Wednesday 28 August 2013

Tomorrow's cities: How big data is changing the world

BBC

A crowdShould happiness become a general measurement of city life?

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You may not be that bothered about the idea of living in a smart city but I bet you'd love to live in one that was happy.
The data to measure the happiness of a city is already all around us, in the tweets we send on an hourly basis to the profiles we share on Facebook.
And increasingly that data is being captured and analysed to gauge the health and happiness of a nation.
Take the Hedonometer project which this year set out to map happiness levels in cities across the US using data from Twitter.
Using 37 million geolocated tweets from more than 180,000 people in the US, the team from the Advanced Computing Centre at the University of Vermont rated words as either happy or sad.
As well as discovering, somewhat depressingly, that people were happiest when they were further away from home, the study threw up some interesting facts about how healthy they were too.
It found words such as "starving" and "heartburn" were written far more frequently in cities with a high percentage of obese citizens.
Such data could be incredibly useful to city governments, for informing them about what policies were needed in any given area.
"Cities looking to understand changes in the behaviour of their citizens, for example to locate ads for public health programmes, can look to social media for real-time information," said Chris Danforth, one of the project leaders.
Data overload

A WORLD OF BIG DATA

Twitter Map
  • Each engine of a jet on a flight from London to New York generates 10TB of data every 30 minutes
  • In 2013 internet data, mostly user-contributed, will account for 1,000 exabytes. An exabyte is a unit of information equal to one quintillion bytes
  • Open weather data collected by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association has an annual estimated value of $10bn
  • Every day we create 2.5 quintillion bytes of data
  • 90% of the data in the world today has been created in the past two years
  • Every minute 100,000 tweets are sent globally
  • Google receives two million search requests every minute
Back in 2010 Google chief executive Eric Schmidt noted that the amount of data collected since the dawn of humanity until 2003 was the equivalent to the volume we now produce every two days.
This data comes not only from posts to social media sites, mobile signals and purchase transactions but increasingly from sensors on objects from lamp-posts to skyscrapers.
The so-called internet of things offers a new way to analyse and measure city life, from whether water pipes are leaking to how traffic is flowing on the roads and whether buildings are using energy in the most efficient way.
A prediction from architect and urban planner Prof Mike Batty back in 1997 that by 2050 everything around us would be some form of computer is already starting to come true.
In Birmingham, lamp-posts are being fitted with sensors that can transmit information about cloud cover to offer hyper-local weather forecasting.
In Norway, more than 40,000 bus stop are tweeting, allowing passengers to leave messages about their experiences, and in London the mayor's office has just begun a project to tag trees so that people can learn about their history.
Sensors on objects also allow people to tell stories about city life in whole new ways.
At MIT's Senseable City Lab, 5,000 pieces of rubbish in Seattle were geo-tagged and tracked around the country for three months to find out whether recycling was really efficient.
The project proved three things, Carlo Ratti, head of the lab, told the BBC.
"The project showed us that we need to design a better system because some of this stuff was moving thousands of miles in the wrong direction.
Raining taxis, MIT Senseable City LabMIT is using weather data to guide taxi drivers in Singapore to where it is going to rain
"It also promoted behavioural change. We shared the information with citizens and one guy stopped drinking water in plastic bottles when he saw that [they were] all going straight to landfill."
A third, more unexpected result of the trial happened when a burglar stole some of the tags from the labs.
"It was very funny and it didn't take the police long to trace him," said Dr Ratti.
Now the team is working on a project in Singapore which offers advanced weather forecasts to taxi drivers to get them to places in the city ten minutes before it starts to rain.
Fridge sensors
Big data is not always such fun.
Supermarket chain Tesco is installing sensors across its stores to reduce heating and lighting costs.
The records of the fridge systems in one store alone produce 70 million data points a year.
"How do you make sense of that amount of data?" asked John Walsh, energy manager for Tesco Ireland.
And in this case the only objective is to run the fridges more efficiently.
Escalate that to a city, with data from transport systems, utilities, rubbish collection, hospitals, schools, offices and government, and the scale of the problem is obvious.
Tesco turned to IBM's data analytics, also used by many cities.
City planning
3D visualisation of VancouverVancouver is making sense of data using a 3D visualisation of the city
Computer-aided design company Autodesk has been working with San Francisco, Vancouver and Bamberg, in southern Germany, to build 3D visualisations over which government can overlay data sets to see how a city is performing at any time.
Presenting data in new ways has had surprising consequences.
In Germany the model was used to show people what the impact of a new railway line would be.
"It was almost like a gaming environment. People could put it on their iPad and zoom around the model," said Phil Bernstein, vice-president of industry relations at Autodesk.
Previously anyone wanting to get involved in city planning would have had to make a trip to the town hall to look at maps that they may not have understood. Making them have much more visual impact could revolutionise how cities are built, he thinks.
"It is a political act as well as a technical act. It makes the decision-making process transparent and democratic, and the design process more inclusive."
Digital copy
Code with words Big Brother is Watching embeddedWith data increasingly becoming a commodity, how do we protect our own?
Whether we like it or not, we are already starting to interact with our cities, whether via the text message that offers you 20% off purchases from the shop you have just walked past or location-sensing apps on our smartphones that tell us about the nearest coffee bar.
"My phone knows that I normally work until 17:30 and knows the next bus I should catch before I even ask it. It is beginning to predict my life," said Andrew Hudson-Smith, who heads University College of London's Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis.

