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Of Taskforce And Hoodlums

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Only recently, a six-member taskforce pursued a truck carrying bundles of iron from Eliozu to Rumuodomaya in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of River State.
They had chased the trailer driver coming from Aba in Abia State from Eliozu, where the office of their principals is.
The six-member taskforce was determined to extort money from the trailer driver, either by hook or crook.  They had hired a small white bus to chase the fleeing trailer driver. Three of the taskforce members alighted from the bus, climbed onto the moving truck and pummeled the driver with blows. They had ransacked and emptied his pockets in search of money to steal but the truck driver was not deterred and did not bulge.  He could not stop because he did not know what the assailants were up to. He had no inkling about whether they were legitimate or not.
One of his assailants got hold of a noxious liquid and administered same to his eyes. As the driver bent down to evade the onslaught, the trailer veered, smashed a yellow Nissan Xterra Jeep with registration number: EKY 298CC and ended up in a gutter. But for the bashing of the Nissan Xterra jeep which caused the trailer to stop, many citizens at the National Identity Registration Centre would have been killed.
As soon as the taskforce members noticed the damage they had caused, they fled for their lives as a crowd that had gathered around the scene chased them. But one of the taskforce members was caught by the mob as he ran out of luck. He was seriously manhandled but the vehicle owner, a legal practitioner, who did not want him to be killed, implored the mob to hand him over to law enforcement agents. The matter was reported at the Rumuodomaya Special Area Division in Obio/Akpor Local Government of Rivers State.
The two suspects caught by good citizens of Rivers State were handed over to the police in that division and detained therein.
At Rumuigbo, a similar incident occurred. Also, at Mile 3, Diobu; Port Harcourt, The Tide gathered another incident had also unleashed mayhem.
The Mile 3 incident, according to an eye witness, provoked commercial drivers bearing machetes to block the road.
Our source disclosed that it took the intervention of officers and men of the Nigerian police to quell the rampage.
For the umpteenth time, taskforce members wreaked havoc in the state. The state government had earlier banned the use of taskforce following the ugly incidents that occasioned their revenue drives. The present taskforce that has started on a bad note, The Tide gathered, is purportedly assigned to check wrong parking.
Unfortunately, the taskforce members are faceless people drawn from hoodlums and a preponderance of jobless people. Most of them, according to reports, are not only unemployed but are also unemployable. Hooliganism and ruthlessness are their stock-in- trade. They execute benumbing cruelty on their victims. Sometimes, they kill, maim and rob their victims in the name of raking in revenue for government. They are in the semblance of the biblical Devil whose mission is to steal, kill and destroy.
Unfortunately, this class of taskforce members does not carry identity cards. They are not given any by their principals but are simply foisted on the society to wreak havoc and unleash mayhem.  For them it is the survival of the fittest, and the society is worse for it. It is pathetic that this kind of thing is happening in the 21st century, when the world has become a global village and most of these ugly scenes are posted on the social media.
Regrettably, the negative image the activities of the hoodlums’ paint can only be imagined, no wonder, our country is often referred to as a shithole country. But what manner of revenue collection requires touts to jump into a moving trailer. Apart from endangering their own lives and that of the vehicle driver, the entire society is at risk in the unfolding drama of the absurd.
Two years back, a female police officer was killed when she was on traffic duty around the Rumukrushe axis of Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of the state. A stray bullet had hit her skull and killed her immediately when another policeman had shot at hawkers in the area. The police woman who was married with three children was felled in a disgusting manner. As she lay in the pool of her own blood, she was posted on the social media.
The state governor, Chief Nyesom Wike, summarily disbanded the task force and it was soothing to many frayed nerves. It also alleviated the pains of those in business and right-thinking members of the society.
The word “task force, according to Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary is “a military force that is brought together and sent to a particular place, (2) a group of people, who are a brought together to deal with a particular problem.”
When one looks closely at the definition of the word “task force”, one is bound to find out that the concept of taskforce precludes an assembly of rejects of the society or hoodlums who are taking a toll on a society that has no place for them. Task forces are constituted to deal with certain problems and not as revenue agents. They are often on adhoc basis and once the problem is solved, they are disbanded.
Again, trap setting for members of the society is not one of functions of government. A government that lures its citizens into crime with the aim of extorting them for the sake revenue is at best a totalitarian one. That is why the prosecution of criminal wrongs ends up in imprisonment. Only minor criminal wrongs are given the option of fine.
The use of a task force that bastardizes the psyche of the society often attracts deprecatory comments about the government in power.
A taskforce consisting of faceless citizens with the sole aim of extorting money from drivers can only originate from illegality. It is a nullity. You cannot put something on nothing. In civilized countries, the police are in charge of traffic not hoodlums or taskforce.  Traffic policemen or traffic wardens are in charge of traffic related offences. Traffic offences are quasi- criminal matters and their punishments are not as severe as such that is why policemen who are knowledgeable in law should handle it. Again, no person can be punished for any crime which is not written in any legal code. Crimes and punishments are codified. Among the various taskforces, the amount of money extorted from vehicle drivers depends on largely on the naivety of their victims. The drivers that are greatly extorted are the ones that come from other states.
The taskforce set up by National Union of Road Transport Workers is the most vicious one. It works with benumbing insensitivity to the plight of its victims.
More pathetic is the fact that the task forces have no adjudicatory mechanism to prove the validity of their allegations against the so-to-speak defendants. They are the police and the court at same time. They allege, arraign, try and punish offenders, all by themselves. The right of fair hearing enshrined in Section 36 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) is at best jettisoned. The barbarity of the process stares every right-thinking Nigerian in the face.
Pathetically, taskforce members drawn from hoodlums are anti-society. Moreover, since most of them are on a daily pay, they can afford to commit crimes and go scot free.  This is because there is certainly no means of identifying who they are. They fizzle into thin air on the least apprehension of danger and the society is victimized.
One hardly understands where members of the taskforce derive their powers to harass and molest innocent citizens. There is obviously no statute backing the use of anonymous and faceless citizens as members of a taskforce to cause mayhem in the society.
The police that are enlisted in the Nigeria police, wear name tags and numbers and can be identified with a specific police division. Taskforce members are everywhere and recruited from everywhere. A policeman that pleaded anonymity told The Tide that one of the frequent cases that attended Police stations in recent times had to do with the excesses and depravity of the taskforce: an uncouth assemblage of hoodlums. Indeed, nothing good can come from this kind of arrangement.
On the one hand, some taskforces are established by government but a preponderance of others that take liberty for license aren’t. They are impersonators. There is grave danger in assigning specific duties to taskforce members that are not profiled. Again, making taskforce assignment exclusively for hoodlums goes against the grain.  Those who are not trained and have no conscience put the society at risk. Power of any kind must not be given to men of questionable characters.
On the other hand, if government does not establish a taskforce with a relevant legislation who does that? Again, is there any provision in any extant statute authorising the use of a taskforce peopled by hoodlums?
Interestingly, every organization established by government is a creation of the law, and it derives its power from the law. Where an organization or body is not created by the law, it is nonexistent. Any act done by such a body or purported to be done such non-existent body is null and void. That is why the operation of the taskforce set up by the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) without the necessary backing by the law can at best be described as an illegality.
In Lagos State, there is the Lagos State Ministry of Transport fondly referred to as LASMA, which levies fine on vehicle drivers that violate traffic regulations. The Ministry can be taken to court when the rights of drivers and vehicle owners are violated. But faceless task force members without proper means of identification are a grave danger to the society.
Years ago, the Rivers State Ministry of Transport used a taskforce simply referred to as MOT to deal with ubiquitous wrong parking of vehicles, obstruction of traffic and sundry other traffic offences and it was good.
MOT could sue and be sued.
What is very offensive today is that members of taskforce depend solely on what they are able to rake in on a daily basis to get paid. This again, is bound to cause problem as “man must eat” syndrome relieves them of any sense of responsibility and justice. Members of taskforce today are not profiled; they cannot sue and cannot be sued especially as they are faceless.
But how long will the society remain in this ugly state of affairs. There are indications that more illegal taskforces are likely to emerge as 2023 draws nearer.

