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Call For Increase In SSB Tax To 20 Percent Heightens, As Medical Experts, Advocates Expose Health Dangers Accrued To SSB Intakes

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Sugar Sweetened Beverages

By Akinwale Kasali

There is a call from health experts and advocates on the Federal Government to review the Finance 2021 Act on Sugar Sweetened Beverages, SSB Tax, from N10 Per Litre to 20 Percent, due to its hazardous health implications on Consumers.

SSBs can be found in carbonated Soft drinks, energy drinks, concentrates or syrups, sport drinks, pre sweetened teas and coffees, enhanced waters, milk based drinks, less than 100 percent fruit or vegetable juices such as juice drinks and nectar.

The high sugar consumptions among children, adolescents and adults has led to non-communicable diseases, NCDs, such as Cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases and diabetes, which is responsible for 74 percent of all deaths globally, with Nigeria recording a high percent.

The risk of consumption of sugar can be traced to this SSBs which health implication leads to NCDs.

Following this development, health advocates, Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa, CAPPA, said that in tackling the SSB menace and its health implications, Taxation is however an effective policy measure to reduce sugar consumption, control incidence of diet related NCDs and reduced its associated health and economic burden.

According to Dr. Francis Adegbule, a Private Health Consultant at the University College Hospital, UCH, University of Ibadan, “SSBs offer more harm than good. Factors leading to the consumption of SSBs is lack of awareness and public education, affordability of SSB products, mindset, availability, urbanization.

“The intake of SSB leads to obesity, Type 2 Diabetes, Hypertension, Cardiovascular diseases, kidney diseases, Non-Alcoholic Liver Diseases. Study have shown that 30 Percent of Adults in Nigeria have hypertension and this could be traced to intake of SSBs”, Adegbule stated.

Preferring a solution to this menace, Adegbule said it was necessary to build a healthy public policy, and restrictions by Government on the SSB Industry on Marketing of Sugary Foods for Children, heavy taxation of SSBs and reorientation of health services.

He stressed that Water is the best option as against consumption of SSBs.

Adeolu Adebiyi, Senior Regional Policy Adviser, Food Program for Global Health Advocacy Incubator, GHAI, said that increased in SSB taxation was necessary for Nigerians to live healthier and have a healthy environment.

He added that SSB Taxation increment from the N10 per litre to 20 percent taxation was germane so that there would reduction in the consumption of sugar, which will in turn reduce the health challenges the consumers are undergoing.

The Executive Director of CAPPA, Akinbode Oluwafemi said that the SSB industry are saying that the 20 percent taxation is targeted at the masses, who will bear the brunt and also lead to job loss.

Oluwafemi however queried this analogy, stressing that there is no nutritive value SSB products have, rather, it endangers the health of everyone irrespective of status.

He added that what is been advocated for is that when the SSB tax in increased this will deter the minds of the consumers from consuming it because the prices of the SSB products will skyrocket.

“The SSB Industry players are saying it is a lot to send them out of business, but what they need to do is reformulation of their product by reducing the sugar content , and also explore healthier alternatives.

“The industry is just bent of making profit and more profit at the expense of the health and lives of the consumers. Between and profit and Health which is more important?”, Oluwafemi queried.

It would be recalled that the clamour for more taxes on SSB has been rife.

The National Action for Sugar Reduction Coalition, NASR, and the President, Nigeria Cancer Society, NCS, had earlier advocated for more taxes on SSB to create more effect on consumption.

Adamu Alhassan, the co-Chairman of the coalition had argued that the current N10 per litre tax on product has no effect on the production industries.

He said that increasing SSB taxes would improve the health impact of taxation on high blood pressure, stroke and even cancers.

“These diseases are very expensive to treat. There is no evidence that the N10/litre tax has had any such effects on the industry.

“NASR has maintained and has redesigned effort to reduce consumption of these harmful products and ultimately prevent the burden of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) which has been on the increase.

“Taxes can improve health by leading consumers to buy less and lowering the risk of NCDs, it has been scientifically proven that the world has achieved a significant impact on SSB consumption patterns through tax.

“The N10 per litre tax is not sufficient to reduce consumption and consequently, and if tax revenue is invested, can relieve the overburdened health system.

