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THE STATES

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Action Congress (AC) has accused Bauchi State Government of colluding with Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the police to truncate the state constituency bye-election for Gamanwa.
The party also accused the state government of obtaining a spurious court injunction restraining INEC from conducting the poll scheduled for October 17, 2009. According to a statement issued by its national publicity secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party noted that government was engaging in politics of desperation, as it decided to push for postponement of the bye election because it was afraid of losing to AC.
The party wondered why such an injunction would be obtained less them 24 hours to the election, when electoral materials were already midway to the venue of the election.
AC also said the party was yet to be served with the court injunction, two days after the election was supposed to have been held.
As part of its strategy, the party said government has also embarked on a massive harassment of AC supporters across the state, arresting as many as 400 innocent party members on the allegation that they are party thugs brought in from neighbouring states.
The party said most of its detained supporters were arrested in their farms and homes, and wondered where the opposition that is not in power have the resources to import thugs.
AC called for immediate release of the arrested party members, whose only offence is that they belong to an opposition party.
A source close to state government, however said all the allegations by AC were false.

Sokoto
Sokoto State government is to establish a school of Nursing and Mid-wifery, aside the existing one in Tambuwal Local Government Area of the state, as part of its determined effort to curb maternal mortality to its barest minimum in the state.
The state government said the move will no doubt address the shortage of manpower especially the dearth of mid-wives in the state.
Speaking to newsmen in Sokoto yesterday, State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Mohammed Kilgori said the initiative was aimed at enhancing qualified manpower that will handle issues of maternal mortality especially in the rural areas.
According to him, the school would increase the number of intakes that can pursue mid-wifery courses that will produce qualified manpower in supporting the maternal health programmes and other child birth services in the state.
“At any stage, there would be a mid-wife that would be ready to take care of any emergency delivery and any thing in terms of both child and women health care”, he said.
The commissioner identified the shortage of qualified child birth manpower in the northern part of the country due to few health institutions in the region, saying “that is why we want to see how this manpower can be provided and available at the door step of the rural dwellers”.
Kilgori noted that the shortage of manpower is more critical in the Northern region because most of the northern states have only one nursing and mid-wifery school with only 100 intakes by the council while in the South, some states have four schools.

Gombe
The Deputy Speaker of t he Gombe State House of Asembly, Inuwa Garba claimed that some foreign powers, companies and organisations were set to hijack the on-going constitutional review in Nigeria.
Garba, who is also the chairman of the House Committee on the 1999 constitution told newsmen at the weekend that a lot of foreign countries, companies, organisations, investors and others were at present using some non-governmental bodies in Nigeria to ensure that their interests were incorporated into the proposed constitution.
The plot, he said is to give the foreigners an edge in the country’s policies, which will certainly affect the security, socio-economic and political lives of our people.
Garba warned that if Nigerians, particularly the lawmakers allowed such foreign influence to be inserted in the constitution, it could have devastating effects on the country’s development and survival.
He also explained that the members of the state legislature and national assembly from the North East geo-political zone were aware of the machinations of such foreign interests and would do every thing possible to ensure that no selfish agenda were allowed into the national document.
The lawmaker pointed out that Gombe Assembly was expected to host and coordinate the forthcoming constitutional review meeting of all state assemblies in the North East zone, which comprises, Adamawa, Bauchi, Yobe, Borno, Taraba and Gombe. Garba said that already, a secretariate had been set up to coordinate representation from all the state assemblies and other segments of the society.

Ekiti
After 10 days break, the Election Petition tribunal hearing the Ekiti State governship petition will next Monday resume sitting.
The resumption of sitting will enable Governor Segun Oni to open his defence in the petition filed by the Action Congress (AC) and its governorship candidate, Dr Kayodo Fayemi, against the outcome of the rerun governship election in the state.
AC and Fayemi had filed the petitions following the declaration of Oni of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) as the winner of the polls. The petitioners are challenging the outcome of the elections in six wards of the state.
The wards are USI, Ifaki I and II and Orin/Ora in Ido/Osi council area and Ipoti A and B in Ijero council area. The petitioners want the result of the six wards cancelled on the ground that the election did not comply substantially with the election manual adding that the polls in the affected wards was marred by violence.

Abuja
In tandem with its statutory mandate, the Nigeria Civil Defence Corps (NCDC) said it had so far issued 1,000 licenses to private guards companies.
It has however charged them to join forces with government in its determination to eradicate the incidence of kidnapping in the country.
Issuing licences to six newly approved private guards security companies in Abuja, Commandant General of the Corps Dr Ade Aboderia, said with the issuance of the licences, the companies had joined government in the fight against crime.
He also charged the security firms to suggest to government ways of curbing the menace of kidnapping, which had assumed alarming proportions, by providing government with vital information based on their experiences.
“By this action, you have joined government in the fight against crime.
Crime has assumed different dimensions and you are to assist government in curbing it.”
“We expect you to submit report of sensitive information concerning your area of operation.
The corps will assist you if you play by the rule.
Kidnapping has gone haywire and we want you to look at it and assist the government”, he said.

