Tag: Nigeria

  • I Will Flush Corrupt Civil Servants Out Of Works Ministry, Says Umahi

    dave-umahi

    Two weeks after a disagreement between workers of the Ministry of Works and their Minister, Dave Umahi, the latter has threatened to deal with corrupt civil servants sabotaging his efforts at the ministry.

    Umahi accused some of the civil servants of conniving with contractors to sabotage the government’s efforts.

    He said those found guilty will be taken to the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) for prosecution.

    “There are some elements within that are also fighting me, who are also benefiting from the system and that is the greatest problem we have and I just pretended.

    “I will flush those elements out and send them to ICPC to handle them because nobody can hold this country to ransom,” Umahi said during an interview with journalists in Abuja.

    Recall that Umahi had alleged a gang-up against him by some major contractors over his decision to construct roads with concrete instead of asphalt.

    This, according to Umahi, was the reason for the plots within the ministry to frustrate his efforts.

    However, while speaking the minister said he has the support of the President, which according to him is the most important to carry out his ministerial duties.

    He also said that some have keyed into the policy as major cement producers have agreed to discount prices for government road projects.

    Source

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  • 104-year-old woman dies days after going skydiving to break Guinness World Record

    104-year-old woman dies days after going skydiving to break Guinness World Record

    Dorothy Hoffner, a 104-year-old Chicago woman who recently went skydiving to set a record, has died.

     

    Hoffner died before being certified by Guinness World Records as the oldest person to ever jump from a plane.

     

    Her close friend, Joe Conant, said she was found dead Monday morning, Oct. 9, by staff at the Brookdale Lake View senior living community. Conant said Hoffner apparently died in her sleep on Sunday night, Oct 8.

     

    Conant, who is a nurse, said he met Hoffner — whom he called Grandma at her request — several years ago while he was working as a caregiver for another resident at the senior living center. He said she had amazing energy and remained mentally sharp

     

    “She was indefatigable. She just kept going,” he said Tuesday, Oct. 10. “She was not someone who would take naps in the afternoon, or not show up for any function, dinner or anything else. She was always there, fully present. She kept going, always.”

     

    On Oct. 1, Hoffner made a tandem skydive that could land her in the record books as the world’s oldest skydiver. She jumped out of a plane from 13,500 feet (4,100 meters) at Skydive Chicago in Ottawa, Illinois, 85 miles (140 kilometers) southwest of Chicago.

     

    104-year-old woman dies days after going skydiving to break Guinness World Record

     

    “Age is just a number,” Hoffner told a cheering crowd moments after landing. It was not her first time jumping from a plane — that happened when she was a spry 100 years of age.

     

    Conant said he was working through paperwork to ensure that Guinness World Records certifies Hoffner posthumously as the world’s oldest skydiver, but he expects that will take some time. The current record was set in May 2022 by 103-year-old Linnéa Ingegärd Larsson of Sweden.

     

    Conant said Hoffner didn’t skydive to break a record. He said she had so thoroughly enjoyed her first jump that she just wanted to do it again.

     

    “She had no intention of breaking the record. And she had no interest in any publicity or anything. She wasn’t doing it for any other reason than she wanted to go skydiving,” he said.

     

    Skydive Chicago and the United States Parachute Association celebrated Hoffner in a joint statement Tuesday, Oct. 10.

     

    “We are deeply saddened by Dorothy’s passing and feel honored to have been a part of making her world-record skydive a reality.

     

    “Skydiving is an activity that many of us safely tuck away in our bucket lists. But Dorothy reminds us that it’s never too late to take the thrill of a lifetime. We are forever grateful that skydiving was a part of her exciting, well-lived life,” they said.

     

    Conant said Hoffner worked for more than four decades as a telephone operator with Illinois Bell, which later became AT&T, and retired 43 years ago. The lifelong Chicago resident never married, and Conant said she had no immediate family members.

     

    A memorial service for Hoffner will be held in early November.

    Source

  • Nigerian govt plans to reduce taxes from 62 to nine —Oyedele

    In case you missed it, an expert’s view on Nigeria’s revenue and tax systems

    The Chairman of the Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms, Mr Taiwo Oyedele, on Tuesday disclosed that the administration of President Bola Tinubu was working to reduce taxes from the current 62 to a maximum of nine, to create a more business-friendly environment in the country.

    Oyedele, disclosed this at the 2023 annual conference of Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria, ICAN, in Abuja on Tuesday.

    According to him, the step had become imperative, as the current multiplicity of taxes had made tax administration cumbersome and ineffective.