“Countries such as South Africa, Mexico and the Philippines, where SSB taxes have been implemented to reduce the risk of chronic diseases that has burdened families, have not led to job losses.

“Beverage industry arguments are unfounded, as indicated by the evidence from these countries,” Alhassan said.

He stated that Nigeria is in need of more policies that would protect public heath and raise revenue for healthcare.

APGA: Njoku To Dialogue With Soludo, After Supreme Court Affirms Him Chairman

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Edozie Njoku, the National Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance, APGA. has called for a dialogue with Governor Charles Soludo of Anambra State.


Njoku made the suggestion following his affirmation by the Supreme Court ad the authentic APGA chairman. Soludo is the only governor under the party’s banner.


The party has been polarised by two factions led by Njoku and Victor Oye, who has the backing of Governor Soludo.


But following the apex court ruling, Njoku said the Anambra helmsman must embrace dialogue with a view to moving the party forward.


The apex court had through its judgment of Friday overruled itself for erroneously included the name of Oye in its earlier judgment by retired Justice Mary Odili in 2021.

In the lead ruling that was delivered by Justice Mohammed Lawal, the court said it has the powers to review its judgement and correct such “accidental slip or error”, when it is brought to its attention.
It, therefore, issued an order, expunging the aspect of the judgement where Oye’s name was reflected as the national chairman of the party.


The ruling followed a motion that was brought before the court by Chief Njoku.

Njoku had in an application he filed through his team of lawyers led by Mr. Chike Onyemenam, SAN, urged the apex court to correct a typographical error in its judgement, which he said wrongly handed the leadership of the party to Chief Oye.

The Applicant noted that the Supreme Court had in a letter it wrote to him on January 19, wherein it addressed him as the National Chairman of APGA, asked him to approach it by way of a motion to regularize the said judgement.

Relying on Order 8 Rule 16 of the Supreme Court Rules, Njoku prayed the court to correct the said error in the lead judgment it delivered on October 14, 2021, in an appeal that was presided over by Justice Mary Peter-Odili (Rtd).

He specifically urged the apex court to correct an accidental slip at Page 13, lines 3 to 4 of its judgment, where instead of writing the name of ‘Edozie Njoku’ who was unlawfully removed from his position as the person that was validly elected as National Chairman of APGA at the convention the party held at Owerri in 2019, mistakenly inserted the name of Victor Oye, who was not a party in the substantive suit that gave rise to the appeal.

CBN: Banks To Work Weekends To Ease Naira Scarcity

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CBN Gov Emefiele

The Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, says it has directed commercial banks in the country to work at the weekends as part of the engine efforts to ease naira scarcity across the country.

The Godwin Emefiele-led CBN said during the week that the cash problems facing Nigerians will disappear by next week.

To achieve this aim, money banks have been directed to adjust their working days to SaturdY and Sunday, the CBN said in a statement on Friday.

The apex bank also stated that it has evacuated the old naira notes in its possession to the banks for onward transmission to customers.

Recall that the Supreme Court, three weeks ago ruled that the old naira notes of N200, N500 and N1000 remained legal tender until December 31, 2023.

The apex court also directed the CBN to ensure that the banknotes were readily available to customers.
According to the statement signed by the CBN Acting Director, Corporate Communications Department, Isa AbdulMumin, in Abuja on Friday afternoon, the government bank said a substantial amount of money, in various denominations, had been received by the commercial banks for onward circulation to their respective customers.

Deposit money banks, CBN said now have enough cash to dispense to customers.

Part of the statement read “The CBN had directed all banks to load their Automated Teller Machines as well as conduct physical operations in the banking halls through the weekends.

“Branches of commercial banks will operate on Saturdays and Sundays to attend to customers’ cash needs.

“The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr Godwin Emefiele, would personally lead teams to monitor the level of compliance by the banks in various locations across the country.”

The CBN also urged Nigerians to be patient as the current situation would ease soon with the injection of more banknotes into circulation.

Sources in the bank informed the magazine  that the CBN ‘the emergency’ measure to tackle the cash crunch that have affected banks’ customers and businesses  for weeks, may not be unconnected  with the threat by the NigerIan Labour Congress,  NLC to picket CBN offices across the country by next week.Wednesday.