Start Quote

We are basically building a digital copy of our physical world and that is having profound consequences”
Carlo RattiDirector of MIT's Senseable Cities Lab
"I could turn it off but I don't because I find it very useful but I am basically giving everything to Google. It is fantastic but scary at the same time and shifts the way the world works," he said.
His lab has been at the forefront of some big data collection projects, and while he sees huge value in it for researchers he recognises that it raises huge ethical issues.
"We can collect every tweet. People have clicked "yes" to those terms but don't realise that everything you share can be collected. We could be walking blindly into a 24/7 surveillance society," he said.
Nick Pickles, director of privacy campaign group Big Brother Watch, agrees that big data could become just another word for Big Brother.
"The core functionality of a smart city requires a vast amount data to be collected on every aspect of our lives every minute of every day. The question is how does that data get used? And it doesn't require a huge amount of imagination to see how it could be used to monitor people in a very real Big Brother way.
"At present the control of information is being taken away from citizens, and companies providing services are rushing to find ways of generating revenue from the data they hold. The danger is that when smart cities become a reality, individuals will not be able to control the ways they are monitored or what happens to the information, which is exactly the opposite of how it should be."
The issue has huge implications for society and is going to need serious debate, Dr Ratti believes.
"We do need to think about how we want tomorrow's society to work but it is a bigger discussion than just smart cities," he said.
"We are basically building a digital copy of our physical world and that is having profound consequences."

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Tuesday 27 August 2013

PIB: FG, oil majors disagreements deepen

Vanguard News - Latest updates from Nigeria, including business, politics, entertainment, fashion, health, technology, naija lifestyle
By Sebastine Obasi

Hopes for a harmonized stance on the contentious Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB, between the Federal Government and the oil majors under the auspices of the Oil Producers Trade Section, OPTS, dim further. Both parties maintained their positions at the just concluded conference organized by the National Association of Energy Correspondents.

The PIB Lead Team and Group Executive Director, Exploration and Production, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, Mr. Abiye Membere, who was represented by Mr. Victor Briggs, maintained that the PIB if passed into law will be beneficial to all stakeholders.
He listed some of the benefits of the bill to include:
•Creating a robust economic environment to attract investments
•Growth of revenue beyond the short term
•Create strong and independent regulators to develop and enforce open, fair and transparent rules in the oil and gas sector
•Liberalize and regulate the downstream and midstream sub sectors of the oil and gas industry
•Create a commercially-oriented national oil company that will compete effectively with its peers
•Foster progress on government transformation agenda especially in the areas of growth, employment creation, power and industrial development.
•Sustain the gains of Nigerian content development and in-country capacity and capability.
Membere said the PIB represents the largest overhaul of the government petroleum revenue system in the last four decades, as it is meant to simplify the collection of revenues and cream off windfall profits in case of high oil prices.

OPTC disagree
However, the Chairman of OPTS and Managing Director, Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited, Mr. Mr. Mark Ward, said that if the PIB is passed as it is currently, oil and gas production will decline from 63 percent to about 25 percent.
He said that this will translate to about $185 billion loss in revenues for all stakeholders, as new projects will be stalled.

He argued that the PIB will create one of the world’s harshest production sharing contract, PSC regime, as Nigerian governmentstake (royalties, taxes and NOC profit oil) at 96 percent, is the highest in the world.
He cited other oil producing countries where government take is lower, such as Trinidad and Tobago (58 percent), Angola (62 percent), Nigeria, pre-PIB (70 percent), Equatorial Guinea (75 percent), Egypt (79 percent), Malaysia (85 percent), and Indonesia (89 percent).
According to Ward, “The cumulative effect of this is a combination of higher royalties and taxes with reduced incentives such that: no new deepwater investments are economically viable and they will not go forward, 90% of new JV gas production will not happen, 30% of new JV oil production will not materialize.
“As part of our analysis of the PIB, we also compared the proposed fiscal terms with 20 other countries. What we see across the board is that when a country has relatively high royalties, they balance it with relatively lower taxes or higher taxes with lower royalties with incentives in both cases providing some balance.

“However, the PIB doesn’t have this balance and the result is that Nigeria would have one of the harshest fiscal regimes in the world. This will make it very difficult for Nigeria to attract the required foreign capital to offset decline let alone grow production. And this comes at a time when the global energy landscape is drastically changing.”
Ward cautioned that Nigeria must get it right now especially with the advent of the shale gale and the discovery of oil in other African countries.

“As you know, new technologies are unlocking shale oil and gas in the US with Russia and China expected to follow. Closer to Nigeria, there have recently been significant gas discoveries in East Africa and West Africa is opening new areas with attractive terms up and down the region. On the market side, recent refinery upgrades are reducing the need for light crudes like Nigeria’s Bonny crude putting pressure on crude sales. All these advances are creating direct competition for investments dollars with Nigeria … That is why now, more than ever, it is important that we get PIB right to keep Nigeria competitive for investments,” he said.
As regards gas, the OPTS chairman also expressed the organization’s concerns over non-fiscal issues which he said would further create uncertainty for the industry and impede investments.
He identified some of these non-fiscal impediments to investments to include:
Licenses and leases – Current PIB terms do not provide adequate time for optimal field development and includes aggressive relinquishment requirements and uncertainty about renewals.
Contract sanctity – Sanctity of contracts is critical to promote a conducive business environment and maintaining investor confidence, especially in the oil and gas industry which requires high up-front investments that take many years before the investments hopefully pay back. Thus, there is a difference between changing a law and changing a contract.

