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House Of Reps Takes Over Troubled Kogi House Of Assembly

Yakubu Dogara

This is coming on the heels of the political crisis rocking the State House of Assembly.
Members of the House of Representatives have also nullified the impeachment of the Speaker of the Kogi State House of Assembly, Hon. Momoh Lawal, by five lawmakers.
The lawmakers described the action of the five lawmakers as embarrassing to the institution of legislature.
The House decision was sequel to‎ the adoption of the report of the Hon. Pally Iriase-led Ad hoc Committee that was mandated to investigate the matter.
The report was presented today to the Committee of the Whole House, chaired by the Deputy Speaker, Hon. Yussuff Lasun. [myad]

The “Sins” Of Alex Sabundu Badeh, By Innocent Okadigbo Ebirim

EFCC 2President Muhammed Buhari’s war against corruption has not been going on without doubts in the minds of Nigerians to the effect that he may not be waging any genuine anti-graft war in the country. This is even as the Economic & Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) under Ibrahim Magu is being seen as being biased and selective in carrying out its duties.

Many feel that what PMB is doing in the name or under the guise of anti-graft war is to select his personal and political enemies or those he perceived to pose threats to his over bearing rule and hand them over to the cat’s paw-EFCC to insult, publicly disgrace, humiliate, embarrass, persecute, witch hunt and later brand as prosecution for corruption.

To me, it was just a way of beautifying impunity. This is when you peep into such cases like the detention of Alex Samundu Badeh, erstwhile chief of defence Staff, CDS. What justification will PMB give for punishing Alex Badeh who suffered severe personal and family losses to insurgency and the reinstatement of the Army Divisional Commander whose naïve and obstinate directives led to the ambushing and wastage of many patriotic and dedicated Nigerian army officers?

The untidy manner, lack of due diligence, seeming media trial, inconsistency in allegations, desperation for new allegations, prolonged detention, near impossible bail conditions for the former Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Sabundu Badeh by EFCC underscores the prevailing opinion in the country that Nigeria is now be heading for civilian dictatorship, who uses state apparatus like EFCC to harass and flog to submission anybody likely to raise a valid eyebrow to the oppression of Nigerian citizens under different guises.

Recently, Justice Halilu of the High Court of Abuja Federal Capital Territory, had cause to slam and berate the EFCC for turning itself into a “Police Station” and a cog in the wheel of the rights of crime suspects, when the Judge was ordering for the immediate release of former President Jonathan’s ADC, Col Ojogbane Adegbe from EFCC’S dungeon.

As a matter of fact, PMB, EFCC and Nigerian State have been outrageously unfair to Alex Sabundu Badeh, who had served his fatherland meritoriously and by dint of hard work rose to the positions of Chief of Air Force and Chief of Defence Staff respectively and who suffocated the insurgents during his tenure, before he left office.

Assuming there are genuine cases against Badeh, what is wrong in arresting him today and arraigning him in the court the next day as stipulated by law and allow him to face the court and challenge the allegations. Abinitio, there appears to be the working of a conspiracy theory to nail Badeh and others the regimes possibly hates their faces.

The Probe Panel to investigate the so called $2.1billion was a kangaroo one because the Panel for one day did not invite the so called indicted people for clarification. The much the Panel did was to sit and find PMB’s enemies guilty of fraud. This jegune justice by the Kangaroo Panel will surely not pass the litmus test of Nigerian judicial firework.

The poor and unprofessional handling of Badeh’s case by EFCC is very suspicious and curious. Badeh, a patriot and faithful Nigerian promptly, quickly and willingly turned himself to EFCC for questioning and had severally thundered his willingness to co-operate with EFCC on any matter bordering his role as Public Officer. Why has he been kept in EFCC dungeon since February 8th, 2015 without arraigning him to court and without any evidence of linking him to any irresponsible utterance or conduct that may warrant his long detention if not that the Nigerian State wanted the humiliation of citizen Badeh. Even when Badeh went to court to challenge his detention, EFCC used the backdoor and obtained a black market detention order against him from a Magistrate court.

Why EFCC rushing of Badeh from Abuja to Lagos under the guise of searching the laundered properties by Badeh when the so-called anti-graft Agency was not sure of its facts. The worse aspect of this was that EFCC dramatized the Abuja-Lagos movement as if it was concrete and genuine when in actual fact EFCC recorded zero point in it except the tarnishing and damaging of the good personal and family name, gallantry aviation reputation and distinguished public officer’s record of Badeh.

