Breaking News

Osun begins Interview for shortlisted Teachers across the State | Governor Adeleke Restates Commitment to Primary Health Care Upgrade. | GOVERNOR ADELEKE GREETS ELDERSTATEMAN, DR OLU ALABI AT 81. | Osun Government Approves Guidelines for Tractor Operations. | In commemoration of Governor Ademola Adeleke’s five-point agenda; | General Infra Projects Add up to make N159b Infra Plan – Spokesperson | WHY OSUN WORKERS EMBRACE GOVERNOR ADELEKE – SPOKESPERSON. | OSUN GOVERNMENT RESOLVES ISSUES AROUND AMOTEKUN RECRUITMENT TRAINING | Over 42,000 pupils, students receives free corrective glasses in Osun – Governor Adeleke. | GOVERNOR ADELEKE CELEBRATES HON KASOPE ABOLARIN ON HIS BIRTHDAY. | I Won’t be Distracted from Good Governance-Governor Adeleke | Osun Government Acted in Line with Public Interest by Submitting Petition to EFCC | Your Best Governor Award for Health Sector is Well Deserved – Telegraph Management | LENTEN: GOVERNOR ADELEKE FELICITATES CHRISTIANS | GOVERNOR ADELEKE CONDOLES AIDE, KAMIL ARANSI, OVER MOTHER’S PASSING | Osun LGs Governor Adeleke Briefs Traditional Rulers, Reaffirms that No Court Order Reinstates Yes/No Chairmen | GOVERNOR ADELEKE PRAYS FOR AND FELICITATES WITH DR DEJI ADELEKE AT 68 | Illegal Occupation of Council Secretariats: Osun Local Government Chairmen, NULGE Drag Yes/ No L.G Chairmen to Courts | Gov. Adeleke Eulogises Obasanjo at 88, Describes Him as Father of All. | Governor Adeleke Launches Stakeholders’ Consultation, Visits Chief Bisi Akande on Recent Developments | GOVERNOR ADELEKE CONGRATULATES NEW NYSC DIRECTOR–GENERAL, BRIGADIER-GENERAL NAFIU OLAKUNLE.

Category: General

Governor-Rauf-Aregbesola

Governor-Rauf-AregbesolaThe Osun Civil Societies Coalition (OCSC) has described theACTION of a serving judge who petitioned the Osun State House of Assembly over alleged mismanagement of the state’s resources by Governor Rauf Aregbesola as strange and unexpected of a judicial officer who knows the nitty-gritty of the law.
TheGROUP, in a petition signed by Comrades Waheed Lawal and Bello Adebayo, chairman and general secretary respectively and sent to the Secretary, National Judicial Council (NJC) yesterday, demanded the investigation of Justice Oloyede Folahanmi.
Justice Folahanmi had sent a 36 -page petition to the Osun State House of Assembly, calling for the probe and possible impeachment of the governor over alleged mismanagement of the state resources if found culpable.
But the OCSC called on the state Assembly to thoroughlyINVESTIGATE all the allegations raised by Justice Folahanmi in her petition, just as it urged the Assembly not to hesitate to impeach Aregbesola if truly he had committed impeachable offence as alleged.
The coalition said, “In as much as we are not in support of corruption, we call on the Osun lawmakers to be fair and transparent in investigating the petition and we demand that appropriate action be taken on Governor Aregbesola if he commits impeachable offence as alleged.”
The petition reads in part, “A subterranean look at the contents of the petition shows that the petitioner who is a serving judicial officer failed to conduct herself in such a manner to preserve the dignity of her office and the impartiality andINDEPENDENT of the judiciary.”
Source :ChidiUkwu.com

