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Man finds lost phone full of Monkey selfies

A Malaysian man who lost his phone found it full of Monkey selfies and video of the animal he believes stole the device after retrieving it from a jungle near their house, CNN reports.

Zackrdyz Rodzi thinks the animal had stolen the phone when he fell asleep.

Rodzi shared the images and video of the animal on social media which have since gone viral.

The pictures show the animal starring into the lens of the camera while the video shows the animal trying to push the phone into its mouth in apparent move to eat the device.

Rodzi said he realised his phone was missing when he woke up on Sunday morning.

“There was no sign of robbery. The only thing on my mind was is it some kind of sorcery,” he told the BBC.

He said it was not until the following day his uncle saw a Monkey nearby and after dialing the phone discovered it lying under a palm tree just beyond their back garden.

His uncle suggested that there could be a picture of the thief in the phone and so when they opened the phone gallery, they saw it was full of money selfies.

“Something that you might see once in a century,” he tweeted when sharing the images and videos.  

He also shared some of the images and videos in a TikTok post, calling the monkey a “sneaky little hairy toyol”, an undead baby used in witchcraft to commit theft and mischief in south east Asian folklore.

In a follow up tweet, he joked: “Hey @Apple I need a new phone since im giving mine to the monkey.”

Rep caught watching porn during plenary

Pascal Oparada

A member of the Parliament in Thailand was caught looking at porn on Wednesday while a budget was being read.

Ronnathep Anuwat staring intently at his phone the House was in session.

Shocked reporters at the press gallery snapped the pictures of the politician who removed his face mask to look more closely at the pictures.

One showed a young woman with her top off, another was lying naked on a bed and a third showed a close up of genitals.

When reporters confronted Ronnathep, he admitted looking at the pictures but said he was doing so because a girl had sent them to him. He said he wanted to make sure the girl was not in any trouble.

He said he wanted to ‘observe the environment surrounding the girl in the picture’ as he feared she was ‘being harassed by gangsters who had forced her to take the pictures’.

Mr. Ronnathep said he eventually realised the girl was ‘asking for money’ so he deleted all of the content.

Government officials summoned the MP for an explanation but ruled no further action would be taken against him.

House speaker Chuan Leekpai said the images were a ‘personal matter’ and added there were no rules about what MPs could look at on their phones in the meeting room.

He said no MPs had complained about the matter so no action would be taken, and further warned the public to separate personal matters from MPs duties.

Mr. Ronnathep represents Chonburi province for ruling military Palang Pracharath Party.(theexpressng)

Shock as hundreds of thousands of birds drop dead from the sky

Scientists have been left in a state of shock after thousands of birds dropped dead from the sky.

Biologists at New Mexico State University are trying to find out why hundreds of thousands of migratory birds have been found dead across the state.

The mystery started August 20 with the discovery of a large number of dead birds at the US Army White Sands Missile Range and White Sands National Monument, according to Martha Desmond, a professor at the university’s department of fish, wildlife and conservation ecology.

What was first believed to be an isolated incident turned out to be a much more serious problem when hundreds more dead birds were found in regions across the state, including Doña Ana County, Jemez Pueblo, Roswell and Socorro.

“It’s just terrible,” Desmond told CNN. “The number is in the six figures. Just by looking at the scope of what we’re seeing, we know this is a very large event, hundreds of thousands and maybe even millions of dead birds, and we’re looking at the higher end of that.”

Dead migratory birds — which include species such as warblers, bluebirds, sparrows, blackbirds, the western wood pewee and flycatchers — are also being found in Colorado, Texas and Mexico.

Alongside biologists from White Sands Missile Range, Desmond and her team began identifying, cataloging and examining about 300 dead birds on Saturday to learn more about the condition they were in when they died.

Residents and biologists reported seeing birds acting strangely before they died. For example, birds that are normally seen in shrubs and trees have been spotted on the ground looking for food and chasing bugs.

Many were lethargic and unresponsive so they were getting hit by cars, Desmond said, in numbers “larger than ever seen before.”

On the missile range golf course, swallows, which are aerial insectivores that don’t even walk, were sitting on the ground and letting people approach them, she added.

Possible reasons

One of the factors biologists believe may have contributed to the deaths of the birds is the wildfires burning in California and other Western states, which may have forced the birds into early migration before they were ready.

“Birds who migrated before they were ready because of the weather might have not had enough fat to survive,” Desmond said. “Some birds might have not even had the reserves to start migrating so they died in place.”

Some birds might have had to change their migratory pathways, while others could have inhaled smoke and sustained lung damage.

While the fires and dry weather in New Mexico may have amplified the number of migratory bird deaths, that still leaves many questions.

“We began seeing isolated mortalities in August, so something else has been going on aside the weather events and we don’t know what it is. So that in itself is really troubling,” she added.

The birds will be sent to the US Fish and Wildlife Service Forensics Laboratory in Oregon for necropsies and to determine their cause of death, but it could take weeks to get results.

“This is devastating. Climate charge is playing a role in this.” Desmond said. “We lost 3 billion birds in the US since 1970 and we’ve also seen a tremendous decline in insects, so an event like this is terrifying to these populations and it’s devastating to see.” (CNN)

UN to mark 75th anniversary with largely online event

The United Nations is to mark the 75th anniversary of its founding amid the ruins of World War II with a large online event on Monday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has said.

