Tag: World

  • Kim Kardashian calls for compassion for victims in Israel-Palestine conflict

    Kim Kardashian calls for compassion for victims in Israel-Palestine conflict

    Kim Kardashian issued a lengthy statement Wednesday, Oct. 11, on the conflict in Israel, Palestine, and even Armenia.

     

    She wrote on Instagram: “A message to my Jewish friends and family. I love you. I support you.

     

    “I have heard about how scared you feel during this time. And I want you to know you are not alone in this.”

     

    The mother of four continued, “My heart is breaking seeing the videos of these babies and families being terrorized and murdered in front of the whole world!”

     

    “As human beings with a heart, how can anyone not be devastated by these horrific images that we will never be able to unsee?”

     

    “Brutal terrorism has taken innocent lives and now both Israeli and Palestinian civilians are suffering and paying the greatest price there is.”

     

    She continued: “As an Armenian, I am particularly sensitive to these issues because I have been talking about the Armenian Genocide for years, and now after months of blockade with minimal media coverage and no external support, Armenians are the victims of an ethical cleansing themselves in Artsakh.”

     

    “They are in this moment also suffering from an extreme humanitarian crisis, and there are still prisoners of war being held captive or missing.”

     

    “No matter who’s (sic) side you are on or how you’ve been triggered by these horrors of these past few days. Our hearts should always have room and compassion towards innocent victims caught in the crosshairs of warring over power, politics, religion, race, and ethnicity,” Kardashian added.

     

    “Although I know there is nothing I can do to personally get rid of the pain of those who are suffering, my family and I are praying for the safe return of the hostages, for those who have died and their affected families, for peace for all the innocent, and the perpetrators of this indefensible violence to be brought to justice.”

     

    Kardashian continued, “My call to action today, something that we can all do, is simply to reach out to your friends, colleagues, and those in your community, those who are hurting, no matter what side you are on, check in on them and tell them you love them. I also ask, that during difficult times like these, not to judge who is or isn’t speaking out, because everyone should be allowed to deal with these types of crisis (sic) in the way that they will feel comfortable, whether it be privately or publicly.”

     

    “Prayers and peace always,” she concluded.

     

    Kim Kardashian calls for compassion for victims in Israel-Palestine conflict
    Kim Kardashian calls for compassion for victims in Israel-Palestine conflict
    Kim Kardashian calls for compassion for victims in Israel-Palestine conflict

     

    Kim isn’t the only Kardashian/Jenner to speak on the Hamas attack.

     

    Kylie Jenner, 26, posted — then quickly deleted — a pro-Israel message to her Instagram Story on Saturday, Oct. 7. 

     

    Source

  • 18-yr-old pregnant housewife arrested for beating stepdaughter to death in Bauchi

    An 18-year-old pregnant housewife, Khadija Adamu, has been arrested by the Bauchi State Police Command for allegedly beating her five-year-old step-daughter to death for defecating on herself.

    The teenager who was paraded at the Command headquarters on Wednesday, however pleaded for forgiveness and mercy as she did not mean to kill the girl but to correct her.

    The state Commissioner of Police, Auwal Muhammad who paraded the suspect before journalists, said the housewife, a resident of the Kandahar area, a suburb of the Bauchi metropolis, was arrested following serious injuries she inflicted on the minor.

    “On September 28, 2023, one Abdulaziz Adamu reported at A’ Divisional Police Headquarters that on the same date around 4pm, Adamu, beat up her stepdaughter, Hafsat Garba, and as a result, she sustained serious injuries on her body,” the CP said.

    “She said policemen moved the victim to the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University Teaching Hospital, Bauchi where she was confirmed dead by the medical doctor.

    “Preliminary investigation revealed that the suspect beat up the victim as a result of alleged pass-stool that spoiled her clothes and she sustained various degrees of injuries on her body,” he added.

    Read also: Woman kills one-month-old baby, dumps corpse in river

    But while speaking to journalists during the parade, Adamu said:

    “How can I kill a child who was like my child? Even though she was my co-wife’s baby, she was also my daughter because she was my husband’s child. What happened was just a mistake and not a deliberate intention to kill,” she said.

