Month: August 2024

  • Police Parade Motorcyclist in Osun Over Alleged Rape of OAU Student

    The Osun State Police Command has paraded a motorcyclist, Damilare Jacob, for reportedly robbing and raping a female student (name withheld) in the ancient city of Ile-Ife, area of Osun State.

    Parading the suspect at the police headquarters in Osogbo on Wednesday, Command Spokesperson Yemisi Opalola said, the suspect, Damilare was arrested after the victim lodged a complaint.

    According to Opalola, “The incident occurred on July 26, 2024, around 9:30 pm. The complainant (student) had taken a bike from Obafemi Awolowo University Campus, Ile-Ife, to Moro. Upon reaching the RCC junction along the Ilesha-Ibadan expressway, the motorcyclist diverted into the bush, where he collected valuable items, including an iPhone X, worth N320,000, a Samsung A71 worth N150,000, an Airtel WiFi worth N10,000, and N20,000.”

    She revealed that the suspect also allegedly cut the victim’s hair in her private parts and armpit.

    Speaking with newsmen, the suspect, Damilare Jacob, said he was triggered by the way the victim underrated him as a motorcyclist, saying she could never marry someone like him.

    He confirmed collecting the iPhone X, stating that the lady asked him to have intimacy with her instead of robbing her of the N75,000 in her account.

    The suspect urged women not to leave their children behind when divorcing their husbands, citing the separation between his mother and father since he was a child as the cause of his problems.

    He begged the police to show mercy in their justice, acknowledging his guilt of the crime committed.

    As at the time of filling this report, the management of the institution and the Students’ Union are yet to react to this disturbing development.

  • Documents Reveal Dangote’s brother among Importers of petroleum products from Malta

    DAILY NIGERIAN

    More facts have emerged on the identities of companies and individuals behind the importation of substandard petroleum products from Malta, with Sayyu Dantata, the half-brother of the president of Dangote Group Aliko Dangote as one of the importers.

    In July, Mr Dangote alleged that some officials of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company, NNPC Limited and oil traders have blending plants in Malta, where they produce and import off-spec petroleum products that are brought to Nigeria for consumption.

    Mr Dangote made the revelation while reacting to the claim by the managing director of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, NMDPRA, Ahmed Farouk, that products from the Dangote refinery are inferior to imported ones.


    “Even at 650,000 bpm and 700,000 bpm, that we are producing was a better quality than what was imported. And I am sure most of you will have problems with your vehicle because of the bad fuel that were imported into the country, I still stand by what I said.

    “Go to filling station, you can pick it up and check the quality. That is only way. But all these one somebody will bring in ship, bring in fake certificates. Some NNPC people, some traders have opened a blending plant somewhere in Malta. We all know these areas, we know what they are doing,” Mr Dangote said.

    Meanwhile, documents obtained by DAILY NIGERIAN revealed that MRS Oil and Gas is one of the oil companies importing fuel from Malta.

    DAILY NIGERIAN gathered that Mr Dangote’s half-brother — Sayyu Dantata — is the founder and chief executive officer of MRS Oil and Gas.

    Other directors of MRS include, Aisha Dantata, Abdu Dantata, Patrice Alberti, GMD, Amina Maina, GCOO, and Mohammed Dantata.

    According to some of the documents obtained by our correspondent, the company imported fuel into Nigeria in February 2024 through the vessel MT AETHER.


    In separate letters dated March 4 and addressed to the authority chief executive officer of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, NMDPRA, and the Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, NUPRC, the oil firm confirmed that it had purchased 91,219.232 Mt Vac of unleaded gasoline 91 Ron from PETROCAM DMCC.


    The letter, which was signed by the general manager of risk management, Moyosola Kuku, said the product was loaded at the port of OPL MALTA, onto vessel MT AETHER.

    “We hereby confirm that MRS Oil and Gas Co. Ltd. purchased 91,219.232 Mt Vac of unleaded gasoline 91 Ron from PETROCAM DMCC, was loaded at the port of OPL Malta onto vessel MT AETHER with bill of lading dated 19/02/2024 as evidenced by the following documents attached, bill of lading, cargo manifest, certificate of origin, and certificate of quantity.

