Monday, November 11, 2019

Respect Court Order On Sowore, NHRC Boss Tony Ojukwu Tells Secury Agencies

Tony Ojukwu, Executive Secretary of Nigeria's National Human Rights Commission (NHRC)

“Stop Desecrating the courts”, Ojukwu advises Law Enforcement Agents.

The Executive Secretary of the National Human Rights Commission, Tony Ojukwu Esq, has advised law enforcement agents to stop desecrating the judiciary. Ojukwu said this while reacting to the alleged refusal of officials of the Department of state services to release on bail the social campaigner Sowore after the order of his release by the trial court and his lawyers meeting the bail conditions. “There is need for the three arms of government to work harmoniously with utmost respect for each other as envisaged under the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

Many cases have been reported to the commission about investigating police officers and state security officers deliberately refusing or delaying to verify bail conditions following court orders just to punish suspects unduly for reasons that are not constitutional. “The constitution guarantees the innocence of every citizen of Nigeria until proven guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction” he said.

A situation where the order of courts are continuously disobeyed by security agents makes such security agents judges onto themselves and such situation does not augur well for our democracy based on separation of powers and rule of law. It makes the law uncertain at any point in time and leads to loss of confidence of the people in government and state institutions of which the judiciary is one.

A situation like this can also lead to self help thereby creating more problems for law enforcement agents and threaten the precarious situation of state responsibility to respect, protect and fulfill human rights in the country. He therefore called for renewed commitment on the part of law enforcement agents to submit to constituted authority and oversight and release all detainees who have met their bail conditions as ordered by the courts of the land. “You cannot approbate and reprobate” he said.

On the part of the Commission, “ we shall continue to train and sensitize law enforcement agents on the need to respect the law and the constitution which they have sworn to protect so as to engender a culture of respect for human rights in the country.”

Source: NHRC Press Release




SDP Kogi Office Raised, Days To Governorship Election


Barely one week to the 2019 Kogi Governorship Election, the Social Democratic party SDP in the state along Paparanda square in Lokoja has been raised by fire.

The incident occurred last  Sunday night after the Governorship candidate of the party Natasha Akpoti addressed members of the party in Lokoja.

Natasha and her running mate Adams Khalid returned to the state to flag off their governorship election campaign after they were declared eligible for the election by the federal high court in Abuja.

The SDP governorship candidate and her running mate for November sixteen Kogi State gubernortorial election were initially disqualified by the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC on the grounds that the age of her first running mate was below the approved age and was denied replacement. 

But the federal high court finally put the matter to rest on Thursday when it ruled in favour of Natasha and her party.

ILO COMMENDS BUHARI OVER MINIMUM WAGE

The Director General of the International Labour Organization, Mr. Guy Ryder has commended  Nigeria for the labour friendly disposition of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration.

Sunday, November 10, 2019

EID el-MAULUD: PRESIDENT BUHARI ASKS MUSLIMS TO FOLLOW THE EXAMPLES OF PROPHET MUHAMMAD


Breaking...Bolivia Army on Morales Stepping down

Mr Morales has denied wrongdoing and previous calls to resign.

The army chief in Bolivia has urged President Evo Morales to step down amid protests stemming from his disputed re-election last month.

The call comes hours after Mr Morales agreed to call a new election after international monitors called for the result to be annulled.

The Organization of American States (OAS), which monitored the elections, found "clear manipulation". 

Mr Morales has denied wrongdoing and previous calls to resign.

International Labour Organization (ILO) LO Pledges Support for Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies in Kwara State

The Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies (MINILS) addresses Human Rights issues within employment relations through their 2019 Public Lecture and National Dialogue, on the theme “Casting Human Rights in Employment Relations Mould: From State to Workplace Perspective”, held in Ilorin, on 31st October 2019.
Press release | 31 October 2019

ABUJA (ILO News): The Director of the ILO Country Office for Nigeria, Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and Liaison Office for ECOWAS, Mr. Dennis Zulu, has pledged ILO’s support to the Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies (MINILS). He made the pledge in response to a presentation made on areas for possible ILO intervention during the MINILS 2019 Annual Public Lecture and National Dialogue, which had as its theme “Casting Human Rights in Employment Relations Mould: From State to Workplace Perspective”. The Public Lecture which was organized in conjunction with the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) held on 31st October 2019 at MINILS campus in Ilorin, Kwara State.

