Friday, February 28, 2014

STEWARDSHIP: IGBINEDION VERSUS OSHIOMHOLE; THE TRUTH .

STEWARDSHIP: IGBINEDION VERSUS OSHIOMHOLE; THE TRUTH .
In 8 years between 1999 and 2007 about N200 billion accrued to Edo State out of which the following are among the projects that emerged: Stella Obasanjo Women & Children Hospital, Edo State Library (Best in the South-South then), NYSC permanent orientation camp, Okada, Gynecological ward, (a storey building), Specialist hospital Benin, College of Agriculture, Iguoraikhi, institute of Management Technology, Usen, College of Education, Igueben, Iyekogba Housing Project. Others are Lecture theatre, ICE, Benin, high Court complex and judges quarters, Uromi, in Okada, in Fugar, etc, Cassavita factory, Uromi (85% completed), the gigantic Edo State Liaison House, Abuja, male and female Hostel AAU, Ekpoma. Also, "Decasualising" workers of EBS, rural electrification, fruit Juice, Ehor and fertilizer blending, Ikpeshi. Etc.
Between 2008 & 2013 i.e. 5 years, about N700 billion has accrued to the Edo state. Out of this mind blowing amount, no attempt has been made to address the fundamental problem in the state, unemployment through industrialization. The environment is made hostile to private investors through punitive taxation and unleashing of "mad men" on businesses and individuals (insecurity). To make matters worse, the state government is carrying out a systematic downsizing of the work force. While the roads rehabilitated do not escape my attention, the huge size of funds siphoned through them is unnerving. How can this government justify the N1.5 billion per kilometer it's paying on Airport road, a road that is not coastal and without a single bridge? We can't afford to wait until these years and funds slip off before hurling ineffective insults & curses. Adams Oshiomhole, must as a matter of urgency apply our funds to the resuscitation of industries that are lying fallow so that the jobs & income which are the vital signs of development would reach the people. Edo is not the personal property of any individual, political party or group, it's ours; we must take it back.

Agriculture is truly the future.

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10 Leading Farms In Nigeria, Their Owners