Guterres is expected to deliver in-person, remarks in the gilded General Assembly Hall, while world leaders, including U.S. President Donald Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, will deliver pre-recorded video speeches.

“It’s very unfortunate but it’s going to be a pretty gloomy birthday celebration for the UN,” UN expert Richard Gowan from the think tank Crisis Group said. Leaders are set to adopt a declaration agreed on in July, committing to a reinvigorated multilateralism.

Gowan described the declaration as a “perfectly fine but pretty anodyne statement of support for UN principles, weakened by the fact that the U.S. did not want strong language on climate change.”

The commemoration comes at a time when the world body faces questions over whether it is still fit for purpose in a more multipolar world, and whether it can muster consensus to deal with current conflicts and challenges, including the coronavirus pandemic.

“In this 75th anniversary year, we face our own 1945 moment. We must meet that moment; we must show unity like never before to overcome today’s emergency,” Guterres told a news conference last week.

A day after the event, the UN’s annual general debate kicks off, with leaders also sending in video speeches due to the pandemic. Trump, who had expressed interest in being the only head of state to address the General Assembly live, is now said not to be heading to the UN’s New York headquarters. (NAN)

Facts, gaps, and questions arising from $3.1 Billion “Full Customs Process Automation” project

By Gowon Omale

Since Nigeria returned to Democracy, some projects presented and approved by FEC had to be cancelled because of facts that later emerged showing flaws in the process or lack of value for money. Successive governments have always talked about increasing debts, falling sales of crude oil, lack of liquidity to fund important projects yet we spend a lot on frivolous projects that are not adding tangible value to the economy except, in the minds of those that concieved them.

We had the Air Nigeria saga,  the bullet proof cars and the second Abuja runway project which was to cost over $40 million dollars than a brand new airport with two runways and taxi way of same length, and other brand new facilities that was being built in an Asian Country around the same time. We’ve also had a case in 2011 when Nigeria spent over N1.5 Trillion ($11.96 Billion using N153 to $1 rate of 2011) on fuel subsidy. These  and other allegations of financial misconducts in huge sums of dollars ranging in billions and the people involved usually just get a pat on the back, and in some cases resurface with another portfolio.

In some of the aforementioned cases, the FEC had to renege on its approvals and steered a new course of action. In all the cases, the Presidency had no hand in it, and the spacialists we expend so much estacodes training abroad were unable to discover the faux paux, thereby misleading their principals to present a shody proposal to the FEC. It’s about time we start expending our money on tangible legacy projects that will not only alleviate the poverty level in Nigeria, but place the nation as an ICON in Africa.

We have the human, capital, intellectual potentials to achieve this, and at the moment, a noble leader like President Buhari that can implement such projects, given the right counsel and advise. The article is a bit lengthy so is the quantum of cash that is being analysed.

Now on the $3.1 Billion for the Customs Process Automation.

The day Hajia Zainab Ahmed presented the $3.1 Billion Request to FEC for approval, I thought she made a mistake which would be noticed and later corrected. But Alas, such was not the case, I became restless since that day, and thought within myself: not again. There is need for us to critically examine the project, because it would further endorse a wrong pattern running the nation aground. Nonetheless, before coming to conclusions, let’s examine some facts about $3.1 Billion for the project.

Value for Money: Highlighted below are the value Nigeria can get for the $3.1 Billion dollar approved by FEC for Automation of Nigeria Customs Services.

Automobile Industry:

Assembly Plant: Volkswagen’s opened a small Assembly Plant in Rwanda in 2018 with a $20 million dollar investment. This implies that $3.1 Billion will build about 147 of such in Nigeria. See links below:

https://expogr.com/detail_news.php?newsid=5720&pageid=2

https://europe.autonews.com/article/20180627/ANE/180629816/vw-invests-20-million-in-rwanda-s-first-car-plant

Toyota Assembly Plant:

Toyota planned to spend about $1 Billion to build a new Assembly Plant in Mexico that will employ more than a thousand people and produce 200,000 cars a year. This implies $3.1 Billion can build 3 of this plant with $100 million left.

https://www.latimes.com/business/autos/la-fi-hy-toyota-mexico-factory-20150415-story.html

Ford Manufacturing Plant:

Ford planned to build a Mega Car Manufacturing Plant in Mexico for $1.6 Billion in 2018 that will employ more than 2800. This implies $3.1 Billion will build two of this plant, with another $100 million added.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/ford

Mega Car Manufacturing Plant:

South Africa planned spending $819 million on a Mega Car Manufacturing Plant in 2016 to be funded by a Chinese Company.

https://constructionreviewonline.com/2016/08/a-mega-car-manufacturing-plant-in-south-africa-to-be-constructed/

Airline Industry:

Airbus Fleet:

A320 Neo – $118.3 Million
A330-800 Neo – $259.9 Million
A350-900 – $317.4 Million

We can have a new airline with nine A320 Neo, four A330-800 Neo and three A350-900, and still have $43.5 Million left.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/273962/prices-of-airbus-aircraft-by-type/

Or

Boeing Fleet:

Boeing 737-700 – $88.1 Million
Boeing 787-8 – $248.3 Million
Boeing 777-200 – $306.6 Million

We can start a new airline with 13 Boeing 737-700, four Boeing 787-8 and three Boeing 777-200ER and still have $28.7 Million left with $3.1 Billion.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/273941/prices-of-boeing-aircraft-by-type/

The cheaper alternative of Embraer has not even been considered that would probably double the Boeing option. If we go into housing, the amount will give us 155,000 units of bungalows at N7.5 million per Unit and more than 1.5 million Nigerians can be engaged assuming 10 people are involved in constructing one building.