Read More
FG Should Pay States for Deductions on Foreign Loans

FG Should Pay States for Deductions on Foreign Loans

 Ex-Minister ofFINANCE, and Co-ordinating Minister for the economy, Dr. Okonjo Iweala
By Yinka Kolawole in Osogb0
As a result of unpaid salariesNgozi Okonjo Iweala2015 and allowances, States in the Federal Republic of Nigeria and other federating units are groaning over injustice melted out to them by the out gone administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan.
While the challenge lasted, some states had engaged the services of consultants in attempt to get the refund of payment made on what was regarded as the “first line charge” of foreignLOANS and interests.
While a few States Kwara, Taraba, Adamawa and Kano whose foreign loans reconciliation were concluded and refunded between 2008 and 2012, others were refused for obvious reasons.
Today, it is a wide spread story of inability to pay workers, untold hardships, poverty and misery to the citizenry of the affected states’ following the dramatic decline in the Federal allocation getting to the States as a result of dwindlingOIL PRICES
Investigationsby THISDAY revealed that from the reconciliation and recovery of several millions of dollars from overDEDUCTIONS of foreign loans’REPAYMENTS (first line charge) on behalf of State Governments, record available to us shows that, in a State like Osun State for instance, “the sum of USD$13.572Billion was deducted  by the federal government forLOAN repayments, loan interest, etc under the first line charge policy. This amount was excluded from all the reconciliations carried out prior and post exit of the Paris and London Club debts.
In a way that suggested attempts to cripple the opposition political party then, a perusal of the first line deductions made from June 1995 and March 2002 which were never refunded by the Federal Government in Edo state was N8, 609, 870,824.20 $161,354,146.80; Osun State was N8,715,757,105.80 -$167,261,095.70; Imo State was N10,013,218,081.30-$185,451,752.90; Bornu State was N10,133,187,816.94 -$194,461,850.70; Zamfara State was N7,472,071,548.90 -$144,169,194.00. Others included Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Yobe and Nasarawa States respectively.
THISDAY’s investigation has equally revealed that based on the above, the FAAC Report of Sub-Committee on Reconciliation of States’ External Debts (December 2007)recommended that another Committee be set up to tackle issues relating to the application of FACC deductions under “First Line Charge” on States’ External Debts profile before April 2002.
It is important to note that despite the FAAC Committee recommendation since December 2007, no new Committee has so far been set up to look into the pending issue of deductions and servicing of loans between June 1995 and March 2002, rather States’ were being treated on individual basis by Debt Management Office These were the States’ earlier mentioned as having collected their refunds.
Investigations also made it clear that the matter was made worse by the immediate past Minister of Finance, who was the Co coordinating Minister for the economy, Dr. Okonjo Iweala, realising that it has opened flood gate of refund to States’ ordered one of the key agencies to close the books.
The exercise therefore revealed that the total deductions from the States’ statutory revenue from June 1995 and March 2002 (period of First Line Charge policy ) were completely omitted in the past foreign loan reconciliation exercise carried out by FAAC Sub-Committee, Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) and Debt Management Office (DMO).
The Federal Ministry of Finance and the Debt Management Office are therefore enjoined to act with dispatch by dusting their books in order to reconcile the figures and effect refunds to the affected states so that they can meet their obligations to their citizenry.

Source:  ThisDay LIVE

 

Read More
OSUN: The Price of Bold Development

 
The present Osun financial crises evoke pity if one takes the time to understand its structural roots. It is hard for those of us who are familiar with the turf watch the  governor, a man of an otherwise adored and praised by his people being picked at by an understandably aggrieved public over the turn of events. It will be a grave political mistake to treat this as a simple public finance management issue and turn a blind eye at the larger picture of fiscal dealings of the federal government with states.
 
 
 
Everyone is familiar with the narrative of a crash in allocation from the Centre. Well, it is real. If the receivables on your budget have had to take a 60% crash without precedence or warning, you are certainly going to be caught struggling in a net awhile, especially if your payables remain unforgivingly deductible at source,  principal, interests and all!
 
 
 
But there is more. The creation of Osun state in 1991 by the Babangida administration left certain key elements out which was key to the survival and thriving of a federating entity – and some of such omission can be observed in a few young states as well. You can expect those states to reach their critical cusp any moment too and manifest fiscal trouble symptoms akin to what we have seen in Osun this far, unless the present federal administration alters the fundamentals to protect other states.
 
No.1. A new state must have a down payment of certain basic infrastructures. For Osun, the capital was billed to be linked to the Ibadan-Ilesha expressway by a 32-km road at Gbongan on the bill of the Federal government. This was left undone. Oshogbo remained a capital with a little “This way to” signboard pointing in its direction. How is that type of an environment to grow and become self-sustaining? Who wants to put his business in a location with no roads in a modern sense? The city was to be skirted by a 30-km axial road to broaden its rim and make movement faster. About 12km of that was built by the Federal government way back under military administration and the rest abandoned. But for the Bisi Akande government of 1999 to 2004, Osun could up till now still be without a state secretariat. The whole environment remained a pastoral and idyllic one, hardly the type that attracts or stimulate forward socioeconomic movement at all.
 