Before the advent of crude oil, agriculture was the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy. Then, the country’s economy thrived; food was available and affordable. People, therefore, did not go hungry, except in extreme cases occasioned by a serious factor.
With the oil boom era, the country and its people shifted attention from agriculture to oil and gas. Subsequently, graduates of Agricultural Science, Soil Science, Agricultural Extension, Agricultural Economics etc., looked for white-collar jobs in banks and other seemingly lucrative areas, including oil and gas. Little did people know that those who remained in agriculture would today be raking in millions and billions of naira, as their products now grace both local and international markets.
This gives an impeccable signal that agriculture is, perhaps, more viable than other sectors. Also, it is an indication that well planned investment in agriculture is not a futile effort. It suffices that some Nigerian farmers have successfully built some shining legacies that need to be emulated and replicated. Most of them, as observed, are politicians. In this edition, LEADERSHIP Friday brings to the fore Nigeria’s top ten biggest farmers.
OLUSEGUN OBASANJO (OBASANJO FARM)
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo is not only a retired army officer, former head of state and politician, he is also a successful farmer. He owns Ota Farm, which is also called Obasanjo Farms. The large farm was formally opened on October 8, 1979, a week after Obasanjo handed over power to a civilian administration on October 1, 1979. At inception, the farm took off as Temperance Enterprises Limited (Farming Venture). It later became Obasanjo Farms Nigeria Limited.
Obasanjo Farms indeed took off in grand style, indication that Nigeria’s former president meant serious business. This probably accounts for the growth, expansion, sustainability and consolidation witnessed in the evolution of the farm, considering how it started and where it is now.
The farm took off with two layer houses containing 100, 000 birds each and five broiler houses of  12,000 each, in addition to two feed mills of three tons per hour each. The large farm, which has up to 7,000 workers started with four bulldozer operators. Today, Obasanjo makes up to N34million daily from Ota Farm, which has branches in Ibadan and Igbo-Ora, Oyo State. This is no small earning for the former president whose farm has played a significant role in the development of agriculture and food production.
Obasanjo also uses the farm complex at the Agbe L’ Oba House, Ota, the Ogun State headquarters of the farm, to hold political and diplomatic meetings.
ABDULSALAMI ABUBABAKAR (MAIZUBE FARMS)
What makes General Abdulsalami Abubakar (rtd) significant today in Nigeria and beyond is not just his successful military career or the fact that he willingly handed over power to a democratically elected government in 1999 to usher in the Fourth Republic. He has a stake in the Nigerian agricultural sector, being the owner of Maizube Farms Limited, which is helping to cater for the food needs of many Nigerians today.
Maizube Farms Limited is located at Km 26, Minna-Bida Road, Minna, Niger State, where General Abubakar is from. The 500-hectare multi-product farm has both livestock and crop sections and today, it is proudly one of the stable sources of crop and animal products upon which Nigerians depend for food and other uses.
Just as General Abubakar gives appreciable time to his peacekeeping mission across the African continent, so also does he give a great deal of time and attention to his Maizube Farms.
MURTALA NYAKO (SEBORE FARMS)
Vice Admiral Murtala Nyako (rtd), the executive governor of Adamawa State may be more popular from the political perspective to many, but he is one of the most successful Nigerian farmers today.  Few know that he is the owner of Sebore Farms in Mayo-Belwa, Adamawa State.
Murtala Nyako was born at Mayo-Belwa, to Alhaji Hamman-Yero, a notable merchant and Hajiya Maryam Daso who was keen on Islamic studies and herbal medicine, on August 27, 1943.
Nyako was born a cattle owner, as his mother had been allocated some cows for her offspring before his birth. So he started what has snowballed into an integrated commercial farm today as a cattle farm. Even throughout his career, in the Navy and in politics, Nyako was never distracted from developing and expanding his coast in the agricultural sector, the result of which is his success story today.
He commenced a sustainable crossbreeding programme of his local cattle with exotic superior sires in 1990 with very satisfactory results. He also got involved in the production of horticultural crops and his first commercial export of muskmelons to Europe, using a chartered aircraft, took place in January 1990. Nyako owns the largest mango farm in Nigeria, leading to his being popularly known as Baba Mai Mangoro (BMM). Exotic mangoes from his mango orchard of 50, 000 trees were first exported to Europe in 1993. He is also presently involved in the modern production of dates, passion fruit and bananas, pasture development breeding of Boer goats and farming.
Nyako is the president of the Horticultural Crops Growers Association of Nigeria, the Practicing Farmers Association of Nigeria and the Apex Farmers Association of Nigeria. He is the patron of numerous farmers’ commodity associations in the country.
USMAN DANTATA Jr. (ANADARIYA FARMS)
The young and enterprising Usman Dantata Jr., who is married to Rukaiya Indimi, daughter of multi-billionaire Borno businessman Mohammed Indimi, is the president/CEO of Anadariya Farms. The large poultry farm, which is located in Tiga, Bebeji local government area of Kano State, was started by the late business sage of Kano, Alhaji Usman Sanusi Dantata of the Dantata dynasty, in the 1960s. Anadariya Farms thrived well in poultry produce. For instance, it was noted for exporting poultry birds and eggs to Saudi Arabia twice a week using a Boeing 747 plane.
However, after decades of activity, the farm experienced some challenges and stopped operations until recently, when Dantata Jr. came on board and injected viability into the large farm. The CEO came with refined vigour, to ensure the farm maintains a successful track record. He has a background in investment and banking and was a trader of various commodities in Europe before coming back to Nigeria. He also has a certificate in feed production and broiler management obtained in North Carolina. Suffice it to say that he had equipped himself with the necessary training before stepping into the business.
