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Osinbajo’s Bid For Presidency Borne Out Of Public Interest – Aide

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VP Yemi Osinbajo

By Ayodele Oni

An Aide to the Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has defended his decision to contest for the presidential ticket of the All Progressives Congress (APC) last year, saying “he couldn’t have just walked away like that.”

The Aide said the decision was borne out of other reason of the interest of the public.

According to Laolu Akande, the presidential ticket slug out by Osinbajo with others including Bola Tinubu was not meant to slight anybody.

His decision to contest had drawn criticism from members of the Lagos APC, with some describing his ambition as a betrayal of Tinubu.

But early this week, deposed Emir of Kano, Sanusi insisted that Osinbajo remains a formidable presidential material in Nigeria.

The vice president was the attorney-general of Lagos when Tinubu was governor of the state.

Speaking on Friday in an interview with Channels Television, Akande said Osinbajo contested because he believed that he possesses the necessary experience, qualifications and inspirational leadership qualities for the office of the president.

“What is important is that you take the step you want to take in the best interest of the people. Public interest is the overriding factor.p

“You couldn’t have been vice-president for eight years, and the kind of vice-president that he has been, and how much work that has been done.

“The level of understanding that you have acquired in terms of what has to be done and the capacity he has demonstrated when he had the opportunity to act for the president.

“And he has inspired tens and scores of millions of Nigerians with his leadership style. People see him as a representation of a new Nigeria. All of these can’t be in place and he just walks away.

“He did what he needed to do and the party made the decision and he just has to move on after doing the right thing.”

Osinbajo was largely absent from the campaign trail of the APC presidential candidate in the run-up to the elections fuelling speculation that he was not supporting the eventual winner of the primary election.

Tinubu went on defeat Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP) in the presidential election.

The two defeated candidates have filed petitions at the tribunal to challenge the decision of the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC) to declare Tinubu winner of the election.

TRCN Reveals Status Of Teachers In Private Schools, Says Most Of Them Are Illiterates

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Ondo Students

By Ayodele Oni

The general saying that private schools are better than the public ones, is being threatened with discovery by a regulatory body that majority of those private institutions are being run by illiterates.

For years now it has become the practice of parents to enroll their siblings in privately owned institutions, especially nursery and primary schools in the believe that they are well equiped to raise those children.

It has even become a sort of competition among parents with some of them having the notion that parents with children in public schools are the poor, and cannot afford fees of privately owned ones.

This has led to astronomical rise in number of privately owned institutions to the extent that any available buildings are being turned to private learning centres.

Now, the Federal Government’s regulatory body for teaching in Nigeria, the Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria, (TRCN), has declared that 70 per cent of private school teachers in Southwest states are not qualified to teach.

The South-west states in Nigeria are Lagos, Osun, Ogun, Ondo, Oyo and Ekiti.

The council’s registrar, Prof. Josiah Ajiboye who noted that the culprits were not teachers, but cheaters, added that they don’t only cheat the pupils/students but the system in its entirety.

Speaking in Abuja at the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding, (MoU) between the Council and INSTILL Education, Ajiboye revealed that contrary to several speculations about the Southwest and its teachers of private schools, 70 per cent had been discovered unqualified.

Lamenting that 70 per cent of the unqualified teachers lacked the prerequisites to be registered by the Council, the TRCN boss stated that a large number of teachers in Nigeria had never been exposed to training and had been using outdated equipment for illustration.

“They are not registrable with the TRCN. So that is to tell you that there is a big gap. So you cannot call them teachers but cheaters.

“So we are looking into the future to fill up that gap like it’s done in South Africa.”

He said signing the MoU was aimed at equipping Nigerian teachers with 21st-century skills that would ultimately support teacher professional development and learning outcomes in Nigeria and Africa in general.

$1bn Ondo Deep Seaport Gets Boost

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NPA MD Bello Koko

The Nigerian Ports Authority, NPA, has assured that the $1 billion Ondo multipurpose deep seaport project would get all necessary approval for its implementation.

According to the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN, Bello-Koko gave this assurance when he received the Ondo State coordinator for special projects, Boye Oyewumi, in his office in Lagos.

During the meeting, Oyewumi submitted the ‘Full Business Case’ for the port to the NPC boss.

