Monday, 31 March 2014

Premium Times ‏@PremiumTimesng 5m Court to rule on Sanusi's suit April 3 http://goo.gl/NEJzxT

The Health and Human Services Secretariat (HHSS) of the Federal Capital Territory Administration has confirmed that no cases of Ebola virus were diagnosed in the city as reported by some media organisations.

This was contained in a statement signed by the Public Relations Officer of the HHSS Mr Badaru Yakasai. It said the suspected case that was referred to Irrua Specialist Hospital was tested for Lassa Fever (which has similar clinical presentations as Ebola) and the test result was negative.

“The FCT Department of Public Health under the Health and Human Services Secretariat, whose mandate is to investigate and report outcome of all suspected outbreaks is in contact with Irrua Specialist Hospital and the Centre confirmed that no Ebola has been confirmed in this case,” it said.

It however stated that samples have been taken to a more specialised Centre for further investigations.

SSS Jailbreak: How Wendell Simlin Feeds Our Scepticism

It’s been 33 days since presidential aide Reno Omokri was exposed as Wendell Simlin, a pseudonym he tried using in linking suspended Central Bank Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi with the spate of terror attacks in February. Reno Omokri got caught, so thankfully the conversation he sought to get started with his Wendell Simlin email never really started.

He instead helped start a conversation around the motive of the presidency with respect to the continued terror attacks in Nigeria. On that 26th day of February 2014, Reno Omokri showed what many had suspected, that the presidency uses the terrorist attacks as a political tool for its own gains. That Reno Omokri got caught helped prove this to a large extent because Reno Omokri works directly with Oronto Douglas, the man many consider as the brain of the Jonathan administration.

There are few strategic or tactical political moves made by the presidency that are not moves orchestrated by Oronto Douglas. This explains why the presidency has kept a loud mute since Wendell Simlin got unraveled as Reno Omokri. That silence will always come at a cost as long as it remains.

The Financial Times, the BBC, Thisday, Daily Trust and several other newspapers, magazines and columnists have written about the presidency and its silence on Wendell Simlin, yet that silence persists. This is one reason why the “attempted jailbreak” claimed by the State Security Service as the reason for the gun battle that ensued at its Head Quarters holds little water. Marilyn Ogar, the SSS spokesperson said, “At 07:15 hours, the Service suspect handler went to the detention facility within the Headquarters to feed the suspects.

“One of the suspects attempted to disarm him by hitting him at the back of his head with his handcuff. His attempt to escape drew the attention of other guards at the facility who fired some shots to warn and deter others.

“The gun shots attracted the attention of the military with which we have an understanding of mutual assistance in the event of any threat. The Army immediately deployed a team to reinforce our perimeter guards to forestall any external collaborators. The situation has since been brought under control.”

There are holes all over this statement. Were it a movie script, it would have been a poorly written one. The SSS is claiming a handcuffed man overpowered its own operative, shot same, and freed other inmates. Where did the other inmates get the guns and bullets they used in engaging the SSS in a prolonged gun battle? How did these inmates breach the SSS’s revered impenetrable security system?  And that attempted jailbreak has since left 22 inmates dead? Never to speak, never to reveal whatever they knew about Boko Haram and their sponsors? Surely, there is more to this jailbreak cover up.

The military needed RPGs and Armoured Personnel Carriers to quell the battle, yet the SSS wants us to believe this was just a jailbreak? A jailbreak that showed that, had the military not been in tow, the SSS would have been overpowered. So then, the escaping inmates suddenly possessed more weapons than operatives of the SSS?

You would notice several theories are already developing around what truly happened. Many have refused the cock and bull tale shared by Marilyn Ogar for obvious reasons; it just didn’t represent the truth, or at least the whole truth of what happened on Sunday morning, 30th March, 2014. Our government should be concerned about this sort of skepticism from the general public, a skepticism that continues to be fed by their insistence on playing pranks with national security.

Had the government for instance distanced itself from Reno Omokri’s Wendell Simlin email, and followed suit with a sacking and investigation of the incident in question, it would have laid down its own commitment towards the fight against terrorism and its insistence on ensuring that Nigeria’s fight against terrorism is not politicized.

It is too late now as the politics of terrorism in Nigeria had its ante raised by the Wendell-Reno-Omokri-Simlin email. When the President once said he had Boko Haram members in his cabinet, he made a statement that put members of his cabinet and his aides in a big box of suspicion. 

When former NSA, General Azazi blamed the PDP for the escalation in terror attacks, that box got even bigger. One would have expected that the presidency would take up the Wendell Simlin incident as a marker to show others that it would not condone the use of terrorism as a political tool.   

So then, the silence of the presidency on Wendell Simlin continues to read loud and the presidency would always be suspected when incidents like the supposed SSS jailbreak happen – or are made to happen. Now, how will a government fight and win the war against terrorism when it cannot be trusted with the fight?