    Read also: Top 10 stories from across Nigerian Newspapers, Wednesday, October 11, 2023

    Oyedele compared Nigeria’s tax revenue of N15.194 trillion in 2022 to the equivalent of N78 trillion revenue of South Africa, with only 10 taxes in the same period.

    He further stated that to achieve the tax reduction goal, administrative intervention and constitutional amendment would be required.

    Also speaking at the event, the Accountant -General of the Federation, Dr. Oluwatoyin Madein, noted that accountants played very critical roles and unique responsibilities in driving the nation’s development.

    She said: “Transparency builds trust”, and as such accountants must ensure accountability in both the public and private sectors.”

    The AGF tasked accountants to also address the unique needs of marginalised communities, with a view to ensuring inclusiveness of the various segments of the nation

    Source

  • Offspring Of Blood: Investigating Benue’s Herder-Farmer’s Clashes — (Part 1) 

    This investigation by NNEOMA BENSON seeks to unravel the identities and agenda of the perpetrators of the Farmers-Herders crisis in Benue State while exploring the various narratives surrounding the conflict. The report, which documents the plights of victims, is also a fact-check of allegations of religious undertone to the crisis.

    They are rarely masked, invading villages in black hoods and trousers or army camouflage with crossbody bags. They have a striking resemblance, wielding dangerous weapons as they skulk about grown bushes 一 Only those lucky to flee their farms and communities live to tell the story.

    Augustine Ikwulono, 68, arrived from his farm at about 5 p.m. in April 2023. He was having an early supper outside the small open area of his residence in the Imana Ikobi community, Apa Local Government Area (LGA) of Benue State, when he heard the muddled footsteps of villagers. Everyone in his household, including his wife, fled, leaving him behind.

    Augustine Ikwulono. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    “Before I could reach that compound,” he said, pointing at the nearby building, “I met with them — the Fulani — the ones that met me wore Army Camouflage, and they carried sophisticated weapons. They did not say anything to me but opened fire and shot me in my back while trying to escape.

    “I couldn’t do anything but run into the bush with my back bleeding from the bullet wound. I climbed a hill and burst out on one side, where I met one Isah, who felt sorry for me and asked me to sit down. I told him no, I would go. So, he sent for a machine (motorcycle) to pick me up from under the hill to the hospital”, he said while recounting his escape to THE WHISTLER.

    Ikwolono spent four days in a hospital in Agatu LGA, less than an hour’s drive from Apa, where doctors operated on him. He recovered and returned to his village to see his house razed and his farm proceeds, mostly yam, harvested and others carted away by the assailants.

    Since then, his health has deteriorated, and he lacks the strength to provide for his family as he should. “Feeding is now a challenge”, he said, and the family’s daily consumption of processed cassava (also known as fufu) and palm fruit extract used for soup is past bearing.

    Scorched Earth Attacks And Graves

    At least 40 houses were razed in Imana Okobi. Few villagers have renovated or rebuilt their homes, while some sleep on the bare ground after their mattresses are destroyed or carted away.

    A razed building in Imana Ikobi community, Apa LGA, Benue State. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    Oinu Matthew told THE WHISTLER that his extended families now cohabit and feed on the meagre produce from their farms. Other times, they depend on their neighbours for a meal. The father of six children from Imana Okobi also had a near-death experience after assailants invaded the same community on February 27. He had escaped into the bush after hearing gunshots.

    “I saw the men wearing black up and down with guns, and they pursued me into the bush. I saw their faces. They looked like Fulani men,” he said, adding, “Unfortunately, I told one of my brothers who was at home to leave the house while I was running away. When I could cross the community through the bush, I called my brother’s phone, and a Fulani man picked it up.”

    Oinu Matthew. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    The Fulani man told him his group had killed his brother and asked him to come and pick up his corpse! “That day, they killed five men. They burnt our houses, destroyed our assets and stole our properties. They started living in our houses permanently. They cooked our chickens, and they left nothing behind for us.”

    Data from various leaders of the Apa LGA showed that at least 98 men were killed between January and May 2023, and (12) communities were also affected within the period under review.

    A breakdown of the data showed that 13 men were killed in Imana Ikobi in separate attacks. In April, 13) were killed in Opaha, including (2) army officers, (8) in Ugbogbi and (3) in Oiyi. In March, (3) were killed in Odugbo and (1) in Edikwu Ich.

