Editorial
That NIS Recruitment Tragedy
Nigerians are unanimous in condemning the
handling of the recent recruitment into the
Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) following the death of applicants across the country. At the last count 18 applicants were confirmed dead, while several others were injured and hospitalised. Among the dead was a pregnant woman.
March 15, 2014, when the tragedy happened, was indeed a black day for the country. It was even more so because this would be the second time the same thing was happening under the same department of government. While the officials would want to see it as an accident, many Nigerian think it was nothing short of a product of criminal neglect.
Already, some people even organisations have demanded for the immediate sack of the Minister of Interior, Mr. Abba Moro and the Comptroller-General of NIS David Paraddang. Meanwhile, the Senate of the Federal Republic and a section of the public have called for a probe to forestall a repeat.
Similarly, President Goodluck Jonathan has ordered the cancellation of the result of the ill-fated interview, while the Head of the Civil Service Commission of the Federation is to head a committee that should conduct a fresh recruitment into the Nigeria Immigration Service.
While we salute the intervention of the President, it must go down on record that the shameful handling of a mere recruitment by the leadership of the Nigeria Immigration Service, even after an initial exercise that resulted in deaths is most unbecoming.
We also commend steps being put in place to reach out to families of the deceased and those hospitalised. While the injured may get automatic employment, some form of compensation would be paid to the families of those who died.
Good as these plans may be, they will not bring back the lives of the deceased, nor would they erase the dent it has placed on the good image of Nigeria. Indeed, that our public service would be seen to be incapable of conducting a safe and credible recruitment is terrible.
Clearly, the challenge of selecting candidates for less than 5,000 vacancies from more than two million candidates can be a challenge, but the rules on recruitment should adequately handle the situation. Indeed, the internet should make the process even easier.
In the first place, we cannot understand why applicants should be made to pay for recruitment forms. Also, we cannot understand why all the applicants should be crowded in three centres. Perhaps, there might also be some new wisdom in making candidates write an examination in the open stadia
For us, everything appears to have gone wrong from the beginning. Clearly, no excuse would suffice, as even the desperation theory that can legitimately be used against the candidates, should have been foreseen, anticipated and avoided.
Another issue that reasonable members of this country may wish to understand is why recruitments like this must be centralised. It is also something that calls for a study that over the years, government would ban employment until when the need for fresh hands becomes dire.
It is becoming almost frightening to ask if states or zonal leaders of these Federal Government departments cannot be trusted to fill vacancies as they appear. Would it be too much to ask that recruitments be done at that level every year, no matter how few.
Although, the millions that applied for this job may have showed how acute the un-employment situation has become in Nigeria, the apparent fight to the death for a public service job should serve to ginger the government to open the economy for a more liberal participation.
Even as a high powered probe may have been instituted to un-ravel the cause(s) of the tragedy and perhaps point a way forward, we think that the leadership of the Nigeria Immigration Service should face some sanctions to serve as a deterrent for others.
At that level of leadership, it will be catastrophic to imagine that they do not know what to do, even with a matter as ordinary as recruitment. At that level they cannot afford to take anything for granted or delegate its functions to a third party and go to sleep.
The Tide believes strongly that the tragedy was simply avoidable. We commiserate with the families of the deceased and pray for the many that narrowly survived. We join all well meaning Nigerians to pray that this does not happen again.
Editorial
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Editorial
Making Rivers’ Seaports Work
When Rivers State Governor, Sir Siminalayi Fubara, received the Board and Management of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), led by its Chairman, Senator Adeyeye Adedayo Clement, his message was unmistakable: Rivers’ seaports remain underutilised, and Nigeria is poorer for it. The governor’s lament was a sad reminder of how neglect and centralisation continue to choke the nation’s economic arteries.