Reno Omokri did not only shoot himself in the foot with his Wendell Simlin stunt, the silence of the presidency continues to fire repeated shots on the foot of the presidency with every decibel of sound that continues to be subjected to the shackles of silence.

Friday, 28 March 2014

NIS Recruitment Tragedy: Moro Accepts Responsibility

The Minister of Interior, Comrade Abba Moro, has admitted responsibility for the death of about 16 persons during the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) recruitment exercise held on March 15.
 
The minister made the admission yesterday while appearing at the opening of a two-day public hearing held by the Senate Committee on Interior on the exercise.

“As the Minister of Interior, under whose purview this unfortunate exercise took place, I cannot abdicate my responsibility,” he said. “The buck stops at my table.”

He expressed regret that a well-intended exercise ended in tragedy.

Meanwhile the Comptroller General of the NIS, Mr. David Parradang, absolved himself of any wrong doing, stating that the minister took the decision on the recruitment exercise unilaterally.
Mr. Paradang, explained that he was not even aware of the aptitude test until a meeting of the board held in January.

FCT Minister Dispels Rumour of Bomb Explosion in Abuja

Following a gas explosion at Area 1, Garki, Abuja yesterday, the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Senator Bala Mohammed, has refuted reports that there was a bomb explosion in Abuja.
 
This was contained in a statement signed by the Special Assistant on Media to the minister, Mr Nosike Ogbuenyi. The minister enjoined all residents and visitors in the territory to go about their legitimate activities without fear.

The statement explained that the gas explosion occurred at a shop located at Shagari Plaza opposite the Area 1 shopping Centre, when a gas seller was refilling a cylinder for a customer at about 4.45pm.

Men of the FCT Fire Service arrived promptly at the scene and put out the fire thus preventing it from spreading, it said, adding that there were no casualties from the incidence.

House Direct Committee to Investigate Abuja Park and Pay

The House of Representatives has mandated its Committee on the Federal Capital Territory to carry out a public hearing to investigate the process leading to the concession, award and operation of the “Park and Pay Policy” in Abuja metropolis.

This came as a result of a motion raised by Hon Bitrus Kaze who noted that the companies contracted to implement the policy do not maintain any infrastructure or provide professional services. He added that the companies only remit between 10 to 40 per cent of generated revenue and keep 60 to 90 per cent to themselves.
Hon Kaze further stated that the policy which was initiated in 2012 order to create sanity in traffic management in the city centre has become an avenue for exploitation, fraud and other forms of illegal practices.
The committee was given three weeks to make recommendations to the House.

Abuja Court Revokes Polish Woman’s Bail

A Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court yesterday revoked the bail it granted to a Polish woman, Ms Dora Gilmaska, for absconding from trial on two occasions.
Ms Gilmaska, who was arraigned by the EFCC for issuing N9 million dud cheque to one Mr Tayo Olugbemi in 2012, failed to appear in court on Oct. 8, 2013 and on Feb. 17 as required.
Counsel to the accused, Miss Tina Debai, did not oppose the submission of the EFCC counsel urging the court to revoke the bail. “My lord, all our efforts to reach the accused was unsuccessful,” she said.
Preising Judge, Justice Abubakar Umar, therefore, ordered that the accused be arrested and remanded in Suleja Prison and adjourned the case until June 10 for hearing.

An Evening with Eugenia Abu

For its anniversary edition, Friendraiser Community, in collaboration with Vlisco, hosted Mrs. Eugenia Abu at the Silverbird Cinema last Friday. The event started an hour late, a delay for which Inimfon Etuk, the founder of Friendraiser, would apologise and explain it was a result of a clash in scheduling with the cinema. “There was a film showing,” she said, “so we couldn’t set up on time.”

At 7 pm, Ini, as she was called throughout the night, invited the special guest to sit on stage and when she had sat, a video about her life played on a projector. The first scenes of the video were blurred as the lights in the hall were inadvertently left on. The video detailed random facts about her career in broadcasting, writing, mentorship, and the process leading up to her selection as 'Vlisco Woman of the Year 2013'.

Eugenia Abu, discomfited by the effusive praise of her on screen, cast her face aside, smiling, as she does when there is a technical hitch on the NTA Network News at 9.

A panel made up of her friends, colleagues, a relative, and a Caucasian first-time visitor to Nigeria joined her on stage. With Ini as moderator, they attempted to deconstruct her. They praised her in her capacity as a friend, humanitarian. In an attempt to decode her, they probed every aspect of her life, both public and private. How was it possible, it was asked several times, to be as famous and as busy as she was and yet be married with six (well-behaved―according to popular opinion) children? She said she has had help from family, friends, and colleagues. The response was too simple to be satisfactory. There must be something extra she is not telling us, some secret.