    “In line with the February 2024 spot gasoline supply contract, we subsequently sold full cargo on board MT AETHER [91.219.232 MTV] to NNPC for delivery offshore Lagos.

    “We remain at your disposal for any further information you might require,” the letter reads.

    In another letter sent to the Managing Director of NNPC Trading Limited, and dated March 4, MRS Oil and Gas confirmed the sale of full cargo on board MT AETHER [91,219.232 MTV] with bill of lading dated 19/02/2024 to NNPC for delivery offshore Lagos.

    The letter titled, “Confirmation of Sale of Cargo to Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation”, reads, We MRS Oil and Gas Co. Ltd., hereby confirm that we sold full cargo on board MT AETHER (91,219.232 MTV) with bill of lading dated 19/02/2024 to NNPC for delivery offshore Lagos.

    “We remain at your disposal for any further information you might require.

    Attempts to get the reaction of the company were unsuccessful, as the phone numbers on the company’s website were not connecting, and the text message sent to the line is yet to be responded to as at the time of filing this report.

  • ASUU Gives FG 21-Day Nationwide Strike Notice

    ASUU Gives FG 21-Day Nationwide Strike Notice

    Punch Newspaper

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, has informed the Federal Government of its plans to embark on a nationwide strike by placing the government on a 21-day notice, The PUNCH reports.

    Sources within the National Executive Council of ASUU confirmed the development to our correspondent in Abuja on Monday.

    The notice was issued at the end of the NEC meeting, which was held at the University of Ibadan, and a copy is expected to be transmitted to the Federal Ministries of Labour and Education.

    “It is not an ultimatum but a strike notice. We are giving them 21 days’ notice, after which we shall embark on strike.

    “Our aim for putting out the notice is that it is a requirement under labour laws so we are trying to ensure that all our actions are done according to the law,” the source said.

    It would be recalled that ASUU had threatened to embark on strike over the non-implementation of agreements reached with the federal government.

    On June 26, the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman, invited the union to a meeting to deliberate on the lingering issues affecting universities and to avert the planned strike.

    The national president of ASUU, Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke who spoke on the outcome of the meeting said the agreements reached with the Federal Government had not been implemented.

    “At the meeting called by the Minister of Education, we agreed that after two weeks, we will meet to see the progress the government has made.

    “We will also see what we will do next if the government fail to implement the agreements reached.”

    The ASUU president said some of the demands included the non-implementation of the 2009 re-negotiated agreements.

    He said the agreements had lingered for over six years, and the government had yet to implement them.

    Osodeke said the academic allowances due to their members had also accumulated for over six years, and nothing had been done about it.

    On the issue of the revitalisation fund, he said they agreed on the Needs Assessment Report to raise N200 billion yearly for five years.

    “Since 2013, only one has been paid. We need revitalisation funds to upgrade our universities to standard so that we can have students and lecturers from outside the country,” he said.

    Oshodeke added that the government had yet to stop the proliferation of universities, adding that many new universities were being approved without funds to run them.

  • Fake Admissions: FG Issues Fresh Directive To Varsities, Polytechnics, Colleges on Matriculation List

    Fake Admissions: FG Issues Fresh Directive To Varsities, Polytechnics, Colleges on Matriculation List

    The Federal Government has directed all higher institutions in the country to “regularly submit their matriculation lists to the Federal Ministry of Education not later than three months after matriculation ceremonies.”

    The list, the government said, must be submitted “through the dedicated channel of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board.”

    The initiative is one of the recommendations made by a committee set up by the Federal Government to combat fake degree mills or racketeers in the country.

    In March, the Federal Government set up an Inter-Ministerial Investigative Committee on Degree Certificate Milling to probe the activities of certificate racketeers following an investigative report published by Daily Nigerian which exposed the activities of fake degree mills in the Benin Republic.

