Buhari Travels To Morocco For Climate Change Conference

President Muhammadu Buhari will attend the 22nd Conference of the Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), also known as COP-22, in Marrakech, Morocco, from November 14-16, 2016.

A statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr Femi Adesina, said Buhari would participate in the official opening plenary on November 15 where he would deliver a national statement during the High Level Segment of COP 22.

The statement said the presidential address would highlight, among other key issues, Nigeria’s unwavering commitment to implementing the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and policy actions aimed at tackling climate change through environmental sustainable efforts.

It also said Buhari would use the occasion of his speech to rally international support for the clean-up of Ogoniland in the Niger Delta and the resuscitation of the Lake Chad Basin.

“While in Marrakech, the President is scheduled to attend the Africa Day Commemoration at COP 22 with the theme, ‘Moving from Commitments to Action with Intended Nationally Determined Contributions and African Renewable Energy Initiative’”, the statement added.

Adesina said Buhari would also attend the Summit of African Heads of State on the sidelines of the Climate Change conference.

COP 22, which will be attended by representatives from 197 countries including world leaders, environment ministers, government officials as well as a wide range of representatives from civil society and the private sector, is the first meeting of State Parties since the entry into force of the landmark Paris Agreement on November 4, 2016.

The legally binding international Agreement on climate change, among others, addresses issues of global warming, including its impact on food security and agriculture.

Buhari signed the Paris Agreement on September 22, 2016 at the margins of the 71st session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Credit: thisdaylive

FG To Restrict Business Class Travels To Ministers, Others

The Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF) has accepted the recommendations of the Efficiency Unit of the Federal Ministry of Finance to restrict Business Class travel to Ministers, Permanent Secretaries, Chairmen of Federal Government Committees, as well as Chairmen and Chief Executives of Parastatals and Agencies.

The Efficiency Unit of the Federal Ministry of Finance is collaborating with OSGF and the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (OHCSF), to review the provisions of some extant government Circulars on Overhead Expenses one of which is on Travels.

Efficiency Unit is the initiative of the current Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun and was set up to engender transparency and reduce government’s large expenditure through procurement in the various ministries, departments and agencies of the Federal Government.

The restriction of Business Class travel to Ministers and others was made known in a press statement by the SA Media to Minister of Finance, Festus Akanbi.

According to the statement, the Efficiency Unit, aside from its negotiation for discounts with local and international airlines also recommended other measures for reducing the government’s large expenditure on travels to the OSGF.

The statement read: “These include the need to restrict Business Class travel to Ministers, Permanent Secretaries, Chairmen of Federal Government Committees, as well as Chairmen and Chief Executives of Parastatals and Agencies.  In the past, some government officials who should have been on Business Class usually travelled First Class, while many others travelled Business Class instead of Economy.

“The second recommendation bordered on the need to reduce the frequency of travels by ensuring that Board and Committee events such as meetings, workshops and conferences in Nigeria are held in locations where the institutions or persons participating in the event are domiciled.  Furthermore, such events should for the most part be held in Nigeria but where this is not possible, the prior approval of the Secretary to the Federal Government should be secured.”

It further stated that, “in line with the present administration’s commitment to reform public expenditure, the OSGF accepted the recommendations in full and has accordingly issued a Circular recently to effect the changes.  The buy-in and prompt reaction of the OSGF is an attestation of the common resolve by government to its change mantra and the spirit of collaboration among government institutions and officials.

“It is estimated that Travel Expenditure will drop by about 20% if the provisions of the new Circular issued by the OSGF are fully implemented.  A 20% reduction in Air Travel Expenditure, using the figure of N69.417 billion incurred on Travels in 2014 will result in a cost-cutting of N13.88 billion.  Such large savings from Travel, which should ordinarily not be a major expense item for the government, will become available for investment in capital projects such as roads, power, railways and public health facilities.”

“The savings are expected to be even larger when discounts secured from Airlines are added. Already, 11 Airlines have offered discounts on local and international routes for travel by MDAs while negotiations are on-going with others.  The discounts received so far vary across routes and airlines and range from 7% to 50%. The Efficiency Unit expects the implementation of the price discounts secured from Airlines to start in May 2016 when the Agreements would have been signed with the Airlines and MDA staff would have been trained and equipped for effective administration of the new process.”

“Other Overhead Expenditure items reviewed by the Efficiency Unit are those relating to Refreshments and Meals, Honorarium and Sitting Allowance as well as Advertising and Publicity.  Measures that will standardise spending on these items, cut costs and promote transparency on these items have been recommended to the OSGF and the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, from which further cost-cutting on Overhead Expenditure is to be achieved.”

Credit: DailyTimes

‘Buhari Will Visit China Soon’ – Chinese Ambassador To Nigeria Says

Yesterday, when the Chinese Ambassador to Nigeria, Gu Xiaojie visited the Minister of Science and Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, in Abuja, he disclosed that arrangements have already been concluded for President Muhammadu Buhari’s official visit to the Peoples’ Republic of China in April.