Ogun
Three persons died and nine others were injured yesterday when an uncompleted building collapsed in Abeokuta the Ogun State capital.
The incident occurred on Oke Padre street, Ita Street Ita Igori, a suburb of Abeokuta.
A worker of the state owned broadcasting out fit, Gateway Television Station, lost his wife and mother.
His injured daughter is at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Idi-Aba.
Others at FMC include Awawu Erike, Rilwan, Iya Erike, Iya Alata, Rebecca, Abigail, Baba Ibeji and Baba Erike.
As at 12:22pm, the bodies had been removed from the rubble. They were taken away in wooden caskets.
The scene was besieged by sympathisers, who used diggers and bare hands to get those trapped out of the rubble.
An eyewitness told The Tide that the 28-year old building caved in a few minutes to midnight.
The witness, who lives in an adjacent building, said he came outside to ease himself and had barely finished when he heard a sound.
When he looked up, he said, he saw the building coming down with dust billowing in the air.
It could not be ascertained at press time, how many people were inside when the structure collapsed.
Some residents said the occupants could not be fewer man 18, but 65-year-old Ebunoluwa Oyedola, who lives opposite the building, said three were about 12 persons inside.
Three died and nine were injured, she said.
She said for over eight hours, residents groped in the dark, trying to rescue trapped victims. She expressed doubts if there could still be bodies buried in the debris.
Commissioner for Environment Prince Adeleke Adedoyin, the fire serve and police visited the scene but they could not do much because of the hilly and rocky terrain of the area, which made it impossible for heavy duty equipment to be deployed in the rescue effort.

Ondo
Citing insecurity of lives and property within its legislative chambers, the Ondo State House of Assembly at the weekend announced that it has adjourned sitting indefinitely as “legislators will not be able to guarantee the security of members”.
House spokesman and chairman of its committee on information, Kele Bolodeoku, who disclosed this at a media briefing said, the decision was taken as a result of last Thursday’s invasion of the Assembly by suspected political thugs.
The hoodlums were protesting the non-acceptance of the Labour Party (LP) winner of the September 19 by-election to fill the vacant seat of Akure North constituency, Adenyi Akindele, even after being issued with a certificate of returns by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
Akindele’s inauguration had sharply divided the House along partisan lines as the majority Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members took advantage of their numerical strength of 15 out of the 25 member assembly to work against it, claiming that the matter was already before a court of law.
The PDP candidate in the election, Akin Idowu, had dragged Akindele to the Federal High Court, Akure in a suit in which both the INEC and the House of Assembly were joined as defendants, alleging that he (Akindele) belonged to a secret cult in contravention of the laws of the land.
According to the PDP leadership, swearing in Akindele would amount to contradicting section 29(3) of the House standing Rule which states that “reference shall not be made to any matter on which a judicial decision is pending in such a way as might, in Mr. Speaker’s opinion, prejudice the interests of parties there to”.
But the nine-member LP and the lone Alliance for Democracy (AD) member in the opposition accused their PDP colleagues of “taking politics too far” while stating that section 285 of the 1999 constitution has limited pre-election matters to the election petition tribunal.

Lagos
Lagos State Government has concluded plans to train teachers one-learning methods of instructing students.
The commissioner of science and Technology, dr Kadri Hamzat disclosed this to journalists in Alausa recently during a media interaction of the forth coming Science and Technology (NASTECH) week. Hamzat added that the government has trained 2,000 teachers on methods of instructing students with the motive of increasing their interest in science subjects.
These teachers, he said, were trained by professionals on how to deliver instructions with focus on chemistry, mathematics and other science related subjects.
He expressed the need to instruct students in indigenous languages saying that this has worked effectively for other developing countries like India and South Korea.
Continuing, he said if you take a look at Indians and South Koreans, they deliver instructions in their own languages and not in English. I think these are the issues we should look at as a nation.
He further explained that apart from the fact that many students develop phobia towards science subjects, the way they is taught he lamented the decay in the nation’s education sector, especially in the field of sciences especially in the field of sciences saying, “These are age-long challenges that we must take very seriously in the over-riding interest of the country.
He explained that this years event will take place from October 21 to 23 at Adeyemi Gbero Auditorium, Alausa.
He listed the events lined up for the week to include exhibition by stakeholders in science and technology, quiz competition, innovators investors and research forums.