The visitor, who was only a week old in Nigeria, expressed surprise at how gorgeously dressed everyone was before asking Aunty Eugenia―that was the preferred form of address for the evening― about the challenges she has encountered in life and how she managed to overcome them . Before responding to her question, Aunty Eugenia stood up, flaunted her gown with extra large, puffy short sleeves, and acknowledged her designer who was in the audience.

When the audience was given the chance to interact with her, more questions about broadcasting, about NTA followed. What advice would she give an aspiring broadcaster? How assertive should a woman be at the work place? Having been spotted reading the news just a day before, was she back to the Network News for real? Could she change the NTA Network News theme song, if she could? Does NTA feel threatened by AIT?

As almost everyone in the hall knew her personally their questions were preceded by flattering anecdotes. I, too, had stories to tell, only my source, childhood memories, was unreliable.

I remember we were neighbours at Assembly Quarters, Makurdi, around 1990. She was maybe married but living alone. Already working as a journalist with NTA or some radio station. Very busy. Never at home. This made her front-yard a convenient rendezvous for children in the neighbourhood. Besides there was the shade and fruit of a fruit tree. I remember the few times she was at home she would make us sweep her frontage. I thought she was mean. Children should play, adults should clean their mess.

First I need to check with older siblings if this episode I hold precious in my head is indeed reality. While the authenticity of that story is pending, I remember her much younger relatives accusing Aunty Eugenia, whose English is as impeccable as a non-native speaker’s can be, of preferring their more eloquent sister to the rest of them. But that should be a story for another evening.

By Ladi Opaluwa

Thursday, 27 March 2014

“Why We Need to Do the Right Thing”

Mr. Mike Omeri, the head of the National Orientation Agency (NOA) spoke to Joshua Ocheja and Tomilola Amudipe about his signature programme and other issues

