News
Multiple Power Producers Panacea To Incessant N’tl Grid Collapse – Ossiomo Plant MD
Published
4 months agoon
By
Editor
The Managing Director, Ossiomo Industrial Park, Ologbo, Edo State, Dr. Uwa Igiehon, has said that the solution to the incessant national grid collapse is for the nation to have multiple independent power producers in the power sector.
Igiehon spoke on Tuesday when he took journalists on a tour to the facilities of the power generating plant located in Ologbo, Ikpoba Okha Local Government Area of Edo State.
Some of the facilities visited by journalists during the tour included: IPP 1; IPP II; gas supply infrastructure; transmission lines; the company’s marine facility, amongst others.
READ ALSO: Blackout As National Grid Suffers ‘System Outage’
INFO DAILY reports that Ossiomo is an Independent Power Producer (IPP) licenced by the Federal Government to distribute power in Edo.
INFO DAILY also learnt that the Ossiomo power network now covers over 200 km around the Benin metropolis with provision of power to the Edo State Government, MDAs, Federal Government establishment, commercial customers, communities, amongst others.
Taking journalists around the facilities, the MD disclosed that Ossiomo is not just a power distribution company, but also licenced as a “power generation and transmission company.
“We have three licences which cover generation, transmission and distribution.
READ ALSO: Collapsed National Grid Restored – TCN
“We also have licences for our gas infrastructure. So, if you really look at our power chain, you are talking about four to five segments, all licenced.”
“There is no doubt that having independent power producers, and having an independent grid is the solution to the incessant grid collapse. Because if you have multiple independent grids, eventually you will be able to connect those independent grids.”
Igiehon, while noting that being a Nigerian he so much believes in Nigeria and that most of the materials used are local, stressed that “for any industry to be successful and competitive, it has to use the materials that are local, because that’s what gives it an edge in the industry.”
He added that the belief in locally made stuff is the reason why most of the company’s engineers are Nigerians, adding that they are quarterly trained for more efficient and effectiveness.
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News
Group Fumes As Rivers CJ Inaugurates LG Poll Tribunal
Published
5 minutes agoon
August 28, 2025By
Editor
A rights group, the Pilex Centre for Civic Education Initiative, has faulted the inauguration of the Local Government Election Petition Tribunals in Rivers State, accusing the state Chief Judge, Justice Simeon Amadi, of lending credibility to what it described as an “illegal” electoral process.
Justice Amadi had on Tuesday sworn in chairmen and members of the tribunals for the state’s three senatorial districts ahead of the August 30 local government elections.
He charged the appointees to be fearless, firm and impartial in discharging their duties within the 30 days provided by law for determination of petitions.
READ ALSO:Man Stabs Lover To Death In Rivers Over Cheating Allegation
But reacting shortly after the inauguration, Pilex Coordinator, Courage Nsirimovu, said the action of the Chief Judge amounted to endorsing an election already tainted by legal controversy.
“The action of the Chief Judge in setting up the tribunal is tantamount to endorsing illegality. He has just attempted to clothe an illegal process with legality, but it won’t work. The judiciary should have resisted this capture by the executive,” Nsirimovu said.
He argued that Justice Amadi ought to have boycotted the exercise or even resigned, insisting that his involvement eroded the moral authority of the judiciary.
“Outside this country, people resign to protect the rule of law. Here, the Chief Judge knows the law yet still went ahead. There is no moral justification for all of this,” he added.
READ ALSO:Nigerian Senate Passes 2025 Budget For Rivers State
Justice Amadi, however, defended his action, stressing that the establishment of the tribunal was a statutory duty under the Rivers State Local Government Elections Tribunal Law 2000 (as amended). He dismissed suggestions that he acted under political pressure.
“What I have done is the statutory duty of the Chief Judge. That is what the law provides — when there are local government elections, the Chief Judge must set up a tribunal. I didn’t do it under pressure,” he said.
Justice Amadi reminded the tribunal members that, unlike before when tribunals had three months, they now had only 30 days to conclude petitions.
“Many lawyers will come there and start objections to delay. You have to be firm,” he told them.
News
Strike Threat: ASUU, VCs Decry Profs’ N525,000 Monthly Pay
Published
37 minutes agoon
August 28, 2025By
Editor
Following the conclusion of its nationwide protests on Tuesday, members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities are set to hold congresses to decide their next line of action, The PUNCH reports.