 

By: Chidi Enyie

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City Crime

RSG Ready For 2030 Digital Transformation

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The Permanent Secretary, Rivers State  Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Department, Mrs. Elizabeth Akani, has said the State Government was set to meet up the 2030 target of the Federal Government towards the actualization of digital economy.
Akani said this at the Rivers State Sensitization Workshops on The Adoption of Nigeria Start-up Act and National Digital Literacy framework (NDLF), in Port Harcourt, weekend.
She noted that the State was ready for both the adoption and domestication of the Act.
According to her, up to 90-95% preparation have been fully covered by the state in readiness to welcoming the digital economy Act.
“Stakeholders talked about adoption and domestication of the Act, it was fruitful. The draft has been sent to the government”, she said.
She also noted that the move was in line with the digital transformation plan of the state and the country at large.
The Convener, Start South, Mr. Uche Aniche, who made case for full ICT Ministry for the state, said such will command the needed growth in the system.
Aniche stated that until they attained the lofty height, all about Tech-knowledge and growth may not fall in place as expected.
Other tech-operators, such as the Code Garden Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Wilfred Wegwu, who welcomed the idea, said it must be done in the nearest future.
Wegwu noted that technology has taken over the world at present, adding that government at all levels needed to key into the system.
He also stated that the system play major roles in various spheres of life, including relationships and collaboration.
He also revealed that the system now was up to forth Industrial Revolution (4IR), according to global shift ranking.
It will be recalled that the State Government has recently ordered to construct ICT centres across the 23 Local Government Area of the state in order to meet up the yearnings of the technology world.
By: King Onunwor
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City Crime

