Ram Nath Kovind was received in Cotonou by President Patrice Talon on Monday
Indian president announces $100m loan for Republic of Benin
India’s president has announced a loan of $100m (£82m) for developmental projects in Benin on a visit to the West African nation.
Ram Nath Kovind was received in Cotonou by President Patrice Talon on Monday – on the first stop of a West African tour Africa. He is continuing on to The Gambia and Guinea.
It is the first visit by an Indian head of state to the three countries.
President Kovind also addressed Benin’s National Assembly in the capital, Porto-Novo, and attended a banquet hosted in his honour. He tweeted a clip of his parliamentary speech, saying it was an historic day in relations between the two countries:
He said that India was committed to support Benin’s growth and development and that he was “happy to note that implementation of the $42.6m credit for upgrading of water supply schemes in 103 villages in Benin, is proceeding well”.
Defence and security co-operation were also on the agenda, with India offering further training assistance to Benin to expand its anti-piracy capacity.
The Executive Chairman, FIRS Tunde Fowler in a handshake with Chairman of Technical Committee, Amb Adeyemi Dipeolu
Nigeria begins work on implementation of National Tax Policy
Nigeria’s Federal Government has inaugurated a team of tax and economy experts charged with the responsibility for implementation of the National Tax Policy has been inaugurated in Abuja on Tuesday.
This is in line with the Federal Government’s determination to reform Nigeria’s tax system towards effective economic growth, a statement from the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) added.
Chairman of the Committee who is also the Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and Chairman of the Joint Tax Board (JTB), Tunde Fowler also inaugurated a Technical Tax Policy Drafting Committee which began a workshop on National Tax Policy Implementation same day.
Fowler said he inaugurated the Technical Tax Policy Drafting Committee same day following the importance and urgency of its assignment to national economy.
Fowler charged the Technical Committee to work harmoniously and assiduously in order come up, within a few weeks, with a tax policy document that will address achieving sustainability in revenue generation, identifying new and enhancing the enforcement of existing revenue streams and achieving cohesion in the revenue ecosystem.
Fowler said: “To support work of the reconstituted National Tax Policy Implementation Committee (NTPIC) Imam inaugurating a Technical Tax Policy Drafting Committee comprising. I am charging the Chairman and members of the Technical Committee with the responsibility of accelerating the drafting and submission of a draft Finance Bill (and if deemed necessary, any draft Executive Order (s), to harmonise the various tax and excise law reform efforts. It is our expectation that the Technical Committee will work assiduously over the next few weeks to produce a singular set of fiscal measures that will be considered and approved by the reconstituted NTPIC. Once agreed, these fiscal measures are to be submitted to the Economic Management Team and the Federal Executive Council for approval and ultimate transmission to the National Assembly, for passage into law as part of the efforts to support the 2020 Executive Budget Proposal”, he said.
The Chairman of the Technical Committee, Ambassador Adeyemi Dipeolu said he understood the magnitude of the assignment given to him and his committee members and promised that they would work hard to achieve a good result.
“The meeting of the Technical Tax Policy Drafting Committee will be convened immediately after this inauguration. We understand the challenges facing the economy and we will work together to produced draft tax policy document that will address the challenges”, he said.
Foreign tax stakeholders in Nigeria such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Department for International Development (DFID) were represented at the event. They commended the initiative and offered some insight towards achieving the project.
Country representative of the IMF Mr. Amine Mati, said reform of Nigeria’s tax system is number one in the IMF’s blueprint on Nigeria’s economy.
“I welcome the initiative of the Committee. It is our number one priority in the economic growth plan for Nigeria”, he said.
Mati suggested that the Committee should look into Value Added Tax (VAT) laws and also ways to further improve non-oil revenue for the country.
Head of DFID’s Economic Development for Nigeria, Richard Ough said he felt emotional about the need for reform of Nigeria’s tax system to accelerate economic development, saying “This is absolutely fundamental to Nigeria’s development”.
Other members of the NTPIC include: Comptroller-General, Nigeria Customs Service (Deputy Chairman); The Permanent Secretary (Finance) from Federal Ministry of Finance; Permanent Secretary (Special Duties); Permanent Secretary and Solicitor-General of the Federation, Federal Ministry of Justice; The Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation; The Director-General of the Debt Management Office; The Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission; The Statistician-General of the National Bureau of Statistics; The Executive Secretary of Nigeria Investment Promotion Council; The Executive Secretary of the JTB; The Deputy Comptroller-General of Customs and the Director (Legal) Federal Ministry of Finance.