This comes as the Federal Government meets today to address long-standing agitations over the implementation of the renegotiated 2009 FGN-ASUU agreement, which triggered nationwide protests across universities on Tuesday.
Earlier this year, the President Bola Tinubu administration released N50bn to settle earned academic allowances owed to university lecturers and staff.
However, ASUU has consistently demanded clear commitments on improved salaries, conditions of service, university funding, autonomy, and a review of laws governing the National Universities Commission and the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board.
The meeting, expected to be attended by the Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa; the Minister of Labour and Employment, Muhammadu Maigari Dingyadi; and representatives of the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission, is expected to produce a timetable for signing and the phased implementation of the renegotiated agreement, along with related reports.
READ ALSO:ASUU Directs Members To Begin Nationwide Strike Education
Government sources in the Education and Labour ministries told The PUNCH that today’s discussions would focus on reconciling the Yayale Ahmed committee draft concluded in December 2024 with the original 2009 agreement and subsequent recommendations, including the Nimi Briggs report.
Also on the table is how to phase the fiscal commitments into the national budget and produce a legally binding instrument for signature.
Speaking with our correspondent on Wednesday, ASUU president, Prof. Chris Piwuna, said the union expected commitment from the government.
“I truly hope they will come up with something tangible. Our members are tired of words and no action.”
Piwuna, however, clarified that ASUU was not invited for today’s meeting.
Piwuna affirmed that the union was done with nationwide protests and was poised to hold congresses to decide on its next line of action.
READ ALSO:JUST IN: Immigration Hikes Passport Fees To N100,000, N200,000
“We don’t have any meeting with the Federal Government tomorrow (today). It’s their meeting, we’re not involved. We have not received any invitation yet for a meeting with the Federal Government.
“However, we’ll let Nigerians know our next line of action after the protests. We operate from the bottom up. The protests are over, so we’ll go back to our members and ask them what is next, and we’ll do exactly what they want us to do as elected representatives,” Piwuna said.
Ahead of Tuesday’s protests, ASUU branches had warned that their patience was exhausted after the renegotiation concluded in December 2024 and was formally submitted to the government in February.
At a press conference in Abuja, ASUU’s Abuja zonal coordinator, Prof. Al-Amin Abdullahi, said the union had fulfilled its part of the bargain and expected the government to adopt the report without delay.
He noted that earlier reports never advanced beyond “filing cabinets” and stressed that failure to act could trigger another shutdown of public universities.
READ ALSO:ASUU Warns Against Abolishing TETFund, Says It’s A Threat To Tertiary Education
ASUU had also rejected the government’s offer of loan-style “support funds” in place of cash entitlements.
Today’s meeting comes as ASUU members had consistently lamented poor pay, worsening state of academics, with professors earning about N500,000 monthly, sleeping in officers ‘ quarters, and reportedly struggling to join buses meant for students.
Documents obtained by The PUNCH show that under the Consolidated University Academic Salary structure, Graduate Assistants earn between N125,000 and N138,020 monthly, while professors earn between N525,010 and N633,333.
Assistant Lecturers earn between N150,000 and N171,487; Lecturer II (N186,543–N209,693); Lecturer I (N239,292–N281,956); Senior Lecturer (N386,101–N480,780); and Readers (N436,392–N522,212).
A former Vice Chancellor of the University of Lagos, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe, lamented the erosion of morale among lecturers.
Ogundipe said, “The lecturers are tired, the morale is low, and lecturers are poorly paid. Academic staff members are on the edge, itching to leave. The standard of teaching is going down. As Vice Chancellor, I earned N900,000 as salary. My present salary as a professor, still in the system, is N700,000. My son saw my pay slip and described it as a joke. Do you know that some lecturers sleep in the office?”
READ ALSO:JUST IN: ASUU Stages Peaceful Protest In Bauchi, Demands Exception From IPPIS
ASUU president Piwuna said many lecturers earned just over N400,000 and accused the government of neglecting academics while prioritising pay raises for politicians.
He described as unsurprising the FG neglects the lecturers while the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission was proposing an upward review of the salaries of public office holders.
He added that stagnant salaries had crippled universities’ ability to attract quality lecturers, worsened morale, and affected output.
Piwuna said, “Well, from experience, Nigerian elites or the political class always look after themselves. So, we’re not surprised that the arms of government that Nigerians are most dissatisfied with are the ones that are getting the pay rise, while those who work day and night to ensure that the country keeps moving, who are making tangible contributions to the growth of this country, are being neglected.