This wealth of experience and pool of relevant knowledge may have been the reason for his decision to expand the services and operations of the farm to include a hatchery, production of broilers and layers, the production of feeds and the processing and sale of poultry products. Anadariya Farms produces above 3, 000 broilers weekly. This is one of Nigeria’s most viable farms, with its growing, diverse agricultural activities.
SIR JOSEPH I.A ARUMEMI-IKHIDE (OJEMAI FARMS)
Another modern farm with high level of activity and making great impact within the nation’s agricultural space is Ojemai Farms Limited owned by Ojemai Holdings. The farm, which is located in Edo State and owned by Sir J.I.A.  Arumemi-Ikhide, the chairman of Arik Air, was established in 1984 with interest tilting towards livestock production. It took off as a local producer of pork and turkey meat. However, as years past by and business expanded in the farm, there was the need for expansion of scope of operations.
This led to new interest in production of broiler, catfish, fish fingerling and other forms of animal produce. The farm has grown to become one of the biggest farms in Nigeria and one of the nation’s prides in the agricultural sector.
ARINZE ONEBUNNE (JOVANA FARMS)
Prince Arinze Onebunne is the successful managing consultant and CEO of Jovana Farms, located in Mushin, Lagos. Onebunne specialises in the farming of animals such as grasscutters (greater cane rats), rabbits, quail, antelope, guinea pigs and fish, and so on. His high profile level of animal farming has taken him to over 30 states in Nigeria and to other countries as a seminar facilitator, advocate, training personnel and empowerment speaker.
The founder of Jovana Farms is also at the vanguard of modern fish and livestock farming in Nigeria, which is considered a fast growing and lucrative subsector of the nation’s economy today. With his vast experience and engagement in training and mentoring prospective animal farmers, he earns millions of naira not only from sales of animal products, but also from consultancy charges. Onebunne also carries out feasibility research, site survey and farm construction projects, as part of his professional services.
DR OLATUNDE AGBATO (ANIMAL CARE SERVICES KONSULT)
Dr Olatunde Agbato, a veterinary doctor, is the founder and president/CEO of Animal Care Services Konsult. Agbato, a graduate of the University of Ibadan (UI), became a viable player in the agricultural sector with the establishment of the company known commonly by its shortened name, Animal Care. The company has interests in commercial poultry production, commercial livestock feed milling, aquaculture, manufacturing, and procurement and distribution of animal health products. The company also undertakes provision of expert services for people with interest in animal farming, but who lack the know-how.
Animal Care was founded in 1979 and is located in Ogere Remo, Ogun State. The company concentrates majorly on poultry and veterinary services. It has continued to grow and has a subsidiary called Funtuna Farms, which is a poultry farming operation unit. Furthermore, it has a fish farm operation unit.
Agbato has over the years distinguished himself as a veterinary doctor cum farmer. He is a fellow of the College of Veterinary Surgeons of Nigeria; fellow, Farm Management Association of Nigeria; member, International Egg Commission, and has received many awards of recognition. Agbato is, indeed, one of the farmers who have sown under the sun and can now reap their harvests.
ABDULLAHI ADAMU (NAGARI INTEGRATED DAIRY FARM)
Nagari Integrated Dairy is one of the farms currently being operated in the country on a commercial level. It is reputed to be one of the largest single integrated dairy farms in Africa. It covers 1,200 hectares of land and has 7,000 Holstein cattle. In view of the quality of the products it churns out, the claim that it is among the top suppliers of high quality farm and dairy products in Africa is justified.
Alhaji Abdullahi Adamu, a former governor of Nasarawa State and now a senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, is the man behind Nagari Integrated Dairy Farm. Although his fame on the political scene has overshadowed his agricultural exploits, Abdullahi can be described as an accomplished farmer. The success story of Nagari Integrated Farm is the result of the enterprising nature of this farmer, lawyer, engineer, technocrat and consummate politician.
Over the years, Nagari Integrated Dairy has invested in research and development, and in state-of-the-art dairy farming technology. The company has developed its own proprietary dairy farming expertise and methodologies. This has made it a benchmark for the efficient production of high quality dairy products.
ALHAJI WAHAB IYANDA FOLAWIYO (FOLAWIYO FARMS LIMITED)
Folawiyo Farms Limited, located on Yinka Folawiyo Avenue, Apapa, Lagos, was incorporated on October 4, 1985. It carries out integrated agricultural production, with branches in several states in Nigeria. It is owned by renowned business tycoon, philanthropist and the Baba Adinni of Nigeria, the late Alhaji Wahab Iyanda Folawiyo.
In matters concerning agriculture, Folawiyo Farms stands tall in all aspects. They are into livestock farming, fish farming, flour milling, agro-chemical production and distribution, agricultural consultancy, development and engineering, production and supply of agro-pesticides, farm tools, fertiliser services, horticulture, and so on.
Folawiyo’s journey to greatness began back in 1957 when he founded Yinka Folawiyo and Sons Limited, an import and export business empire that includes holdings in shipping, banking, construction, agriculture and energy. It is therefore not out of proportion to say Folawiyo’s business concerns traverse the entire length and breadth of the Nigerian economic terrain.
PETER ADENIYI (ANU-OLUWA FARMS)
Mr Peter Adeniyi, perhaps, did not understand fully the fortunes he was sowing to harvest when he founded Anu-Oluwa Farms in Ibadan, the ancient capital city of Oyo State. The farm, which has special interest in poultry and egg production for the Nigerian market, has become one of the largest farms in Nigeria.
The farm also sells livestock feeds and materials, table eggs, day-old chicks, point of lays, fish and fish fingerlings and livestock vaccines. Adeniyi is one of the most successful farmers in Nigeria.