The above are Legacy projects we can embark on for the nation. With proper  negotiations, the nation can get these companies to invest in these projects which will be evident to all, instead of a  Customs Automation process that is virtual. Moreover, there is an existing state of the art Software and other hardware/equipment which are being used by several Nations… with commendable results. You may have other projects in mind that you can juxtapose the figures to compare with the value of “Automation”.

Debt Profile:

The Honourable Minister of Finance and the Government have been hammering so much on the debt the country is owing. The Minister informed the FEC that the Project would be financed by the Conglomerate and Nigeria does not have to provide funds immediately. It’s like a man going to a car lot advertising that “drive away a car for free and pay later”. The moment the man signs and drives away the car he becomes a debtor and, if for any reason, he is unable to pay, it becomes another story.

Likewise on the Customs Automation project, whether financed or not, as soon as the contract is signed, the fact is that it becomes a public debt that has to be settled, which only results in increasing Nigeria’s debt profile. A lot of agencies have gotten the country indebted over the years through initiatives like this.

Contravention of the Procurement Act 2007:

The proposed Customs Implementation violates the procurement law. Section 16 sub Section I sub sub section (b) states that “based only on procurement plans supported by prior budgetary
appropriations and “no procurement proceedings shall be formalized until the procuring entity has ensured that funds are available to meet the obligations” and subject to the threshold in the regulations made by the Bureau”

In this case, the Nigeria Customs Service does not have the funds, hence, going into the project as it is, violates the Act, unless it is being implemented as a loan which must pass through due process in accordance with the Laws of the Federation.

Existing Automation Capability:

The NCS currently has an existing Software ASYCUDA++ with Full Process Automation used by over 92 Countries with commendable results.

Info Link: https://customs.gov.ng/?page_id=3167

Link to ASYCUDA: https://asycuda.org/en/

Before going into a new product, it is important to know the shortcomings of the existing platform and how the new product intends addressing the identified shortcomings. There must be a clear demonstration of the new product to everyone if it really exists and that it can address the limitations with the old. If it is just conceptual, then, there is no guarantee it will work and would end up being a white whale project (you can see the carcass of a dead elephant but a dead whale remains buried in the sea).

A $3.1 Billion concept is too expensive an adventure for Nigeria in its current state.

Moreover, someone needs to tell the Minister that it is the human beings that are mostly the problem in our system and not the tools being used. The right tools in wrong hands with wrong motives is still ineffective and would be frustrated.

Fact Check on the Product:

The Product may not exist at the moment and may just be an integration of different hardware and a Software to be developed. Otherwise, let the Minister tell us details of the Equipment and Software for the subject “Full Automation” and Countries where it is currently being used. It would be necessary to carry out an appraisal of those implementations, if any, to ensure it is robust enough to address the supposed challenge. Nigeria cannot afford to be a $3.1 Billion dollar Guinea Pig.

Fact Checks on the Parties Involved:

Messrs E. Customs HC Project Limited:

A check on the Internet revealed that Messrs E. Customs HC Project Limited does not exist. The only results available online are the Online Newspapers reporting the FEC meeting and reflected the name of the Company as part of the Ministers presentation. We need to know what other projects this ‘”Conglomerate” has executed in the past, before Nigeria becomes indebted to the tune of $3.1 Billion.

We also checked on the Company in the BPP search engine and no record of the Company was found as at today. We know someone might be smart after reading this article to claim there was an engine error or some funny stories.  Search engine is fine because other genuinely registered companies have credible results on the portal.

Bionica Technologies West Africa Limited:

The Company is registered with CAC. Reg No is 90893.

https://publicsearch.cac.gov.ng/ComSearch/index.php

Search on BPP Website (https://federalcontractors.bpp.gov.ng/#/search) indicates no record found. Again, a smart alec will probably come up with the story that BPP Website had a problem. How did company get Due Process No Objection  Certificate?

No credible information on the company after an online check. Results for the company was generally only three (Sites with related info considered as one):

www.dnb.com pulled up something on the Company. Gave company address as: BIONICA, 2B Batna Close, Off Agadez Street, Off Aminu Kano, Crescent, Abuja FCT Nigeria. This had two contacts with no phone numbers.

www.manpower.com.ng puts company address as Address: Plt 1678 Olukunle Bakare Close Victoria Island. No phone numbers or contact person.

Visit to websites with Company’s domain name showed error/not available or under maintenance. This is a usual gimmick for upcoming companies who try to put up a front.

Another link in ICIJ Website reported a Company with same name was registered in British Virgin Island incorporated 22 October 2004 was struck off on 30 April 2008 and finally deactivated on 2 May 2008, having defaulted. Company’s Agent was Mosac Fonseca as reported in the Panama Papers (https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/10110048). You may wish to conduct a search on the personality of Mosac Fonseca yourself.

Can Nigeria really commit $3.1 Billion project to a company like this?