He emphasized that the visit was significant because it would strengthen diplomatic relations between China and Nigeria.

“The relationship right now is a strategic partnership that will definitely help to expand mutual
benefits between the two countries to look at widening areas and scope of cooperation.

“We are also set to look for new areas of cooperation between China and Nigeria against the background that this year, China and Nigeria are celebrating 45 years anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries,” the Ambassador said.

He also disclosed the volume of trade between Nigeria and China in 2015 at $14.9bn, saying Nigeria is China’s biggest trading partner in Africa.

Joel Pereyi: ‘Garba Shehu, We Want A Domestic President’

Garba Shehu said he has been amused by jokes of the frequency of our president’s foreign visits. He submits that all such jokes are misplaced because our dear president who also doubles as a voyager and Mr. Shehu’s principal has been using these trips to set up local and international infrastructures that will bring to bear the change we chorally yearn for.

He listed countries Mr. President has so far visited and how he had been privileged to be an accompanying person in some of the delegations. Unexpectedly, he laced his article with benefits of these foreign visits, the opinion of public and international diplomacy experts  and how one of our former military heads of state regretted his insularity to the international community over time.

There was virtually nothing Mr. Shehu didn’t tell us to make us buy into President Buhari’s junketeering. But like himself and other minders of the presidency, it is their job to market this administration to us and ours. It is their job to always paint the federal canvas in bright colours. They are paid to beatify every of President Buhari’s doing and undoing.

So we recognise Mr. Shehu’s article for what it is: a mere PR gig; an intellectually compromised piece; a work written with paycheck fixated thoughts, hence, lacking in forthrightness. So, we aren’t buying it. It is too damn petty!

Ours happen to be a nation so gifted and blessed with bright minds and skillful hands. All those witty tweets and updates rebuking Mr. President’s overly frequent trips on blogosphere can’t be wrong.

Even if in the light of Mr. Shehu’s article they seem to be wrong, let’s do the maths ourselves. How many times does a Barrack Obama, David Cameron or say Francois Hollande travel in six months? Okay, they run first world economies and our challenges are quite different. It would be unfair to compare ours to theirs.

What of Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, the president of Argentina or Dilma Rousseff of Brazil, whose economies largely depend on oil? Do they spend 40 out of 181 days outside the shores of their respective countries? Just like ours, aren’t their economies seething due to the falling oil prices?

Oh, they aren’t plagued with Boko Haram. They do not have internal security challenges to deal with. Their girls don’t get abducted and their male students aren’t at the risk of having their throats slit while having their well deserved nocturnal rest. Their mosques, parks and markets are safe and their churches are a tad safer.

But can we say the same of all other African countries? Have Boko Haram not extended its deadly paws to Chad, Niger and Cameroun? Was a hostel in Mali not attacked by Al shabab militants? Were there no abductions in certain parts of Africa early this year? Are extremists not operating in Libya and South Sudan? Was Paris, with her watertight security and all her technological advancement not attacked by terrorists?

All these are pointers to the fact that our security and economic challenges aren’t peculiar. As has been touted time and time again, Mr. President’s junketeering has so far served little or no utility. They have thus far yielded little or no result.

Despite his acclaimed visit to the U.S., the country and several other crude oil traders still shun our oil. Because of our refusal to devalue our currency as The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recommended, some of our former buyers now ditch our oil for less attractive ones. That isn’t all.

In the Nigeria of today, job losses are now the new cool. The Nigerian Bureau of Statistics recorded that 1.4 million people have lost their jobs in the last six months. At this point, it is worthy to recall that our ivory towers presently churn out, on an annual basis, 1.8 million graduates with zilch spaces for them in the highly competitive labour market.

Unending spaghetti queues have since returned to our gas stations and the APC–led administration is yet to lay down a policy framework it intends to use in fulfilling the mouth watering 720,000 annual jobs, N5,000 monthly stipends for unemployed youths and several such juicy promises it made during the build-up to the elections.

Running from the U.S. to France and stopping by at Germany wouldn’t actualize these promises. Travelling to Ghana or Malta wouldn’t automatically fix our roads or create jobs.

Nelson Mandela didn’t have to be a globetrotter to claim his rightful place in the world of great leaders. Lee Kuan Yew didn’t have to be a junketer-in-chief to transform Singapore from third world to first world.

The December deadline for Boko Haram is already at the corner. Junketeering wouldn’t bring the infamous group to its knees. We didn’t vote for a sprinter or marathoner. We don’t want a president who runs from pillar to post. We are a troubled race. A president who rather than tackle our problems head-on seeks an avocation in tripping and lounging is a nightmare we do not want to have.

Joel Pereyi is an award winning essayist and writer. He maintains a bimonthly column for the Abuja-based FCTPost.

Views expressed are solely that of author and does not represent views of www.omojuwa.com nor its associates