Dispute resolution – Access to independent arbitration is a key part of a secure investment environment, and a globally-accepted practice. PIB should seek to do the same as also is provided in the current law. PIB as proposed has government regulators providing the final decision on business disputes.
He therefore advocated for a bill that would result in globally competitive terms and an investor friendly enabling business environment so as to retain the international capital required to materially grow Nigeria’s production.

Monday 26 August 2013

Nigeria: Oil - the Conspiracy That Robs Nigeria of Billions of Dollars

Vanguard (Lagos)

BY EMMA AMAIZE AND SAM OYADONGHA AND JIMITOTA ONOYUME

Yenagoa/Port Harcourt — Nigeria is in dire straits. This statement summarizes the response of a top security official familiar with the large scale theft of crude oil that is going on at the nation's oil terminals and as well as other locations en-route.
The security official fingered highly placed individuals in a conspiracy that deprives Nigeria of billions of dollars in revenue to the Federation Account. "There is more to what you want to know from me.
The truth is that it is a high technology crime and there is a well-built cartel responsible for oil theft in the country and, until you smash their set-up, illegal oil bunkering will not stop," the security official told Sunday Vanguard in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State capital, last week.
He added, "They (the cartel) are highly connected people in and outside government, oil companies, businessmen, retired and serving military officers, including people you never thought could be involved. "Illegal oil bunkering is their means of livelihood and they are bleeding the country. Forget about those you people in the media refer to as oil thieves.
I mean those that steal crude oil from well heads with Cotonou boats/canoes, and then hide in the bush to refine and sell to petrol station owners. "Those are people in the kindergarten section of the business. The main people are the ones you do not see.
They do not come to the pipeline to steal crude oil; they do their transaction at the various oil terminals. Whether Forcados or Bonny (terminals), officials can declare that only two vessels were loaded when 10 were loaded.
"The oil barons are very wealthy and they mop up the little that oil bunkers are able to steal and sell to them, but they do their real business with oil companies and government officials. " Appearing perplexed about the situation, he asked rhetorically, "Do you think anybody will be complaining of stealing of crude oil if it is just the volume that villagers steal and refine to eke a living?"
How they operate
If the unnamed security official was hard to pin down, the president of the Ijaw People's Development Initiative, IPDI, Warri, Comrade Austin Ozobo, was straightforward. He explained, "The oil cartel has illegal points where they siphon oil through long hoses into their waiting boats with an understanding with military officials.
"The poor class, who were doing the business to earn a living, have long, quit the business because of the manhunt by security agents, who have continuously destroyed their properties, as they could not afford huge amounts to settle the security agents on daily basis".
According to him, "Military men see the business as a money-making venture. They lobby to be posted to the Niger-Delta area because they know whoever serves in the creeks of the region must buy expensive cars and build big houses.
"Oil cartels lobby military men in oil installations to enable them load raw crude from points and to refine. Sometimes, they pay between N100,000 and N200,000 for loading per boat and local refinery operators settle military men in their operational areas with between one and two million naira per week.
"Most of the military men, government officials and oil company workers have big vessels, Cotonou boats, barges, local refinery ports and illegal points allocated to individuals to steal oil and make huge amounts of money. "The military men are selective in their operations. They only go after people who refuse to settle them".
Kuku's alarm
Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Chairman of the Presidential Amnesty Office, PAP, Mr. Kingsley Kuku, raised eyebrows over the theft of the nation's crude oil by an unidentified cartel, urging Nigerians to view it as a war against the country.
Giving his position and privileged sources, Kuku, who spoke while playing host to national executives of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association, led by its vice president, Mr. Adamu Umoru, should know what he was talking about. He warned that unless decisive steps were taken to arrest the ugly trend, the theft could cripple the economy.
He noted that the volume of crude stolen could only be compared to the loss experienced at the peak of insurgency in the Niger Delta, warning that the theft could rise from 400,000 barrels per day to between 800,000 and one million.
His words, "The theft of our oil should only be equated with the 'Blood Diamonds' in Sierra Leone. This is the greatest act of sabotage against the Nigerian economy."
Kuku, earlier in an interview with State House Correspondents, in July, accused the international oil companies (IOCs), some of their indigenous staff and some oil-bearing communities of complicity in oil theft.
According to him, the process of illegally extracting crude oil from pipelines in the coastal areas requires highly technical and mechanical expertise, which ordinary Nigerians or residents of the oil-producing communities do not have. However, he absolved Niger Delta governors of complicity in the crude theft, saying there was no evidence of their involvement.
He insisted that oil theft was an international crime and urged the international community to go beyond coming up with penalising oil theft, and support the efforts of governments across the Gulf of Guinea and other parts of the region in dealing with it.
He said, "The best you can find at the level of the Niger Delta people or some merchants of this trade are those doing menial jobs in it. "You will need high-grade vessels and, where you cannot load your illegal or stolen oil, you are definitely going to find yourself in a mess where you will have to pay huge sums for demurrage. How many Nigerians have the capacity to do that?
"So it is an international crime. I have never heard about any governor being involved. I know of one thing and, this is the bombshell, that there are workers in the oil and gas industry who have the expertise, who have the technical know-how, who know about the ways and means of sabotaging the oil and gas industry, who are likely to be involved.
"I also know and this is critical and I know that a lot of multinationals will be angered by this, but their being angry does not bother me; what bothers me is the oil theft that is affecting the revenue of this country; that is affecting the environment that I am from.
"So you have a situation where some pipeline protection contractors empowered by the oil companies participate in the theft. This is not about NNPC; not about PPMC. You know almost every oil company has pipeline protection contract, pipeline surveillance contract for local security contractors.
The same people who are meant to be securing these pipelines participate in oil theft. So the oil multinationals must look inwards at their contracting process, their procurement process, look at the status of some of their vendors and security contractors, x-ray them, review their processes very well and deal with the issue of oil theft as it affects participation in-house in the oil and gas industry"
