Friday, 30 June 2017

The Dakkada philosophy is taking hold- Akwa Ibomites, yak edak-edda!

Some Nigerians called me an idiot when I was selling bitter kola. I will come to Akwa ibom and buy and Aboki people from Kaduna will come and buy from me. They can buy up to  100 trailers of bitter kola if one can scout for it. I started the business with 20,000. 4 months later i was counting over 500,000. Those who were calling me idiot, those who were saying "Big boy like, why you go sell common bitter kola", were coming to me to borrow money. Those things we look down on, that is where the money is. With just 25,000, i got full bag of snail in Benue last week. My gain from that alone after I removed every expenses is 19,000. Am expecting another bag on Friday. I don't need a job anymore my sister. If am making 19,000 weekly without calling anybody sir, e no better? Our youths should be encouraged tostand up. There is money everywhere

My Advice:
The people paying you to post things and discredit government initiatives that can turn your fortunes around are already living large,  they might not have need for these  opportunities,but you do.

Find  traders in Uyo,  PH,  Abia that travel  to the North to buy tomatoes in large quantities, tell them you can reduce the stress and cost of transportation  to buy tomatoes in the North, by supplying  them tomatoes from Akwa Ibom. This might be the diamond you have travelled the globe in search off.

#SenseFallOnYou

UDOM EMMANUEL AND THE DILEMMA OF SHOOTING AN ELEPHANT

I owe it to the cerebral and ever articulate,  Akwa Ibom State Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Barrister Ini Emeobong, that I pen this piece from new insights on leadership.

It was during the the PDP Open Day Workshop, held on June 13,2017 that he initiated,  for an intellectual engagement of minds,  sans partisan leaning. 

For me, that session was nothing short of a Harvard Leadership course,  and I shall remain thankful. The topic was, 'Doing the right thing and Doing what is right'. We were to spot the difference between both theorems. As a garnish to that, a short prose, titled, 'Shooting an Elephant', by renowned writer, George Orwell was deployed, to deepen the discourse. I shall come back to that. 

I was at once drawn to Governor Udom Emmanuel and his leadership nuances as the reading commenced. I recalled that, when the current magnificent new Dakkada Secretariat Annex was conceived and Governor Emmanuel directed his then Commissioner for Housing and Urban Renewal, Prince Enobong Uwah,  to restructure and rehabilitate the hitherto abandoned structure into a modern office complex, a cynical Comrade of mine sarcastically remarked, 'there goes another White  Elephant project'. 

I understood his pessimism, although, didn't share it. The complex has turbulent and troubled history. It was conceived as the Tenth Anniversary Hotel by  Navy Captain Joseph Adeduro Adeusi,  who was governor of Akwa Ibom State, from August 1996 to August 1998 during the military regime of General Sani Abacha, to mark the 10th anniversary celebration of the State.

 The project was stalled until Obong Victor Attah mounted the saddle as Governor on May 29, 1999. His government took a decision to sell off the abandoned hotel project to a private investor and Mr. Sunday Idowu of Jojein Venture Limited bought it. 

Until 2009 when then Governor Godswill Akpabio revoked the Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) in respect of the controversial 10th Anniversary Hotel Uyo, sparking a protracted legal tussle, the project remained a White Elephant. 

After it was settled and Akwa ibom State Government took back the property, nothing further was done. The place became a moribund and desolate complex. A hideout for social deviants and a coven for the ungodly. In the very heart of an otherwise serene capital city, the place was a bedlam and sad commentary of chaos surrounded by order. 

Governor Udom Emmanuel's vision to turn that monumental waste to wealth and transform a hell of decay,  to a haven of enterprise, couldn't sit well as realizable in a certain public affairs analyst's value. Alas, a miracle was activated. 

The Housing and Urban Renewal Ministry went to work. It was 70% directly executed by the staff of the Ministry and no contract Construction firms took charge of the remodeling that ensued, saving costs. This triggered confidence and was a boost, for the, on- the - job capacity of, commonly unused and redundant staff". A very core value of the Dakkada can-do spirit. The  standard of quality delivered on the job by staff of the Ministry,  and locally sourced labour, today measures up with what expatriates could have done.

The building which was commissioned on, Saturday 28/05/2016 to mark the first anniversary of the Udom Emmanuel administration, currently houses 304 offices, studios and laboratories, Four conference rooms with video conferencing facilities, three lifts, and a large lobby. Added to the building are staff clinic, ambulance bay, ophthalmology unit, X-ray rooms, two observation rooms, and staff restaurant.
 The Dakkada Secretariat was also designed with consideration to the people with special needs, even as it has modern fire fighting outlets and emergency exits on each floor coupled with 2000 capacity parking lot. It now sits as a vestige of pride to the state and has saved Government millions of Naira, hitherto spent on housing Government Departments and Agencies in rented apartments. 

Funny enough, my doubting Thomas friend, simply dismissed the remarkable achievement and well informed vision of the governor, with a whimsical, 'is that why I should jump into the river'? 

No! he needn't take a hike. All he needs do is eat his unbelief and give the governor a toast. For, had the governor failed, I can barely imagine what would happen and why he wouldn't bring down the roof, harping, 'I said it, this was another White Elephant"! 

Oh! Did I say Governor Emmanuel is soaked in the dilemma of, "shooting an Elephant?" Here is what I mean. 

George Orwell, narrates the predicament of a British colonial officer in Burma, who was responding to the outcry and scare of the local subjects over an Elephant that has run amock, knocked down a hut, killed a cow and trampled a boy to death. 

He rose to the challenge, got his Elephant gun, but on seeing the said Elephant, calm and regal, he was in a fix at the tricky impasse. What use is it killing the Elephant? The crowd was right behind him, and even their resounding silence, was a pressuring chant and charge on him to shoot the Elephant,  whose mahout, was nowhere near to tame the awesome beast. 

He had the gun(power), prestige (colonial official), and the mandate of the Queen. He could not afford to look like a coward before the people,  if he decided not to kill the Elephant. Unsure of what the people really want, he nonetheless shot and killed the Elephant. 

As soon as he did, the crowd did not decorate  him with garlands or bear him high on their shoulders as a hero. No, the women did not sing songs of his courage. They simply brushed him aside and descended on the game to share the meat. At least, he was consoled, he avoided being looked on as a fool, if he didn't do it. 

Every other day, Governor Udom Emmanuel has shot an Elephant and the people will not notice. Look at the Eket - Ibeno Road which he amazingly took up frontally and completed. What did he get? An  interloper in the name of ExxonMobil to detract and undercut  his fame. The rest is history. 

The Tooth Pick and Pencil Factory, and The Akwa Prime Hatchery, several roads and bridges commissioned, payment of salaries up to date. should I list all he has achieved in 2 years, to spite a nationwide economic recession? Yet, as he executes his campaign promises, the naysayers won't let him be. 

Fact is, Governor Emmanuel should be consoled, in that, assessments of his substantial achievements will differ across partisan bias, and will equate the parable of the nine blind men who were trying to describe - Guess what?, An Elephant.

by Osondu Ahirika 

I owe it to the cerebral and ever articulate,  Akwa Ibom State Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Barrister Ini Emeobong, that I pen this piece from new insights on leadership.

It was during the the PDP Open Day Workshop, held on June 13,2017 that he initiated,  for an intellectual engagement of minds,  sans partisan leaning. 

For me, that session was nothing short of a Harvard Leadership course,  and I shall remain thankful. The topic was, 'Doing the right thing and Doing what is right'. We were to spot the difference between both theorems. As a garnish to that, a short prose, titled, 'Shooting an Elephant', by renowned writer, George Orwell was deployed, to deepen the discourse. I shall come back to that. 

I was at once drawn to Governor Udom Emmanuel and his leadership nuances as the reading commenced. I recalled that, when the current magnificent new Dakkada Secretariat Annex was conceived and Governor Emmanuel directed his then Commissioner for Housing and Urban Renewal, Prince Enobong Uwah,  to restructure and rehabilitate the hitherto abandoned structure into a modern office complex, a cynical Comrade of mine sarcastically remarked, 'there goes another White  Elephant project'. 

I understood his pessimism, although, didn't share it. The complex has turbulent and troubled history. It was conceived as the Tenth Anniversary Hotel by  Navy Captain Joseph Adeduro Adeusi,  who was governor of Akwa Ibom State, from August 1996 to August 1998 during the military regime of General Sani Abacha, to mark the 10th anniversary celebration of the State.

 The project was stalled until Obong Victor Attah mounted the saddle as Governor on May 29, 1999. His government took a decision to sell off the abandoned hotel project to a private investor and Mr. Sunday Idowu of Jojein Venture Limited bought it. 

Until 2009 when then Governor Godswill Akpabio revoked the Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) in respect of the controversial 10th Anniversary Hotel Uyo, sparking a protracted legal tussle, the project remained a White Elephant. 

After it was settled and Akwa ibom State Government took back the property, nothing further was done. The place became a moribund and desolate complex. A hideout for social deviants and a coven for the ungodly. In the very heart of an otherwise serene capital city, the place was a bedlam and sad commentary of chaos surrounded by order. 