    “I am also a mother and I am currently four months pregnant with my second child, how can I possibly kill another child? What happened was that this girl defecated on her body and I felt that at her age, she shouldn’t have done that, so I used a USB cord to beat her. It was not as if I had any intention of killing her.

    “I didn’t know she would die. I only wanted to correct her. She didn’t die that day I beat her, it was the next day that she died and I felt very sad and unhappy that she died.

    “I asked for leniency because everyone has forgiven me. I asked the police to pardon me if not for anything but for the baby I am carrying in my womb since what I did was not a deliberate thing.”

    Source

  • Amid rising evictions and rents, states grapple with protections in tenant-landlord laws

    At 90 years old, Hilda Chavera has found a new purpose in life: tenant organizing.

    A Minneapolis resident for 50 years, Chavera said she has seen her city change, with many of her neighbors struggling to stay in their homes.

    “People can’t afford their rent. They are getting kicked out of their homes. They feel like they aren’t being heard,” Chavera told Stateline. She began organizing during the pandemic in 2020 with advocacy organizing group United Renters for Justice. “I may not live much longer to see anything change, but I want the younger generation to not feel like they need to choose between a place to live and what to eat.”

    In the decade preceding the COVID-19 pandemic, Minnesota-based tenant advocates lobbied state lawmakers for a slew of rental protections, but those efforts were unsuccessful.

    This spring, however, the newly Democratic-controlled legislature passed roughly 15 laws in a session advocates described as the most substantial change to the state’s tenant-landlord laws in a century. The measures include the right to legal counsel for tenants in public housing who face eviction, limits on the scope of landlords’ eviction powers and more transparency on required tenant fees.

    “Prior to this session, several [Minnesota cities] all enacted their own local pre-eviction notice protections because the state was taking so long,” said Eric Hauge, executive director of HOME Line, a Minnesota-based tenant advocacy group.

    “With these bills, the state legislature finally caught up to the tenant organizing that was happening in our cities.”

    Tenant advocates told Stateline that the tenor of tenants’ rights movements has shifted over the past three years. Prior to the pandemic, battles at the statehouse often revolved around repairs and substandard housing. Now, those debates are more likely to center on affordability and keeping people in their homes.

    Rents are rising — the average U.S. rent rose 18% between 2017 and 2022.

    The end result for many cash-strapped renters is evictions.

    Talking to peers

    As the number of renters rises in the U.S. — 46 million, or more than a third of U.S. households, are renters — organizers pushing for renters’ rights are finding more of their own among the ranks of state legislatures across the country.

    Hauge said he’s seen more lawmakers talking about or even campaigning on their experiences as renters. An analysis by the news organization New York Focus found that in New York’s legislative body, Democratic lawmakers who rent are far more likely to back tenant protections than those who own their homes.

    “An influencing factor in all this — as compared to five, 10 years ago — is that there are definitely an increased number of state legislators who are currently renters or who have significantly more lived experience renting their homes,” Hauge told Stateline.

    Historically, renters have been underrepresented in all levels of government; research suggests that imbalance has resulted in policies that overwhelmingly favor homeowners.

    Alexandra Alvarado, director of education and marketing for the American Apartment Owners Association, an industry group, agreed that the advancement in renters’ protections in some states has altered the landlord-tenant dynamic.

    “As we become more of a renter nation … what comes with that is renters are asking for more rights, and that’s not a bad thing,” Alvarado said in an interview. “And landlords may have to concede that they no longer have the upper hand.”

    Mixed success

    In September, roughly 200 Michigan renters flocked to the Michigan capitol in Lansing. William Lawrence, a lead organizer for the Rent Is Too Damn High coalition, said organizers see a “perfect storm” for passage of pro-tenant legislation and repeal the state’s ban on rent control.

    For the first time since 1984, Democrats have held the governor’s office and both houses of the Michigan legislature. According to the Michigan Association of United Ways, 26% of households in the state make too much to qualify for federal benefits but struggle to afford basic needs. A large portion of their income is going to rent, as wages have stagnated.

    “We know as renters this is our chance to demand change and meaningful rental housing reform,” Lawrence told Stateline. “When you see 200 people chanting the same thing and experiencing the same thing, what better time than now to pass renter protections in our state.”

    But these movements have seen setbacks and met resistance.