Osun Governorship; Adeleke   Floors Oyetola; Duly Elected; Court Fines APC; Osun Agog

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By Ayodele Oni

It was a relief for Senator Ademola Adeleke as the Court of Appeal in Abuja reconfirmed his election, Friday, as Governor of Osun State.

In a unanimous decision, the three man panel of the Court of Appeal threw out the judgement of the Osun Election Tribunal, and reaffirmed Adeleke as the Governor. The Panel said the Election Tribunal which removed him from office in favor of Gboyega Oyetola, the former Governor, who he roundly defeated in the Governorship election held in 2022, was wrong in all ramifications.

To show how empty the case was, the Court of Appeal fined the APC and Oyetola the sum of N500,000.

Ede, Adeleke’s hometown, immediately erupted in joy. And Osun State is agog!

For the Governor, it is all glory to God and thanks to Osun people by reaffirming support for him, especially, in the House of Assembly Elections where his Party, the PDP, overwhelmingly won.

The Election Tribunal had ruled that Adeleke did not receive the majority of lawful votes during the election.

However, the Court of Appeal has now overturned this decision and upheld Adeleke’s position as Governor.

The three-man panel, led by Justice Mohammed Shuaibu, unanimously agreed that the tribunal’s ruling was flawed, and Adeleke should retain his position.

The Appeal Court Panel has also rescinded the tribunal’s order that Adeleke’s certificate of return should be withdrawn and given to his opponent, Gboyega Oyetola.

One of the key issues that the Appeal Court Panel considered was the issue of BVAS.

It stated that the Osun State Tribunal had made a mistake by accepting Oyetola and the APC’s evidence that there had been over-voting during the election.

The Panel argued that this evidence alone did not prove that there was over-voting and that the Tribunal’s decision was, therefore, incorrect.

PHOTO: Tony Elumelu Celebrates 60th Birthday With Symposium

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The Group Chairman, United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc, Tony Onyemachi Elumelu, CFR, clocked 60 years on Wednesday March 23, 2023 and in commemoration of this event, a symposium was held in his honour at the Tony Elumelu Amphitheatre in UBA House.

The symposium tagged ’60 for 60’ was attended by 60 young beneficiaries of the Tony Elumelu Foundation Entrepreneurship Programme, friends and colleagues

L-R: CEO, The Tony Elumelu Foundation( TEF), Somachi Chris-Asoluka; daughter of celebrant, Miss Oge Elumelu; Founder, TEF and celebrant, Mr. Tony Elumelu; Co-Founder, The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF), Dr Awele Elumelu; and Group Managing Director/CEO, United Bank for Africa(UBA), Mr. Oliver Alawuba, during the symposium held in commemoration of Mr. Elumelu’s 60th birthday, attended by 60 beneficiaries of the TEF Entrepreneurship Programme, held at UBA House, Marina, Lagos.

Tony Elumelu
Group Chairman, United Bank for Africa (UBA), Founder, The Tony Elumelu Foundation and celebrant, Mr. Tony Elumelu; Co-Founder, The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF), Dr Awele Elumelu; Daughter, Miss Oge Elumelu; flanked by beneficiaries of the TEF Entrepreneurship Programme, at the symposium held to commemorate Elumelu’s 60th Birthday held at UBA House, Marina, Lagos.

Tony Elumelu
Co-Founder, The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF), Dr Awele Elumelu; Founder, TEF and celebrant, Mr. Tony Elumelu; and daughter, Miss Oge Elumelu, during the symposium held in commemoration of Mr. Elumelu’s 60th birthday, attended by 60 young beneficiaries of the TEF Entrepreneurship Programme, held at UBA House, Marina, Lagos.

Co-Founder, The Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF), Dr Awele Elumelu, Founder, TEF , Group Chairman, United Bank for Africa(UBA) and celebrant, Mr. Tony Elumelu; and daughter, Miss Oge Elumelu, during the symposium held in commemoration of Mr. Elumelu’s 60th birthday, attended by 60 young beneficiaries of the TEF Entrepreneurship Programme, held at UBA House, Marina, Lagos.

OPINION: Louis Odion: The Matter of ‘Capacity’

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Azu Ishiekwene

By Azu Ishiekwene

Sometimes it feels like we have been childhood friends. That we have known each other forever. For over 30 years since our paths crossed, I can’t remember how many times I’ve called him “Louis,” much less “Louis OsaretinOdion.”

