Thursday 10 November 2016

Reactions Trail Lawmakers’ Decision To Probe MMM Operations

Hours after the House of Representatives in Nigeria initiated a
process to probe the operations of a Ponzi scheme, MMM, Nigerians,
apparently those engaging in the scheme, are reacting to the decision.

The House had mandated its committee on banking and currency and
financial crimes to investigate the operations of the internet based
wonder bank, known as "MMM Nigeria scheme".

But some Nigerians took to Twitter, posting different tweets in
response to the initiated probe.

One of the tweets read: "Leave us alone…. We want to be scammed by
MMM. Our Reps have been scamming Nigerians ever since. Probe
yourselves".

Another tweet read: "MMM has kept the unemployed out of the street
seems they want them back@to be queening before their industry for
employment?".

-ChannelsTV

Reactions Trail Lawmakers’ Decision To Probe MMM Operations

Hours after the House of Representatives in Nigeria initiated a
process to probe the operations of a Ponzi scheme, MMM, Nigerians,
apparently those engaging in the scheme, are reacting to the decision.

The House had mandated its committee on banking and currency and
financial crimes to investigate the operations of the internet based
wonder bank, known as "MMM Nigeria scheme".

But some Nigerians took to Twitter, posting different tweets in
response to the initiated probe.

One of the tweets read: "Leave us alone…. We want to be scammed by
MMM. Our Reps have been scamming Nigerians ever since. Probe
yourselves".

Another tweet read: "MMM has kept the unemployed out of the street
seems they want them back@to be queening before their industry for
employment?".

-ChannelsTV

Sunday 6 November 2016

Cattle On The Loose Compete With Vehicles In Nigeria’s Capital

The indiscriminate movement of cattle around the Nigeria's Federal
Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, has attracted a warning from the
administration of the FCT.

The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Mr Muhammed Bello,
issued the warning on Saturday while reacting to the increasing
movement of herdsmen and their cattle within Abuja.

Mr Bello was reacting to the increasing presence of cattle in the city
centre of the nation's capital, which he said must not compete with
vehicular movement.

He asked the herdsmen to move only within bush paths and not in the metropolis.

The minister further assured Abuja residents that the FTC
administration was accelerating the development of the grazing
reserves for cattle.


Muhammed Bello says animals should not compete with vehicular traffic
on the street
While the residents express displeasure with the movement of cows in
the city centre, herdsmen say they have nowhere else to go, requesting
that the government should create grazing areas for them.

Movement of cattle within Abuja has become a familiar occurrence for
many residents of the FCT.

Cattle now co-habit with human beings, disrupting car movements and
littering the streets with their dung.

This has raised serious concerns among residents, with some insisting
that animals should not be moved around where people live and a city
like Abuja, the nation's capital where foreign could come into at any
time.

Cattle grazing is illegal in Abuja's city centre, but the recent surge
has raised questions on what the FCT administration is doing to
address the menace.

The Abuja Environmental Protection Board put together a taskforce that
includes security operatives to enforce the directive of the FCT
administration. But that has not yielded much result.

A total of 33,485 hectares have already been earmarked for grazing
reserves to cater for about seven million herds of cattle.

The reserves are Paikon Kore – 8,500 hectares, Karshi – 6,000
hectares, Kawu in Bwari – 9,000 hectares and Rubochi in Kuje which is
9,985 hectares.

==ChannelsTV

Tough Journey Through Owerri-Port Harcourt Expressway

A journey to the state through Imo State in the east use to be an
excitement in the minds of whoever decides to travel, but this joy and
excitement are gradually fading and turning into sadness, as a journey
to the oil city through Imo State now leaves commuters exhausted.

What use to be an exciting journey has now left residents of Umuapu in
Ohaji Egbema Local Government Area of Imo State as well as commuters
in lamentation, with a passionate appeal to the Federal Government to
make their journey exciting once again.

Work had been abandoned for over four years, with the road now in ruins.

The users are asking the government to mobilise the contractors and
ask them to return to the road and resume work.

At a time that the Nigerian government is pushing economic
diversification, with so much focus on agriculture as the way out of
the economic recession, residents in the area are finding it had to
move their farm produce to cities where they can sell them.

The condition of the road is causing untold hardship for us, as it is
now difficult for us to transport our farm produce to consumers,
residents of the area said.

While farmers lament the hardship, commuters, who ply the road daily,
said the bad state of the road had made it easier for criminals to
perpetrate their evil acts on the road such as kidnapping, car
snatching and armed robbery.

They called on President Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government to
come to their aid and fix the road for the good of the people.

Over Four Hours Journey

The Owerri-Port Harcourt federal highway is one of the important
highways in the southern region of Nigeria, as it connects Imo State
to other South South states like Rivers, Cross River and Bayelsa.

During its good days, which is about five years ago, travelling from
Owerri to Port-Harcourt takes less than an hour.

Sadly, the once motorable federal road has now become a nightmare and
death trap on the Imo end of the road. One of such spots is the Umuapu
community in Ohaji Egbema, about four kilometres to the Rivers State
boundary. To get to Port Harcourt, it now takes over four hours with
heavy traffic.