    Daily Nigerian reporter Umar Audu revealed how he obtained a degree within six weeks and even proceeded to embark on mandatory youth service under the National Youth Service Corps scheme back in Nigeria.

    The investigative report, which exposed the illegalities perpetrated by some tertiary institutions in the West African countries, led to the Nigerian government placing a ban on the accreditation and evaluation of degrees from Benin Republic and Togo.


    The Minister of Education, Tahir Mamman, having received the report of the committee, noted that holders of fake degrees from Nigerian and foreign universities will be flushed out of the system.

    In a memo addressed to the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board on July 15, 2024, the education ministry said, “You may recall that following the publication of allegations of certificate racketeering involving some foreign institutions, especially in Cotonou, Benin Republic, and other countries, the ministry constituted an inter-ministerial committee to investigate the allegations to find lasting solutions.

    “The committee has submitted its report and the Honourable Minister of Education has approved its recommendations for implementation.

    “In that regard, I hereby convey the request of the honourable minister for the implementation of the following recommendations of the committee:

    “Enforce the mandatory requirement for all tertiary institutions in Nigeria to exclusively conduct their admissions processes through the Central Admissions Processing System under the auspices of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board; mandate all tertiary institutions in Nigeria to regularly submit their matriculation lists to the Federal Ministry of Education not later than three months after matriculation ceremonies through the dedicated channel of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board.

    “You are kindly requested to implement the above recommendations and furnish the ministry with implementation updates.”

  • Chemist Rapes 9-year-old Malaria Patient To Death in Kano

    Chemist Rapes 9-year-old Malaria Patient To Death in Kano

    A 9-year-old malaria patient, Rumaisa Sadiq, has been reportedly raped to death by an acclaimed chemist in Jaba, Fanisau Unogo Local Government Area of Kano State.

    Kano State Commissioner of Women Affairs, Disabled and Children, Hajia Aisha Saji, who confirmed the victim’s death in a statement, said justice would be served.

    She said despite moves to divert the case, Governor Abba Yusuf’s administration would follow up the matter to serve as deterrence to others.

    The father’s victim was said to have taken her to the Chemist’s shop for malaria treatment, a common practice among some Nigerians who avoid going to hospital when ill, so as to avoid huge bills.

    “Despite moves by some individuals to infuse diverters into the reported case of a fatal rape against nine year old Rumaisa Sadiq, the Commissioner of Ministry of Women, Children and the Disabled, Hajiya Aisha Lawan Saji Rano has insisted that there must be justice for the late victim and her family.”

    “Speaking during a condolence visit to the family house of the victim, the Commissioner said, ‘there must be justice for the little girl who lost her life simply because someone chose to display his animalistic instinct on her.

    “In fact, full and quick dispensation of justice in this case is necessary in order to serve as lesson and deterrence to others like this grown up person that carried out this merciless act against an innocent nine year old girl.

    “The Kano State Government under the justice-loving Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf will follow up the case in court to a conclusive end.

    “It could however be recalled that Rumaisa was allegedly raped by the owner of a chemist where she was taken to by her father for treatment against malaria.”

  • Matrix Energy Clears Founder, Abdulkabir Aliu of Wrongdoing Over Importation of Petrol From Malta

    TheCable

    Matrix Energy has absolved Abdulkabir Aliu, the company’s founder, from any wrongdoing following a report by TheCable that the businessman is behind the importation of petroleum products from Malta and Russia.

    On Friday, TheCable reported that one of the biggest petrol importers via Malta is Aliu, a member of the presidential economic coordination council (PECC).

    BACKGROUND

    Petroleum imports from Malta grabbed the headlines on July 22 when Aliko Dangote, chairman of Dangote Petroleum Refinery, alleged that some personnel of Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited, oil traders and terminals have opened a blending plant in Malta.

    Following his allegation, Mele Kyari, the group chief executive officer (GCEO) of NNPC, denied having an interest in any plant in Malta.