It is widely believed that the NOA operates more as the propaganda arm of government, rather than a re-orientation agency. What’s your take on that?
Well, if the NOA is described as the propaganda arm of government, what else do they want us to do? Be the enemy of Nigeria? But what I know and I insist is that and you can do a psychoanalysis of all that I have said since I came here and whether anything that I have said is contrary to what society wants and not. If you talk about railway, there are railways. If you talk about airports, go there and see first. If you talk about agriculture, go there and see what is happening. I challenge journalists who have interviewed such people who claimed that we have been compromised to do an analysis, to take steps to investigate and come out with a position.
I am an investigative journalist by training and if I see people doing investigation especially for information, I get excited. Yes we are compromised for good governance, we are compromised for Nigeria and we have no shame about it. We are compromised for patriotism and we love our country and we have no shame about that.  
“The Do the Right Thing” is your signature intervention. Why is such a campaign necessary?
We conducted a baseline study and discovered that every Nigerian wants and desires the right thing. Every Nigerian dreams the right thing but Nigerians are not working for the right things. So we thought we should come up with a charge for Nigerians. It is not a slogan but a charge to remind Nigerians that these right things that we talk about and need are a collective task and it begins with the individuals. Therefore it’s a call to action because there are so many aspects of values that we have neglected that are right and that we want. We have decided that we take them one after the other. For instance, a Nigerian may think that not planting tree is the right thing to do or throwing dirt on the road is the right thing to do. And because we are so accustomed to doing what is wrong, we think that what is wrong is right. So this campaign is to wake us up to the reality to what is right.
Can you share with us the roadmap and the success of this campaign?
Part of what we intend to do is to rebrand. As a fact we have rebranded the then WAI Brigade into Community Support Brigade. The idea is to have this and other such platforms in the communities spread out there and supporting people to do the right thing, reminding people about what is right and doing it always. But aside from that, we are also the campaign to the government and to public servants. Every civil servant knows that there are rules of doing what is right and therefore if we remind them through our patriotism and ethics roundtable, through our various conferences and workshops which we have signed a collaboration with the office of the Head of Service of the Federation, it will give us a mileage towards achieving what we are doing.
We are also working in the schools through our campus focus programmes because these issues that need corrections are in all aspects of our lives. So every organised group and some unorganised ones are our platforms and therefore we approach them with the message of doing what is right relevant to their sector. We have been to the markets, we have been to road transport workers, government offices, we have had executive business roundtable involving some agencies of government and we intend to continue with that. So in that way we hope that the message will sink in. But importantly, the Patriotism and Ethics First platform of the NOA is a roundtable model that is created by the agency in the states and within agencies of government. Using that method, we have 5000 or more roundtables going on in this country and we expect that it will grow. We hope to get Nigerians talking and listening because at the moment we do a lot of talking but not listening. So through this roundtable method, we hope Nigerians will listen and share experiences and we see it reflected in the display of values that we crave for.
What impact do you think this campaign will make?
Imagine for you, a day that you wake up as an individual and decide to report to work and do the right things. Imagine how it will turn out to be and if all of us choose to do what is right in our homes, workplaces and other social spaces and in interactions with people. Imagine the difference it will make in our lives. So a community that is doing what is right will reap the benefits of productivity and organisation. But cast your minds back for those of us who have experienced the past of Nigeria when government was never there, when little of government was known, when government was heard of as a distant phenomenon, how were the people surviving? They were organised around values. Nobody wanted to steal anything because it’s not a good thing to do so. What we are simply saying is return to values. So it is dependent and incumbent on us now to be the Sardaunas, the Azikiwes, the Awolowos and the Macauleys of Nigeria.
Some believe the challenges are deep-rooted. How do you factor that into the campaign?
I just visited the Universal Basic Education office and I am about to visit the TETFUND and other similar agencies and the education resource centres. What we are doing is calling for the return of the teaching of history. At least Nigerian history and the introduction of patriotism and civic education in schools because within these are the values. There exist 40 basic proven principles of character. And if you observe any one such as integrity, honesty, love for your neighbour, etc., you will make positive impact in the society. So in essence, we are taking the campaign to the primary schools using our local government model because we are spread in all the local government areas and the states. Our staffs at that level are engaging with primary schools and such institutions.
We are also in the secondary schools, universities and other tertiary institutions. We just came back from Kebbi State University of Science and Technology where we had the campus focus programme geared towards bringing back values to that layer of the foundation of individual development.
The NOA under your watch has been very active. Would you like to share with us some of your other interventions since assumption of office?
We have been active as a result of enthusiasm and belief that the transformation agenda will work this time. Yes we have quite a number of interventions that we have introduced like the campaign on environmental sanitation which is a collaborative effort with other government agencies. We also have the joint collaborative initiative on disaster mitigation and awareness. We embarked on advocacy and community awareness and so people will know the dangers of abusing the environment and building within disaster-prone areas etc. We also have the theatre for development which we use to dramatize issues, using the same people in the communities to interpret messages of government and it has been quite effective especially when we implemented the freedom of information public sensitization campaign in some communities. We have also the community interactive and engagement platform. We have been working hard to get a radio station that will essentially be reflective of the character of the agency itself, speaking to the communities in their local languages and giving these communities a voice. We need community radio stations to fill in the gap that the social space has created. So we are working on that and so many other initiatives that we have introduced which I cannot easily enumerate but I can say that with very little logistics support we are able to provide some made in Nigeria vehicles to our state offices and head office for operational purposes.
You mentioned the made-in-Nigeria vehicles. Do you want to shed more light on it?
We have been leading the campaign for the patronage of made in Nigeria products. We were the first to acquire made-in-Nigeria vehicles for official and operational use that are made in Nigeria because after ours, a lot of other agencies are beginning to patronise. The Federal Government has made it a policy to patronise a made-in-Nigeria vehicle and with the coming of the National Automotive Act, you can see that what we started as a little campaign, what the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investment is pursuing as a campaign, what the transformation agenda has introduced is beginning to get the attention of Nigerians and everybody is involved in the process. Don’t forget that we just had a Made- in- Aba Fair in Abuja. It was fantastic and you needed to see what was on display.
What is the Neighbourhood Development Ambassadors Scheme about?
We have actually changed the name since then to Citizens Responsibility Volunteer Scheme. This is supposed to be a volunteer-based scheme to be located in the communities: people helping communities organise themselves, supplying energy, talent and education. It is a holding platform in the vision of the agency for those who are yet to be engaged or acquired any formal employment to be productively and positively engaged within communities and neighbourhoods so that they can add value and through that eventually discover that they can empower themselves from their talents within the community. So instead of sitting down and doing nothing, the scheme can be a worthy alternative and we intend that in the long run we would get the MDG Office and ITF and other agencies involved so that certain projects that can be implemented in communities can attract the labour of the Citizens Responsibility Volunteers. In that way you trap income within the community, you get multiple benefits because people will now respect, protect and use what they perceived to be their own creation in the communities. Our hope is that it will eventually lead to creating a people who will end up cooperating to build their communities.
How has the response been?
Well, we have not implemented any major programme yet because we are still at the training and advocacy stage. So people need to know exactly what it is and to be able to key into it. At the community level I have discussed with the young people and they are willing to be a part of it because they have signed up.

Confab: Sultan Leads Protest Team to Jonathan

The Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Saad Abubakar III, yesterday led some Muslim leaders to President Goodluck Jonathan to protest the composition of delegates to the National Conference.
The Sultan however refused to speak to newsmen at the end of the closed door meeting with the president at the Presidential Villa.