Imperialism at full speed, The Ugandans says no to homosexuality.

World Bank Freezes Loan To Uganda For Not Allowing Homosexuality

Filed under: Africa,Featured | 
President Yoweri Museveni photo
President Yoweri Museveni
AFRICANGLOBE – The World Bank has suspended a planned $90m loan to Uganda meant to strengthen its health care system after its president signed into law a bill prescribing harsh jail terms for homosexual offences.
The decision by the global lender comes days after homosexuality supporting countries such as Denmark, the Netherlands and Norway said they would also freeze or change aid programmes for Uganda because of the law.
The law will see those convicted of “aggravated homosexuality” – defined as sex between gay men and minors or the disabled – jailed for life.
“We have postponed the project for further review to ensure that the development objectives would not be adversely affected by the enactment of this new law,” a World Bank spokesman said.
With a per capita income of $506, Uganda relies heavily on donor aid and suspension of aid could affect many development programmes.
Government spokesman Ofwono Opondo shrugged off foreign aid cuts and international criticism, saying Uganda can do without Western aid.
“The West can keep their ‘aid’ to Uganda over homos, we shall still develop without it,” he said in a message on Twitter.
Yoweri Museveni, the Ugandan president, signed the bill, described as one of the world’s toughest anti-homosexuality laws, despite condemnation from Western regimes and foreign backed so-called human rights groups.
Barack Obama, the US president, had warned the president that he risked complicating diplomatic ties between the two nations if he signed the bill into law.
United States Secretary of State John Kerry on Wednesday compared the “flat-out morally wrong” and “atrocious” law which was enacted to protect Ugandan children to anti-Semitic legislation in Nazi Germany or apartheid in South Africa.
Crisis Meeting
Ugandan homosexuality proponent Frank Mugisha met with his masters in Washington on Thursday with top State Department officials to call for help in protecting homosexuality.
A State Department official said Mugisha met the top US diplomat for Africa, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, and acting assistant secretary for human rights Uzra Zeya, to discuss “mutual concerns” about safety and “how the US might respond to the law’s enactment”.
Diplomats and foreign agents masquerading as rights groups had tried to pressure President Museveni – already under fire from key Western regimes over alleged rampant graft and for stifling opposition groups and media – to block the legislation.
But in a blunt speech after signing the law, Museveni warned Western nations not to meddle in the east African country’s affairs and said he was not afraid of aid being cut.
Immoral western regimes are attempting to force their lifestyle on African governments whom they perceive as being weak, however it seems as if their concerns over so-called human rights does not extend to countries such as Saudi Arabia and Israel.

