Monday, September 16, 2013

Nasarawa Government To Spend N447m On e-libraries, Laboratories

Nasarawa Government To Spend N447m On e-libraries, Laboratories



The Nasarawa State Government on Monday said it has awarded contract for the construction of six e-libraries and three laboratories in the state at the cost of over N447 million.
Dr Salisu Mohammed, Senior Special Assistant on Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to Gov. Umaru Al-Makura disclosed this during a meeting with the contractors in Lafia.
Mohammed said the e-libraries would be located in Lafia, Doma, Akwanga, Keffi, Nasarawa and Karu.
He said three science laboratories at Government Science School, Lafia and Nasarawa Eggon as well as Government College, Keffi would be renovated and equipped.  
The governor's aide said the projects were part of efforts to boost the education sector and revive reading habit in students.
Mohammed, who said the projects would be completed within 16 weeks, warned the contractors against violating the contract agreement.
``We are aware that some of the contractors may have even sold the contracts out before getting the award documents.
``I can assure you that the government will not hesitate to sanction anyone found to be engaging in sharp practices that would jeopardise our aim,” he said.
One of the contractors, Alhaji Abubakar Aruwa assured that they would deliver the projects on time and according to specification. (NAN)

Nasarawa Government To Spend N447m On e-libraries, Laboratories

Nasarawa Government To Spend N447m On e-libraries, Laboratories



The Nasarawa State Government on Monday said it has awarded contract for the construction of six e-libraries and three laboratories in the state at the cost of over N447 million.
Dr Salisu Mohammed, Senior Special Assistant on Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to Gov. Umaru Al-Makura disclosed this during a meeting with the contractors in Lafia.
Mohammed said the e-libraries would be located in Lafia, Doma, Akwanga, Keffi, Nasarawa and Karu.
He said three science laboratories at Government Science School, Lafia and Nasarawa Eggon as well as Government College, Keffi would be renovated and equipped.  
The governor's aide said the projects were part of efforts to boost the education sector and revive reading habit in students.
Mohammed, who said the projects would be completed within 16 weeks, warned the contractors against violating the contract agreement.
``We are aware that some of the contractors may have even sold the contracts out before getting the award documents.
``I can assure you that the government will not hesitate to sanction anyone found to be engaging in sharp practices that would jeopardise our aim,” he said.
One of the contractors, Alhaji Abubakar Aruwa assured that they would deliver the projects on time and according to specification. (NAN)

