Rivers
Furniture: Church Shops For N4.5m
The Seventh Day Adventist Church, Mile 1, Port Harcourt, says it is sourcing for N4.5 million to replace its plastic chairs with wooden ones.
This was contained in a keynote address at the Annual Choir Day and Dedication of the church’s Baptistry at the weekend in Port Harcourt.
The keynote address which was read by Elder Ogbulu G.P. Ijeije on behalf of the church said that a total of 95 pieces of wooden pews (seats) would be needed to fix both adult and children church auditoriums.
He said that the baptismal pool which was conceived since 2014 by Pastor Anyalebechi Nnunukwe would help the church to populate the Kingdom of God.
He said that the idea was to avoid baptising members of the church in polluted and contaminated waters.
“Regrettably, the environment we find ourselves tend towards negating this sanctimonious mission of the church as almost all the water bodies around us are either polluted, contaminated or desecrated, defiling the sanctity of the sacred mission in our hands”, he said.
Also speaking, President, Port Harcourt Conference, Seventh Day Adventist Church, Pastor Anyalebechi N. Nnunukwe said that the Mile 1 Church had set a high record in evangelism, stressing that more souls will now be won for Christ.
Pastor Nnunukwe who also spoke with newsmen in an interview called on Christians to focus more attention on soul winning instead of prosperity.
Chairman of the occasion, Elder Chukwuemeka P. Ukpaka urged public-spirited individuals to identity with the church in its need.
Earlier in a sermon titled “Set up and Walk, the President Rivers West Conference of the church, Pastor Chimezie Obuzor warned members against allowing earthly things to derail them from the path of God.
He urged for more commitment and dedication to the service of God.
Rivers
Macobarb CEO Cries Out, Says No Indigenous Contractor Can Win Case Against NLNG Or Oil Majors in Nigerian Courts …As Justice Nwogu Throws Out Macobarb’s N5.74bn Claim
Justice Chinwendu Nwogu of the Port Harcourt High Court has thrown out the N5.74bn claim filed by Macobarb, an indigenous contractor, against the NLNG for breach of contract and accumulated losses.
Shedrack Ogboru, the CEO of Macobarb International Limited, who filed the claims since 2022 as one of the claimants, in suit number HC/2013/CS/2022, has however cried out, saying the fate of indigenous contractors in Nigerian courts is doomed.
Ogboru told newsmen outside the court after the shock ruling that the judge abandoned the crux of the matter and the terms of the contract to deny Macobarb the claims.
Showing anger and frustration, Ogboru said he felt he presented tight case to the court to show that the NLNG breached terms of payments and that the breaches caused slowdown of the execution of the contract, but regretted that the judge did not agree with any of his arguments.
Saying many indigenous contractors have died as a result of injustices in the hands of the oil majors, he said only abroad do communities and local contractors get some form of justice, never in Nigeria.
Justice Nwogu had ruled that the NLNG did not breach its contract with the contractor and that the gas company did not unlawfully deny Macobarb payments.
The judge said work executed by Macobarb did not amount to ‘work done’ as stated in the contract terms except the NLNG approved it as so, and that the provision mandating the person recognized as ‘contract holder’ nominated by the NLNG as the one to authorize any dealings with the contractor did not mean that he alone could act for the NLNG as relied upon by the contractor. The judge ruled that the ‘contract holder’ was a mere day to day overseer of the project, and that any official mandated by the NLNG can terminate the contract.
The judge also ruled that the contract did not provide for ‘standdown payment’ and that the NLNG did not cause delays in the execution of the contract as claimed by the contractor.
The judge also ruled that the payment failures by the NLNG that the contractor claimed affected the contract did not amount to an offence or breach of the contract but that the contractor misused the loan he obtained from banks.
In the end, the judge ruled in favour of almost all the grounds submitted by the NLNG and none of the grounds by the contractor, and even tongue-lashed the contractor in most of his rulings.
Reacting, Ogboru said: “My case is presented 100 per cent, the NLNG’s case is zero; but surprisingly, the NLNG has rather been upheld, and Macobarb denied. I pity indigenous contractors in Nigerian courts. We are doomed.”