There has been an on-going effort on tax reforms. In May 2018, former Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun submitted a Memorandum to the Executive Council seeking approval to the National Tax Policy Implementation Committee Report on Tax Law Reforms. The Former’s Minister’s memo sought the Cabinet’s approval to: 2 distinct Executive Orders namely: the VAT (Modification) Order and review to Goods liable to Excise Duties and Application Rate on Sin taxes; Five separate amendment bills covering Companies Income Tax, Personal Income Tax, Value Added Tax, Individual Development (income and tax relief), Act, and Customs, Excises and Tariffs as well as amendments to the Stamp Duties and associated Gas reinjection Act.
L-R: Executive Chairman of Nigeria’s top tax authority, Tunde Fowler and Governor of Lagos State, Babajide Sanwo-Olu at the TIN flag-off in Lagos. Source/FIRS
Nigeria’s South-West pays 50% of whole country’s bills, says tax chief
South-West region of Nigeria have six states: Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Ekiti, Osun and Ondo contribute more than 45.6 percent of total internally generated revenue of the country in 2018, Executive Chairman of Nigeria’s top tax authority, FIRS, Tunde Fowler, has said.
Nigeria has six geopolitical regions with 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in Abuja altogether.
In the South-West, Lagos States has the largest stake in terms of business activities and consequent revenue generation. In 2017, data from the tax authority say Lagos alone contributed 50% of the country’s revenue.
Fowler made this remarks in Lagos on Thursday at the South-West regional flag off ceremony of the new TIN registration system and its consolidated database of individual and corporate taxpayers’.
Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State was at the event and he said the introduction of the new Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) registration system and its consolidated database marked a new regime in tax compliance and administration. He also called on stakeholders across all levels to support the new initiative in order to deepen tax administration and increase tax revenue collection.
Fowler, who is also the Chairman, Joint Tax Board (JTB), said the said that the economic profile of Lagos State was humongous and that the effect of these economy activities could be felt across the entire South West and the country in general.
“At 45.6%, the South West Geopolitical Zone is the largest contributor to total IGR collection at the sub-national level for the year 2018. This is a trend that has been consistent over the years, and with the vibrancy of economic and commercial activity in the Zone, it holds immense potential which can only be unlocked by a systematic approach to revenue generation.
“The fact of Lagos State being the economic nerve-centre of the nation is not in dispute. Touted as the fifth largest economy in Africa, Lagos is home to the Apapa Port and the Tin-Can Port.
“It is also the hub of the nation’s aviation industry and the nerve centre of the nation’s manufacturing and financial sector, with thousands of manufacturing companies and hundreds of financial institutions having their operational headquarters within its boundaries.
“In simple terms, the economic profile of Lagos is humongous, and the effect of its economic activities can be felt across the entire South-West Geo-political Zone and the nation as a whole,’’ Fowler explained.
Fowler said Lagos State continued to carve a positive niche for itself in terms of innovation and dynamism in tax administration and that the neighboring states within the region were towing similar paths of tax reform.
He noted that the new system would consolidate the efficiency and effectiveness of the tax administration process in region and the entire country.
Fowler added that: “This new reality drives the desire by the JTB to ensure that the identification of individuals and corporate bodies for tax purposes in Nigeria is achievable.
“It is not only important that these records are available, it is equally important that the records are credible and reliable and that they are accessible under a secure environment, online real-time.”
He said the country had in the last four years have seen a number of modest milestones in tax-revenue administration to include expansion of the tax base from 10 million to 20 million taxpayers with the potential for an increase of up to 45 million before the end of the third quarter of 2019 and growth in the IGR of states by 46.11 per cent from N800.02 billion in 2016 to N1.16 trillion in 2018
Also, growth in FIRS collections by 53.81 per cent from N3.30 trillion in 2016 to N5.32 trillion in 2018; with the 2018 total collection of N5.32 trillion being the highest collection ever in the history of FIRS, while Non-Oil Revenue, with a collection of N2.85 trillion accounted for 54 per cent of total revenue collection
A positive movement during the same period by Nigeria moving up 25 points in the Tax Administration Section of World Bank ‘Ease of Doing Business’; it is expected that the country would further move up the rankings by the time the review for 2019 is published among others.
He commended stakeholders including Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS), Nigeria Identity Management Commission (NIMC), Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) among others for their support.
According to the Governor, “The demand for higher quality of governance and citizens everywhere in the world are seeking to interface with their governments in order to fulfil their obligations in an easier and efficient manner.