Governor Udom Emmanuel's vision to turn that monumental waste to wealth and transform a hell of decay,  to a haven of enterprise, couldn't sit well as realizable in a certain public affairs analyst's value. Alas, a miracle was activated. 

The Housing and Urban Renewal Ministry went to work. It was 70% directly executed by the staff of the Ministry and no contract Construction firms took charge of the remodeling that ensued, saving costs. This triggered confidence and was a boost, for the, on- the - job capacity of, commonly unused and redundant staff". A very core value of the Dakkada can-do spirit. The  standard of quality delivered on the job by staff of the Ministry,  and locally sourced labour, today measures up with what expatriates could have done.

The building which was commissioned on, Saturday 28/05/2016 to mark the first anniversary of the Udom Emmanuel administration, currently houses 304 offices, studios and laboratories, Four conference rooms with video conferencing facilities, three lifts, and a large lobby. Added to the building are staff clinic, ambulance bay, ophthalmology unit, X-ray rooms, two observation rooms, and staff restaurant.
 The Dakkada Secretariat was also designed with consideration to the people with special needs, even as it has modern fire fighting outlets and emergency exits on each floor coupled with 2000 capacity parking lot. It now sits as a vestige of pride to the state and has saved Government millions of Naira, hitherto spent on housing Government Departments and Agencies in rented apartments. 

Funny enough, my doubting Thomas friend, simply dismissed the remarkable achievement and well informed vision of the governor, with a whimsical, 'is that why I should jump into the river'? 

No! he needn't take a hike. All he needs do is eat his unbelief and give the governor a toast. For, had the governor failed, I can barely imagine what would happen and why he wouldn't bring down the roof, harping, 'I said it, this was another White Elephant"! 

Oh! Did I say Governor Emmanuel is soaked in the dilemma of, "shooting an Elephant?" Here is what I mean. 

George Orwell, narrates the predicament of a British colonial officer in Burma, who was responding to the outcry and scare of the local subjects over an Elephant that has run amock, knocked down a hut, killed a cow and trampled a boy to death. 

He rose to the challenge, got his Elephant gun, but on seeing the said Elephant, calm and regal, he was in a fix at the tricky impasse. What use is it killing the Elephant? The crowd was right behind him, and even their resounding silence, was a pressuring chant and charge on him to shoot the Elephant,  whose mahout, was nowhere near to tame the awesome beast. 

He had the gun(power), prestige (colonial official), and the mandate of the Queen. He could not afford to look like a coward before the people,  if he decided not to kill the Elephant. Unsure of what the people really want, he nonetheless shot and killed the Elephant. 

As soon as he did, the crowd did not decorate  him with garlands or bear him high on their shoulders as a hero. No, the women did not sing songs of his courage. They simply brushed him aside and descended on the game to share the meat. At least, he was consoled, he avoided being looked on as a fool, if he didn't do it. 

Every other day, Governor Udom Emmanuel has shot an Elephant and the people will not notice. Look at the Eket - Ibeno Road which he amazingly took up frontally and completed. What did he get? An  interloper in the name of ExxonMobil to detract and undercut  his fame. The rest is history. 

The Tooth Pick and Pencil Factory, and The Akwa Prime Hatchery, several roads and bridges commissioned, payment of salaries up to date. should I list all he has achieved in 2 years, to spite a nationwide economic recession? Yet, as he executes his campaign promises, the naysayers won't let him be. 

Fact is, Governor Emmanuel should be consoled, in that, assessments of his substantial achievements will differ across partisan bias, and will equate the parable of the nine blind men who were trying to describe - Guess what?, An Elephant.

Thursday, 29 June 2017

CARETAKER TRANSITON CHAIRMAN OF UKANAFUN LOCAL GOVERNMENT COUNCIL, BARRAISTER ABASIONO JACKSON UDOMFU (m) AND OTHERS ARRAIGNED FOR MURDER.

Our attention has been drawn to the Press Bulletin issued by the Akwa Ibom Police Command entitled “Caretaker Transition Chairman of Ukanafaun Local Government Council, Barrister Abasiono Jackson Udomfu ‘M’ and others arraigned for murder, signed by the Police Public Relations Officer, Akwa Ibom State, and DSP Chukwu Ikechukwu.
While we do not intend to make comments on an issue that is already before the court of law, we, however, wish to correct the erroneous impression that was created in paragraph 4 of the said release. The release had in the paragraph referenced stated inter-alia: The secretary was said to have frustrated the intention of the Governor of the state to grant amnesty to ice-Land secret cult members in Ukanafun area, which did not go down well with the Transition Chairman and the leadership of the ice-Land cult. Consequently, the chairman allegedly ordered his personal assistant, PA, to organize members of the ice-Land cult to eliminate the secretary, to pave way for the amnesty programme”.
We wish to state unequivocally that His Excellency, Governor Udom Emmanuel never contemplated, thought of, planned or intended to grant amnesty to any criminal group or elements in the State. He has zero-tolerance for criminals or their activities and the relative peace we enjoy today in the State is as a result of this robust approach to dealing ruthlessly with criminals and their networks. The police and other security agencies have been key partners in this drive and pursuit.
The phrasing of the paragraph was inelegant and the Police Commissioner himself has agreed that the statement was an allegation on the part of the individuals concerned and NEVER a statement of fact. “Governor Udom Emmanuel never planned to grant an amnesty to any criminal group and such discussions never came up. The individuals concerned made the wild allegations which we found out not to be true.  Any insinuation to the contrary is wrong and should be dismissed” the Police Commissioner Don. N. Awunah had stated strongly in a telephone discussion on the issue.
Members of the public should please be guided.

Signed:

Ekerete Udoh
Senior Special Assistant, Media/ Chief Press Secretary to the Governor

AKWA IBOM GIVES MOBIL QUIT NOTICE!

Mobil VS AKSG N8B Scandal: Relocate to Akwa Ibom or leave our lands- AKHA
Jun 29, 2017

Stakeholders in the four core oil host communities in Ibeno, Eket, Esit Eket and Onna Local Government Areas, Akwa Ibom State, have asked the Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited, MPNU, to vacate their lands if it was averse to relocating its administrative headquarters to the state, its operational base, as directed by the Federal Government.

Leaders of the communities, who spoke when the Ad-hoc committee set up by the state House of Assembly, invited them and top management of Mobil for investigative hearing on the controversial N8 billion counterpart fund payment by the company for the construction of Eket-Ibeno road, said the operational license of the multinational oil firm should also be revoked.

Speaking during the hearing, the Paramount Ruler of Ibeno, Owong Effiong Achianga called for the revocation of Mobil’s operational license if the company continues in its lackadaisical attitude adding that the company should pay all environmental hazard compensation.

While presenting the position paper by the core communities before the Committee, the Chairman MPNU’S Core Communities Technical Committee, Chief Nduese Essien, expressed dismay that Mobil despite having made petrol dollars from Akwa Ibom State has refused to relocate its operational base to the State even after the express directive of the Acting President.

The leaders, who strongly complained about the unwillingness of the company to reposition to the state, stressed that the issue of relocation, which is part of the MoU signed with the company, almost 19 years ago, remains one major area of divergence between core communities in the state and the multinational oil giant, over the years.

Wednesday, 28 June 2017

UDOM EMMANNUEL: PURVEYING AN ECONOMIC MIRACLE IN AKWA IBOM STATE

A miracle takes place when there is a sudden functional change that eludes human comprehension. In socio-economic and political parlance, someone or society is said to experience a miracle when it there is a sharp transformation or progress that was unplanned, astonishing and incomprehensible.

At the global stage, the Asian economic miracle remains one of the most   fundamental transformation the human society has known of since the end of the cold war in the 1991. This miracle, though prevalent in most of the East Asian countries, the four dragons or tiger: HongKong, SouthKorea, Singapore and Taiwan, had the most far-reaching touch.

It should be noted that the concept of the four Asian ‘’Tigers’’ or four Asian ‘’dragons’’ is a term used to explain the economic revolution which took place in the highly free-market and developed economies of Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan.

These nations were notable for maintaining exceptionally high growth rates( in excess of 7 percent a year) and rapid industrialization  between the early 1960s (mid-1950 for Hong Kong) and 1990s. By the 21st century, all four had developed into advanced and high-income economies, specializing in areas of competitive advantage.

Hong Kong and Singapore for instance, have become world-leading international financial centers, whereas South Korea and Taiwan are world leaders in manufacturing information technology. Their economic success stories have served as a role model for many developing countries, especially the tiger club economies.

In Akwa Ibom State, there is a conscious effort by the administration of Governor Udom Emmanuel at putting in place the requisite macro-economic policies and institutional framework that would set the stage for an economic miracle. For instance, the 5- point Agenda of Mr Udom Gabriel Emmanuel which encapsulates poverty alleviation, wealth creation, political & economic inclusion, infrastructure consolidation & expansion and job creation explain the pertinence of sound public policy to the overall process of development.
Little wonder, the Governor evolved a Foreign Direct Investment Committee in the state headed by a seasoned investment expert, Gabriel Ukpe to interface with foreign investors on behalf of the state.