Bargain Securities and Supplies Nigeria Limited:

Company not found in CAC Registration or BPP Portal

No information about this Company online except for online news on the contract award. Also a search on BPP website. No record found. Not even a website.

Mmmmm. This is now becoming interesting…..

African Finance Corporation (AFC) has some credible information on it.

Huawei as we all know is a Chinese Company that does exist.

In conclusion. Somebody has not done his/her work well in considering this so called “Conglomerate” for $3.1 Billion project for Nigeria. We believe the father of the nation will not allow this to go through. Just like Obasanjo withdrew from the Air Nigeria project, Jonathan withdrew from the second Abuja Runway project, Nigerians are sitting down to watch what will happen.

Secondly, all the projects being presented for approval because of this great faux pas on the so called Customs Automation needs to be scrutinised, including the N19 billion approved for “Aviation Automation” in the FEC. Thirdly, what Nigeria needs are not sharks but men and women of sound mind who can sense a fraud even before the proposers complete their presentation.

In this matter, it appears some very top government officials have been deceived and sweet talked, and in turn (giving a benefit of doubt) misled the FEC. A nation struggling to pay minimum wage and complaining of dwindling income and need to diversify should not even be contemplating spending $3.1 Billion frivolously. It’s like a man who owns a 2-year old Mercedes that is struggling to pay his childrens fee and provide for his family, and suddenly wants to buy a Ferrari on Credit because the Benz is slow. Meanwhile, he cannot even drive the Ferrari in his neighbourhood because the roads are bad.

In all of these, we may be wrong; but we invite the sponsors and approving authorities, including the NCS, Federal Ministry of Finance, or even the FEC to prove this article wrong. We are waiting.

God bless Nigeria and our President.

▪︎ Omale, a businessman, sent this material via e-mail from Onitsha, Anambra State

Minister inaugurates Committee on commercialization of Nigeria Film Corporation

Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has inaugurated the Steering Committee on the Commercialization of the

Nigeria Film Corporation (NFC), saying the country’s film industry had the potential to make Nigeria the entertainment capital of Africa.

The Minister said at the inauguration on Monday that the Federal Government was now set to reposition the NFC for effective service delivery.

According to him, “What we are doing today is to simply reposition the NFC in a manner that will enable it to play the role statutorily assigned to it.”

He said that “the film industry drives entertainment and has brought fame to the country, hence the need to reposition the sector and provide the necessary enablement for the industry to thrive.”

He pointed at the lack of critical infrastructure to drive the film industry in Nigeria, saying, for example, that “Nigeria has only 142 cinema houses compared to South Africa with 782 cinemas, United States of America, 40,393, India, 11,209 and China with 50,976 cinemas.”

He therefore appealed to state governments to invest in the provision of infrastructure for the entertainment industry, in view of its huge potential to generate employment and contribute to the economy.

He stated further: “It is important to appeal, especially to our state governments, to invest in infrastructure in the industry.

“I don’t think it will be too much for the state governments to ensure they build at least one cinema house in each local government area of their state. That will give us additional 774 cinema houses.”

The minister said “at the moment, the NFC, which is expected to regulate and organise professional practice in the film industry, is facing numerous challenges, which include NFC’s inability to engage in commercial film production; the fact that the law establishing the
Corporation limits its operational functions such that it cannot leverage on the private sector-led growth of the industry, and also that NFC’s civil service structure comes with bureaucratic limitations, budgetary constraints and operational inefficiency among others.”

He said in order to address these challenges and reposition the NFC for improved performance, the Federal Government had engaged the services of a Business Development Consultant to conduct due diligence on the corporation and the sector and recommend a strategy that was suitable for its reform and commercialization.

He declared: “Dear members of the SC, your appointment into this committee come with huge trust and belief in your ability and capacity to make this reform happen. I therefore urge you to consider this a critical national assignment that requires unflinching commitment and zeal.”

Director General of the Bureau for Public Enterprise, Mr Alex Okoh, clarified that the reform of the NFC was not a privatization but commercialization, with no transfer of ownership and sale of share, so as to ensure that the resident values of the corporation were enhanced.

Members of the Steering Committee are: Honourable Minister, Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, Alhaji Mohammed as Chairman; Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, Deaconess Grace Isu-Gekpe; Director General, BPE, Mr Alex Okoh; Managing Director, NFC, Dr Chidia Maduekwe, and Director, Industries and Communications, BPE, Abdullahi Dikko, as Secretary.

How FRC led agencies to pay N1.8trn into Consolidated Revenue Fund – Official

The Acting Chairman, Fiscal Responsibility Commission (FRC), Mr Victor Muruako, has said that over N1. 8trillion had been paid into the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF) by agencies and state-owned enterprises listed in the schedule to FRC 2009.

Muruako made the disclosure at a one-day training, organised by the Fiscal Responsibility Commission in collaboration with Brevic Consultants and Investment Ltd. and the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) held in Lagos on Monday.

Muruako said that the N1. 8trillion paid into the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF) was the operating surplus of 80 per cent of yearly operations of the agencies and state-owned enterprises listed by the schedule to FRC 2007.

News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Fiscal Responsibility Acts (FRA) 2007 was signed into law by Former President, Umar Yar’Adaua, in 2007 while the Commission was inaugurated in 2008.