Plauteau
After four months of strike, Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) in Plateau State will resume work today following the suspension of the action.
The strike which began on June 1, 2009 was called off following an agreement reached between the state government and the officials of the NUT in a meeting brokered by the Gbong Gwom Jos Da Jacob Gyang Buba.
The state’s NUT chairman, Goshe Yalis, who announced the suspension said the union took the decision because the state government had agreed to pay the outstanding arrears to the teachers.

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Don Seeks Funding of Language Centres

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A professor of English linguistics at the Rivers State University (RSU) Nkpolu Oroworukwu Port Harcourt, Prof. Isaac Enyi Ngulube, has advocated for better and improved funding for language centres in Nigeria, such as NINLAN Aba and Nigeria French Language Village, Badagry, for optimum value and effective local languages development.

He also called for funded research on the development of orthographies and language documents across the country to rescue local languages from extinction, as well as having a well-planned and implemented mother tongue education in all institutions in the country, from primary to tertiary.

Prof. Ngulube made with these assertions while presenting his inaugural lecture at the university’s 121st inaugural lecture with the topic “The Career of Rough Beats: Language, Literature and the Development of our Common Humanity” held in Port Harcourt, Wednesday.

The erudite scholar, in the lecture, stressed that the study of English language, linguistics, and literature is very broad, large, and difficult, adding that he overcame the rough roads through resilience and determination.

He described language as “a purely human and non-instinctive means of communicating ideas and emotions,” noting that “the word is a fundamental need in language; you cannot study language without the use of language.”

He urged parents to be cautious with their utterances, warning that “what they refer to their children as is what they will automatically end up becoming.”

He recommended a branded English language for every profession or course of study, stressing that embedding oral literature in the teaching of students from primary to tertiary level will enable them to know their traditions and roots of origin.

“Tell them the folk stories and moonlight tales; you are sending them back to their people. You must be a human being first before becoming a medical doctor, engineer, or anything else,” Ngulube said.

He also called for better and improved production of quality language and literature teachers, provision of modern teaching/instructional materials, improved welfare packages for teachers, and provision of better infrastructure at both primary and secondary school levels.

He used the opportunity to appreciate the Vice Chancellor for the approval of the Department of English Language and Literature, adding that it had been his long-held dream for the university.

In his speech, the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Isaac Zeb-Obipi, while highlighting the lecture, opined that the lecturer x-rayed the lecturer’s journey into the study of English language, linguistics, and literature, describing the field as broad, large, and difficult, but with determination and focus, he was able to defeat the beasts he encountered on his way.

Zeb-Obipi agreed with the lecturer’s recommendations on ways to improve indigenous languages in the country and directed that modalities be worked out for the university to have the Department of English Language and Literature, among others.

He highlighted RSU’s recent victory in the Bilingual Community Project organized by the French Embassy, describing it as proof of the university’s rising excellence in language studies.

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HYPREP, Contributing To National Peace, Development- Zabbey

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The Federal Government through the implementation of the various projects of the Ogoni cleanup programme is demonstrating a strong commitment to national peace and the development of Ogoniland.

The Project Coordinator of the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project(HYPREP), Prof Nenibarini Zabbey, who made this assertion at a two-day training on Mechanism for Alternative Dispute Resolution(ADR) and other Peacebuilding Techniques for Community Leaders In Ogoni, held in Port Harcourt, said through the ongoing environmental restoration effort, potable water provision, livelihood restoration, public health interventions, and the Ogoni Power Project, HYPREP is contributing to national peace and development.

He explained that by improving the living conditions in communities and creating new opportunities for young people, the Project is also reducing the social pressure that often fuels conflict, stressing that the Project is proud of this service to the Ogoni people and the nation.

Describing traditional leaders and stakeholders as peacebuilders and guardians of community harmony, Zabbey noted that the workshop would strengthen their capacities and reinforce the Ogoni dialogue process, which HYPREP continues to support in line with its mandate on peacebuilding.

He said HYPREP is actively promoting ADR alongside other mechanisms across its project sites and other areas of operation aimed at fostering unity, fairness, mutual respect and faster dispute resolution, stressing that these are qualities necessary for the future of Ogoni people and their communities.

He further indicated that the Minister of Environment and Chairman of HYPREP’s Governing Council, Malam Balarabe Abbas Lawal is disposed to promoting peace and stability across Ogoni communities and HYPREP project sites.

The Project Coordinator, therefore, charged Ogoni leaders to be mindful of their actions, words and body language, as what they say or do can either promote peace or fan the embers of conflict.

Continuing, he stated thus,”We must always ask ourselves: Is my position on this matter in the people’s interest? Does it promote unity and progress? Will it enhance development?”

The Project Coordinator assured the participants that HYPREP is working tirelessly in line with the directive of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda for the accelerated implementation of the Ogoni cleanup programme and ensure that its benefits reach the grassroots where they are needed most.