    In May, (7) were killed in Akpete, (7) in Olopa and (3) in Ochumeku. In February, (1) was killed in Kano-Ochumekwu, (30) in Ikobi and (9) in Ijaha Ikobi within the period in review.

    Samuel Enokola, a traditional leader of the Ugbobi community, explained that the herders do not touch women when they attack a village. They kill only the men whom they regard as threats to their existence.

    Ochanya James, a resident of Imana Ikobi, stands in front of her house, razed by herders. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    So, when these attacks occur, residents flee to Ugbokpo, where they squat with relatives after an attack because there are no Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in Idoma lands. During the day, they would journey for at least two hours on foot to their villages and farms. The people suffer in the aftermath of such attacks.

    Women Here Are Brave 

    Like Ugbokpo, Obagaji is a haven for displaced communities in the Agatu LGA. The suburb is the headquarters of Agatu, another worst-hit area among the Idoma-speaking tribe. Agatu is bound to Apa by the North, and the proximity makes both axes danger zones.

    A drive over a 74-kilometre distance, across over ten communities in Agatu, showed that the villagers are yet to recover from the mass invasion of the Fulani herders between 2013 and 2016 and other pockets of attacks in subsequent years.

    Ologba, a community after Obagaji, is deserted, and no human lives there. The razed buildings are dressed with branches from aged trees, and the locals are now refugees in Obagaji while others moved to Otukpo LGA, bound to Agatu by the South.

    Touched buildings in Ologba community, Agatu LGA, Benue State. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    Data obtained from the LGA officials by THE WHISTLER showed that the Fulani between 2013- 2016 affected 15 communities, razed over 700 houses, displaced over 1000 women and children and killed over 368 people.

    Between 2019 and mid-2023, at least 105 incidents of farmers-herders crisis were recorded; over 1,500 people were reportedly killed, and over 1.5 million people were displaced in the state.

    Moving through the Agatu hinterlands, talking to dozens of people across the affected communities revealed that fear of death from an attack by locals or suspected herders is palpable.

    Women, the most vulnerable victims, are raped, injured or widowed. They are attacked by both herders and local criminals.

    “Some women are raped by herders and abandoned on their farms. Not many survive; those who do will take two or three days before we find them,” a community leader of Kokolo, Anthony Aboje, said.

    On March 13, Oteni and her husband were en route to their farm on a motorcycle when herders intercepted them.

    Oteni displays her hand where herders macheted her earlier in March 2023. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    Speaking in Idoma, she said, “I was going to Ogboji on a market day when two Fulani men attacked me. They met me at Odugbelo. They asked us to give them our motorcycle, and we refused. Then, they beat us and cut my hand with their sharp machete. They collected our motorcycle, and we have yet to see it”. 

    Rebecca Micheal, with ten children from Agatu LGA, said they are constantly faced with armed herders skulking about the bushes, chasing them away from their farmlands.

    “I was on my farm with other women in July when I saw the bush moving. Then we knew they were coming. They were carrying guns and chased us away from our farms,” Micheal said, noting the difficulty maintaining previous outputs of farm produce.

    Mary Emmanuel, mother of four, is a farmer, but the conflict with herders in Agatu LGA has restricted her activities. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    Mary Emmanuel, 26, whose portions of lands are now inaccessible due to recurring attacks from herders, said, “If I go to the farm alone, they will kill me.” She currently farms on a small portion near her house.

    The descriptions of the villagers here are peculiar. Both men and women would rather forsake their farms than get killed when herders invade their farmlands, and for most women, walking in groups prevents the attackers from harming them.

    The Victims Are Also Aggressors 

    The once peaceful farming and fishing environment of Agatu has lost its innocence. According to John Ikwulono, former Vice Chairman of Agatu LG Council, “Agatu has become a place where people are restless, undergoing pains and challenges as a result of both internal and external crises. Internal crisis because we have a communal crisis that has affected some communities in Agatu.”

    John Ikwulono, immediate past vice chairman of Agatu LGA. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    Aside from the herders and farmers conflict, Benue communities also suffer intra-communal crises on the sideline. It is barely acknowledged or given attention. Most villagers are afraid to speak of the internal killings and kidnappings recorded across the LGA, and to those outside the state, every incident is perpetrated by Fulani herders. 

    David Ogbole, Co-convener of Movement Against Fulani Occupation, described the situation as one of the components of insecurity in the state where a community or a clan within a community clashes over farmland, fishponds and chieftaincy issues.