You're Double Minded, Unstable, Jonathan Tells el-Rufai

You're Double Minded, Unstable, Jonathan Tells el-Rufai



President Goodluck Jonathan on Sunday urged Nigerians to beware of former FCT Minister and Deputy National Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Malam Nasir el-Rufai who he described as "a double minded and unstable man in all his ways."
The former minister was receiving this bashing for stating in an interview published in the Saturday Sun of September 14, 2013 that nothing could make President Jonathan succeed because he was a grossly incompetent president who hardly listen ed or understood issues.
But in a statement issued in Abuja by his  special assistant (New Media), Mr Reno  Omokri, the president urged the public not to be misled by the machinations of el-Rufai, "a man who is in dire need of prayers and perhaps psychological assistance.".
He recalled that contrary  to his position in the interview, el-Rufai had at a meeting with Ambassador John Campbell in April  of 2007, said that Jonathan, the then vice-presidential nominee of the People's Democratic Party, PDP, "is clean and honest."
Omokori added that  el-Rufai had  told the ambassador that Jonathan was the only candidate that met  Obasanjo’s  guidelines- honesty and  Ijaw.”
He said unknown to  el-Rufai, the ambassador kept a record of their conversation which was now a public record in America.  
Omokori said, "Beyond that,  Nasir  el-Rufai, who had gone into voluntary exile under the presidency of Malam  Umaru  Musa  Yar'Adua  after he was accused of corruption and abuse of office while he was minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), felt safe enough to return to Nigeria as soon as President Jonathan ascended to power.  
Omokri recalled that when  el-Rufai  returned to Nigeria in 2010, he visited President Jonathan at the  presidential villa on May 11, 2010, and was the first major political figure to call on him to contest for the 2011 presidential election.
He noted that in the double-speak nature of el-rufai, he showered encomiums on Gen. Muhammadu Buhari in the  latest interview contrary to a damning conclusion on the General in 2010.
"I think that where Nigeria is today, it is only someone like  Buhari, with the experience of having run the country before, and having run it along certain principles of discipline, integrity and accountability, that Nigeria needs," he stated. 
Recalling that the same el-Rufai had, however, in October 6, 2010, said Buhari was not a suitable person to rule the country, Omokori said, "Malam  el-Rufai  wishes to remind General  Buhari  that he has remained perpetually unelectable because his record as military head of state, and afterwards, is a warning that many Nigerians have wisely heeded.
"His insensitivity to Nigeria’s diversity and his parochial focus are already well-known. In 1984,  Buhari allowed 53 suitcases  belonging to his ADC’s father to enter Nigeria unchecked at a time the country was exchanging old currency for new. Against all canons of legal decency, he used retroactive laws to execute three young men for drug-peddling after they were convicted by a military tribunal and not regular courts of law. 
"Buhari  was so high-handed that he gave himself and his  officials  immunity even from truthful reporting. That obnoxious Decree 4, against which truth was no defence, was used to jail journalists and attempt to cow the media as a whole. That tyrannical legislation showed the essence of his intolerance. These are facts of recent history. 
"The story of counter-trade and import licensing, the cornerstone of Buhari’s  stone-age economic strategy and those whose interests it served, is a tale for another day." 
Omokri said he wondered how el-Rufai could go from warning the nation about Buhari  as a man unfit to rule Nigeria and one who is perpetually unelectable because of his parochial nature, to go back to say that it was the same man that could best lead the nation.
The statement issued on Sunday further noted, "It is obvious to all that there is more than one  personality  in  possession of the mind and soul of this man called  Nasir el-Rufai. Can any sane person trust the words of a man who is so unstable?  Today,  el-Rufai, perhaps banking on what he thinks is the short memory of  Nigerians, is attempting to rewrite history. But it is such a difficult task to paint the truth with  a lie.  
"Nasir  el-Rufai  wanted something from the President which was why he visited him at the presidential villa to heap unsolicited praise on the president in 2010. When he did not get what he wanted, he became bitter and since  the days of yore when the fox that could not get the grapes tagged them 'sour grapes' to mask its frustration, it has always been the habit of persons who cannot compete on the basis of ideas to give a dog a bad name in order to hang it.
"Thus,  el-Rufai, having run out of ideas, has tagged this administration as 'incompetent," he said

Saturday, September 14, 2013

PHOTOS: Meet Actress, Stella Damasus' Beautiful Daughter

PHOTOS: Meet Actress, Stella Damasus' Beautiful Daughter


Nollywood actress, Stella Damasus finally shows off her daughter.
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The actress took to twitter to tell her fans her daughter would be working with her on a new drama web series "MIX MATCH".
In her tweet “Great working with my daughter on the set of MIX MATCH”.
The actress has been in New York with her lover and movie producer/ director,  Daniel Ademinokan filming the new drama web series.
Ademinokan’s new project is titled 'Mix Match'. This will be a drama 'based on the lives of the members of a biracial family living in New York City'.
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photophotophotophotophoto