Sharp drop in revenue
The impact of oil theft in recent times has been so devastating that oil giants, Shell and Agip, were losing 190,000 barrels of crude daily from oil fields in Southern Bayelsa State.
The decline was responsible for the drop in oil revenue accruable to the state from N12.4billion in May to N9billion in June, according to figures from the monthly revenue breakdown, echoed by Seriake Dickson, the governor of the state. It also forced the two oil firms to declare force majeure on their crude output from their facilities domiciled in Bayelsa to absolve them of liabilities from crude buyers.
Force majeure is a legal notice that absolves an oil firm of liabilities for failure to meet supply obligations to crude buyers due to circumstances beyond the firm's control.
The Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, recently, lamented that the country was losing 400,000 barrels of crude oil per day because of crude theft, illegal bunkering, vandalism of infrastructure and halt in production.
In addition, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, said Nigeria might not recover from the negative impact of crude theft and pipeline vandalism in the next 20 years or more. Alison-Madueke stated that the nation was producing 2.3 million barrels of crude oil per day as against its daily production benchmark of 2.567mbd in the 2013 budget.
Analysing the impact of the 400,000bpd loss on the economy, a renowned economist and Chief Executive, Financial Derivatives Company, Mr. Bismark Rewane, said, "If you are doing two million barrels per day, multiply it by the cost of a barrel and you will understand what the country makes or loses. The 400,000 barrels is about 20 per cent of our total production. So, if your salary is reduced by 20 per cent, what impact will that have on you? Therefore, it is a very grave situation for the country".
Unidentified cartel
Ex-militant leader and founder of the non-operational Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger-Delta, MEND, High Chief Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, revealed, in an interview, that a brawny cartel was behind oil theft in the country.
On whom they are and how they could be exposed, he said, "The identity of those responsible for the theft of crude oil could only be revealed through a high-powered investigation because it is a big business for the rich."
Tompolo is the chairman of Oil Facility Surveillance Limited, OFSL, Warri, Delta State, an indigenous company that was contracted for a pipeline surveillance contract by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, to protect crude oil pipelines in Delta State. The contract, a pilot project awarded February 2011, expired in February 2012 and is yet to be renewed.
Control measures
Investigations carried out y Sunday Vanguard concluded that the fact that a cartel, comprising oil companies, security agents, government officials and wealthy Nigerians, are ripping off the nation, is not in doubt.
What is troubling, however, is the lack of foolproof measures to monitor pipelines, absence of up-to-the-minute technology to determine the actual oil production and the tepid attitude to the policing of the pipelines.
Oil companies also cry
Before Kuku raised the latest alarm, Shell Petroleum Development Company, SPDC, blew the whistle on behalf of the oil companies, sometime in June.
The company's Manager, Government, Community Relations, Mr. Krukrubo Evans; General Manager, Nigeria Content Development, Mr. Igo Weli; and Head, Oil Spill Response, Mr. Pat Agbo, who spoke in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, warned that the negative impact of pipeline vandalisation, oil theft and illegal refineries could affect Nigeria's economy and environment.
Evans, who was represented by Mr. Funkakpo Fufyin, lamented that the activities of oil thieves had forced the SPDC to close oil production in its Nembe Creek Trunk Line in the state.
He said the shutdown of the facility led to the loss of 150,000 barrels of oil per day, adding that the development reduced the revenue accruing to the derivation account.
Prior to the shutdown, he said the SPDC discovered over 90 different punctured points on the 90km pipeline, adding that the company had commenced repairs of the trunk line.
"Our biggest worries are crude oil theft and illegal refineries. They are bringing down the economy. Nigeria loses 150,000 barrels per day amounting to $6.1bn annually to oil theft," the SDPC Manager said.
"Illegal refineries are destroying our environment. We are pushing and talking to the government and other stakeholders to do something about it. These crude theft and illegal refineries have to stop"
He decried the mode of operation of illegal refineries and said operators only took 30 per cent of the crude oil products and "pour the rest into the environment."
The official identified the company's facilities in Bodo West, Imo River, Nembe Creek Trunk Line, coastlines offshore Niger Delta as the hot spots for illegal bunkering, adding that the oil company had taken measures to stop oil theft by monitoring its pipeline through detective equipment and aerial surveillance.
Govs intervention, by Uduaghan Fielding questions from reporters, penultimate Sunday night, in Abuja at the venue of the Nigeria Governors Forum meeting, Delta State governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, said the Forum was determined to check the challenge of oil theft in the country and had already taken measures to support the Federal Government, which were already paying off.
According to him, the Forum had to do something after the shutdown of two major pipelines (Trans-Niger and Nembe), which led to the combined loss of about 300,000 barrels per day.
"This resulted in the drop of our oil output from 2.5million bpd to 2.1million bpd. But, as I speak today, the two pipelines vandalized and damaged have been repaired and re-opened", he stated. Uduaghan said that the cooperation and vigilance of all Nigerians was necessary to check illegal oil bunkering.
Hullabaloo over lost barrels
The point of the biggest controversy over oil theft is the actual loss figure. Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, disagreed with the claim that Shell lost $700 million to oil theft in the second quarter of the year.
NNPC, in a statement by its Acting Group General Manager, Public Affairs Division, Ms. Tumini Green, in Abuja, described Shell's claim as "defective", pointing out that the loss the multinational oil firm claimed to have suffered was not based on its operations in Nigeria.
It said the country was winning the war against oil theft and pipeline vandalism. Consequently, the corporation disclosed that daily crude oil production had increased to an average of 2.4 million pbd.
It said: "Suffice it to say that some vandalised pipelines and flow stations have been repaired and re-opened such that average current national daily production stands at 2.4 m/bpd compared to the average year to date figure of 2.13 m/bpd as at June 2013." The corporation traced the success to the Petroleum Minister's directive to NNPC to constitute an industry-wide committee on Security Strategy Against Crude Oil and Product Theft.
That committee's members include representatives from NNPC, all IOCs, NPDC, security agencies and Oil Producers Trade Section, OPTS, of the Lagos Chambers of Commerce and Industry, LCCI.