Industry Braces For Glut And Investor Demands

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The oil and gas industry is in for a tough year ahead, as it must balance financial discipline, shareholder returns, and long-term investments in the sustainability of the business—while navigating a hypothetical glut.
The warning comes from Wood Mackenzie, which said in a new report that the industry was faced with conflicting trends over the next year that would make decision-making challenging. Among these is an expectation that the market would tip into an oversupply, pressuring prices, while the demand outlook for oil over the long term brightens up, motivating more investments.
“Oil and gas companies are caught between competing pressures as they plan for 2026. Near-term price downside risks clash with the need to extend hydrocarbon portfolios into the next decade. Meanwhile, shareholder return of capital and balance sheet discipline will constrain reinvestment rates,” Wood Mackenzie’s senior vice president of corporate research, Tom Ellacott, said.
The executive added that investors would also influence decisions, as they continue to prioritize short-term returns over long-term investments. This last part, at least, is not unusual in the current investment environment across industries. It could, however, make life even more difficult for oil and gas companies for a while.
The glut that Wood Mackenzie analysts expect is the same glut that the International Energy Agency has been expecting for a while now. Yet that very same International Energy Agency earlier this month issued a warning on the longer-term security of global oil supply, saying the industry needed to step up investment in new production because natural depletion at mature fields was progressing faster than previously assumed.
Per the report, if the industry has to maintain current levels of oil and gas production, more than 45 million barrels per day of oil and around 2,000 billion cu m of natural gas would be needed in 2050 from new conventional fields. It’s worth noting that this is maintenance of current production levels, assuming demand will not rise, which is a risky assumption.
Even with projects ramping up and new ones approved for development and not yet in production, a large gap still exists “that would need to be filled by new conventional oil and gas projects to maintain production at current levels, although the amounts needed could be reduced if oil and gas demand were to come down,” the IEA said.
However, demand could just as well increase, heightening the degree of uncertainty in the industry and making long-term planning even more challenging—especially for companies with higher debt-to-equity ratios. Wood Mackenzie expects those with gearing of above 35% would prioritise resilience over long-term growth, while those with better debt positions would turn to divestments and asset acquisitions to improve the quality of their portfolio.
Share buybacks will also remain on the oil industry’s table as a favorite tool for making shareholders happy, although, Wood Mac notes, these tend to dry up when oil slips below $50 per barrel. Interestingly, the analytics company does not seem to factor into its analysis a scenario where prices might go up instead of down, especially now that President Trump has signaled he would be willing to step up pressure on Russia to bring a swifter end to the war in Ukraine.
If prices do rise, for whatever reason, including failure of the massive 3-million-bpd glut that the IEA predicted to materialize, then the immediate outlook for the oil and gas industry becomes different—but not too different. Companies have already demonstrated they would not return to their old ways of splurging when times were good and tightening belts when times were bad. They would likely stick to spending caution and shareholder return prioritization, regardless of prices.
By Irina Slav
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City Crime

ECN Commences 7MW Solar Power Project In AKTH

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As a landmark intervention designed to guarantee uninterrupted electricity supply, the Energy Commission of Nigeria (ECN), has commenced a 7MW solar power project at the Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital (AKTH)
The project is the outcome of ECN’s comprehensive energy audit and strategic planning, which exposed the unsustainable cost of diesel and the risks associated with AKTH’s dependence on the national grid.
Working in close collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Innovation, Science, and Technology under the coordinating leadership of Chief Uche Nnaji, the ECN planned and executed this critical project to secure the hospital’s energy future.
The Director – General, ECN, Dr. Mustapha Abullahi, said “the timing of this intervention could not be more crucial” recalling that only days ago, AKTH suffered prolonged power outages that tragically claimed lives in its Intensive Care Unit.
“That painful incident has strengthened our resolve. With this solar installation, we are ensuring that such tragedies are prevented in the future and that critical medical services can operate without fear of disruption”.
Abdullahi stated that the project is a clear demonstration of the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in action and reflects ECN’s commitment to making Nigeria’s energy transition people-centered, where hospitals, schools, and other essential institutions thrive on reliable, clean, and sustainable power.
The ECN boss further reaffirmed ECN’s commitment to continued deployment of innovative energy solutions across the nation.
“This is not just about powering institutions; it is about saving lives, restoring confidence, and securing a brighter future for Nigerians”, he stated.
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