 
 
The Aregbesola administration in its zeal to accelerate economic development in the state had eagerly taken the bull of those projects by the horn and had gone to source long term loans to build those roads I mentioned as well as another federal road linking the state to Kwara. That bridge you see on the expressway that links Oshogbo at Gbongan on your way to Abuja is being built by the state, not the federal government. Pubic schools were pathetic, empty sheds and something just had to be done. Those projects are important if the state is to be stimulated economically and it is not fair for the Federal authorities to have shown a cavalier attitude in its duty to the newborn state 25 years on.
 
I believe if the Fed should repay Osun for those projects today, the state will be out of financial woods for the good part of its present  N36billion salary bill, to begin with.
Talking about salary, how does a state like Osun cope with this huge personnel cost that swallows over 70% of its total revenue?
 
 
 
No. 2 , Osun has proven gold reserves which has been mined artisanally since the Portuguese colonization in the 16th century. Till date, there is no structured exploration of the mineral for lack of funding. Gold exploration is not as simple and as cheap as oil exploration. In prospecting for oil, the earth is bombarded with sound signals and the echoes analyzed to reveal subterranean liquid bodies. For gold, you need extended periods of digging with actual augers to several meters of depths. Workmen descend as deep as 5km in some South African gold shafts following gold veins.
The Fed should have funded the exploration of this mineral for the benefit of the state right from inception. Such legacy projects would have given the state a solid local economic foundation on which viability and development can be built. The standard practice in gold exploration is to engage what is called a Junior Mining concern. This will map out the gold and gather geological data that the actual mining company will rely on for a mining contract and actual exploitation. The means for engaging a Junior Mining company is beyond the state. One would have thought that a special development federal fund should do this. There must be some basic economic skeleton to give form and structural integrity as foundation for a political entity like a state upon which further development can be built. If this is not done, the states are but mere geographical expressions and the governors are mere transmitters of handouts from Abuja.
 
 
 
No.3 is water resources, which among other things, is cardinal to local economic development. The Osun River is a branch of the Niger running through the state all year round. It seems that river in fact played a crucial role in making the survival and the thriving of early settlers possible in what grew to become Oshogbo, the state capital. Throughout its length, there is nowhere it is stopped with dykes for conservation for off-season farming. Why is this so? This idea was central to the creation of the River Basin Development Authorities, a federal agency, but what have they done with the Osun river so far? In fact the Aregbesola government has been spending billions dredging that river so it will stop overflowing its banks and killing people. Since Aregbesola came in, death by flooding has stopped in the state. And for a  fact, here is another area where the Federal government is indebted to the state in form of Ecological Funds. The state has borne the brunt while Abuja plays politics with refunds. I am certain Abuja owes Osun much more than its N29 billion salary debts in statutory Ecological Funds alone! But let’s get back to irrigation. Why wasn’t a major dam for water conservation not one of the endowments for that state at creation to give it a modern agricultural launching pad?  This would have made a whole lot of difference for the state’s large farming communities and reduced dependence on monthly federal handouts. It would also have impacted positively on IGR, for you can only increase IGR to a point by tightening collection strategies alone. Real increase in IGR is a function of local productivity. The trouble that Governor Aregbesola got himself into stemmed from the fact that he keenly saw the need for some of these infrastructures and he rammed himself into the job of providing them with borrowed funds, hoping for some clement political turn that will help address the Federal attention deficit the state has suffered, especially as an opposition state. It was something that was bound to happen someday – any day a governor that is passionate about development gets on the saddle in Oshogbo. It may have been for the fear of the present quagmire that foregoing governors left the works undone, yet, what real good can come from a leader who walks on eggshells? He is probably the type of a governor who wouldn’t want his main achievement in power to be mere prompt salary payment and so had to stretch his resources thin, living as it were, in hope. Had the federal government not cut allocations to that state much earlier than the period of declining oil revenue, you can be certain that his projections would have worked and these seams would not have burst.
 