    In 2023, Nigeria’s petroleum importation from Malta surged significantly to $2.08 billion, compared to zero between 2017 and 2022, and a mere $13.32 million in 2016.

    Also, TheCable revealed that in July alone, over 200,000 tonnes of “lower quality African Spec” petrol from Malta were discharged into the Matrix jetty in Warri, Delta state, according to an insider who shared confidential documents with the publication.

    “This represents about 25 percent of Nigeria’s monthly PMS consumption going to a relatively small player with only 150 retail stations,” the insider said.

    Similarly, on June 16, about 15,000 tonnes of diesel — loaded on May 26 from Novorossiysk, Russia, and transported by a vessel, MT Kallos — were reportedly transloaded into the company’s vessel, Matrix Triumph, offshore Lome without corrections and discharged into Matrix jetty in Warri.

    It is understood that the diesel from Russia is typically off-spec and is often corrected in places like Lome and Malta through blending with other components.

    Off-spec is when a product does not meet the specifications or standards set for a petroleum product.

    Also, Aliu was said to be leveraging his close relations with NNPC top management to secure crude oil cargoes from the national oil company for Matrix.

    The crude allocations to Matrix are traded by Gulf Transport & Trading (GTT), a trading company registered in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), according to the insider.

    The source said two of the three crude cargoes of the recently launched Utapate grade were allocated to GTT.

    MATRIX DENIES IMPORTING OFF-SPEC PRODUCTS


    In a statement on Saturday on the company’s website, Matrix said its imported products meet the approved specifications and no customer has rejected them.

    “The Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) is the sole regulatory body empowered by the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) to issue import licenses and enforce the Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON) product specifications,” the company said.

    “Matrix Energy has consistently imported products that meet the approved specifications, and we have never been found wanting in this regard.

    “Our commitment to quality is reflected in the fact that none of our customers have ever rejected our products; indeed, demand for Matrix products often exceeds our capacity to supply, a testament to our reputation for reliability. This success is equally reflected in our fertilizer businesses.”

    On July 20, while defending his company against the claim of selling substandard products, Dangote alleged that diesel obtained from Matrix Retail showed 2,653 parts per million (ppm) sulphur concentration, while that of TotalEnergies showed 1,829ppm, compared to his which was 87 ppm.

    Low-sulphur diesel is below 500 ppm, and is considered cleaner for the environment; while high-sulphur diesel is used for off-road purposes because it causes progressive damage to the engine of machinery.

    In Nigeria, the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) said 50 ppm sulphur concentration is required by law and adopted by the Economics Community of West African States (ECOWAS) in 2020.

    WE DIDN’T IMPORT 200K TONNES OF PETROL’

    Addressing the allegation of importing 200,000 tonnes of petrol in July, Matrix said the company did not import such volumes even though it has the capacity and customer base.

    “Our depots boast a storage capacity of 150 million litters of liquid products, including LPG and bitumen. However, contrary to the claims made in the publication, we did not discharge 200,000 metric tons of PMS into our facility in July 2024,” the company said.

    “While we have the capacity and customer base to handle such volumes, Matrix Energy has never imported or distributed any substandard cargo in our two decades of operation. Our quality test has never been doubted by the regulators and Nigerians who have found a partner in us.”

    MATRIX SAYS ALIU HAS RIGHT TO TRADE IN ANY PART OF THE WORLD

    The company said Aliu has the right to trade freely in any part of the world.

    “Our Chief Executive Officer, Abdulkabir Adisa Aliu is a talented and dedicated Nigerian with the right to associate freely as well as trade freely in any part of the world,” Matrix said.

    “Like he stated in his presentation before the Nigerian Senate, we are not aware that Nigerian companies have been banned from bringing in legitimate and standard products from outside the country and until such is done, we will continue to serve the public with best quality products.

    “Those who know our CEO understands that he is far from lazy; rather, he is deeply committed to making a positive impact. His selection by Mr. President to serve as a member of the Economic Coordination Council is a recognition of his dedication to shared values and his commitment to the betterment of Nigeria in the Renewed Hope Agenda, for which he remains deeply grateful.”