GETTING THE BASICS RIGHT

From his inception as Governor, Mr Udom Emmanuel has instituted sound polices capable of promoting equity and growth in the state. Fundamentally sound development policy is a major ingredient in achieving rapid growth.
Macroeconomic management in the state is unusually good and macroeconomic performance unusually stable, providing the essential framework for private investment. Some of the chunky private investments in the state include the 2 billion capacity syringe factory, a high capacity flour mill, a metering plant and the Coconut Refinery, amongst others.

Also, there are policies to increase the integrity and corporate governance. In this connection, the importance of the Bureau for Technical Matters & Due Process headed by a reputable technocrat and seasoned corporate governance expert, Mr Ufot Ebong cannot be overemphasized.

The free and compulsory Education policy in the state has been deepened. It is focused on primary and secondary schools. Technical training and skill acquisition programs are also encouraged to generate rapid increase in labor force . It should be noted that unhindered access to basic education accounted significally to the success of the meji restoration (the great economic leap) in japan.
Thus, the case of Akwa cannot be an exception, as skilled and highly developed manpower beckons in the nearest future.

Agricultural and agro- related policies in Akwa Ibom are aimed on productivity and negates tax on the rural economy. Today, Akwa Ibom is self-sufficient into tomato, cucumber, cocoa, cassava and other produce. These commodities were hitherto bought from the northern and western parts of the country and at exorbitant prices.
Recently, courtesy of FERep, the pet project of Mrs Martha Udom Emmanuel, wife of the Akwa Ibom State Governor, 3 Cassava Processing Factories were resuscitated and commissioned in the three senatorial districts of the state. Of course, it is expected that this robust initiative would cause a boost in good production in state, while creating jobs and alleviating poverty.

ATTRACTIVENESS OF PRIVATE INVESTMENTS:
Udom Emmanuel’s policy on investment has sustained and engendered rapid growth with a fair income distribution pattern which has led to unprecedented economic growth. Recently the nation bureau of statistics (NDS) in its report for first quarter, noted that Akwa Ibom is the second largest foreign exchange attraction from importation of development capital in Nigeria with $18.36 in foreign direct investment (FDI) and other investment component of capital importation behind Lagos.

SOUND PUBLIC POLICY AND GROWTH:
The role of public policy in orchestrating growth, accumulating human and physical capital for investment in the state cannot be overemphasized.
In his bid to use public policy to actualize his development blueprints, Governor Udom Emmanuel has developed a framework that links rapid growth with (1) accumulation (2) effective allocation and (3) technological catch up.

Governor Emmanuel’s policy choices could be classified into two groups: (1) fundamental and selective interventions. The important policies within these include macroeconomic stability, high investment in human and intellectual capital and openness to foreign technology. Selective intervention include industrial promotion, local content and provision of security.

In the area of human capital development, it must be emphasized that indigenous professionals have been sent abroad for training programs in meter and syringe production. This would enhance the process of the technology transfer and ‘reserve engineering’. Reverse Engineering, as a process of ‘stealing technology’ through re-invention accounted for the quick technological development experienced by the newly industrialized countries (NICs) of south East Asia.

Closely related to the above is the local content policy of the state Government in the construction industry. Viable local concerns such as BENEST, VERINI, HENSEK and SEYANG  Construction Companies, among others have been engaged and this hassled to the avalanche in construction labor, technological development, while alternating poverty to a reasonable level. Capital flight too has been discouraged, implying that the local economy would experience a tremendous boost.

Summarily, taking into cognizance  the development blueprint laid down by Governor Udom Emmanuel anchored on the 5-point Agenda, it is apparent that an economic miracle beckons in Akwa Ibom State. Unarguably, sound public policy and strategy are the primary considerations for this great leap!

Uwemedimoh Umanah, an International Public Affairs Analyst, writes this piece from Uyo

Ibom Specialist Hospital is not fully equipped: putting truth to the lie by mischief makers.

We have read with amusement the banner headline in some local tabloids and on the social media to the effect that His Excellency, Mr. Udom Emmanuel, Governor, Akwa Ibom State had stated that Ibom Specialist Hospital is not fully equipped.
Our initial reaction was to studiously ignore the story as the handiwork of mischief makers and agent provocateurs who are bent on starting a narrative that is at best geared towards drawing some political capital out of a decidedly non-existent issue, but doing so, would have amounted to ceding the ground for the lie to hold.
Let me state here categorically that His Excellency, Mr. Udom Emmanuel, Governor of Akwa Ibom State did not; within the context and tenor of the statement categorically say that Ibom Specialist Hospital is not fully equipped.  The said statement was taken out of an excerpt of an interview His Excellency granted a cross-section of the media recently in Lagos, of which Thisday  newspaper reporter, Olawale Olaleye was one of those reporters who interviewed him.
For the avoidance of doubt, this is exactly what the Governor had said when the reporter asked him why some prominent Nigerians still do not deem it fit to patronize the hospital.  “it is one thing to have the facilities; it is another thing for the facilities to get to where they produce optimum results. So, where we are today, WE HAVE GONE SOMEWHERE. But I can say that we have not fully equipped it to the level of the vision we have that is why we called on the Minister (of Health) that we need to partner the Federal Government.”
What His Excellency meant with the above excerpt was that Ibom Specialist Hospital is on solid ground and that we have made tremendous progress with the facilities the hospital has, but that more facilities are needed to take it to the vision that led to its establishment by the State Government.
It is therefore, the height of mischief for someone to misconstrue the statement and gave it a narrow and politically expedient narrative that suits their notion. All over the world, medical science is an evolving enterprise with new technologies and updates, hospitals as a result, are equipping and re-equipping to keep up with the pace of new technologies, and if the Governor said that though the facilities we have currently are great, but we need to equip the hospital with additional facilities to meet the vision, it is very sad for people to try to play politics with such an honest and globally acceptable fact.
We recognise that the political season is upon us, and desperate individuals will, as a result, attempt to cause division and create imaginary issues, Governor Udom Emmanuel, however, is determined to continue the erection of a skyscraper for the good people of Akwa Ibom State from the solid foundation and structure that his mentor and the immediate past Governor, the Senate Minority Leader of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Distinguished Senator Godswill Akpabio (CON) had erected. Every attempt by certain individuals or politically sponsored  groups to derail His Excellency from that vision will amount to a waste of their time and resources.
Governor Udom Emmanuel is a bridge-builder, and one of the planks in his Five-Point Agenda is political inclusion. He has gone the extra mile to ensure that all Akwaibomites are invited to come on board the train of the Akwa Ibom Project no matter their political affiliations. He remains dedicated to that noble ideal.

Signed:

Ekerete Udoh
Senior Special Assistant, (Media) and Chief Press Secretary to Governor Udom Emmanuel

Tuesday, 27 June 2017

Former President Goodluck Jonathan criticises the Niger Delta Development Commission

Former President Goodluck Jonathan has criticised the Niger Delta Development Commission, saying the agency has failed to provide the needed infrastructural development in the region.

Speaking at the occasion of the Rivers State 50th year anniversary in Port Harcourt, Wednesday, Mr. Jonathan said fiscal federalism was the system that would work better to facilitate development in the country.

“This will allow states to assume control of the exploitation of their natural resources and mandate them to pay adequate taxes to the Federal Government,” said Mr. Jonathan.

“My conviction that fiscal federalism will initiate faster development is born out of a comparison between the intervention Agencies and the 13 percent derivation. From the days of Special Funds, through OMPADEC to now NDDC, the Federal Government has provided funds for the development of the oil bearing communities but very little physical infrastructure to show for it.

“This is so because these bodies are highly political and lack continuity as tenures are hardly completed. New Federal Government administrations appoint new teams who award new contracts hence the zone is littered with abandoned projects.

“I believe that without the 13 percent derivation, action governors like Wike would not have the capital to drive his ambitious developmental projects. With fiscal federalism, the pace of development will be even faster.”

Mr. Jonathan said although the country is doing well in many areas, several issues have continued to agitate its citizens.

“Our people want us to improve on the way we govern ourselves. That was why in 2014 I set up the National Conference to examine the grey areas and proffer viable options that will accelerate our political, social and economic development. I am convinced that implementation of the Report will help resolve some of the problems in our country,” he said.

“It is also my conviction that the future of democracy, not only in Nigeria but across the entire continent of Africa, lies in putting the people first. This will entail not only working to improve their lives but also respecting their rights to freely chose who to represent them, without let or hindrance.

“That way, they will be able to wrap their hope and future around the certainty of the declaration that real power belongs to them, and that the maxim of one man one vote is not just mere platitude.”

INIBEHE EFFIONG: AN APC BABY LAWYER'S RANTING ON RADIO

"We have a stadium in Lagos, we have a stadium in Abuja and other cities. Akwa Ibom state did not need any stadium. It was a waste of public funds. By the way, the stadium should not have been renamed after an individual. That is why I still maintain that the stadium is cursed. It doesn’t make any difference whether people come here to watch football matches, they could have still gone elsewhere and watch it. It is not about building white elephants projects but what are the economic importance? I expect most people to be outraged by the things I have said.”