“Technology is the way to do this. Leveraging on technology to drive change at our various economic activities,” he said.
Sanwo-Olu commended the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), SBIRs and various technology providers for putting all of this together.
According to him, this initiative should be communicated as widely as possible in order to have the highest number of taxpayers taking advantage of this initiative.
Earlier, the Executive Secretary of JTB, Mr. Oseni Elamah (mni) said the dynamics of change in Information and Communications Technology (ICT) made it imperative that domestic tax-revenue administration meet up to the emerging trends.
He said the new TIN Registration System and its consolidated database of individual and corporate taxpayers’ have been designed to form the foundation upon which the nation’s automated tax administration system was built.
“The new System is a web-based solution that offers access to authorized users to initiate TIN request from the comfort of their homes/offices real-time online, verify their tax status and print their TIN certificate.
“It is a transparent system that assures timely and accurate collection and recording of basic identification data. It also permits the tax administrator to understand its taxpayer base for effective revenue projections and other planning activities.
“By leveraging on existing data from relevant identity management agencies, the new system reduces the burden of multiple registration of taxpayers as well as promoting the ease of doing business and paying taxes.
“It also ensures seamless integration and exchange of information amongst the various tax authorities within and outside Nigeria, as well as with other authorized stakeholders via web service. The new system is innovative, inspires confidence and provides transparency’’, he explained.
NNPC recruitment 2019: Oral Interview begins July 1
NNPC recruitment 2019: Oral Interview begins July 1
Successful candidates in the aptitude test segment in on-going recruitment into the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) will begin engagement for oral interview on Monday, July 1st, 2019, Discover Africa News has learned.
It is exactly one month after about 60, 000 out of over 26 million applicants wrote aptitude tests in about 50 centres across the country. Unlike the June 1 exercise, the NNPC did not announce commencement of oral interview publicly but this newspaper gathered from an insider source that less than 5000 persons have notified to appear for oral interview starting from Monday.
It is unclear how many persons the NNPC would employ in the 2019 recruitment exercise but sources said about 1000 (One Thousand) persons are likely to be hired by the Corporation .
The NNPC is one of Nigeria’s upward-looking government agencies with attractive remuneration package, perhaps, the reason many Nigerians want to work there.
Last month, in a series of tweets via its verified Twitter handle @NNPC group, the Corporation said the recruitment exercise, which kicked off via nationwide adverts in the national dailies and online media on March 13, 2019, and followed by the shortlisting of qualified candidates which commenced from about 27 March, 2019, had entered a third phase.
Referencing a Press release signed by its Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, NNPC stated that shortlisting of candidates for the exercise had been concluded, and that shortlisted candidates had been scheduled to sit for Computer Based Test on Saturday, 1st June, 2019 across the country.
“Notification of progression to the next stage has been sent to all shortlisted candidates via text and e-mail, while other details such as test centre and time will be sent on or before the 27th of May, 2019,” the release stated.
Ughamadu relayed that validation of credentials of candidates would be a continuous process throughout the exercise, stressing that candidates discovered not to meet the requirements or who had presented false documents at any stage would be withdrawn from the exercise.
It added that the CBT would be administered in about 50 centres across the country, saying those who emerge successful in the test would subsequently be invited for oral interviews for final selection
Sanusi didn’t deny saying ‘Nigeria will go bankrupt’ if profligacy persists
Although the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation (Nigeria) has come forth to give possible interpretation to the stinging speech of Emir Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, saying the Emir was merely giving an advise, Sanusi himself has not denied saying that “Nigeria will go bankrupt” if Nigerian government continues spending profligately on petroleum and electricity subsidies.
The Emir has been on the spotlight following his dissenting opinion majorly on the economy with the government of president Muhammadu Buhari and that of his state governor, Umar Ganduje.
On Tuesday at the 3rd National Treasury Workshop organized by office of the Accountant General of the Federation Kano, North-West Nigeria, Sanusi upbraided the government of Nigeria for spending so much on petroleum and electricity subsidy, places where he had described as meaning of siphoning money from the economy.
What happened is that the federal government do pay petroleum subsidy, pay electricity tariff subsidy, and if there is a rise in interest rates, Federal Government pays.’
Emir’s Full Speech at the event
Let me begin first by welcoming you to the city of Kano and as I did yesterday when the delegation visited me. I urge you to take the opportunity of being here to go round the city. For those who are here for the first time, observe some of the culture and the people, but most importantly, as I said yesterday, since you’re all officials of the ministry of finance, I believe you have come with pockets full of estacode.