Somebody has to be brave and adventurous at a point in a community’s leadership history to provide that initial lifting force that seeds growth. Yes, it comes with a price which I think Ogbeni and the people of the state are paying right now.  However, it will serve us well as a people not to throw the baby out with the bathwater by failing to dig deeper. The reasoning that the Osun governor is wanton with the state’s affair or is flagrantly uncaring is simplistic as it is unfair. To just dismiss the man with a simple wave of the hand in a politically convenient way that our system affords will do much more harm to the state and will not lead to a solution. A question is pertinent: Why was allocation to this state cut from around April, 2014, a few months to the state’s tensed governorship election which the erstwhile ruling party sent 73,000 troops to police and was clearly desperate to win? Was there a deliberate plot to scuttle the state financially? Where does this take us in redefining the fiscal relationship between the federal government and states? Answers to those questions will equip us with the right tools to address the Osun financial situation more rationally.
Governor Aregbesola must have his own imperfections of course. Perhaps, he is too zealous for development, maybe he could have been slower. Or he could have first right-sized the state’s bloated civil service. It is possible he could have somehow mitigated this whole cascade of events. But then, real-life leadership comes with risk taking, it’s prices and it’s gains. Maybe that was the reason that the state hardly ever came near the headlines in terms of physical development until Aregbesola came along.
I believe if the Federal government honours 70% of its statutory obligations to the state right now, its present troubles will be history. If it goes further to endow the state by helping it in the area of gold exploration and water conservation/irrigation, that state will become another golden egg goose in a most literal way.
 
John Ogunlela is an agricultural scientist, entrepreneur, blogger, public policy analyst. He resides in Osogbo an can reached via johnogunlela@gmail.com

Read More
Governor-Rauf-Aregbesola

 
Governor-Rauf-Aregbesola
The lawmaker representing Epe Constituency 2 at the Lagos State House of Assembly, Segun Olulade, on Wednesday commended the Governor of Osun State, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, for frantically making efforts to commence the payment of salary arrears of civil servants in the state.
Olulade said this while reacting, in a statement, to the recent petition submitted to the Osun State House of Assembly by Justice Folahanmi Oloyede seeking the impeachment of the Governor over unpaid salaries of the civil servants in the state.
Olulade said such call was petty, premature and uncalled for.
He added that Governor Aregbesola has worked significantly at turning the state around and that the financial crisis affecting the state is a national crisis as many other states are also involved, a situation that is due largely to poor management of the nation’s sovereignACCOUNT by the previous administration under the watch of the Peoples Democratic Party.
The lawmaker said Justice Folahanmi Oloyede, if well informed about the nation’s current challenges, would haveCHANNELLED her current energy to tasking the National Assembly, where Nigeria’s problem is currently begging for solutions.
He said the National Assembly needs to legislate on true federalism, make proper amendment to the nation’s constitution to reflect progressive fronts and settle down for business rather than the sight of some of them scrambling for power excessively at the expense of the nation’s progress.
He also said the nation needs very proactive legislatures at this critical time to look into constitutional lapses that gave room for previous recklessness by the executive, and enact laws that would make corruption attract severe punishment to save our economy and nation.
“The nation will fareBETTER if corruption attracts severe punishments.
“It was due to recklessness of previous administration that led us to where we found ourselves today, leading to various states’ inability to pay their workers simply because the nation’s enormous resources was not properlyMANAGED at the federal level,” he said.
Olulade thus appealed to Nigerians to be patient with the present government under the leadership of Muhammadu Buhari, who he called a good handMANAGING  the executive.
He also called on the federal legislatures to complement such fine equation by living up to their tasks so that Nigerians can be happy.
 
Source : PM NEWS

Read More
Cocoa-farmers

Cocoa-farmers
 
The moribund Cocoa Processing COMPANY in Ede, Osun state has on Thursday RECEIVED a lifeline with the intervention of two Chinese firms who have promised to resuscitate the comatose Cocoa industry.
This disclosure was made when the Chinese firms paid a courtesy call on the governor of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola at the government house in Osogbo.
The companies resuscitation of the Cocoa products company promises creation of manyJOBS IN the state.
‎The two China-based companies -Skyron Corporation and Golden MonkeyGROUP of Company promised that production will commence in the next 6 months.
Mr. David Shi who led the Skyron group stressed that ‎the company has been in the business of Cocoa processing in the last 10 years and that their firm is similar to that of Ede.
He held that the company is sure of turning around the moribund Cocoa processing company in no distant time.
According to him, “Cocoa processing industry is not a new terrain to Skyron having been engaging in similarSECTOR and company in the last ten years.
“Skyron group has a turn over of 6.4billion Dollars in the year 2014 with visibleINVESTMENT in Agriculture and construction sector established across the world including Lagos and other states in Nigeria”.
Also the head of delegation of Golden Monkey Corporation of China, Mr. Liu Jin Hiu assured that aside resuscitation of Cocoa industry, confectionery company will also be established.
Mr. Liu also added that the group is ready to embark on massive production of cassava as raw materials for the confectionery.
He said, “Golden monkey corporation remains the number one producer of candies and chocolate in China, reviving the cocoa processing company in Ede will not be a problem.
“The partnership with the government of Osun in reviving the cocoa project will end up being a win-win partnership project. We have severalINVESTMENT companies in West Africa, especially Cote D’voire with 55 additional branches throughout the world.”
In his remarks, Governor Aregbesola disclosed that the State of Osun is ready to provide an enabling environment for the investors, urging them to consult him whenever they have challenges in pushing ahead theINVESTMENT.
The governor who also spoke on cassava production and processing held that the state is the largest producer of cassava in the country.
He assured that land and personnel already committed to cassava cultivation andINVESTMENTare guaranteed, saying government will look forward to a speedy revival of the cocoa processing COMPANY in Osun.
Aregbesola also advised the foreign investors to be ‎up to date in the use of technology and equipment by replacing the obsolete machinery in the moribund company
In his words, “We hope that with result-oriented activities and hard WORK, your company should hit the ground running as we are committed to ensuring that your investment will yield profit as operation commences.
“We desire for others what we desire for ourselves. We therefore challenge you to allow activities to start at the Cocoa processing company in Ede latest November this year”. The governor emphasized.
Source  : OSUN DEFENDER

