Three local miners of laterite in Mai’adua Local Government Council Area of Katsina State have died after being trapped underground while three others sustained serious injuries. It took locals about two hours before the bodies were dug out of the ground.
An eyewitness said that the men were excavating laterite when unexpectedly the debris caved in. He said the three men that survived were the first to be rescued.
Commenting on the unfortunate incident, Chairman of Mai’adua Local Government Council, Engineer Abba Yusuf told newsmen that the council would take precautionary measures against a re-occurrence of the incident.
He warned locals to stop mining laterite until the council comes up with new rules.
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Friday, October 22, 2010
Monday, October 11, 2010
The Scam - Part 1 (NEPA/PHCN)
Nigeria, the most populous black nation on planet Earth. Blessed with abundant human resources, natural resources and wild life. A country that has produced some of the best scholars, scientists, business moguls and atheletes in the entire world. Indeed, a great nation. How can a country so obviously blessed, seem so apparently cursed?
Picture this.................
- You spend a better part of the journey after work between your office and your home in a bar, for the simple reason of no light at home.
- Somehow, families living in "face me - I face you" apartments seem to have more kids and you wonder why.
- More young girls, from age 15yrs upwards have now been known to sleep with anyone for just any amount. While still living under their parents roof.
- Too many kids walking on the streets in certain areas because they have too many siblings and their one room apartment is too hot to contain all of them at once when there is no electricity.
- Everybody now has at least 2 jerricans just for fuel.
- Everyone has at least 2 generators.
- You cannot sleep at night because you have too many neighbours running noisy generators at the same time.
- There are more kids in viewing centers watching soccer matches because they don't have 'light' at home to read their books.
These scenerios are endless and they do not only apply to those living in abject penury. They apply to all of us living in this country.
This constant lack of electricity has led to population explosion, joblessness, increased promiscuity and a generation of dullards, hooligans, alcoholics and criminals.
Where other countries brag about having cities with blinding lights. It goes without saying that Nigeria is a country with no light. In other countries, families only rely on power generating sets (popularly called generators) as backup power supply. Usually switched on once or twice a year, when they are being serviced. My beloved country is one in which the parastal responsible for generating power for the entire country (PHCN/NEPA), has ensured that they provide power only as a source of backup to every family in the entire country. Each household is solely responsible for generating its own power. Yet, pay ridiculous monthly bills to PHCN.
A country with over 180million inhabitants kept in perpetual darkness. Month after Month. Held to ransom by the ineptitude of the those appointed to head PHCN, incompetence of PHCN/NEPA employees and insatiable greed of those in power in the Nigeria government.
Truthfully,
- When we were growing up they said we were the leaders of tomorrow. Now in our 20s, 30s and 40s, when will that tomorrow come?
- Why should modern day kids aim for a future as doctors, lawyers, engineers etc, when they can aim to be state governors, senators, ministers, presidents or even local government chairmen, councilors thieves and fraudsters????
- Why should we have power when we have oil???
- How else would the government exploit it's citizenry from the need to consume more refined fuel???
- Major importers of generators donate huge generators alongside monthly supply of diesel to 'those that matter'. Is it not to ensure that they stay in business and sell more??
- Isn't it ironic that even PHCN/NEPA offices run on generators??
- Why should Foreign investors be encouraged to start up companies or invest in already existing companies? Is it so they can share their investments with the already corrupt head(s) of such companies and the government.
- Why should those entrusted with the duties of investigating the gross inefficiency of the power sector be involved in mismanagement of billions of naira???
- Why don't we have light when we have abundant skilled and unskilled labour.
- Why don't we have light when we have water, the sun, coal and wind???
- Why.....................
I am truly compelled to take down all the PHCN wires in my house and solely depend on my generators, or acquire the more expensive inverters or solar energy.
Nigeria, with her wide array of underexploited mineral resources which include columbite, tantalite, bitumen, uranium, natural gas, coal, bauxite, gold, tin, iron ore, limestone, niobium, lead and zinc. Despite huge deposits of these natural resources, the mining industry in Nigeria is still almost non-existent. With the country depending majorly on a fast depleting oil reserve.
I love Nigeria this I know.
"I pledge to Nigeria my country". That much I know too.... If tomorrow ever comes, then I might decide to abide by the rest of the National pledge.