The disturbing aspect of the entire drama is that the initial allegations for his invitation bordering on procurement of used aircrafts and uniforms and breaches of Procurement Act had been watered down with the new allegations of money laundering in properties as contained in the 10 charges preferred against him by EFCC. The whole episode appears to be an orchestrated plan to nail or manufacture allegations to nail Badeh at all cost.

Left for EFCC, they would have allowed Badeh to rust in detention knowing his precarious health conditions, but the public opprobrium generated against EFCC for the terrible handling of Badeh made the anti-graft Agency to pretentiously charge him to court and the drama of the entire sham continues in the court as we hear contradictory stories on the presence or otherwise of the judge to handle the matter.

So far, EFCC had preferred a 10 count charge of money laundering against him, further accusing him of removing N3.9billion from the accounts of the Nigerian Air Force between January-December 2013. Badeh had quickly replied denying the corruption allegations against him and accusing the Federal Government of persecution. This is an interesting case which the court will decide in due course but the oppressive manner EFCC handled it made it highly shocking to sane minds. I think Ibrahim Magu is brutalizing people brought before him to appease the oppressive appetites of his master so that his appointment will be confirmed since he is on acting capacity in EFCC.

From Abuja to Lagos and from Lagos back to Abuja, from one allegation to entirely different allegations, etc. Who is sure that EFCC has strong points against Badeh? From the beginning EFCC appears to be unsure of what it is saying against Badeh and that will be the alibi of EFCC in the law court if Badeh’s lawyers work very hard.

In the next few months, we shall be watching the fate of a Defence czar and icon who strongly defended his country against the dreaded Boko Haram menace and a well-tested pilot who successfully piloted series of aircrafts without any hitch conveying top government functionaries including Heads of States and top dignitaries and diplomats on local and international official assignments from 1992 to 2004 when he was a member of the Presidential fleet. As Chief of Air Staff and Chief of Defence Staff, Badeh got many national and international accolades for the military & Nigeria respectively through numerous professional exploits.

 

innoebirim@gmail.com. [myad]

 

 

Badeh Alleges Persecution, Decries Media Trial

bADEHFormer chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshall Alex Badeh has decried the spread of deliberate falsehood and attendant media trial over his ongoing travails with the Economic and Financial crimes Commission, EFCC.

A member of Chief Badeh’s family, who spoke on conditions of anonymity told newsmen in Abuja that the retired Air Force Fighter Jet pilot does not have $1 million to keep in his house for the EFCC to allegedly pick, as was being mischievously insinuated, describing his travails as a case of persecution.

According to the family member, Nigeria owes Chief Badeh a lot of gratitude for putting in his best as Chief of Air Staff and later Chief of Defence Staff, given the circumstances the military found itself during his tenure, saying he does not deserve the humiliations he is being subjected to.

In the same vein, a serving Air Force Officer who worked under former Chief Of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshall Alex Badeh has alluded to the innocence of the retired Air Force Pilot, alleging that Badeh is a victim of vendetta by some unnamed forces working in tandem with the Federal Government.

Speaking to select journalists in Abuja on the condition that his identity will remain concealed, being a serving officer, over the allegations leveled against the ex-defence chief by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, the one star General said, that the former CDS knew he will face persecution after leaving office.

“The former Chief of Air staff is fighting a futile war trying to prove his innocence, as the Government is determined to rubbish his record as one of Nigeria’s foremost Military Officers, who performed well in the circumstances the military found itself in the war against terror”, he revealed.

He observed that, the EFCC has made futile attempts to link Alex Badeh with the Arms scandal, or with some property in Abuja, some of which have been reportedly seized, even before the pronouncement from a competent court of law, which according to him, exposes EFCC’s desperation to nail Badeh at all cost.

According to him, a former minister had threatened the embattled former CDS, shortly before his retirement that, he was going to ensure that President Buhari goes after him when he leaves office, and that he must be found guilty for whatever offence should he ever be brought to court.

He maintained that, having failed to find anything incriminating against him during his tenure as chief of Defence Staff, the EFCC is desperately looking back into his tenure as Chief of Air Staff, ostensibly to come up with old issues, as was earlier hinted to Badeh by his interrogators at EFCC.