Read More

OSUN COMMENCES SALARY PAYMENT, ANNOUNCES PAY CUT FOR POLITICAL OFFICE HOLDERS

The Government of the State of Osun has announced the commencement of the process of paying the salaries of civil servants in the state.
In a statement issued by the Governor’s Office, the government said it is paying the balance of November and and full December salary arrears owed.We must assure our people that serious efforts are on to ensure the remaining months are also cleared.
Also, the government has announced a 50% cut in salaries and allowances of all political office holders in the state.The statement further read that the government, while saddened and troubled by the turn of events in the financial status of the state and the country at large, is taking responsibility for the unfortunate problem and is prepared to meet the challenge head-on.
“Since the inception of this government, we have treated the resources under our control with the utmost respect and disbursed them diligently for the greater benefits of our people. Our mandate had always been to use our God-given wealth to bridge the gap between the downtrodden and the government. “It is very unfortunate that we find ourselves unable to pay our workers their due wages for several months when, in the past, we stood for paying on or before the 25th of each month. We thank the ever gracious and understanding workers of our state for their patience as we go through this most trying time.
“However, we are glad to announce that we have commenced the process of paying for the balance of November and full December salary arrears for all our workers across the state and the process should be concluded by Friday, July 3rd, 2015. We are able to do this because our partners and creditors have faith in us and we have proven to be responsible and trustworthy.
“We must emphasize at this point: We are not out of the woods yet! Our finances took a dive because we were hit by the shock of the sudden and massive drop in global oil prices while Nigeria also had a Federal Government that failed in its primary responsibility to secure our people and our commonwealth. Thanks to the Nigerian people, that evil leadership has been removed and replaced with a progressive one. That does not translate to instant cure for our near-empty pockets. We must take drastic steps to correct many of our past errors and embrace the true realities of today.
“Therefore, we hereby announce a 50 per cent cut to the salaries and allowances of all political office holders and appointees. This is one of the many steps we are taking to ensure the sustenance of our collective. We are also calling on our people to join us and do their part in carrying the weight of change.
“Austerity stares us right in the face. We must embrace it. We are going to intensify our efforts at prudence and frugality. We will practice self-denial in every way possible. “As we proceed on this journey of self-discovery, we hope to put more and more of our people to work by attracting productive investments to our state. The better part of our resources will go to funding capital projects that will create employment and unlock wealth. The State of Osun will rise from this situation and prosper like never before.”
Signed: Semiu Okanlawon
Director, Bureau of Communication and Strategy,
Office of the Governor.
Tuesday June 30, 2015