    A proposed bill to repeal the state’s ban on rent control, which has been in place since 1988, would alleviate rent burden for Michigan renters in cities such as Detroit and Ann Arbor, advocates say.

    If that measure doesn’t pass, Lawrence said it would be a “wasted opportunity” given the makeup of the government.

    “I think there are politicos [in the legislature] that think that this doesn’t have a snowball’s chance of repealing this preemption. But rent control is on everybody’s lips,” he said. “People are talking about rent control, and it’s very clear that renters really want rent control. It’s up to our lawmakers to represent those demands.”

    The bill is currently in committee in the House.

    Rent control has faced resistance in many legislatures this year. And measures to require that landlords have legitimate reasons to evict someone, often called “just cause” eviction protections, were floated in a few states this legislative cycle, with no success.

    Those included Connecticut, Maryland and New York, all states with Democrats controlling both legislative chambers and the governor’s mansion.

    “People may think that just because we have Democratic majority in the statehouse and the governorship, then the state is tenant- and renter-friendly. That’s not the case,” said Luke Melonakos-Harrison, an organizer with the Connecticut Tenants Union. “There’s no guarantee we’ll get the protections we need to keep renters in their home passed.”

    In other states, New Mexico’s Democratic-controlled government did not pass a repeal of the state’s rent control ban.

    And in deep-blue California, a bill to prohibit landlords from using criminal background checks as part of the tenant screening process never made it out of a Senate committee.

    The California Apartment Association classified that bill and other “crime-free housing” bills floated in the legislative session as harmful. Alvarado, of the American Apartment Owners Association, said landlords “want data and information to make decisions that could prevent evictions in the future.”

    “If landlords can’t use eviction records or criminal history, then what else are landlords supposed to base the risky decision on who to rent to?” she said.

    California already has rent control and just cause eviction laws on the books, but lawmakers closed loopholes in those laws.

    In September, they passed a bill that seeks to close a loophole in existing law that has allowed landlords to circumvent the state’s rent cap by forcing out current tenants and brining in newer tenants at higher rents. The bill is awaiting Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s signature.

    Red states take action

    Meanwhile, several GOP-dominated states went in the opposite direction, enacting laws scaling back tenant protections.

    Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill preventing local rent control and superseding tenants’ rights measures that were passed in counties such as Miami-Dade and Pinellas.

    Texas, meanwhile, passed a sweeping law prohibiting cities from enacting eviction protections along with any other local ordinances not expressly permitted by the state.

    However, a state judge ruled the bill unconstitutional before it was set to take effect this month. The Texas attorney general’s office filed a notice to appeal the decision, arguing that the law should still take effect.

    Austin landlord Victoria Wilson told Stateline that eviction powers are a “necessary” measure to counteract non-payment of rent. Still, she said, they shouldn’t be abused by landlords — nor strictly regulated by government or the courts.

    Republicans in Oklahoma aimed to pass an anti-retaliation bill protecting tenants from vindictive landlords — one of the few states where such practice is legal — but it was unsuccessful.

    And a Georgia bill with bipartisan support that would have required landlords to ensure rental properties are “fit for human habitation” upon signing a lease failed to pass.

    Moving forward in Minnesota

    When asked by Stateline what housing policies he wished Minnesota’s Democratic trifecta would consider, Republican state Sen. Eric Lucero, who sits on the Senate housing committee, touted “free market” housing policies that exist in Republican-controlled Montana and Democratic-controlled Vermont and Washington state.

    He told Stateline that the new Democratic-backed laws in his state tilt the tenant-landlord dynamic out of balance.

    “An equilibrium exists in state law balancing and protecting rights and responsibilities of both tenants and housing providers, yet the Democrat majority continues to actively ignore testimony and experiences shared by those on the housing providers’ and builders’ side of the equilibrium,” Lucero said.

    To ensure enforcement of its new protections in 2024, Hauge, of HOME Line, said the group is hosting workshops over the next few months with both tenants and landlords to help them learn about the laws.

    “A law isn’t effective without compliance. We know there are landlords that do follow the law and want to continue to follow the law,” he said. “We want to make sure we answer their questions, as well as empower renters on these changes, before they take shape.”