He said those who had the privilege of working with Badeh may be surprised at the charges being preferred against him, as they know those who make the allegations are being economical with the truth.

Badeh had earlier denied charges brought against him for alleged corrupt activities while in office as Chief of air Staff, even as his family had earlier decried the manner his case is being handled differently from all others, confirming their fears that there may be a conspiracy surrounding Alex Badeh’s matter. [myad]

The Yunusa/Ese Saga And Media Hypocrisy, By Mohammed Haruna

Mohammed HarunaI may be wrong, but I can’t remember any story that has attracted such wide and intense newspaper coverage in the last five years or so as the so-called abduction of an underage Ese Oruru (14) from her native Bayelsa State by a teenage Yunusa Dahiru (18) to his native Kano State.  Going through the country’s top seven newspapers – The Punch, Thisday, The Nation, Sun, Daily Trust, Vanguard and The Guardian, not necessarily in that order – I recorded no less than 70 pages of news, comments, interviews and editorials on the story between February 28 and last Monday.
Not even the marriage of a not-so-young Senator Ahmed Sani, former Governor of Zamfara State and the pioneer of penal Sharia in the country, to an under-age Egyptian girl in Abuja over five years ago, indeed, not even the globally condemned abduction of over 100 girls from Chibok, Borno State, over a year ago, allegedly by Boko Haram insurgents, has attracted this quantity of newspaper coverage.
Unfortunately, as is invariably the case anytime we allow sentiments and mischief to get the better of our reasoning, the quantity of the newspaper coverage of the story couldn’t have stood in sharper contrast to its abysmal quality.
Last Monday our Literature Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, and radical lawyer and Senior Advocate, Femi Falana, addressed a joint press conference on the story, apparently with the intention of to replacing the intense heat the media have generated by their awful coverage with much needed light. Both of them emphatically condemned attempts to characterize the issue as essentially religious. “The attempt to bring religion into the matter,” one newspaper quoted Falana as saying, “is sheer hypocrisy.”
Soyinka was even more categorical and specific. “Let’s take religion out of this,” The Nation (March 7), said he said. “We are talking about pure criminality and it is my demand, and will always remain my demand, that unless you make an example of people like (Senator Ahmed Sani) Yarima, there would be thousands of Yunusa, the man who abducted Ese.”
One couldn’t agree more with both Soyinka and Falana. Indeed one can go even further to say the two should have added the attempts to tribalize and regionalize the story while condemning the attempts to drag religion into it. However, while I completely agree with them that we should keep religion out of the matter, I must say it seems to me both of them have the wrong culprits in mind.
In condemning the attempt at bringing religion into the matter, both of them specifically named Ishaq Akintola as their chief villain. “People like Akintola,” Falana said during the press conference in question, “are playing on the intelligence of the poor.”
Akintola is a professor of Islamic Eschatology and Director of Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), a Lagos based civil society organization. In an interview in Sunday PUNCH (March 6), the professor had said Islam has no age barrier for marriage, implying support of the claim that Yunusa forcibly married Ese. “Non-Muslims,” he said, “should keep off Muslim affairs.”
It is true that in Islam, as Akintola said, there is no age barrier in marriage. But I am sure the professor would be the first to agree with me that in a multi-religious and multi-ethnic country like Nigeria, it is difficult, if not impossible, not to mind your neighbour’s business. As he himself admitted, not all marriages in Nigeria are between two persons of the same faith. Even if his claim that only 0.1% of Muslims marry outside their faith is true – and I suspect it is grossly exaggerated – he would, I am sure, be the first to agree with me that the rights of the 0.1% non-Muslims they marry deserve protection.
Even then I believe it is grossly unfair to accuse Akintola of bringing religion into the Yunusa/Ese controversy. On the contrary a complete reading of his Sunday PUNCH interview shows he was totally against doing so. When the episode first broke out, MURIC, as he pointed out, issued a statement that Yunusa should be arrested and prosecuted for abduction because Ese was a minor and a Christian who required her parent’s consent, a condition Sharia says must be met for a marriage to a minor to be valid.
In any case, the fact, as Akintola pointed out, was that no one in authority in Kano, not the Shari’a Council, not the Emir, not the putative groom’s father, nor others some newspapers have accused of forcing Ese to marry Yunusa, agreed to his request. On the contrary, they all did their bits to see Ese returned home to her parents, something the newspapers would not want to acknowledge because doing so would take the sensationalism out of their stories.
So instead of attacking Akintola for pointing out the fact that Islam has no age barrier for marriage, Soyinka and Falana should be blaming the prominent politicians (for example, Senator Ben Murray Bruce), the Christian clergy (for example, Reverend Musa Asake, the Secretary-General of Christian Association of Nigeria) and sections of the media   that framed the issue as one of a Muslim man stealing a Christian girl and forcing her to change her religion to marry her, instead of looking at it as the criminal matter that it is.
Probably the chief villain among newspapers in their clearly biased reporting was PUNCH. “Kano Man,” it trumpeted in the sensational headline of its lead story on February 28, “abducts 14-year old Bayelsa girl, forcefully marries her”! Not only did the newspaper, like many others, convict Yunusa of abduction even before he has had his day in court, they have all echoed the lie that he forced her into marriage when no such thing ever took place.
It is apparent that what we have here is a case of one standard for Muslims and another for none Muslims. And as if to expose the hypocrisy of those who first dressed the Yunusa/Ese case in religious and ethnic garbs, about the very day Ese was finally united with her parents, a daring gang of young men invaded a girl seminary in Lagos and allegedly abducted three girls. You would search all the newspapers in vain to know the religious, ethnic or regional identities of the gang members.
Long before this case there was that of the daring kidnapping of the wife of Steve Nwosu, the Deputy Managing Director of Sun and one of its ace columnists, from his Lagos residence last year. Throughout their wide coverage of the episode, there was not a single word about the religion, region or ethnicity of the suspects. It is not surprising then that his column of March 2 is, at least in my opinion, one of the most sensible things anyone has written about the Yunusa/Ese case, even though I did not completely agree with it.
“No body,” he said halfway through his article, “should go thinking that this malaise is an Islam thing alone. It is not! Many Christian clerics are also into it.”
The biased framing of the Yunusa/Ese story by newspapers implied by Nwosu’s accurate observation is not the only worrisome aspect of it. Equally worrisome is the attempt by the newspapers to paint a pattern of Muslims abducting little Christian girls and forcing them into marriage by dredging up cases of such abductions where none existed.
In its lead story on page 5 of its March 7 edition, for example, The Guardian said a “15-year old Benue girl, Patience Paul, who was abducted since last year and taken to Sokoto, has re-united with her family after the intervention of Governor Aminu Tambuwal and other security agencies.”
Reading this story you will never know that Patience and her parents have been resident in Sokoto for years instead of in their native Benue State. You will also never know that when she wanted to convert to Islam under the influence of a Muslim girl friend, and because she said she was a victim of child abuse at home, the religious authorities in Sokoto refused to oblige her because they said she did not have her parent’s consent.
Instead some of the newspapers went as far as to recklessly accuse the urbane Sultan of Sokoto and head of Nigerian Muslims, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, of hiding her in his palace.
Soyinka and Falana are right to condemn any attempt to bring religion into the Yunusa/Ese saga. But they are wrong to accuse only one side of doing so. [myad]