Read More

Should Government Workers Celebrate The New Minimum Wage?
Government workers in Nigeria are getting excited about the newly approved minimum wage of 18,000naira. Does this really call for jubilation? I’m not trying to be pessimistic, but I personally feel that what Nigerian workers need is not a new statutory minimum wage. They will be better off if the government focus her attention on arresting the factors responsible for eroding the purchasing power of the workers income. If the present attitude of our leaders in maintaining the social infrastructures continues, the newly approved statutory minimum wage will have less than the purchasing power of the old 7,500naira minimum wage.
It is not the volume, but the value!
I personally feel that everyone would have been better off, if government has concentrated on improving the supply of electricity and repairing the roads. Those two factors alone cost an average worker thousands of naira per month. so much fund is wasted from each workers income as they struggle to provide energy using petrol generator.  The cost of transportation is also high because commercial vehicle owners pay heavily for maintenance of their vechicle due to bad roads and poor road networks.
Will The State Government Pay?
The state governments are already crying foul over the federal government action. They claim they can’t afford to pay the new minimum wage. This shouldn’t come as a surprise to us, knowing fully well that some are owing their workers more than one month salary (at the old minimum wage rate). How on earth do we think such states will be able to pay their workers the new minimum wage which is more than 100percent increase on the old rate.
Will The Private Sector Pay The New Minimum Wage?
The private sector will now have to contend with disgruntled workers who will be expecting automatic increase in their salary because of the pronouncement of the Federal government. Unfortunately, many workers in private organisation will be dissappointed. Such automatic increase in salary is not realistic. Presently, a lot of private firm are having challenges with running their operations on diesel driven generator, because there is a hike in the price of diesel. Unlike before when a litre of disel sold for 110naira, now it goes for as much as 140naira per liter. That is a sudden increase in overhead expenditure.
Just two months into the new year and there are already many challenges for the Nigerian Entrepreneur to combat with. Unfortunately, our leaders are too pre-occupy with the April election to bother about the state of the economy. They are not helping matters in any way as their reckless spending is putting pressure on the economy. The warning from the Central Bank of Nigeria on the need for the executive to cut down on recurrent spending seems to be falling on deaf ears.
Nigerian entrepreneurs need to re-strategize in order to cope with the unforeseen result of these government policies. Every wise entrepreneur need to watch his/her overhead expenditure this year. It is obvious that there are challenges ahead. What is your opinion about the new minimum wage?
http://naijaecash.com/new-minimum-wage-for-nigerian-workers/#sthash.cZnTyQci.BBozxAeL.dpuf

Read More

A couple of years ago I wrote an article explaining what I felt was a real risk to Nigeria’s national interest due to the growing trend of 10.5 million school age children being out of school.[1]  The article concluded
that the country was sitting on a “ticking time bomb” that could explode with catastrophic consequences for all Nigerians, if this trend was not addressed quickly.  I suggested some options to mitigate this risk,
including the introduction of a national primary school meal program.

Since the publication of the article, and during the run-up to the recent Nigerian general election, the All Progressives Congress party (“APC”) made a pledge in their manifesto to introduce free daily school meals for
all primary school children. [2]  This was a timely and needed pledge. Now that the APC has been given the national mandate, the newly-elected government should proceed to deliver on this promise and put in place the
legal and administrative framework to effectively implement a school meal policy.

The policy and its benefits:
A good start would be to adopt Article 24 of the Convention on the Rights
of the Child[3] and legislate for the provision of “adequate nutritious
foods” for all children in state funded primary schools.  I suggest this
is made a constitutional provision.  Setting the policy within a
constitutional legal framework will strengthen its delivery across the
entire nation.[4]  It is also suggested the government sets up a joint
cross-departmental task force comprising officials from the Ministries of
Agriculture, Education, Health, and Finance to implement this policy and
monitor food quality and compliance.

Implementing this policy can benefit several sectors in Nigeria.  For example, it could benefit the health sector by improving child nutrition and reducing the chance of our children falling ill.  The education sector
could benefit by (a) Increasing school enrolment rates; (b) Improving attendance at school; (c) Increasing concentration in class, and arguably, improving children’s learning outcomes.  As a result, learning and teaching will become easier and more rewarding.  Also, our local economic activities across the nation may expand due new local jobs created (as a direct result of this national policy) in the agricultural, construction,
transport and catering sectors.

Critics of the school meal policy may argue about the huge implementation costs.  They have a good point.  After all, it is an ambitious project that will require a huge financial commitment from the government.  New
cooking facilities in the numerous schools will need to be built, and cooking and eating utensils purchased in large numbers across the entire nation.  Also, there are operational costs such as providing a regular
supply of water, food ingredients and fuel to cook these meals.  In addition, the salaries of catering staff and farmers, the costs of transportation of food materials, and costs of monitoring food quality
will also need to be covered.

However, if implemented properly, this is an investment in our nation’s future, which in the long run will yield dividends for all Nigerians, directly or indirectly.  Nigeria’s children are the country’s most
important asset.  And providing primary school healthy meals for all children will go a long way to protect and sustain this asset.  After all, of what good is the natural economic resources our country has if our
emerging labour force is not healthy and sufficiently educated to exploit
its benefits for the country’s development?  Therefore, a national school
meal policy should carry an equal or even higher weighting amongst the
competing demands on government expenditure.