The act had mandated the Commission to strive in promoting prudent management of the nation’s resources, ensuring long-term macro-economic stability and transparency in fiscal operations of the nation’s economy.

Muruako said that the Commission had been seen as an institutional response to the quest for a regime of prudent, ethical and efficient management of public finances at all tiers of the government in Nigeria.

He explained that Fiscal Responsibility Act, 2007 was signed into Law in ensuring the dream of the nation to instill a new transparency and accountability framework was unstoppable.

Muruako said that the inauguration of the commission had enable public finance management to be more positive, transparent and prudent.

“The Commission has reformed the budgetary process through the introduction of the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF).

“This is being put in place to link policy, planning and budgeting over the medium-term three years at best.

“In order to ensure that the FRA, 2007 was adhered to, the Commission had to devise alternative strategies to nudge the MDAs to discharge their functions through stakeholders’ interactions and bilateral engagements geared towards increasing awareness and understanding the requirements of the FRA, 2007.

“The key areas traditionally monitored include: Preparations and approval of the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF); Preparation and approval of the Annual Budget (Appropriation Acts; Execution of the budget and publication of Budget Implementation Reports (BIR).

“Also other areas are: Determination (and monitoring of) appropriate Operating Surpluses due for payment by scheduled corporations into the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federal Government; Savings and assets management; and Revenue Monitoring.

”The Commission has also developed a Template for the calculation of Operating Surplus, which has been approved by the Honourable Minister of Finance, who has also issued a circular in that respect since 2016.

“We are working towards recommending more agencies for addition to the Schedule, whilst also looking critically at some of them that may be removed from the list for certain considerations relating to their operations and the welfare of the Nigerian people.

“Unfortunately, the Commission has not got enough support to push up this template and engage these agencies including the Nigerian Railway Corporation on what constitutes Operating Surplus. This part of why we are here today,” Muruako said.

He said that the situation presently was not best of times for Nigerian Economy, particularly as the nation struggle to recover from the debilitating challenges of COVID-19 pandemic, which took the whole world unawares.

Muruako said that in spite of the fact that  COVID-19 challenges affected every country, adding that the commission had been guided by getting every hand on deck in ensuring that Nigeria do not fall back into recession the second time.

According to him, it is indeed possible looking at the economic programmes of President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR.

“The Fisacal Responsibility Act, 2007 are sensitised to understand what is expected of them by the Act. One of it is majorly the payment of Operating Surplus.

“Since we started operation in 2009, the Commission has caused the remittance of more than N1.8 trillion into the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federal Government with just about Government investment of N5.8 billion covering Personnel, Overhead and capital projects on the Commission.

“I want to particularly commend the management of the Nigerian Railway Corporation for seeing the importance of partnering with the Commission for this important programme.

“We have worked hard to ensure that all the agencies in the schedule in spite of some challenges, the implementation of the spirit and letters of the Act has led to some outstanding achievements namely: Reform of the budgeting process through the implementation of the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) among others,” Muruako said.

He commended the efforts and support of President Muhammadu Buhari, and the Minister of Transportation, Mr Rotimi Amaechi, for making it possible for the Commission to carryout it functions diligently.

The Managing Director, Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC), Mr Fidet Okhiria, said that the Federal Government was investing heavily on railway infrastructure, adding that it was indeed imperative that NRC shown capacity in all feats to manage and maintain the huge investment.

Okhiria, who was represented by the Director, Operations of NRC, Mr Niyi Ali, said that NRC with its vision to become a World Class Rail Transport Organisation, providing safe, efficient, affordable, reliable, widely linked network, customer oriented service’ and mission.

He said that  according to Tejvan Pettinger, fiscal responsibility implies a government pursues the appropriate level of government spending and tax to maintain sustainable public finances; ensure fiscal policy aids the optimal rate of economic growth and maintain appropriate levels of public investment.

Okhiria said that the subsisting fiscal environment was generally ineffective coupled with poor savings culture, uncoordinated borrowing, poor access to fiscal records, amongst others.

“This led to economic instabilities, inefficient public sector investments, debt overhang, poor service delivery and worsening socio-economic conditions in the country before the Commission was created.

”We appreciate the rich course content design for our staff, which is very suitable as we undertake the era of the railway modernization. The course content which include: The overview of the FRA Act 2007; MTEF and its roles in the budgeting process.

“Operating surplus computation using FRC operating surplus calculation template and FGN Revenue sources and monitoring will definitely aid the expansion of the horizon and better understanding of this important discourse by  our the participants,” he said.

Okhiria, however, urged the participants to take full advantage of the programme to acquaint themselves of more knowledge in government policies, business and transcend, adding that participant should extend the knowledge to their colleagues after the training. NAN

Lumumba’s tooth and toothless United Nations, By Owei Lakemfa

•Late Patrice Lumumba

PATRICE Lumumba, a postal worker, was 34 years when he won election as Prime Minister to lead the Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC to its June 30, 1960 independence. He made a powerful speech at the independence celebrations denouncing the barbaric colonisation of the DRC which led to the massacre of 15 million Congolese. The departing Belgian colonialists regarded the speech as an insult and decided that Lumumba must die. The British and Americans thought Lumumba was speaking like a communist and must, therefore, be eliminated. American President Dwight D. Eisenhower then ordered Lumumba’s assassination.