It Was Ese Oruru That Insisted She Would Follow Me To Kano – Yunusa Yellow

Ese Oruru and Yunusa DahiruYunusa Dahiru, the 18-year old who was today arraigned in a federal high court in Bayelsa State for the abduction and rape of 14-year old Ese Oruru, said that it was the girl who insisted that she would follow him to Kano.

He also said that her mother, Mrs. Rose Oruru was fully aware of the love affair between them and that the two of them were sleeping together while he was in Bayelsa.

Yunusa told The Sun newspaper in the court premises that Mrs. Rose Oruru was also aware that he was leaving for Kano with Ese, but that the girl’s father did not know.

He accepted responsibility for Ese’s pregnancy, which he said was only disclosed to him by the police.

Asked why he had taken the young girl to Kano, he said she was the one who wanted to go with him, saying she loved him.

Of their intimacy, she told the reporter that it took place in Bayelsa and that Mrs. Oruru knew about it.

Yunusa, who is charged with abduction, illicit sex and unlawful carnal knowledge of a minor, said he was counting on God to vindicate him. [myad]

Federal Government Now Splits NNPC Into 7 Independent Entities

NNPC TowerNigeria Federal Government has finally split the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) into seven independent operational units.

The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, who announced the split of the national oil company in Abuja today, said that five of the seven operational units will be strictly business-focused in line with global best practices of national oil companies.

