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Why I recorded, leaked Aisha Buhari’s video — Fatima, Mamman Daura’s daughter

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Daughter of Mamman Daura, Fatima, has accused First Lady Aisha Buhari of  sending the family packing from Aso Villla leading to friction in the family.

Speaking with BBC Hausa service monitored in Kaduna on Monday, Fatima disclosed that when President Muhammadu Buhari won the presidential election in 2015, he gave her father a house inside the Villa which is known as the Glass House.

She said when Yusuf, Buhari’s son was involved in an accident last year, the President directed his uncle, Mamman Daura to relocate to another house known as House No 8  so that Yusuf would be  relocated to the Glass House.

According to her, the Glass House is closed to the First Lady’s house within the vicinity of the Villa, saying, “My father and all those in the Glass House should pack their belongings before a particular Saturday.”

Fatima disclosed that it was when they were packing from the Glass House, she heard voices of people quarreling, noting, “I was inside one of the rooms, while my other siblings were In the other room closed to the parlour.

“My sister said the room  should be locked up because they were used to locking it when they were not around. So even if the First Lady comes she should see it locked.

“But to their surprise, when Aisha Buhari came, she used her position as the First Lady to break the lock.

“It was then I decided to video her when on the act to have evidence of what she did to us.”

On her arrival from London according to the reports Aisha Buhari confirmed that she was indeed the one in the video and said  Fatima took the video and made it go viral.

 

Emergency on Lagos roads.

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At last, the administration of the new Governor of Lagos State, Mr. Babatunde Sanwo-Olu, has roused itself into action after months of anguish that residents have had to bear while commuting on roads across the city-state. Sanwo-Olu reverses Ambode’s LAGESC to KAI Gov. Sanwo-Olu On Sunday, October 13, 2019, the Governor announced a “state of emergency” on roads at a ceremony in Lagos House, Marina.

The state government also signed memorandums of understanding with renowned construction companies, such as Julius Berger, CCECC, Arab Contractors, Metropolitan Construction, Slavabogu Construction, Rajaf Foundation and RCF Nigeria Limited, whose reconstruction efforts will be complemented by the ongoing palliative works being carried out by the Lagos State Public Works Corporation, LSPWC.

Some of the critical main arteries that will receive urgent attention include the Ojota section of Ikorodu Road where a bad patch caused a truck to tip over recently, Motorways-Kudirat Abiola Way, Babs Animasaun Road (Surulere), Apongbon Highway in Lagos Island and Agric/Isawo and Ijede Roads in Ikorodu.

In the Lekki Peninsula it will also involve Abraham Adesanya-Eleko and Lekki Epe Expressway, among others.

Sanwo-Olu assured residents that the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority, LASTMA, will be on duty “round the clock” to ensure free flow of traffic and reduce the pain the massive public works are liable to cause.

This is the long-expected cheering news. Successive administrations in Lagos State have always been known for their quick response to major outcries such as the scandalous situation of the roads. We hope that the Sanwo-Olu government will seize this opportunity to reassure the residents that, with its “For A Greater Lagos” mantra, it will not depart from the progressive path that made Lagos State a shining example for the rest of the states and Abuja.

The question that should occupy the minds of the LASG is: Why did roads throughout the state suddenly deteriorate after just one rainy season?

The answer is not far-fetched. Perhaps because of political distractions, the regime of former Governor Akinwunmi Ambode might not have been on top of its game in the area of monitoring of contractors to ascertain the quality of work they were doing. A big case in point was the Oshodi-Abule Egba Expressway which was broken down and reconstructed with a special corridor for the Bus Rapid Transport, BRT, services.

This road started developing a rash of potholes barely three months after completion. The four month-old Sanwo-Olu regime has already patched sections of the road twice yet the collapse continues. We call on Governor Sanwo-Olu and the relevant committees of the Lagos State House of Assembly to conduct routine inspections of public works to ensure quality control. It will also keep the personnel of LASTMA on their duty posts and making life easier rather than abandoning commuters to their fate. The emergency on Lagos roads is welcome. We shall monitor it.