BOSS’ N UP: AKON BRINGING ELECTRICITY TO OVER ONE MILLION AFRICAN

BOSS’ N UP: AKON BRINGING ELECTRICITY TO OVER ONE MILLION AFRICANS

Published On February 28, 2014 | By john | Be the bossNewsStrictly for the brothersThe Barbershop
akon2
BY:  John “Hennry” Harris
Singer/producer/writer Akon has launched an ambitious and highly commendable effort that aims to improve the lives over a million people in Africa with his new initiative“Akon Lighting Africa”.
The Senegalese-American hopes to bring electricity to one million households by the end of 2014 to help promote energy sustainability and sufficiency throughout the Mother Land.
akon3“The lack of electricity is currently a major problem in Africa,” reads the website for the campaign“A significant number of households in rural areas and even urban cities do not have access to electricity. This is a real obstacle to Africa’s Sustainable Development.”
Akon has partnered with local charities and has corporations on board to aid in the efforts of the campaign by addressing Africa’s energy issue and utilizing clean, renewable energy by installing solar equipment in over one million households.
Akon will travel and meet with leaders in nine countries in nine days to discuss the project including his native Senegal, Mali, Guinea Conakry, Gambia, Burkina Faso, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Congo and the Ivory Coast.
BOSS salutes the efforts of Akon to improve the lives of so many people in need.  He is a great example of not akononly “reaching back” to help but paying it forward to provide a better future.
Akon, although born in St. Louis, spent much of his childhood years in Senegal, which he describes as his hometown. Born Aliaune Damala Bouga Time Bongo Puru Nacka Lu Lu Lu Badara Akon Thiam, he rose to prominence in 2004 with the release of his smash hit “Locked Up”, the first single from his debut album Trouble.
Akon has been a trailblazer in music founding Konvict Muzik which was the launching pad for auto-tune wiz T-Pain and he also is the driving force behind the success of Lady Gaga.  Akon is the first solo artist to hold both the number one and number two sports simultaneously on the Billboard Hot 100 charts twice.  He has always been a “worldly” artist and has sang songs in other languages including Tamil, Hindi and Spanish.  The Guinness Book of World Records has Akon listed as the #1 selling artist for master ringtones in the world.

BLACK AXE AND EIYE CONFRATERNITY CLASH IN EKOSODIN UNIBEN.

BLACK AXE AND EIYE CONFRATERNITY CLASH IN EKOSODIN, UNIBEN, 20 DEAD IN THREE DAYS

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By Enoch Bamah

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One of the dead students
Tears, Sorrow and Blood in Ekosodin community: Ekosodin community is location behind the University of Benin, it is populated by University of Benin students, as members of Black axe and Eiye confraternity clash over who is superior. Ekosodin is a safe haven for notorious criminals and cult members.
Right now there are series of unreported killings by members of the black axe and Eiye confraternity. On Monday February 24th, a student simply identified as Osas was found lifeless at University of Benin main gate.
More than 20 students has been killed in three days, between February 24th and 27th, in a revenge attack by members of both confraternities. Some of the students killed are Gallacy, killed in Ekosodin gate, and George popularly known as Jack Bauer. These recent killings are believe to be linked to the leadership of Edo Rainbow Coalition who propel these confraternity boys into actions to get attention from the state government because it has refused for some time now, to dish out money to them. Some members of Ekosodin community wants a state of Emergency to be declared in Ekosodin community to stop the killings in the community. As at the time this report was filed, members of black axe and Eiye confraternities are still killing themselves.

You have my vote on that one.

Give Nigerians right to defend selves against insurgents, says Brigade Commander

on    /   in News 8:31 pm   /   Comments
Sokoto- Brig.-Gen. Tasi’u Ibrahim, Commander, 1 Brigade, Nigerian Army, said Nigerians should be allowed the right to defend themselves if the country was to win the war against terrorism.
Ibrahim made the call in Sokoto while  addressing the Brigade’s 2014 Officers Training Day.
He stressed that this was one of the measures that should be adopted “if Nigeria is to holistically win the ongoing war on terror.”
According to him, this is being practiced in developed nations of the world.
Ibrahim listed other measures to include strict monitoring and severe restriction on the importation of certain goods being used to aid and abate such crimes.
He stated that such goods included motorcycles. “It has been proved that a good number of the insurgents use them for their attacks.’’
Ibrahim said “a good number of those selling petty things by the road sides in most of the nation’s cities are simply easy preys in the hands of these insurgents.’’
He also expressed concern with town planners in the country, “who allow the erection of illegal shops scattered all over the nation’s major cities
He called for urgent review of national planning system, settlement patterns and borders to check terrorism in the country.
The brigade commander said the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) does not necessarily have to relocate to the insurgency-prone states.
“The COAS is everywhere already, hence his representatives across the nation.’’
He advised that national resources should be deployed in earnest towards addressing the ugly situation since “the army is just but a fraction of the national powers.’’ (NAN)

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Boko Haram killings and Northern Elders.