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Sunday 25 August 2013

INSECURITY IN NIGERIA: THE RIPPLE EFFECTS OF SABOTAGE AND THE VINDICATION OF OJUKWU AND MAJOR GIDEON ORKAR (11)


Temple Chima Ubochi
ubochit@yahoo.com

The precondition to freedom is security (Rand Beers)

If you want anything to actually change or to move ahead in your life you actually have to do it yourself, you can’t sit there and wait for somebody or talk about what you might want, you know, you should actually keep dreams and desires inside and let them burn a little bit, and then they might come true' (Russell Crowe)

The way to get ahead is to start now. While many of us are waiting until conditions are "just right" before we go ahead, others are stumbling along, fortunately ignorant of the dangers that beset them. By the time we are, in our superior wisdom, decided to make a start, we discover that those who have gone fearlessly on before, have, in their blundering way, traveled a considerable distance. If you start now, you will know a lot next year that you don't know now, and that you will not know next year, if you wait (William Feather)

he Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika, on Monday August 19, acknowledged the ineffectuality of the fight against Boko Haram insurgents so far, saying that previous operational strategies of the military against insurgency were inadequate. That was the reason the army decided to take over the fight by creating a new division of about 8,000 troops stationed in Maiduguri, Borno State capital. Ihejirika noted that there should be no mercy for Boko Haram and other such groups. He said that Nigerians would soon smile as the military had decided to come out very hard on those who believe that they could continue to undermine the nation's internal security, as it will be an all-out war.

 The JTF, about to be replaced by then new Army division, then claimed that its troops killed the terror group's leader, Abubakar Shekau, during a clash. The Joint Task Force, Operation Restore Order, quoting intelligence reports, claimed that the sect leader might have died of gunshot wounds sustained in confrontation with the soldiers. The statement released by the spokesman of the JTF said the terrorist leader sustained serious gunshot wounds in an encounter with the JTF troops in one of their camps at Sambisa Forest on June 30, 2013. It added that: "Shekau was mortally wounded in the encounter which he never recovered from. It is greatly believed that Shekau might have died on 25 July to 3 August, 2013". Nigerian Tribune wrote that when Shekau was shot by the Special Forces, he escaped to Mali, where he was placed on treatment, but, the injury became worse and had to be sneaked into Amitchide - a border community in Cameroun - for treatment by some of his members before he died. A source told the Tribune: "In fact, as I am talking to you now, we have it on good authority that a close confidant of his (Shekau), who was mandated to follow him and ensure he received proper treatment and return him safely to the country, has been killed by other members of the group for allowing the information to get out".