Even now, it feels awkward to write it. I call him by the name that the closest circle of his friends has come to know and call him for nearly three decades: “Capacity!”

And that’s what he calls me too, even though he retains the proprietary right to the moniker. He earned it from the odysseys of a life of sailing against the wind when many of his mates walked a road paved with comfort and relative safety.

His struggles through early school life in IkareAkoko, Ondo State (where his parents stayed after leaving Edo, then Bendel State), his decision to set forth early to fend for himself and make his own luck by accepting and applying himself even in lowly jobs, and his abiding faith in a future that rewards hard work and diligence all combined to toughen his resilience.

These experiences have done at least two things for him. One they have given him wisdom beyond his years. It sometimes feels like he was 50 long ago. And two, his experiences have not only benefited him, they have also strengthened his shoulder for many who would lean on him along life’s journey.

I’ve been one of them. Even though Capacity started out first as a stenographer in Concord newspapers in the early 1990s, we didn’t know each other well until he began to make editorial contributions to the Op-ed pages and later, the back page of what was then one of Nigeria’s most prestigious newspapers.

It was a matter of sheer serendipity and generosity of heart that Tunji Bello, the Group Political Editor of Concord at the time spotted Capacity, encouraged him to get a university degree and later redeployed him from secretarial duties to the editorial department of Concord. But I still didn’t know Capacity well enough at the time.

We began to bond more closely around 1995 when he moved to ThisDay, after the closure of Concord and following General Sani Abacha’s assault on the press, and particularly on MKO Abiola who was detained unto death after he won the 1993 presidential election.

At ThisDay, Capacity started a weekly column, “Bottomline”, which soon became a national must read. Week after week, he brought to bear on his commentary a rare quality of insight and fearlessness which kept his growing fan base locked in and the political elite on edge.

Capacity was a columnist that other columnists had to read, especially on politics and current affairs. One particular article in 2002 bears recalling. Entitled, “Before the Babangida candidacy”, Capacity had taken on a faceless writer whose article was published in ThisDay, promoting the candidacy of military president Ibrahim Babangida.

After claiming he had stepped aside, Babangida was obviously still toying with the idea of running for the presidency exactly 10 years after he annulled the June 12 1993 election and was forced out by General Abacha.

In his usual bang-on-the-nail style, Capacity hammered the hack writer saying that even if the devil had tempted Babangida and he couldn’t summon the will to say no, he ought to have borrowed the sense of shame to resist it.

Two prominent pro-Babangida acolytes and public intellectuals descended on Capacity in a co-authored rejoinder. They attacked his motive, insisting that Babangida was exactly what a broken, wounded country needed. Then the fireworks began. The June 12 faithful-in-residence at ThisDay led by Bello, Kayode Komolafe, Sam Omatseye and Waziri Adio, launched a counterattack.

For me as Editor of Saturday PUNCH at the time, and a columnist too, it was riveting punditry and entertainment. I recall Bello accusing the two pro-Babangida public intellectuals who were in their fifties at the time, of “ganging up to silence a ‘small boy’!”

I was later informed that ThisDay Chairman and Publisher, Nduka Obaigbena, was obliged to call a truce, which also effectively signaled the end of the editorial road for the pro-Babangida merchants hoping to deploy the newspaper in the service of their principal.

This fearless quality of attacking injustice or hubris which he showed early in his career remains the hallmark of his journalism. We sometimes joke that it is a carry-over from his unfinished career as an amateur boxer. Anyone who knows Capacity knows he doesn’t choose his battles carelessly. He is a fighter you would rather have in your corner.

My interest in his work and our bond deepened after he left ThisDay as Deputy Editor and joined SUN in 2002 as the first Editor of its Sunday title. To be a title editor in SUN on the watch of the exceptional Mike Awoyinfa and DimgbaIgwe, ex-Concord staff members and SUN top guns who made Weekend Concord a soar away brand, was quite a task.