Chief Richard Akinjide (SAN), a member of the Tafawa Balewa and Shagari governments – and as such, privy to intelligence reports and sensitive records – had this to say:
“In 1898, Lugard formed the West African Frontier Force initially with 2,000 soldiers, about 90 percent of them were from the North mainly from the Middle belt,, and that was the beginning of our problems. Anybody who wants to know the root cause of all the coups and our present problems, and who does not know the evolution of Nigeria would just be looking at the matter superficially. Our problems started from that time. And Lugard was what they called at that time imperialist.“

... I have always reflected on these incontrovertible facts:

1. The average weapon-wielder in Nigeria is a northerner...daggers, swords, machetes, knives etc can be found in scabbards with the average Arewan.. Check out the Suya guys or the ubiquitous mai-guards in the south for instance...

2. The average soldier (army/air force/navy) is also a northerner.

3. There are thousands of retired Generals in the north still alive with many of them stupendously rich...

How come the area is ravaged daily like hot knife through butter by the most cowardly and moronic murderers of harmless, helpless, and unarmed kids, women and worshippers at night and during the day? There are thousands of cases in the south where even women and men band themselves together to chase away night-marauders, expose kidnappers, and other antisocial elements in their neighbourhoods...

OPC, BAKASI BOYS of ABA, OMATA of Onitsha etc have succeeded in sanitizing most of their environments even without practical military or paramilitary experience compared to the north. Go to most streets in Lagos and you will likely find gated entries and egresses in most neighbourhoods for security purposes. All are communal efforts. Nothing from govt... But not so in the north: Instead, serving military officers of northern stock have been caught with Boko Haram links....The Hisbahs (sharia police) can seize 200,000 cartons of beer from hundreds of dealers and destroy them but can't catch a single BH idiot... HERE IS WHY: ‘Northerners Are Willing Agents of Destruction’ – Senator Turaki

Senator Ibrahim Saminu Turaki, former governor of Jigawa state has said that Northerners are their own greatest enemies.

Speaking during the launch of his political movement, ‘Saminuya’, at his Bandawa farm in Kazaure local government area of Jigawa, Senator Saminu Ibrahim Turaki said, “The people that destroyed the North are northerners”.

He stated that “We have a crab culture in the North. You know, when the crab wants to climb it brings others down”.

“In the North, we don’t like ourselves. Anybody that is in power wants to destroy his predecessor. The northerners are willing tools for whoever wants to destroy somebody” he added. http://247ureports.com/?p=48134 PS: In the same Yobe State the last LGA elections witnessed A MASSIVE VOTER TURN OUT as APC swept the polls. No fear of Boko Haram... ‪#‎oddinnit‬?
Chief Richard Akinjide (SAN), a member of the Tafawa Balewa and Shagari governments – and as such, privy to intelligence reports and sensitive records – had this to say:
“In 1898, Lugard formed the West African Frontier Force initially with 2,000 soldiers, about 90 percent of them were from the North mainly from the Middle belt,, and that was the beginning of our problems. Anybody who wants to know the root cause of all the coups and our present problems, and who does not know the evolution of Nigeria would just be looking at the matter superficially. Our problems started from that time. And Lugard was what they called at that time imperialist.“

... I have always reflected on these incontrovertible facts:

1. The average weapon-wielder in Nigeria is a northerner...daggers, swords, machetes, knives etc can be found in scabbards with the average Arewan.. Check out the Suya guys or the ubiquitous mai-guards in the south for instance...

2. The average soldier (army/air force/navy) is also a northerner.

3. There are thousands of retired Generals in the north still alive with many of them stupendously rich...

How come the area is ravaged daily like hot knife through butter by the most cowardly and moronic murderers of harmless, helpless, and unarmed kids, women and worshippers at night and during the day? There are thousands of cases in the south where even women and men band themselves together to chase away night-marauders, expose kidnappers, and other antisocial elements in their neighbourhoods...

OPC, BAKASI BOYS of ABA, OMATA of Onitsha etc have succeeded in sanitizing most of their environments even without practical military or paramilitary experience compared to the north. Go to most streets in Lagos and you will likely find gated entries and egresses in most neighbourhoods for security purposes. All are communal efforts. Nothing from govt... But not so in the north: Instead, serving military officers of northern stock have been caught with Boko Haram links....The Hisbahs (sharia police) can seize 200,000 cartons of beer from hundreds of dealers and destroy them but can't catch a single BH idiot... HERE IS WHY: ‘Northerners Are Willing Agents of Destruction’ – Senator Turaki

Senator Ibrahim Saminu Turaki, former governor of Jigawa state has said that Northerners are their own greatest enemies.