“Our salaries have remained stagnant, and that has affected the quality of lecturers that we can attract into the universities. That has also affected our morale, and because our morale is low, certainly the output would also be affected. And so our salaries have been a major area of concern for our members.
READ ALSO:JUST IN: ASUU Threatens Fresh Strike, Issues 3 Weeks Ultimatum To Nigerian Govt
“Our salaries, our condition of service have always been a product of collective bargaining. And the last time this was done was in 2009. Talking about increases, for instance, this government has made an increase through the minimum wage, but all that was added to our salaries, and it’s for every public service, is N40,000.
“So, professors that were earning a little over N400,000 have still not been able to get to the N500,000 mark that you’re talking about, except for professors that have had annual increases for maybe 10, 20 years.”
In the same vein, a Senior Lecturer, Department of Economics, University of Lagos, Prof. Tunde Adeoye, urged the Federal Government to urgently review salaries of lecturers to avert another industrial strike.
According to him, the Federal Government needs to be sensitive to the plight of lecturers and engage them in renegotiating the 2009 agreement, adding that the major issue is improving the salary structure of academics.
Adeoye stressed the need for the Federal Government to increase the salaries of university lecturers to reflect the current economic realities in the country.
READ ALSO:JUST IN: Crisis In UniAbuja As ASUU Faction Declares Indefinite Strike
He added that the salary of a professor in a Nigerian university was about N500,000 without any deductions, adding that after deductions, it comes to about N300,000.
He noted that in some African countries like Kenya and Zimbabwe, lecturers were paid better than in Nigeria, and urged the federal government to make concerted efforts toward improving the living standards of lecturers and their condition of service to prevent brain drain.
Adeoye said, “The ASUU members equally have families and aged parents to cater for. As it is now, many of our members cannot pay their house rents.
“Many of our members who were sick have died, while some with hypertension cannot even afford to buy their routine drugs.”
In the same vein, Secretary of the Committee of Vice Chancellors, Prof. Andrew Haruna, faulted successive Nigerian governments for neglecting the education sector and reducing the value of academics to mere salary figures, stressing that what lecturers truly need is an enabling environment to teach, research, and contribute meaningfully to national development.
READ ALSO:Give N50bn Budgeted For Loan To Students As Grant – ASUU Tells FG
Speaking with The PUNCH, Haruna, who has taught in over 10 European universities, lamented that academics in Nigeria were undervalued compared to their peers abroad.
Haruna said, “I have taught in many countries in Europe. If you go through my CV, you will see that I taught in more than 10 different universities in Europe, and I was trained in Europe, and I came back to Nigeria to help. Now, if I were trained in Europe, I would know what I am worth.
“So, if you get just a meagre salary in Nigeria, just because I have decided to come and contribute, it simply shows the kind of leadership we have. Do they really respect the Nigerian citizens? If they respect the Nigerian citizens, do they really respect the Nigerian academia?”
He argued that the problem was not just low pay, but the lack of infrastructure and conducive conditions for intellectual work.
On the international value of academics, he stressed that professors remained globally mobile, unlike many other professions.
He added, “If I earn $4,000 a month and I decide to come to Nigeria and you pay me N400,000, you simply show the kind of value you put on me. Professors, academics, are highly mobile. We are the only category of workers who have a professor in Nigeria, a professor in America, and a professor in Germany. Just like the degree we get in a Nigerian university, the Nigerian student will go to America and do a master’s degree, and go to Japan and do a PhD. So, this is the only job that is international.”
News
JUST IN: Immigration Hikes Passport Fees To N100,000, N200,000
Published
1 hour agoon
August 28, 2025By
Editor
The Nigeria Immigration Service has announced an upward review of the cost of obtaining the Nigerian Standard Passport, effective September 1, 2025.
According to a statement signed by the Service Public Relations Officer, ACI AS Akinlabi, on Thursday, the new fees will apply only to applications made within Nigeria.
“The review which only affect Passport Application fees made in Nigeria, now set a new fee thresholds for 32-page with 5-year validity at N100,000 and 64-page with 10-year validity at N200,000,” the statement read.
READ ALSO:FG Launches Passport Front Office For Senior Public Officials
However, the statement clarified that application fees for Nigerians in the diaspora remain unchanged at $150 for the 32-page, five-year passport and $230 for the 64-page, 10-year passport.
The service said the adjustment was aimed at maintaining the quality and integrity of the Nigerian passport while ensuring accessibility for citizens.
More details soon..
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