“My simple message to my supporters and great people of konshisha is that if you love Nigeria, you must come out to vote,”
They say “The best antidote to the rigging of elections is a high voter turnout. Remember, none of us is greater than all of us.”
I, therefore, urge you to come out and vote based on your conscience and conviction.”
“Shun violence, shun hatred. Come out this Saturday and vote peacefully for the Nigeria of your choice. Remember, we are all brothers and sisters born from the womb of one mother Nigeria.”
Friday, 15 February 2019
Thursday, 14 February 2019
INVITATION TO TENDER FOR FHA SHOPPING COMPLEX
FEDERAL HOUSING AUTHORITY (FHA) IN LINE WITH THE INFRASTRUCTURE CONCESSION REGULATORY COMMISSION (ICRC) ESTABLISHMENT ACT (2005) AND NATIONAL POLICY ON PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP (N4P)
INVITATION TO TENDER
Background
1. The Federal Housing Authority (FHA) is a wholly owned agency of the Federal Government of Nigeria, established vide Decree 40 of 1973 now cited as Act CAP F-14 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004 and is supervised by the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing. The Authority which became partially commercialized in accordance with Decree No 25 of 1988 is charged with among others, the responsibility to acquire, construct and maintain dwelling houses, schools, communal and commercial buildings and other structures.
2. The Federal Housing Authority (FHA) has a landed property on a parcel of land measuring about 2,500m² located along the 3rd Avenue, Gwarinpa II, Abuja. In order to optimize the use of the land, FHA plans to develop a modern commercial shopping complex on the land.
3. In line with the FHA’s mandate of developing commercial buildings, and in compliance with the requirements of the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (Establishment Act) 2005, FHA hereby invites suitably qualified firms to submit Proposal for Qualification to develop the shopping complex.
4. The successful firm shall be required to finance and construct the shopping complex in accordance with FHA’s specifications. Upon development of the shopping complex, the successful investor shall in conjunction with FHA sell the completed shops to the general public.
5 Prospective bidders should note that there is a private proponent who had submitted proposal on the project, however in order to ensure transparency, competition and value for money, the project will be procured under a “Swiss Challenge Procurement methodology” which requires that if the original project proponent is
not the most responsive bidder, it will be given the right to match the most responsive bid to win the concession. However, if it is unable to match the most responsive bid, the most responsive bid then wins the
Swiss Challenge PPP procurement and becomes the preferred Project Proponent.
Method of Application:
6. The investor/developer for the shopping complex will be procured through a competitive bidding, following a two-stage bid process: a pre-qualification stage and a proposal stage. In order to be pre-qualified, prospective bidders, who must be local/international investor/developer must be able to demonstrate a track record of successful financing, construction and management of a shopping complex in accordance with the approved design by FHA.
7. Interested applicants should provide the following information:
7.1 Full name of company and contact person, postal address, telephone/fax numbers, and e-mail address. If a consortium or joint venture, provide names and contact details of consortium members, evidence of Association or joint venture agreement, and indicate the lead firm in the consortium or joint venture;
7.2 Ownership structure of bidding entity. Name(s) of major shareholders and percentage shareholding of participants in the bidding entity;
7.3 Evidence of Incorporation with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) or its equivalent for foreign firms;
7.4 Audited financial statements for the most recent three (3) years (2015-2017);
7.5 Technical and operational capabilities including:
i. Track record of financing and constructing a shopping complex in the most recent three (3) years;
ii. Local and regional (Africa) experience in financing and constructing shopping complex;
7.6 Payment of non-refundable fees of N100,000.00 (One hundred Thousand naira) should be through REMITA
platform, evidence of which must be attached to the invitation to tender.
7.7 Detail of the RfQ requirements can be downloaded from the FHA website: www.fha.gov.ng
Submission of Qualification documents:
8 Qualification documents and Financial Bids must be packaged as separate documents and submitted in one (1) original and five (5) printed copies in a sealed envelope clearly marked “QUALIFICATION / BID FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF FHA SHOPPING COMPLEX ABUJA”. An electronic copy on USB drive or CD-ROM version should also be included.
9 Submitted documents must be delivered not later than 12:00 hours on Wednesday, July 11th, 2018 at the following address:
Head, Public Private Partnership (PPP) Unit Federal Housing Authority 26, Julius Nyerere Crescent Asokoro – Abuja
10 All RfQs will be opened same day immediately after close of bids submission
11 Interested applicants may obtain further information via email: akin.olagbemiro@fha.gov.ng, or at the above address from 9.00am to 3.00pm, Monday through Friday (except public holidays).
12 Following the evaluation of submitted qualification documents, only Request for Proposal (RFP) and other bidding
documents of bidders who meet the minimum criteria will be analysed.
13 Qualification documents must be in English Language only.
14 FHA shall not be responsible for the cost of any submission.
15 This advertisement shall not be construed as a commitment on the part of FHA to appoint any firm nor shall it entitle any firm submitting documents to claim any indemnity.
16 FHA reserves the right to take final decision on any of the documents received in the RfQ and to verify the authenticity of any claims made on the documents submitted by the companies.
17 Submissions via courier will be accepted only if delivered within the submission time shown above.
18 Request for Qualification through email or fax will not be accepted.
Signed:
Management
The Moment Buhari Arrived Dikko Stadium In Katsina For His Final Campaign
This is inside Muhammadu Dikko Stadium, Katsina, the venue for APC Presidential Campaign Rally.
Buhari arrive in style at the stadium as mammoth crowd cheer him up. Never seen something like this, President Muhammadu Buhari is purely loved by majority of people.