- APC Baby Lawyer, Barr. Inibehe Effiong on Inspiration FM

MY RESPONSE

The first ever stadium to be constructed in Nigeria was in 1930 and that is the Onikan Stadium in Lagos State. From 1930 till date, more than fifteen standard stadiums have been constructed across the country. If your argument that we did not have need for a stadium is anything to go by, then Nigeria would not have had needs for more stadiums, afterall the Onikan stadium at Lagos is still in shape. Why don’t you criticize the Lagos government for building Teslim Balogun stadium despite the presence of Onikan and national stadium at Surulere? If the Federal Government saw a need for the Abuja Stadium, if the Rivers State Government saw a need for a stadium, despite having the liberation stadium and the Yakubu Gowon stadium, then Akwa Ibom State was over ripe for a stadium, if not for its economic importance which you are blind enough not to see but for "pride" as one of the states feeding the entire country. As a dummy, I am sure you have not heard of the schools sports competition recently held, were our children drew motivations in the modern edifice.

You may not know these since you have never seen anything good in the State and the Peoples Democratic Party, on the different occasions that the stadium has hosted matches, the 30,000 capacity stadium has always been filled to capacity, tickets are sold out with both Nigerians and foreigners who loves football wishing the stadium was at least 70,000 capacity. Do you know the economic important of a sold out stadium to the state? Hawkers, bar owners, hotels, tricycle owners, bike men at machine park before the flyover, taxi men at airport, stadium workers etc are always excited whenever a match is to be played at this stadium, how then is it a curse? The stadium is only a curse and a white elephant project to someone like you who is a known Facebook lawyer and a tout.

In describing a motor park tout, Nwakaudi has these to say "in the motor park, relevance is measured by how much violence the tout vents on others. The tout's capacity is recognised by the venom of his bad mouth. Nobody expects anything good from a motor park tout because he only has pain, sadness and loss to offer". Nwakaudi's description best fit our baby lawyer.

This is one guy that is only good at making inciting statements (his record is there for all to see), he speaks before he thinks and uses any opportunity he has to destroy others. Just like a motor park tout, Inibehe Effiong is uncouth, useless, senseless, worthless, infact he is a definition of anything bad. He feels talking down others will catapult him into achieving his life ambitions but NO!!!! life does not work that way.

Going on air to say a Governor that was voted massively for by millions of Akwa Ibom people is Insensible is the mother of all stupidity. If you ask me, I will tell you that he is only seeking for an attention and I regret using my platform to give him that attention but truth must be told. Ever since your party lost in 2015 and at the Supreme Court, you became irrelevant but since 2019 is tomorrow, you have started offering yourself to the highest bidder in your party. I am still wondering why you did not attend Nsima Ekere's prayer summit or did you? That would have been a nice platform to sell yourself to him after all he cuddles blackmailers of your ilk.

Apart from begging radio stations in the state to give you a platform to insult others, what have you achieved in life? How many cases have you won? How many elections have you contested? What have you done to project the state positively?

You questioned what the governor does with his security votes, have you cared to ask what Buhari does with his? Have you asked how much the president has spent so far treating himself? Have you asked what happened to the 2016 budget? Have you cared to ask why your party has not fulfilled even one of its promises? Charity they say  begins from home. You should be abusing your party  before talking about any other person. You should try and win your cases before judging others. Have you even asked what Nsima Ekere is doing in NDDC with the funds generated in our backyard, outside funding his 2019 ambition?
By the way this one you are lying that you no longer belong to the APC, will you stop carrying brooms at their campaign rallies? When did you leave Umana Umana’s employ? The achievements of Gov. Udom Emmanuel's administration is there for all to see not like the lies your party has been telling Nigerians.
A word is enough for the wise, sadly, you are not wise.

Re: Emmanuel, There is no Alternative to PDP Yet

The attention of the Government of Akwa Ibom State has been drawn to an interview granted by the Governor His Excellency Mr Udom Emmanuel, and published on ThisDay Newspaper of Sunday June 25,2017, with the headline, "Emmanuel, There Is No Alternative to PDP Yet".

While we align ourselves with the contents of the interview which are excerpts of the views expressed by His Excellency, the Governor, we completely dissociate ourselves from the introductory aspect of the publication which tends to cast aspersion on the records and achievements of the immediate past Governor and Senate Minority Leader, Senator Godswill Akpabio. The said sentence read, “As a banker, his experience and exposure came handy and today, Akwa Ibom is generally believed to have fared better than the days of the lousy ‘uncommon transformation’ with a relatively conservative but generous effective approach to governance.”

Governor Emmanuel holds Senator Godswill Akpabio in high esteem and like every well-meaning Akwa Ibomite, the governor appreciates the successes of the uncommon transformation era as the foundation of today’s Akwa Ibom which his administration is building on.

It was against the backdrop of those successes that ThisDay Newspaper bestowed on the former governor, a prestigious title of "Emerging Tiger" in 2009.

His Excellency Mr Udom Emmanuel operates a government of political inclusion and has maintained a policy of uniting every Akwa Ibomite beyond all divides in the task of developing the state and as such is totally against such negative remarks against past leaders or other stakeholders from the state.

We therefore urge the general public to discountenance the said comment which we believe was made in error by the newspaper.