The Secretary General of the Nigeria Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, said the President assured them that there was no deliberate move to marginalise Muslims at the conference. “We are happy we consulted with him,” he said, “and he has given us reasons to re-assure the Muslims that Muslims in Nigeria are not deliberately marginalised and he has asked us to convey the feelings of the government, the genuineness of the government, the fairness of the government to the entire populace.”

“If there are issues that are not as they ought to be, they were not definitely deliberate and we want to believe that Mr. President told us his mind,” he added, “but we also want to believe that it is proper to protest.”

Reps Approve Creation Revenue Agency for FCT

The House of Representatives has adopted a recommendation of its committee to establish the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Internal Revenue Service for the territory.
 
The report was a product of a bill referred to the House committee on FCT headed by Hon Emmanuel Jime. It provides in clause 1 that: “There is established a body to be known as the Federal Capital Territory Internal Revenue Service (in this bill referred to as “the service”).

Clause 2 of the report states that: “The object of the service shall be to control and administer the different taxes and laws specified in the first schedule or other laws made or to be made from time to time by the National Assembly or other regulations made there under by the government of the federation and to account for all taxes collected.”

While clause 3 provides that there shall be a board for the service with an experienced chairman, directors of treasury, legal services, lands, planning and survey, area councils and Abuja Infrastructure and Investment Company who shall be appointed by the Minister of the FCT subject to confirmation by the National Assembly.

Fourteen out of the 86 clauses contained in the report were adopted. When established, the FCT Revenue Service will be saddled with the responsibility of assessing, collecting and accounting for all revenues due to the territory.

NEMA Donates Drugs to FCT NYSC

The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has donated drugs and consumables to the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) orientation camp.
The Coordinator of NEMA, Abuja Operations office, Mr Ishaya Chonoko, made the donation yesterday in Abuja, on behalf of the NEMA Director-General, Alhaji Mohammad Sani-Sidi. He said that the gesture was in fulfillment with the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU signed between NEMA and NYSC to mitigate and prevent disasters at the grassroots.
“NEMA has an MoU with NYSC that has been very effective, especially in mitigating disasters in the grassroots using the available manpower in the NYSC,” he said. “It is the tradition of the Director-General of NEMA to donate drugs to attend to emergencies that may occur while corps members are in the camp.”
NYSC FCT Camp Director, Mr Anthony Enweonwu, who received the items on behalf of the Director-General, Brig.-Gen. of the Corp, Mr. Johnson Olawumi, commended NEMA for the gesture. He assured that the drugs would be used for the benefit of the corps members and for other community development activities after the orientation camp.

60 Soldiers, 40 Policemen Deployed as FCTA Demolishes Estate

No fewer than 60 soldiers and 40 policemen were on ground at the Saraha City Estate, Gwarinpa Abuja as the Department of Development Control, Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) began the demolition of about 200 houses in the estate.

The demolition team which arrived at the estate yesterday morning, sealed off the two gates leading to the estate and drafted armed soldiers to area to prevent residents from going in or coming out from the estate. Many of the house owners who had gone to their places of work before the demolition team arrived later came and met their buildings pulled down.

Several people were said to have been critically injured and properties worth billions of naira were destroyed in the cause of the exercise.

Lawyer to the house owners, Mr Femi Falana (SAN), expressed shock over the incidence and described the demolition as illegal, especially as the matter is pending before Abuja High Court 24. He promised to take up the matter with FCDA and the court.

Shame

Cairo reminds you of everything that is wrong with Abuja. It hits you how much of a fraud many government projects are- more expensive than anywhere else but of less quality. 
You think of the Abuja airport and the billions that have already gone into the remodelling. The airport is not a place you want to spend any time. It is unwelcoming and basic and all you need to do to drive you to anger is look beyond the new tiles and newly painted walls. The airport in Abuja teaches you not to expect anything, reminds you that you are in transit, warns you not to get comfortable. 
 
In Cairo, free WiFi welcomes you as you make your way from the plane to your transit gate. Your ticket says you will be here for more than three hours before your Harare flight. After an initial feeling of gratitude, you feel ashamed. You should not be so grateful. In your country, dozens of billions of dollars go missing without consequence every other year. There is no reason the Abuja airport cannot be one of the best in the world. Shame is in order as you send emails and tweet in an open Italian restaurant. 

A few days after, in the Vumba countryside of Zimbabwe you are taking long walks through game reserves and old castles. Abuja is a distant memory. You are now an oil-rich Nigerian whenever people ask where you are from. You do not tell them that the plains and landscapes you are seeing are more beautiful than anything you have ever seen in Nigeria.
Someone is taking you up the hill to a quiet scenic small holding where a famous baker called Tony performs culinary wonders. At Tony’s you choose chocolate whisky cake. You look at people’s faces and you realise you are not the only one reacting this way to Tony’s cakes. The word to describe the feeling exists only in Hausa. You explain to your friend that there is no English equivalent for Santi. You can only explain with a story about sugarcane. Sugarcane you say, is meant to be enjoyed in moments of calm and reflection. And for you, such enjoyment can only happen with at least two sticks of sugarcane. The first one to cool you down, to lubricate your throat, prepare you for the real journey. The second piece is the journey, to the sacred land of santi- a Hausa concept symbolising extreme sensory excitement from food. You define the word: “Santi is a hausa term with no known English equivalent describing intense sensory, and at its peak, near orgasmic reaction to good food.” 