As shared by Bashir Ahmad he wrote :
This is how President Muhammadu Buhari makes a ‘grand’ entry into Muhammadu Dikko Stadium for his final presidential campaign rally. The reception can’t be described by any word, it is just SPEECHLESS.http://www.thenaijafame.com.ng/2019/02/swag-stunning-and-massive-here-is.html?m=1
Buhari arrive in style at the stadium as mammoth crowd cheer him up. Never seen something like this, President Muhammadu Buhari is purely loved by majority of people.
As shared by Bashir Ahmad he wrote :
This is how President Muhammadu Buhari makes a ‘grand’ entry into Muhammadu Dikko Stadium for his final presidential campaign rally. The reception can’t be described by any word, it is just SPEECHLESS.http://www.thenaijafame.com.ng/2019/02/swag-stunning-and-massive-here-is.html?m=1
Imama Amapakabo Invites 33 Home-based Players For U-23 AFCON Qualifier vs Libya
Imama Amapakabo invites-based players for U-23 AFCON qualifier against Libya
Nigeria’s U-23 team will begin their quest for the 2020 Olympics when they take on Libya in the AFCON qualifier scheduled for March.
Nigeria's U-23 team won a bronze medal at the 2016 Olympic Games
Head coach of Nigeria’s U-23 men’s national team Imama Amapakabo has listed 33 home-based players for their upcoming qualifier against Libya.
Nigeria were drawn against Libya in the preliminary qualifier for the Africa U23 Cup of Nations.
One month to the encounter, Amapakabo who is a veteran manager in the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) has called up 33 players based in the country to prosecute the qualifiers.
Nigeria’s U-23 team are the reigning champions of the competition after their triumph in Senegal back in December 2015 and are aiming to recreate their exploits by booking a place at the 2019 edition.
Amapakabo will be assisted by new Remo Stars boss Kennedy Boboye , MFM FC head coach Fidelis Ilechukwu and Etta Egbe who is the Goalkeepers’ Trainer.
Nigeria’s U-23 team are expected to face off with Libya in the away fixture scheduled b y the Libya Football Federation (LFF) for either Tuesday, March 20 or Wednesday, March 21 in Tunisia as Libya cannot play international games in their country..
The second leg is expected to be confirmed by the Amaju Pinnick led Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) for the return leg to hold on Monday, March 25.
Winners of the tie still have a qualification game to go through before booking a spot at the U-23 AFCON scheduled to hold in Egypt from Friday, November 8 till Friday, November 22, 2019 which holds spots to the football event of the 2020 Olympic Games.
Imama Amapakabo is expected to lead Nigeria's U-23 team in the qualification series [NFF] Imama Amapakabo is expected to lead Nigeria's U-23 team in the qualification series [NFF]
Of the 33 players called up by Amapakabo, there are four goalkeepers, nine defenders, 10 midfielders and 10 forwards and are expected to resume training in Abuja where they will be trimmed down.
Amapakabo has called four goalkeepers, nine defenders, 10 midfielders and 10 forwards for the assignment.
33 players for Libya
Goalkeepers: Amos Benjamin (Bayelsa United); Makanjuola Adewale (Ekiti United); Anozie Chinedu (FC IfeanyiUbah); Stanley Nwabili (Enyimba FC)
Nigeria Ddream Team VI won the U-23 Africa Cup of Nations in Senegal Nigeria Ddream Team VI won the U-23 Africa Cup of Nations in Senegal
Defenders: John Lazarus (Lobi Stars); Chidera Eze (Rangers International); Anumudu Udochukwu (Lobi Stars); Austin Ugochukwu (Kano Pillars); Chinedu Ajana (Katsina United); Kehinde Adeyemi (Sunshine Stars); Ndah Olisah (Remo Stars); Chinwendu Ali (Yobe Stars); Ebube Duru (Lobi Stars)
Midfielders: Ayobami Junior (Shooting Stars); Isah Ndala (Nasarawa United); William Ukeme (Wikki Tourists); Olatunji Matthew (Enyimba FC); Seth Mayi (Plateau United); Yusuf Maigoro (Kano Pillars); Iwuala Anayo (Kada City); Cletus Emotan (Rivers United); Chigozie Obasi (Sunshine Stars); Chukwudi Agor (ASJ, Owerri)
Forwards: Etiboy Akpan (Akwa United); Anas Mohammed (Shooting Stars); Chijoke Alaekwe (FC IfeanyiUbah); Shamman Tanze (Kano Pillars); Agboola Joshua (Katsina United); Wari Williams (Nasarawa United); Ebuka Okeke (Lamray United); Tolu Ojo (Remo Stars); Wasiu Alalade (Enyimba FC); Solomon Nsude (FC IfeanyiUbah) https://www.pulse.ng/sports/football/3-home-based-players-for-u-23-afcon-qualifier-against-libya/9rzk3tl
Nigeria’s U-23 team will begin their quest for the 2020 Olympics when they take on Libya in the AFCON qualifier scheduled for March.
Nigeria's U-23 team won a bronze medal at the 2016 Olympic Games
Head coach of Nigeria’s U-23 men’s national team Imama Amapakabo has listed 33 home-based players for their upcoming qualifier against Libya.
Nigeria were drawn against Libya in the preliminary qualifier for the Africa U23 Cup of Nations.
One month to the encounter, Amapakabo who is a veteran manager in the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) has called up 33 players based in the country to prosecute the qualifiers.
Nigeria’s U-23 team are the reigning champions of the competition after their triumph in Senegal back in December 2015 and are aiming to recreate their exploits by booking a place at the 2019 edition.