The Belgians set the events in motion by sending in troops to strengthen a secessionist movement in the Katanga Province while the Americans bought over the DRC Army Chief of Staff, Mobutu Seseseko, to engineer a mutiny. Within weeks of independence, the country was in turmoil. Lumumba was in a dilemma: he could ask for assistance from the then Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, USSR, but he would be branded a communist; so he turned to the United Nations, UN, whom he assumed was a neutral body. He was to realise that the UN is a body susceptible to manipulations by powerful countries.

Lumumba did not learn from the Korean experience when the UN on June 25, 1950 passed its Resolution 82 which, basically, empowered the US and its allies to invade Korea under its banner. Today, 70 years later, the foreign troops who invaded Korea in the name of the UN are still in that divided country, except that now, they fly the American flag. On Lumumba’s invitation, UN troops came to the DRC. They included troops from some African countries, notably Nigeria, whose Chief of Army Staff was British Major General Forster!

When the UN troops arrived, they placed Lumumba, the democratically elected Prime Minister under house arrest. Rather than watch his country taken over by colonialists and their lackeys, he escaped and headed for his stronghold of Stanleyville to establish a new government and put up resistance. Taking advantage of his enormous popularity, he stopped at towns and villages along the way, mobilising the masses.

Unfortunately, this left a trail which the bloodhounds of the American, Belgian and British secret services picked and sent rebel soldiers after him. He was eventually captured. What do you do with a man who had the mandate of his people to lead? Put him on trial? If so, on what charges; for being a patriot?

Since Western leaders had decided that Lumumba should be murdered, they tried to find a way of executing him without their hands dripping with the blood of the innocent. They embarked on a ridiculous and childish plot. They flew him and his two comrades, Joseph Okito, Senator representing the Kasai Province and First Vice President of the Senate, and Maurice Mpolo, Minister of Youths and Sports, into the rebel enclave of Katanga and handed them to the rebel forces led by Moise Tshombe. They were tortured on the way from the airport, then the convoy turned off into a forest, where they were tied to trees and shot.

The firing squad was led by Belgian officers. The man who supervised the murders, chopped up the bodies and then dissolve them in acid, was Belgian Police Commissioner Gerard Soete. In 2000, 39 years after these sordid events, he told the AFP about that January 17, 1961 day: “We started by getting drunk, to have the courage. We dismembered the corpse (of Lumumba) the hardest bit was cutting it up.” Soete said he took two teeth of the famous African leader as souvenir. That same year on the ARD German TV channel, he showed Lumumba’s teeth.

After Soete’s death, his daughter in 2016 granted a newspaper interview during which she displayed a tooth of Lumumba she had inherited from her father. This June, Lumumba’s daughter, Juliana, 64, petitioned the Belgian King Philippe condemning the “vile statements made in Belgium about holding some of his remains” and complained that: “The remains of Patrice Emery Lumumba are being used on the one hand as trophies by some of your fellow citizens, and on the other as funeral possessions sequestered by your kingdom’s judiciary.” Pointing out that her legendary father was a “hero without a grave” she demanded the return of his remains “to the land of his ancestors”.

On September 10, 2020, a Belgian court ruled that Lumumba’s remains should be returned to his family. This formalised the decision by the Belgian Federal Public Prosecutor’s Office that his remains could be given back to his family. This is a victory not only to the African peoples, but the entire human race whose species committed such unspeakable crimes.

Cuba learnt from the Lumumba experience. It had been invaded from April 17-19, 1961. But aware that the Americans were planning a larger and more determined invasion, the Cubans did not waste their time seeking UN intervention or troops, they appealed directly to the Soviet Union which sent missiles to the country as a deterrent. The Americans, led by an inexperienced President John Kennedy, were furious. Havana is 510 kilometres from Florida and the missiles could easily be turned at it.

Kennedy threatened an attack that could trigger a Third World War, and staked his reputation and Presidency on the removal of the missiles from Cuba. The Soviets decided to give him a face-saving solution: the missiles would be removed on two conditions. First, America must undertake never to invade Cuba again. Secondly, that America must remove its missiles on the Turkish border with the Soviet Union. Kennedy agreed. That was how the Cuban ‘Missile Crisis’ was resolved. None of the parties thought highly of a UN intervention. It was a win-win situation; all sides got what they wanted. Until today, America has not invaded Cuba again.

Since the debacle in Congo, the UN has continued to carry out its peace keeping missions, including in Rwanda where in 1994, it ordered its troops back to the barracks to watch, or allow the genocide take place. UN troops are today in Western Sahara under the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara, MINURSO, where it is watching the Moroccan occupiers detain, torture and massacre the indigenous Saharawi.

The UN has also been used to perpetrate crimes across the universe. For instance, it was used as cover in the criminal Western invasion and decimation of Iraq based on information it knew were lies. The UN was also used as cover in the invasion and devastation of Libya, including the cowardly execution of its President, Mouamar Ghadaffi.

The UN has been of tremendous benefit to humanity, setting up life-saving agencies like UNICEF and UNHR, but its peace-keeping missions need some teeth.

