 billion from the Mobile Network Operators in the last six years is also listed for hamonisation.

Confirming the readiness of the Federal Government to hamonise the various biometric data at a post-event interview with The Guardian, the Senior Special Adviser on Information and Communications Technology (ICT) to Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, Lanre Osibona, said the advancement in digital technology is throwing up so many developments, which if tapped adequately in Nigeria, can put the country ahead.


Osibona said as part of putting up proper structure and ensure the country is adequately protected, government has commenced the process of hamonising all the disparate identity management to ensure “we can identify all the citizens accurately.” According to him, government has mandated the NIMC to coordinate the hamonisation of the data bases as soon as possible, “within the next few months that should start.”
Osibona reminded that the current administration was determined to develop a digital economy, which aimed to deliver government modernisation; greater value for citizens and businesses; transparency and open government.
The need for the hamonisation was further re-echoed by the Deputy Director, Banking and Payment System, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Musa Itopa-Jimoh, when he said identity management guards against frauds, “as accounts are linked to individuals.”
Itopa-Jimoh confirmed that the BVN was one of the disparate data that will be hamonise by the NIMC.
According to him, the purpose of the BVN is to further check activities of fraudsters in the banking industry and the country as a whole.The CBN chief said the BVN, which is in its third year now, gives a unique identity that can be verified across the Nigerian Banking Industry (not peculiar to one Bank). Customers Bank Accounts are protected from unauthorized access and addresses issues of identity theft, thus reduce exposure to fraud.
He revealed that the BVN is also being used by the Nigeria Police Force to checkmate activities of fraudsters in the country.Jimoh-Itopa disclosed that there will be a general framework on whom and what can access the BVN very soon.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lUICgz
via IFTTT
Expert Wants CBN To Intensify Restriction On 41 Banned Items

Expert Wants CBN To Intensify Restriction On 41 Banned Items



The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Godwin Emefiele
Contrary to calls in some quarters that it should lift the ban it placed on 41 items from being financed with forex obtained from the official interbank market, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) should intensify such restriction, a financial expert has said.

According to the Head, Department of Banking and Finance, Nasarawa State University, Dr. Uche Uwaleke, the restrictions were required in order to boost domestic production and conserve scarce foreign exchange in the country.
Speaking in Sokoto, yesterday, at the 23rd edition of the seminar for Finance Correspondent and Business Editors, organized by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Uwaleke stressed that the current demand side management involving forex access restrictions on items which can be produced locally, introduced by the Apex Bank should be sustained.
The University lecturer, whose paper was entitled: “Enhancing Domestic Production as a Panacea For Growth and Foreign Exchange Conservation”, urged the CBN to identify specific imported goods which can be produced locally and provide incentives for small and medium scale enterprises to increase the production of such goods.
He stated that the CBN should pay more attention to agriculture in its intervention programmes since its remained the largest employer of labour in Nigeria, adding that a significant percentage of the current demand for forex goes directly to importing agricultural produce.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2mJaX8Q
via IFTTT
Aisha Buhari lays foundation for the Aisha Buhari Foundation Orphanage & School in Borno

Aisha Buhari lays foundation for the Aisha Buhari Foundation Orphanage & School in Borno

Aisha Buhari lays foundation for the Aisha Buhari Foundation Orphanage & School in Borno
The project which is borne out of her passion to improve the living condition of victims of conflict and other humanitarian crises, particularly children.The completed project will have a Nursery/Primary Section of 12 classrooms, Secondary school section of 24 classrooms, Boys and Girls hostels, ICT Center and 4 laboratories, Administrative block, Staff quarters, Main hall, Civic/Social center, Skills Acquisition center and a health facility.

from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lnwqmY
via IFTTT
Nigerian elites are corrupt – Osinbajo

Nigerian elites are corrupt – Osinbajo


The Acting President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo has explained why corruption is prevalent among political elites in Nigeria.