Amapakabo will be assisted by new Remo Stars boss Kennedy Boboye , MFM FC head coach Fidelis Ilechukwu and Etta Egbe who is the Goalkeepers’ Trainer.
Nigeria’s U-23 team are expected to face off with Libya in the away fixture scheduled b y the Libya Football Federation (LFF) for either Tuesday, March 20 or Wednesday, March 21 in Tunisia as Libya cannot play international games in their country..
The second leg is expected to be confirmed by the Amaju Pinnick led Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) for the return leg to hold on Monday, March 25.
Winners of the tie still have a qualification game to go through before booking a spot at the U-23 AFCON scheduled to hold in Egypt from Friday, November 8 till Friday, November 22, 2019 which holds spots to the football event of the 2020 Olympic Games.
Imama Amapakabo is expected to lead Nigeria's U-23 team in the qualification series [NFF] Imama Amapakabo is expected to lead Nigeria's U-23 team in the qualification series [NFF]
Of the 33 players called up by Amapakabo, there are four goalkeepers, nine defenders, 10 midfielders and 10 forwards and are expected to resume training in Abuja where they will be trimmed down.
Amapakabo has called four goalkeepers, nine defenders, 10 midfielders and 10 forwards for the assignment.
33 players for Libya
Goalkeepers: Amos Benjamin (Bayelsa United); Makanjuola Adewale (Ekiti United); Anozie Chinedu (FC IfeanyiUbah); Stanley Nwabili (Enyimba FC)
Nigeria Ddream Team VI won the U-23 Africa Cup of Nations in Senegal Nigeria Ddream Team VI won the U-23 Africa Cup of Nations in Senegal
Defenders: John Lazarus (Lobi Stars); Chidera Eze (Rangers International); Anumudu Udochukwu (Lobi Stars); Austin Ugochukwu (Kano Pillars); Chinedu Ajana (Katsina United); Kehinde Adeyemi (Sunshine Stars); Ndah Olisah (Remo Stars); Chinwendu Ali (Yobe Stars); Ebube Duru (Lobi Stars)
Midfielders: Ayobami Junior (Shooting Stars); Isah Ndala (Nasarawa United); William Ukeme (Wikki Tourists); Olatunji Matthew (Enyimba FC); Seth Mayi (Plateau United); Yusuf Maigoro (Kano Pillars); Iwuala Anayo (Kada City); Cletus Emotan (Rivers United); Chigozie Obasi (Sunshine Stars); Chukwudi Agor (ASJ, Owerri)
Forwards: Etiboy Akpan (Akwa United); Anas Mohammed (Shooting Stars); Chijoke Alaekwe (FC IfeanyiUbah); Shamman Tanze (Kano Pillars); Agboola Joshua (Katsina United); Wari Williams (Nasarawa United); Ebuka Okeke (Lamray United); Tolu Ojo (Remo Stars); Wasiu Alalade (Enyimba FC); Solomon Nsude (FC IfeanyiUbah) https://www.pulse.ng/sports/football/3-home-based-players-for-u-23-afcon-qualifier-against-libya/9rzk3tl
First Flight Lands At Bayelsa International Airport Built By Gov. Dickson
Below are photos of the first historic flight to land at Bayelsa International Airport built by Governor Henry Seriake Dickson, Governor of Bayelsa State.He was in the flight when it landed.
http://www.trezzyhelm.com/2019/02/first-flight-lands-at-bayelsa.html
http://www.trezzyhelm.com/2019/02/first-flight-lands-at-bayelsa.html
Taraba Govt Sacks Husband Of Woman Who Died In APC Rally Stampede
Taraba State Government has sacked Alhaji Haruna Kawuwa who is the husband of Safiya who died along with eight others in a stampede during the APC presidential rally in Jalingo last Thursday.
Haruna Kawuwa, before his sack, was Head of Local Government Administration (HOLGA) in Ardo-Kola Local Government Council in the state.
Haruna’s sack was contained in a letter with reference no LGSCSAR/S/vol1334 and dated 13 February 2019. It was signed by the Permanent Secretary Local Government Service Commission, Malam Lawal Yakubu.
The letter, however, did not disclose the offence committed by late Safiya’s husband but it was gathered that Governor Darius gave the order for the sacking of Malam Haruna for allowing his wife to attend an APC rally.
The junior brother of Mr. Abel Peter Diah, Speaker of Taraba State House of Assembly has been appointed to replace Malam Haruna.
Meanwhile, All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state has condemned the sacking of Malam Haruna Kawuwa.
The publicity secretary of the party, Mr Aaron Artimas said the action of the state government was undemocratic and inhumane.
https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/taraba-govt-sacks-husband-of-woman-who-died-in-apc-rally-stampede.html
Haruna Kawuwa, before his sack, was Head of Local Government Administration (HOLGA) in Ardo-Kola Local Government Council in the state.
Haruna’s sack was contained in a letter with reference no LGSCSAR/S/vol1334 and dated 13 February 2019. It was signed by the Permanent Secretary Local Government Service Commission, Malam Lawal Yakubu.
The letter, however, did not disclose the offence committed by late Safiya’s husband but it was gathered that Governor Darius gave the order for the sacking of Malam Haruna for allowing his wife to attend an APC rally.
The junior brother of Mr. Abel Peter Diah, Speaker of Taraba State House of Assembly has been appointed to replace Malam Haruna.
Meanwhile, All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state has condemned the sacking of Malam Haruna Kawuwa.