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    © 2023 States Newsroom

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Cross River: Otu Commits To UKaid’s Climate Change, Agriculture Programme

    Cross-River-Governor-Bassey-Edet-Otu-

    To promote environmental sustainability and agricultural growth, Governor Bassey Otu of Cross River State has announced his administration’s partnership with the UKaid-funded climate change programme, Propcom+.

    The initiative aims to support agroforestry projects that enhance climate resilience and increase the incomes of smallholder farmers in Cross River, through innovative agroforestry and sustainable land management practices.

    During a meeting with Propcom+’s Country Representative, Dr. Adiya Ode, and her team at his office in Calabar, Governor Otu expressed his commitment to leveraging the state’s rich biodiversity to enhance environmental conservation and elevate smallholder farmers’ livelihoods.

    According to him, climate change needs to be urgently addressed, adding that Cross River must preserve its lush forests to boost eco-tourism.

    “Climate change is a serious issue that requires concerted efforts from us. We want to place back Cross River State on the world’s map when it comes to tourism and eco-tourism and protecting our rich forest reserves is central to this.

    “Thus we are very keen on revitalising our forestry sector so that we can contribute to reducing the impact of climate change, open up our tourism potential as a state and also empower communities to improve their lives,” Emmanuel Ogbeche, Governor Otu’s Chief Press Secretary, quoted his principal as stating at the meeting.

    Dr. Adiya Ode, the Country Representative of Propcom+, in his earlier remark, explained that the programme aims to support over 4 million people in Nigeria, with a special focus on empowering women, by promoting sustainable agricultural practices that enhance productivity, climate resilience, and environmental preservation while reducing emissions.

    The program has initially been launched in focal states such as Kano, Jigawa, and Kaduna in the North West, and it is open to collaborating with reform-oriented states like Cross River to align with global policies on sustainable land use and deforestation-free commodities, encouraging more Nigerian states to participate in the African Sustainable Commodities Initiative (ASCI).

    “Cross River State has long been recognised as one of the world’s top biodiversity hotspots. We see a great opportunity to work with stakeholders in the state, particularly the Government of Cross River State and private sector organisations to harness this huge potential in a way that benefits smallholder farmers.

    “We want to link forest protection to economic incentives for farmers, thus Propcom+ will initially focus on forestry initiatives that protect natural resources while improving the livelihoods of smallholders,” Ode said.

    Through their partnership with the Otu administration, Propcom+ envisions intensive reforestation and land restoration efforts combined with climate-smart agricultural practices that generate new and alternative livelihoods for farmers.

    Source

  • ‘Dave’ star GaTa arrested for domestic violence


    American rapper and actor known for his role in the FXX TV series “Dave”, GaTa has been arrested over an alleged domestic violence. 

     

    TMZ reported that sheriff’s deputies responded to a report of a domestic violence incident in Santa Clarita, California this past Sunday and officers were told a physical argument occurred between two parties. The details are unclear but it led to GaTa getting arrested.

     

    He was booked for felony domestic violence, before being released on $100K bond and scheduled to appear in court at a later date. The case is under investigation.

     

    Confirming his client’s arrest, GaTa’s lawyer, Shawn Holley said; 

     

    “The entire incident between the parties is on video which I am in the process of providing to law enforcement. The video demonstrates clearly that Mr. Ganter did nothing wrong and, instead, tried to de-escalate the situation.”

    Source

  • Niger Delta group accuses NNPCL GMD, Kyari, of misconduct, demands his sack

    A Niger Delta group under the aegies the Niger Delta Coalition (NDC), has demanded the sacking of the Group Managing Director (GMD) of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Mele Kyari, over what they called “gross misconduct and high handedness.

    Other allegations the group levelled against Kyari included financial impropriety, misuse of authority, lack of vision, poor performance, and autocratic conduct, among others.

    The NDC, a coalition of over 26 youth associations across the Niger Delta region, which held a peaceful protest march in Warri, Delta State on Wednesday, called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to immediately remove Kyari to save the country’s oil industry.

    The protesters in their numbers, barricaded the entrance of the NNPC building to register their grievances, accompanied by chants of solidarity songs, displaying placards with inscriptions such as ‘Protect our Nation, President Tinubu sacks Mele Kyari’ among others.