    CRUDE OBTAINED FROM NNPC THROUGH TENDER’

    Matrix said the Utapate crude oil blend was obtained after winning a tender by NNPC.

    “It is important to note that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited (NNPCL) recently introduced its Utapate crude oil blend from OML 13. NNPC traditionally tenders its free crude cargoes, and any company that wins the tender is operating within the law,” Matrix said.

    “Matrix Energy like other companies also won the tenders. As a people-oriented company that operates above board and in line with international best practices, we welcome constructive criticisms.”

    On August 5, NNPC introduced the Utapate crude oil blend into the international market.

  • NYSC To Prosecute 54 ‘Corps Members’ From UNICAL

    NYSC To Prosecute 54 ‘Corps Members’ From UNICAL

    The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC),through its head, Brigadier General Yushau Ahmed, has said that 54 corps members from University of Calabar (UNICAL) have been demobilised and will be drag to court for prosecution by the NYSC management.

    Ahmed in a statement by Director, Information and Public Relations of the service, Eddy Megwavowed, vowed that all illegally mobilised corps members from the university would be prosecuted.

    He said 19 among them who initially registered online for mobilisation had been prevented from service, while four Certificates of National Service for other culprits were not produced by the scheme.

    This is coming on the back of 101 certificates that were recently voided by the scheme, making it 178.

    Ahmed commemded the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar, Professor Florence Obi for her forthrightness to have earlier hinted the scheme on the mobilisation of unqualified graduates from her institution.

    He insisted that the scheme would leave no stone unturned in sanitising its mobilisation process.

    “The Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar came here to report that she observed some names appeared on the institution’s list and they ought not to have been there.

    “She checked the list the school gave us and I told her that their certificates would be invalidated.

    Ahmed reiterated that the Scheme would intensify its collaboration with all the Heads of Corps Producing Institutions and relevant stakeholders in the country in order to stop the menace.

    He added that any failure in the mobilisation process from any school falls on the integrity of the management of such institution.

    “Those who are responsible for imputing the data of graduates should be people of integrity,” he said.

    He called on all employers of labour in the country to verify the authenticity of Certificates of National Service being presented for job placement from the NYSC.

  • Bread Seller Who Didn’t Attend Varsity Mobilised For Service – NYSC

    Bread Seller Who Didn’t Attend Varsity Mobilised For Service – NYSC

    Director General, National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Brigadier General Yushau Ahmed, has said that one of the “graduates” fraudulently mobilised for the scheme by University of Calabar, Cross Rivers State, is a bread seller who did not attend the institution.

    This is coming on the back of 101 certificates that were recently voided by the scheme, making it 178.

    Ahmed commemded the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar, Professor Florence Obi for her forthrightness to have earlier hinted the scheme on the mobilisation of unqualified graduates from her institution.

    He insisted that the scheme would leave no stone unturned in sanitising its mobilisation process.

    “The Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar came here to report that she observed some names appeared on the institution’s list and they ought not to have been there.

    “She checked the list the school gave us and I told her that their certificates would be invalidated.

    “Previously, a bread seller was mobilized on the graduation list from the same institution. There are bad eggs in many places that generate matriculation numbers and courses for their candidates,” Ahmed said.

  • Tinubu’s Economic Reforms: Nightmarish Cases from Other Countries By Farooq A. Kperogi

    Tinubu’s Economic Reforms: Nightmarish Cases from Other Countries By Farooq A. Kperogi

    By Farooq A. Kperogi

    The President Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration likes to psychologically anesthetize Nigerians who are grieving from the hurt of its economic policies (petrol price spike, electricity tariff hike, devaluation of the naira, etc.) by saying Nigerians are only undergoing transitory pains in the service of a forthcoming permanent prosperity.

    I have repeatedly called this an intentional lie. I have done so from the benefit of my knowledge of the outcomes of such policies in other countries, including in Nigeria from 1986 to 1993 when Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida implemented a Structural Adjustment Program (SAP) as dictated by the World Bank and the IMF, which is similar to Tinubu’s “reforms.”