The publicity secretary of the party, Mr Aaron Artimas said the action of the state government was undemocratic and inhumane.
https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/taraba-govt-sacks-husband-of-woman-who-died-in-apc-rally-stampede.html
Wednesday, 6 February 2019
Unity Schools: Solving Nigeria’s Disunity Problem
The biggest problem in Nigeria is not corruption as many would believe. The biggest problem Nigeria has is disunity. The disunity in Nigeria translates into other problems like tribalism, corruption, lawlessness etc.
While many would want to argue that the greatest problem facing Nigeria is corruption, I beg to disagree. Fighting corruption as we have always done has not solved many of the problems plaguing Nigeria.
Nigeria is a country that is currently divided along strong religious and ethnic lines. Our nation is highly diverse with over 250 ethnic groups. More than 500 languages are spoken within the confines of Nigeria.
In many cases, diversity is a blessing. In Nigeria, diversity is the main cause of disunity. How does one bring the various groups that make up Nigeria under one common umbrella?
The Federal Government had the perfect answer: encourage unity and cooperation among Nigerian youths. After the civil war, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) program was created to promote unity and development of common ties among Nigerian youths. For decades, this system worked.
In recent times, the NYSC has ceased to serve its basic function: promoting unity and common ties. The Federal Government had the right idea of promoting unity among the youths. The youths are the future of Nigeria.
Encouraging unity and common ties used to start before the university level. The many Unity Schools the Federal Government established were the fertile ground for sowing unity among Nigerians. But sadly, we’ve neglected our sacred duties.
Unity schools are secondary schools which were established and funded by the Federal Government. The purpose of these special secondary schools was to provide good education while fostering unity and ties among Nigerian children from different backgrounds.
The first Unity school established was King’s College which opened its doors in 1909. This was followed by the establishment of Queen’s College in 1927. After independence, three more schools were established in Warri, Sokoto, and Okposi.
Between 1973 and 1974, 17 more Unity Schools were created. Their development came after the 3- year Nigerian civil which threatened to destroy the entity known as Nigeria. In these colleges, students from both North and South interacted without ethnic and religious biases.
National unity was promoted as children from different cultures, ethnic groups, religions, and backgrounds are nurtured together. Friendships that span lifetimes were forged in Unity Schools. It was a golden time for the Nigerian dream.
These days, the standards in Unity schools have fallen below that of other schools. Lack of proper funding, teaching equipment, and amenities have laid waste to what was once the beacon of learning and Unity in Nigeria.
To solve the many ethno-religious problems plaguing Nigeria today, we have to go back to the basics. The Unity schools served a purpose which is still very important today. Fostering unity and brotherly love amidst the various tribes of Nigeria is just as important now as it was after the civil war.
Increased funding and proper management will breathe new life into the Federal Government Colleges. Creating more unity schools when the standard of existing ones are high will encourage parents to send their children to them. Our dream of achieving a united Nigeria is just some schools away from actualization.
Teacher Education and Development in Nigeria: An Analysis of Reforms, Challenges and Prospects
Although teacher education, both pre-and in-service, programs are offered in Nigeria by different teacher education institutions (as provided in the National Policy on Education), and varying degrees of success recorded, various problems still confront the program with far reaching consequences in Nigeria’s educational system. This paper talks about the need for teacher education, the ideal teacher education, teacher education and national development, analyses the historical contexts of the teacher education reforms and development in Nigeria with emphasis on the roles of the Christian missions, the colonial administration and that of the Nigerian government after independence. It examines key recommendations of two commissions (Phelps Stokes and Ashby) and their implications to the reform and development of teacher education in Nigeria both during colonial era and after independence. The paper further discusses the influence of these and other reforms in shaping teacher education in Nigeria, the challenges still facing it, and finally suggests solutions and a holistic approach to better the lots of teacher education in Nigeria.
In Nigeria, like many other developing countries in the world, teaching is the most vital and strategic profession for national development. This is so because teaching is that important activity which makes possible the acquisition of knowledge and skills that brings about the mark of an educated and useful person in the society. Education remains a single major factor for national development. The teacher is central in this enterprise, and no tool has been able to replace the teacher yet; this is because no educational system can rise above its teachers. The teacher holds the remedy to the many problems ravaging Nigeria. The teacher’s efficiency matters in these regards. The central purpose of teacher education according to the NPE is to provide teachers with the intellectual and professional background for their assignment. Notwithstanding the laudable objectives and efforts made by various administration of Nigerian government, this paper concludes that although various Nigerian governments did a lot to improve the system, teacher education programs in Nigerian higher institutions are largely lacking in quality neither do they conform to international standards. This situation is mainly because of the governments’ inability to keep up their commitments in the education sector in a way that answers to the needs and the changing (socio-economic) dynamics of the country, in spite of the long years of the oil booms and the vast amount of foreign exchange earned.
In Nigeria, like many other developing countries in the world, teaching is the most vital and strategic profession for national development. This is so because teaching is that important activity which makes possible the acquisition of knowledge and skills that brings about the mark of an educated and useful person in the society. Education remains a single major factor for national development. The teacher is central in this enterprise, and no tool has been able to replace the teacher yet; this is because no educational system can rise above its teachers. The teacher holds the remedy to the many problems ravaging Nigeria. The teacher’s efficiency matters in these regards. The central purpose of teacher education according to the NPE is to provide teachers with the intellectual and professional background for their assignment. Notwithstanding the laudable objectives and efforts made by various administration of Nigerian government, this paper concludes that although various Nigerian governments did a lot to improve the system, teacher education programs in Nigerian higher institutions are largely lacking in quality neither do they conform to international standards. This situation is mainly because of the governments’ inability to keep up their commitments in the education sector in a way that answers to the needs and the changing (socio-economic) dynamics of the country, in spite of the long years of the oil booms and the vast amount of foreign exchange earned.