Jonathan’s blow to affirmative action

Jonathan’s blow to affirmative action


When President Goodluck Jonathan appointed 14 women as ministers in a cabinet of 46 members, women activists and supporters of the president celebrated it. Indeed, in June this year, First Lady Patience Jonathan publicly attributed the success recorded by her husband to the performance of the women in his cabinet.
“Two days ago, the President read his mid-term report to Nigerians. He and his team have done very well. Women are the powerful people in that cabinet,” she was reported as saying at a dinner she held for women at the Presidential Villa, Abuja in commemoration of Democracy Day.
Shortly after that revelation by the First Lady, President Goodluck Jonathan was celebrated through the presentation of a 320-page glossy book titled, “Goodluck Ebele Jonathan: Champion for Women.” Jonathan was hailed for the opportunities his administration gave to women to serve Nigeria.
Indeed, less than two weeks ago, Chairman of Nigeria Social Insurance Fund (NSITF), Dr. Ngozi Olejeme, said as far as women representation in government was concerned, the womenfolk never had it so good in the history of Nigeria as they are currently doing in the     Jonathan   administration.
Olejeme, who was speaking at a fundraising dinner in honour of the wife of the Belizean Prime Minister, Kim Simplis Barrow, said apart from the 14 women ministers in Jonathan’s government, many other women are holding sway as diplomats and or heads of several parastatals. Even President Jonathan himself has had reasons to boast about his ‘women-friendly’ administration.
Last Wednesday’s sack of ministers has rubbished that ‘colourful record’. President Jonathan decided to show five out of the 14 women in his cabinet the way out, in what was seen as a big blow to the much touted affirmative action. Those who were asked to go are  Professor Ruqayyatu Ahmed Rufa’i, Minister of Education (Jigawa); Mrs. Hadiza Ibrahim Mailafaya, Minister of Environment (Kaduna); Lady Amal Pepple, Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development (Rivers); Olusola Obada, Minister of State for Defence (Osun) and Hajia Zainab Ibrahim Kuchi, Minister of State for Power (Niger).
Those who escaped the president’s hammer are  Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance; Diezani Alison-Madueke, Minister of Petroleum Resources; Mrs. Omobola Johnson, Minister of Communication Technology; Hajia Zainab Maina, Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development; Mrs. Sarah Reng Ochekpe, Minister of Water Resources; Princess Stella Oduah, Minister of Aviation; Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide, Minister of State for Federal Capital Territory (FCT); and Professor Viola Onwuliri,  Minister of State (1) for Foreign Affairs.
Many observers have also aired divergent views over the sacking of the five women ministers, with most insinuating political undertones.
Auwal Musa Rafsanjani, Executive Director of the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), while condeming the sack of the five female ministers, said “this act contradicts President   Jonathan’s claim to 32 per cernt affirmative action for women, since about 70 per cent of the ministers sacked are women,” adding that “the action did not only negate Mr. President’s transformation agenda, but also makes mockery of our country’s effort towards women empowerment, gender equality and inclusiveness in the national political arena.”
Fateema Bello, a public affairs commentator based in Jimeta, Adamawa State, says “no doubt, the ministers sacked by the president, especially the women, couldn’t have been shown the way out based on performance. It is instructive to note that the affected women are from states where the governors are seen as opposed to President Jonathan’s ambition.”
Also speaking, Director of Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD), Dr. Jibrin Ibrahim, says  “I don’t think they were sacked because they were women, I think they were sacked because they were unfortunate to have people who supported their entry to the ministerial positions.”
He said when these ministers are being replaced, there should at least be the same number  of women to be returned.
A member House of Representatives Nkoyo Toyo says “President Jonathan has been consistent with support for women and the removal of the women is not a failure on their part, but an indication of the fact that we have not reach a position in the country that we need to make this kind of change without rancour.”
Michael Daelle, a women activist in Kaduna, said President Jonathan should look beyond politics when appointing replacements for those he sacked. “Some of us have not forgotten the promised made by the president that he was going to appoint many women to top government positions. He fulfilled that. Now that another chance has presented itself, the president must not go back on his words.”
Brief on the casualties
Prof. Ruqayyatu Rufa’i (Jigawa) was born in 1958. She is former Dean, Faculty of Education at the Bayero University. She was Commissioner for Health and Commissioner for Education and Science in Jigawa State before she was appointed as Minister of Education. Many said she was sacked because of her governor’s (Sule Lamido’s) seeming opposition to Jonathan’s presidential ambition.
Zainab Ibrahim Kuchi (Niger), like Ruqayyatu, had to give way because she was nominated by Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, one of the ‘rebel’ governors behind the New PDP. Weekly Trust learnt from credible sources that Zainab, who is apolitical, had offered to broker peace between her governor and the president. However, the president wants someone who can tame the governor for him.
Hajia Hadiza Mailafiya (Kaduna), Minister of Environment, should have been spared since the governor, a protégé of Vice President Namadi Sambo, is not having any issues with President Jonathan and has always sided with the president’s camp. But observers say the president is not leaving things to chances and is looking for an astute politician.
Amal Pepple (Rivers) was Head of Service of the Federation (HOSF) before she retired. When she was appointed as Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, many said it was a good choice. But coming from Rivers State, where Jonathan is locked in a battle of wits with Governor Rotimi Amaechi, the humble lady had to go to make room for someone in the class of Nysom Wike, now supervising Minister of Education that is openly fighting Amaechi. Pepple had also tried to broker peace between Jonathan and Amaechi, but did not succeed
For Olusola Obada, former deputy governor of her state (Osun), was sacked because she was nominated by Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, who is now the Secretary General of the New PDP faction. Obada had been an advertiser, lawyer and seasoned politician
.

