Connect with us

Opinion

Time To Make Rivers State Work

Published

on

Rivers State, one of Nigeria’s most resource-rich regions, holds immense potential. Situated in the Niger Delta, it is home to a diverse population, abundant natural resources, and a bustling economy driven primarily by oil and gas. Yet, despite its wealth and strategic importance, Rivers State faces significant challenges. To unlock its full potential and ensure sustainable development, concerted efforts must be made to address these issues head-on. Firstly, the state’s infrastructure needs urgent attention. Poor road networks, inadequate power supply, and substandard healthcare facilities are prevalent. These deficiencies hinder economic activities and reduce the quality of life for residents. Prioritizing infrastructure development, with a focus on improving transportation networks, expanding access to reliable electricity, and enhancing healthcare services, will create a more conducive environment for business and everyday life.
Education is another critical area requiring investment. The quality of education in Rivers State lags behind national standards, with many schools lacking basic facilities and qualified teachers. By investing in education, the state can equip its youth with the skills and knowledge needed to compete in the global economy. This involves not just improving physical infrastructure, but also ensuring adequate training and incentives for teachers, and implementing policies that support academic excellence. Environmental sustainability is crucial for the long-term prosperity of Rivers State. The region has suffered severe environmental degradation due to oil exploration and industrial activities. Restoring and protecting the environment must be a top priority. This can be achieved through stricter enforcement of environmental regulations, encouraging the adoption of cleaner technologies, and initiating large-scale clean up and reforestation projects.
Economic diversification is essential to reduce dependence on oil and gas. While these industries will continue to play a significant role, developing other sectors such as agriculture, manufacturing, and tourism can create new job opportunities and stimulate growth. Encouraging entrepreneurship and supporting small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) can also drive economic diversification and resilience. Security remains a major concern in Rivers State. Kidnappings, armed robberies, and communal conflicts are all too common, undermining investor confidence and endangering lives. Strengthening law enforcement agencies, improving community policing, and addressing the root causes of crime, such as poverty and unemployment, are critical steps towards creating a safer environment for all. Promoting good governance is fundamental to achieving sustainable development. Transparent and accountable leadership can ensure that resources are used efficiently and that the benefits of development reach all citizens. This requires not only political will but also active civic engagement, with citizens holding their leaders accountable through participation in the democratic process.
Public health is another area that cannot be overlooked. The state needs to invest in healthcare infrastructure, provide adequate training for medical personnel, and ensure the availability of essential medicines and services. Public health campaigns targeting prevalent issues such as malaria, HIV/AIDS, and maternal health can significantly improve health outcomes. Empowering women and youth is vital for social and economic progress. Ensuring equal access to education, employment, and political participation for women can drive development and reduce poverty. Similarly, creating opportunities for young people through vocational training, mentorship programs, and access to finance can harness their potential and energy for positive change. Cultural preservation and promotion can also play a role in development. Rivers State boasts a rich cultural heritage that, if well-managed, can attract tourism and foster a sense of pride and identity among its people. Supporting cultural institutions, festivals, and arts can contribute to both economic growth and social cohesion.
Collaboration between government, private sector, and civil society is essential to drive these changes. Public-private partnerships can leverage the strengths of each sector, bringing together resources, expertise, and innovation to tackle the state’s challenges more effectively. To make Rivers State work, it is important to address corruption head-on. Corruption undermines developmental efforts and erodes public trust. Establishing strong anti-corruption institutions, ensuring transparency in government transactions, and promoting a culture of integrity are crucial steps in building a more just and equitable society.  Ofcourse. The role of technology cannot be overstated in modernizing Rivers State. Investing in digital infrastructure, promoting digital literacy, and encouraging the adoption of technology in government services, education, and business can spur innovation and improve efficiency across sectors.
Environmental education should also be part of the state’s strategy. Educating citizens about the importance of environmental conservation and sustainable practices can foster a culture of responsibility and stewardship, ensuring that future generations inherit a healthier planet. Housing and urban development need attention to accommodate the growing population. Ensuring affordable housing and developing urban areas with adequate amenities can improve living conditions and reduce slum proliferation. Healthcare services must be expanded to rural areas, where access is often limited. Mobile clinics, telemedicine, and community health programs can bridge the gap and ensure that even the most remote communities receive quality healthcare. Addressing the root causes of social unrest, such as inequality and marginalization, is essential for long-term peace and stability. Inclusive policies that promote social justice and equitable distribution of resources can help build a more harmonious society.
Finally, fostering a culture of innovation and research can propel Rivers State forward. Establishing research institutions and innovation hubs can drive advancements in various fields, from agriculture to technology, positioning the state as a leader in development and progress. In conclusion, making Rivers State work requires a multifaceted approach that addresses infrastructure, education, environment, economy, security, governance, public health, and social inclusion. By leveraging its resources and embracing sustainable development practices, Rivers State can achieve its full potential, ensuring a prosperous and equitable future for all its citizens. The time for action is now. Thus acknowledging that a distracted government can not be focused enough to actualise its goal and target.
Rivers State requires an atmosphere devoid of political acrimony and rancour  to be able to meet the yearnings and aspirations of the people.

Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi

Continue Reading

Opinion

Adult Delinquency In Public Space

Published

on

Over the years,  the remarks of Konrad Adenuar, (January 6, 1876 – April 1967),  a former Chancellor of Western Germany, that   ”in view of the fact that God limited the intelligence of man, it seems unfair that He (God) did not also limit his stupidity”,  has continued to agitate the minds of critics including public affairs analysts. This comment, which put succinctly, highlights God’s unfairness for  supposedly setting definite limit on man’s wisdom (intelligence) but  failed  to set the same limit on man’s stupidity, has  attracted wide spread condemnations from different sects; christians and non christians alike. Similarly, some critics, largely writers, hold the sentiment that society should not concentrate on juvenile delinquency alone but should also be concerned about what some identified as “adult delinquencies” since societal ills,grievious misdemeanors are traceable to adults, some of whom are leaders of thoughts occuping high offices.
Nigeria is replete with gutter Languages in public spaces deserving of concern and attention. One classic example is the recent outburst of Senator Adams Oshomhole, a former Governor of Edo State. It would be recalled that Senator Adams Oshomhole referred to the wife of the Governor of Edo State, Mrs Betsy  Obaseki, as a barren woman.Truly, it could be said that Mrs Betsy Obaseki  stoc the crisis when she referred to the governorship aspirant of All Progressive Congress (APC) Monday Okpebholo, as  a man without a wife. Political campaigns should be undertaken or conducted to discuss  issues and not insults to  enable the electorate choose a credible leader who can provide solutions to societal challenges. No doubt, it is regrettable that a former labour leader, governor and now a serving Senator, Adams Aliya Oshomhole, considered as  highly experienced to exhibit civility, maturity and superior acumen in a challenging situation such as this, particularly when viewed against the backdrop that the comrade- senator was not  speaking at a political rally ground.
Recently, the West, particularly Europe, is returning artefacts stolen from ancient Benin Kingdom more than a century and thirty years ago which politicians can discuss with respect to diversifying the economy as well as provide solutions to numerous difficulties facing Edo State and Nigeria at large.Worse still, can any parent boast of having or rearing children by his or her self as  to scorn an expectant family?. In the same way, the German statesman Konrad Adenuar cited above once  noted: “History is the sum total of things that could have been avoided”. For instance, the former governor of Kaduna State, Nasiru El-Rufai, once told foreign powers planning to interfere into the 2019 general election to  jettison the plan otherwise they would  leave in body bags.’Body Bag!’.
The expression “leave in body bags”,  is not befitting of a serving governor in all ramifications. As if that was not enough, the current Senate President and former Governor of Akwa Ibom State Senator Godswill Akpabio, referred to the contribution of a fellow law maker Natasha Akpoti Uduaghau as a “Night Club Comment”.This was another sad commentary and bad public communication made by a public office holder of equal ranking with a fellow colleague, because all senators are equal and therefore, the remarks by Senator Akpabio was regrettable even though he had apologized for his unfortunate outburst. Denigration of any sort should not be an option in pilloring the women folk in public places.
In fact, elder statesman, Pa. Edwin Clark, recently  called on the Inspector of Police and President Tinubu to arrest the minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Chief Nyesom Wike, for saying he (Wike ) will put fire in the states of PDP governors and officials who want to interfer with his political structures in Rivers State.To put fire is ambiquous and has frightening implications. The Bible is apt and ever correct when in proverbs 15:1 noted that “Soft answer turns away wrath but grievous words stir up anger”. The remarks cited above traceable to public officials and leaders  in public spaces  show pride, selfishness, arrogance and are capable of igniting crisis, if not nibbed  in the bud. In addition to the provision of infrastructure, elected leaders must learn the acts of engaging in public communication, speaking life and not hate speach to build society for the better.Jesus Christ speaks in John 6:63 thus: “The words I speak they are Life and Spirit”.
It is instructive to observe that before David killed Goliath in it is recorded in 1st Samuel Chapter 17:24 – 45, that Goliath was very insultive, boastful, denigrating the army of Israel at the battle field before a non-soldier in the person of David over powered him- Goliath. Pride, they say, goes before the fall of man. This is why leaders in positions of trust should retrace their steps and be mindful of the words they speak and transmit in communicating with the electorate,fellow polititicians or their party members to engender peace in the polity and promote peaceful co-existence in Rivers State and Nigeria at large. The time to act is now.