    Elizabeth Inalegwu, 35, was sighted in the Aila community on one of her farms. The mother of five is stuck with the farm in Aila and has involuntarily neglected the farm in Egba for fear of being killed. Now, she is left with little produce for harvest by 2024.

    Elizabeth Inalegwu on one of her farms in the Aila community, Agatu LGA. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    “In our heap farm, we cannot go there now because of the Egba people coming to attack us. We have now left that side between Ogbalu, Aila and Odugbelo. Our property is still on that farm because we planted Guinea corn and Iron beans after Fulani removed our yam. Even to go there and spread chemicals or cut the grass, we cannot go because of the Egba people,” she said.

    Amos Odoba, an opinion leader of the deserted Ologba, explained that there had been an ongoing conflict between Egba and Ologba over an ancestral fish pon1d beyond the invasion of Fulani herders in his community.

    Amos Odoba, an opinion leader of Ologba, Agatu LGA. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    He said, “The Ologba and the Egba have been fishing together, but the disagreement came like a joke over a fish pond. The military tried to make peace, but it failed. Then, they started to kidnap and kill people”.

    He recalled what led to the issue, saying, “But there was a survey carried out by a Federal government unit. They told us that the fish pond is suspected to have crude oil, so many big men from that place (Egba) wanted to take over the fish pond so that they can use it for themselves, and that has been the genesis”.

    The Fight Over Land

    The age-long conflict between farmers and herders remains a catalyst for the numerous deaths and displacements recorded across Idoma, Tiv and other minority-speaking tribes.

    But history says the Fulanis and Benue people coexisted peacefully in their communities until recently. The presence of the Fulanis, their families and cattle from November to March was mutually beneficial to the people. 

    The fertile grasses in Benue made the cows of the pastoralists grow fatter and healthier, while the cow dung fertilised the soil for farmers.

    The Benue indigenes bought chickens, Main-Shanu and Nono (cow milk extraction) from the Fulani, while the community reciprocated by selling various kinds of grains. As a result, some local government areas such as Ogbadebo LGA have naturalised Fulani bearing Idoma names. 

    Ogbole explained that the Fulani had a pass-ritual: “They come after the harvest seasons in November to eat the post-harvest wastes beside the farmlands.

    An Illustration of the beneficial and cordial relationship between farmers and herders in Benue State before the ongoing crisis. NneomaBenson/THEWHISTLER

    “By the time the rains begin in April, they quickly return to the North, where the grasses are grown for grazing and to avoid the river volume getting too high for their cows to cross. So, they cross while the rivers are  still dry in April.”

    The Fulani made Benue their home, given the limited resources in Northern Nigeria. Most pastoralists took abode in LGAs like Guma and Logo by the Benue Valley for easy access to water.

    The year-round river accommodates at least 200,000 cattle yearly, encouraging an influx of herders and cattle in Guma, Agatu and Gwer-West LGAs. So, what changed?

    Ogbole, in his book: ‘Herdsmen Crisis in Nigeria: The Benue Peace Option’, claimed that “By 2001, a Tiv farmer named Omandi found a Fulani man grazing his cow on his farm and crops.

    “When he accosted the Fulani man, the herder drew out his sword and killed him. That was the first offspring of blood in that relationship between herders and farmers.”

    The situation degenerated, with the Benue locals vowing not to accommodate the herders in their communities.

    The pastoralists would then avoid hostile areas for fear of being attacked, yet the encroachment continued, as did reports of killings on both sides and the rustling of cows.

    Traditional rulers on both sides prevailed over the recurring disputes, and “for every encroachment on the Benue man’s farm, the pastoralists are asked to pay a fine, often outrageous,” Baba Ngelzarma, National President, Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association (MACBAN), told THE WHISTLER.

    Giving a background of the crisis, Benue-born Ibrahim Galma, National Secretary of MACBAN, Benue Chapter, explained how climate change also exacerbates the conflict over land.

    Ibrahim Galma, National Secretary, MACBAN, Benue State Chapter. NneomaBenson/THEWHISTLER

    He said, “Due to factors including desertification, lack of greener pastures during agricultural development, population growth, and many grazing areas in Nasarawa and Plateau States becoming farming areas, the only saving grace for the herders became the riverine of Benue due to its year-round water because cattle cannot survive without water.

    “The Benue River passing through the state became a competitive area for the herders who concentrated their grazing in Agatu and Gwer West. Due to their increase, farmers who used to farm around the river bank started to have problems with the Fulanis for trespassing into their farmlands.”

