Tag: Policy

  • Our policies are not to punish Nigerians – Tinubu

    Our policies are not to punish Nigerians – Tinubu

    President Bola Tinubu says the policies of his administration are for the best interest of Nigerians and not to punish people.

    Tinubu said this in an address at the 12th National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting of the All Progressives Congress (APC) on Thursday in Abuja.

    “Nigeria is going through some issues and I have sufficiently addressed them in my broadcast; we will face it squarely to re-engineer the economy of this country.

    “We must find a way to satisfy the yearnings of the common man and we must ensure that all the policies we roll out work for the common man.

    “Our policies are for the people not to punish the people,” Tinubu said.

    He congratulated Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, the Speaker and the entire National Assembly leadership for the way they conducted their affairs thus far.

    He said that all the party’s elected leaders, both old and new had gone through a process.

    “Election is just a step in the process, good governance is another one.

    “We have gotten the trophy; the president is standing before you and the reward for hardwork is more work.

    “The party has a responsibility to promote unity, stability and love among ourselves.

    “And we have to fulfill your dreams and the dreams of our founding fathers; to be sure that Nigeria remains the focal point of our domestic and foreign policies,” he said.

    Tinubu added that party loyalty was critical to it advancement.

    “So, we must congratulate ourselves, as democrats, those who cannot accept the results of a free and fair election do not deserve the joy of victory.

    “There are governance issues and we are taking it heads on; we must oil the wheel, grease it and we are doing that.

    “I have submitted ministerial list to the Senate for screening and approval. We are in the process of establishing fully the government of the people, for the people and by the people,” Tinubu said.

    Former Gov. Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano State, emerged as APC National Chairman at the meeting.

  • My policies already yielding positive results – Tinubu

    My policies already yielding positive results – Tinubu

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu says the Federal Government is receiving support and commendations from the global communities over the removal of fuel subsidy and the foreign exchange regime policies, saying they are yielding positive results.

    Tinubu stated this at a Gala/Award Night on Saturday, organised by the office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (HOCSF), to recognise and honour outstanding civil servants to mark the 2023 Civil Service Week.

    Represented by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Sen. George Akume, President Tinubu appreciated civil servants for their numerous contributions to the economic development of the country.

    The president, who accepted the fact that the policies had in one way or the other affected the masses, said the government was working on measures to cushion the effects.

    “We shall without delay cushion the pains being experienced by our people as a result of these measures through a number of well-targeted interventions aimed at giving adequate relief and succour to a great number of our long- suffering citizens, ” he said.

    He, however, pledged to give more supports to the civil service sector, being the custodian of public trust to consolidate on the gains of the ongoing reforms in the sector.

    Earlier, in her opening remarks, the HOCSF, Dr Folasade Yemi-Esan, said every human being had an inherent desire to be appreciated or acknowledged for their efforts, and so hard-working civil servants deserve reward for their services to the nation.

    According to Yemi-Esan, when an individual feels valued and recognised for hard work, he or she is more likely to be
    committed and enthusiastic next time around.

    She used the occasion to present prizes namely, a brand new 2022 JAC JS4 Luxury Model SUV, a 2 Bedroom semi-detached bungalow; and a plot of land to the top three outstanding civil servants.

    The gesture, which is in collaboration with the Aig-Imoukhuede Foundation, also favoured 29 other outstanding civil servants who went home with other awards while few got N500,000 each.

    “The Star Prize of a Brand New 2022 JAC JS4 Luxury Model SUV won by Mrs Juwon Olayiwola of the Federal Ministry of Education; a 2-Bedroom Semi-Detached Bungalow was won by Mr. Nwachukwu of Service Welfare Office, office of the HOCSF and the 3rd prize, a Plot of Land, was allocated to Mrs. Chukweke Stella Oluchi, Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF).”

    While urging heads of MDAs to reward outstanding workers, the HOS said recognition/rewards could serve to inspire employees to go the extra mile to innovate and achieve excellence in the course of discharging their jobs.

    “In this ever-evolving corporate world, fostering a positive and motivating work environment has become crucial for the success of any institution.”

    Also, the Chairman, Federal Civil Service Commission, Dr Tukur Ingawa, represented by Dr Simon Etim, a Commissioner in the Commission, said rewarding a worker is critical innovative factor for motivation in executing the needed jobs in any organisation.

    The theme for the service week is: ‘Digitalisation of work processes in the public service: A gateway to efficient resources utilisation and national development’.