Baridorn Sika
Sika, is a public affairs analyst.

Continue Reading

Opinion

Corruption: Nigeria’s Hydra-Headed Problem

Published

on

If the viral report on the social media that the former Director-General of the Department of State Security, (DSS,) Yusuf Magaji Bichi, is currently looking for his son, Abba, who broke into his safe in his house and stole $2million (N3billion) cash and took off, is true, then Nigeria is in for big trouble. This is not healthy news in a country that is plagued by  multi-dimensional socio-economic challenges. According to the report, “sources in the DSS who confirmed the theft said Abba who had knowledge of where his father hides money he collects from politicians raced to his father’s house and took the box load of Dollars as soon as his sack was announced by President Bola Tinubu”.While about 200 million people wallow in an orgy of corruption- induced poverty, some public office holders are far richer than some states.
That the son of the former Director General of State Security Services allegedly “broke into his father’s house and stole $2million about N3 billion equivalent is one of the several known and hidden cases of brazen corruption that have dwarfed to a state of savagery Nigeria’s development. How could a public servant in Nigeria have such whoping amount of money at home? This goes to confirm the saying that loots of Nigeria’s public officers are hidden in foreign banks, GP tanks, underground safe and several other odd and unorthodox saving methods.Such startling revelations of alleged outrageous looting, siphoning of public funds and corrupt practices  attests to the fact that Nigeria is incurably sick and is tottering on the brink of collapse, if nothing is done to save the country. Nigeria is not a poor country yet millions are living in hunger, abject poverty and avoidable misery. What an irony!
Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy and most populous nation is naturally endowed with 44 mineral resources, found in 500 geographical locations in commercial quantity. According to Nigeria’s former Minister for Mines and Steel Development, Olamiekan Adegbite, the mineral resources include: baryte, kaolin, gymsium, feldspar, limestone, coal, bitumen, lignite, uranium, gold, cassiterite, columbite, iron ore, lead, zinc, copper, granite, laterite, sapphire, tourmaline, emerald, topaz, amethyst, gamer, etc. Nigeria has a vast uncultivated arable land even as its geographical area is approximately 923, 769 sq km (356,669 sq ml). “This clearly demonstrates the wide mineral spectrum we are endowed with which offers limitless opportunities along the value-chain, for job creation, revenue growth. Nigeria provides one of the highest rates of return because its minerals are closer to the surface”, Adegbite said.
Therefore, poverty in Nigeria is not the consequences of lack of resources and manpower but inequality, misappropriation, outright embezzlement, barefaced corruption that is systemic and normative in leaders and public institutions. Although, Nigeria is ranked as the economic giant of Africa, the most populous country in Africa and the sixth in the world with a population conservatively put at 200 million people, the country has the second highest population of impoverished people in the world.According to the World Poverty Clock 2023, Nigeria has the awful distinction of being the World Capital of Poverty with about 84 million people living in extreme poverty today. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data also revealed that a total of 133 million people in Nigeria are classed as multi-dimensionally poor.
Unemployment is a major challenge in the country.
About 33 percent of the labour force are unable to find a job at the prevailing wage rate. About 63 percent of the population were poor because of lack of access to health, education, employment, and security.Nigeria Economic Summit Group (NESG) speculated that unemployment rate will increase to 37 percent in 2023. The implications, therefore, is increase in unemployment will translate to increase in the poverty rate.The World Bank, a Washington-based and a multi-lateral development institution, in its macro-poverty outlook for Nigeria for April 2023 projected that 13 million Nigerians will fall below the National Poverty line by 2025. It further stated that the removal of subsidy on petroleum products without palliatives will result to 101 million people being poor in Nigeria.The alarming poverty in the country is a conspiracy of several factors, including corruption.
In January, 2023 the global anti-corruption watchdog, Transparency International, in its annual corruption prospect index which ranks the perceived level of public sector corruption across 180 countries in the world, says Nigeria ranked 150 among 180 in the index. Conversely, Nigeria is the 30th most corrupt nation in the ranking. It is also the capital of unemployment in the world. At the root of Nigerians’ poverty is the corruption cankerworm.How the nation got to this sordid economic and social precipice is the accumulation of years of corrupt practices with impunity by successive administrations.  Nigeria is not a poor country yet millions are living in hunger and abject poverty. The government can close the yawning inequality gap and increasing poverty level. There are several cases of corruption in Nigeria that have been swept under the carpet.
The case of misappropriation and embezzlement of pension funds is one of such ugly cases that stares the Federal Government’s anti-Corruption agencies and the Judiciary on the face. The Federal Government should be proactive and intentional in addressing the stinking wave of corruption in the country.

Igbiki Benibo

Continue Reading

Opinion

Elected LGA Councils, A Norm At Last?