Bello-Koko assured his guest that the NPA would work with the federal Ministry of Transportation and other relevant agencies to obtain approvals to enable the port to begin operations.

The NPA chief executive said, “The NPA has consistently restated its readiness to provide requisite technical guidance for the establishment of new ports in line with global best practices.

“In keeping with NPA’s commitment to creating an enabling atmosphere for the construction of more deep seaports, the Ondo state project will come to fruition.”

 

 

May 29: Tinubu’s Men Attack Catholic Bishop

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Ahead of the May 29 inauguration of the president-elect, Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s men are not leaving anything to chance to ensure that the plan is not scuttled.

To that extent, they are not prepared to spare anyone who appears to be against their principal becoming the commander-in-chief, even if such is a revered man of God like the former Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, John Cardinal Olorunfemi Onaiyekan.

On Wednesday, the retired Catholic Archbishop joined a few other Nigerians who said Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who won the February 25 presidential election should not be sworn in until the contestations over his election are settled in the court.

“There are cases in court that have not been disposed of. That is why we are in an anomalous situation.

“We have a president-elect whose election is being challenged and the court is handling it.

“I’m still waiting for the court to tell me who won the election. It doesn’t make much sense to be swearing in people when they are still in court,” Onaiyekan said.

His comment did not go down well with the camp of the president-elect who has descended on him heavily. Nothing would stop the inauguration of Tinubu, according to Festus Keyamo, the minister of state for Employment and one of the spokesmen of the former Lagos Governor.

In a statement, he issued on Thursday,  the minister said Onaiyekan comment is an embarrassment to the Body of Christ, he urged him to act like a statesman on matter concerning the stability of the country.  “Dear daddy Onaiyekan, you know we all respect you a lot, but your political comments are becoming unstatesmanlike.

“A statesman who doubles as a Man of God should strive to be fair to all. You didn’t say the same thing when Obasanjo, Yar’Adua, Jonathan, and Buhari were all sworn in as Presidents when their cases were still before the courts,” Keyamo said.

On his part, Femi Fani-Kayode described Onaiyekan’s comment as one of the plans by the ‘Deep State’ to stop Tinubu from becoming president, adding that the president-elect is a moving train that cannot be stopped.

According to the former Minister and one of the spokesmen of the defunct Tinubu/Shetima Presidential Campaign Council, said the election of Tinubu is a divine plan of God that cannot be stopped by anybody.

He said Tinubu will outlive all those that want to stop him from becoming president and commander-in-chief.

Fani-Kayode said: “To Cardinal John Onaiyekan and those that share his views that the swearing in of our President-elect should be postponed until after the Election Tribunal has delivered its judgement I say the following.

“The Nigerian people have spoken and the Deep State conspiracy to stop Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu from becoming President failed long ago.

“We are well past that stage and you cannot stop a moving train. Those that have hardened their hearts and that have refused to accept God’s will and admonition to let Asiwaju and the Nigerian people go shall, like Pharaoh, perish before our very eyes.

“Those that are filled with bitterness, hate, envy, fury, and rage and that seek to pursue us into the Red Sea as we make our way to the Promise Land shall be drowned by it.

“Whether they like it or not, God-willing, the President-elect SHALL be sworn in on May 29th and those that want him dead or wish him ill shall see the grave long before he does. This is the doing of the Lord and it is marvellous in our sight.”

Meanwhile, some opinion leaders in the country insist that the inauguration should go ahead while the court is allowed to do its job of deciding who won the presidential election.

This is not the first time a president will be inaugurated while contestations about the election are still pending in the court,” according to those familiar with the nation’s political system.

Nothing Will Stop Tinubu’s Inauguration Says Army

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Bola Ahmed Tinubu At Arewa Joint Committee Forum

The Nigerian Army has assured Nigerians of the smooth inauguration of president-elect, Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

Tinubu is billed to be sworn in on May 29 as the country’s 16th president and commander-in-chief despite controversies surrounding his election.

He will replace the incumbent, President Muhammadu Buhari who is expected to step back in a few weeks after the end of his eight-year term.

Some Nigerians have expressed reservations about his impending inauguration, while others have called for the institution of an Interim National Government, ING.