Please extend the money kindly before you leave. And secondly, since we’re having the FAAC meeting in Kano, and all the states and local governments are taking billions of naira away, I think the Kano state government is entitled to one percent commission from everyone’s allocation, as a token thank you for the hospitality of the people of Kano.
‘I didn’t want to attend this event’ On a more fundamental note, let me begin by congratulating the honourable accountant general of the federation for having been nominated for a second term by the president and to wish him once more, great success and to hope that he will continue to conduct himself in a manner that would make Kano and the country proud of his work. But I will be honest and say my initial inclination was not to attend this event.
I did because of common interest and I’ll tell you why. A few years ago in Kano, we had a meeting of the National Planning Commission similar to your treasury workshop and I was invited to address commissioners, permanent secretaries, directors of planning, on the Nigerian economy but I declined even though I received a written invitation from the secretary to the state government. But after I received a phone call from the minister of planning, I agreed to attend. And then, I had the meeting and talked about the economy.
I talked about the things that were being done well and the things that were not being done well and what we needed to do. And for saying that we were not doing some things well, I got into a lot of trouble. So, I decided that we have a problem. If government invites you to a function and does not want to hear the truth, the person is not to go. So, this year when I was invited to address the newly-elected governors by the Nigeria Governors Forum, I refused to go.
The DG called me and I said I would not go. Because if I tell them these are things that you have not done, these are things you should do, it is interpreted as an attack and criticism. ‘If you do not want to hear the truth, never invite me’ But since I have decided to come, you have to accept what I say to you. And please, if you do not want to hear the truth, never invite me. So, let’s talk about the state of public finance in Nigeria. We have a number of very difficult decisions that we must make and we have to face reality. His excellency, the president, said in his inaugural speech that his government would like to lift people out of poverty. It was a speech that was well received not just in this country, but all over the world because the concentration of the extreme poverty in Africa… and the numbers are frightening.
Last year at the United Nations General Assembly, Bill Gates presented the Goalkeeper’s report and we all know the numbers and the forecast which is that if we do not change the way things are done across the world, by 2050, 85 percent of all those living in extreme poverty in the world would be on the African continent and half of them would be in two countries — Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
‘I’m happy Buhari wants to lead the fight against poverty’ So, we’re all happy that the president has announced that he is going to lead this fight against poverty. So where do you come in as treasurers? To fight poverty, we need to invest in education, we need to invest in healthcare, we need to invest in infrastructure. Where is the money going to come from? In the last few years, we have talked about VAT. We have talked about increasing taxes.
Now, as an economist, I can tell you if you have an economic slowdown and you choose to increase taxes, what happens? Your economy becomes even slower. Now your job — and this is why you are treasurers not just accountants — your job is to tell your principal that there are certain things that need to be done, and they are difficult but they need to be done. Two days ago, I read that the percentage of government revenue going into debt service has risen to 70 percent. These numbers are not mine. They’re public numbers. I read them in newspapers. I’m no longer at the central bank, I don’t have access to confidential data. ‘Nigeria’s balance sheet doesn’t benefit from oil price rise’
And in spending 70 percent of your revenue on debt service, you guys can be transparent and accountable but you are managing 30 percent. And then we continue subsidising petroleum products and spending N1.5 trillion per annum on petroleum subsidy. The other 30 percent is gone. And then we subsidise electricity tariffs and maybe we have to borrow from the capital market or from the central bank to fund the shortfall in the electricity sector.
Where is the money to pay salaries? Where is the money for education? Where is the money for healthcare? For 30 years, we have had this project called petroleum subsidy, which is not a subsidy. In economics, it is a hedge. We don’t call it hedge because we know the implications. The first thing we must do is stop this hedge and at least make it a subsidy.
And let me try to explain. When you subsidise something, let us say it costs a hundred naira, you say to somebody this costs a hundred naira, I am subsidising to the tune of 20 percent or 30 percent. So, I pay twenty naira, you pay eighty naira or I pay thirty naira, you pay seventy naira. If the price goes up, I pay a little more, you pay a little more.