Speaking during the launch of his political movement, ‘Saminuya’, at his Bandawa farm in Kazaure local government area of Jigawa, Senator Saminu Ibrahim Turaki said, “The people that destroyed the North are northerners”.

He stated that “We have a crab culture in the North. You know, when the crab wants to climb it brings others down”.

“In the North, we don’t like ourselves. Anybody that is in power wants to destroy his predecessor. The northerners are willing tools for whoever wants to destroy somebody” he added. http://247ureports.com/?p=48134 PS: In the same Yobe State the last LGA elections witnessed A MASSIVE VOTER TURN OUT as APC swept the polls. No fear of Boko Haram... ‪#‎oddinnit‬?

Competency Test for teachers in Edo State

COMPETENCY TEST:OSHIOMHOLE, PRADOTIONAL RULERS; LIES AND DECEIT

When primary school teachers went on strike last year oshiomhole promised to teach them a lesson, he boasted that he would sack 3000 teachers. He praised secondary school teachers for not joining the strike, he promised to pay them their salaries. while he refused to pay primary school teachers. Then he hired a comedian, a female from the East with Igbo accent to convince us that she is a primary school teacherin Edo state who cannot read and write, with a cognitive level below pre-k. Few months later, after the TV show he sacked teachers. Not done yet, still unable to pay Edo workers, and bent on firing more. That is his goal, and to achieve this, he want to do competency text for teachers, like the female clown from the East, this time, pradotional rulers are ready to help him. Pray for teachers in Edo State.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Gold Discovered In Haiti Estimated at $20 Billion

