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AELN Sensitises Students On Environment …Promises Them Scholarships

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The Association of Environmental Lawyers of Nigeria (AELN), has taken its awareness campaign to secondary schools in Rivers State, with a firm promise to offer scholarships to students, who successfully gain admission to study Environmental Law and Environmental Management in any of the country’s universities, as a way of motivating them to champion the protection of the environment.
The association, which gave this indication during the awareness campaign at the University of Port Harcourt International Secondary School, Mile 3, Diobu, Port Harcourt on Wednesday, also hinted that it would sponsor essay competitions on the environment in schools in the state.
The campaign which also featured a question and answer session saw the participating students, drawn from SS1 and SS2 classes, enthusiastically answering questions from the lawyers, who had earlier grilled them with thought-provoking tutorials centred on the environment.
Essentially, all the students, who correctly answered the questions posed to them were rewarded with specially customised notbooks, as a mark of appreciation for their efforts.
The National President of the association and Associate Professor of Energy and Environmental Law, Dr Samuel Chisa Dike; Rivers State Chairman of the body, Barrister Promise Iwezor; and the National Public Relations Officer, Barrister (Mrs) Judith Adeniji, took turns to lecture the students on what constitutes the environment and highlighted the need to protect, preserve and keep it clean at all times.
Speaking with The Tide in an interview, the National President, Dr Samuel Dike said the association took the campaign to schools in order to catch them young and to create awareness and actually make the students Green Advocates and ambassadors of environmental protection and cleanliness, as well as inaugurate them as such.
According to him, “the environment is our future and our pride”.
Dike also said that the awareness campaign was equally a way by the body to uplift the society, as government alone cannot do everything, including protecting and cleaning the environment.
He said the association was poised to take the awareness campaign to other schools in the state, and expressed delight that the programme was received with excitement and enthusiasm by the students of the University of Port Harcourt International Secondary School, noting that it was basically “to make them conscious of what we are doing and also make people know that there is need to protect and keep the environment clean.”
On her part, the National Public Relations Officer, Barrister (Mrs) Judith Adeniji hinted that she had taught the students the dangers of oceanic pollution, and stressed the need for young people to be inculcated the habit of not dumping wastes into drainages.
The Rivers State Chairman of the association, Barrister Promise Iwezor explained that the awareness campaign is taken to schools in order to catch them young before they actually get out of hand and control, adding that going by the performance of the students in the school visited, the objective of the programme had been achieved.
Also speaking in an interview, the Principal of University of Port Harcourt International Secondary School, Mrs Ngozi Emechala described the programme as great, saying, “We are now aware of our environment and the students are now aware of how to keep the environment clean and preserve animals like rodents instead of killing them”.
Emechala, who was visibly elated, said she had before now not heard of environmental lawyers but had been so captivated by the programme that she would like one of her children to be an Environmental Lawyer. She said the secret behind the outstanding performance of her students during the programme was the sheer fact that the school has qualified teachers.

By: Donatus Ebi

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Niger Delta

Navy Pledges Improved Patrols, Welfare Boost For Personnel

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The Chief of Naval Staff (CNS), Vice Admiral Idi Abbas, has pledged to ensure improved welfare for personnel and more patrols on the maritime corridors of the nation.
He  disclosed this during an on the spot assessment of things at the Eastern Naval Command (ENC), Calabar, on Wednesday.
According to him, there is the need for officers to always be ready,  by improving on their welfare, in a bid to keep the country secured.
“I am here for an on the spot assessment of our operations and like you have seen, I have also gone round to check the ongoing buildings.
”These  are welfare issues and for us to be able to have our men ready and keep us secured, their welfare needs to be catered for.
“So, we are here to kill two birds with one stone,  which are basically operations and welfare issues.
”I am happy with what the command is doing; it is doing well in terms of keeping the maritime environment safe.
“We will continue doing what we are doing and improve on that, which is patrol of the waters and increase in the area of surveillance”, he stated.
As part of his visit,  Abbas commissioned the 12×1 Junior Rates Accommodation Block A and B, at the Navy Barracks at Atimbo in Calabar.
The naval chief also inspected other ongoing projects in the Akim Barracks, 1006 flats and the Navy hotel, all within Calabar.
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Niger Delta