On Wednesday, a former Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, John Cardinal Olorunfemi Onaiyekan said the cases arising from the February 25 presidential election should be dispensed with by the tribunal before Tinubu is sworn in.

Not many agreed with the respected Catholic cleric.

Speaking ahead of the May 29 inauguration the Army said it will be hit-free to ensure that ‘nothing unwanted happens.”

It also warned those planning to scuttle the inauguration to have a change of heart.

The Director, Defence Media Operation, Maj.-Gen. Musa Danmadami, told reporters in Abuja that the military and other security agencies are working together so that the country had a smooth transition of power.

According to him, “The issue of threat to the security and stability of the country is addressed promptly. Elections have come and gone. For the presidential election, a winner has been announced.

“There is a transition committee in place comprising all members of the security agencies, ministries, and agencies of government to make sure the event is held successfully and without a glitch.

“We don’t see reasons why there should be a problem during the activity. The inauguration will come and go and nothing will happen.

“We are not going to relent at ensuring there is peace and stability across the length and breadth of the country.”

OPINION: The Fowl of Mecca and Nigeria’s Census Palaver

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Azu Ishiekwene

By Azu Ishiekwene

We have a measurement problem eloquently illustrated in a Yoruba tale about a Mecca has-been. The fellow in this tale had just returned from a pilgrimage to Mecca, apparently the first to do so in his community. Upon his return, folks were understandably curious and wanted to know about the Holy Land.

Thinking of what would best illustrate the majestic splendour of Mecca, the sojourner decided to use a native fowl as an example.

“You all know our native fowl?,” he began.

“Of course!,” his curious, attentive listeners chorused.

“The fowl in Mecca is as big as a cow, if not bigger!,” he told them.

“Oh no!,” one rather incredulous listener said, amidst the rapturous gasps of h-e-n-e-n-h-e! “Big as a cow or big as a goat?”

“Ok,” the sojourner replied, “Let’s say it’s as big as a goat!”

“Oh no!,” the incredulous interlocutor reposed again. “Big as a goat or as big as a rabbit?”

This encounter continued until the sojourner, lowering his hand each time he was challenged, grudgingly lowered it until the point where nearly everyone finally concluded that the size of the fowl of Mecca was not significantly different from the size of the local one.

The tale of the fowl of Mecca is a metaphor of our census dilemma. We have spent nearly 60 years counting ourselves and yet, the answer to Nigeria’s census question is: it depends on whose hand is at play.

The Nigerian Population Commission (NPC) estimates that Nigeria is 218 million; the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) puts the figure at “over 200 million”; while the UNFPA and the World Bank estimate Nigeria’s population at between 216 million and 218 million, or thereabouts.

Former President Goodluck Jonathan even said at a recent event that Nigeria is not 200m. “Far from it,” he reportedly said on April 14. “We should be about 150m.”

As things stand, Nigeria is in the company of Afghanistan, DR Congo, Uzbekistan, Madagascar, Eritrea and Lebanon as countries without a census population. The only thing certain about the Lebanese population, for example, is that there are more Lebanese in the Diaspora than at home!

The recent attempt to have another count in Nigeria, already overdue by 17 years, has been postponed indefinitely. After a hasty meeting on Friday night between President Muhammadu Buhari and the Chairman of NPC, Nasir Isa Kwarra, the Federal Government announced that it had decided to let the incoming administration handle the census.

The postponement did not surprise me. After years of doing nothing, the Board of 36 commissioners and a relatively unknown chairman have become so used to pay and prestige without work that getting any serious census off the ground was always going to be a tough job.

Ten years ago, former Managing Director of Nigerian Breweries Plc and Chairman of NPC, Festus Odimegwu, was forced to resign his position because he said Nigeria could not have a meaningful census except certain fundamental changes were made.

He said at the time, “If the current laws are not amended, the planned 2016 census will not succeed.” By that, of course, he meant laws that make the population of states a basis for the sharing of oil revenues and political representation.

His comment ruffled feathers. President Jonathan who already had his back to the wall sacked Odimegwu to appease deeply offended interests in the North who thought the NPC chairman could not be trusted to conduct a credible census.