Tuesday, 5 February 2019
First papal mass held on Arabian peninsula
Tens of thousands of Catholics and several thousand Muslims have attended an unprecedented public celebration of Mass by Pope Francis, the first pontiff in history to visit the Arabian Peninsula.
More than 120,000 worshippers packed Zayed Sports City stadium and its surroundings in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, to see the Pope, who is in the Gulf country to promote inter-faith dialogue.
The UAE hosts about half of the two million expatriate Catholics living on the peninsula, home to the birthplace of Islam in neighbouring Saudi Arabia. The community includes large numbers of people from the Philippines and India.
"It is most certainly not easy for you to live far from home, missing the affection of your loved ones, and perhaps also feeling uncertainty about the future," the Pope said.
"The Lord specialises in doing new things; he can even open paths in the desert," he said at the end of a trip where he met with the grand imam of Egypt's Al-Azhar mosque and UAE leaders.
Francis entered the stadium in a white open top jeep to roars from the crowd. People wearing white baseball caps emblazoned with the visit logo packed the stadium stands and snapped pictures on their smartphones.
"For me as a Christian, this is one of the most important days of my life," said Thomas Tijo, a 44-year-old from India's southern state of Kerala, who lives in the UAE and travelled by bus in the early hours to get to the stadium.
"We are a long way from home and this is like a comforting blanket," he said, holding his three-year-old son, Marcus.
Organisers said Catholics from about 100 nations were expected to attend the Mass, along with about 4000 Muslims, including government officials.
The Pope, who arrived on Sunday at the invitation of Abu Dhabi's crown prince, has used the visit to condemn regional wars, including that in Yemen, the poorest country in the Peninsula, where the UAE is involved as part of a Saudi-led military coalition. He also called for greater cooperation between Christians and Muslims.
During the service the Pope spoke in Italian and English, which is widely spoken in the UAE where expatriates outnumber Emiratis nine to one. The congregation prayed for migrant workers and their families and for the ending of wars.
Priests and diplomats describe the UAE as one of the least restrictive environments in the Gulf for Christian worship, which is allowed in church compounds with special licences.
Steps To Planning A Successful Building Project
There’s a strong temptation to dive straight into home remodeling projects. The sooner you start, the sooner you’ll be done, right? Unfortunately, it doesn’t work that way if you haven’t done some essential planning up front. Each design professional and contractor runs his or her business in a different way, but homeowners usually need to follow the same steps to get to the construction phase.
Here are six crucial steps to help you plan for a successful home renovation, and the reasons they're so important for any project.
1. Choose a design professional. To create a plan and detailed scope of work, most homeowners hire either an architect or interior designer, and sometimes both. Every company does things a little differently, and design licensing varies in each state. Many designers work on projects that don’t involve major structural work or additions, and also offer assistance with material and color selections. Architects may take on a wide range of work, or work only on floor plans and permits, and leave the details of the electrical plan, baths and kitchen to another designer.
Selecting a design professional usually starts with an in-person meeting, which can take a few weeks depending on how many companies you are interviewing. This is your opportunity to understand the services that each firm offers and make sure they match up with what you are expecting. It’s also critical that you have a budget for your project in mind that you communicate clearly to the firm you hire, so the design can align with what you are planning to invest.
2. Create a plan. After choosing a design firm, it's time to start making a plan. There are usually at least two and sometimes three good ways to reach your design goals.
The plans are called schematic designs; they usually involve a rough layout of the floor plan and some simple views of the exterior of the home if there is an addition. It takes time for the design professional to work these out, and then usually another week or two for the homeowners to consider them and make decisions. If the project is larger or the homeowners want additional changes made to the schematics, this initial design phase can take several months.
3. Interview contractors. Contractors are frequently brought into the process once a final schematic design has been selected. Usually there is at least a general idea of how the home will look from the outside, a dimensioned floor plan and some preliminary material selections. With this much information, it’s possible to provide preliminary estimates of cost.
ARTIC
Contractors are often asked to estimate the schematic design as part of the interview process. It may take a couple of weeks to set up the interviews and generally at least two to three weeks after interviews to receive the estimates. Altogether it could take four to six weeks to interview candidates and receive estimates. After that you may want to call references, visit jobsites or do additional research before making a decision about the contractor you will hire.
4. Go shopping while others are engineering. Love to shop or hate to shop? This may determine whether you enlist a designer to help with your material selections. Even those who like to shop may be overwhelmed by all the options and want professional input. Do not underestimate the number of things that need to be selected, from doorknobs and windows to countertops and light fixtures. To really keep a handle on your project cost, it’s best to select every last thing ahead of construction. This will allow your contractor to tell you the prices for what you’d like and properly schedule material purchases based on lead times.
Allow yourself one to two months to choose everything. While you are shopping for tile and hardwood floors, your architect or designer will finalize construction drawings, work with a structural engineer on how the project will be built and put in the details required for permitting. If it all goes well, you will work on this step and the previous one concurrently and finish at the same time.
5. Get your permits. Depending on the scope of your project and where it’s located, permitting can take a day, months or even years. You should have some idea ahead of filing for permits about the length of the process, which will allow you to identify a likely start date for your project. Permit fees can range from a few hundred dollars to thousands of dollars, depending on where you live and how big your project.
6. Ready, set ... With the plan submitted for permits and material selections made, your contractor will be able to finish up pricing and write up a contract for construction. If the selected materials cost more than the budget allows, there may be a round of “value engineering,” which means changing scope of work or materials to reduce cost. By the time the contract is signed, your contractor will have identified the longer-lead items (like cabinets, windows, doors, tile and sometimes plumbing or electrical fixtures) and may even have them on order ahead of the start of construction, depending on the timing of your project.