    While addressing journalists during the protest, the National Coordinator of the Niger Delta Youth Alliance, Oris Bakpa, who spoke on behalf of the NDC, urged President Tinubu to take immediate action by removing Kyari from office and institute a comprehensive inquiry into his conduct while in office.

    “Nigeria is blessed with abundant oil resources. However, a glaring deficiency within the NNPCL is the presence of dormant refineries scattered across the country,” Bakpa said.

    Read also: Nigeria to end importation of petroleum products in 2023 —Kyari

    “Regrettably, despite the staggering allocation of N100 billion for refinery rehabilitation in 2022, these facilities, with a combined production capacity of 445,000 bpd, have failed to produce any refined products for the past several years.

    “The inability of the NNPCL to operate the moribund refineries has forced the nation to rely on the mindless importation of petroleum products, with the attendant consequences for the economy.

    “The ripple effects of the over-reliance on the oil industry were visible in the nation’s inflation rates, has reached a staggering 25.80 per cent in August 2023.

    “The implications of such high inflation figures are far-reaching, encompassing elevated costs of living, a discouraging business environment, and palpable instability in the nation’s overall economic well-being.

    “Furthermore, the alleged irregularities in the awarding of oil production contracts have cast a shadow of opacity over remittance to the Federation Account, giving rise to grave concerns about transparency and accountability in these financial transactions.

    “As a collective of concerned and dedicated Niger Delta people, we vow to uphold the law and employ peaceful demonstrations as a means to urge President Tinubu to remove Kyari from his position.

    “The President should launch an investigation into the leadership and management of the NNPCL with a view to addressing the urgent issues of refinery rehabilitation,” he said.

     

    Source

  • PG&E faces California money penalty for huge and destructive wildfire

    PG&E is facing the prospect of a state penalty and fines in connection with a huge and destructive wildfire that the utility caused in Northern California, regulators said Monday.

    The state Public Utilities Commission is eyeing a $45 million penalty against PG&E due to the utility’s role in causing the Dixie Fire that scorched portions of five California counties in 2021.

    The Dixie Fire cost $1.15 billion and roared through sections of Plumas, Butte, Lassen, Shasta, and Tehama counties.

    The wildfire began under a PG&E transmission line near State Route 70 and Cresta Dam after a rotting tree fell onto the utility’s power lines.

    The Dixie blaze erupted in the Feather River Canyon not far from the origin of a fatal blaze in 2018 known as the Camp Fire.

    The PUC proposed a penalty with three components:

    — $40 million penalty for capital expenditures to transition records to an electronic format.

    — $2.5 million payment to California indigenous tribes affected by the blaze.

    — $2.5 million fine paid into the state’s general treasury.

    “We accept CAL FIRE’s finding that a tree falling into our powerline caused the fire. However, PG&E believes we acted as a prudent operator,” a PG&E spokesperson said in a comment emailed to this news organization. “There is no evidence that PG&E consciously and willfully disregarded a known risk with regard to the ignition of the Dixie Fire.”

    The Dixie Fire destroyed more than 1,300 buildings. One firefighter was killed in the battle to contain and control the blaze.

    The five-member state PUC is slated to consider the proposed settlement at a Nov. 16 voting meeting.

    PUC staffers said PG&E customers won’t have to bear the cost of the penalty through higher monthly bills.

    “PG&E would pay a $45 million shareholder-funded penalty” under the proposal issued on Monday by the PUC’s enforcement staff, the regulators stated.

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    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • IGP Summons Five Police Officers Who ‘Opened Fire’ On Lagos Driver

    IGP-Kayode-Adeolu-Egbetokun-

    Five unnamed police officers in Lagos State have been summoned to the headquarters for alleged unprofessional conduct.

    This was disclosed by the spokesman of the Lagos State Police Command, Benjamin Hundeyin, on Wednesday.

    An X (formerly Twitter) user, 99% Oppressed @PIDOMNIGERIA, had in a post alleged that a young man in a red Toyota Corolla was driving out of a filling station after buying fuel at Ijede Road in the Ikorodu area of the state on Wednesday when some police officers tried to double-cross him.

    The poster alleged the police officers opened fire on the young man inside the filling station.

    A video shared under the post showed that the red Corolla car had some of its parts damaged.