It turned out, however, that Jonathan’s sacrifice was neither enough to secure him Northern sympathy in the 2015 election nor did the census hold as planned in 2016. His successor, Muhammadu Buhari, after promising to hold the census in May 2023 has now kicked the can down the road, with no shortage of excuses.

The most obvious one was the shift in the date of the governorship and state house of assembly elections. The NPC said the shift in state elections from March 11 to 18 complicated its original plans to have the census between March 29 and April 2.

That is potentially true, but mainly false. The shift by one week may have momentarily affected NPC’s planning and execution, but only momentarily. The Commission was not ready, simple. Apart from those in its glass-panelled offices in Abuja and a few staff in the states, NPC has been very busy talking to itself.

It was not the shift in election dates by a week that complicated NPC’s problem. Its unseriousness was worsened by widespread complaints about the failure of the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) bimodal verification system. NPC was deeply worried by the prospects of a flawed count piling on the unresolved BVAS mess.

Another sign of unpreparedness was the questionnaire – the basic instrument for the 2023 census. On April 14, the NPC Director of Public Affairs, Dr. Isiaka Yahaya, was quoted to have said in Kano that the Commission would not ask questions about religion and ethnicity in the census!

Why not? What is it about respondents’ religion and ethnicity that NPC is so afraid of that it desperately wants to expunge from the questionnaire?

If there was anything that needed a review, it is the often-weaponised “state of origin” which could have been replaced with “state of residence,” for example. But to pretend that it’s OK to strike out religion/non-religion and ethnicity and make us a bunch of aliens is, well, largely alien to population census. I don’t know where this idea is coming from or what NPC hopes to achieve.

But none of the countries I have searched turned up this demographic insanity. Not India, the world’s largest multi-ethnic democracy, where everything from caste to mother-tongue and migration status is required; not South Africa or Kenya; and certainly not Ghana, Nigeria’s neighbour.

Yet, what these countries have in common, but which Nigeria lacks, is significant degree of reliability in primary data on births, deaths, school enrolments, migrations and so on, managed in secure systems and regularly updated. Without reliable primary data, any census conducted — whether every five, seven or ten years — is a waste of time. And without this data also, no reliable planning or forecast is likely.

It would seem that the real elephant in the room, though, is that the NPC knows the Bola Ahmed Tinubu government would reject the outcome of a census rammed down the country’s throat with only days before President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration leaves.

They’re dealing with a familiar customer. It was Lagos State, under Tinubu, that dragged the Federal Government to the tribunal over the 2006 census, on grounds that the state’s population had been underreported by nearly half its size.

The current Lagos Deputy Governor, Femi Hamzat, who was the Commissioner for Science and Technology at the time, produced a book on behalf of the state, entitled, “Errors, Miscalculations and Omissions: The Falsification of Lagos Census Figures,” which essentially said that instead of the 9.1 million which the NPC had awarded the state, its own shadow census showed the state actually had a population of 17.6 million.

Nothing much came out of the legal challenge, but Odimegwu’s complaint seven years later re-echoed the sentiments of Lagos and significantly explains the scramble, this time, to nick the census before May 29.

If Kwarra and his commissioners are deceiving themselves, Buhari knows that Tinubu’s government will not accept any census result under the current circumstances. That is why the census was postponed.

Yet, given the current structure of the country, especially the conservatively dominated National Assembly, it would be difficult to have a credible census, even under Tinubu, without a review of the law that makes population the basis of sharing oil money.

Under the “horizontal sharing” formula of 26.72 percent of revenue in the federation account, for example, population accounts for 30 percent. This figure could be cut to 10 percent; while internal revenue which currently gets 10 percent could be increased to 30 percent.

Appeals not to politicise the census is empty, self-serving noise. Politicians will not relent, unless there is also a countervailing legislation that ties the extent and scope of Federal intervention in states to the taxes or royalties collected from the states and, fundamentally, to how much wealth the states themselves create.

Nothing short of a drastic action will cut the politics of our census fowl to its true size.


Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

Egbu Diocese Celebrates Pioneer Bishop Iheagwam’s  80th Birthday –10 Years After Bowing Out

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Professor Emmanuel Uchechukwu Iheagwam and His Wife

By George Best Okoroh

The entire congregants of the Diocese of Egbu, Anglican Communion, Oweeri North, Imo State, on Tuesday, 2nd May 2023, celebrated their pioneer Bishop, the Rt. Rev. Professor Emmanuel Uchechukwu Iheagwam who clocked 80 years. This celebration came 10 years after the retirement of Iheagwam as the Bishop on clocking 70 years of age.

Iheagwam, an academic-turned Bishop, a Professor of Zoology, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, accompanied by his devoted wife, Mrs Ada Iheagwam, a Geographer, was full of joy that he was celebrated alive and not in death. He gave all thanks and praises to God Almighty who made it possible.

In his sermon, the Bishop of the Diocese of Egbu, Iheagwam’s solid successor in office,  since 2013,  the Rt. Rev. Geoffrey Enyinnaya Okorafor,  described the octogenarian as an epitome of humility whose good legacy will always be remembered in the annals of Egbu Diocese, popular as Holy Ghost Diocese.

According to Bishop Okorafor, the Rt. Rev. Prof Emmanuel Iheagwam was being celebrated because of his leadership qualities and pragmatic approach to issues.

He quoted the pioneer Bishop as always saying that ”we are all learning in every day of our lives”.

Bishop Okorafor recalled that Egbu Diocese, when established in 1996, was not giving the chance to survive based on the circumstances surrounding it at that period while under the Diocese of Owerri. But pointed out that with the pragmatic leadership qualities of the pioneer Bishop, the Diocese has clocked 27 years, and still standing very strong on its feet.

Bishop Okorafor highlighted some of the achievements of Bishop Iheagwam before he bowed out of office to include the establishment of Archdeacon Dennis Foundation International Boys Secondary School, Egbu which kick-started same year the Diocese was established, the recovery of Egbu Girls Secondary School as a Missionary School owned by the Diocese  from the State Government, Palm plantation project at Emeabiam area of Imo State as well as other agrarian projects provided huge income to the treasury of the Diocese and many more.

In the words of the Lord Chancellor of Orlu Diocese and a retired Judge of Imo State, Goddy Anunihu KSC

“I joined the Service and Ceremony marking the 80th Birthday anniversary of Rt. Rev. E. U. Iheagwam Rtd. Via Zoom from my holiday location in Manchester United Kingdom. It was really glamorous.”

He Congratulated  the Bishop Emeritus, the Incumbent Bishop and the Planning committee ” for a good outing.

Some of the dignitaries who graced the event include the Archbishop emeritus of Ecclesiastical Province of Owerri and retired Bishop of Orlu, Most Rev. B.C I Okoro, Bishops Chidi Oparaojiaku, Emma Maduwihe PhD, Chamberlain Ogunedo, retired Bishop of Mbaise, Rt Rev Bright Ogu  and their wives.

The Chancellor of the Diocese, Chief Magistrate Maureen Onyewuotu, and the Legal team were also present as well as Hon. Justice Ijeoma Agugua.

Others present were Senator Sam Anyanwu (Sam Daddy), the Governorship Candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party,  who unveiled a book, “Autobiography of the Rt Rev Prof. Emmanuel Uchechukwu Iheagwam” as part of the events which marked the Bishop Iheagwam’s 80th birthday.

Also in  attendance were  Hon James Onyeriri, the Lord Chancellor of Oji River Diocese,  Bar. Aham Eke -ejelam (SAN), Hon. Rogers Nwoke, and Sir Sam Ojukwu amongst several others.

Save Democracy In Nigeria

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CJN and NBA President

As the Presidential Election Petitions Tribunal gets set to begin hearing on the various election petitions before it, the NEO AFRICANA CENTRE (NAC) has called on the judiciary to rise to the occasion and be prepared to play its role as the bastion of democracy. The public policy think tank said it is compelled to make this charge in the light of the many flaws and infractions that characterized the 2023 general elections. The Centre believes that there is an urgent need for the judiciary to intervene in order to save democracy in Nigeria from total collapse.

In a statement by its Director of Public Affairs, Jenkins Udu, the Centre expressed grave concern over the charade called the 2023 elections, a situation which it said has given rise to the plethora of litigations the tribunal is saddled with. It has therefore charged the judiciary to live above board by cleansing the Augean stable of the 2023 general elections.