If the price goes down, I pay a little less, you pay a little less. When you tell somebody that I have fixed the price of this product, it is not a subsidy, it is hedge. You have told 160 million Nigerians that you have fixed the price of petrol at N85 per litre. It does not matter what the exchange rate is, the dollar can move from N160 to N500, the federal government will fund the difference. It does not matter what the interest rate is, and when you look at the components of petroleum price, the foreign exchange rate, the price interest rate, demurrage, petroleum equalisation, you know what happens? Nigeria is the only country whose balance sheet does not benefit from an increase in the price of oil. And this did not start from this government it has been on for 20, 30 years. Today, you have tensions between America and Iran, the price of oil will go up. Every oil-producing country will be happy because it is going to earn more but you know what will happen in Nigeria? We will earn more and we will turn round and spend what we have earned importing petroleum products, because petroleum products also go up. And the federal government is going to fund 100 percent of the increase.
‘N1.5tr on petroleum subsidy is N1.5tr out of education’ I’m not speaking theoretically. I was the governor of central bank. In 2011, the federal government earned $16 billion from the oil sector. The country spent $8 billion importing petroleum products and $8.2 billion subsidising the products. One hundred percent of what we earned in the oil sector went out to import petrol. You are treasurers, is this sustainable? The country will be bankrupted, and we are heading to bankruptcy.
So, let us begin, and I know politicians, it is very difficult for you to say, I have removed petroleum subsidy. Let the government say we are going to pay 30 percent of the cost of petrol. Let us begin from there and maybe next year, we will break it down to 20 percent Maybe next year 10 percent by 2022, we are down to zero. But for the federal government to place itself in a position where in finance, you all know that this is called naked hedge.
Price of crude oil goes up, the federal government pays, exchange rate moves, the federal government pays. Interest rate moves, the federal government pays. Demurrage, the federal government pays. What is so crucial, what is so life-threatening about petroleum price that we have to sacrifice education, sacrifice health, sacrifice infrastructure, so that we can have cheap petrol and risk the financial health of the country?
It is a difficult decision, but if the president really wants to deal with poverty, he has to deal with this and you have to tell Nigerians that they have to be ready. If the international price of oil goes up, people must be ready to pay more. If it goes down, people will benefit. We have to be responsible, this is what happens everywhere. Now, we have this situation where people need to be talked to because people need to understand that N1.5 trillion on petroleum subsidy is N1.5 trillion out of education, it’s N1.5 trillion out of healthcare, and therefore, we don’t understand why we have so many out-of-school children?
Why we have so much malnutrition? Where are you going to address out-of-school children, malnutrition and mortality rates, if all the money is going into petroleum subsidy? ‘How did we suddenly start to consume 60m litres of petrol?’ Secondly, you are treasures, not-accountants, and there are questions that you should be asking. In 2016, we were told publicly by the government that we were consuming 28 million litres of petroleum products a day. You can Google it; it’s a story; a public story. A few weeks ago, we were told that we are consuming 60 million litres a day.
How did we suddenly start consuming double? People need to ask… And the only way to avoid this is to move to proper subsidy routine and eliminate it. And then, you don’t have to worry whether there is scarcity, whether there is corruption, whether there are inflated invoices, you take away the incentive. A second example is electricity. You go to Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire, they have electricity 24/7. Why? They did cost reflective charge.
They are not richer than Nigerians. They don’t have a higher per capita income. If you ask NERC some of the companies they have given permission to do mini grids are charging very high tariffs in rural areas and people are paying. If you meet someone who is a poor man and you tell him you are subsidising electricity and the power is not available, he remains poor. If you offer him at cost for electric price, but he has that power 24/7, he does not need to buy generator, he does not need to buy diesel, he can take that power, be a mechanic, open a kiosk, have a small grinding machine, open a cookery shop, earn enough income to pay for electricity and lift himself out of poverty. The idea that the way to lift people out of poverty is to provide them with cheap power is not available, it is wrong.
You give them power at the right price 24/7. So, these two policies do not make economic sense but they also impact directly on your work. Because if somebody is generating electricity and somebody is transmitting and somebody is distributing and you are receiving tariffs below the cost, you have to find the money to fund it. Banks to be recapitalised – Emefiele(Opens in a new browser tab) ‘Petroleum consumption is a private decision’ If we are importing petroleum products and selling them to 160 million people and the price goes up and there is a gap, you have to find that money to fund the gap.
And where do you find the money, you go and borrow in the capital market and then your interest rate goes up and then your debt service ratio moves from 60 percent to 70 percent to 80 percent… if you are in a private company and you spend 70 percent of your turnover on interest, you are already bankrupt. True or false? Now, this is simple common sense to me. Now, if you don’t borrow from the capital market and you don’t have the tax revenue, what do you do?