As Editor of a weekend newspaper myself, Iwatched Sunday SUN initially struggle to define its identity – a cross between a wannabe red top and something a bit more serious. And then, as Capacity grew into the job, the brand slowly pulled away to become one of the most authoritative newspapers for political interviews and consequential stories. It forced me to reset Saturday PUNCH. I think my friend and Sunday PUNCH Editor at the time, Remi Ibitola, also did the same.

But it was not until after Capacity’s tour of duty at SUN and later, National Life (where he was Managing Director/Editor-In-Chief), that we became really close.

As MD/Editor-In-Chief, he was now straddling the delicate and often potentially hazardous line between business and editorial survival of the new title. It’s not what you find in journalism textbooks. Well-funded newspaper companies abroad are protected from such miseries, too. Their editorial departments are walled off from the business side of the operations.

In a typical newspaper organisation in Nigeria, however, the MD/Editor-In-Chief is – or has to be – an expert at everything from circulation to advertising and from editorial content to digital marketing, if he or she really wants the business to survive.

As Controller at the time, I was also involved in the business aspects of newspaper operations at PUNCH. It was while Capacity was trying to find his footing not as an editorial man, this time, but also as a business manager, that he began to knock on my door more often, to compare notes.

Later, we worked together on a few entrepreneurial ventures, one or two of which we got our fingers burnt, but all of which only further deepened our bond of friendship.

When he accepted to work as Commissioner of Information in his home state, Edo, under Governor Adams Oshiomhole, he did so with great reluctance. Capacity has no patience for bureaucracy, the worst kind of which is the mainstay of public service in Nigeria. Even though his job as a journalist has forced him in the public eye, he remains an intensely private man.

Above everything else, accepting the job meant dividing his time and attention between Lagos and Benin, perhaps for eight straight years? He was concerned about the effect of the job on his mother whom he remains deeply fond of, and also his young family.

Yet never one for half measures, once he took the job, he took it, at a great personal cost. He brought to his office extraordinary goodwill, professionalism and competence, for which he earned great respect and admiration.

I used to tease him that he is one of the few public officers who drove around without a police orderly, even though he had one, and quite often spent his own money to run the office.

Outsiders who didn’t understand his misery hardly flinched from pressing their demands, mostly financial, on the “Honourable Commissioner” to “do something.” He tried but when he had had enough, he resigned voluntarily mid-way into Oshiomhole’s second term in 2015 and in spite of pressure to stay on.

His appointment in August 2019 as Senior Technical Assistant on Media to President (under the office of the Vice President), is well known. But positions have never been what binds us. At core, we share a deep, filial bond for family, profession, faith and justice.

Capacity has an extraordinary network of friends and contacts across age, tribal and occupational lines whose loyalty and friendship he covets. Still, he maintains that space, which Germans call lebensraum, that allows him to enjoy the respect, loyalty and confidence of friends, and yet keep his privacy.

If as Andrew Marr says, every editor needs an editor, Capacity is mine. He has been for as long as I can remember. He is often among my last “gatekeepers,” adding insight, challenging arguments and re-drafting awkward sentences.

And the owl that he is, I’ve sent my articles to him week after week for the last over 20 years, and have gone to bed only to wake up to his feedback in the morning. This is one of the very few editions I won’t share with him before press. I can’t be grateful enough for his labours of friendship in good times and in bad.

Since he insists that he is just 50, I’ll have to accept. But by my reckoning, which of course is not just a number, he has gifts far, far beyond his years!


Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

Group Calls For Arrest, Arraignment Of Protesting Group Calling for Interim Government Over Treason

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Protest in Abuja Calling for Interim Govt

By Akinwale Kasali

A Civil Society Organization under the auspices of Centre for Social and Economic Rights, CSER,  has called on the Department of State Services (DSS) to immediately arrest, interrogate and arraign for treason the leaders and members of a Group, National Youth League for the Defence of Democracy, NYLDD,  who were reported to have staged a protest today 23rd March 2023 in Abuja the federal capital territory and called for the installation of an interim government.