Africa and the Idea of the university, By Biko Agozino

Why do universities around the world require the donning of academic gowns that look like the Danshiki, Babariga, or Kosankosa of Africans? The modern university originated in Africa with its inception in 859 AD at Fez, Morocco, by Fathima, a Muslim woman, and it continues today as the oldest university in the world named in 1965,  University of Al Quaraouiyine. This was followed in 989 AD in present-day Mali by the Mosque of Sankore or Timbuctoo which doubled as a higher learning centre or Madrasa still known as the University of Sankore or Timbuctoo.

By comparison, the first university in Europe is the University of Bologna which started in 1088 AD and was indirectly modelled after the University of Sankore by being situated in a Cathedral institution or church with the aim of training priests in the study of the entire universe by the Catholic church that still calls itself the universal church, hence the Italian title, universitas or university (whole universe) – a term that was also used to describe global business establishments.

Some scholars misunderstand this term and therefore suggest that the multiversity is a better term for the university because there are different kinds of universities with different disciplines, epistemologies, methodologies and theories but they are mistaken because all those studies and methods relate to the one and only universe. Europeans are also mistaken when they assume that Eurocentrism or ethnocentrism is the only valid or universal epistemology, given that Afrocentricity is more valid by placing Africa at the centre of studies about Africa without assuming that all studies of the entire universe must be centred on Africa – Afrocentrism.

The classical African system of education in ancient Kemet or Egypt obviously paved the way for the modern study of the entire universe by establishing a similar body of knowledge at the Royal Temples and libraries built by the multi-genius polymath, Imhotep, with writing and learning in all fields – Medicine, Architecture, Philosophy, Astronomy, Algebra, Chemistry, Athletics, Politics, Religion, etc. according to Cheikh Anta Diopin Civilization or Barbarism and according to George James in Stolen Legacy: The African Origin of Greek Philosophy.

The ancient Greek philosophers were all known to have studied in ancient Egypt for dozens of years and Europeans had a 16th century saying based on the writings of Pliney the Elder (23-79 AD) that testified to this view of Africa as a mysterious place: ‘Africa Always Brings Us Something New’. According to Derrida, Plato earlier quoted his teacher, Socrates, as saying that Africans invented writing as a kind of medicine for healing the sick with a warning that patients should be careful not to take an overdose lest the Pharmakon or cure becomes a poison. Aristotle was known to have written nothing until he accompanied his student, Alexander the Great, to invade Egypt and loot the library at Alexandria before he published over 40 books in a few years, most of the contents being found in papyri of the Egyptian Mystery School that dated thousands of years before there was any culture known as Greek.

Europeans tried to hide the fact that even the Greeks regarded the African philosophy as offensive and therefore executed Socrates, sold Plato into slavery and exiled Aristotle for teaching foreign ideas. Europeans mounted a propaganda that only Europe had a literate culture while other cultures had oral traditions. Hegel and Levi-Straus claimed that literacy was what made Europeans superior to all other cultures. Habermas claimed that African cultures were ‘pre-civilisational or pre-literate’ in terms of his Theory of Communicative Action. The only pre-thing that African culture is can be said to be pre-European.

The African-born philosopher, Jacques Derrida, challenged such notions of white supremacy by reminding everyone that writing was not invented by Europeans but by Africans and that when human beings evolved in Africa and then migrated to the rest of the world 200,000 years later, they took writing with them by giving names to themselves, which is an indication that every culture engages in writing in general, or aspects Of Grammatology. Edward Said agreed that the idea of Orientalism as a condescending reference to the East by the West is mistaken because the huge contributions to universal knowledge from Orient cannot be denied by the Occident.

The difficulty for Africans is that hundreds of years of being denied universal education while being enslaved and colonised by Europeans have resulted in underdevelopment. The modern university is therefore assumed to have been introduced by Europeans to Africa as part of the civilising process of colonisation. But Walter Rodney warns that the colonisation of Africa was designed to mis-educate Africans and to underdevelop Africa to facilitate European exploitation given that after hundreds of years of domination, the colonisers failed to educate a sizeable number of university graduates to lead the development of Africa. It took the initiative of pioneers like Edward Blyden who rose from survivors of slavery to acquire universal knowledge and return to Africa to teach that indigenous African knowledge was not inferior to Eurocentrism.

Similar figures like Aggrey, Du Bois, and Garvey inspired the great Nnamdi Azikiwe, Zik of Africa, to venture across the Atlantic in search of the Golden Fleece of knowledge for service to our people. On his return, he published Renascent Africa and set up newspaper chains with which he trained young journalists to become public intellectuals while he sponsored or inspired the education of the Argonauts like Kwame Nkrumah, K. O. Mbadiwe, Nwafor Orizu, Mbonu Ojike, and many more who confessed that they were inspired by Zik of Africa to go abroad for their advanced learning in order to be equipped for the struggle for the restoration of independence.

The European colonisers believed that Africa was not ripe for universities, as if we were some kind of bananas. It took a lot of pressure from the Zik Group of Newspapers to persuade them to set up Colleges of the University of London in Ibadan and Accra with very few opportunities for the increasing population of students desiring higher learning. As soon as the colonisers allowed self-rule, Azikiwe took the initiative to build the first indigenous full-fledged land-grant university in Nigeria in 1955 and he called it The University of Nigeria, Nsukka, with the motto: To Restore the Dignity of Man. It was modelled after US universities and became the very first to offer courses in Business Administration and Electrical Engineering, as opposed to emphasis on the European Classics at the University College, Ibadan, which became autonomous only in 1963.