A private car owner, Mr Derrick Nnamdi, told Channels Television that
"ordinarily, though, I drive fast, it takes me approximately 45 to 50
minutes between Owerri and Port Harcourt, but now it takes over two
hours to get to Port Harcourt.

"Sometimes if the community here have their market, you may spend
about 50 minutes' stand still in this community before you can pass.

"After the boundary, to Port Harcourt, it is a pretty smooth drive".

A public bus driver, who plies the roads on a daily basis said: "We
need road. No road for us. Every time we are suffering, especially on
this federal road. They told us that within eight years this project
will be completed when they started, but since that time and now there
is no difference and we are still suffering. Rain or no rain, every
day we suffer.

"If we buy car parts today after two days we go back to get new ones,
but before now when the road was good at least our shaft use to last
between four to five months before we get new ones but now only two
months we buy new shaft.

"So, we need help. They should help us. From Port Harcourt the road is
nice but once you enter Imo State, it is bad".

According to reports, the road was said to be awarded in 2009 by the
Goodluck Jonathan's administration through the Ministry of Niger Delta
Affairs to Arab Contractors at the rate of 23.1 billion Naira.

The people of the area claimed to have only seen Arab Contractors
working on few kilometres of the road from Owerri to Umuagwo, a
neighbouring community, where they stopped work. While the residents
of the area continue to wait for the contractors to resume work on the
remaining portion of the road, their wait has been to no avail.

An Indigene of Umuapu Community, Andrew Enyinnaya, gave his own side
of the story.

"Infact we have been dying not even suffer for this road. Arab
Contractors have been working on it. Two years ago, they stopped by
three to four poles away from here. And since they stopped work, we
have been dying not suffer. Even though the old road we use for
by-pass is bad, trailer and big lorries have spoilt everything. There
is no road, no way, no nothing. So, we have been suffering much"

"Please, you people should come and rescue us from this bad road and
many things come from here, food, garri, Akpu, cassava, everything but
no road to bring it to town. We are not receiving anything from the
government. I am telling you the fact. Without being told you can see
for yourself," Eyinnaya said.

Other commuters appealed to the Federal Government to resume work on
the road especially as the yuletide season is drawing closer so people
can travel freely to enjoy their Christmas and new year season with
their families.

In a quest to know what could be the challenges holding the execution
of the project, Channels Television visited the office of the
contracting firm handling the project but could not get any useful
information, as the public spokesman for Arab Contractors in the
state, Mr Mark Eke, refused to speak, maintaining that he had no
authority to speak on the matter.

Fortunately, the crew stumbled on the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs,
Usani Uguru Usani, at a workshop he attended in Owerri the Imo State
and he said that paucity of funds due to the dwindling nature nation's
resources has hampered the commencement of work on the road.

The minister said: "The development of infrastructure is not a moral
responsibility, it is a responsibility and duty anchored on variables
which cannot be assessed in casual terms. So, when I talk about budget
and development in building and construction, as a journalist, you do
not expect me to begin to give you time lines. You know our budgetary
allocation, It is in the website of budget and planning. So, we are
dispensing resources according to what is available and according to
certain laid down criteria. If we have all the money, we will give to
all the contractors but even the Federal Government doesn't have all
the money to sponsor all the projects that is why they are ongoing
projects.

"So, we are assigning resources as we receive. knowing fully well that
you cannot carry out anything beyond the budget line. All I can say is
that money given to us to work we will continue to apply it. We should
also be able to appeal to contractors sometimes to be able to execute
according to what they get, because sometimes the work is
under-performed relative to resources received."

"The situation about each road in Nigeria is not in isolation. It is
the fate of collapse of infrastructure in the country. So, that this
project is under the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs is only by
assignment of responsibility.

"But it is not in any way different from what is happening about
infrastructure in the entire country. You know for more than seven
years the total infrastructure collapse has been there and you can see
that the government has made tremendous effort beginning from budget
appropriation to give 30% to infrastructure, rehabilitation and
development.

",So our situation is just the same but handicapped as you know our
work is determinable by availability of resources or lack of same" the
minister said.

When asked if there was any appeal the Federal Government had for the
commuters who have been complaining of the hardship experienced on the
road, the minister said:"Complaining about the Federal Government's
inefficiency in working on the road is loss of sense of history. How
long do you expect the road that has been dilapidated for 10 years to
be taken to repairs. Meanwhile, you know that the resource base of the
nation has dwindled for over many months, therefore it is difficult to
expect that the hen will lay eggs for the goose, each animal species
will lay its own egg, so if the public is quarrelling it is because
you the journalists are telling them to quarrel".

If there is anything to go by with what the minister has just
revealed, surely there seems to be no end in sight to the sufferings
and hardship of commuters plying the Owerri-Port Harcourt expressway,
as they will need to wait for a longer time before this road receives
attention of the Federal Government.

-ChannelsTV