Stressing the need for Ogoni leaders and stakeholders to explore communication and trust options to prevent disputes from degenerating into violence, the Project Coordinator noted that it was time for all Ogonis to be united for development, leaving behind perceptions that do not serve collective progress.

Similarly, the Director of the Centre for Peace and Security Studies of the University of Port Harcourt, Prof Chioma Daisy Onyige, said the workshop is a strategic platform aimed at strengthening the capacity of traditional institutions and community leaders to sustain peace, foster dialogue and promote non-adversarial engagements in the implementation of the Ogoni cleanup programme.

Prof Onyige noted that the Ogoni leadership structure commands deep respect and legitimacy, and strengthening their capacity in ADR methods such as mediation, negotiation, dialogue, facilitation, and consensus building means strengthening the foundation of peace in the region.

Participants, comprising traditional rulers and key stakeholders in Ogoni, commended HYPREP for the initiative, and assured it of their continuous support to the Project by providing an enabling atmosphere for the smooth implementation of the cleanup project in Ogoniland.

Resource persons who presented thought-provoking lectures at the workshop included the Dean of the Faculty of Postgraduate Studies of the University of Port Harcourt, Prof Kinikanwo Anele; Prof Olariwanju Lawal; Prof Chioma Daisy Onyige; and Dr Gbenemene Kpae; among others.

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Ogoni Cleanup Programme, Enabling Pathways To Development Of Ogoni – Zabbey

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With significant achievements recorded across thematic areas of the Ogoni cleanup programme being executed by the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), the Project Coordinator of the Project, Prof Nenibarini Zabbey, has said that all these are enabling pathways to the development of Ogoniland.

This is coming on the heels of milestone achievements in the following areas and their impact on Ogoni communities. They are mangrove restoration which is 94 percent complete; shoreline remediation which stands at 67.1 percent; and the phase 2 land remediation progressing to 36.55 percent.

Moreso, HYPREP has constructed 14 water facilities, providing potable water to 40 communities. With the commissioning of the water schemes in Bane and Gwara communities, the number of communities with access to clean and safe drinking water will be 45. The process of operationalising the Centre of Excellence for Environmental Restoration (CEER) which is at 92 percent complete, is ongoing. The same for the Ogoni Power Project which is progressing with wayleave compensation and construction works at Bodo and Wiiyaakaara substations ongoing

Similarly, the Ogoni Specialist Hospital and Buan Cottage Hospital are at 76.8 percent and 98.7 percent respectively.

This is alongside other public health interventions and the Human BioMonitoring Survey also in progress.

Under the livelihood
programme, over 7,000 direct jobs have been created for Ogoni women and youths, while over 5,000 have been trained in multiple skills and provided start-up kits, workshops, education grants, scholarships and other empowerment programmes. This quarter, training will commence in other demand-driven skill areas, such as cybersecurity, full-stack development, mud logging, software development, commercial diving, and underwater welding.

Zabbey had reeled out these achievements, during the third quarter interactive session between the Project Coordination Office engagement with Ogoni youths in Port Harcourt on Friday, in line with HYPREP’s strategic stakeholders policy to provide an interface opportunity to abreast Ogoni youths on the Project’s activities, while garnering their feedback.

Zabbey noted that, “This
quarterly engagement was,therefore, designed as an inclusive strategy to ensure that youth voices are heard, concerns are addressed, and progress updates are provided transparently. Also, it reflects our firm belief that a project of this magnitude must be people-centred, accountable, and participatory”.

” I am delighted to inform you that the Project remains on course to achieve its mandate as outlined in the UNEP Report on the Ogoni environment and the official gazette establishing HYPREP. HYPREP is committed to transparency and accountability in the implementation of the cleanup projects and activities”, he said.

He stressed that HYPREP’s achievements are pathways to a better Ogoniland, assuring that the Project’s goals are aimed at benefiting all categories of Ogoni youths, whether in business, farming, advocacy, education, entrepreneurship or community development.

”This Project belongs to all of you, and its success depends mainly on your participation, unity and constructive engagement. And with your support, we are confident that all challenges will be addressed in the overall public interest,” Zabbey said.

The Project Coordinator urged Ogoni youths to continue to support the Project by promoting peace, discouraging misinformation, and collaborating with project teams working in the communities, and address challenges through dialogue, rather than confrontation.

Prof Dinebari Badey, a Professor of Development Sociology in the University of Port Harcourt, delivered the keynote address, linking the nexus between HYPREP and youths in the development of Ogoniland through unity of purpose while Engr Solomon Akere, gave a talk on Ogoni youths in business.

Participants raised questions concerning the maintenance of the water projects, remediation efforts, and compensation for the Right of Way (RoW), among others.

In attendance were management staff of HYPREP who provided responses to the interventions.

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