By the time all of these steps are complete, it may be four to six months or even more since you started talking with design professionals.
The planning process can be lengthy, but each step you take will put you closer to starting your project with a clear vision of what’s to come. That investment of time on the front end means your entire construction team — design professional, contractor and you — can start the project on the same page with a clearly articulated plan. That makes it much easier say, “Go!” without any hesitation.
Monday, 4 February 2019
Federal Unity Colleges: Yesterday and today
The contents of that article and the analysis therein were not disputable. The arguments of the author, Eno-Abasi Sunday, and his analysis of the situation today in these schools were sound and worthy of attention of the proprietor of the institutions.
In summary, what is being highlighted is the parlous state of these once famous institutions of first choice for Nigerian parents due to poor funding, lack of maintenance and supervision.
A number of questions are propping up and discussions on the justification of the continued existence of the Unity schools. First, on the current state of the schools, has the Federal Government the capacity both financial and managerial to sustain them at the level that made them schools of first choice for Nigerian parents at the secondary level of education?
Second, the philosophy that underpinned the establishment of federal unity schools, though still relevant, is their continued existence justifiable based on the socio-economic challenges in the nation at present?
The reason for the creation of the Federal Government Colleges, among others, is to guarantee national integration and national building among Nigerian children if given the opportunity at a very tender age to live, learn and play together in ideal education environment as provided ab initio by the Federal Unity School established in the 1970s and 1980s.
The solidarity and espirit d’corps exhibited by the alumni and alumnae of King’s and Queen’s colleges nationally were the triggers that formed the birth of Federal Government Colleges which are today referred to as Federal Unity Schools with a common motto; ‘’Pro Unitatae’’.
The first set of Federal Government Colleges were three in number established in 1964 over 51 years ago. There were located as follows: one in the Eastern Region, at Okposi; the other in the Mid-Western Region at Warri and the third in Sokoto in the Northern Region.
These colleges and many others established later were lavished with resources, properly maintained and staffed with the best teachers available at the time. They were meant to be models to be copied by the various state governments. They produced men and women with broad-mindset from various backgrounds and culture with a common bond of unity – the school tie – that transcends tribalism and ethnicity. In fact, the unintended outcome is increased inter-ethnic marriages among their past students.
Today, the Federal Unity Colleges have become victims of rot and neglect; the Federal Government appears to have abandoned its responsibility; parent-teachers associations hire and fire teachers for Federal Government Colleges!!; the nation is so often treated with unpalatable stories involving the headships of Federal Government Colleges and Chairpersons of Parent-teachers Associations of their schools ( Guardian, 9, July, 2015).
However, although, the reasons for establishing the Federal Unity Schools are still valid today, but should the Federal Government lose sight of the current social, economic, and political realties at this time just to retain them? For example, insecurity that pervades the nation coupled with terrorism, displacement of people as well as human trafficking and kidnapping would not encourage any parent to send a child of 11 – 12 year old far from home to attend unity school outside his environment. Furthermore, the proliferation of private secondary schools, some of which are better equipped than the Federal unity schools, have provided parents alternatives choices.
In the light of the above, should the Federal Ministry of Education/ Federal Government not consider exit strategies for the discontinuation of the unity schools as they stand today? They not only consume a lot of national resources in their upkeep vis-Ã -vis other areas of Education, they have not been true to the goals of the founding fathers if judged by their current performances in the national public examinations.
The purpose of this memorandum is to share my thoughts on the exit strategy for the discontinuation of Federal Unity Schools if the government is thinking in this direction. The current reality is that unity schools although still desirable, are no longer sustainable on the long-run and for this and other reasons, I humbly make the following suggestions:
1. Choose any twelve of the most viable Federal Unity Schools in existence that is, two from each geopolitical zone and convert them into Federal Senior Secondary Schools of Science. The core curriculum will emphasise, Physics, Mathematics, Chemistry, Biology and Information, Communication and Technology (ICT).
2. Admission is by either national or state-wide common entrance examination at the end of the Junior Secondary Education.
3. To man the schools and to ensure staff of desired quality with relevant subjects, all the extant teachers in the unity schools need to be interviewed and re- assessed. The successful ones deployed to the new science secondary schools.
4. The rest that are not science oriented can be deployed to where they are needed in the ministry of education. Any surpluses can be offered the option of early retirement.
5. The exit strategy should be thought through thoroughly. There should be gradual phase-out of the student population and a time frame for further intake into year one of the federal unity schools.
6. King’s and Queen’s colleges should remain. They are part of our colonial history. They predate the federal government colleges.
In conclusion, it is my prayer that any decision by the Federal Government in respect of the continued existence of the Federal Unity Schools should be based on the current social and economic realities. Many things in life are desirable, they can also be affordable at times in short-run, but if they cannot be sustained in the long-run should the nation not re-assess its position?
Atiku Abubakar
Atiku Abubakar GCON (born 25 November 1946) is a Nigerian politician and businessman. He served as the 11th vice-president of Nigeria from 1999 to 2007 under the presidency of Olusegun Obasanjo. He is a member of People's Democratic Party.
In 1998 he was elected Governor of Adamawa State. While still Governor-Elect, he was selected by then presidential candidate Olusegun Obasanjo as his running mate. The duo went on to win elections in February 1999, and Abubakar was sworn-in as Nigeria's second democratically elected vice president on 29 May 1999. Abubakar's second term as Vice President was marked by a stormy relationship with President Obasanjo. His bid to succeed Obasanjo did not receive the latter's support, and it took a judgment of the Supreme Court to allow Abubakar contest after he was initially disqualified by the Independent National Electoral Commission on the grounds that he had been indicted for financial misconduct by an investigating panel set up at Obasanjo's behest. The Supreme Court ordered the electoral commission to restore Abubakar's name onto the presidential ballot. Abubakar ran on the platform of the Action Congress, having quit the PDP on account of his issues with President Obasanjo. Abubakar lost the election, placing third after Umaru Yar'Adua and Muhammadu Buhari of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP).