Jonathan’s blow to affirmative action

Jonathan’s blow to affirmative action


“Two days ago, the President read his mid-term report to Nigerians. He and his team have done very well. Women are the powerful people in that cabinet,” she was reported as saying at a dinner she held for women at the Presidential Villa, Abuja in commemoration of Democracy Day.When President Goodluck Jonathan appointed 14 women as ministers in a cabinet of 46 members, women activists and supporters of the president celebrated it. Indeed, in June this year, First Lady Patience Jonathan publicly attributed the success recorded by her husband to the performance of the women in his cabinet.
Shortly after that revelation by the First Lady, President Goodluck Jonathan was celebrated through the presentation of a 320-page glossy book titled, “Goodluck Ebele Jonathan: Champion for Women.” Jonathan was hailed for the opportunities his administration gave to women to serve Nigeria.
Indeed, less than two weeks ago, Chairman of Nigeria Social Insurance Fund (NSITF), Dr. Ngozi Olejeme, said as far as women representation in government was concerned, the womenfolk never had it so good in the history of Nigeria as they are currently doing in the     Jonathan   administration.
Olejeme, who was speaking at a fundraising dinner in honour of the wife of the Belizean Prime Minister, Kim Simplis Barrow, said apart from the 14 women ministers in Jonathan’s government, many other women are holding sway as diplomats and or heads of several parastatals. Even President Jonathan himself has had reasons to boast about his ‘women-friendly’ administration.
Last Wednesday’s sack of ministers has rubbished that ‘colourful record’. President Jonathan decided to show five out of the 14 women in his cabinet the way out, in what was seen as a big blow to the much touted affirmative action. Those who were asked to go are  Professor Ruqayyatu Ahmed Rufa’i, Minister of Education (Jigawa); Mrs. Hadiza Ibrahim Mailafaya, Minister of Environment (Kaduna); Lady Amal Pepple, Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development (Rivers); Olusola Obada, Minister of State for Defence (Osun) and Hajia Zainab Ibrahim Kuchi, Minister of State for Power (Niger).
Those who escaped the president’s hammer are  Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance; Diezani Alison-Madueke, Minister of Petroleum Resources; Mrs. Omobola Johnson, Minister of Communication Technology; Hajia Zainab Maina, Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development; Mrs. Sarah Reng Ochekpe, Minister of Water Resources; Princess Stella Oduah, Minister of Aviation; Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide, Minister of State for Federal Capital Territory (FCT); and Professor Viola Onwuliri,  Minister of State (1) for Foreign Affairs.
Many observers have also aired divergent views over the sacking of the five women ministers, with most insinuating political undertones.
Auwal Musa Rafsanjani, Executive Director of the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), while condeming the sack of the five female ministers, said “this act contradicts President   Jonathan’s claim to 32 per cernt affirmative action for women, since about 70 per cent of the ministers sacked are women,” adding that “the action did not only negate Mr. President’s transformation agenda, but also makes mockery of our country’s effort towards women empowerment, gender equality and inclusiveness in the national political arena.”
Fateema Bello, a public affairs commentator based in Jimeta, Adamawa State, says “no doubt, the ministers sacked by the president, especially the women, couldn’t have been shown the way out based on performance. It is instructive to note that the affected women are from states where the governors are seen as opposed to President Jonathan’s ambition.”
Also speaking, Director of Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD), Dr. Jibrin Ibrahim, says  “I don’t think they were sacked because they were women, I think they were sacked because they were unfortunate to have people who supported their entry to the ministerial positions.”