He said this was because of the high premium placed on wealth in the country.
Osinbajo said this while inaugurating the Private Sector Advisory Group for the Sustainable Development Goals at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
He said some nations were doing better than Nigeria because they didn’t place much emphasis on wealth.
Osinbajo said, “We have decided as an elite in this country that wealth is a measure of worth. It is a decision we made consciously or unconsciously.
“The political elite have decided that wealth is a measure of worth and that is why you find so much corruption among the political elite. Even the religious elite believe that it is a blessing of God.
“There are some societies that have decided that the value of human beings is in their contribution to the society. Those societies, of course, have done better than those who have decided that wealth, no matter how it was obtained, is a measure of worth.
“I think it is important if our elite decide that dealing with poverty is worth the while and that it will measure whether or not we are serious about our society.”
“At the end of our lives, the question that will be asked is what is the impact that we made on people’s lives. Nobody will be measured by how much money we made or the positions we held.
“A lot of our people in this country hang their hopes on us. They look up to us and believe we can do it and despite all the failures and the false starts, our people especially the poor and the vulnerable still believe that these elite will and can deliver.
“Let us therefore take this as a personal responsibility to our people to do something profound that will make a huge difference in the lives of our people.
“This is why I am so excited about this coming together of the public and private sector to ensure that the Sustainable Development Goals are realised in our time and that nobody is left behind,” the Acting President said


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lxa2YV
via IFTTT
Cashless Policy: We Are Still In Preparation Stage – CBN

Cashless Policy: We Are Still In Preparation Stage – CBN



The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has attributed the delay in implementing the cash-less policy initiative nationwide to the need for proper preparation. Besides, it wants to tap from the experience gained from the pilot states.

Speaking on the sidelines of the Electronic Payment Incentive Scheme (EPIS) 2016 awards in Lagos at the weekend, the Deputy Governor (Operations), CBN, Adebayo Adelabu, said the apex bank was working to ensure that the aim of the cashless policy was realised despite the delay in its takeoff in the remaining 30 states.
“As we all know, the success of any initiative depends on the amount of preparation that you put in before you go into execution level. We have used about six states as pilot states. We have learnt our lessons, we have made mistakes and corrected them and before we move into the other 30 states, all the learning points of the six states would be applied in the remaining 30 states. So we have spent so much time preparing for this and we believe we’ll not have any challenge when we go nationwide,” Adelabu said.
He said the cash-less policy, which the CBN is implementing with the Nigeria Inter-bank Settlement System (NIBSS) and all the commercial banks, will be a success as it goes nationwide.
Adelabu said the CBN supported the EPIS initiative, saying he was excited at the recent development in the payment system. “The CBN has been identified as a leader in the payment system because of the successes recorded by the project. I foresee faster, more rapid and effective payment system in the coming years, given the caliber of operators we have in Nigeria. They have all done well. The operators are happy that they were recognised for the big roles they played in the last one year. The reward for hard work is more work,” he said.
The Chief Executive, NIBSS, Ade Shonubi, who pointed out that the role of NIBSS in the system has always been that of infrastructure provider, assured Nigerians that his organisation will ensure that “the backbone works. We will try to scale it up so that as the volume grows, there would be no impact”. We already have an idea of what is going to happen, so we are already scaling up,” he stated.
Shonubi also advised banks and other stakeholders to sensitise members of the public on the initiative.
The EPIS “Most Customer Experience (Electronic Payment Platform Experience) Award, was won by Guaranty Trust Bank Plc. Also, Zenith Bank won the ‘Cashless Driver Bulk Payment’ and the ‘Cashless Driver PoS Transaction’ awards, while the ‘Cashless Driver Instant Payment;’ ‘Cashless Driver PoS Issued Cards Transaction’ and three other awards went to GTBank.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lUSgzV
via IFTTT
Nigerian Economy Contracts by 1.5% in 2016, Marginally Beating IMF Forecast