The Northern and Western Region governments followed the example of Azikiwe by building what became Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and the University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University, while the Federal Government built the University of Lagos to meet the yearning for universal learning across the country. The University of Nigeria soon set up branches in Calabar (now the University of Calabar) and the Aba Campus for Nigerian Languages while the Enugu Campus hosts the Faculties of Law, Medicine and Business Administration. Other independent African countries also quickly established their own universities or upgraded university colleges such as the ones in Makerere in Uganda, Nairobi in Kenya, or Fourah Bay College in Sierra Leone to serve as full universities.

The apartheid regime in South Africa continued with the Bantustan education policy that reserved poorly funded institutions for the African majority until the emergence of majority rule under Nelson Mandela before many of the polytechnics were upgraded to universities. Yet the African National Congress government of the new South Africa continued to increase tuition fees, forcing students to launch a campaign saying that Fees Must Fall, Rhodes Must Fall, and the universities must be decolonised in line with the teachings of progressive intellectuals led by Fanon in Algeria in the 1950s-1960s, by Steve Biko in the 1970s, and by Walter Rodney at the University of Dar es Salaam and the University of the West Indies in the 1960s-1970s.

The universities in Africa today remain thoroughly colonialist in orientation. The French universities in parts of Africa remain tied to the intellectual colonialism of France despite the heroic theoretical efforts of Leopold Senghor and Aime Cesaire, Cheikh Anta Diop, and by Mudimbe. One aspect of colonialism that remains is the domination of university administration and the professoriate by men trained in the colonial education system with little or no room for women at the top, according to CODESRIA which builds a network of African universities and links them up with Africa Diaspora scholars for mutual benefits.

When some women are appointed as Vice Chancellors they operated with the assumption that they must support oppressive patriarchy against progressives in order to retain their positions. Hopefully, the recent appointments of the first female VCs at the University of Calabar and at Imo State University would not be seen as a mandate for the repression of progressive intellectuals on the campuses. Instead, Madam VC should be supported to advance decolonisation by, for example, endowing a prize for the best doctoral dissertation written entirely in indigenous languages in any field. No country has ever industrialised by relying on the languages of colonisers.

The Murtala/Obasanjo administration introduced tuition-free university education in Nigeria but the emergence of state universities (started by Jim Nwobodo with Anambra State University of Technology in 1979 quickly followed by Sam Mbakwe in Imo State in 1980, both under the party leadership of Azikiwe, and then by Ambrose Ali in Bendel State under the leadership of Awolowo) and private universities forced university administrators to roll back the tuition-free programmes even in federal universities today as ASUU laments.

The universities across Africa should adopt this policy of publicly funded education to make education at all levels tuition-free the way that ancient Africans exemplified when there were no fees charged by the Royal Temples of Imhotep nor by the University of Sankore, contrary to the austerity conditionalities imposed by IMF loans. Education funding should be raised to 26% of the GDP for this purpose or raised even higher as Azikiwe did in Eastern Region in the 1950s which persuaded Awolowo to launch free primary school education in the Western Region to catch up with the East, he said. Cuba offers a better model of free education at all levels today.

The decolonisation of education effort should be advanced by challenging researchers to wean themselves from Eurocentric theories, epistemologies or methodologies, and develop original ideas based on African indigenous systems of knowledge as pioneered by African creative writers like Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka, Ama Ata Aido, Ngugi wa Thiongo, Mariama Ba, Sembene Ousmane, Buchi Emecheta, and by social scientists such as Kwame Nkrumah, Eskor Toyo, Samir Amin, Ifi Amadiume, Ruth First, Bade Onimode, Oyeronke Oyewumi, Nkiru  Nzegwu, Herbert Ekwe-Ekwe, Arthur Nwankwo, Ola Oni, Bala Usman, Mahmoud Mamdani, Achille Mbembe, Bagele Chilisa, and Akpan Ekpo, and also by scientists like Cheikh Anta Diop, Frantz Fanon, Chike Obi, Edwin and Bene Madunagu, Phillip Emeagwali, Abdul Bangura, to name but a few.

African intellectuals should be supported with generous funding for research from the governments and the private sectors across Africa the way it is done around the world. The Mo Ibrahim Foundation should redirect the Africa Leadership Prize away from corrupt politicians and share the prize money to scholars in different fields across African universities to encourage more innovation in the pursuit of knowledge of the entire universe. The universities should establish outreach to artisans, market women, farmers and artists to learn from the ingenuity of our people and share the fruits of systematic study more widely.

Dr. Agozino is a Professor of Sociology and Africana Studies at Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA. He is the author of Black Women and the Criminal Justice System and of Counter-Colonial Criminology, Editor-In-Chief of the African Journal of Criminology and Justice Studies and co-editor of Routledge Handbook of Africana Sociologies.

Lagos Inferno: What caused the blast that destroyed a Nigerian girls’ school

An explosion in Lagos, Nigeria rocked the city to its core. Twenty-three people were killed, and a girls’ boarding school totally destroyed.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, the country’s state-owned oil firm, said the blast in March occurred as a result of a truck that hit gas cylinders near one of its petroleum pipelines.

But BBC Africa Eye’s investigation indicates this explanation for the cause of the blast, that decimated over 100,000 square metres of the city, is wrong.

TIPS