  • FG directs implementation of 5-year U.S visa policy

    FG directs implementation of 5-year U.S visa policy

    The Federal Government has directed the full implementation of a new visa reciprocity policy for citizens of the U.S. with effect from March 1.

    This is contained in a statement by the Media Adviser to the Minister of Interior, Mr. Sola Fasure, in Abuja on Friday.

    According to Fasure, the Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, gave the directive following the approval for the implementation of the new Bilateral Consular Policy Agreements between both countries.

    The adviser said that the agreements, among others, include: The reciprocity of five-year tourist visa validity for U.S. citizens pursuant to Section 30 of the Immigration Act, 2015.

    Others are Extension of visa validity to three years for Diplomats and government officials between the citizens of both countries.

    Consequently, the minister directed the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) to commence the implementation of the policy from March 1.

    It would be recalled that President Muhammadu Buhari inaugurated the new Nigeria Visa Policy (NPV) in 2020, which amongst other things, promoted tourism.

    According to him, Tourist Visa falls under the Short Visit Visa (F5A) category.

    This, he said, was a policy in line with the President’s desire to boost cultural exchange and business between both nations.

    He added that as part of the agreement, the U.S. would implement a similar policy for Nigerians wishing to travel on Tourist Visas to the U.S., and for diplomats and officials visiting the country.

    Fasure said that the U.S., as part of the agreement, would extend Tourist Visa Validity for Nigerian citizens to five years.

    The minister also enjoined all registered voters in Nigeria to come out on the election day to exercise their franchise.

    He also promised a safe and secure environment before, during and after the general elections.

    Aregbesola said that while exercising their civil democratic right for the elections, it was important that all hands be on deck to make the exercise peaceful, safe and successful.

    “Internal movements have been restricted to the polling units. There will also be no movement of persons across national borders.

    “Law enforcement agencies are required to use all means necessary in providing security for lives and property at the polling units, in the streets and at the borders.

    “Every threat must be contained and assurances must be given for lives and property and for the success of the elections.”

    He also assured that the federal government has put in place all necessary measures to ensure the security of lives and property and the success of the elections.

    The minister further enjoined Nigerians to be calm and peaceful in their conduct, quietly cast their votes and shun any act capable of putting the nation’s democratic festival in jeopardy.

    He also admonished Nigerians to be vigilant and report any suspicious persons or activities to the nearest security agency or on the N-Alert application online.

    He wished all Nigerians a very peaceful and successful election.

  • U.S. Supreme Court to hear argument on Biden immigration enforcement policy

    U.S. Supreme Court to hear argument on Biden immigration enforcement policy

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday is set to consider whether President Joe Biden’s administration can implement guidelines challenged by two conservative-leaning states of shifting immigration enforcement toward public safety threats.

    This the court said in a case testing executive branch power to set enforcement priorities.

    The justices will hear the administration’s bid to overturn a judge’s ruling in favor of Texas and Louisiana that vacated U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) guidelines narrowing the scope of those who can be targeted by immigration agents for arrest and deportation.

    The Democratic president’s policy departed from the hard line approach of his Republican predecessor, Donald Trump, who sought to broaden the range of immigrants subject to arrest and removal.

    Biden campaigned on a more humane approach to immigration but has been faced with large numbers of migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.

    The guidelines, announced by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in September 2021, prioritised apprehending and deporting non-U.S. citizens who pose a threat to national security, public safety or border security.

    In a memo, Mayorkas called the guidelines necessary because his department lacks the resources to apprehend and seek the removal of every one of the estimated 11 million immigrants living in the United States illegally.

    Mayorkas cited the longstanding practice of government officials exercising discretion to decide who should be subject to deportation and said that a majority of immigrants subject to deportation “have been contributing members of our communities for years.’’

    Biden’s administration, saying fewer detentions and deportations have encouraged more illegal border crossings.

    The top Republican in the U.S. House of Representatives, Kevin McCarthy, earlier called on Mayorkas to step down and said the House may try to impeach him when Republicans formally take control of the chamber in January.

    Republican state attorneys general in Texas and Louisiana sued to block the guidelines after Republican-led legal challenges successfully thwarted other Biden administration attempts to ease enforcement.

    Their lawsuit, filed in Texas, argued that the guidelines ran counter to provisions in immigration laws that makes it mandatory to detain non-U.S. citizens who have been convicted of certain crimes or have final orders of removal.