He said when these ministers are being replaced, there should at least be the same number  of women to be returned.
A member House of Representatives Nkoyo Toyo says “President Jonathan has been consistent with support for women and the removal of the women is not a failure on their part, but an indication of the fact that we have not reach a position in the country that we need to make this kind of change without rancour.”
Michael Daelle, a women activist in Kaduna, said President Jonathan should look beyond politics when appointing replacements for those he sacked. “Some of us have not forgotten the promised made by the president that he was going to appoint many women to top government positions. He fulfilled that. Now that another chance has presented itself, the president must not go back on his words.”
Brief on the casualties
Prof. Ruqayyatu Rufa’i (Jigawa) was born in 1958. She is former Dean, Faculty of Education at the Bayero University. She was Commissioner for Health and Commissioner for Education and Science in Jigawa State before she was appointed as Minister of Education. Many said she was sacked because of her governor’s (Sule Lamido’s) seeming opposition to Jonathan’s presidential ambition.
Zainab Ibrahim Kuchi (Niger), like Ruqayyatu, had to give way because she was nominated by Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, one of the ‘rebel’ governors behind the New PDP. Weekly Trust learnt from credible sources that Zainab, who is apolitical, had offered to broker peace between her governor and the president. However, the president wants someone who can tame the governor for him.
Hajia Hadiza Mailafiya (Kaduna), Minister of Environment, should have been spared since the governor, a protégé of Vice President Namadi Sambo, is not having any issues with President Jonathan and has always sided with the president’s camp. But observers say the president is not leaving things to chances and is looking for an astute politician.
Amal Pepple (Rivers) was Head of Service of the Federation (HOSF) before she retired. When she was appointed as Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, many said it was a good choice. But coming from Rivers State, where Jonathan is locked in a battle of wits with Governor Rotimi Amaechi, the humble lady had to go to make room for someone in the class of Nysom Wike, now supervising Minister of Education that is openly fighting Amaechi. Pepple had also tried to broker peace between Jonathan and Amaechi, but did not succeed
For Olusola Obada, former deputy governor of her state (Osun), was sacked because she was nominated by Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, who is now the Secretary General of the New PDP faction. Obada had been an advertiser, lawyer and seasoned politician
.

Lamido receives Ruqayyatu, thanks Jonathan

Lamido receives Ruqayyatu, thanks Jonathan



Governor Sule Lamido of Jigawa State yesterday thanked President Goodluck Jonathan for giving Jigawa two ministerial slots in the whole of the north and for appointing Professor Ruqayya Ahmed Rufai as the first female Mister of Education in Nigeria.
Lamido, who organized a reception for the former Education Minister at the Aminu Kano triangle in Dutse, said Jigawa people are grateful to President   Jonathan for the period given to Prof. Ruqayya to serve.
“We are here to receive Professor Ruqayya Ahmad Rufai, a worthy ambassador of Jigawa State who has served this country meritoriously. We are also here to thank President Goodluck Jonathan, a dear friend, brother, our political leader for appointing her a minister. We have no ill fillings, no grudges or anger over her removal. The President has not done any wrong by firing her and there is no political dimension to the sack contrary to popular opinion.”
Prof. Ruqayya thanked Almighty Allah who sustained and protected her throughout her tenure as minister. She also thanked Governor Sule Lamido for the confidence reposed in her and nominated her for ministerial appointment.
She also expressed her gratitude to President   Jonathan for the support and cooperation she said she received from during her tenure.