While delivering his good will message at the event, Mr. Zulu acknowledged with appreciation the Institute’s contributions to debates on key labour issues that are of interest to the ILO. According to him, the public lecture was of a great relevance to the ILO’s objectives as it celebrates its centenary in 2019. He stated that right from its inception in 1919, the ILO has been using Standards to address workers’ rights globally and at the workplace. He used the opportunity to congratulate Nigeria for being the first African Country to host both the First African Office of the ILO in 1959 and the First ILO African Regional Conference in Lagos from 5-16 December 1960. 

He stated that the ILO’s engagement with MINILS since its inception has yielded positive results over the years and has affected labour administration in Nigeria positively. He was optimistic that ILO’s continuous engagement with MINILS, partners and other relevant stakeholders would bring more benefits to Nigerians. He commended MINILS for taking the initiative to share information and good practices on labour issues and pledged the ILO’s support to some of the activities and programmes of the institute to enable the institute impact positively on the beneficiaries of such programmes.

In his goodwill message, the NLC General Secretary, Comrade Emmanuel Ugboaja, commended the ILO for adopting a number of conventions and recommendations to moderate industrial relations in the work place. He listed them as the convention of Freedom of Association, Organizing, Collective Bargaining, Full and Productive Employment, Elimination of all Forms of Forced Labour, Abolition of Child Labour and the Elimination of Discrimination in Employment and Occupation. He urged workers and employers to use these standards to demand their rights.   

 

Mr. Saliu Alabi, Director-General of MINILS, in his welcome address gave a detailed overview of the strategic nature of the theme of the lecture. Mr. Saliu Alabi, speaking on the theme of the lecture, said that human rights are key elements in overall strategy for engendering decent jobs as well as transforming employment relationships and work place practices. “There is increasing consensus that the workplace is a critical platform upon which development processes could be fostered, at both strategic and operational levels’’ he said. He further commended the Ministry of Labour and Employment and several other partners including ILO for their support to the institute and implored that the Dialogue would give momentum to the cause of human rights and employment relations in Nigeria.

 

Remarks were made by a representative of the Executive Governor of Kwara State, His Excellency Alhaji Abdulrahman Abdulrazak. Declaring the lecture open, the State Governor stated that its government had done their best to ensure that everyone was accorded their rights within the confines of the law. Alhaji Abdulrazak assured the gathering of his government’s continuous efforts to ensure that issues relating to human rights are tackled especially that relating to minimum wage. He also maintained that Kwara is “leading the charge” in restoring and protecting basic human rights and working towards UN SDGs especially the rights of women and young girls to fair representation, inclusion and decent empowerment.

 

From the panel discussions, various recommendations were made on how to promote human rights and workplace practices.   The event gathered together renowned professionals from government, labour, academia, civil societies and legal profession. Amongst those who participated at the public lecture and made contributions were the Acting Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Dr.  Folasade Yemi-Esan ; Acting President, National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN), Hon. Justice Benedict Bakwaph Kanyip; and Chief Femi Falana, SAN. Chief Falana lauded judges of the NICN for deciding labour matters in line with the provisions of the ILO conventions and international best practices). Also in attendance were trade union leaders and members, representatives of civil society and human rights organizations, top government functionaries, and representatives of the international community.

 

The Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies (MINILS) is Nigeria’s foremost institute for labour education aimed at building the capacity of workers and their unions; promoting exchange between Industrial relations parties in the interest of Industrial harmony; developing international linkages to encourage best practices and global solidarity and advancing the frontiers of knowledge on labour matters. It has evolved into a rallying platform for industrial and labour discourse on contemporary national and international issues.

 

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Equipped With Required Skills, Youths Are Nigeria’s Greatest Asset – ILO Director


BY OBIOMA C. APPOLOS

Against the much expressed fear that Nigeria’s skyrocketing youth population would be a detriment to the progress of the country, the International Labour Organization’s (ILO) Nigeria, Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone Country Director, Dennis Zulu, has said that the reverse is rather the case.