Delta Begins Uromi Junction Flyover Construction 

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The Delta State Government says it has began construction work on the long-awaited Uromi Junction Flyover Bridge in Agbor, Ika South Local Government Area of the state.
Director-General (DG) of the Delta State Bureau for Orientation and Communications, Dr. Fred Oghenesivbe, confirmed the development to newsme in Asaba.
According to him, heavy-duty construction equipment have arrived the site, a project which is being handled by Julius Berger Nigeria PLC, one of the country’s leading construction firms.
Oghenesivbe, described the flyover as a massive infrastructure project with far-reaching socio-economic benefits for the area.
He said the project would significantly transform the Agbor metropolis by easing traffic congestion, improving the city’s aesthetics, and boosting commercial activities within the local government area.
He described the State Governor, Sheriff Oborevwori, as a promise-keeper and pragmatic leader whose administration remains committed to infrastructure development and economic growth across the state.
The DG expressed confidence in Julius Berger’s capacity to deliver the project within record time and according to the highest construction standards.
“The Uromi Junction serves as a major link between different parts of the country but has recently been plagued by severe traffic congestion, making vehicular movement increasingly difficult”, he noted.
He urged residents to cooperate with the contractor and safeguard construction materials and equipment to ensure the timely completion of the project.
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A’Ibom Rejects Ekid Ownership Claim Of Stubbs Creek

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The Akwa Ibom State Government has rejected claims by the Ekid People’s Union that it owns land within the Stubbs Creek Forest Reserve, describing such assertions as “false, misleading and a distortion of the judicial record.”
In a recent statement, signed by the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Uko Udom, the state government said it was compelled to respond in the “overriding public interest,” despite a pending court case instituted by the same group.
The government stated that contrary to claims circulating in the media, the historic case of Ntiaro and Ikpak vs. Ibok Etok Akpan and Edoho Ekid, decided by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in 1918, did not vest ownership of Stubbs Creek land in any ethnic group or community.
“The final judgement merely dismissed the claims before the court and granted title to no party whatsoever”, the government stated, adding that “any assertion to the contrary is false, misleading and a distortion of the judicial record.”
According to the statement, the land was lawfully reserved by the colonial government under Forest Reserve Order No. 45 of 1930, later amended in 1941, 1955 and 1962, with “the principal rights of the land forfeited to the Government upon the change of status.”
It said the area has since been administered under applicable laws by the Akwa Ibom State Government, which “has at all times acted within its lawful authority in the management and allocation of land in the area for legitimate public and economic purposes.”
Citing the 1999 Constitution and the Land Use Act, the government stated that all land in the state is vested in the governor to be held in trust for the common benefit of Nigerians, noting that claims of absolute ancestral ownership are subject to existing laws.
The government “categorically denies allegations of fraud or misrepresentation” regarding Stubbs Creek or investments there and warned it would take “appropriate legal steps” against any individual or group publishing false or defamatory material capable of undermining public confidence or discouraging investment
The statement also assured the federal government of “full access and Right of Way” for the proposed Coastal Highway through any part of the state.
The government statement followed an earlier report in which the Ekid People’s Union accused Governor Umo Eno of Akwa Ibom State of making comments that allegedly linked the community to terrorism, while he was defending the Coastal Highway project passing through the Stubbs Creek.
Ekid People’s Union maintained that the people of Ekid are the original owners of the land known as Stubbs Creek Forest Reserve, arguing that their ancestral ownership predates colonial rule.
The group cited historical occupation, customary ownership and a 1918 Privy Council case, which it claimed affirmed Ekid rights over the territory.
The union also accused the Akwa Ibom State Government of misrepresenting history to justify taking over the land for commercial interests and the proposed Coastal Highway, an allegation the state government has denied.
The group rejected any suggestion linking the Ekid people to criminality or terrorism, insisting they were peaceful citizens defending their ancestral land through lawful and civic means.
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