CBN to limit banks’ appetite for govt securities(Opens in a new browser tab) You go to your central bank and when your central bank lends you the money, what does it do? It creates high powered money and what happens, inflation goes up, interest rate goes up, debt service goes up. And it is a vicious circle. So, let us go to the root of the problem. FG begins clampdown on illegal cooking gas dealers(Opens in a new browser tab) Petroleum consumption is a private decision. If you can’t afford fuel, take public transport. Electricity consumption is a private decision.
If you cannot pay, set up your solar panel in your house. By simply addressing these two sources of drain on the balance sheet of the government, you as treasurers will have more money available to fund development and the president can achieve his goal of lifting people out of poverty. You will not lift people out of poverty by paying interest on debts. You do not lift people out of poverty by subsidising power. You don’t lift people out of poverty by subsidising the consumption of petroleum products that are produced abroad. ‘If we continue spending 1.5 trillion on petroleum subsidy… this country would go bankrupt’ Every time we spend a billion dollar importing petroleum products, it is a billion dollar to refineries operating in Europe, creating jobs in Europe, eliminating poverty in Europe.
That money is better spent on educating our children and on healthcare. And that is eliminating poverty. I speak to you because I am told that this is a treasury workshop, not an accounting workshop. I don’t like accounting; I’m not an accountant. But if you are treasurers, you are not just counting money, you are managing it. And your duty is to tell your principal; ‘Sir, look at these numbers, we cannot afford it.’ And if we continue spending 1.5 trillion on petroleum subsidy, spending how many hundred billion on electricity tariff subsidy, spending so much on interest… this country would go bankrupt. It is your job to say it. It is no longer my job; I’m no longer in the central bank, I’m no longer in the treasury. So, it is great to talk about accountability and transparency, but you will do much better if you have more money at your disposal. Then, the accountability will translate to development. And I am hoping that… again, what I have said is simply common sense, simple honest contribution to you on how you can begin to push through reforms.
You know in your homes, if your salary goes down, you will have to tell your wives and the children to do away with some things, some vacations will have to be set aside, some things on the menu have to go down, maybe we have to switch off the generator during the day. You don’t just continue spending when your income is down.
Nigerians have to understand. We can’t continue taking money out of education, out of health, out of infrastructure, putting this money in petroleum subsidy and tariffs subsidy and expect to cure poverty. So, in case anybody is wondering why I’m saying this, the president himself is the one who said he wants to deal with poverty.
So, we have a duty to contribute ideas to him as to how he can deal with poverty. If you’re happy with what I’ve said, that is fine. If you’re not happy, that is fine. I just want you to know I have a duty to my conscience and to this country, when I speak, to say what I believe to be true and if you don’t want to hear this, don’t invite me. Culled from TheCable
AfDB approves USD 24.7 million for Water, Sanitation in South Sudan
AfDB approves USD 24.7 million for Water, Sanitation in South Sudan
The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank (www.AfDB.org) on June 20, 2019, approved a proposal to commit $24.7 million to finance the South Sudan Strategic Water Supply and Sanitation Improvement Project.
The Strategic Water Supply and Sanitation Improvement Project will support the rehabilitation of approximately 50km of the Juba town distribution network and related works, including metering and public water collections outlets. The project will also cover feasibility and engineering design for two other towns under the jurisdiction of South Sudan Urban Water Corporation. The project will additionally cover the development of solar powered water distributions systems and sanitation and hygiene promotion in high-density rural communities surrounding Juba, as well as capacity development in the relevant water institutions.
Implementation will commence during the 2019/2020 financial year, with the Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation and the South Sudan Urban Water Corporation serving as the executing and implementing agencies, respectively.
South Sudan’s capital city of Juba, like many urban centers in the country, suffers from the effects of years of armed conflict and under-investment in the development and maintenance of basic water infrastructure. Increased numbers of displaced people and rapid urbanization have placed considerable strain on existing urban water supply infrastructure and the illegal supply of untreated water drawn from river Nile by private water tanker operators is common in the city and its suburbs.
On completion, the project will directly benefit 300,000 people in Juba and the surrounding rural Jubek state. The nearly $2 million grant will ensure that schools and communities in eight targeted rural areas of Jubek state, will benefit from 40 public/institutional latrines blocks to be constructed, as well as hygiene education.
“The incorporation of a rural water and sanitation component in areas that are relatively safe to reach indicates that the project opens a pathway for more support for rural WaSH going forward,” said Osward Chanda, Manager for the Water Security and Sanitation Division at the Department of Water Development and Sanitation.