Nigerian Economy Contracts by 1.5% in 2016, Marginally Beating IMF Forecast

  •  Presidency says country is on the mend, recession may have bottomed out
  • NNPC puts oil production at 2.1mbpd
Tobi Soniyi, James Emejo, Chineme Okafor in Abuja and Obinna Chima in Lagos
The Nigerian economy contracted by 1.5 per cent in 2016, the first full-year contraction since 1991, and slightly beat the forecast by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which initially predicted a contraction in the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 1.8 per cent, but later revised it to 1.7 per cent.
In contrast, the Nigerian economy grew by 2.8 per cent in 2015.
GDP data released tuesday by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) also showed that the economy shrank by 1.30 percent in the fourth quarter of last year (Q4 2016), compared to -2.26 per cent in the previous quarter.
Though the decline was less severe than the contraction in the previous quarter, it was lower than the 2.11 percent growth attained in Q4 2015.
Reacting to the latest growth data from the NBS tuesday, the presidency stated that there were indications that the country was on its way out of the recession, considering the overall contraction in 2016 and the NBS data showing that the contraction in the last quarter of 2016 had slowed down.
This is just as the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) announced that the country’s oil output has risen to 2.1 million barrels per day (mbpd), signaling the in-roads the federal government has made in restoring peace in the Niger Delta, where attacks by militants on oil installations last year slashed Nigeria’s production to 1.3mbpd.
According to the NBS, in real terms, Nigeria’s GDP was valued at N18.29 trillion in Q4 2016, compared to N18.53 trillion in Q4 2015.
For the full year, NBS said GDP contracted by 1.51 per cent, indicating a real GDP of N67.98 trillion.
However, nominal GDP in Q4 2016 was valued at N29.29 trillion at basic prices, representing a year-on-year nominal growth of 12.97 per cent.
For the entire year, aggregate nominal GDP stood at N101.59 trillion, compared to N94.14 trillion in Q4 2015.
In contrast to real growth, this was 5.84 per cent higher than Q4 2015, implying that the GDP deflator increased faster than the earlier period, the NBS stated.
The contraction in the quarter under review, it added, reflected “a difficult year for Nigeria, which included weaker inflation-induced consumption demand, an increase in pipeline vandalism, significantly reduced foreign reserves and a concomitantly weaker currency, and problems in the energy sector such as fuel shortages and lower electricity generation”.
Quarter-on-quarter, real GDP increased by 4.09 per cent, which partly reflected seasonal factors, as well as a rise in the general price level, NBS added.
Oil production was estimated at 1.90mbpd in Q4, 0.27mbpd higher than the 1.63mbpd production volume in the previous quarter but lower than Q4 2015 estimates by 0.25mbpd when output was put at 2.16mbpd.
For the full year 2016, however, oil production was estimated at 1.833mbpd, compared to 2.13mbpd in 2015.
The oil sector contracted by 13.65 per cent in the year, representing a more significant decline of -5.45 per cent in 2015.
The oil sector’s share of real GDP also declined to 8.42 per cent in 2016 compared to 9.61 per cent in 2015.
According to the NBS, “This reduction has largely been attributed to vandalism in the Niger Delta region. As a result, the sector contracted to -13.65 per cent, a more significant decline than in 2015 of -5.45 per cent.”
The oil sector also declined to -12.38 per cent in real terms (year-on-year) in Q4, indicating an improvement relative to the previous quarter, when the sector declined to -22.01 per cent, but a more severe decline than in Q4 2015, when a contraction of -8.23 per cent was recorded.
Quarter-on-Quarter, real oil sector GDP grew by 8.07 per cent and represented 7.15 per cent as a share of the economy, compared to 8.19 per cent in Q3 2016 and 8.06 per cent in Q4 2015.
On the other hand, the non-oil sector shrank by 0.33 per cent in real terms in Q4, but increased its share of GDP to 92.85 per cent from 91.94 per cent in Q4 2015.
In 2016, the sector shrank by 0.22 per cent in real terms, compared to a growth rate of 3.75 per cent in 2015, a difference of 3.97 per cent.
A breakdown of the non-oil sector showed that real estate shrank by 9.27 per cent and contributed –0.77 per cent to year-on-year growth in total real GDP.
According to the NBS, manufacturing, construction and trade also shrank, ameliorated slightly by continuing strong growth in agriculture especially crop production.
Mining and quarrying contributed 7.32 per cent to real GDP in Q4, representing a decline of 0.89 per cent relative to the corresponding quarter of 2015 and a decline of 1.02 percentage points relative to the third quarter of 2016.
Agriculture contributed 25.49 per cent to overall GDP in the quarter under review, higher than its share of 24.18 per cent in Q4 2015, but less than its share in the previous quarter of 28.65 per cent.