Charles Udoh
Hon. Commissioner
Information & Strategy

Sunday, 25 June 2017

Emmanuel: There Is No Alternative to PDP Yet

Young, smart, cerebral and confident, the Akwa
Ibom State Governor, Mr. Udom Emmanuel, has
turned out a terrific improvement of himself two
years after assuming office. From the boardroom
of the banking sector to the expansive and
complex office of the governor, albeit with a stint
at the office of the secretary to the state
government, Emmanuel is just another proof that
there is nothing cryptic about governance. A
clear example of generational power shift, his
capacity to tame the challenges that attend the
office of the governor was first put to test by the
economic recession that ushered in the present
dispensation in 2015. As a banker, his experience
and exposure came handy and today, Akwa Ibom
is generally believed to have fared better than
the days of the lousy ‘uncommon
transformation’ with a relatively conservative but
generously effective approach to governance. In
this interview with Olawale Olaleye, Emmanuel
relives his experience in office in the last two
years and how he has been able to meander
through the difficulties and demands of his office
to delivering on his promises to the people of the
state. He also speaks on several other issues.
Excerpts:
Two years in office, what has the experience
been like and was there anything that prepared
you for this job?
God has prepared me for this job. I keep saying
so. Nobody just wakes up and finds himself in
the position of being a leader. You build up
yourself to become a leader through your
experience. If you remember, last time I said
there are two types of politicians: professionals
in politics and professional politicians. For us
who are professionals in politics, it means we’ve
been prepared for leadership over time.
You know your vision is limited to your
exposure. So, I believe with the exposure that
we’ve had over time, our training both in and out
of the classroom and hands-on experience, our
interaction with the outside world across the
globe and even the field of the masses – the
grassroots, by the time you put all of them
together, they contribute in different areas.
Take for example, the heart you have towards
the common man, what can trigger that is your
experience relating with that common man. For
example, despite compulsory education at
present, at school hours, you get into some
wards, some units, you still a lot of children who
could not make it to school. And even if you say
let’s go and arrest the parents for not sending
them to school, the child will walk up to you and
if you ask, why didn’t you go to school? He
would say sorry, sir, I couldn’t go because I
didn’t eat. At that point in time, goose pimples
will be all over you.
How can you spend so much providing free and
compulsory education and even when the child
goes to school, he cannot still do well, because
the basic things have not actually been tackled?
So, it’s all these things put together that
actually get you prepared for the job. You are
willing to make sacrifices; you are willing to
push. In fact, we are afraid to celebrate. You
can’t even celebrate anything you do, because
you still believe you have a lot of grounds to
cover because of what you see. I think those are
the things that prepare people like us for this
job.
Looking back, are you fulfilled with the level of
work done so far?
I just gave you an example of what will enable
one to be fulfilled. I can’t feel really fulfilled.
That’s why I said a job well done needs much
more jobs to be done. I can only be fulfilled any
day I look at our per capita and it is comparable
to what others actually achieved outside this
place, because nobody has a monopoly of what
it takes to run governance. Those per capital are
in tens and hundreds of thousands of US Dollars;
they don’t have a monopoly either. Those who
have these things in excess, who have totally
overcome the basic needs of life don’t have the
monopoly. I can only be fulfilled when I see
Nigerians at that level.
No matter what I do from inside and outside, I
can only be fulfilled if I provide free and
compulsory education and every child will be
jumping to go to school because the child must
have had a balanced diet, must have eaten well,
must have had enough protein that can actually
enable that child to develop, so that when the
child is in the class and is being taught, he will
be able to feel happy going to school. However,
not when the child is afraid that ‘as I’m coming
back from school, won’t they even send me first
to farm before I have my lunch.
So, even when we are moving towards providing
school feeding system, it’s still not enough
because there is a whole lot to be desired
outside that. When the school is not in session,
won’t the child still eat? When they are on long
vacation, what happens? What happens on
weekends when the child does not go to school?
So, there is a whole lot to be done. It’s too early
to start drumming up to say I’m fulfilled from
inside of me. And that fulfillment will not
necessarily be from the state that you come
from. It will cut across the whole country. If you
train your state indigenes and you don’t train
your neighbours, know that even your children
won’t be at peace because it must cut across.
You don’t just train your child and leave your
neighbour’s child and think your child will be at
peace?
You once spoke about the politics of inclusion.
How much has that achieved in moving the
state forward especially, that you seem to be
issuing handouts to the opposition for them to
comply?
We don’t issue handouts. I don’t even know
what you mean by handouts. I only know of
handouts when we were in school and that was
for us to read and pass exams. Then in what
way have we ensured politics of inclusion? In all
ramifications! Everything we do, we don’t deal
with political party affiliations. We are not
partisan on anything; what we do, we just look
at our people, our state.
At the same time, if you look at the way we give
appointments, a lot of people who did not even
support me and what drives this is that the day
election is over, it is governance. It has nothing
to do with election again. This is time for
governance. It’s no more time for partisan
politics. These things are just the state of mind
and once you can overcome it from your own
mind, you can also conquer it. So, you embrace
everybody and try to break those barriers of
partisan politics. That’s the way we do it.
Recently, the Minister of Science and
Technology said by 2019, the nation would start
producing pencils and your state seems to be
deeply into this. Is it just for your people alone
as a test case?
Well, I didn’t hear the minister say so. But let me
also say something here clearly. I’m not the one
who brought out the statistics, but let me tell
you what I heard about the statistics that
Nigeria spent about N350 billion importing
pencil. So, the question is, is producing pencil a
wrong exercise? The answer is no. If you pay a
visit to Akwa Ibom State, I have everything that
it takes in terms of raw materials. I have all that
you use in that pencil. Is it the bamboo, the
wood, or is it the pieces of paper?
And you know, with the new attention on
environment, you can actually get used papers to
produce pencils that will be more environment
friendly too. There are so many things that they
are now using to produce pencil. It’s not as
difficult as you made it sound. If you don’t also
want to make use of wood to produce this
pencil, you make use of paper. Can you get the
technology from somewhere else, the answer is
yes. You can actually share knowledge. But
where you cannot, you can also borrow
knowledge.
What matters most is do you have the people;
do you have the material? The answer is yes.
I’m one of those who believe that we can start
this under small and medium enterprises
scheme. These are entrepreneurial schemes that
we are running for small and medium scale
enterprises. Why? It is because I don’t see this
as a major exercise. It doesn’t actually pay us
as a country to import a whole pencil when we
have so much unemployment and so much of
those things we can also use in making our own.
So, we have our blueprint and we are looking at
not just pencil, even the basic plastic materials
that we use on daily basis. Those are things that
we believe that small and medium scale
enterprises can produce on a daily basis,
because those are the things that people use on
a daily basis.
Coming to toothpick, any kind of bamboo, even
from the raffia palm, will do it. Some people even
use it for firewood. So, why should I import
toothpick, when I can easily produce it. It’s the
same bamboo that I’m going to import from
another place when I can actually create value
for the same local woman, who is cutting that
bamboo for firewood. A man can also cut the
same bamboo and use it to process toothpick,
rather than importing it. That’s basic knowledge,
nothing so special. It’s just for you to just look
out and say what do I have and what I have is
what I need.
So, why can’t the main bamboo tree now
become a source of raw material? And even the
raffia palm that we have all over the place in the
swampy areas. That’s a major source of rubber
materials. So, I don’t see a big deal in this. The
only aspect I think we need to also look at as a
people is those machines that process this. I
think that’s where the main issue comes in. I
think with time, Nigeria should be able to break
into that also because I look at those machines,
they can easily be fabricated by the people. It’s
not that difficult. That’s why I say some of those
technologies we can also transfer. That’s how I
look at those areas.
How do you go about that?
First off, we identify that needs there. How many
schools do I have? If I run a free and compulsory
education and the people need something to
write, why do I have to go and buy those things?
Why do I have to import them? Let me first of all
meet that need. It’s the same thing. The money
I could have used to import them, let me use
that money to manufacture them and in the
course of doing that, I will employ a lot of people
and create an economy.
By the time you look at the complete value
chain, I’ve done something within the economy
and the effect will be there. So, instead of just
throwing away raw cash outside, I keep telling
people that any country which imports
everything, that country is a rich country. So, can
actually look back and plough that money that
we want to use for importation into some other
small industrial businesses and it is in line with
our blueprint.
How have you been able to balance your goals
amid financial constraints?
As much as you prepare for leadership, you know
God also prepares you for serving the people at a
point in time. I try to let people know that in
time of recession, two things must be defined
clearly in your head and you must be able to
define and separate them to know what matters
at what point in time. There is a difference
between cash and money. So, in period of
recession, you must define what money can get
for you and what cash can get. In the time of
recession, you won’t be able to get cash, but
you can create money depending on what you
are pursuing.
I know a lot of people still get highest revenue
but at what revenue line? I only get when it
comes to sharing from oil. For months, there
was a time when we did not even lift a barrel of
crude oil. Akwa Ibom produces almost 46 per
cent of the entire oil this country produces. So,
there was a time when we did not lift even a
barrel of crude oil. You can imagine the impact
of that on our revenue. So, in time of recession,
we must differentiate what you can do with cash
and what you can do with money.
I think for those that count payment of salaries
as major achievement, it is because in a period
of recession, what cash can do is an
achievement. My workers work in a particular
day and they get alert, not just salaries but
pensions. So, we take those things for granted.
Once you differentiate between what cash and
money can do, you will know where you are
going. I think that’s the edge we have over
certain people who can’t create money. I think
we can create money even in a period of
recession, but we may not have cash. If you are
looking at what cash can do, it will affect
everybody. But if you look at what money can
do, it may not affect everybody because it’s not
everybody that has the capability and the
capacity to create money during a recession. But
I think we do.
Specifically, how did you manage during this
recession?
This thing has a lot to do with attitude. In every
situation, there is always an opportunity. If you