Back at the hotel, an old white man walks up to you and ask if you are the writers he has heard of. 

‘Yes,’ you say.

‘All local?’

‘From Ghana and Nigeria’

‘Oh Ghana is alright. But Nigeria, not so much.’

You all laugh. But he is not joking. 

‘I sent someone up there once to start a brewery. My people said, the people want to drink our beer but they just can’t do business there.’

You are not sure how to respond to this. It is possible to defend Nigeria and say that corruption is everywhere and all but you will not. Not with things like 20 billion dollars going missing with no consequence. There are better ways to use your time. Like enjoy the beauty of Zimbabwe. And the santi from Tony’s cakes.

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Dream Homes at Asokoro Gardens


The near-magical Asokoro Gardens appeals to the suburban dreams of the resourced and the discerning, writes Osang Abang

Perched on the hills overlooking Asokoro, the office of real estate developers SED Limited is the perfect place for a postcard picture of Abuja.
The panorama through the windows is both a visual and a socio-economic milieu of the city. At the center, the skyline is punctuated by the World Trade Center and the Millennium Tower, the glint of the NNPC Towers, the façade of the Central Bank of Nigeria, the dome of the National Assembly, the spires of the Central Mosque and the arches of the National Church of Nigeria. To the west the greenery and residential buildings blend into the horizon. To the east Aso Rock stands sentry over the city. And below, in the distance, along the Abuja-Keffi highway, cars the size of matchboxes drive by.
 
The SED offices are situated in a prototype of the Deluxe Villa of Asokoro Gardens, the first phase of SED Limited’s audacious real estate project Sunrise Hills.
 
On display in the foyer of the SED offices is the model of Sunrise Hills: a miniature city within a city with a 570 hectare green wonderland mapped with villas, high-rises and compounds. In the works are plans for a 5-star hotel, golf course, hospital and the largest shopping mall in West Africa.
 
For a project this massive, any one of its features would be an ideal jump-off spot. But the company has gone with Asokoro Gardens, a 20-hectare residential component. Of this choice Mr. Sami Jaoude, the Managing Director of SED Limited, says the idea is to under promise but over deliver.
 
Asokoro Gardens is divided into three areas: The Olu Edidi compound comprised of five apartment buildings with 70 units of two and three-bedroom apartments and four-bedroom penthouses; The Greens, an area of four and five bedroom duplexes; and the privately gated units, a luxury area of 10 made-to-specification standalone duplexes and 11 villas.
 
Bringing expertise from Lebanon and the Mediterranean, SED’s approach to the residential architecture is a fine blend of Mediterranean Revival, Spanish Colonial and modern styles. The duplexes of the greens and gated units feature spacious balconies, and the villas with their voluminous depth, recessed porches and classical columns have an enchanting historic quality.
 
But for all the variance in building types, a stylistic cohesion is achieved, with smooth, stucco walls in earth tones for all the units. More stunning is its intelligent design that incorporates natural lighting with energy efficiency. With tall, floor-length windows positioned in the direction of sunlight, the buildings of Asokoro Gardens have a natural luminosity that minimizes the use of electrical lighting for most of the day. For safety, all upper windows feature decorative wrought iron balconets. SED, from a cross-section of the completed units, is making good on a modest promise in an especially unforgiving terrain.
 
The area housing Asokoro Gardens and the Sunrise Hills is geographically tricky. A composite of undulating hills and low valleys, the area is resistant to ease, a challenge SED Limited and its construction partners seem to relish.
 
Pointing out how meticulously each building was realised in relation to the surrounding land, Mr. Jaoude smiles. Despite their similarities, each building is unique, he says. Each house was constructed differently, to deal with sewage disposal and water pressure, according to its area.
 
As if to emphasize SED’s approach, across the valley, in the area of Asokoro extension, a house is being built in what is an excavated area cutout of the hillside. It looks like an asteroid crater: the house sits on a flattened area surrounded by earth-faced walls without any concrete reinforcement.
 
Asokoro Gardens tows a different line. SED maintains its natural vistas with environmental sustainability and 75 percent of the property is dedicated green area. Every house is surrounded by grass with space for private gardens, and the overall impression is one of being in inhabited pastureland.
 