For 2016 as whole, agriculture increased its share relative to 2015 to 24.43 per cent due to relatively strong growth in the sector.
However, the contribution of manufacturing to nominal GDP was 8.34 per cent, lower than the 9.09 per cent in the corresponding period of 2015, and 8.59 per cent in the third quarter of 2016.
Real GDP growth in manufacturing remained negative in Q4 2016, contracting by 2.54 per cent (year-on-year).
For 2016, the manufacturing sector in real terms contracted by 4.32 per cent compared to a decline of 1.46 per cent in 2015.
According to the NBS, this was reflective of the number of challenges faced by manufacturing in 2016 such as higher costs of imported inputs as a result of the exchange rate and higher energy costs as a result of the fall in electricity generation and more expensive fuel.
Recession Has Bottomed Out
In its reaction to the latest GDP data from the NBS tuesday, the presidency expressed confidence that the country was on the mend, considering the overall contraction in 2016 and data showing that the contraction in the last quarter of 2016 had slowed down.
The Presidential Adviser on Economic Matters, Dr. Adeyemi Dipeolu said this in a statement released by Mr. Laolu Akande, media aide to acting President Yemi Osinbajo.
Dipeolu said a review of the GDP figures released tuesday by the NBS showed a contraction of 1.30 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2016, translating to an estimated economic growth rate of -1.51 per cent for the full year.
According to him, these figures reflected the slowdown in the economy for most of 2016, but also showed that the recession may have bottomed out because of improving trends in several key sectors.
He said: “The Nigerian economy actually performed better overall last year as the growth rate was higher with a contraction of -1.5 per cent, compared to -1.8 per cent predicted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), raising hopes that the recession may have bottomed out with the improving trends in several key sectors of the economy including agriculture and mining.
“Overall, the Nigerian economy performed better than expected, even though we are still in the early stages of recovery. It is indeed noteworthy.”
He said government was also optimistic that with the ongoing engagement with the oil producing communities in the Niger Delta, increased oil production will be sustained.
“In a similar vein, the ongoing implementation of the Social Investment Programme (SIP), significant infrastructure spending of the federal government, and possible early passage of the 2017 budget, are all expected to trigger a positive multiplier effect on the Nigerian economy,” he added.
Dipeolu said government would not relent in its efforts and comprehensive approach to bring about the full recovery of the Nigerian economy and set it on a solid path of sustainable growth.
“Our work continues and we renew the pledge to do it with diligence and the firm commitment it deserves,” he stated.
He noted that even though the oil sector contracted to -12.38 per cent on a year-on-year basis, this, he said, was a relative improvement compared to the third quarter when the decline amounted to -22.01 per cent.
He said: “This outcome was due mainly to the increase in (oil) production such that the quarter-on-quarter growth for the oil sector between the third and fourth quarters was 8.07 per cent.
“The non-oil sector however declined by 0.33 per cent after showing some resilience in the third quarter when it grew by 0.03 per cent at the height of the recession.”
The NBS figures showed that agriculture grew at 4.03 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2016, a marginal decrease over the 4.54 per cent growth in the third quarter, he said.
Dipeolu explained that this was mainly because agriculture (especially crop production, which accounts for the bulk of agricultural production) is seasonal, with growth in the third quarter of the year usually higher than others.
He observed that the overall outcome for the year showed that the agricultural sector grew by 4.11 per cent, higher than 3.72 per cent in 2015.
He further observed that manufacturing actually grew on a quarter-on-quarter basis by 1.89 per cent but declined over the year by 4.32 per cent, reflecting the problems that the sector faced in the course of the year due to a combination of factors including the depreciation of the naira and higher energy costs.
“The metal ores sub-sector grew by 7.03 per cent in Q4 of 2016, compared to 6.93 per cent in the last quarter of 2015, thus justifying the priority that the federal government continued to give to solid minerals.
“The services sector, which accounted for 53.55 per cent of GDP in 2016, experienced a decline in growth to -0.82 per cent over the year, compared to a growth of 4.78 per cent in 2015.
Dipeolu explained that this slowdown in the services sector arose from generally fragile economic conditions.