To help reduce costs, free school meals can be provided only to children from the poorest families, whilst at a subsidized price to children from non-poor families.  Clearly a system will need to be adopted that fairly
assess who qualifies for free meals and who receives it at a subsidized rate.  But this administrative hurdle is not insurmountable if there is political will and the legal framework is in place.  Also, international
organisations exist who can provide technical assistance for sustainable and effective implementation of this programme.[5]  Furthermore, there are best practices and models in other countries that our policy makers can
understudy to develop this programme and learn how costs were managed.

When I was in primary school in the 1970s in England, hot school meals were provided daily for every school child.[6]  I have fond memories of those meals and I’m sure they helped me concentrate better in class and
participate actively in school activities including sports.  School lunch was an integral part of the school day.  When we sat down to eat with fellow children and teachers it cemented relationships and helped us
develop social skills.  The UK Government still has this policy.

Millions of school children in Asia, Europe and the Americas also enjoy school meals where their governments promote these policies.  Even countries with bigger populations than Nigeria implement school meal
policies.  For example, India’s Midday Meal Scheme provides free lunches to 120 million Indian children every school day.[7]  The USA provides low-cost or free lunches to more than 31 million U.S. children each school
day.[8]  In 2013 Brazil provided school meals for 45 million students every school day and has been running this program for over 50 years.[9] Encouragingly, three states in Nigeria, Osun, Enugu and Anambra, have
introduced school meals in their public primary schools.[10]  The challenge is to extend this policy nationwide.

Every year I travel to my village in Delta State to volunteer teaching and
distribute essential educational materials to poor primary school
children.  There is no doubt in my mind that the children are keen to
learn.  They enjoy reading the story books and colourful educational
posters I bring from London.  Some of the children walk for miles in all
weather conditions, just to get to school.  But their learning environment
is nowhere near conducive.  The school I visit does not provide school
meals, and does not even have pipe-born running water or electricity.  The
difficulties of learning when one is hungry and tired are well known.
Yet, these children are expected to concentrate and learn at school.
Their experience is similar to millions of other children in Nigeria.  The
majority of Nigerian school children are missing out on a healthy start in
life simply because of where they were born.  It is not their fault, and
it is not fair.  Every Nigerian child deserves the same healthy start as
children born in Asia, the Americas and Europe.  After all, no one chooses
where they are born.

To maximise the benefits of providing healthy meals in our primary
schools, government at all levels (federal, state and local), should
combine this policy with:
(a) Continuous investment in teacher competence;
(b) Adequate provision of books and learning materials,
(c) Involvement of the voluntary sector;
(d) Free annual medical health checks for every school child, and
(e) Maintaining and upgrading learning education facilities.
Collectively, these can form the foundation of a Nigerian “New Deal”
education policy.

Conclusion:
If we take a long-term view and implement a national school meal policy
properly, I believe the standard of education both offered and received
will gradually improve.  Every Nigerian child would have a healthy start
in life and a fairer opportunity to fulfil their potential for themselves,
their families, and the nation.  Also, the positive domino effect on our
local economies as a result of the investment in this policy would lead to
further economic growth in our local communities.

Ultimately, as a consequence of this policy, in the near future a Nigerian
healthy, educated work force will emerge which is better equipped to
sustain our long term economic development.  When this happens, I am
confident we will eventually defuse the ticking time bomb that is
currently threatening Nigeria’s national interest.

Credit : POINTBLANK NEWS

Read More
Are

Are
The article by Abimbola Adelakun on her engaging back page column in The PUNCH recently, entitled, Ogbeni Aregbesola, pay your workers, made an interesting reading. Be that as it may, it is no longer news that Osun State civil servants have become restive due to the six-month salary backlog the state government is owing workers. It is an unfortunate situation affecting many homes.
The development is affecting every home, schools at all levels and also the day-to-day activities in the state.