SED Limited’s motto is ‘you are what you live,’ a fitting statement of aspiration. A new building is a part of a city’s social and architectural history and an indicator of its future. Abuja’s metropolitan aspirations rest on complementing its city center with true suburbs. The suburb is the thin line between the rural and urban, a space requiring a delicate balance of the provincial and the modern—criteria under which Asokoro Gardens qualifies.
Prices
-       Stand Alone House (5Bdr): N450M
-       Compound House Type I (4Bdr Duplex): N250M
-       Compound House Type II (4Bdr Duplex): N295M
-       2Bdr Apartment: Starting at N115M
-       3Bdr Apartment: Starting at N125M
-       Large Deluxe Villa (6Bdr): N850M
-       Deluxe Villa (5Bdr): N750M
Contact
Phone: 0813 666 6612; 09 870 1631
Email:   This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. info@sed-ltd.com This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Website: www.sed-ltd.com
See below for more pictures


 


Okadas Return to City Centre


Despite the ban, commercial motorcyclists find their way back to the city centre, reports Malik Yila.
 
 
Abdullahi Auwal, 29, is a motorcycle (okada) operator who transports passengers to and from the AYA in Asokoro at least four times a day, defying the FCT’s order forbidding him and other motorcyclists from operating in the city centre.
Kayode Fanola of the Federal Road Safety Corps secretary, when he was the FCT sector commander, told Daily Trust newspaper that commercial motorcyclists are not welcome in town. “They are banned from the city itself. By this we refer to Wuse District, Maitama, Asokoro, Utako, Jabi up to Life Camp, even Gwarimpa.
 
“They are allowed only in the satellite towns such as Nyanya, Gwagalada, Bwari, Abaji, Kuje, Kubwa etc. Those are the places they are allowed to operate. The federal capital authority ordered that any bike that flouts the law should be seized. We don’t even expect to see them in the city. They are banned from operating in the city in daytime or at night,” he said.
 
The ban has been in existence since 2006 and was put in place by then FCT minister Nasir El-Rufai, but not even the current FCT minister, Bala Mohammed’s recent complaint about the renewed presence of okadas in central areas discourages Auwal and other okadas, who continue to ply his chosen route in the heart of Abuja.
 
“It is far more rewarding financially than operating in Masaka (an outskirt part of the FCT, where he lives). It takes me less than 30 minutes to get to Ado (where he took this writer to), as you can see. The N400 you are paying me now will take me far more time to make at Masaka.”
 
From A.Y.A., motorcyclists charge N50 to ECOWAS or Asokoro General Hospital at any time of the day, but Auwal says he does not go beyond A.Y.A.
 
Metropole’s findings revealed that there are military men and policemen, both serving and retired, among the motorcyclists riding around in the daytime, especially those who go further than the roundabout into other parts of Asokoro.
 
These men, who are older and more orderly in the more rugged and sometimes unkempt young men from the outskirts, operate freely and with more confidence, notwithstanding the presence of law enforcement agents, including men of the FRSC and VIO.
 
Despite Bala Mohammed’s directive that they should be arrested and prosecuted, the young men are not deterred. Sunday Orji, who lives in Mararaba, says there will always be a way out if he is arrested, as long as it is not by officials of the Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB), who, once they arrest a motorcyclist and confiscate his bike, that’s the end for the owner.
 
“I was once arrested by the police and spent six hours begging. I had to pay N500 because I told them I had not worked that day. The other time I was arrested, they collected N3, 500 instead of the usual N10, 000.”
 
But the services of okadas are in high demand, particularly among people who have appointments and cannot go through the hellish traffic hold up that is the bane of residents who live on the outskirt of town.
 
“I hope your story does not lead to a clampdown on them [okadas], because they rescue us from that dreadful hold up,” said Victor Bako, a lawyer.
 
However, safety is a major concern for passengers. Most often than not, okadas do not obey traffic rules; they overtake from any side of the road and ride against traffic in one way streets. Even when a passenger warns them against speeding before climbing the bike, once they move, they ignore the warning.    
 
Theresa Anjekele is a banker who closes late from work, but she prefers to endure the traffic hold up than take a bike home. Still physically and mentally scarred by her experience with an okada several years ago, she does not think she will take one anytime soon.
 
“This mark you see on my leg (she lifts her trouser to reveal a massive weal) was caused by one stupid acaba (Hausa word for okada) and it reminds me not to climb another one,” she says.
 
With risk comes reward for these stubborn okadas. They don’t risk arrest and their safety simply because they want to rescue passengers from the tiring Nyanya-Mararaba hold up. The longer and heavier the traffic, the better for them because then they have the bargaining power to charge higher fares.
 
Having plied the road for about two years, Auwal makes between N2, 000 and N3, 500 daily after deducting money for fuel and other expenses, and has saved enough money to buy a car to use for taxiing. He says he is better off now than when he had a monthly-paying job.
 