look at the opportunity in that situation and
tackle that opportunity, you would have coped
with that situation at that point in time. Even in
the period of recession, there are lots of
opportunities. So, why not address those
opportunities and leave the setbacks. You must
deliberately look at what are the game changers
and then pursue those ones. I was just talking to
one of your colleagues and we were sharing
ideas.
If a human being can die and there is an
opportunity, how much more a recession? If
somebody dies now, while the bereaved are
crying over their dead, the man selling casket is
happy that there is going to be sales. It’s an
opportunity for the man. So, in every situation,
there is an opportunity. Even the recession you
are saying, that is the time you can change the
mental attitude of your people, because they are
facing the reality of the time. Don’t wait. Don’t
look at the global economy. Look at what you
have. We use different teachings. Look at also
where they are familiar with.
The easiest thing to talk to an African is religion,
because in Africa, anything goes. The same man
who is going to work in the morning is going to
church in the evening. So, you can do leadership
training. You let the people know that with five
loaves and two fishes, you can actually make a
difference to enhance your potential. This is the
time to launch a mental rebirth and a philosophy
that could guide the people. So, by the time
there is a period of abundance, that philosophy
you can’t easily change it. They will now use
that in the management of the resources at that
point in time, because they are coming from a
different mindset. So, in every situation, you
always create an opportunity. That’s how we are
managing.
In what ways are you improving the IGR of your
state, because that is central to achieving these
goals?
I know a lot of people say different things about
rates, but there is a limit to what you can do
because no matter how lovely your tax laws are,
no matter how aggressive you are in driving
collections, the ability to pay must be there. How
many people would you lock up because they
couldn’t pay taxes? The ability must be there.
Mind you, some of these taxes are not collected
in advance. They are collected in arrears.
So, the people may have spent both your tax and
his own earnings because a whole lot of state
government IGR comes from pay as you earn.
Some of them would have spent what they are
earning this month because they live in advance.
As time comes, the money doesn’t even get to
them. It must have vanished from the banks.
So, how do you collect that kind of IGR?
It’s so nice with words how to improve IGR, but
does it work in real time? The answer is no. The
reality is: these are your people. The ability to
pay must be there. We can’t just lock somebody
because the person didn’t have the ability to
pay. There is a limit to what you can do and
that’s why we are trying to do that shift in
paradigm that there are other things that can
earn revenue for you, not just the same PAYE
concept.
So, what do you now do with that? You now
look at the economy. If the economy is buoyant,
there will be many sources of IGR. You need to
build the economy and then IGR will be added.
You must build on something to get something.
You cannot just build without foundation. The
building will collapse. So, you first of all look at
the foundation and then tackle that foundation.
Once the foundation is strong, it will be easier to
build and it will be sustainable.
Have you pondered the sustainability of your
projects?
The answer is yes, because of the sense of
ownership. For example, the coconut plantation
we are doing, the communities own certain
percentage of what we are doing there. So, there
is that sense of ownership. Once we start
earning revenue, some of the local government
areas will participate actively in this thing,
because a lot of people will be interested in being
local government chairman, because of the
sources of revenue. Ownership will be there.
People protect what they own. Even when they
don’t have the money, you give them certain
percentage of shares from there. That is
sustainable.
Second, we made these projects as pure
business. Let me give you an example. What we
did with cocoa, instead of us to start planting
cocoa afresh, we started with the maintenance
of the 26,000 hectares of cocoa that we have. All
of them are individual ventures. And as support
from government, we first of all brought
consultants, who will show them the
maintenance of that cocoa.
Immediately, we started that maintenance within
a short period. We told them, leave the farm to
us for three to four weeks, then, come back.
When most of them came back after six weeks,
the way the thing had sprout all over, even a
tree that they wanted probably to cut off, by the
time they came back, the flowers were all over
from the top to the base of the tree. They
couldn’t just believe it. They started calling it
magic. It’s not magic. It is about knowing what
to do at every point in time. So, what we did
was, the government pays the consultants, the
people who have knowledge. Knowledge is
power.
Your government is believed to be doing a lot in
the area of agriculture. How far have you gone
here?
Now, we are launching into improved seedlings
for them to plant. In doing that, you could see
that it flows from the hands of the people into
government. So, government is just creating an
enabling environment, depending on the kind of
produce you are looking at. Like that cocoa, we
do that. But things like palm fruits and so on, we
leave those in the hands of individuals. We just
provide the enabling environment. There are
some that we need to bring the seeds like the
maize farming that we are doing.
The problem that we had was that over the
years, what we used to think were pests for corn
plantation and they were not really pests.
Research now shows that the seed that were
planted are the great, great grandfather seed.
How do you preserve seed in Africa? Once you
harvest corn this year, those domestic
consumptions you’ve finished, the remaining
ones, people now put it in this clay pot and then
dry it in front of fire to preserve it. Those things
are losing value.
After certain generation, when you plant it, it
comes out as if they are being attacked by pest.
It’s because those things have actually lost
value. So, what do we do? As a government, we
said no, we started running at out-grower
scheme. We bought improved seeds in order to
suck off those old seeds and then we give the
seeds free. Anywhere in the world, government
must subsidize the basic life of people.
So, we bought the seeds for them. We also
introduced two planting seasons in a year. We
believe if they plant twice in a year, in 24
months, we will have a cycle of four. So, within
three to four years, we would have actually
eliminated the old seeds from the system and
there will be new ones. These new seeds have
improved starch, improved vitamins and it’s also
sweeter. It’s a sweet corn.
In terms of rice production, I know without even
improved seedlings or anything, our yield is one
of the best. So, we started with what I call a
demonstration system of 10,000 of hectares that
is solely into the private bodies that are coming
to grow in. Once they start growing, we will set
up a mill and they will process that. To also add
to cocoa, we are also trying to bring a
processing plant for the cocoa, because why our
people are not getting value for cocoa is because
the flavor does not stay in the international
market. What makes one particular type of cocoa
different from the other is the flavor in the
international market and that’s due to the drying
system.
Once you go and spread it under the sun, that
drying process loses the flavor in the
international market. So, we are now coming up
with the latest technology in processing. These
are the enabling environment that you create for
people and that’s why I think it’s sustainable.
So, when you are asking whether it is
sustainable, the answer is yes, they are
sustainable, because you are actually teaching
people the right approach, the right things to do
that will make them sustainable. Once people
start getting value out of this, they won’t let it
go and they will try to maintain it.
There have been speculations that you were
planning to join the APC, because you already
have issues with your predecessor. Is it true?
The answer is no. I’ve never considered that. It
is unthinkable that a pillar of PDP like me will
think of jumping the ship. In my entire lifestyle, I
don’t jump ship. I’m a very loyal person. The
church I was born into by my grandfather is the
church I’m still maintaining till today. I’ve not
changed. I keep saying that nobody has a
monopoly of God.
That same man who can read that same bible
and understand it, the same ministry is available
for me too. I can also read to understand it. So,
I also know what to do to find fragrance in my
own worship service too that will make my
church sustainable and attract people, not to
talk of political parties. I can’t go anywhere. PDP
is my blood. So, I can’t go anywhere outside
PDP. PDP can never die. PDP is the largest party
in Africa.
Forget the propaganda, PDP is the only party
that if you go to any ward in all the 774 local
governments in this country, and you mention
PDP, nobody will ask you what you are referring
to. In fact, PDP in my state is like a religion.
PDP is the only place that you can see quality
leaders. Anything you hear of and you still
believe in Akwa Ibom is PDP. So, how do you
expect my people to leave PDP?
In my state today, if you ask anybody in the
local community, who is the party chairman, they
will mention the PDP chairman. Even from the
airport, ask them that you want to go to the
party chairman’s house and see where they will
take you to. It’s PDP chairman that they will
take you to straight. Is there any other political
party? The answer is no. It’s one party that I
know and that is PDP. I don’t know of any other
party. Anywhere you see me, know that you’ve
seen PDP.
So, is it true you have issues with your
predecessor?
I’m not aware of that, depending on what you
call issues. You know there are two types of
issues – issues of development or negative
issues. If you listened to my speech on
democracy day, I said our politicking is pro-
development. If you mean we are having issues
of developing in the state, of course, that’s how
we do our politics. But if you say issues, I don’t
know of any other issue. The day I was voted
into power, I was not voted to have negative
issues.
I was voted to have positive issues and those
positive issues have been part of development of
the people and resources of our state. So, we
don’t have any issues in the direction that you
are looking at. Somebody told me one day that
this is a banana peel and I said we won’t match
that banana peel. So, when you read those
things, just ignore. There have never been any
issue and there will never be.
It has also to do with how you play these things.
If the whole idea is about service to the people,
your self-aggrandizement must come down for
people’s interest to override that and once that
overrides your self-aggrandizement, we don’t
have issues at all. Our state is too precious for
us to be thinking of any other thing. We have a
very cordial relationship as expected. It’s left for
you now to define as expected.
You were the chairman of the PDP committee
that zoned the national chairmanship of the
party to the North East and eventually to Borno
State. Do you regret the emergence of Senator
Ali Modu Sheriff as PDP national chairman,
given the crisis at hand?
I’m one person that if I take decisions, I don’t
regret my decisions. I took that decision at that
point in time based on what was available for
me at that time. So, it was the best of judgment
at that minute. Situations change. It is only God
that does not change. So, if situations have
changed that could change the character of
people, it doesn’t actually matter. So, you don’t
sit back and regret that.
The question now is: when will your ingenuity in
the management of crisis come in? How do you
manage yourself out of that situation and remain
unscathed? That’s where we are going towards
and at the same time, we will go with the rule of
law. So, it doesn’t call for me castigating
somebody’s character. At the time we took that
decision that was the best at that point in time.
You said earlier that the PDP is known for
throwing up quality leaders. Does it include
Senator Sheriff?
Before Sheriff was nominated chairman, the
forum talked to so many other people. There