“This is because its fortunes depend to a large extent on consumer spending and government expenditure which were both adversely affected by difficult economic conditions,” he added.
He explained that the Social Investment Programme of the federal government, relatively high level of infrastructure spending in late 2016, as well as 2017 capital spending plans should begin to have a multiplier effect on the economy.
He stated that the data for nearly all the sectors showed an improvement in growth in nominal terms although such effects were outweighed by inflationary factors.
“The expectation is that this trend and the slowing down of month-on-month inflation will enable an early return to positive growth in the economy. This positive trajectory will also receive a boost from the positive news emerging from other parts of the economy,” he observed.
He cited the approval and release of the Nigerian Economic Recovery and Growth (NERG) plan by the Federal Executive Council, which sets the stage for the government’s economic reform programme, as being critical to the country’s recovery path.
Dipeolu also expressed hope that the likely early passage of the 2017 budget estimates would also lend further momentum to economic growth.
“Similarly, the recent Eurobond issue of $1 billion which was oversubscribed by almost 8 times will reinforce the trend of increasing reserves.
“Indeed, foreign reserves rose from $23.9 billion in October 2016 to $27.8 billion in January 2017,” he added.
In his views, the outlook for revenue from the petroleum sector was also positive, adding: “This improved outlook for the oil and gas sector is closely linked to the ongoing engagement and dialogue between the federal government and various communities in the Niger Delta.”
Analysts React
Also commenting on the fourth quarter GDP figures released yesterday, Chief Economist for Africa, Standard Chartered Bank, Razia Khan, while acknowledging that she was expecting a full-year contraction, the -1.5 per cent growth rate recorded for 2016, was marginally better than expectation of -1.7 per cent year-on-year.
Khan, in a note yesterday, said: “The very shallow contraction in non-oil GDP growth in Q4 2016, raises hope for a more meaningful recovery in non-oil GDP in Q1 2017, buoyed both by improved budget spending and some improvement in FX availability.
“We have not yet seen a sufficient turnaround in oil production, but even in Q4 last year, the extent of contraction had lightened. This is a good sign.
“Recovery in the oil sector in 2017 will be driven by higher prices and production gains. A continued double digit contraction in the oil sector, especially given the weak base, is unlikely.
“So while today’s GDP release for Q4 confirms the full year contraction in Nigerian GDP, recovery is nonetheless underway.
“How quickly the Nigerian authorities put in place much-needed reforms will determine the strength of that recovery.”
The Chief Executive Officer of Cowry Assets Management Limited, Mr. Johnson Chukwu also said the slow pace of economic contraction was an indication that there was some improvement in the performance of the economy.
He, however, said if the appropriate policies are put in place, the economy might fully recover latest by the end of the second quarter of the year.
Chukwu stressed that for the economy to fully recover, the government must facilitate business transactions.
“There is need to continue to liberalise the forex market as we have seen with the new forex policy, to make forex easily accessible by businesses.
“The sectors that experienced a decline are sectors that are heavily dependent on forex, such as manufacturing, telecommunications, and others.
“So, we need to stimulate those sectors that account for eight per cent and above of GDP. The government also needs to ensure that peace and tranquility is restored in the Niger Delta so that our oil production would continue to recover,” Chukwu added.
Also, Research Analyst at FXTM, Lukman Otunuga said that the country’s full-year economic contraction of 1.5 per cent for 2016 highlighted how the terrible combination of depressed oil prices, foreign exchange shortages, and overall sluggish economic fundamentals exposed the nation to downside shocks.
“While the outlook for Nigeria still remains bearish in the short term, it must be kept in mind that markets have acknowledged that the nation is currently in the process of a critical structural transformation.
“Since the start of the year, the positive report of a successful Eurobond issue coupled with recent interventions from the CBN have bolstered the investor risk sentiment towards the nation.
“It should be understood that Nigeria’s web of alternative foreign exchanges remains a major stumbling block to sustainable economic recovery while also effectively repelling foreign direct investment (FDI).
“While recent reports of the CBN releasing an additional $180 million to the forex market in an effort to ease business transactions may strengthen the naira further, speculation is rife on the central bank’s devaluation of the local currency to improve liquidity and regain more stability,” the Cyprus-based analyst added.