 

2.5m registered voters cleared for Kogi, Bayelsa gov’ship election, INEC reveals

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The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), has revealed that there are 2,467,088 registered voters set to exercise their voting rights during the November 16 governorship elections in Bayelsa and Kogi States.

The electoral body while giving the break down on Monday said 1,646,350 registered voters are for Kogi State, while 867,088 are for Bayelsa State.

According to INEC’s National Commissioner in charge of Kogi, Nasarawa and Kwara, Mohammed Haruna, who disclosed this in Lokoja, a total number of 1,485,828 of the registered voters have collected their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) in Kogi state.

Haruna who was speaking at the presentation of the soft copy of the register of voters to the 23 political parties listed for the election, also revealed that commission’s official Register of Voters used for the 2019 general election will be used for the governorship election.

 

Border Closure: Local Rice Varieties Now Rule Markets

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Locally processed rice is now common in markets and departmental shops, a market survey carried out by equity news recently has shown. Miva rice, Mama Gold dominate markets in Benue with a 50kg bag of each costing between N16,000 and N18,500.

In Cross River State, Bansanra rice and Ayade Vitaminised & Nutrient Rice are common in most of the local markets in the state with a 50kg bag sold for N15,500 to N17,000, depending on the market. Our correspondent in Kano reports that the popular Jamila rice now being bagged is gradually taking the place of foreign rice in the state alongside Umza rice.

They both cost N16,000 to N17,500 per 50kg bag also depending on place of purchase. In Abuja market and some notable stores, Mama Gold, Mama Pride produced by Olam go for N16,000 to N18,000 per 50kg bag, depending on the market. This has been the price since the border closure, it was discovered. Similarly, brands like Umza from Kano, Bull from WATCO in Argungu (Sokoto State), and other brands have remained at N14,500 to N17,000 depending on the market they are purchased from. Other local brands like Mas Rice in Gombe, Anambra Rice, Mama Happy Rice in Niger, Ofada Rice, Abakaliki Rice and Igbemo Rice now dominate major markets across the country.

Consumers’ new rush for local rice brands Daily Trust reports that because of the border closure, the quantum of foreign rice is gradually reducing in both local markets and major stores. The closure is also forcing the price of the product out of reach of many consumers. A 50kg bag of Tomato rice, one of the notable foreign rice brands now costs between N20,000 and N22,000 depending on the market while Royal Stallion goes for slightly higher.

The same goes for other foreign rice brands wherever you can find them at the market. A measure (small mudu) of foreign rice now costs between N700 and N750 compared to the locally processed rice that sells for between N500 and N550, depending on the market and the state. A consumer in Abuja, Madam Rose Isah, attributed her new love for locally processed rice to the price disparity, saying she can save as much as N200 per measure if she buys the locally processed rice. A rice retailer at Wuse market told Daily Trust that many residents now patronise local rice as the prices of the foreign varieties were going higher by the week.

Dealers re-bagging locally processed rice as foreign – Consumers Consumers and local rice merchants in Katsina State have decried how some rice mills and foreign rice dealers were purchasing and allegedly re-bagging locally processed rice which they resell as foreign at exorbitant prices. Border closure has seriously affected the importation of foreign rice into the country, a situation that has increased demand for the locally produced variety, especially with the proliferation of modern rice mills across the country. Farouk Abdu, a local rice dealer, said besides the newly established modern mills that were purchasing paddy rice in bulk, some foreign rice dealers have resorted to mopping up locally processed rice and re-bagging it to be sold at high price as foreign rice.

“If you go to Dandume, Kafur and Bakori, you will see how those rice dealers are mopping up the locally milled rice which they transport to Kano, where they just sieve and re-bag it as foreign one,” he said. Farouk added that the development has caused the market price of the locally processed rice to skyrocket.