The statement reads in part:

“As a Public policy think tank concerned with the tripartite principles of democracy, good governance and the rule of law, we have remained scandalized by the elaborate charade which the Independent National Electoral Commission shamelessly passed off as elections in Nigeria in 2023. The exercises which held on February 25 and March 18 remain a huge national embarrassment. The electoral commission did not just subvert its own rules, it abandoned midstream the technological innovations which would have made the conduct and outcome of the elections almost seamless. While we do not intend to go into the nitty gritty of the flawed exercises, we make bold to say that the February 25 presidential election was the worst of its kind that Nigeria ever experienced. The electoral commission failed the country spectacularly.

“The Centre is of the considered opinion that this failure by the electoral body should be mitigated. This is where the judiciary comes in. As the bastion of democracy, the judiciary cannot afford to fail where other arms or institutions of government fail.

“Regardless of what many perceive as miscarriages of justice which have dogged the judgments of the courts in recent years, we still believe strongly that the judiciary can salvage itself and the country from the mess we have on our hands.

“Unlike what obtained in the recent past where our courts, including the Supreme Court, have been pooh poohed over scandalous judgements, the judiciary must put its acts together this time. It must shun those pitfalls that have made some of our judges objects of ridicule and derision. If the judiciary fails, the country would have failed holistically. Such a grim prospect will be injurious to the survival and sustenance of democracy in Nigeria.”

The Centre said it wants the judiciary, as was the case in the past, to put the country first by upholding the principle of integrity and keeping dirty compromises or inducements at bay.

“The people are watching and you cannot afford to fail,” the statement concluded.

Uzodimma, Adamu Commission Ehime Mbano FG Water Scheme

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Uzodimma with Adamu

A Federal Government initiated Water Scheme located at Ezeala Akpaka, Umueze 1 in Ehime-Mbano Local Government Area of Imo State was on Thursday handed over to the Imo State Government after it was commissioned by the Minister of Water Resources, Eng. Suleiman Adamu, assisted by Governor Hope Uzodimma.

Addressing the people at the handover and commissioning ceremony at Umueze 1, Governor Uzodimma thanked President Muhammadu Buhari for granting approval that the project be located in Imo State and assured that it will be protected by the people.

The Governor said that the project was one of the numerous projects President Buhari was gracious to grant their approval and location in Imo and said the people of the State will remain grateful to him.

He reminded the audience that the Water project belongs to the community and the entire Okigwe zone and urged the community members who turned out in good number to protect the project and ensure it is not vandalised by thieves and criminals.

The Governor said that he had it on good authority that the Water project was originally conceived to serve 200,000 households but what is on ground can only serve 50,000 households and pleaded with the Minister of Water Resources to endeavour to ensure that the remaining 150,000 households are not denied the opportunity of drinking healthy water.

He thanked the Minister for personally coming to commission the project and for his efforts in the Inyishi Mega Water Scheme in Ikeduru, noting that reports before him indicate that the “Inyishi Water Scheme can still be completed by this administration.”

In his address, the Minister thanked the Governor for all his support towards the success of the project.

He said that Imo State is one of the States in Nigeria to benefit from the World Bank Sustainable Water Scheme.

Adamu joined the Governor in asking  the community to protect the project “because government will not be always there to protect the project.”

He informed that the investment in the Water Scheme is huge and the benefits are enormous.

The Managing Director of Anambra Imo River Basin Authority thanked the Minister for making the project a reality. He also thanked the Governor for the conducive environment he created and the community, for providing their land for the project.

He further thanked President Buhari for the approval to locate the project in Imo State in general and at Ezeala Akpaka in Ehime-Mbano LGA of Imo State Nigeria in particular.

Earlier, the Imo State Commissioner for Water Resources,  Lady Ann Dozie had assured that the Scheme will be reticulated and protected.

She thanked the Governor for the opportunity and all the necessary support that made the project come to fruition.

The Governor was accompanied by the Secretary to the State Government, Chief Cosmos Iwu, the Chief of Staff, Bar Nnamdi Anyaehie and  members of the Expanded Executive Council.