Oil Production Rises
Meanwhile, NNPC tuesday announced that Nigeria’s oil production has risen to 2.1mbpd as a result of the government’s sustained peace initiatives in the Niger Delta.
The state-run oil firm also stated that with the current peaceful atmosphere in the oil-rich region, it was expecting tthe country’s oil production to grow above 2.2mbpd, effectively exceeding the 2017 budget benchmark of 2.2mbpd.
The Group Managing Director of NNPC, Dr. Maikanti Baru, stated this when he spoke on the corporation’s commercial strategy and priorities at the 2017 Nigeria Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition in Abuja.
Baru’s remarks came at the same time the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Dr. Ibe Kachikwu described Nigeria’s continued importation of petroleum products as shameful and fraudulent.
Kachikwu equally stated that the country’s refineries in Warri, Kaduna and Port Harcourt have continued to operate below profitability levels, adding that their inoperative condition had resulted in the waste of crude oil and human capacity.
The minister said the country has an oil sector infrastructure gap of over $45 billion which would need to be bridged within the next five years to reactivate the efficiency levels of Nigeria’s oil and gas sector.
Baru, in his presentation at the conference, said: “Crude production declined to as low as 1.5mbpd in July 2016, but this has steadily increased to 2.1mbpd in recent times due to the strategic steps taken by the NNPC and her partners to produce from assets that were affected by pipeline vandalism.
“We must also mention that the improvement in production is also as a result of the success of the recent dialogue held by the federal government in the Niger Delta areas.
“We are hoping that by the end of Q2, 2017, we should ramp up production above the budget benchmark of 2.2mbpd.”
He stated that NNPC encountered considerable challenges that impacted on its operations in the past year, adding however that the final resolution of joint venture cash call obligations in December 2016 re-established the confidence of joint venture partners in the business capacity of the corporation.
“The problem of the joint venture cash calls has been addressed after rigorous negotiations with our joint venture partners.
“The initial sum of about $8.1 billion was reduced to about $5.1 billion that will be paid over five years through incremental production. This notable achievement has saved the nation about $3 billion.
“The resolution of cash call arrears is expected to increase the confidence of JV operations in the system and therefore ginger more investments in new capital projects,” Baru stated.
Kachikwu also said that the infrastructure gap was limiting productivity levels in the sector.
In an apparent plea for a revision of the government’s policy of holding on to oil and gas sector assets, which it cannot fund, he said for Nigeria to bridge the gap, the nation would have to attract and allow private investment in the upgrade of most of the oil assets that are moribund.
“There is a sense of urgency needed here on infrastructure. The government is not in a position to fund most of the infrastructure and so we are left with little alternatives than to bring in private investors and work out terms that will enable us to begin to massively address the $45 billion infrastructure gap.
“Over the next four or five years, we have to find a way of bringing into this country an average of about $10 billion every year and that is essential whether in infrastructure, in pipelines, refineries or depots.
“We also have to be bold enough to take steps that have not been taken before, and they are steps that could be challenged by people but make a lot of commercial sense.
“It is no longer profitable to handhold all the assets, we have got to release those assets to the private sector under some operational and corporation mechanisms that enable us to reactivate those assets, charge the right tariff and get them to work efficiently.
“Whether it is for the gas pipelines, crude pipelines or refined products pipelines, the time has come to move away from the old model.”
On the importation of petroleum products and government’s commitment to end it, Kachikwu said: “Importation of petroleum products would have to cease, there is absolutely no reason why a country with the resources that we have will continue to import petroleum products.
“It is a shame to this country, it is fraud on the system and we have got to end it. We are committed to do this by 2018/2019.
“The refineries are not performing in the capacity they are supposed to perform. It is waste of crude and a waste of everybody’s intellectual capacity.
“If we do that, the downstream sector will survive. But if we don’t, by the first quarter of 2020 when the Dangote refinery would have come on stream, then we will have an issue in our hands.”