“This year we started selling the locally processed rice at N490 per measure and 100kg at N19,500, but now because of high demand, a bag costs N28,000 and a measure N700, the price that normally comes after the harvest period, which is around March,” Farouk also said. He said many trailers load local rice on weekly basis out of Bakori, Kafur and Dandume, the three major local rice markets in the state.

Alhaji Abdullahi Namairo, one of the dealers purchasing locally processed rice, told this reporter that because of high demand for rice generally, locally established rice mills could not meet up with the increasing demand of the produce hence they resorted to purchasing the already locally processed rice, which they sieve and polish before it is bagged and sold as made in Nigeria rice. “Unlike how it was widely speculated, we add value to the produce we buy before we sell it as Nigerian rice, not foreign rice,” said Namairo. He added that even those with penchant for foreign rice have no option now than to buy the local one because the foreign one is now either scarce or costly in the market.

equity news noticed that there was bulk purchase of locally processed rice in Katsina markets but could not ascertain whether the produce was being re-bagged and sold as foreign rice as alleged by some merchants and consumers; especially that the ones purchased were being transported to Kano. Usman Sani, a rice farmer, said the complaints came mainly from consumers and some dealers but farmers were celebrating the high cost of the produce. “Rice farmers this year are happy because of the high demand of both paddy and locally processed rice in the market.

It has reached the extent that farmers are being followed to their farms to buy paddy rice at not less than N10,000 depending on the variety,” said Sani. Why prices are on the high side now -Processor In the last couple of weeks, the prices of paddy rice have changed twice. This caused fear among processors that the price of milled rice may further go up. Although the wet season harvest has just commenced, there is high demand for the product at the moment as buyers go after those who have already harvested.

equity news can confirm that this is the case in Doma area of Nasarawa State which is home to Olam Nigeria, one of the biggest producers and processors, where this reporter visited. “Two weeks ago, I sold a 100kg of paddy at N11,000, surprisingly a week later I sold 12 bags at N14,000 each and the buyer came here (the village),” a farmer, Dauda Bako told Daily Trust in Doma. However, a paddy buyer, Ibrahim Maishinkafa, said processors are rushing for the paddy in anticipation of the yuletide season – Christmas and New Year. “This rush will certainly trigger price rise,” he said, adding that “as more harvest hit the market, we expect some stability”. In an earlier interview with Daily Trust, the Managing Director, Labana Rice Mills Ltd, Birnin Kebbi, Kebbi State, Alhaji Abdullahi Idris Zuru explained the rise in price.

“To be honest with you, the price has increased to some extent because the millers went to get paddy from the farmers and the farmers, knowing that the borders have been closed, and the millers will come for it, increased their price. And only a few of them have it because some had earlier given up the business because the price was not encouraging. “A ton of rice which was sold at N100,000 is now about N120,000 to N122,000. If the farmers are encouraged and returned to farm based on this policy and produce, the price will crash.” He was optimistic that the millers will process more and with additional mills coming on board, the price will come down. “The current price is just because the (border closure) policy just came into force,” Alhaji Abdullahi said.

Farmers ready for massive paddy rice production

The farmers are optimistic of a promising future as the National President of Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN), Alhaji Aminu Goronyo, told Daily Trust in a phone interview. Alhaji Aminu said farmers are already planning big for the forthcoming dry season as they are targeting to cultivate one million hectares with an average of seven tons. The wet season harvest has already begun across the country.

“We had planned and proposed to government for this border closure to cultivate a minimum of one million hectares by the forthcoming dry season. We expect to get a minimum of seven million metric tons of rice; and what we consume in Nigeria is between 7 to 8 million metric tons per annum. “So you can see in this one production circle, which is the dry season, that 7 million can be cultivated and we can do this three times in a year. So we are hoping that the commodity will be available and affordable,” he said.