was actually an interview process and everybody
at that committee accepted that. At that point in
time, was that the best decision to take? The
answer is yes. Can that decision change in the
next minute? The answer is yes. That’s why we
are immortal. We are not God.
So, we can take decisions today that might not
look good to anybody in the next minute. But we
must learn to stand by that decision and
manage ourselves out of it. That’s what
differentiates a man and who is not a man. So,
when you hear people just sitting and criticising,
they are recruits in this field. They are not yet
Generals, because if you are a General, you
should manage yourself out of that situation, not
criticising that situation.
So, when I said PDP produces best leaders, I
mean elected leaders under the PDP platform. I
mean people elected under the PDP platform.
It’s like if you have a house, there is a difference
between your biological son and an adopted son,
even though you might try to share your rights,
biology and law are two different things. They
don’t even belong in the same faculty.
Your state often boasts of having one of the
best hospitals in the country and yet, prominent
Nigerians, most of them politicians have never
deemed it fit to patronize the hospital. Is there
a problem?
In life, we must respect our bosses. I have
absolute respect for anybody who is on top of
me. So, I don’t discuss anybody on top of me.
The only person I’m allowed to discuss is only if
the person is my biological father. But anything
outside that, I respect the system. But coming to
Ibom Specialist Hospital, it is one thing to have
facilities; it’s another thing for the facilities to
get to where they produce optimum results. So,
where we are today, we’ve gone somewhere.
But I can say that we have not fully equipped it
to that level of vision that we have. That’s why
we called on the minister that we need to partner
the federal government. You remember within
that period we made that statement, dollars
dropped from N186 to over N500. So, it dropped
by almost N75 per cent. You can see the
paradox there. Cost increased to almost infinity.
It didn’t balance.
So, it affected the planning. No matter how
efficient, no matter your level of ingenuity, you
cannot create something out of nothing.
So, that’s what affected the speed of getting to
where we wanted that Specialist Hospital to be.
So, you could see that most of the equipment
that could have actually helped us reach that
level of such other hospitals that you can find in
Germany or anywhere, with the forex was not
even available. Even when you have N500 to buy
1 dollar, where will even find the genuine
transaction that you wanted to buy? Mind you,
this transaction is in the international market
and you can only go through international best
practices. That’s what actually made us not to
reach that peak that we were hoping for.
Talking about the issue of the Bakassi
returnees, in what ways are you proposing to
help?
Bakassi returnees have been there over the years
and it is not how do we intend but how have we
been helping them. I think as at today, most of
them have actually been re-integrated into the
system. So, it’s not new. It might interest you to
know that Bakassi is so close – about two hours
from Akwa Ibom market. If you go towards Ibaka
area right now, most of the settlers there are the
Bakassi returnees. Some of them have picked up
new trade.
Some of them are going back into fishing. What
matters most is how much do we want to
accept these people? Once we accept them, then
there are no barriers. There won’t be any issue.
Some of them are very good fishermen. So,
they’ve fully re-integrated themselves like the
other fishermen, who are settling around the
riverine area. That also helps the state, because
it makes the fish and aquatic materials available.
In fact, there are so many people now bringing
them to the shore line for people to buy.
Are considering holding the local government
elections anytime soon?
When people refer to conducting local
government elections, I said it’s quite clear. The
hierarchy of needs, some are fundamental and
urgent and important. Some are important but
might not be so urgent, might not be so
fundamental. I consider that meeting other basic
needs of people is much fundamental, urgent and
material, because of the style. When we are
talking about policy inclusiveness, I don’t sit in
my office and write names of those who are the
local government transition committee. That’s
what makes the difference.
Those I put in the local government transition
committee, even if I were to do elections, it’s the
same people that will go hundred per cent
because I leave this thing back to the people to
decide. So, we called headquarters meeting. We
want to do transition Committee. We don’t have
money to do election. And no matter how we do
an election, we must do the election in almost
3,000 units. Look at the materials that we need.
And here, when you are doing anything, it’s with
your own infrastructure. Look at the generators
that we will buy.
Look at the security that we need there. Look at
the manpower resources, mobility and vehicle,
because you must convey materials. So, by the
time you put these things together, you now
wonder, what am I set to achieve? What is the
purpose? At times you run out of answers. Just
for me to have somebody to govern a local
government. We can use that money and even
pay the local government employees, who have
not been paid for some time; pay the pensioners,
who could die even before the election. Who will
the voters be if everybody is hungry? The money
we could have used to give them what is
required so that they can actually have the
strength to go and vote we now use for election.
Who are we trying to impress?
Who are we working for? Some of these things
are not cast in stone or iron. You can actually
look at what the law allows you to do within the
context of available resources and what you
want to achieve for your people. I think my
people are very happy. If you hear anybody going
to court, you know it’s an exception. But the
question is: are we going to do the local
government election? The answer is yes. We are
meeting with the State Independent Electoral
Commission so that we chat on how we are
going to do the local government election,
because that is the law. But we have to cushion
the effect and the drastic nature of last year’s
recession. That’s why I’m the manager of
resources.
What efforts are you making to creating jobs
given the teeming unemployed youths in the
state?
I’m not actually taking count of this. But I can
tell you that in a period of recession, approvals
given to capital projects will create a lot of jobs.
I was talking one of the construction companies
and he told me that he had 400 employees. You
can imagine the likes of CECC, Julius Berger,
how much they have in my place. In the period
of recession, you need to defend the economy by
pumping a lot of money. That’s why I talked of
creation of money. Once I create money, those
people will look for cash and pay the workers.
So, I am not taking stock of this but I know we
are going somewhere very significant. If you add
the empowerment scheme, you will see that we
have created a whole lot. It’s only in my state
that you will see a journalist who used to write a
lot when we contested, and today, he can stand
tall and give you a testimony that he has
dropped his biro and he is in a tomato farm and
from that tomato farm, he can even publish two
or three newspapers.
It’s only in my state that you will see a young
man who has never gone to school. He was
weaving baskets for people to go for the fishing
of shrimps in the swampy land. He will tell you
that he has weaved 1000 of those baskets for a
tomato farmer and he has realised N40 million,
that he has never realised in his life time.
Today, there is something we are about doing for
palm wine tappers. You know in those days,
when somebody taps palm wine, they will think
you are the poorest person, but it shouldn’t be.
We just discovered now that the ethanol from
palm wine is one of the best on planet earth for
both cosmetic, gin and alcohol manufacturers.
So, what do we do? Anybody who taps that
palm wine, in that case, it won’t have any expiry
date. We just create a silo. You put the palm
wine once you tap. From there, you get ethanol.
It’s not rocket science. It’s simple knowledge.
All I need is electricity to process them.
Which of the PDP camps do you belong?
I belong to PDP, not any side. But at the same
time, I belong to everybody. Once you are in PDP
with all sincerity of purpose, you are my party
member. As human beings, there is no way that
we will expect to live in this life without minor
hiccups; it’s not practicable. Anywhere you have
two or three people, there are bound to be one
or two issues. In PDP today, for somebody to
say if you go this way, he’s going that way,
when you hear somebody talking that way, you
know that he’s not a PDP person. Any PDP
person will stay to build PDP.
You mean even if it was under Sheriff?
It doesn’t matter. After Supreme Court judgment,
the name will not disappear. The party will
remain. The day I was voted into office, I wasn’t
voted as Udom Emmanuel. I was voted as PDP.
So, people go to the polls to vote the party, not
individuals. So, how come somebody will be
talking about individuals and not the party? Once
you see people talking like that, you know that
they are not true party people. How come it’s
only in Nigeria that people just jump ship,
probably because your party has lost election at
the centre? If you are a Republican, you are a
Republican for life.
Somebody can even tie you to your grandfather
– oh that’s the family of Republican, that’s the
family of Democrats. It’s only here that you
can’t even determine where people belong. But
not me, I’m in PDP. Anywhere the judgment
goes, I remain PDP. I want somebody to look
tomorrow at my children tomorrow and tell them
that you are from a family of PDP, not where you
can’t pronounce certain names. I hear all kinds
of name, but forget it. Nobody is going
anywhere. Politics is about negotiations. All
those people who are creating those things are
just looking for negotiations – all of them.
We will negotiate. But don’t ask me any faction I
belong to. I belong to PDP and I will not leave
PDP. When you hear people just jumping, today
they are here, the next day they are there, they
are being greedy. When you see them, look into
their eyes and tell them you are greedy men. You
are jumping from one place to another, you are
greedy men. Tomorrow, the same people who
jumped two years ago, you find that they are
jumping to another place.
You will lose your legs in the cause of jumping.
Judgment will not change the umbrella of our
party. Judgment is just to decide who heads and
all those things are just personal issues. It’s just
the individuals. Why must you follow individuals?
The party should stand on its own; it should
stand on the principles on which that party was
founded and the mission of that party, not
individuals. So, the party remains. Don’t let
anybody deceive you.
Lastly, let’s talk about tackling poverty, isn’t it
sad that in spite of the uncommon
transformation of the eight years of your
predecessor, you still have to deal with poverty
at such a level?
Poverty is relative. I’m sure tomorrow now, you
can just touch your pocket and tell my
commissioner, I’m very poor. It is relative, and
we might look at your assets and you can
actually buy up the whole place. It’s relative
depending on how you define poverty at that
level. But what I mean here is that poverty is a
generic term because I’m measuring this on per
capita and we’ve not reached there yet. Let me
also say that uncommon transformation was to
lay a foundation. Few things attract investment
anywhere but I want to concentrate on three:
security, reliable infrastructure and transparent
legislation.
Uncommon transformation tackled the
infrastructure. But you need others to actually
get people out of the poverty line. So, security is
not only in terms of physical security. Food
security is there. So, the foundation laid by
uncommon transformation would have been the
foundation for a sky scraper.
But you don’t a skilled person to come and build
a bungalow on top of that foundation that is
supposed to be for a sky scraper. What we are
looking for is a square peg in a square hole to
actually fit in there. So, having laid the
foundation, we must build a super structure on
that foundation. Until you finish it, it’s not yet
done. So, uncommon transformation laid that
foundation. We are building on that foundation.