The governor, in his remarks at Government House, Port Harcourt, expressed concern that the twin seaports — the NPA in Port Harcourt and the Onne Seaport — have not been operating at their full potential. He underscored that seaports are vital engines of national development, pointing out that no prosperous nation thrives without efficient ports and airports. His position aligns with global realities that maritime trade remains the backbone of industrial expansion and international commerce.
Indeed, the case of Rivers State is peculiar. It hosts two major ports strategically located along the Bonny River axis, yet cargo throughput has remained dismally low compared to Lagos. According to NPA’s 2023 statistics, Lagos ports (Apapa and Tin Can Island) handled over 75 per cent of Nigeria’s container traffic, while Onne managed less than 10 per cent. Such a lopsided distribution is neither efficient nor sustainable.
Governor Fubara rightly observed that the full capacity operation of Onne Port would be transformative. The area’s vast land mass and industrial potential make it ideal for ancillary businesses — warehousing, logistics, ship repair, and manufacturing. A revitalised Onne would attract investors, create jobs, and stimulate economic growth, not only in Rivers State but across the Niger Delta.
The multiplier effect cannot be overstated. The port’s expansion would boost clearing and forwarding services, strengthen local transport networks, and revitalise the moribund manufacturing sector. It would also expand opportunities for youth employment — a pressing concern in a state where unemployment reportedly hovers around 32 per cent, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
Yet, the challenge lies not in capacity but in policy. For years, Nigeria’s maritime economy has been suffocated by excessive centralisation. Successive governments have prioritised Lagos at the expense of other viable ports, creating a traffic nightmare and logistical bottlenecks that cost importers and exporters billions annually. The governor’s call, therefore, is a plea for fairness and pragmatism.
Making Lagos the exclusive maritime gateway is counter productive. Congestion at Tin Can Island and Apapa has become legendary — ships often wait weeks to berth, while truck queues stretch for kilometres. The result is avoidable demurrage, product delays, and business frustration. A more decentralised port system would spread economic opportunities and reduce the burden on Lagos’ overstretched infrastructure.
Importers continue to face severe difficulties clearing goods in Lagos, with bureaucratic delays and poor road networks compounding their woes. The World Bank’s Doing Business Report estimates that Nigerian ports experience average clearance times of 20 days — compared to just 5 days in neighbouring Ghana. Such inefficiency undermines competitiveness and discourages foreign investment.
Worse still, goods transported from Lagos to other regions are often lost to accidents or criminal attacks along the nation’s perilous highways. Reports from the Federal Road Safety Corps indicate that over 5,000 road crashes involving heavy-duty trucks occurred in 2023, many en route from Lagos. By contrast, activating seaports in Rivers, Warri, and Calabar would shorten cargo routes and save lives.
The economic rationale is clear: making all seaports operational will create jobs, enhance trade efficiency, and boost national revenue. It will also help diversify economic activity away from the overburdened South West, spreading prosperity more evenly across the federation.
Decentralisation is both an economic strategy and an act of national renewal. When Onne, Warri, and Calabar ports operate optimally, hinterland states benefit through increased trade and infrastructure development. The federal purse, too, gains through taxes, duties, and improved productivity.
Tin Can Island, already bursting at the seams, exemplifies the perils of over-centralisation. Ships face berthing delays, containers stack up, and port users lose valuable hours navigating chaos. The result is higher operational costs and lower competitiveness. Allowing states like Rivers to fully harness their maritime assets would reverse this trend.
Compelling all importers to use Lagos ports is an anachronistic policy that stifles innovation and local enterprise. Nigeria cannot achieve its industrial ambitions by chaining its logistics system to one congested city. The path to prosperity lies in empowering every state to develop and utilise its natural advantages — and for Rivers, that means functional seaports.
Fubara’s call should not go unheeded. The Federal Government must embrace decentralisation as a strategic necessity for national growth. Making Rivers’ seaports work is not just about reviving dormant infrastructure; it is about unlocking the full maritime potential of a nation yearning for balance, productivity, and shared prosperity.
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