Goronyo also said they were working closely with the processors to support the federal government to make sure that it succeeds in its self-sufficiency drive. He reiterated that the current policy is already incentivizing the production as many people are already warming up for dry season production, adding that as more farmers go into production and millers off-take, the prices would come down. Meanwhile, despite the increase in the prices of paddy in the last few weeks, the prices of the finished products have been stable in the market

Tinubu, Osinbajo, Saraki meet at Lagos party

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The trio of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, Bola Tinubu and former Senate President, Bukola Sarak met at a birthday party in Lagos over the weekend.

Photos from the event, which was the 60th birthday of businesswoman, Bola Shagaya had been shared several times on social media, with users putting their own spin on what the scene in the photos portends for the Nigerian political class.

In one of the photos, the wife of the former Senate President, Toyin Saraki was seen chatting with the APC national leader, while he (Saraki) looked on.

Vice President Osinbajo, who is an In-law to the birthday girl (Shagaya) was also seen in the photos.

In another photo, Saraki and Tinubu were seen holding hands as Saraki smiled in Tinubu’s face.

 

KOGI GUBER: Aspirant wants court to disqualify Bello

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A governorship aspirant in Kogi State, Natasha Akpoti, had approached a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja to disqualify Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State ahead of the coming governorship election in the state.

Akpoti, in the suit filed before the court and marked FHC/ABJ/CS/122/2019 on Monday, accused Bello of double registration as a voter in 2011 and 2017.

She also prayed the court to bar Bello, from contesting the coming governorship election in the state and election for any public office for 10 years.

She also requested the court to compel the Independent National Electoral Commission to “thoroughly investigate the act of double registration” and “to immediately prosecute him upon the expiration of his first tenure of office as governor of Kogi State in January 2020.”

The plaintiff’s lawyer, Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN), contested that Bello’s act of double registration as a voter grossly violated section 24(e) of the Electoral Act.

Ozekhome argued that as part of the grounds of the suit that “by his wilful act of making double registration, Bello as APC’s candidate, “is not a fit and proper persons to be allowed by the 2nd defendant (INEC) to vote or be voted for in the forthcoming Kogi State governorship election, having committed acts of electoral fraud.”

In the affidavit in support of the suit, Akpoti narrated that she contested the March 23, 2019 Kogi Central Senatorial election but lost.

She also added that she had emerged as the Social Democratic Party’s candidate in the forthcoming governorship election in the state, but was unjustifiably disqualified by INEC.

She, however, alleged that \ first registered as a voter in Abuja in 2011 and procured the second voter registration card in Lokoja, the Kogi State capital, in May 2017.

She added, that as a confirmation of the alleged infraction by Bello, the governor subsequently transferred his Permanent Voter Card from Abuja to Lokoja while the second registration done in Lokoja was still subsisting.

 

Fela Kuti’s 81st Posthumous Birthday Is Today

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Fela Anikulapo Kuti (15 October 1938 – 2 August 1997), also professionally known as Fela Kuti, or simply Fela, was a Nigerian multi-instrumentalist, musician, composer, pioneer of the Afrobeat music genre and human rights activist.

At the height of his popularity, he was referred to as one of Africa’s most “challenging and charismatic music performers”.

 

New minimum wage: Workers set to join NLC proposed strike

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Workers in Osun State have announced plans to join the proposed nationwide strike by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).

Mr Jacob Adekomi, the Chairman of the state chapter of the NLC made this disclosure on Monday.

Adekomi said he had received the directive on the proposed strike by the national headquarters of the congress and that the directive would be followed to the letter, NAN reports.

The NLC General Secretary, Mr Emmanuel Ugboaja, had in a circular, directed the state councils of the congress to mobilise members for the strike in case the negotiations between government and the union slated for Tuesday, breaks down.

Adekomi, however, said it was unfortunate that labour had to resort to strike before workers’ demand for welfare would be looked into.

“It is quite unfortunate in this country that you do not get your right easily.

“The language employers of labour understand is agitation, which is quite unfortunate.