God bless you, God bless me and God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Written by Tony Obijeih @tonyobj
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Fake Naija Currency Printed in Australia
Counterfeit Naira Printed In Australia During Soludo’s Era At The Central Bank Of Nigeria
Culled from Sahara Reporters
caption: Charles Soludo
PM News, lagos
The police in Australia have been told how the Nigerian currency notes, the naira, were printed illegally by a firm in that country during the era of Prof. Chukwuma Soludo as the Central Bank Governor. Soludo was replaced last year by Lamido Sanusi.
An Australian newspaper, The Age, reports that three former workers at The Reserve Bank of Australia’s currency firm, Securency, told the police that the firm produced millions of partly made Nigerian banknotes without authorisation from the Nigerian authorities, a practice former staff of the firm described as effective counterfeiting.
The newspaper reports that the Australian Federal Police, AFP, have been investigating Securency for the past 17 months over its alleged bribery of foreign officials, including Nigerian and Vietnamese officials, to win contracts in these countries.
The Australian Federal Police were told by three former staff members that the RBA company produced banknote substrate – the unique base material used to make banknotes - belonging to at least three countries, including Nigeria and Vietnam, without formal orders from their central banks.
Government sources have said that among the potentially explosive evidence uncovered by the AFP are documents suggesting a senior trade official engaged in highly unethical behaviour to help win Securency contracts overseas.
Ministers, including Treasurer Wayne Swan, and RBA governor Glenn Stevens have repeatedly refused to comment on the scandal. Securency’s board is chaired by an assistant bank governor.
The AFP has been told by former Securency employees that the unauthorised banknote substrate was stored at the company’s Craigieburn headquarters or off-site – including at a facility with poor security – in the hope that it would eventually be ordered.
Three former Securency employees aware of the practice, and who have all given statements or been debriefed by the AFP, said the practice was highly improper but was done so the company could falsely claim it was meeting production and sales targets.
When P.M.NEWS contacted the Coporate Affairs Head of Central Bank of Nigeria, Mohammed Abdullahi, this morning, he said “it was impossible,” adding that the report “is sheer balderdash.” He declined to speak further.
Due to fears of counterfeiting and currency manipulation, firms that make banknotes can usually only do so after receiving an order from a central bank.
The unauthorised substrate production also suggests that the senior company executives who ordered it did so because they may have been aware of corrupt back-room deals struck with foreign officials who had promised to make future orders.
In an AFP witness statement, one of the former employees stated that they had been told by Securency managers that doing an unauthorised print run ”would constitute counterfeiting”.
Despite this, the witness said that they were told in 2008 to begin the unauthorised Nigerian substrate production using an expired production order number.
The AFP statement says: ”Substrate was never produced without a valid customer order. However, on one occasion during August or September 2008, production received a direction from (chief executive) Myles Curtis to produce substrate for Nigerian currency, the 20 naira denomination, in the absence of a customer order.”
The employee said that staff protested several times about doing the unauthorised print run on the basis that it was highly unethical and potentially illegal. But they said that Securency management told them that ”the production would go ahead regardless”.
In the police statement, the witness says they believed that the unauthorised print run was ordered so the firm’s board – which includes senior RBA officials, including deputy governor Bob Rankin – could be told the company was meeting sales and production targets.
”I believe that the decision by management to produce substrate without an order was made on the basis that the second production line was operating below capacity,” the AFP statement says.
The witness statement also reveals that Securency stored the Nigerian substrate in a facility with poor security, a concern shared by two other Securency employees.
”On several occasions, I raised concerns about what I regarded as the lack of security at the storage facility where the Nigerian substrate was stored. I also had concerns about the transporting of the substrate.”
The witness states that dissent was not tolerated at Securency. ”Securency was tightly controlled by a clique of senior managers. If an employee was outside of this clique and questioned company practices, he or she would likely be quickly terminated.”
Two other former Securency employees told The Age they had spoken to the federal police about their concerns that the company had engaged in quasi counterfeiting.
The AFP refused to comment on its inquiry into Securency, which features 20 full-time officers and spans several continents. It has previously stated it is examining whether the firm’s executives engaged in foreign bribery by paying multimillion-dollar commissions to middlemen Securency hired to influence foreign officials to give the firm banknote contracts.
Securency managing director Mr. Curtis and company secretary John Ellery departed earlier this year after the RBA conducted an audit of Securency’s activities that found almost $50 million had been paid between 2003 and 2009 to overseas middlemen.