“By helping to improve the quality and delivery of urban water supply services in Juba city and strengthening rural water supply and sanitation services, the project will greatly assist its target population,” said Bank Country Manager for South Sudan, Benedict Kanu. He added that it will help in combatting diseases, reducing health costs, improving quality of life, as well as helping women save time and increased convenience due to closer water supply outlets.
Since 2012, the Bank has contributed more than $136.79 million in development aid across various sectors in South Sudan. Bank support has focused on capacity building, infrastructure development, and creating conditions for promoting peace, stability and state building, among the Bank’s strategic priorities.
The project aligns with South Sudan’s National Development Strategy (2018-21) and the orientation of the Bank’s 2012-18 Country Strategy Paper, which was extended in May 2019 to 2021. Both strategies emphasize nation building through capacity building and infrastructure development.
Nigeria’s President Buhari signs N8.92 trillion 2019 budget
Nigeria’s President Buhari signs N8.92 trillion 2019 budget
Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari, on Monday, signed the country’s long-awaited 2019 appropriation bill into law.
President had submitted the 2019 budget of N8.83trillion to the Senate but was increased by about N10billion by the Upper House, bringing the amount to N8.92trillion.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the dignitaries who witnessed the signing of the budget, which took place at the mini-conference hall of the president, included the Senate President Bukola Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara.
The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha and the Chief of Staff to the President, Malam Abba Kyari also witnessed the signing of the budget.
Others at the event were the Ministers of Finance (Zainab Ahmed), Budget and National Planning (Sen. Udoma Udu Udoma), Information and Culture (Lai Mohammed) and the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Sen. Danjuma Goje,
The Senior Special Assistant (SSA) to the President on National AssemblyMatters (Senate), Sen. Ita Enang and his counterpart for the House of Representatives, Umar El-Yakub were also at the event.
NAN reports that on June 6, 2018, Buhari signed the 2018 appropriation bill of N9.120 trillion.
Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma, after the signing of the bill, the president said the 2018 Budget will help his government to consolidate the achievements of previous budgets and deliver on Nigeria’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) 2017-2020.
He expressed his happiness with the implementation of the 2017 budget, which saw the N1.5 trillion implementation of capital projects during the 2017 fiscal year, and said the government will work hard to recreate the same achievement and generate the revenues required to finance projects and programmes that’ll significantly improve the economy.
NAN also reports that during the signing of the 2018 bill, the president further noted, with dismay, the cuts made by the National Assembly to the bill he originally presented.
He said the legislature made cuts amounting to N347 billion in the allocations to 4,700 projects submitted to them for consideration and introduced 6,403 projects of their own amounting to N578 billion.
The president said he only signed the bill because he didn’t want to further slow down the pace of recovery of Nigeria’s economy, and further disclosed that he’ll send “a supplementary and/or amendment budget” to the national assembly to rectify the critical issues he raised.
Austerity Measures: South Africa slashes inauguration with ($7m; £5.5m
Austerity Measures: South Africa slashes inauguration with $7m
Responding to economic lull in the country, South Africa will be spending 100m rand ($7m; £5.5m) less on President Cyril Ramaphosa’s inauguration compared to the cost of swearing in Jacob Zuma for his second term five years ago.
Announcing the change, Minister in the presidency Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma said spending had to be reduced because “we all know there is economic difficulty in this country”.
As part of the cost-cutting measures, only southern African heads of state and the leaders of continental and regional bodies have been invited to the inauguration on 25 May.
The government has also opted for a sports stadium in the capital, Pretoria, rather than the area in front of the Union Buildings, the office of the presidency, because it was cheaper to prepare, Dr Dlamini-Zuma explained.
Nigeria’s President is helpless about country’s poverty, insecurity level
Nigeria’s President is helpless about country’s poverty, insecurity level
Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari looks helpless about high poverty level in Nigeria. Nigeria’s economy remains abysmally low and the government has not shown tact to refloat it.
Buhari on Monday night bemoaned the high level of poverty pervading in the country at the moment, saying that the situation makes him uncomfortable.
Vanguard says the president expressed his displeasure on the nation’s poverty rate when he played host to Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, the Ministers, Service Chiefs, Heads of Security Agencies and Chief Executives of Federal Government Agencies and Institutions to a breaking of fast at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
He frowned at the inability of the Nigerian elites to address the welfare and educational needs of the less-privileged in the society.