Abubakar is a co-founder of Intels, an oil servicing business with extensive operations in Nigeria and abroad. He is also the founder of Adama Beverages Limited, and the American University of Nigeria (AUN), both in Yola, Adamawa.
Early life
Atiku Abubakar was born on November 25, 1946 to a Fulani trader and farmer Garba Abubakar, and his second wife, Aisha Kande, in Jada village of Adamawa State. Atiku Abubakar became the only child of his parents when his only sister died at infancy. Atiku’s father and mother divorced before his father died in 1957 and his mother remarried. Atiku said:
“As a young boy growing up in Kojoli, my parents doted on me. They tried their best to provide for me and to ensure that I grew up in a wholesome environment of love and spirituality. My father saw me as a rare gift, a child of destiny.”
Eventually, his mother died in 1984 of a heart attack. Atiku Abubakar could not start school when he grew old enough to because his father was opposed to him obtaining Western education. When his not going to school was noticed, his father was arrested and jailed until he paid a fine. Consequently, Atiku Abubakar was admitted into Jada Primary School at the age of eight.
After completing primary school, Atiku was admitted into Adamawa Provincial Secondary School, Yola in 1960. He graduated from secondary school in 1965 after he made grade three[definition needed] in the West African School Certificate Examination. Abubakar then proceeded to attend Nigerian Police College, Kaduna. He left the college for a position as a tax official in the Regional Ministry of Finance. Later he received admission to study at the School of Hygiene, Kano in 1966. In 1967, he graduated with a diploma. That same year, Atiku Abubakar was admitted for a Law Diploma at Ahmadu Bello University on a scholarship. He graduated in 1969 and was employed by Nigeria Customs Service that same year.
Education
His father was opposed to the idea of Western education, and tried to keep Atiku Abubakar out of the traditional school system. When the government discovered that Abubakar was not attending mandatory schooling, his father spent a few days in jail until Aisha Kande's mother paid the fine
At the age of eight Abubakar enrolled in the Jada Primary School. He said:
“My father did not want me to go to school. He tried to hide me from the prying eyes of Native Authority officials who had embarked on compulsory mass literacy campaign in the region. My father soon discovered that he could not resist the wind of change that was blowing through the area at the time.
In 1960, he was admitted to Adamawa Provincial Secondary School in Yola where he did well in English Language and Literature, struggled with Physics and Chemistry and Mathematics. He graduated with a Grade Three WASSCE/GCE Certificate in 1965.
Following secondary school, Abubakar studied a short while at the Nigeria Police College in Kaduna . He left the College when he was unable to present an O-Level Mathematics result.He worked briefly as a Tax Officer in the regional Ministry of Finance, from where he gained admission to the school of Hygiene in Kano in 1966. He graduated with a Diploma in 1967, having served as Interim Student Union President at the school. In 1967 he enrolled for a Law Diploma at the Ahmadu Bello University Institute of Administration, on a scholarship from regional government. After graduation in 1969, during the Nigerian Civil War, he was employed by the Nigeria Customs Service.
Marriages and family
Abubakar has four wives and is the father of 28 children.
While at Idi-Iroko, Abubakar met nineteen-year-old Titilayo Albert, who he secretly married in December 1971, in Lagos, because her family was initially opposed to the union. On 26 October 1972, Titilayo delivered a baby girl they named Fatima. She later gave birth to Adamu, Halima and Aminu.
In January 1979, he married Ladi Yakubu as his second wife. "I wanted to expand the Abubakar family. I felt extremely lonely as a child. I had no brother and no sister. I did not want my children to be as lonely as I was. This is why I married more than one wife. My wives are my sisters, my friends, and my advisers and they complement one another," Abubakar has said. He has six children with Ladi: Abba, Atiku, Zainab, Ummi-Hauwa, Maryam and Rukaiyatu.
In 1983 he married his third wife, Princess Rukaiyatu, daughter of the late Lamido of Adamawa, Aliyu Musdafa. She gave birth to Aisha, Hadiza, Aliyu (named after her late father), Asmau, Mustafa, Laila and Abdulsalam. His fourth wife, Fatima Shettima, followed in 1986. Fatima gave birth to her first child Amina (Meena), Mohammed and two sets of twins Ahmed and Shehu, Zainab and Aisha then her last daughter Hafsat.
Abubakar later divorced Ladi, allowing him to marry, as his fourth wife (the maximum permitted him as a Muslim), Jennifer.
Business career
Abubakar started out in the real estate business during his early days as a Customs Officer. In 1974 he applied for and received a 31,000 naira loan to build his first house in Yola, which he put up for rent. From proceeds of the rent he purchased another plot, and built a second house. He continued this way, building a sizeable portfolio of property in Yola.
In 1981 he moved into agriculture, acquiring 2,500 hectares of land near Yola to start a maize and cotton farm. The business fell on hard times and closed in 1986. "My first foray into agriculture, in the 1980s, ended in failure," he wrote in an April 2014 blog. He then ventured into trading, buying and selling truckloads of rice, flour and sugar.