Published

on

Since the return of democratic rule in 1999, Nigeria’s third tier of government, the local councils, consisting of 774 Local Government Areas (LGAs), has regressively slided into undemocratic governance, no thanks to the impunity of some state governors. At the moment, about 462 LGAs in 22 out of the 36 states of Nigeria are ruled by care-taker committees, apointed by state governors. Though in some states, the brief imposition of care-taker committees were fall-outs from political wranglings, some state governments however, made the jettisoning of democratically elected council governments as modus operandi. The worst record so far in this regard was that of Bauchi State which conducted no local government elections for 12 unbroken years, between 2008 and 2020. Apart from a brief council election in October, 2020, that allowed elected council officials till October, 2022, the state has since relapsed to the imposition of caretaker committees.
But if we go by the most current perpetration of the longest count of years of unbroken council rule by appointed committees, the ignominous title of the worst usurper of council authority goes to Anambra State, where since 10 years ago local government elections have never been held, and where Governor Charles Soludo further distabilises council administrations by having run eight tenures of transition committees just within two years. In Anambra, the last council elections held in November 2014 at the twilights of former Governor Peter Obi’s administration. Following Anambra state is Kwara, which held its last LGA elections in 2017, while Imo and Zamfara held theirs in 2018 and 2019, respectively. It appears however, that the dark clouds over Nigeria’s local government system is about to clear, going by the sudden flurry of electioneering preparations noticeable at the State Independent Electoral Commissions (SIECs) in no less than 13 states of the federation.
This new development is most welcome, considering that the restoration of democracy at the third tier of government would help to deepen the principles of democracy and accountability at the grassroots levels, with spiralling impacts to the higher levels.The new turn comes not without some push, though. Following a public interest litigation in suit: SC/CV/343/2024, filed by Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Lateef Fagbemi (SAN), against the 36 states of the federation, the Supreme Court had declared in a landmark judgment that “A democratically elected local government is sacrosanct and non-negotiable,’’ and for state/LGAs joint accounts believed to be the conduit through which LGA funds were diverted, the judgment declared that, “In this case, since paying them through states has not worked, justice of this case demands that LGA allocations from the federation account should henceforth be paid directly to the LGAs,” to the effect that only democratically elected local government administrations should receive and manage funds meant for the local councils.
Following the new reality, some state houses of assembly have had to amend local government laws, albeit hurriedly, to pave way for council elections. In Anambra state, where the governor is being criticised for renaging on his pre-election promise of restoring grass-roots democracy within the first six months in office, Governor Soludo had swiftly secured amendments to the local government laws that enabled him constitute members of the Anambra State Independent Electoral Commission (ANSIEC), and at the swearing-in ceremony, declared somewhat cynically, “Ndi Anambra, here comes your ANSIEC Commissioners, I’ve done my job,” and to the newly sworn-in commissioners, “When you are done, announce to the people when you’ll hold elections.” Probably, the governor was not comfortable with a court judgment that had stopped federal allocations to his latest Local Government Transition Committees.