The statement from JTF added that the recent video released on August 13, 2013, by the purported sect leader threatening everybody and calling the bluff of the United States (US), Britain and France and claiming that nobody could stop the group, was dramatized by an impostor to hoodwink the sect members to continue with the terrorism and to deceive the undiscerning minds. JTF added it was a smokescreen to paint a picture that he was still alive and in control. A week earlier, the JTF announced the killing of Shekau's deputy, Momodu Bama (aka Abu Saad) and his father, Flatari, said to be the spiritual leader of the sect, while about 24 other terrorists were arrested. Also, the Vigilance Youths Group (BVYG) known as the 'Civilian JTF' and the Military Joint Task Force (JTF) claimed they arrested a top Boko Haram informant in Maiduguri metropolis on Sunday August 18, recovering incriminating documents from him. If all these are confirmed, then they’re goodnews for Nigeria and morale booster for the security forces which deserve our commendations for all these efforts, but, the problem is that all these are unconfirmed reports. It’s likely that Shekau is dead, but, don’t forget that a claim in 2009 that Shekau had been killed turned out to be untrue. Also, we read that residents of Maiduguri, Borno State, said they are doubtful of JTF's claim, noting that they expected the task force to do a thorough job ascertaining the identity of the sect leader that died. A resident summed it thus: "We would have wished the JTF did a thorough investigation and come out with the true picture of how the man (Shekau) died rather than suggesting that he may have died". A Paper rightly noted that the killing of the most wanted terror leader, who has a $7 million bounty on his head, would have been celebrated by all security agencies but the situation appears to be different in the absence of evidence of his death.

Sabotage is being alleged, in that the Punch wrote: “However, it was gathered that the military high command in the country was bitter about the release of the statement on Shekau's purported death because of the growing lack of evidence around it. However, a top security source confided that the statement was viewed as a product of sabotage and an unnecessary contest for glory by the JTF, which prosecuted the war against terrorism. The source said that the hurried release of the news of the killing of Shekau on the date a new division of the Nigerian Army was taking over from the JTF was rather suspicious”. Sequel to what Punch of Wednesday, August 21, 2013 wrote, there’s more to the released information about Shekau’s death than the public will ever know. We read that the 'Information on Shekau's death was not authorised by DHQ'. The story has it that the Defence Headquarters was surprised by the statement announcing that Shekau might have been killed, which came out on the day a new Division of the Nigerian Army took over from the Joint Task Force and was assigned the sole responsibility of continuing with the war against the insurgents. A source said that the Chief of Defence Staff, Vice-Admiral Ola Ibrahim, and the top leadership of the Defence Headquarters, were still considering how to verify the pending issue of Shekau's killing when the statement announcing his death was released. It was gathered that the CDS (Chief of defence Staff) was still considering sending troops to the Cameroonian town of Amitchide to carry out an extensive search operation in the area for graves to explore the possibility of a DNA exercise, when the news was released. Investigations revealed that the JTF sent a report on the issue of the killing of Shekau to the DHQ (Defence Headquarters), but the CDS and other top military officers were said to have advised that there was a need for a proper verification before the release of the death of somebody of Shekau's status. The source said that the decision of the CDS was taken because of the fact that even the JTF personnel who claimed to have killed Shekau were in doubt. The question becomes why the hurried release of the information, when the Chief of Defence Staff, the highest military officer in Nigeria, ordered otherwise? Who disobeyed the CDS’s order? That’s the sabotage this column has been harping on all along.

This column, while waiting for a concrete evidence of the death, will still cautiously commend the JTF for a job well done. This column has criticized the security forces and their handling of the war against insurgents all along, so if they have achieved such a feat, the column will not withhold the encomium due to them. But, before an all out celebration and salutation, we want the evidence (of the death); in order not to rejoice to early for what will turn out to be a hoax later. For now, let’s postpone the jubilation until the death is forensically confirmed. What if Boko Haram framed Shekau’s death as a ploy to distract the security forces so that their leader can have time to relocate, and the sect will have time to replenish its depleted arsenal and to re-map its strategy? That’s a remote possibility; let’s just wait and see! Killing Shekau has been long overdue, as it’s believed that he masterminded the kidnapping of seven French citizens and that Alhaji Shettima Ali Monguno. He also murdered many Islamic clerics in the north. He was also responsible for the bombings of many places of worship and public buildings, including the Police and the United Nations Headquarters in Abuja. What of the hundreds of women he and his sect abducted and raped?

Any thing said or written in this part of this article (below) further vindicated Ojukwu as a man who wanted the best for Nigeria. Ojukwu saw things ahead of time as what he advocated, about 45 years ago as a solution to the problems of Nigeria, is what everybody is concurring on now.
It is unfortunate that some of the Ogoni and Ijaw leaders such as Prof. Tam David-West, Chief Edwin Clark (who were some of those who convinced the then Nigerian government to reject the Aburi Accord of 1967 that should have granted Eastern Nigeria including part of their Ijaw or Ogoni nation, confederate status within the Nigerian nation) are now seeing what they didn’t see in the late 1960s. Some of these south-south leaders played great part against the Igbos during the civil war. Worth pointing out here is the fact that many of the Niger Delta leaders who were frustrated by the injustices meted out to the oil producing region, also frustrated the efforts of the Igbos between 1967 through 1970, who then wanted to take their destiny into their own hands. Some of the Niger Delta leaders of today were then saboteurs against the Biafran cause, but, they haven’t fared much better since then, despite all they did to sabotage all the efforts of the Igbos in their quest for justice and self rule. Men like Edwin Clark, late Saro-Wiwa, Adaka Boro, Tam David-West and some others sold Biafra then for a plate of porridge, but, by now they must have eaten up the porridge and are still hungry, even when President Jonathan is one of theirs. Now, some of those Niger Delta leaders are singing Ojukwu’s 1966 song. Emperor Haile Selassie (1892 – 1975) was right to say that “Throughout history, it has been the inaction of those who could have acted, the indifference of those who should have known better, the silence of the voice of justice when it mattered most, that has made it possible for evil to triumph”.