Uzodimma: Lawyers Play Stabilising Role In Society; Declares 2023 Law Week Open in Imo

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Hope Uzodimma with Court of Appeal Judges

The Imo State Governor, Senator Hope Uzodimma on Thursday, May 4, 2023 declared the 2023 Law Week, organised by the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Owerri Branch open, submitting that lawyers play stabilising role in the society and should not abuse the privilege.

In his speech at the ceremony held at Villa Garden Hotel, New Owerri, Governor Uzodimma assured the lawyers that the State Government will continue to support their stabilising role to the society by way of providing enabling environment that will help them to discharge their duties effectively.

The Theme of the Law Week 2023 is – State of legal practice in Nigeria: Imo State in Focus.

The Governor who decried the attitude of some lawyers with regard to pursuit of frivolous petitions and motions that often cause delay in court proceedings, urged the judges to discourage such acts as they contribute in disrupting the processes of justice delivery.

He bemoaned a situation where some lawyers have deliberately delayed and asked for adjournment to enable them continue to collect appearance fees among other despicable acts.

He reiterated that the significant role lawyers play in the society is such that “the rich and mighty will not trample on the less privileged.”

Governor Uzodimma insists that the duties of lawyers should centre around “upholding and maintaining the rule of law as well as defending dignity of humanity,” and that “a lawyer should show good conduct, be diligent to the service of his client,” while “Judges should recuse themselves from handling cases they have interest.”

The Governor said that his administration has made the welfare of lawyers in Imo State a priority since he came to office, paid arrears of salaries he met in office, provided official cars to judges, signed into Law the Criminal Justice Act, in addition to the establishment of Alternative Dispute Resolutions (ADR) to ease justice delivery  “and have continued to appoint only men and women of proven integrity into the Bench.”

According to him, the provisions of the Administration of Criminal Justice Laws, which he signed into law as soon as he assumed office “was to encourage speedy trial and discourage unnecessary adjournments.”

Governor Uzodimma further tasked judges on speedy dispensation of justice, especially as it concerns the common man.

In her speech, the Chairman of the opening ceremony and Presiding Justice, Court of Appeal, Ibadan Division, Hon Justice Chioma Nwosu-Iheme, said she was delighted to be with the lawyers, noting that Owerri Bar remains her Base where she started her Bar assignment.

Justice Nwosu-Iheme described Owerri Bar as one of the best, not only in the Eastern part of Nigeria but the entire Nation.

She said this year’s theme is very apt in legal practice in Nigeria and told the lawyers to think again about what they do in courts today with Exparte motions.

In his welcome remarks, the Attorney General/ Commissioner for Justice Imo State, Barr. C.O.C Akaolisa welcomed the Governor and all that graced the occasion and thanking the Governor in particular for his financial and moral support to the Bar.

He promised on behalf of the Bar that the lawyers will continue to support his administration.

Earlier in his opening address, the Committee Chairman of the 2023 Nigerian Bar Association Owerri Branch Law Week, Bar Jude Nnodum, said that “for some years now, each year’s Law Week had focused on a diversity of issues of national importance,”  emphasizing that “this year was a time for self examination, a time to access the state of legal practice in Nigeria.”

“This is the reason for choosing this year’s theme: “STATE OF LEGAL PRACTICE IN NIGERIA: IMO STATE IN FOCUS.”

In his address of welcome, the Chairman, NBA, Owerri Branch, Mr. Ugochukwu Damian Alinnor thanked Governor Uzodimma and other legal luminaries for honouring their invitation.

He said: “There is the urgent need to purge ourselves of various interests which tend to restrict us from assuming our pride of place in the court of public opinion and the Nigerian polity. Our aim, therefore, at this year’s NBA Owerri Branch Law Week is to check our scorecard, to see whether we are progressing or retrogressing, as well as finding out how to make meaningful progress in this new age ”

The event was attended by Judges of the Court of Appeal Imo, Chief Judge of Imo State, Justice Theresa Eberechukwu Chikeka, President Customary Court of Appeal Imo State, Hon. Justice V.U Okorie, the Speaker Imo State House of Assembly, Secretary to the Imo State Government, Chief Cosmos Iwu, the Chief of Staff, Barr Nnamdi Anyaehie, former NBA President, Mr. Olumide Akpata, among others.