Friday, 23 June 2017

NSIMA MOCKS BUHARI WITH FUNNY PRAYER

-Uses President’s failing health for his 2019 governorship campaign
-Draws battle line with Sam Akpan, shuns Bishop’s 60th birthday
The failing health condition of President Muhammadu Buhari has taken a different dimension in Akwa Ibom State with the planned mockery prayer and a decoy on the President’s Health condition by the Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission NDDC, Mr Nsima Ekere who is hiding under the cover of youth prayer rally to launch his 2019 governorship campaign.
The campaign rally in the name of prayer which is scheduled to take place in Akwa Ibom State on Friday 23rd June 2017 will hold at the Nsima Ekere’s campaign office along Edet Akpan Avenue, Uyo.
Already, the NDDC MD has compiled the names and list of those who will lead the group. The planned campaign rally is to set up a rival group dominating by youths within the All Progressives Congress APC, Akwa Ibom State chapter which has already been turned apart by infighting within the party.
A source whose name is in the list of the yet to be inaugurated campaign team for Nsima Ekere who pleaded anonymity told this reporter that the group is coming to rival with another group in the APC called “the REAL APC” which is currently advocating for Senator John James Akpanudoedehe to be considered as the gubernatorial candidate of APC come 2019.
He maintained that with the way things are going on in APC, it became very imperative to organize a rival group for Nsima Ekere, and the only opportunity to launch the group in a big way to receive the blessing of some stakeholders of the party is to organize a prayer rally for President Buhari and use it to unveil the group.
The source maintained that the growing popularity of Udoedehe in the APC is impacting negatively on Nsima Ekere’s governorship ambition which needs to be put under a serious check.
But a lot of people in the state and within the APC are not comfortable with the idea of using the President’s health to advance Nsima Ekere’s governorship aspiration. People wondered the level of desperation by the NDDC MD just to become a governor. Adding that the way Nsima Ekere is going about his 2019 governorship ambition, it is clear that the NDDC MD is so desperate and can do anything to become governor if he can use Buhari’s health to launch his governorship campaign.
A chieftain of APC, Mr Udeme Ekott said, “Some people can be so unfeeling. The man that gave you the appointment is very sick and that is the auspicious time for you to launch your governorship campaign. And on top of that you are using his ill health as a decoy. Akwa Ibom people have seen the level of desperation of this NDDC man. This level of insincerity, playing politics with Buhari's health is very bad. Launching your youth campaign structure under the guise of praying for President Buhari is very immoral. You are not better than the Pharisees”!
Meanwhile, the NDDC MD who is poised to chest away anybody he feels will constitute a threat to his governorship ambition has drawn a battle line with Bishop Samuel Akpan, the governorship candidate of the Accord Party in 2015 election who dumped his party for APC recently.
Bishop Akpan was said to have been received by the Umana Umana led faction of the Akwa Ibom APC without the blessing of Nsima Ekere. It was gathered that Ekere had earlier disagreed with Umana Umana on the idea of allowing Akpan into APC, but Umana still went ahead with the plan.
This development, a sources close to the NDDC MD confirmed that does not go down well with Ekere who refused to attain the event. He said that Ekere is very bitter with Sam Akpan who is coming to contest the governorship ticket of the party with him. He maintained that Ekere is wondering why Akpan should bring his own trouble to the APC when he is currently battling to contain with Udoedehe.
But Akpan was very emphatic in his remark that he will contest the 2019 governorship election in the state. This development according to the source, made Ekere to be troubled and confused.
In a related development the governors of Niger Delta State have accused the MD of NDDC of turning the commission into a campaign ground for his 2019 governorship ambition in Akwa Ibom State.
Speaking on behalf of the governors, the Governor of River State, Barr Nyesom Wike said NDDC should focus on the development of the region, instead of being involved in partisan politics.
The Governor stated this at Government House, Port Harcourt when he granted audience to the Governing Board of the NDDC, Governor Wike said it will be counterproductive if NDDC continues to operate like a political party.
He noted that development in the Niger Delta has been stunted because of the politicization of the activities of NDDC, which makes it difficult for the commission to focus on its core mandate. The governor said that the NDDC is not a state; hence it must subject itself to the laws of the states where it operates.
The source leaked that Governor Wike's view is the aggregate opinion of other governors in the region when he further warned that, “It is worrisome that NDDC is trying to politicise the execution of projects and this will not help the development of the region".
Governor Wike who expressed concern that, the NDDC is not a political party charged the board to channel all efforts towards the betterment of the people”

Tuesday, 20 June 2017

RE: ENEH JOHN; STOP THE BASELESS TRUMPET :

About 72 hours after the public hearing in respect to the Property Charge Bill which is presently at the committee stage in the House of Assembly, the social media space has been infiltrated with some sort of trivial commentaries and opinions from unscrupulous and faceless persons base on hatred and bias mind.

My response to my brother -Eneh John is triggered by unprofessional usage of words and name calling of the Governor, Speaking speaker and my very pragmatic House member Rt. Hon. (Dr) Usoro Akpanusoh as stooges without considering their well nurtured  characteristics which is endeared to many.

It is obvious that a general public announcement was placed to give room to all Akwa Ibomites, Stakeholders, professionals and the business class to present / tender their opinions in respect to the aforementioned subject, yet, instead of such privilege of open democracy  to  have been embraced either by proxies or otherwise; as agent of propagandas and retrogression, they resolved to deliberate act of calumny and flagrant aspersions to drag the executive and the legislature into muddy waters became  their alternative medium  of expressing their ill thought fabricated script.

The bill which tend to replace the tenement rate law is subject to professional review to either accommodate or enable expunction of certain provisions which might not be suitable.

It's obvious that Churches are at the moment excluded, this bill will help us as a host state (landlords) to negotiate on our Royalty / payment charges per property.

This bill when passed into  law will enable legal backing of charges on every properties like vessels that comes into our shore to lift oil / whatever which duration in our water ways might have exceeded one month.

Though, I as a true believer, I will not advocate for churches to be charged whosoever the pastor might be knowing the ecclesiastical foundations and blessings its exemption could be to our developmental strides.

On the accusation of the speaking speaker and co-supporters to have been bribed by His Excellency Governor Udom Emmanuel as well as our progressive youths supporting this bill said to be on the payroll of government is a brazen degeneracy of Eneh Johns acclaim professional stand point and in buttressing this; I challenge anyone to present open a comprehensive lists of those youths under government payroll and receipt of transactions.

Let me enlighten you that Properties outlined  in this bill includes: Tank Farms, aircrafts, high brow buildings, Industries, Hotels etc.

However, the Property Charge Bill is neither  Udom, PDP or State House members bill. The bill is paramountly aimed at generating internally revenues to the state. It is is preposterous to undermine the ratio of positive impacts / effects envisaged in posterity.

The bill categorically states that a landlord with a property of (3Bedroom Bungalow ) in an areas like Ewet Housing Estate, Shelter Afrique, Osongoma will not be charged  same as those in Ekpri Nsukara, Ifatai-Etoi, Eket etc. this, symbolically shows that the bill is targeted at the elites and not the poor.

What stoped you to have gathered or hired your acclaimed proficient consultants to represent your ill brain at the public hearing if you are truly representing the voiceless?

The likes of Hon. mark Esset, Aniekan Uko, Aniekan Bassey, Nse Essien are my very beloveth brothers whose antecedent speaks volumes and I will not for any reason cast aspersions on their credibility and representation just because they are not in support of this bill.

How do you as an acclaimed social crusader expect development in a corporate establishment to grow above standard when personnel deliberately refuse to adhere to established code or regulated guidelines?

How do you expect comprehensive data collection of properties owned by the elites and businesses operating within the State if we should allow the bill to be buried as you so wished?

QUESTIONS WE SHOULD ASK OURSELVES:

Can we be resident in the US,France, Canada,UK etc, without paying our bills as stipulated by the law?

* Are we getting revenue from the Tank farms stationed in our lands by the multinational oil companies?

* Do fishermen pay tickets or revenue fees on landing or arrival at the sea bank before discharging or offloading their goods?

* Are we losing revenue from vessels that comes into our shores to lift oil?

* Does Keke Operators, motorcyclists, wheel barrow pushers in the market pay for commercial emblems, daily tickets and parking permits in areas they operates?

The passage of this bill into law will help you as a veritable guide to answer the above  questions.

Nevertheless, the idea of increment on failure to pay in a stipulated time frame is to ensure defaulters are discipline, it will rather enable such a person to begin to abide to established rules in other to safe His/herself from undue health stress.

The relocation of ExxonMobil to Akwa Ibom is not a fresh calling, the Hon. House member Representing the good people of a Esit Eket / Ibeno State Constituency is so vested with leadership charisma, his impeccable attributes is second to none so he cannot be caged or cajoled into supporting a course which is not of prime interest to his constituents and  society ( Akwa Ibom); Yes, politics is all about leadership devoid of showmanship as your sponsors might have assumed, but The character of His Excellency Deacon Udom Emmanuel is highly purposeful which everyone strive to emulate and so calculations / assumptions is classified absurdity should you by any reason of bias and greed label the duo of Udom Emmanuel and Rt. Hon. Usoro Akpanusoh as political gamblers and men of no repute.

The political attainment, global exposure and intellectual capacity in building a future capable of competing with 21st century contemporaries is worth more than an asset for anyone to preempt as lacking in foresight and ideas. He has been on the frontline advocating for equity by demanding the relocation of ExxonMobil to Akwa Ibom State before now.

As holy and moral as you might be, If I should ask you, how many times have you led a protest to Mobil in Lagos and in QIT on this same course of relocation? How many times have you communicated to the headquarters of ExxonMobil on the relocation matter? If Akpanusoh should move a motion for the rehabilitation of IBB road; Is IBB under Esit Eket constituency? How many times have you attended plenary from the inception of the 6th Assembly before now?

I beseech you to refrain from being hoisted rather, I will advise you to align with men of valor and purpose to ensure that the bill is passed into law for a multi dimensional positive effects to help build our state as envisaged.

Domestic violence: Nigerian man breaks his wife's head

Lawyer and activist, Emeka Ugwuonye posted photos of the case he received yesterday. He is yet to share details...