    When the Benue locals attacked them for trespass, the Fulanis complained to the kindred heads in the state, whom they believed would intervene and settle the disputes.

    “But things changed in 2014 when more sophisticated weapons were used to attack our cattle. Many cattle were killed in Agasha and along the riverine areas, including 17 herders.

    “We do not know how they got the weapon because those people are criminals. This triggered the crisis in Guma, Logo LGAs and some parts of the Makurdi metropolis, and the herders retaliated. So, it became more complex and many lives were lost,” Galma narrated.

    The alleged Agatu criminals would later kill a Fulani leader, Ardo Buderi and attack pastoralists and their cattle in the riverine areas of the LGA, and there would be a departure of Fulanis in preparation for the gruesome invasion of Agatu where thousands were displaced and hundreds killed.

    According to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), “Approximately two-thirds of the labour force makes a living through farming or pastoralism.

    “With minimal irrigated land, both activities rely heavily on seasonal rainfall and related weather patterns, so the effects of climate change can be intense.”

    Global warming has also increased the severity of droughts and contributed to extreme seasonal variability in water supply across the Sahel and neighbouring countries.

    These long-term climatic trends disrupt and harm traditional livelihoods like farming and herding, increasing economic uncertainty.

    Analysing the situation, Murtala Abdullahi, a climate and environmental analyst, said that Nigeria has at least 11 states in the North battling with factors exacerbating climate change.

    These factors include the felling of trees and increased use of firewood, which expose the soil and expand desertification in such areas.

    The effect, Abdullahi said, “Increases the scarcity of these lands, and for pastoralists, there is going to be conflict over land with farmers competing for more resources with pastoralists.”

    The crisis between farmer-herders has become a significant security problem, leading to the death and displacement of thousands of Nigerians, while climate change has aggravated the conflict.

    The reality far outnumbers reported incidents as each dry season reminds the Benue farmer of his loss and impending tragedy — his inability to sleep without trepidation, educate his child, access health care, and cultivate on his farmland, among others, owing to seasonal infiltration of pastoralists.

    Fulanis Are Victims Too

    The consequences are evident as many pastoralists who spoke to THE WHISTLER during this investigation said they were innocent of the crimes attributed to them but admitted to the existence of criminals on both sides, perpetuating attacks and fuelling the crisis.

    “The Benue people use firearms to attack herders, and they acquire them indiscriminately, and herders find ways to protect themselves.

    “In Benue, it has become a habit to find youths with firearms, and we regard them as criminals; even the herders found with firearms, we call them criminals. We also accuse them because we have seen those victimised with bullets. We also have Fulani attacked with bullets, confirmed by the police.”

    While the Benue farmers have accused the herders of plots of taking over their land by killing the locals and destroying their properties, the pastoralists said they had recorded many cattle rustling, theft and killings by Benue militants.

    However, both Ogbole, an indigene of Otukpo LGA in Benue and Ngelzarma, from Yobe, Adamawa State, had different stance on the issue of cattle rustling but agreed that there were criminal elements among herders and the Benue residents.

    David Ogbole, a campaigner against herdsmen in Benue State.

    According to Ogbole, cattle theft differs from cattle rustling: “People who rustle cattle don’t rustle for the meat, but for the cargo they carry, including contraband drugs, hard currency, and arms.

    “Once a rustler sees a herd of cattle, he knows who it belongs to and what cargo it carries.” But Ngelzarma faulted the claim, saying, “That is a blatant lie” because cattle rustling demands an in-depth knowledge of the art of herding, including the ability to command the cattle’s attention enough to separate the cattle from the general herd.

    Findings indicate that the farmers and herders in Benue bear the brunt of cattle rustling and the general crisis among the ethnic groups. 

    Respondents on the conflict confirmed to THE WHISTLER that criminal elements among Benue people connive with Fulani criminals to rustle herds of cattle, fueling mutual suspicion that triggers violence. Usually, the actual perpetrators are never punished; only innocent residents become victims.

    Data obtained and analysed by THE WHISTLER showed that 1,304 herders were killed in 13 Benue LGAs between 2013 and date. The numbers may be more, but the whereabouts of at least 328 are still unknown.

    Ngelzerma shared a telling experience. He said, “There was a time when the Benue people went on a rampage, killing the herders and their cattle, and when they came for reprisal, they didn’t care who you were or what you had.

    “If you think that what they have in the forests are just huts and you destroy and kill them, the same people you see with the cattle will also come and burn your houses.