    I have also made recurrent references in the past to countries that have made progress precisely because they defied the economic template Tinubu is implementing now. I highlight the case of Malaysia in the late 1990s to support my point.

    But let’s start with SAP in Nigeria. In 1986, self-described military president Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida was persuaded by the IMF and the World Bank to “restructure and diversify” Nigeria’s economy.

    The restructuring and diversification led to the removal of subsidies on petrol (all past regimes called petrol price spikes “subsidy removal”), devaluation of the naira (now it’s known by the fancy term “floating of the naira”), deregulation (that is, allowing market forces to regulate the economy while the government takes the back seat), privatization (i.e., selling off of Nigeria’s national patrimony to a few moneybags), etc.

    The immediate aftereffect of this IMF-endorsed “restructuring” (Tinubu calls his “reform”) of the economy was a never-before-seen inflationary conflagration, which eroded the purchasing power of the average Nigerian. It produced widespread hardship similar to what Nigerians are going through at this moment.

    Petrol price spike and privatization led to job losses and a deepening of the unemployment crisis. Reduction in government spending, particularly on social services, led to declines in healthcare and education quality. Poverty rates also increased as a direct consequence of the removal of subsidies for fuel and basic services.

    I distinctly remember all the rhetorical maneuvers that officials of the IBB regime used to fray nerves, and they are awfully similar to what honchos of the Tinubu regime now use: it will get worse before it gets better, there is light at the end of the tunnel, there is no gain without pain, Nigeria simply can’t afford to fund subsidies, our economy would collapse if we don’t restructure the economy, the current system is unsustainable, we’ll all smile and appreciate the wisdom of this temporary sacrifice when the gains start coming, etc.

    By 1993 when IBB left power, Nigeria became firmly secured in the economic toilet. Manufacturing collapsed, social unrest rose, and brain drain (which is now called “japa”) started and blossomed, and hopelessness was democratized.

    Someone very close to IBB who nonetheless opposed his IMF-backed economic “restructuring” told me he asked one of IBB’s IMF/World Bank-appointed finance ministers a few years ago what happened to the “gains” they promised would replace the “pains” people underwent between 1986 and 1993?

    He reported him as saying the gains didn’t materialize because the “restructuring” wasn’t implemented faithfully. Meanwhile, thousands of people died, and millions of people were destabilized because of this “restructuring.” I can bet that Tinubu and his defenders would give the same excuse when they dig Nigeria deeper into the depths of despair at the end of their “reforms.”

    In a 1995 report titled “Structural Adjustment and the Spreading Crisis In Latin America,” we see the same scenario repeated throughout the developing countries of South and Central America. Everywhere subsidies were removed, currency devalued, and so-called market forces given a free reign, the result is always the same: devastation, poverty, hopelessness, death of the middle class, etc.

    The report instructively noted: “Mexico is one of many cases worldwide where adjustment and the free market have not only failed to alleviate poverty, but have further polarized the country and led to disaster, economic and social. World Bank and IMF officials continued to say — right up to the current crisis — that adjustment’s attack on poverty would take time, but, after more than a dozen years of adjustment in Mexico, things have never been worse than they are today, and there is no light at the end of the tunnel. There must be a point at which these institutions acknowledge that their strategy has failed and needs to be abandoned, and that a new, more democratically determined approach to the country’s development has to be taken.”

    But it’s not inevitable that governments in developing countries should follow the IMF/World Bank’s ruinous prescriptions. Many countries with leaders who have guts and who care for the welfare of their people resist these institutions. And it often turns out that the only countries that are witnessing inclusive growth and development are countries that have chosen to depart from the hell-paved path created by the IMF and the World Bank.

    For example, in 1997, when Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, and South Korea faced economic headwinds and turned to the IMF and the World Bank for financial bailout, they were offered help with the usual conditionalities attached: budget cuts, subsidy removal, currency devaluation, etc.

    Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed rejected the conditions. He said they would choke off economic growth, bankrupt companies, and cause massive unemployment in his country. So, he went counter to the counsel of the IMF. Instead of budget cuts, he increased government spending. Instead of currency devaluation, he defended the ringgit, Malaysia’s currency, by fixing it to the US dollar. Malaysia recovered from the economic crisis faster than its IMF-obedient neighbors.

    During “A Meeting of Minds” dialogue organized by Forbes magazine in 2009, the magazine’s chief executive officer and editor-in-chief, Steve Forbes, asked Mahathir how and why he bucked the IMF and did better than countries that slavishly obeyed it.

    “Fortunately, I am not a financier,” he said. “I know very little about economics, so I do things which are not quite off props. When people tell me that the right way to handle a crisis like that is to obey the IMF and the World Bank, I thought otherwise. I actually examined their prescriptions, and I found that those prescriptions would actually make matters worse, so I didn’t see why I should be following them.”

    I am glad Mahathir attributed his success in standing up to the IMF to his not being a financier and knowing “very little about economics.” It’s as if he was talking about Nigeria’s gaggle of slavish, brain-dead, self-impressed, IMF-controlled know-things who pass themselves off as “economic experts” and who have popularized the aggravating idiocy that subsidies are bad and must be removed because they are supposedly bad for the economy and don’t benefit the poor.

    Now we know the truth. We need more people who “know very little about economics” and a lot about commonsense to make economic decisions for Nigeria.

    The questions people with lots of common sense and very little knowledge of “economics” should ask are, what does it profit a national economy if a government increases the cost of production for manufacturing companies through sharp spikes in the cost of petrol and electricity?

    What benefits does a country derive from a policy that causes mass pauperization, which ensures that everyday citizens can’t afford the basic things of life, not to talk of discretionary spending? Recession kicks in when people have no money to spend.

    How does a country get light at the end of the tunnel when its policies trigger inflation and a once-in-a-generation cost-of-living crisis because it devalued its currency under the instruction of far-flung economic institutions notorious for instigating mass misery in developing countries and that are concerned more for “their loans, not on growth,” as Mahathir once put it? How can a country surrender its economic sovereignty to a foreign entity and tell its citizens to expect a bumper harvest in an undefined future?

    The only benefit of the ongoing “economic reforms,” according to Tinubu and his officials, is that it is bringing in more money for the government. And what does the government do with the money? Fritter it away in frivolities while people starve and die.

    Even if the money will be used to build or renew infrastructure—we all know it won’t—if this is achieved at the expense of pauperizing the great majority of our people, it is still worthless.

    Only people who are alive and healthy use infrastructure. The time to know very little economics and have lots of commonsense is now because the lofty “tomorrow” Tinubu’s IMF economic policies are promising will never come. It never came for countries that implemented similar policies.

  • Police Give Details on Abduction of 20 UNIJOS Medical Students

    Police Give Details on Abduction of 20 UNIJOS Medical Students

    The Benue State Police Command has given more details regarding the abduction of twenty medical students from the University of Jos.

    The medical students were reported to have been kidnapped along the notorious Otukpo/Otukpa/Enugu road on Thursday evening on their way to attend the annual convention of the Federation of Catholic Medical and Dental Students, FECAMDS, in Enugu.

    Police Public Relations Officer SP Catherine Anene reported that the students, who were traveling from Jos to Enugu, were intercepted by gunmen suspected to be kidnappers.

    The Otukpo/Otukpa/Enugu road, especially the Otukpo/Otukpa section, is known for frequent criminal activity, including kidnappings.

    Prominent individuals, such as local government chairmen, priests, and the Rector of Benue State Polytechnic, Ugbokolo, have previously been victims of kidnappers along this route.

    Anene confirmed, “We received a report that medical students traveling from Jos to Enugu were kidnapped after Otukpo. Approximately twenty students are involved, and an investigation is ongoing.”

    The students were en route to the Federation of Catholic Medical and Dental Students annual convention in Enugu when they were ambushed by the gunmen.