    U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton, a Trump appointee, ruled in favor of the challengers, finding that while immigration agents could on a case-by-case basis act with discretion the administration’s guidelines were a generalised policy that contravened the detention mandate set out by Congress.

    “Whatever the outer limits of its authority, the executive branch does not have the authority to change the law,’’ Tipton wrote.

    After the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in July declined to put that ruling on hold, Biden’s administration turned to the Supreme Court.

    The justices on a 5-4 vote declined to stay Tipton’s ruling, with conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett joining liberal justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson in dissent. The justices did not provide reasons for their disagreement.

    Biden’s administration has told the Supreme Court that Texas and Louisiana lack the proper legal standing to challenge the guidelines because the states had not suffered any direct harm as a result of the policy.

    The states countered that they would be harmed by having to spend more money on law enforcement and social services as a result of an increase in non-U.S. citizens present within their borders due to the guidelines.

    The administration also told the justices that the guidelines do not violate federal immigration law and that the mandatory language of those statutes does not supersede the longstanding principle of law enforcement discretion.

    A decision is expected by the end of June.

  • Night-time economy, a policy for development – Benue Guber Candidate, Kuraun

    Night-time economy, a policy for development – Benue Guber Candidate, Kuraun

    All Progressive Congress Governorship candidate, Benue state, Dr. Jeffrey Kuraun outlined business model behind night-time economy as a viable policy for development in the state.

    In a statement Dr. Kuraun stated that, “We will utilize our water resources to develop a night-time economy. We will dredge the River Benue to prevent/avoid frequent flooding, enable navigation and promote inland water transportation to serve as a viable alternative or addition to road transport”.

    Kuraun declared that his passion to drive a positive change in Benue state would make a positive difference. “Inland water transportation is environmentally friendly and will be the most economical mode of inland transport in Benue. We will establish Benue River Maintenance Agency (BRMA) for upkeep, care and sustenance of River Benue and its tributaries” he said.

    He noted that collectively, will also construct waterfront facilities for entertainment, dining, nightlife, leisure/recreation, arts, music, theatre, festivals, events and tourist attractions including shopping malls and hotels for accommodation to earn revenue, promote tourism, create jobs and ensure our towns and cities become safer, vibrant and more attractive at night.

    “Some of the proposed tourist attractions that can be developed through public and private sector collaboration and will be the first of its kind in Nigeria include: Makurdi Waterpark (family amusement park), Makurdi Musical Water Fountain (dancing fountain), Makurdi Boat Cruise (sailing near the Benue river bank aimlessly for fun) and Makurdi Eye (state capital observation wheel)” he added.

  • Online classes: Trump rescinds policy on cancelling visas for foreign students

    Online classes: Trump rescinds policy on cancelling visas for foreign students

    Facing a barrage of federal lawsuits and opposition from hundreds of universities and big tech companies, the Trump administration on Tuesday back-pedalled on a rule that would have invalidated the visas of foreign students.

    The rule required international students to transfer or leave the country if their schools held classes entirely online because of the pandemic.

    According to AP, the policy somersault was announced at the start of a hearing in a federal lawsuit in Boston brought by Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs said federal immigration authorities agreed to pull the July 6 directive and “return to the status quo.”

    A lawyer representing the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said only that the judge’s characterisation was correct.

    The announcement brings relief to thousands of foreign students who had been at risk of being deported from the country, along with hundreds of universities that were scrambling to reassess their plans for the fall in light of the policy.

    Under the policy, international students in the U.S. would have been forbidden from taking all their courses online this fall.

    New visas would not have been issued to students at schools planning to provide all classes online, which includes Harvard.

    Students already in the U.S. would have faced deportation if they didn’t transfer schools or leave the country voluntarily.

    Immigration officials issued the policy last week, reversing earlier guidance from March 13 telling colleges that limits around online education would be suspended during the pandemic.

    University leaders believed the rule was part of President Donald Trump’s effort to pressure the nation’s schools and colleges to reopen this fall even as new virus cases rise.

    The policy drew sharp backlash from higher education institutions, with more than 200 signing court briefs supporting the challenge by Harvard and MIT.

    Colleges said the policy would put students’ safety at risk and hurt schools financially.

    Many schools rely on tuition from international students, and some stood to lose millions of dollars in revenue if the rule had taken hold.