    “And these people are not militias. They are the same Fulani herders; the Benue farmers kill their cattle and wives, and we have pictures where they were brutally killed. So, if you kill his cow, he will also damage all you have. It is a tooth for a tooth thing,” 

    Videos seen by THE WHISTLER showed how herders mutilated the corpses of residents in the Tiv-speaking areas around the Makurdi axis after killing them.

    It was likely retaliation for the killing of Fulani cattle, as pictures made available by the herders showed at least 117 cattle slain by suspected Benue locals in December 2022.

    Slain cows of herders killed in December 2022 in Benue State. NneomaBenson/THE WHISTLER

    All efforts to visit the affected communities in the Tiv-speaking area failed due to severe insecurity.

    It was also challenging to find a Fulani herder in Benue State to speak to because they had been “chased out” of their settlements by the locals. They now reside in Nasarawa communities bordering Benue State.

    Ardo Muhammed Madaki, Emir of Kadarko Giza development area in the Keana LGA of Nasarawa bordering Benue State, told THE WHISTLER he was “chased out by former Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom” following the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law 2017.

    The law was a response to the rising tensions and cycle of attacks, resulting in the deaths of thousands, the destruction of farm products and houses, cattle rustling, and the disruption of peace and orderliness in the State.

    It was aimed to prevent clashes between nomadic livestock herders and crop farmers, among others.

    But the Fulani have alleged that the Livestock and Community Volunteer Guards (LCVG) set up by the immediate past Governor of the State, Samuel Ortom, to ensure compliance with the law prohibiting the open grazing of cattle in the state is being used to exploit them.

    The herders accused the Guards of exploiting the outfit by deliberately chasing the cattle into neighbouring Tiv communities to confiscate them for ransom.

    Before the law was enacted, Emir Madaki said he lived in the Guma LGA of Benue with his family, where he went about his herding business unperturbed despite the crisis.

    “Honestly, I have been managing since I left Benue State. Grazing my cattle has also been difficult because if I cross the boundary into Benue State, the Livestock Guards will shoot and kill my cattle.

    “Since last year, the Guards would enter Nasarawa and chase our cattle into Benue so that we could pay a ransom. If you have many herds of cattle, and the Guards chase you into Benue State…

    “They could demand N30 million to release the cattle, and we pay the money to Linus, a Tiv man in charge of the Livestock Guards.”

    Alhaji Jaile Madaki Doma from Akpata LGA, Nasarawa, also narrated his ordeal in the hands of the Tiv people. His community borders the Tiv-speaking area of Benue. His experience with Tiv criminals and the Livestock and Community Volunteer Guards (LCVG) is unpleasant. Speaking to THE WHISTLER, he said in Fulani language:

    “The people that came into our community came to kill our people. I cannot remember what they were wearing, but the government officials came and arrested more than 600 of our cattle and asked us to pay over N20 million.”

    According to MACBAN, a total of 27,000 livestock have been killed and rustled in the last 10 years, while the immediate past administration of the state auctioned 4,500. “We have paid a total of N400 million ransom to get our cattle confiscated by the Livestock Guards since 2013 to date,” MACBAN said.

    An illustration of a cow being attacked after crossing established grazing boundaries

    The Fulani herders accused the immediate past administration of Benue State of complicity in the farmers-herders crisis. “Often, the Livestock guards never return the cattle in the same number they were seized,” Ngelzerma said. 

    To a Fulani man, his cattle are his pride, and he will do everything to nurture them until they are mature for commercial purposes, used for marriage settlements and dowry for his female children.

    The herders said a cow is worth at least N600,000 and a similar tragedy will happen to those who kill their cattle or herders.

    “In the Northern region, the Fulani do not have lands. They stay in the Forest. They don’t lay claim in those areas because whenever development comes, they move away from that area. Their main concern is where their cattle will find grass, and they don’t care about the land. They are there to take nobody’s land,” Ngelzarma said.

    In the convoluted and complex moving parts of the conflict in Benue State, the herders-farmers’ crisis has turned into a theatre of war, where the combatants dig deeper and deeper into their holes with no end in sight.

    This story was produced with funding support from the International Centre for Journalists (ICFJ) in partnership with Code for Africa.