Gold Discovered In Haiti Estimated at $20 Billion

Haiti – Its capital is blighted with earthquake rubble. Its countryside is shorn of trees, chopped down for fuel. And yet, Haiti’s land may hold the key to relieving centuries of poverty, disaster and disease: There is gold hidden in its hills — and silver and copper, too.
A flurry of exploratory drilling in the past year has found precious metals worth potentially $20 billion deep below the tropical ridges in the country’s northeastern mountains. Now, a mining company is drilling around the clock to determine how to get those metals out.
In neighboring Dominican Republic, workers are poised to start mining the other side of this seam later this year in one of the world’s largest gold deposits: 23 million ounces worth about $40 billion.
Haiti’s annual budget is $1 billion, more than half provided by foreign assistance. The largest single source of foreign investment, $2 billion, came from Haitians working abroad last year. A windfall of locally produced wealth could pay for roads, schools, clean water and sewage systems for the nation’s 10 million people, most of whom live on as little as $1.25 a day.
“If the mining companies are honest and if Haiti has a good government, then here is a way for this country to move forward,” said Bureau of Mines Director Dieuseul Anglade.
In a parking lot outside Anglade’s marble-floored office, more than 100 families have been living in tents since the earthquake. “The gold in the mountains belongs to the people of Haiti,” he said, gesturing out his window. “And they need it.”
Haiti’s geological vulnerability is also its promise. Massive tectonic plates squeeze the island with horrifying consequences, but deep cracks between them form convenient veins for gold, silver and copper pushed up from the hot innards of the planet. Prospectors from California to Chile know earthquake faults often have, quite literally, a golden lining.
Until now, few Haitians have known about this buried treasure. Mining camps are unmarked, and the work is being done miles up dirt roads near remote villages, on the opposite side of the country from the capital. But U.S. and Canadian investors have spent more than $30 million in recent years on everything from exploratory drilling to camps for workers, new roads, offices and laboratory studies of samples. Actual mining could be under way in five years.
“When I first heard whispers of this I said, `Gold mines? There could be gold mines in Haiti?’” said Michel Lamarre, a Haitian engineer whose firm, SOMINE, is leading the exploration. “I truly believe this is our answer to taking care of ourselves instead of constantly living on donations.”
On a rugged, steep Haitian ridge far above the Atlantic, brilliant boulders coated with blue-green oxidized copper jut from the hills, while colorful pebbles litter the soil, strong indicators that precious metals lie below.
“Just look down,” said geologist John Watkins. “Where there’s smoke, there’s fire.”
Nearby, 8-year-old Whiskey Pierre and his barefoot buddies stared at a team of sweat-drenched men driving a narrow, shrieking diamond bit 900 feet into the ground.
“That is a drill!” shouted Whiskey, bouncing on his toes. “The man drill to get gold!”
The workers periodically pulled up samples and knocked them into boxes. The first 40 feet yielded loose rocks and gravel. About 160 feet down, cylinders of rock came back peppered with gold. At 1,000 feet down, rocks were heavily streaked with copper.
Geologists extrapolating from depth and strike reports estimate at least 1 million ounces of gold at two sites. In April, prospectors found the first significant silver ever reported in Haiti: between 20 million and 30 million ounces. And in the end, it may be copper that is the most lucrative: geologists suspect that more than 1 million tons lay in just one of many areas under exploration.
The prices of precious metals have been volatile in recent years, with copper selling for about $8,000 per ton, silver at $30 an ounce, and gold at $1,600 per ounce.
“Ultimately, I think mining is going to dwarf anything else in Haiti,” says Michael Fulp, an Albuquerque, N.M.-based geologist who visited the drill sites. “Usually you’ve got about a one-in-1,000 chance of making a mine from the exploratory stage, but those odds are much better in Haiti because of the lack of any previous modern-day exploration and very, very promising samples.”
Gold was last gathered in Haiti in the 1500s, after Christopher Columbus ran the Santa Maria onto a Haitian reef. Spaniards enslaved the Arawak Indians to dig for gold, killing them off with harsh conditions and infectious diseases. When the Spaniards learned of even more lucrative deposits in Mexico, they moved on.
In the 1970s, United Nations geologists documented significant pockets of gold and copper, but foreigners weren’t willing to risk their cash in a country where corruption and instability has long discouraged outside investment.
Ironically, it was only after the catastrophic 2010 earthquake that investors saw real opportunity. Fifteen days after a seismic jolt brought down much of Port-au- Prince, a Canadian exploration firm acquired all of the shares of the only Haitian firm holding full permits for a promising chunk of land in the northeast.
“Investors want to get in at the bottom,” said Dan Hachey, president of Majescor Resources, the Canadian company, “and I figured after that earthquake, Haiti was as low as it could get.”
Hachey was also betting that the $10 billion in foreign assistance promised for earthquake recovery would force change and accountability.
“The eyes of the world will not allow the government to fool around,” he said.
Three firms are considering mining in Haiti, but so far only SOMINE has full concessions to take the metals out of the mountains. Those permits, for 50 square kilometers (31 square miles), were negotiated in 1996 under President Rene Preval and require the firm to hire Haitians whenever possible.
In exchange for minimal permit fees, SOMINE committed to spend $2.25 million in the first two years. In addition, it will pay $1.8 million after a feasibility study, according to the contract.
Bottom line: Haitians should get $1 out of every $2 of profits, compared with about $1 out of $3 that most countries get from mining firms.
Discoveries of rich resources, whether diamonds, oil or gold, often prompt great economic booms but come with great risk of environmental, health and social problems. Chile, one of the wealthiest nations in Latin America, is the world’s largest copper exporter, deriving a third of its income from the metal. Peru, with one of the fastest growing economies in the world, has privatized most of its mines in recent years, and now gets about 20 percent of its total revenues from the industry.
Though the contractual terms are generous for Haiti, there is plenty to be cautious about. Haiti’s government is repeatedly rated as one of the most corrupt in the world. The mines would ostensibly be regulated by government officials responsible for enforcing environmental, mining and corporate laws, but at this point those officials don’t exist and there are neither plans nor budgets to hire them.
Further, open pit mines, common around the world, are crater-like holes made up of a series of massive terraced steps that drop thousands of feet into the ground. When the resources are exhausted, usually after about 25 years, the pits can be refilled or converted into reservoirs. In many cases, the mines leave serious problems — environmental contamination, displaced communities and mountaintops torn asunder.
From Papua New Guinea to the Philippines to Brazil, mining accidents have allowed tons of waste to be spilled into rivers and lakes, creating environmental disasters.
“In low-income countries, the dangers are substantial,” said UCLA political science professor Michael Ross. “The great irony of mineral wealth is that those countries that most desperately need infusions of mineral revenue — low-income countries with weak governments — are also least likely to manage these resources wisely, for the benefit of the country.”
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