He added that with the enthusiasm he saw in many Nigerian youths, the country will become a powerful nation in all ramifications if the youths are equipped with the required skills needed for the future of world of work, and enabling environment that would channel the skills to positive production facilitated.

Mr Zulu, went on to say rather than being pessimistic about what he termed ‘Nigeria’s greatest asset’, government at all levels and Nigerians in their different strata should see the country’s growing youth population as an advantage to becoming a reckoning powerful nation in the world.

He then tasked government and giant business owners to get busy with structural planning which its focal point should be training and retraining the youths in the required skills that would usher in growth in every sector of the economy, investment in developmental projects and provision of basic amenities such as electricity that would fast track the desired development and of course, impactful economic growth.

Zulu in an exclusive interview with THE LABOUR, enjoined Nigeria government to take facilitation of business-thriving environment seriously ; as part of its conviction that a drastic action needed taken in order to prevent the country from falling into precarious state, and also as a commitment towards achieving desired goals.

“Government exists to provide an enabling environment, to facilitate a business-thriving environment for people to grow. That is one area Nigeria government need to do more, that is what the government and should be seriously doing.

“People talk about the growing number of young Nigerians in the country, yes it might be a challenge but it is also an opportunity and Nigeria’s greatest asset.

“There are some countries in the world that are facing human resource challenges, they don’t have sufficient men and women to do the work and their population is shrinking.

“If you have a growing youth population what does that mean, it means a growth in demand for certain things that young people need. If you are a business man that is a great opportunity to provide those needs because you have a growing consumer base and when you have an increased aggregate demand for goods and services propelled by a growing youth population, it means that it also propels the economy to grow.

“So if an economy is growing, obviously it is a cyclic of things. It is an ecosystem being established, it is an increase in demand, it is that companies are set up to meet the demand and these companies need employees to work for them and employees will generate income and that income will need goods and services. To cut the long story short about the future of work, we need to prepare, we know what the drivers are, we know what the issues will be, the question is are we preparing sufficiently and are we doing the right thing?”

Furthermore, Zulu praised what he called business oriented and surviving spirit enthusiasm that average Nigeria youth possesses. He then task government to seriously key into that spirit and do more to helping the youth. He also stressed the need to redirect some skills that youths have already acquired but are using on a negative direction , such as for “Yahoo Yahoo”.

“In Nigeria you say hustle. That itself shows the uniqueness that young Nigerians will not sit back and wait for government to make a difference for their lives. I see young Nigerians carrying sewing machines on their shoulder looking for business but in other countries the young person will sit with his sewing machine at the house waiting for customers to come and they won’t come.

“The drive that a young Nigerian has to carry a sewing machine or the stuffs used to fix shoes and walks around looking for business, tells you that there is something distinctively different. You speak to these people and you are amazed by the sort of ambition that they have. They say one day I would be able to drive a car or I will be able to afford housing that is the drive you need.

“Now, how has does government nurture that enthusiasm that is already there, the entrepreneurial spirit that is already there, the drive that is already there in the young Nigerian, by providing an enabling environment for them to be able to grow, there is need to facilitate and it is only when they facilitated that hopefully the opportunities will grow.

“On the “yahoo yahoo” issue, I was in Enugu a week ago speaking to the trade unions and I talked about “yahoo yahoo”. I spoke again about it in another meeting, I said look, let’s nurture that talent, let’s use that skill towards something productive for the country”.

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    TWO BROTHERS GET FIVE YEARS JAIL TIME FOR $788 SCAM


    Justice J. K. Omotosho of the Federal High Court, Port Harcourt, has convicted and sentenced two brothers to five years imprisonment for obtaining money under false pretences. 

    According to @officialEFCC ,The duo are Otojareri Governor Lucky (a.k.a Sam Lewis) and Otojareri President Mayor (a.k.a John Jacob Carison). Their offences run contrary to Section 1(1)(a) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act, 2006 and punishable under Section 1(3) of the same Act.
    Lucky and Mayor were arraigned by thPort Harcourt Zonal office of the EFCC, on Thursday, October 25,  2019 on one-count charge bordering on obtaining the sum of $788.00(USD) under false pretences.