Chief Edwin Clark said, in the Vanguard Newspapers of 29th July 2008, that the only sane way out of the long-drawn-out Niger-Delta crisis is for President Umaru Yar’Adua to return the country to true federalism, which was the situation in the First Republic (That was what Ojukwu advocated in 1966 and Clark didn’t support him then). According to Clarke as reported by the vanguard:
“These are the only realistic solution to the lingering Niger-Delta crisis; this was the situation in the First Republic when the principles of true federalism brought social and political stability in the three regions. The North had groundnut and cotton, the East had coal and palm industry and the West had cocoa, these, they used to develop their various regions at their own pace. For instance, in former Western Nigeria where Chief Obafemi Awolowo was the Premier and leader, it was the most developed and progressive because of its wealth in cocoa. Through cocoa, Awolowo was able to establish the University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University. The introduction of free primary education, establishment of Odua Group of Companies, which remains the largest group of company owned by any individual or state or group of states, the establishment of a television station, which was the first in Southern Nigeria, the Cocoa House in Ibadan, Western House in Lagos and industrial estates in Ikeja were some of the benefits of cocoa wealth. These benefits did not extend to the Mid-West region except for free primary education because we never contributed to cocoa wealth. These same reasons were used to deny Mid-West region equitable sharing of assets when it was created in 1963 even when I became Commissioner for Finance in 1972, all efforts to convince Gen Adeyinka Adebayo, the military Governor of Western region, despite the very good relationship he had with Col. S.O. Ogbemudia, then military Governor of the Mid-West region failed. It should be noted that the Premier of the Northern region, Sir Ahmadu Bello also used his groundnut and cotton wealth to establish the present Ahmadu Bello University and the modern city of Kaduna, which was its capital. Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe could not do much because he relied on limited resources available to him, including the remaining 50 per cent that accrues to the federation, which it shared between the two regions and the central government”.

The hatred Clark has for Ndiigbo blinded him as he failed to acknowledge the fact that whereas the west relied on cocoa, the north on groundnut and cotton, the east used the proceeds from palm oil and by-products to build University of Nigeria, Nsukka, the first indigenous university in Nigeria, Presidential Hotels in Enugu and Port Harcourt, Metropolitan Hotel in Calabar, Nkalagu Cement Industry, Golden Guinea Breweries Umuahia and the industrial estates in Enugu, Umuahia, Aba, Port Harcourt, Calabar, Owerri etc etc

Few months ago, the Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly (SNPA) met to deliberate on the myriad of problems confronting the country. There, the members called on President Goodluck Jonathan to urgently convene a national conference to address the issues. This was the consensus of opinions at the gathering of the body in Lagos, which witnessed the attendance of foremost traditional rulers and prominent Nigerians, including the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade, Yeye-Oodua, Chief (Mrs) HID Awolowo represented by Dr (Mrs) Tokunbo Awolowo Dosumu; Ondo State Deputy Governor, Alhaji Ali Olanusi, Bishop Emmanuel Bolanle Gbonigi, Chief Edwin Clark and Alabo Tonye Gharam-Douglas. Others were former Vice-President Alex Ekwueme, former Senate President Adolphus Wabara; former Chief of General Staff (CGS), Lt. General Oladipo Diya; Senator Bode Olajumoke, Senator Femi Okunrounmu, Senator Felix Ibru, Chief Olu Falae, Alhaji Shuaib Oyedokun, Mr Ayo Opadokun, Senator Iyiola Omisore, Chief Gani Adams, Dr Walter Ofonagoro and Hon Cairo Ojougboh, among others. In his address, Edwin Clark, who led the South-South delegates said Jonathan should organise a national conference on or before January 2014. Wasn’t it what Ojukwu advocated in 1966?
To be continued!

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Nigerian lawmakers are the highest paid in the world