Governor Rauf Aregbesola has repeatedly been reported as saying the unpaid salaries were due to the state’s dwindling revenue. For example, the revenue from all sources in 2012, including the Federation Account, internally generated revenue, and other accruals like value added tax, from the Federal Government, yielded N28.4bn, whereas the total wage bill only was N31.6bn, leaving a deficit of N3.2bn. The same thing was experienced in 2013, with a deficit of N10.4bn.
Also, perhaps, the dwindling oil revenue has made it difficult for the Federal Government, and 24 of Nigeria’s 36 states, to pay staff salaries. The initial cause of the palaver was the increase of the minimum wage to N18,000, unilaterally entered into by the President Goodluck Jonathan government with the labour unions. It became a kerfuffle when the price of crude oil plummeted, and reduced the revenue that accrued to the nation.
The Nigeria Governors’ Forum, led by former Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, alleged that another cause of the problem was the Federal Government’s squandering of funds due to the states from the Excess Crude Account. But the former Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, countered that the money was actually paid to the states.
Things have got so bad that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation is unable to meet $2bn cash call obligations to its joint venture international oil corporation partners. Indeed, an IOC source alleges that the Federal Government totally mismanaged available crude oil revenue, and misappropriated money meant to execute projects and activities that were not included in budgets approved by the National Assembly.
Some argue that some state governments embarked on ambitious projects.
But government is about providing services to the people – and paying some cadres of the citizenry to perform them. And there are some services that the people didn’t ask for, but must be provided nonetheless: You don’t ask for the military or police forces to protect you, before government provides them anyway.
The same goes for social services like hospitals, schools, and traffic control that will have adverse effect on society if not discharged. You will have a hard time faulting an Osun State Government that fulfils its electoral promises by feeding about 254,000 pupils daily, and providing jobs for about 3,000 cooks, and giving farming and agribusiness a shot in the arm, through the ‘O’ MEALS Elementary School Feeding and Health Programme.
Neither can you really fight a plan to refurbish the old Osogbo Aerodrome, to provide a hub to freight agricultural produce from Osun and adjoining states. The airport comes with a repairs hanger where military, private air operators and commercial airlines can repair their aircraft. The network of roads around the airport also makes for easy flight connections for passengers and farming cargoes.
But the sudden drop of oil revenue scuppered the whole thing, bringing unpaid wages in its wake. Because the problem of unpaid wages of government workers is a universal phenomenon in Nigeria, many suggest downsizing of staff. That fails to recognise that employment of workers is also a legitimate social service expected of every government.
This then brings up the argument that state governments must be allowed to independently negotiate minimum wages with labour unions. If the Federal Government will not pay the salary bills of states, it should not negotiate wages on their behalf. Allowing each state the autonomy to negotiate its minimum wage with labour goes by the name, fiscal federalism.
But the Federal Government is too big, to the detriment of the states and (especially) local governments. The real interface between the state and the citizens is more at the local government level. Shouldn’t the revenue allocation formula be restructured to the advantage of local government councils?
Indeed, the day of argument for fiscal federalism is here. It is imperative for the Nigerian state to recognise that those who provide the resources must be first partakers in its yield. That must explain why the Niger Delta, whose soil provides the oil and gas that have provided the major source of revenue for the country, complains about being schemed out of the returns from the petroleum resources.
The Ijaw have therefore expressed a desire for self-determination, having noted that the Treaty of 1914, between the Ijaw and the British colonial powers, lapsed in 2014. Fair-minded Nigerian patriots must not ignore this heart cry of the Ijaw – or other nationalities for that matter. All people of goodwill must strive to achieve a more honest interpretation and implementation of the protocols of democratic and federal governance in Nigeria.
State governments that owe salaries must certainly demonstrate the will to pay. They could restructure payment schedules (the way bankers do), and then seek to re-negotiate more realistic minimum wage regime with labour. This way, accrued wage bills are settled, and a future without financial booby traps, charted.
And it is not enough to blame the states for unpaid salaries. The Federal Government may have to immediately initiate a rescue plan to pay the salary arrears, to stem the human suffering, before asking the state governments to go and sin no more.
Buraimoh is an undergraduate of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife
PUNCH

Read More
Valedictory Get-Together Dinner Party 1

Valedictory Get-Together Dinner Party 1
Governor State of Osun, Ogbni Rauf Aregbesola (3rd left),Outgoing Consulate General of American Embassy, Lagos State, Mr. Jeffery
Hawkins (right), his Wife Annie Hawkins (2nd right),Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun (left) and Director Sahara Group, Mr. Tony Cole during the Valedictory Get-Together Dinner Party in Lagos on Monday 29/06/2015.
 
Valedictory Get-Together Dinner Party 2Governor State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola (left),Outgoing Consulate General of American Embassy, Lagos State, Mr. Jeffery
Hawkins(right), his Wife Annie Hawkins (2nd right), during the Valedictory Get-Together Dinner Party in Lagos on Monday 29/06/2015.

Read More