In a press statement issued by the organization’s  executive director, Nelson Ekujumi in Lagos today 23rd March 2023, “CSER condemned in the strongest terms, the irresponsible, reckless, barbaric, provocative, invitation to anarchy and treasonable call by the group who from all intent and purpose are dancing nakedly to the drum beats of it’s anti democratic sponsors who are hell-bent on undermining and truncating Nigeria’s democracy at all cost after their political party and candidate was rejected at the polls by the Nigerian people in an election that was fair, successful and creditably conducted by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

The Group  noted that the 1999 constitution as amended, state very clearly the manner for the installation of government in Nigeria which is via elections as conducted by INEC and that there is no provision in the constitution for the installation of a interim government which the anarchist group is calling for after the conclusion of the 2023 general elections which has received local and international commendation despite some observed lapses which does not in any way distract from the success and credibility of the elections.

However, CSER noted that the treasonable call by this anarchist group (NYLDD) can be gleaned as leaning on support from the previous statement of former president Olusegun Obasanjo and the recent one of the vice presidential candidate of the Labour Party Mr. Datti Baba-Ahmed on a national TV programme, where he said democracy will end in Nigeria on May 29, 2023 if the president-elect is sworn into office in line with the provisions of the constitution of the federal republic of Nigeria, which is utterly reckless, reprehensible, condemnable and amounts to treason.

The group called on aggrieved parties and candidates who took part in the just concluded 2023 general elections to explore the window of judicial process as stipulated by the electoral Act instead of plotting to derail democracy by acts of treason which is condemnable and unacceptable.

The civil society organization used the occasion of the press statement to awaken Nigerians to be alert to defend this hard won democracy which has come under relentless attacks from agents of anarchy and treason in a scenario similar to the June 12 1993 presidential election debacle and must not be allowed to repeat itself.

CSER called on the DSS to immediately arrest the group leaders, interrogate them to name it’s sponsors and arraign for treason in order to safe guard our democracy and national security which is under attack.

House Of Reps Steps Down Bill To Legalize Cultivation, Use Of Cannabis For Commercial Purpose

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By Akinwale Kasali

The House of Representatives has stepped down the Bill to decriminalize the cultivation, use and sale of Cannabis for commercial purposes.

At Plenary Thursday, 23rd March, 2023, the Bill was criticized during the Second Reading by most members  including Speaker of the House, Femi Gbajabiamila.

The criticisms against the proposal forced the sponsors to demand that it should be stepped down for review, a prayer that the lawmakers unanimously granted.

The sponsors had clashed on Wednesday over the proposed legislation.

Benjamin Kalu and Olumide Osoba, had sponsored separate bills seeking to amend the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency Act, to expand the scope of the anti-narcotics agency to issue licences for the cultivation, sale and use of weed.

The proposed pieces of legislation were harmonised and titled, ‘A Bill for an Act to Amend the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency Act, Cap. N30, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 to Confer Additional Responsibility of the Power to Grant and Revoke Licences for the Cultivation of Cannabis (or Any of Its Three Species, Namely Cannabis Sativa, Cannabis Indicia and Cannabis Ruderalis) Plant for Medicinal Purposes; and for Related Matters.’

However, when the bill was up for second reading at the plenary on Wednesday, another member of the House, Miriam Onuoha, protested that the content of the bill was the same as hers.

The Cannabis Control Bill, 2020, sponsored by Onuoha, is titled, ‘A Bill for an Act to Regulate the Cultivation, Possession, Availability and Trade of Cannabis for Medical and Research Use, and Related Purposes.’

The Speaker had, in his ruling, asked both sides to liaise with the Chairman of the House Committee on Rules and Business, Abubakar Fulata, to identify the differences and similarities between the bills ahead of sitting on Thursday.

On Thursday, the two bills, which had different titles, were harmonised.

While Kalu and Osoba maintained the same title, Onuoha’s was titled, ‘A Bill for an Act to Decriminalise the Growth and Use of Cannabis, to Establish a System for the Registration and licensing of Cannabis Growers, Users, Control to legalise the Growth, Sale and use of Cannabis and set out a Legal Framework for the Registration and Licensing of Cannabis Growers and Producers in Nigeria; and for Related Matters.’

Those who spoke against it, especially the Deputy Speaker, Ahmed Wase, and Majority Whip, Mohammed Monguno, condemned its proposed decriminalisation.

Gbajabiamila, who presided over the session and had defended the proposal, noted that it must have been opposed due to the word ‘decriminalise’ in the title of the bill, which he said was not there earlier on Wednesday.