Culled from Sahara Reporters
caption: Charles Soludo
PM News, lagos
The police in Australia have been told how the Nigerian currency notes, the naira, were printed illegally by a firm in that country during the era of Prof. Chukwuma Soludo as the Central Bank Governor. Soludo was replaced last year by Lamido Sanusi.
An Australian newspaper, The Age, reports that three former workers at The Reserve Bank of Australia’s currency firm, Securency, told the police that the firm produced millions of partly made Nigerian banknotes without authorisation from the Nigerian authorities, a practice former staff of the firm described as effective counterfeiting.
The newspaper reports that the Australian Federal Police, AFP, have been investigating Securency for the past 17 months over its alleged bribery of foreign officials, including Nigerian and Vietnamese officials, to win contracts in these countries.
The Australian Federal Police were told by three former staff members that the RBA company produced banknote substrate – the unique base material used to make banknotes - belonging to at least three countries, including Nigeria and Vietnam, without formal orders from their central banks.
Government sources have said that among the potentially explosive evidence uncovered by the AFP are documents suggesting a senior trade official engaged in highly unethical behaviour to help win Securency contracts overseas.
Ministers, including Treasurer Wayne Swan, and RBA governor Glenn Stevens have repeatedly refused to comment on the scandal. Securency’s board is chaired by an assistant bank governor.
The AFP has been told by former Securency employees that the unauthorised banknote substrate was stored at the company’s Craigieburn headquarters or off-site – including at a facility with poor security – in the hope that it would eventually be ordered.
Three former Securency employees aware of the practice, and who have all given statements or been debriefed by the AFP, said the practice was highly improper but was done so the company could falsely claim it was meeting production and sales targets.
When P.M.NEWS contacted the Coporate Affairs Head of Central Bank of Nigeria, Mohammed Abdullahi, this morning, he said “it was impossible,” adding that the report “is sheer balderdash.” He declined to speak further.
Due to fears of counterfeiting and currency manipulation, firms that make banknotes can usually only do so after receiving an order from a central bank.
The unauthorised substrate production also suggests that the senior company executives who ordered it did so because they may have been aware of corrupt back-room deals struck with foreign officials who had promised to make future orders.
In an AFP witness statement, one of the former employees stated that they had been told by Securency managers that doing an unauthorised print run ”would constitute counterfeiting”.
Despite this, the witness said that they were told in 2008 to begin the unauthorised Nigerian substrate production using an expired production order number.
The AFP statement says: ”Substrate was never produced without a valid customer order. However, on one occasion during August or September 2008, production received a direction from (chief executive) Myles Curtis to produce substrate for Nigerian currency, the 20 naira denomination, in the absence of a customer order.”
The employee said that staff protested several times about doing the unauthorised print run on the basis that it was highly unethical and potentially illegal. But they said that Securency management told them that ”the production would go ahead regardless”.
In the police statement, the witness says they believed that the unauthorised print run was ordered so the firm’s board – which includes senior RBA officials, including deputy governor Bob Rankin – could be told the company was meeting sales and production targets.
”I believe that the decision by management to produce substrate without an order was made on the basis that the second production line was operating below capacity,” the AFP statement says.
The witness statement also reveals that Securency stored the Nigerian substrate in a facility with poor security, a concern shared by two other Securency employees.
”On several occasions, I raised concerns about what I regarded as the lack of security at the storage facility where the Nigerian substrate was stored. I also had concerns about the transporting of the substrate.”
The witness states that dissent was not tolerated at Securency. ”Securency was tightly controlled by a clique of senior managers. If an employee was outside of this clique and questioned company practices, he or she would likely be quickly terminated.”
Two other former Securency employees told The Age they had spoken to the federal police about their concerns that the company had engaged in quasi counterfeiting.
The AFP refused to comment on its inquiry into Securency, which features 20 full-time officers and spans several continents. It has previously stated it is examining whether the firm’s executives engaged in foreign bribery by paying multimillion-dollar commissions to middlemen Securency hired to influence foreign officials to give the firm banknote contracts.
Securency managing director Mr. Curtis and company secretary John Ellery departed earlier this year after the RBA conducted an audit of Securency’s activities that found almost $50 million had been paid between 2003 and 2009 to overseas middlemen.
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