Aside Anambra, other states that have not conducted elections in a long while now show swift upswings in councils election preparations, with no less than 13 states fixing election dates. Whereas Anambra fixed September 28, 2024, Kwara and Imo had set September 21, 2024 as election dates, Kaduna and Kogi, October 19, 2024, while Katsina and Osun gear towards February, 2025.However, the hurry at which most council elections are now being pursued is raising a new form of worry in some who fear that the rush might compromise the credibility of the elections and undermine the envisaged benefits derivable from properly conducted council elections. Again, in Anambra where ANSIEC set barely a month timeline for elections, a public affairs analyst in the state, Mr Tony Okafor, while commending Governor Soludo for finally allowing the conduct of council elections, lamented that, “This short notice, coupled with the absence of comprehensive town hall meetings with stakeholders, may not provide sufficient time for adequate preparation, robust campaigning, and thorough voter education, thereby potentially compromising the integrity of the electoral process.”
Also a House of Representatives member, representing Ogbaru Federal Constituency, Hon. Afam Victor Ogene, said, “The newly imposed 30-day notice period for local government elections will lead to widespread disenfranchisement at the grassroots level. Within this truncated timeframe, it will be nearly impossible for stakeholders to conduct meaningful consultations, organise primary elections, secure funding, and prepare for the election without government support. This is a disservice to the people and a mockery of our democracy. By frustrating the enthronement of true democracy at the grassroots level, the government is mindlessly undermining the very essence of democratic practice.”However, there are speculations that the rush at the various states might be aimed at enabling unhindered flow of monthly federal allocations to councils, or fixing elected officials in place ahead of any impending National Assembly laws that might sweep away the powers of SIECs to conduct LGA elections.
Whatever the reason for the rushed council elections, and how so ever the officials emerge, one positive result is remarkably emerging, which is that, the era of elected council officials is now being guaranteed. With assured tenur periods, elected council officials who mean well and have the chatacter to deliver good governance to their constituency could now rely on formidable legal backings to do so.But while local government elections may most likely become regular henceforth, the total independence of the councils might still be a long-drawn battle ahead, considering that some fear that federal government’s move, to free the councils from the domineering clutches of state governments, might pave way for some central control over same councils, especially if federal laws emerge that move the powers of state assemblies and SIECs over the councils, to the federal.As Nigerians watch the swing in the pendulum of power over, or over to, the councils, it is becoming clearer that the business over council affairs would not be as usual.

By: Joseph Nwankwor

Continue Reading

Trending