While Kalu and Onuoha were unanimous on the call for the bill’s withdrawal, the former noted blamed the rejection on the harmonisation of the bills, noting that they would be represented separately after a review.

It would be recalled that the Presidential of Action Alliance Congress, AAC, Omoyele Sowore had promised that if he becomes the President of the Country, he would legalize the cultivation and usage of Cannabis also known as Marijuana for Commercial Purpose.

Also, Ondo State Governor, Oluwarotimi Akeredolu had backed the cultivation and usage of Cannabis for commercial purposes saying it would boost yeh economic fortunes of the country.

On January 7th, 2021, it was proposed at the House that there should be a legalisation of cultivation and trading in cannabis, also known as hemp and marijuana, for medical and cosmetic use, research purposes as well as revenue generation for Nigeria.

If the bill becomes law, hospitals and doctors will be allowed to prescribe doses of cannabis for the treatment of patients, while pharmacies and stores will be allowed to sell the drug.

The proposed law, however, sets conditions for the cultivation, buying, selling and consumption of the drug.

In the bill, Onuoha said the objectives of bill, among others, include providing for the “regulation of the cultivation, possession, processing, availability and trade of cannabis for medicinal and researching purposes.”

The proposed law will also provide for “registration and licensing system for cannabis farmers and processors; regulate the cultivation, processing, availability and trade of cannabis for medical purposes; and promote public awareness about the cultivation, processing, availability and trade of cannabis for medicinal and research purposes and its use in relation to medical or health purpose.”

The relevant agencies will be empowered to “regulate the growth and use of cannabis; register cannabis growers and users; issue licences to cannabis growers, processors producers, manufacturers and users; and develop awareness programs on the growth and use of cannabis.”

My Suspension, Beginning Of Ayu’s Exit From PDP – Fayose

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By Ayodele Oni

Former Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose has revealed the next line of what will happen to Iyorcha Ayu, national chairman of the People’s Democratic Party, (PDP), following his suspension from the party.

Reacting to the National Working Committee’s decision on Thursday to suspend him along with others, Fayose  described the action by the Iyorchia Ayu led National Working Committee of the party as “the last kick of a dead horse.”

Fayose, who reacted to the suspension through his Spokesperson, Lere Olayinka, said “Ayu and his cohorts are only entertaining themselves with the purported suspension as their latest comedy skit.”

He said in a matter of days, the inglorious tenure of Ayu as national chairman of PDP will become history and the party will enjoy a new lease of life.

The former Governor, said that himself and others who stood by the party when Ayu and his cohorts left it to die will rescue it and give life back in due course.

“The purported suspension will have no leg to stand.”

Wike Escapes As PDP Suspends Fayose, Anyim, Sets Up Committee To Try Ortom

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Ayo Fayose and Anyim Pius Anyim

By Ayodele Oni

The People’s Democratic Party, (PDP) has weilded its big stick on recalcitrant members as it announced the suspension of a former Senare President, a former State Governor and other prominent members.

The suspension, coming after the poor outing of the party in the just concluded elections, affect former Governor Ayo Fayose and former senate president, Pius Anyim.

Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom’s case has been referred to the a Disciplinary Committee for necessary action.

However, PDP was silent on the leader of the PDP G5 Governors, Nyesom Wike who took the Party to Court to stop his suspension from the Party.

These are some of the chieftains of the party that worked against the interest of the party before the general elections, which led to the defeat of Atiku Abubakar while some governors, national assembly members lost their States.

A statement on Thursday, signed by Debo Ologunagba, PDP spokesman, stated  that “National Working Committee (NWC) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has after very extensive review of the affairs of our Party in the country and pursuant to the provisions of the PDP Constitution (as amended in 2017) referred the Governor of Benue State, Dr. Samuel Ortom to the National Disciplinary Committee over his reported involvement in anti-party activities.

“The NWC also approved the suspension of the following from the Party with effect from today, Thursday, March 23, 2023.A

“Ayodele Fayose, Ekiti State; Sen. Pius Anyim,Ebonyi State; Prof. Dennis Ityavyar Benue State; Dr. Aslam Aliyu (Zamfara State).

“The PDP urges all leaders, critical stakeholders and teeming members of our Party across the country to remain united and focused at this critical time.”