President Buhari who noted that too many people were running around unable to find something to eat, challenged the elite to do something very urgent to ameliorate the pathetic situation.
He stated that already Federal Government had introduced people friendly programs like the School Feeding and `Trader Money’ to alleviate the hardship being experienced by the less-privileged individuals across the country.
He, therefore, commended the Vice-President for successfully managing the school feeding and `trader money’ programs According to him, “When I drive around the country what upset me very much is the status of our poor people in this country – you see young people, the so-called Almajiris with tore dresses, with a plastic bowl.
They are looking basically for what to eat. “The question of education (to them) is a luxury. I think Nigerian elite are all failing because I think we should have a program that will at least guarantee some basic education for our people no matter how poor they are. “So, I welcome the Vice-President initiate of the School feeding program.
If you check in your localities the enrolment into schools improved because a lot of children can get at least one good meal a day. This is the position of this country. “But, culturally some of us are quiet merciless, we don’t care about what happens to others we just keep on moving forward.
“This `market money’ I warned the Vice-President I don’t like him to be mobbed, especially the way I see hefty women coming and confronting him, he should be very careful. “These are very good initiates. Initially, I was quite reluctant but I must admit that they are very good programs and they endear this government to a lot of poor people because of these N5,000 or N10,000 being given to them as loans.
“They are fantastic programs and I have to admit quite honestly that the Vice-President was ahead of me by insisting on them. “But he knows me if he insists I will say `okay go and do what you like.’ He did it and I’m very pleased as he is being very successful,’’ he said.
Speaking at the event, Vice-President Osinbajo, thanked the president for inviting them, both Muslims and Christians, to the breaking of fast with him. He said that regardless of ethnic and religious affiliations Nigerians must continue to be their brothers’ keepers and must work towards building a united nation.
He, however, condemned some politicians, who were bent on dividing the people along ethno-religious lines. On the Ramadan period, Osinbajo said: “Mr. President I must say that there are some reasons I had always look forward to the Ramadan session. But some of those reasons are now being seriously challenged.
“The first of those reasons is that during the Ramadan meetings are usually very short. But, unfortunately, last Wednesday Mr. President seemed to have destroyed that very good notion by taking us through the longest FEC meeting in the history of the Federal Executive Council.
“So, we shouldn’t expect anymore that meeting will necessarily be short during the Ramadan. “The second is that some of my friends are far less troublesome during the Ramadan. People like Lai Mohammed, Abba Kyari, Adamu Adamu they are usually very well behaved during the Ramadan. But I’m not even sure that that is true anymore.
“So, I think that all we can truly expect now from the session is possibility what it was meant to do which is to remind us of some of our responsibilities to ourselves as brothers and to our fellow men/women especially our roles as leaders.
Buhari will not rig Presidential election – BMO “I think it is auspicious that this particular Ramadan falls at the eve of the new term in office. “So, it is an opportunity for us to remind ourselves over the core mandates which is the welfare and security of the majority of our people,’’ he said.
Those, who joined the President for the fast-breaking meal known as Iftar, included some heads of federal government agencies and institutions. The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Godwin Emefiele, the Director-General of the Nigerian Television Authority, Alhaji Yakubu Ibn Muhammed, and the Chairman, National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, Abdullahi Mukhtar, were among the dignitaries at the event.
FILE: PHOTO. President, FILE PHOTO: President, Muhammadu Buhari has assented to the new minimum wage bill
Finally, Nigerian workers get N30, 000 ($84) Minimum Wage
Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari has assented to the new minimum wage bill which pegs minimum wage at N30, 000 which is roughly $84.
The bill, which has now become a law, will usher in a new pay structure for Nigerian workers.
The National Assembly had passed the bill approving N30,000 as the minimum wage for workers.
State governors had opposed the N30,000 minimum wage with many of them saying they will be unable to pay their workers N30,000 minimum wage.
Reports say Buhari’s aide on National Assembly Matters (Senate), Ita Enang, told journalists that the president has signed the minimum wage bill into law.
Enang, who briefed State House correspondents after meeting Mr Buhari, said the new law has N30,000 as minimum wage for Nigerian workers.
He also said implementation of the new law starts immediately.
Enang said the signing of the bill into law now “makes it compulsory for all employers of labour in Nigeria to pay their workers the sum of N30,000.”
The presidential aide, however, said employers with less than 25 workers are excluded from paying the new wage.
He said workers of “a ship which sails out of the country and other persons who are in other kinds of regulated employment which are accepted by the act” are also excluded from the new wage.
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