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lUN9Q5
via IFTTT
SOWING IN TEARS – Wednesday March 1st 2017

SOWING IN TEARS – Wednesday March 1st 2017

 
SOWING IN TEARS – Wednesday March 1st 2017
Memorise: They that sow in tears shall reap in Joy. Psalm 126:5
Read: Psalm 126:5-6 (King James Version)
They that sow in tears shall reap in joy.
He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.

Bible in one year: Genesis 27, Isaiah 47:14-48:11, Hymn: Sing hymn 14
MESSAGE:
More often than not, we associate sowing with giving of money. For this reason, some people who do not have money believe they do not have anything to sow. This is far from the truth! If you do not have money, you can sow your time or talents into the work of the kingdom. Be it through praying, using your natural talents or your acquired skills/training, there is no one who has nothing to sow. Even if all you can do is smile, you can apply this is making new comers to church feel welcome. If you are a dramatic person, use it for the propagation of the gospel. Everyone has something to sow; all you need to do is to identify what you have. Romans 12:6-8 says,
“Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith; Or ministry, let us wait on our ministering: or he that teacheth, on teaching; Or he that exhorteth, or exhortation: he that giveth, let him do it with simplicity; he that ruleth, with diligence; he that sheweth mercy, with cheerfulness.”
When you sow a seed in tears, you will reap its yield in joy. Moreover, what you reap will be determined by what you have sown. You can sow towards the salvation of a loved one, telling God that he or she must not go to hell. To this end, you can sow prayers, fasting and witnessing to the fellow. The day such a soul eventually becomes saved; you will definitely reap the joy of heaven (Luke 15:7).  I cannot forget the wife of one of my friends; I was his best man at their wedding. My friend’s wife would say to me, “Please give your life to Christ and be born again.” But I would tell her “I am already a Christian, and my Christian name is Enoch.” She would reply, “That is not what I am taking about”, and then she would begin to cry. I would look at her and wonder what was wrong with her, saying “I am not the worst fellow around; at least you can ask your husband. He knows I am a good person. “However, she kept on praying and crying, sowing in tears for my salvation. Today, she is now laughing. When last did you sow towards the salvation of a loved one – family or friend? Open Heavens 2017 Wednesday 1 March 2017:- Sowing in tears. Some of us attempt to preach to such a fellow once or twice, but after being rebuffed, we say “I have done my best; if you like, refuse to repent. Your blood can no longer be required from my hands.” Yes, you have made attempts, but you have not yet done your best. You have to keep at it, and in Jesus’ Name, you will reap in joy. Rccg open heavens March 1 2017.
Action Point
The salvation of some people requires great sacrifice. Ask God for the grace to pay the required price of the salvation of all your loved ones.
Open Heaven Daily Devotional, written by Pastor E.A Adeboye,

The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, one of the largest evangelical church in the world and also the President of Christ the Redeemer's Ministries.


from Nigeria Newspaper- Nigeria News| Naija News http://ift.tt/2lm4Oyi
via IFTTT