    Domesticate Child Right Act Now, UNICEF Tells Northern Nigerian States


    Over 200 young Nigerians converged in Bauchi to discuss issues hindering them to attain their potentials. 

    This year’s theme is tagged: “The Nigeria We Want: Voices from Bauchi”.
    The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has said that 11 of 36 Nigerian States are yet to domesticate the Child Right Act.
    UNICEF stated this on Saturday at a joint programme put together with the Bauchi State Universal Basic Education Board to mark the 30th anniversary of the Convention on the Right of the Child (CRC) in Bauchi.
    UNICEF boss, Bauchi Field Office, Mr. Bhanu Pathak, said that the increasing number of child brides is another major factor contributing to the menace of out-of-school children which Bauchi accounts for over 1 million.
    While addressing youth from six northern States: Bauchi, Taraba, Adamawa, Jigawa, Plateau and Gombe, Pathak said that an estimated 3 in 5 children have suffered one or more forms of violence before reaching 18, with over 70 per cent experiencing multiple incidents of violence.
    Pathak said: “Only 25 States in Nigeria have the Child Right Law in place. Eleven States are yet to enact this law, these States are from the Northern part of Nigeria”.
    He said that for Nigeria to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, things must clearly change.
    Pathak maintained that Nigerian children and young people need to be able to access the opportunities they need to develop in a safe environment.
    However, Wife of Bauchi State Governor, Hajiya Aisha Bala Mohammed, challenged youths in the country to take up the task of rebuilding the nation, while noting that multinational corporations and agencies should not be left alone in fixing Nigeria’s problems.
    She said: “We know our problems and we must fix them ourselves, some parents still take education for granted in this part of the country. This, we can say is contributing to the nation’s insecurity”.
    She further enjoined parents to ensure that their children enrol and attend school regularly.
    Also, Bauchi State Commissioner of Education, Dr. Aliyu Usman Tilde, assured the State’s youth of accessible and quality education.

    FCT State Minister Promises 720 Skill Acquisition Jobs

      

    FCT Minister of State, Dr. Ramatu Tijjani Aliyu, has assured that the FCT Administration will creates 120 skill acquisition jobs for women and youths in each of the six Area Councils of the territory by December 1, 2019.  

    In a statement by Austine Elemue, S.A Media To FCT Minister of State on
    10th November, 2019, says 
    The measure according to her will pull out a total of 720 women and youths from joblessness to  employers of labour in the first 100 days in office of the present FCT Administration.  

    Aliyu, who stated this during "An Evening with Friends of NTA Channel 5 Abuja", also assured that plans have reached an advanced stage for the provision of 10 boreholes in each of the six Area Councils to address the challenges of water and sanitation among rural communities in the territory.  

    The minister who was represented at the occasion by the Director of Information and Communications, Mr. Stella Ojeme, acknowledged that the task of running a mega city is enormous, but not insurmountable, also solicited for the support of NTA Channel 5 and other notable media organisations for the realization of Abuja of our dream.  

    According to Aliyu, "In the past three weeks, I have embarked on tour of facilities in the six  Area Councils to ascertain the level of infrastructural decay in the rural communities with a view to fixing them in line with President Muhammadu Buhari's mandate to complete all abandoned and ongoing projects.  

    "In all of these inspection tours, I have been able to identity areas of needs and prioritized them for proper execution. To start with, we are carrying out a comprehensive work on our youth centre in Nyanya for skills acquisition of  women and youths across the Area Councils.  

    "It is my pleasure to report to you that by December 1, 2019, as part of activities to mark 100 days in office, we will engage 120 women and youths in different skills in each Area Council of the Territory. Also, plans have been concluded to provide 10 boreholes in each Area Council to address challenges of adequate water supply and sanitation".  

    She, however, thanked NTA Channel 5 for the support she has received from the station since her assumption of office by broadcasting the activities and events of the Administration, while looking forward for a more rewarding and fruitful relationship.