  • Pantami inaugurates committee on national digital economy policy

    Pantami inaugurates committee on national digital economy policy

    The Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Dr Isa Pantami, has inaugurated experts review committee for the National Digital Economy Policy and Strategy (NDEPS).

    Pantami, who inaugurated the committee on Monday Abuja, said that digital economy had dominated the world and gave a background of how the policy came decision came about.

    He explained that the review was to bring all documents together for discussion and added to the different aspects of the NDEPS in ways that were seamless and easy to assess.

    He said that it would enable Nigeria to have a slice of the global digital economy, which experts valued at 11.5 trillion dollars or approximately 16 per cent of the global economy.

    According to him, the President came up with this idea of developing a digital economy policy for Nigeria in 2019.

    He said that the issue was presented to the Federal Executive Council (FEC) and the ministry started the implementation immediately.

    “We have been working on the document simultaneously. There are things that are generally strategic.

    “There are many pillars we have started implementing since. The draft of the policy was not produced in Nigeria.

    “We engaged some of our friends and stakeholders to develop this policy.
    “When we engage people from outside the country and they may not be able to know some of our challenges and peculiar data of the industry or bureaucracy of the government.

    “The value is expected to grow significantly in coming years.
    “The world economic forum has predicted that over 60 per cent of global GDP will be digitised by 2022.
    “In the next decade, digital platforms will be used to create close to 70 per cent of new value.

    “It is because of this that all the eight pillars we came up, we did so on our own personal work.”

    He called on the committee to look into the pillars critically, work on it and see how it can be improved.
    He added that all the parastatal agencies under the ministry had a role to play on the national policy.

    Prof. Mohammed Abubakar, Managing Director, Galaxy Backbone (GBB) congratulated Pantami for coming up with such development that would help digital economy in the country and urged the committee not to take their duties lightly.

    He also said that six of the pillars had to do with the GBB as it was part of the agency’s mandate to provide Information Communications Technology (ICT) infrastructure for the pillars to be achieved and for the actualisation of a digital Nigeria.

    Earlier, the Executive Vice Chairman, Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Pro. Umar Danbatta, wished the committee a good deliberation during their discussions.

  • Reps seek policy for fishery development

    By Gabriel Okoro, Abuja

    The House of Representatives has urged the Federal Ministry of Agriculture to include the science of Aquaculture in the practice of Agriculture to govern the fisheries and aquaculture sector.

    The House resolved that the call is to majorly formulate plans, strategies, policies and programmes for fisheries development, to guide fisheries economic reform, to implement and monitor fisheries laws, regulations and international/bilateral fisheries agreements.

    The decision followed a motion sponsored by Mr. Awaji-Inombek Abiante (PDP, Rivers) and two others during plenary on Wednesday.

    In his lead debate, Mr. Abiante noted that agriculture is the main base of human life, as daily living directy or indirectly depends on control.

    He expressed concern that Nigeria has failed to make transition from the additional definition of agriculture and as a result, not kept pace with the growth and transformation of the agriculture value chain to leverage on the many opportunities inherent, particularly in Aquaculture.

    He revealed that the volume of global trade in aquaculture value chain is in excess of 200 billion dollars and that fisheries departments in the top ten leading aquaculture countries have created exclusive entities for fisheries or autonomous Bureau of Fisheries in their respective Ministries.

    According to him, Nigeria can set an ambitious goal of becoming a leading country in aquaculture; specifically in the productive development of its coastal marine environment by taking a more serious interest in the development of its aquaculture sector and providing equitable funding.

    He therefore called for the need to provide incentives to the estimated one million indigenous artisan fishermen and small-scale fish farmers using old equipment and outdated practices and scale them up into diverse set of industrial fisheries practices using modern technologies for the growth and sustainability of aquaculture.

    “With a coastline of more than 850 kilometers and numerous rivers, including West Africa’s two largest canals and tributaries, Nigeria has huge geographic potential for aquaculture”, he said.

    The lawmaker added that Nigeria is blessed with a large resource base of waterways spanning 10,000 kilometers, and twenty-eight of the nation’s 36 States can be accessed through water, an ideal situation for large-scale fisheries development of diverse marine fish species.

    Contributors to the motion’s debate all spoke in its favour. Mr. Oghene Egor (PDP, Lagos) said “if the federal government takes fishery sector seriously, hunger will be defeated in the country. The Agricultural sector of the country should be balanced not just the government providing seedlings and livestocks but fishery should be encouraged also”.