“It is about precedent now, if you want to get your right here, you have to do the unthinkable.

“It is the unthinkable language that they do understand,” he said.

Adekomi, however, expressed the hope that the issue of consequential adjustment on the minimum wage implementation would be resolved between now and Tuesday.

“It is not about the issue of strike. It is about getting our demands. Nobody is interested in strike but what we are saying is give us what is due to us’’.

 

News New Minimum Wage: What Ngige said after meeting with labour

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Representatives of the Federal Government on Monday met with the leadership of organised labour over the implementation of the new N30,000 minimum wage.

The Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige presided over the meeting.

Speaking after the meeting, Ngige announced that there would be another meeting on Tuesday with heads of government agencies and parastatals, where their books would be opened for scrutiny to see what amount can actually be paid to workers, Channels Tv reports.

“We met with the leadership of the organised labour movement on the implementation of the new N30,000 minimum wage and the consequential adjustment of salaries for civil servants.

“The meeting was an information-sharing from the previous meeting between the government and the labour leaders.

“We assured the union leaders that we would remain neutral in the whole negotiation and appealed to members of the union to show some understanding.”

if negotiation breaks down again with Federal Government.

In a circular sent to state councils, signed by its General Secretary, Mr Emmanuel Ugboaja, NLC said it was a notice in case the proposed negotiations slated for Oct. 15 with the Federal Government broke down.

 

$665b lost in three years to disasters

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About $665billion has been lost in the last three years globally to disasters, it was learnt.

According to statistics, large percentage of the loss was recorded by high-income countries.

This was revealed in Abuja on Monday by the Director General of National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Engr. Mustapha Maihaja during the celebration of ‘International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction’ with the theme; ‘Build to last’.

Maihaja, who was represented by the Director of Finance and Account, Mr. Sunday Hamman, explained that the most effective way to reduce risk was by incorporating disaster risk reduction into investment decisions.

He said: “According to the United Nations International strategy for Disaster Reduction, there are about $665billion direct economic losses during the past three years .A considerable proportion of those losses comes from infrastructures failures in high-income countries.

“The theme has captured the essence why we must work towards integrating disaster risk reduction into investment decisions which is the most cost-effective way to reduce risk.”

On the essence of reducing risk, Maihaja said: “Weak implementation and enforcement mechanisms are common problems in countries where most urban development is informal, as such when critical infrastructure fails, businesses experience indirect losses, as production, distribution and supply chains are interrupted.

“The recurring disasters and their impacts on our people and environment must serve as a wake up call to all stakeholders, governments at all levels, individuals and the organized private sector must rise up to their responsibilities on disaster risk reduction.

“Disaster risk reduction is everybody’s business; therefore the need to re-strategize and foster stronger collaboration on principled and effective disaster management remains paramount. Despite the competing demands for resources, we must work together to improve the lives of the vulnerable citizens as well as enhance their resilience.

Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola said risks could be avoided if people have respect for nature and other environmental issues.

Fashola, who was represented by the Director of Construction of the ministry, Arc. Mosunmade Odusanya, said with adequate commitments, dedications, and constant awareness, disasters can be prevented and minimized if they occur.

He also noted that the speed at which help and services are rendered when disaster occurs should be of paramount importance.

Speaking on areas that require attention in order to mitigate risks associated with disasters, Fashola said: “Priority should be given for the consideration of planning, environmental issues, structural design, construction and other building components that can stand the test of time occasioned by unforeseen disaster.

“At the pre-design, design, construction and post-construction stages, the provisions in the National Building Code, Fire Code and other environmental prescriptions should be adequately considered.

“Spaces for human habitation, workspaces, setbacks, access roads, fire prevention and firefighting equipment; ecological, geophysical thermal consideration should take the prime of place.

“Also hazardous spaces such as filling stations, chemical factories, bunkers and shelters should also be given attention at the design stage of the development. Consideration should also be given to evacuation of people and goods.”