    “This happened a few minutes ago, at Ijede Road Ikorodu Gbaga bus stop, at about 11:10 am,” 99% Oppressed said with an accompanying video.

    “The young man in the red Corolla just bought fuel from the filling station and was driving out when this criminal police team tried to double cross him with their unmarked tinted glass Korope bus. He tried to reverse back out of fear, but the next thing they opened fire on him right inside the filling station.

    “Even with a petrol tanker inside the station. The people around felt they had killed the driver so they trooped out to confront the police team in anger. The next thing the rogue police team bolted away when they saw the crowd, and realized they were being recorded.

    “@BenHundeyin you must unmask these criminals and bring them to book. They wore face masks, caps, and glasses just to disguise themselves because they knew they were on illegal duty. The young man would just been wasted for nothing, because of their rascality if not for God. They destroyed his car and ran away.

    “The entire area would have been on flames if the bullet had penetrated that fuel tanker.”

    But reacting, Hundeyin said the officers had been identified and summoned to the headquarters for further investigation.

    He, however, said that preliminary investigation suggests the driver of the car drove out of the filling station, driving against traffic when the policemen saw him and tried to stop him.

    According to him, upon sighting the officers, the said driver reversed back into the filling station, adding that the scratches on the car as well as the cracks on the windscreen were allegedly a result of the Corolla hitting a parked trailer while in reverse.

    “The five men led by an ASP, all serving at Area N, Ijede, have been identified and summoned to the headquarters for further investigation and necessary actions.

    “Preliminary investigation suggests that the driver of the red Corolla with registration number JJJ685GD headed out of the petrol station, driving against traffic. The policemen saw him and attempted to stop him. Upon sighting the officers, the Corolla driver drove in reverse back into the petrol station. All the scratches on the car and cracks on the windscreen allegedly emanated from the Corolla hitting the parked trailer while in reverse.

    “The officers were confronted by an irate crowd as the incident escalated. In their bid to prevent further confrontation with the already charged crowd, they left the scene,” Hundeyin said via his X handle @BenHundeyin.

    “A detailed investigation is being launched into the incident to ascertain the extent of unprofessionalism of the police officers. The driver of the vehicle and eyewitnesses are encouraged to give useful information, physically or electronically through our various channels.

    “The public will be kept updated on the progress of the investigation,” he added.



    Source

  • Journalist claims he made a loss to protect Nigeria’s currency by refusing to change dollars at the black market rate

    Journalist claims he made a loss to protect Nigeria

    A journalist has claimed that he refused to change dollars at the official market rate even though his decision meant making a loss.

     

    He explained that he took $500 to a Bureau De Change agent and asked to have it changed to Naira at the FMDQ rate of N763.53 per dollar even though the agents were changing at N1010 per dollar.

     

    He explained rate he did this to protect the Naira.

     

    He tweeted: “Took this $500 to Bureau de change. They said the rate is N1010/$1 which means I get N505,000. I rejected it & told him I would be changing at official FMDQ rate of N763.53/$1 so I got N381,765. I made a loss of N123,235 but it was worth it. Let’s protect our country and currency.”

     

    Journalist claims he made a loss to protect Nigeria

    Source

  • Nigerian govt to commercialise 12 river basins dams

    The Federal Government has concluded an arrangement for commercialisation of dams in the country’s 12 river basins.

    The Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation, Prof. Joseph Utsev, disclosed this shortly after inspecting the Tiga dam in Bebeji local government area of Kano State on Wednesday.

    He said the move was to ensure the dams generate more revenues for the federal government.

    The minister stressed that exercise would ensure effective management of the infrastructure at the dams.

    He pointed out that the federal government was ready to partner on the production of assorted food crops in the country.

    Utsev said: “The basins have huge infrastructure like water supply schemes, dams, and irrigation that require good funding to be able to keep them running and to provide dividends for Nigerians.

    ”We are ready to partner with commercial farmers. They come and register with us, and we will allow them to tap water from the dam for commercial farming which will help immensely in enhancing food production.

    ”Farmers are tapping water illegally from the canals and this will have a negative impact, hence we are working towards calling the attention of the farmers so that they will register with the government and the water would be supplied to them.”

    Source