    To this end, the Speaker Yakubu Dogara after putting to voice vote, mandated the Committees on Agricultural Production and Services and Legislative Compliance to ensure compliance and report back within 4 weeks for further legislative action.

     

  • Saraki Lauds FG for Adopting Kwara’s 10-year old Policy

    Saraki Lauds FG for Adopting Kwara’s 10-year old Policy

    President of the Senate, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, has commended the President Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government for adopting the ‘Every Child Counts’ education policy initiated by his administration 10 years ago, when he was governor of Kwara State.

    In a statement signed by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Yusuph Olaniyonu, Saraki applauded the government for keying into his decade-old vision for education reform, which was initiated to resuscitate public education in Kwara State by ensuring an improvement in teaching quality across the state and building strong educational institutions in the state through the development of the Ministry of Education, the Teaching Service Commission and strengthening the State Education Management Information System (EMIS).

    I commend the Federal Government for adopting and modifying the ‘Every Child Counts’ programme that we began in Kwara State in 2008 for the entire country. This shows that this administration values such time-tested ideas that leave positive impact on the lives of our people – especially our young children.

    Right now, our nation is suffering from a rising epidemic. We have over 10.5million out of school children across the country. In order to systematically and strategically cut down on this number, we must work to implement the ‘Every Child Counts’ policy across the country,” the Senate President stated.

    Saraki also emphasised that the Federal Government must work to ensure that improving the quality of teachers through constant training and re-education – which was a central focus of the Kwara State model – must play a central role in the Federal Government’s policy approach.

    Teachers are the bedrock of our educational system. The better and more equipped our teachers are, the smarter and more educationally sound our young children across the nation will be. Hence, it is important that as we work to build strong educational institutions through this repackaged policy, we must also work to enhance the individual capacities of our teachers to meet the demands of a constantly changing world,” he said.

    Saraki called on other states across the nation to study and emulate the Kwara State model, while also commending his successor, Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed, for sustaining the model that his administration began in 2008.

    Right now, we must look beyond our political affiliations to address the issues that are important to our people. Other states across the nation should key into the successes of the Kwara State model, as the Federal Government has done, to ensure that we not only get our students back in the classrooms, but also to improve the quality of their education through strategic and holistic reforms,” the Senate President stated.

     

  • Buhari’s Visa-On-Arrival policy yielding results, says Lai Mohammed

    The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has said the Federal Government’s Visa-On-Arrival Policy has started yielding fruits, especially in the tourism sector which has been boosted by the policy.
    The Minister made the assertion in Abuja on Monday, when he received members of the Latin America Motorcyclists Association (LAMA), who are in Nigeria for a tour of heritage sites and other tourist attractions in the country.
    ”All our visitors here today got visa on arrival. That shows that the Federal Government’s visa-on-arrival policy is working,” he said.
    Alhaji Mohammed said the presence of the international bikers in Nigeria is a testimony to the fact that the Administration’s quest to promote the country’s cultural heritage and tourism sites is yielding fruits.
    ”As you tour Nigeria, under the ‘Rediscover Heritage Bikers Tour of Nigeria’, and visit historical heritage sites, you beam the searchlight on those sites for the world to see.
    “You will see these heritage sites for yourselves as you travel through our culturally-rich and diverse nation. These sites include museums, monuments, homes of national heroes and other tourist sites,” he said.
    The Minister therefore enlisted the support of the bikers to become Nigeria’s heritage ambassadors by spreading the news of the country’s hidden treasures and their experiences while in the country.
    In his remarks, the President of LAMA, Mr. Mario Nieves, said the group, which consists of members from 24 countries, is in Nigeria to rediscover the country’s culture and heritage as well as promote unity among the human race.
    “We are just a group of humble motorcyclists that decided to arrange and create some type of impact in our society. We believe that it is more important to be human than it is to be black or white or oriental or Indian, because we belong to the human race and we believe that we are all one people,” he said.
    Mr. Nieves said Nigeria has set a good example for them in humility, respect and hospitality, and that when they return to their respective countries, they will spread the good news about Nigeria.
    While giving a background on the tour, the Acting Director General of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments, Mr. Abdulkarim Kadiri, said the bikers, from Brazil, US and Mexico, among others, and their Nigerian counterparts will tour 11 states of the Federation in order to rediscover Nigeria and its rich cultural heritage.