“I used to drive a school bus where I was paid N20, 000 monthly, but the pay was always delayed and even when it came, I had almost nothing left after settling my debts,” he says with a chuckle.
 
Now his two children are among the first pupils to have their school fees of N40, 000 paid. “Since I stopped driving the school bus and bought this motorcycle, I have been able to take care of my family and by the end of this month, I shall have my own taxi.”
 
In about a year’s time, the Federal Capital Territory is likely to have another minister, and whether or not he decides to really put a stop to the invasion of the capital territory by okadas, Auwal believes that after he buys his taxi he will no longer have to fear arrest, but says his other colleagues will always find a way around attempts to reduce their income.
 
“Any okada who plies this route from Nyanya-Mararaba to A.Y.A. and back will not want to stop, even if it means bribing law enforcement agents, because what we make on this road monthly is more than what some office workers make,” he concludes as the writer reminds him that he has reached his destination.    
 
See below for more pictures:
 Man Patronising an Okad

Even on the Walkway

Right in the City Centre

On the Highway

FG Distributes 3 Million Free Exercise Books to Pupils


In its determination to attain the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of Universal Basic Education, the Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on MDGshas distributed three million free exercise books to indigent pupils across the country.
 
Speaking at the event which took place yesterday in Abuja at the Cinema hall, Centre for Arts and Culture, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on MDGs, Mrs. Precious Gbeneol, said the distribution of the exercise books was aimed at easing the burden of the benefiting poor families as well as stimulate the interest of the pupils in education.
 
Mrs Gbeneol explained that in order to achieve its objective, government has also deployed Debit Relief Gains (DRG) to fund projects and initiatives in the education sector, with a focus on the issues of quality, capacity, access and relevance.
 
Also speaking, the Executive Secretary, Universal Basic Education Commission, (UBEC) Mr. Dikko Abdullahi represented by Mr. Pius Osaghae, said the provision of the free exercise books would go a long way in ameliorating the plight of indigent pupils and their parents.
He promised that UBEC will ensure the effective distribution of the exercise books throughout the country, using the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) platform.
 
that government untiring efforts in the educational sector was yielding positive results, stressing that the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) report of 2013 showed that in 2012, primary school attendance ratio was 71.0 per cent which represents 10 per cent improvement in comparison to 2008.
 
She added that 83.9 percent was in urban area, while 63.4 per cent was in rural area, nothing that secondary school net attendance ratio was about 54. 8 per cent, while rural accounted for 46.2 per cent.
 
She further stated that Grade 6 (six) completion rate was about 87.7 per cent, representing about 5.7 per cent increase compared with the 2004 figure and 12.3 per cent lower than the MDG benchmark. A further breakdown of the figure shows that completion rate was about 81.5 per cent in the urban area and 90.5 cent in the rural area.
 
According to her, through the DRG, "in 2011 and 2012, a total sum N26.1billion was invested in 261 local governments area with the execution of more than 15, 000 high impact MDGs related projects across the country in the education, income generation, agriculture, health, water and sanitation sectors"
 
"There has been a successful execution of 12, 342 water and sanitation projects nationwide with the construction, renovation and equipping of 5, 206 health facilities. About 68, 430 health workers were trained to provide the much needed skilled health services at the grassroots; funding was also made available to 1, 704 beneficiaries to aid agricultural enterprise start-up". She added.
 
Gbeneol noted that through the support to the National Teachers Institute (NTI) and UBEC for the Federal Teachers Scheme (FTS), MDGs has trained and retrained an average of 120, 000 teachers annually from 2006 till date, the scheme she said was meant to provide teachers with requisite skills and to be able to impart same knowledge to their students, adding that 672,135 primary school teachers have benefited since 2006.
 
She stressed further that, about 40, 000 teachers and 5,000 science teachers are recruited every two years under the FTS and were posted to states according to their needs.
 
Gbeneol also said MDGs has made available over N113.75 billion of debt relief to the Federal Ministry of Education from 2006 to date to implement various programmes and projects bothering on girl child education.
 
See below for more pictures:
Cross section of parents and SUBEB officials
Cross section of students
Dr. Precious Kalamba Gbebeol, presenting copies Master Benjamin Suleiman
Dr. Precious Kalamba Gbebeol presenting copies Master Leoumnamene Saturday
Dr. Precious Kalamba Gbebeol, presenting copies Miss Adebowale Olubukola
FCT Theatre group entertaining guests
L-R- Dr. Precious Kalamba Gbebeol and copies  Pius O. Osaghae , Ag director, Academic Service UBEC, presenting copies to Lyop Gloria Mang Plateau State SUBEB
L-R- Dr. Precious Kalamba Gbebeol and copies  Pius O. Osaghae , Ag director, Academic Service UBEC, presenting copies to Monica D. Bukuni, Taraba State SUBEB