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By Denrele Animasaun
Instead of giving a politician the keys to the city, it might be better to change the locks.—Doug Larson
Nice job if you can get it. No wonder the Nigerian Lawmaker fights tooth and nail to stay on the gravy train. It is a known fact that Nigerian Lawmakers are the highest paid in world.
There are 109 Senators and 360 members of the House of Representatives so in terms of payment by result, the Nigerian lawmakers do not deserve such high pay and surely does not perform their duties to warrant such hyper inflated pay. In America, a Senator earns 174,000 US dollars and in the UK, a Member of parliament about 64,000 US dollars a year. So what do our lawmaker do for this generous amount can someone please tell me why they deserve this enormous amount of money. It is about time Nigerians demand better service and improvement for Nigeria and Nigerians.
No one deserves that much money while ordinary people are scavenging to make ends meet. Nigeria has got multitude of deprivation; high infant mortality rate, maternal mortality rate, malnutrition, inadequate health care and transportation and lack of electricity outage, high crime rates, high number of young people not in education, employment or in training. So why is some of these excesses going to improve the lives of Nigerians. So instead Nigerians lawmakers are paid for below par performance and disregard to the electorates that they are meant to represent. I feel that ordinary Nigerians have been severely short changed, cheated and insulted by these so called honourable people.
Senate President, David Mark and Speaker of House of Reps, Aminu Tanbuwal
Senate President, David Mark and Speaker of House of Reps, Aminu Tanbuwal
According to Professor Itse Sagay, he stated that the Nigerian lawmakers at the lower and upper chambers of the National Assembly are the highest paid legislators in the world. A senator in Nigeria earns 240 million naira (about 1.7 million US dollars) in salaries and allowances and a member of the House of Representatives earns 204 million naira (about 1.45million US dollars) per annum. It definitely rubs insult to injury for the average Civil servant who earns about 46 to 120 US dollars per month.
RMAFC disputes the allowances that the lawmakers earn as misleading and describes the allowances as befitting the political and public office holders; such as the Nigerian Senator Remuneration package comes to 1,505% of basic salary, and the other 225% for furniture .So like I said, Fine job if you can get.
Response to: A Time Will Come…?
Politics is supposed to be the second-oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first. ~Ronald Reagan
I will say this. We are being judged as a nation. As Denrele Animasaun said, we like to show our allegiances to religion yet we have lost our humanity. The elite use the ethnic divisions for their own benefit yet we are too blind to see it. Only now are we beginning to wake up to this fact. It is funny that Obasanjo talks of his former Vice President and former governor of Bayelsa in this manner yet he picked Abubakar twice in return for campaign money and forced Goodluck Jonathan onto the late President Yar’Adua, a Goodluck Jonathan who later pardoned and forgave his former boss Alamieyeseigha.
Those who are identify themselves as Ijaw who will still support Jonathan have themselves to blame if by 2019 their quality of life has not improved. They will blame the Northern elites of course or someone else other than themselves. This tribal politics has retarded our nation and many people know this. I have talked with them. However, many seem to be either on two track minds, shortsighted, or cowardly that they will return to tribal politics the next day. I will say this again, we are being judged by God now. He will not save those who do not attempt to save themselves.
- Chukwuka Okoroafor
Dear Denrele,
Your above captioned article refers. It’s acceptable that the Columnist’s job is to point out the flaws, in order to elicit appropriate response. But our peculiar situation demands that it is even more helpful for possible solutions to be proffered, especially by those of you in the diaspora, who see how things are made to work. So next time you ask these many questions, please try give at least one good answer. “A time will come” when someone might use it to better our country. Have a fine day. Regards, -Alh Musah Ali
My response:
Dear Ali,
Thank you for your email. A time will come… was very self indulgent and it was my way of exorcising the pain and frustration within me! In a country of so many talented and intelligent people you would think the solution will and can come from within. Outside looking in as diasporas, the solutions are oblivious; honesty, transparency, compassion and selflessness. All these characteristics are the bedrock of any civil society, you would expect that majority of people already have it. We as Nigerians truthfully lack most of these qualities so, about time we developed a conscience and work collectively towards building a better future. So my piece was to prick our collective conscience and judging by the number of mails I have received, it got people to think collectively that the answer lies within all of us.
Regards, Denrele Animasaun
We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office. – Aesop
Whatever next? Ebenega Okorodudu, has requested that state and federal governments immortalise late Pius Akpor Ewherido. And he also would like the speedy release of former Governor of the State, Chief James Ibori, from London prison.

Where do you begin with such people, even the pope cannot beatify any one unless there has been evidence of sustained good deeds and miracles. So unless the state and the federal government have become the Vatican then I am afraid that there is a case of delusion of grandeur going on. Certainly the sudden death of Ewherido in some quarters must have evoked so much emotions but I think common sense should prevail and accept that death is a leveller. As for Ibori? The good doctor is requesting that Ibori should be pardoned; he argued that the former governor was instrumental in the improvement of his state. Dr Okorodudu seem to have no integrity or morals when he talks warmly of Ibori’s crime as the man has no shame and he has lost touch with reality and with the ordinary Deltans and Nigerians in general.
There is a big omission here; that Ibori is a convicted common criminal pure and simple. Nigerians should know right from wrong as the present crop of politicians are self serving and desperately want to hold on the last vestiges of power while ordinary Nigerian starve and pillage for need to know what is wrong form right and we cannot paint people as dignified and full of integrity when they have been caught, convicted of criminality because he has great that he improved a small part of his state, while he was siphoning the state coffers? He is where he belongs for the crime he had committed and it is evident that Nigeria would have done nothing but parade him as an honest for governor. The message to the younger generation is clear; you are honest provided that you are in government.

In his own reasoning, Dr. Okorodudu said that the Federal and States governments to fast -track a means of releasing the former governor from the British custody where he is currently serving a jail term for offences bordering on money laundering, said the ex-governor is only a human being who can err, but if after owning up and apologizing to his people and the nation, he should have been given a very minimum sentence. Am not sure what stealing vegetable by a hungry person is nowadays but, I am sure it is not a minimal sentence. Yet a thief can steal billions and we create and perpetuate a corrupt society and we shrug our shoulders and we reasoned that there is not much we can do about it as everyone is doing it! Here lies the problem, we look to others to change their ways while we continue being dishonest and incorrigible. So for an errant politician they demand a softly, softly approach. Nigeria has a problem and our lawmakers are a representational of our people and there
lies our problem.