The new units include those for Upstream, Downstream, Gas & Power, Refineries, Ventures, Corporate Planning & Services and Finance and Accounts, each being headed by a Chief Executive Officer (CEO).

For the Upstream, Bello Rabiu has been appointed CEO while Henry Ikem-Onih becomes the CEO of Downstream and Anibor Kragha for the Refineries. Others are Saudu Mohammed for Gas & Power) and Babatunde Adeniran for the Ventures.

The Group Executive Director in charge of Finance & Services would be Isiaka Abdulrazaq, while the Executive Head, Corporate Services will be Isa Inuwa.

All appointments are with immediate effect. [myad]

MTN Fueled Boko Haram Insurgency, President Buhari Tells Visiting President Zuma

Zuma and BuhariPresident Muhammadu Buhari has reported to President Jacob Zuma how the mobile phone giant with the root in South Africa, MTN fueled the Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria by failing to disconnect unregistered Sim.

Buhari who spoke today at a joint press conference with President Zuma who is on a state visit to Nigeria, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, explained why the government of Nigeria had to fine MTN for an act adjudged to be against the security of the country.

Last year, Nigeria fined the South African-owned firm $3.4bn (£2.7bn) for missing a deadline to disconnect cards.Nigeria believes Boko Haram militants use unregistered sim cards to co-ordinate attacks.

President Buhari enlightened his host: “you know how the unregistered (sim cards) are being used by terrorists and between 2009 and today, at least 10,000 Nigerians were killed by Boko Haram.”

Buhari complained that while other mobile phone operators complied with a mid-2015 deadline to register all sim cards, “unfortunately, MTN was very very slow and contributed to the casualties.”

Nigeria’s President said MTN, which is in talks with Nigeria to reduce the fine further, could make gradual payments, out of the $3.4 billion, which was a reduction from the initial $5.2 billion fine on MTN in October.

Last month, MTN said it had dropped court action to challenge the fine, and had paid $250m as part of efforts to reach an “amicable settlement”.

MTN has 231 million subscribers in 22 countries across Africa, Asia and the Middle East. However, Nigeria is its biggest market.

In September, the company was named as most-admired brand in Africa in the Brand Africa 100 awards, beating Samsung, while it was also awarded the continent’s most valuable brand, worth $4.6bn.

MTN was South Africa’s second mobile operator when it was set up in 1994 after the end of apartheid.

It began its expansion across Africa four years later with operations in Rwanda, Uganda and Swaziland. [myad]

Senate Stumbles On N15 Billion Contract Scam In Niger Delta Dev. Commission

Senator NwaoboshiThe Senate Committee on Niger Delta has announced the discovery of N15 Billion that was paid out by the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) for projects that were nonexistence or not carried out in both Ondo and Bayelsa states.

The committee has therefore resolved to dig more into the financial transactions of the company from 2000 to date.

Chairman of the committee, Senator Peter Nwaoboshi, said in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital that the commission paid out N3.9 billion for a non-existent project said to be ongoing in Ondo State.

The NDDC was said to have also doled out a whooping N10.8 billion for contracts in Bayelsa state that were never executed, and the contractors nowhere to be found.

Nwaoboshi’s committee which is currently on an inspection tour of NDDC projects in the Niger Delta region, as part of its oversight functions said they are determined to get to the bottom of the sleaze.

He lamented that a number of such deals were carried out between the NDDC and some fake contractors, in which several billions of naira were allocated and paid out to non-existent contractors for unidentifiable projects across states of the oil rich region.

He said that the commission had hid the projects and the amounts paid from the documents submitted before his committee during the 2016 budget defence, and that they uncovered the sleaze though private investigations.

He therefore called on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to arrest and prosecute those found culpable in the contract scam, and to ensure that all the monies running into several billions of naira allegedly stolen from the commission since inception are recovered.

Nwaoboshi, said there is a need to carry out a thorough and prompt probe of the NDDC since inception because it had embarked on “nasty projects” that were not useful to the people, even as he disclosed, that the committee had already engaged the services of consultants and external auditors, including chartered accountants to probe the accounts of the NDDC, beginning from 2000.

He further declared that the committee would launch an investigation into the multi-billion naira anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs purchased by the commission without subsequent distribution to the beneficiaries until they were found to have expired.

