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September 29, 2021 House of Representatives Set Up Conference Committee on Electoral Act Amendment Bill

House of Representatives Set Up Conference Committee on Electoral Act Amendment Bill

The House of Representatives has set up a Conference Committee to harmonize positions on the Electoral Act Amendment Bill.
Speaker of the House, Rt. Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila who announced this Tuesday September 28, 2021 during plenary, said that the conference Committee will work with that of the Senate in order to be on the same page on the mode of conducting primaries by political parties, Electronic transmission of results by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) among other things.

The Members of the Committee are:
1.Hon. Akeem Adeyemi – APC – Oyo (South-West) -Chairman
2. Hon. Unyime Idem – PDP – Akwa Ibom (South-South)
3. Hon. Ahmad Abdullahi Kalambiana – APC – Sokoto (North-West)
4.Hon. Blessing Onu – APC – Benue (North-Central)
5.Hon. Emeka Chris Azubogu – PDP – Anambra (South-East)
6.Hon. Abiodun Faleke – APC – Lagos (South-West)
7.Hon. Aishatu Dukku – APC – Gombe (North-East)

September 29, 2021 Senate Raises Motion for Oil & Gas Companies to Relocate to Operational Bases

Senate Raises Motion for Oil & Gas Companies to Relocate to Operational Bases

The Senate has mandated Oil & Gas companies operating in Nigeria to relocate to their operational bases without further delay.
This follows a motion presented during Tuesday’s plenary by the Senator representing Akwa Ibom North East, Obong Bassey Albert, on the need for the companies to immediately relocate to their operational bases to ensure host communities reap the dividend of the Petroleum Industry Act (2021).
Presenting the motion for consideration, Senator Albert said the inability of Multinational and Nigerian oil and gas companies to have their operational headquarters within their host communities account for the high cost of production in the sector.

This, he said, has been the bane of the country’s oil and gas industry, which militates against maximum derivation of revenue from crude oil and gas sales to the Federation.
He highlighted the high cost of production as one of the most contentious elements limiting development of petroleum industry value chain.

The lawmaker hinted that the recent passage and signing into law of the Petroleum Industry Act, 2021 (PIA) by the National Assembly and the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria respectively, is a major milestone towards the restoration of a lasting peace in the host communities.
According to him, the Petroleum Industry Act, 2021 places certain responsibilities on the security, peace and safety of oil and gas infrastructure on the host communities to safeguard and ensure peaceful co-existence between oil and gas companies and their host communities.
He said the PIA has provided for the restoration, recovery and rehabilitation of the massive infrastructural facilities abandoned by the various oil and gas companies in their various operational bases to ensure their full utilization

He assured that the relocation of these companies to their host communities will further boost development in those areas and enhance the corporate social relationship and strengthen the collective resolve to drastically reduce the contentious cost of production and ensure adequate returns to the federation account.
The Senate, in its resolution, mandated the Senate Joint Committee on Petroleum Resources Upstream, Downstream and Gas to liaise with the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the Presidential Implementation Committee on the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), to galvanise the immediate relocation of the oil and gas companies in Nigeria to their various operational bases to ensure their smooth operations.

September 29, 2021 ICPC Identifies Nepotism As Frontline Driver of Corruption in Nigeria.

ICPC Identifies Nepotism As Frontline Driver of Corruption in Nigeria.

Beyond bribery and embezzlement of funds, nepotism and the subsequent display of incompetence by some political office holders have been identified as two of the strongest drivers of corruption in Nigeria.

Mr ETANNIBI ALEMIKA, a professor of Criminology and Sociology of law at the University of Jos, believes that sacrificing competence on the altar of nepotism is the bane of corruption and its attendant effects.

He stated this in his lecture on National Security and the Opportunity Cost of Corruption at the two-day capacity building retreat of the Independent Corruption and Other Related Offences Commission -ICPC in Uyo.

Professor ALEMIKA questioned the effectiveness of the Federal Character Commission in the selection of candidates for political appointments and urged the national assembly to rise to the occasion.

The Federal Character Commission created by decree in 1996 primarily to implement and enforce the Federal Character Principle aims at ensuring fair representation of all states in the public service.

On the sidelines of the event, the chairman, house committee on anti-corruption, SHEHU GARBA told Inspiration FM that it is expedient for citizens to join the national assembly and other actors in the war against corruption.

The ICPC chairman, Professor BOLAJI OWASANOYE also told Inspiration FM that the retreat focused on the relationship between crypto-currency and corruption and the need for legislation to regulate the practice.           

Our correspondent OKODI OKODI reports that the retreat featured discussions on various topics, including public service and integrity, illicit financial flows and understanding crypto-currency, money laundering and terrorists financing threats.

September 29, 2021 Stakeholders In National HIV Response Charge Media Professionals On Result Oriented Messages.

Stakeholders In National HIV Response Charge Media Professionals On Result Oriented Messages.

Media professionals have been urged to effectively use Social and Behavioral Change Communication (SBCC) to aid Nigeria’s HIV response.

The role of media professionals were highlighted at a capacity building workshop organized by the National Agency for Control of AIDS, NACA in collaboration with Johns Hopkins Program for International Education in Gynecology and Obstetrics.

Participants at the workshop were tasked to channel their skills in Social and Behavioral Change Communication towards telling compelling HIV stories for better outcomes.

Director General of NACA, Dr GAMBO ALIYU, represented by the agency’s South-West Zonal Coordinator, RAHEEM MOHAMMED said the media is a critical stakeholder in the agency’s efforts aimed at ending the epidemic by 2030.

In a chat with Inspiration FM’s Health Correspondent, IMA DEM, Journalism Trainer, ANSELM OKOLO said journalists must focus on framing HIV messages appropriately to speak to the hearts of the people.

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