    Source

  • Inventory Manager / Stock Accountant at Deloitte October, 2023

    Never pay for any CBT, test or assessment as part of any recruitment process. When in doubt, contact us

    Akintola Williams Deloitte is the Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited (DTTL) member firm in Nigeria and the oldest indigenous professional services firm in Nigeria. The firm was established in 1952 by Mr. Akintola Williams, FCA, CFR, CBE, the doyen of the accountancy profession in Nigeria. Our approach to corporate responsibility is shaped by the recognition…

    Read more about this company

     

    Inventory Manager / Stock Accountant

    Description

    • On behalf of our client, a leading trading company, we are seeking to recruit a dedicated and detail-oriented Inventory Manager/Stock Accountant.
    • As an Inventory Manager/Stock Accountant, you will be responsible for overseeing our inventory management processes and maintaining accurate stock records.
    • You will play a crucial role in optimizing our supply chain efficiency, minimizing costs, and ensuring product availability to meet customer demands.

    Requirements

    • Inventory Control: Implement and maintain effective inventory control processes to monitor stock levels, minimize overstocking or stockouts, and reduce carrying costs.
    • Stock Reconciliation: Regularly conduct physical inventory counts, reconcile stock records, and investigate and resolve discrepancies.
    • Forecasting: Collaborate with cross-functional teams to forecast demand and plan stock replenishment accordingly.
    • Record Keeping: Maintain accurate and up-to-date stock records using inventory management software and tools.
    • Supplier Management: Work closely with suppliers to ensure timely and accurate deliveries, and negotiate favorable terms.
    • Reporting: Generate inventory reports, analyze data, and provide insights to improve inventory management strategies.
    • Compliance: Ensure compliance with company policies, industry regulations, and best practices in inventory management.
    • Process Improvement: Identify opportunities for process improvement and implement efficient stock management practices.
    • Team Leadership: If applicable, lead and mentor a team of inventory personnel, fostering a culture of accountability and excellence

    Requirements:

    • Bachelor’s degree in Accounting, Finance, Business, or a related field (relevant certification is an advantage).
    • Proven experience in inventory management, stock accounting, or a related role.
    • Proficiency in inventory management software and Microsoft Excel for data analysis and reporting.
    • Strong analytical skills with attention to detail.
    • Effective communication and collaboration skills.
    • Ability to adapt to a fast-paced and changing environment.
    • Knowledge of industry-specific regulations and compliance requirements

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  • Barry Melrose to step away from ESPN after being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease

    Barry Melrose to step away from ESPN after being diagnosed with Parkinson

    Barry Melrose, the American media personality described as the best NHL analyst on television will be stepping away from his role on ESPN after being diagnosed with Parkinson. 

     

    Longtime ESPN personality John Buccigross made the heartbreaking announcement, revealing that Melrose will be spending time with his family for the foreseeable future.

     

    Buccigross said; 

     

    “I’ve worked with Barry at ESPN for over a quarter century. Cold beers and hearty laughs in smokey cigar bars. A razor sharp wit, he was always early & looked like a million bucks. I love him. I’ll miss him. Wayne Gretzky on a life dedicated to hockey.”

     

    Melrose both played and coached in the NHL for years before he began breaking down games for ESPN beginning in 1996. He took a brief hiatus from the network to coach the Lightning, but returned a short time later.

     

    Sports executive, Gary Bettman also said; 

     

    “Hockey on ESPN won’t be the same without him. Barry’s gigantic personality and trademark style have made our game bigger, more exciting and more entertaining,

    “His love for hockey is obvious and infectious. And it is impossible to have a conversation with him without a smile on your face.”

    Source

  • EXCLUSIVE: Nigerian Government Directs 17,000 Federal Civil Servants Unpaid Since May 2023 To Partake In Registration Exercise Holding In One Centre Nationwide

    The Nigerian Government has directed all civil servants and workers of the country’s core ministries whose details are yet to be captured by the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System (IPPIS) to partake in an ongoing registration exercise.

    SaharaReporters learnt the affected federal civil servants from across the country are required to go to Abuja for the exercise; meanwhile, their salaries have been delayed.

    The newspaper obtained a circular issued by the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation, dated October 3, 2023 with reference number HCSF/HRM/M.1125/T4/194, and for the attention of all Permanent Secretaries.

    SaharaReporters gathered that about 17,000 workers are affected while a document exclusively obtained by SaharaReporters shows that workers affected in the Ministry of Labour and Employment are up to 1,831.

    According to the circular, all the affected workers are mandated to show up for a physical exercise in Abuja from Monday, October 16 to Friday, October 27, 2023, at the Public Service Institute of Nigeria (PSIN), Kubwa Expressway, Abuja.

    Reacting to this, one of the affected workers who spoke to SaharaReporters said the government was insensitive despite the economic hardship they are currently facing due to the non-payment of their salaries since May when they decided that all the workers must show up at Abuja for the physical screening.