“A holistic investigation of the commission from 2000 will start soon. The question is, nobody is here to witch- hunt anybody. For the projects that are completed, we will give our recommendations and even recommend them for further jobs from the NDDC. I think we have only seen two completed jobs so far since we came here; all others are abandoned ones.” [myad]

What We Will Do With $321 Million Abacha Loot From Switzerland – Vice President Osinbajo

Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo
Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has announced that the Federal Government is now developing a framework on how to utilise the $321m stolen funds from Nigeria under the Abacha government which Swiss government has promised to repatriate soon.
Prof. Osinbajo said the framework once finalized will be made available publicly, and it would cover the whole spectrum from the source of the stolen asset to how it would be managed once recovered.
He said “the framework will guarantee that returned assets will be used in the interest of the people of this country.”
Vice President Osinbajo spoke today at the Presidential Villa, Abuja during a meeting with a Swiss delegation led by the country’s Federal Councillor and Head of its Foreign Affairs Department, Mr. Didier Burkhalter and the Swiss Ambassador to Nigeria,  Mr. Eric Mayoruz.
Osinbajo added: “we guarantee that recovered assets would be put to uses for which they have been intended.”
The Vice President said the federal government appreciates the Swiss government for its efforts to repatriate Nigeria’s stolen assets, saying: “Swiss has always been at the forefront of returning stolen assets and ensuring that the people of Nigeria get the benefit.”
This was even as the Attorney-General of the Federation and Justice Minister, Abubakar Malami, signed an agreement described as a “Letter of Intent” between the Swiss government and the Nigerian government on the restitution of illegally-acquired assets forfeited in Switzerland.
Burkhalter signed the letter for the Swiss government.
Under the agreement, the Swiss government will award to Nigeria $321 million of funds illicitly acquired by the Abacha family, initially deposited in Luxembourg and confiscated by the Judiciary of the Republic and Canton of Geneva, pursuant to a Forfeiture order dated 11th December 2014. [myad]

Aregbesola Creates 31 Development Areas, 3 Councils, 2 Admin Offices In Osun

Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State
Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State

The Governor of Osun state, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola has announced the creation of additional 31 Local Council development Areas, 3 area Councils and two administrative offices.
In a radio and television broadcast to the people of the state today, the governor promised to make ‎judicious use of the state’s revenues in such a way that increasing the number of councils will least constitute any financial burden.
This was even as he dissolved the management committees of the existing 30 Local Councils and Area Office and their Executive Secretaries, deputy executive secretaries, members, Special Advisers and other functionaries.
He said that the request for additional local councils by the people of the state after several legal procedures was sent to the state House of Assembly in form of an executive bill.
He explained that the House looked into the bill, set up a committee and subsequently, a referendum was held on February 19, 2015 in which the people of the state overwhelmingly gave a Yes vote on the bill.
“The House passed the bill creating 31 new Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs), three Area Councils and two Administrative Offices, signed into law by the governor.”
Aregbesola said that he has put in place procedures that will cost less and safe money thus bringing rapid development to the people, adding that the primary responsibilities of the newly created councils are to bring development to the people, market management, revenue mobilisation and generation among many others instrumental to the yearnings of the people.
The Governor said that the state will be saving huge cost with the new system and that the same number of staff will still run all the councils and no new appointments will be made to existing ones.‎
‎He said that the local government system will be managed by Council Managers for three months who would be appointed and deployed by Local Government Service Commission from among the substantive grade level 14 officers in the local governments.
“Many would be wondering and asking: why create more councils at this special time of financial challenges? We have also given sufficient consideration to this. With this new parliamentary system, it will cost less to run the new councils and save a lot of money for the government than in the past.
“The primary responsibilities of our new local government system are sanitation, market management and revenue mobilisation and generation. This is consistent with local government administration worldwide.
“The beauty of this new system is its parliamentary nature, which requires the chairman and the vice chairman to be elected by the councillors from among their own ranks, thereby saving cost.”
The Governor said that the creation of additional local governments should not be seen as being alien in the sense that In advanced western democracies, the local government controls the police and provides many municipal services to the people.

“It is where the government is designed to be closest to the people. While you need to follow some protocols for reasons of security and tight schedule before having an audience with a minister, a state governor or the president, you can walk in on your local government chairman or other officials of council.
‎”Also, because the geographical space of the local government makes it the smallest unit of administration, it is easier to get things done at this level. The local government is also the ideal training ground for political leadership.” [myad]

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