    The registration exercise for the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System (IPPIS) started in May 2017 and it was repeated in subsequent years and concluded in April 2023.

    At the end of the exercise, the Accountant General of the Federation was directed to pay only civil servants whose records had been verified and uploaded on the IPPIS portal.

    The statement reads further: “It is regrettable to observe that some civil servants failed to take part in the exercise, or neglected to complete it, leading to the suspension of their salaries.

    “All officers whose salaries have been suspended, are being given the last opportunity to access the IPPIS verification portal, update their records and present themselves for physical verification. Specifically, the officers, fall into two categories, as follows: a) those who did not update their records online; and b) those who updated their records but were unable io complete the process and/or could not print The slip, indicating conclusion of the online registration exercise.

    “The portal – https://verification.ippis.gov.ng, – will be open for the officers from Tuesday 3rd to Tuesday 10th October, 2023. Thereafter, the physical verification will hold from Monday, 16th to Friday, 27th October 2023 at the Public Service Institute of Nigeria (PSIN), Kubwa Expressway, Abuja. The exercise will take place between 10:00 am and 4:00 pm on each of the days.

    “All officers are expected to present the original copies of the documents listed below: (i) Letter of Appointment (Temporary): (ii) Letter of 1st Appointment into Service (Permanent & Pensionable): (iii) Assumption of Duty Certificate; (iv) Letter of Transfer of Service (where applicable); (v) Letter of Confirmation of Appointment or Gazette Publication; (vi) Letters of the last three (3) Promotions; (vii) Birth Certificate/Declaration of Age; (viii) Educational Certificates:  First School Leaving Certificate – Secondary School Certificate or Equivalent, OND, HND, NCE (if applicable) University Degree, -NYSC Certificate/Exemption, Higher Degree and/or Professional Certificate, (ix)    Identity Card of present MDA; (x)     Recent IPPIS Pay Slip; (xi) Copy of Letter of Last Posting; (xii) IPPIS On-line Records Update Completion Slip; and (xiii) Duly completed and signed Personnel Verification Form with recent passport photograph affixed.

    “Officers are also expected to complete the attached Personnel, Verification Form duly signed by their Heads of Department (The Form can also be downloaded from the CHOSE website).”

    “All concerned officers are to note that this is the last opportunity for the exercise,” the circular added.

    Source

  • ‘Don’t sleep in the theatre of operations, look for Boko Haram terrorists to kill,’ Defence chief charges troops

    The Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Christopher Musa, on Tuesday charged troops of Operation Hadin Kai, to deal decisively with the Boko Haram and Islamic State of West Africa Province (ISWAP) terrorists in their areas of operations.

    Musa gave the directive in his address to troops at the Headquarters Theatre Command, Operation Hadin Kai, in Maiduguri, Borno State.

    He said: “Don’t just come and sleep in the theatre, make sure you look for Boko Haram and kill. Anybody who comes to the theater and finishes without killing one Boko Haram is not complete.

    “So you must make sure before you go (kill one), look for them, that’s the only way we can finish them completely. They should not be looking for us, we should be looking for them.

    “Do not go and sit down until they attack and we repel; there is nothing like repel, go and find them and kill them.

    “The Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Nigeria said ‘I should come and see how you are doing and to thank you. We all appreciate your sacrifices and commitments. It is not easy to come here and leave your families and stay.

    “The President said he is happy with us and wishes all the very best. He also reminds us that it is not yet over but that we are moving on the right track. If we continue the way we are going, very soon Boko Haram will come to an end.

    “It is good you finish so that you all go back to your families. The only way we can do that is if we defeat Boko Haram completely. And I know we can do it because all of you are gallant soldiers. And it is a task for every Nigerian, it is not only for the Army, Navy, and Air Force alone or the police, it’s for everybody.”

    Source

  • Army Court Martial Sentences General To 7 Years Over $2,178,900 Fraud, Others

    A Nigerian Army Special Court-martial sitting in Abuja has sentenced the former Group Managing Director, Nigerian Army Properties Limited (NAPL), Maj. Gen. Umaru Mohammed to seven years imprisonment.

    Umaru was sentenced to jail over an 18-count charges bordering on forgery and misappropriation of funds among others.

    The court ordered him to pay back $2,178,900 and N1.65bn to the Army properties and NAPL.

    The general who pleaded not guilty to all allegations was also tried on charges of forgery, even as the court found him guilty of 14 counts.

    Source