Abubakar worked in the Nigeria Customs Service for twenty years, rising to become the Deputy Director, as the second highest position in the Service was then known. He retired in April 1989 and took up full-time business and politics. He ran for the office of governor in the Gongola State (now Adamawa and Taraba States) in 1991, and for the Presidency in 1993, placing third after MKO Abiola and Babagana Kingibe in the Social Democratic Party (SDP) primaries.
Abubakar's most important business move came while he was a Customs Officer at the Apapa Ports. Gabrielle Volpi, an Italian businessman in Nigeria, invited him to set up Nigeria Container Services (NICOTES), a logistics company operating within the Ports. NICOTES would go on to provide immense wealth to Abubakar. Conflict of interest accusations have since trailed him on account of his involvement in business while a civil servant, who exercised supervisory authority.
On his part, Abubakar has defended the decision, saying his involvement was limited to the ownership of shares (which government rules permitted), and that he was not involved in the day-to-day running of the business. NICOTES would later be rebranded INTELS, and go on to feature prominently in accusations of money laundering levelled against Abubakar by the U.S. government during his Vice Presidency.
Abubakar's business empire also includes a beverage manufacturing plant in Yola, as well as an animal feed factory.
Early political career
Abubakar's first foray into politics was in the early 1980s, when he worked behind-the-scenes on the governorship campaign of Bamanga Tukur, who at that time was managing director of the Nigeria Ports Authority. He canvassed for votes on behalf of Tukur, and also donated to the campaign. Towards the end of his Customs career, he met Shehu Musa Yar'Adua, who had been second-in-command of the military government that ruled Nigeria between 1976 and 1979. Abubakar was drawn by Yar'Adua into the political meetings that were now happening regularly in Yar'Adua's Lagos home. In 1989 Abubakar was elected a National Vice-Chairman of the Peoples Front of Nigeria, the political association led by Yar'Adua, to participate in the transition programme initiated by Head of State Ibrahim Babangida. The Peoples Front of Nigeria included politicians such as Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, Babalola Borishade, Bola Tinubu, Abdullahi Aliyu Sumaila, Rabiu Kwankwaso and Sabo Bakin Zuwo.
Abubakar won a seat to represent his constituency at the 1989 Constituent Assembly, set up to decide a new constitution for Nigeria. The People's Front was eventually denied registration by the government (none of the groups that applied was registered), and found a place within the Social Democratic Party, one of the two parties decreed into existence by the regime.
First gubernatorial run
On 1 September 1990, Abubakar announced his Gongola State gubernatorial bid. A year later, before the elections could hold, Gongola State was broken up into two – Adamawa and Taraba States – by the Federal Government. Abubakar fell into the new Adamawa State. After the contest he won the SDP Primaries in November 1991, but was soon disqualified by government from contesting the elections.
First presidential run
A similar fate – disqualification by the military – would befall Shehu Musa Yar'Adua, Abubakar's friend and political mentor, in his 1992 bid for the presidential primary of the SDP. With no chance of contesting for the presidency, Yar'Adua decided to push Abubakar forward as the focal point of SDP's ambitions. Abubakar came third in the convention primary. But because MKO Abiola, the winner, had won by only about 400 votes a run-off was due. Abubakar stepped down for Abiola, asking his supporters to cast their votes for him, with an unwritten agreement that Abiola would announce Abubakar as his running mate. Abiola won the SDP ticket, and announced Babagana Kingibe, the runner-up, as his running mate.
Second gubernatorial run
In 1998 Abubakar launched a bid for the governorship of Adamawa State on the platform of the People's Democratic Party. He won the December 1998 elections, but before he could be sworn in he was tapped by the PDP's presidential candidate, former Head of State Olusegun Obasanjo, as his vice-presidential candidate. The Obasanjo-Abubakar ticket won the 27 February 1999 presidential election with 62.78 percent of the vote.
Vice-Presidency
Abubakar was sworn in as Vice-President of Nigeria on 29 May 1999. He presided over the National Council on Privatization, overseeing the sale of hundreds of loss-making and poorly managed public enterprises.
In 1999 he, alongside South African Deputy President Jacob Zuma, launched the South Africa Nigeria Binational Commission.
In 2006, Abubakar was involved in a bitter public battle with his boss, President Olusegun Obasanjo, ostensibly arising from the latter's bid to amend certain provisions of the constitution to take another shot at the presidency (for the third consecutive time).
In a November 2013 interview Abubakar is quoted as saying, regarding Obasanjo's alleged attempts to justify his third term bid: "[He] informed me that 'I left power twenty years ago, I left Mubarak in office, I left Mugabe in office, I left Eyadema in office, I left Umar Bongo, and even Paul Biya and I came back and they are still in power; and I just did eight years and you are asking me to go; why?' And I responded to him by telling him that Nigeria is not Libya, not Egypt, not Cameroun, and not Togo; I said you must leave; even if it means both of us lose out, but you cannot stay."
The debate and acrimony generated by the failed constitutional amendment momentarily caused a rift in the People's Democratic Party. The Nigerian National Assembly eventually voted against any amendments allowing Obasanjo to run for another term.
The Abubakar-Obasanjo face-off damaged the personal relationship between both men.
Second presidential run
On 25 November 2006 Abubakar announced that he would run for president. On 20 December 2006, he was chosen as the presidential candidate of the Action Congress (AC).
On 14 March 2007, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) released the final list of 24 aspirants for 21 April presidential election. Abubakar's name was missing from the ballot. INEC issued a statement stating that Abubakar's name was missing because he was on a list of persons indicted for corruption by a panel set up by the government. Abubakar headed to the courts on 16 March to have his disqualification overturned.
The Supreme Court unanimously ruled on 16 April that INEC had no power to disqualify candidates.
The ruling allowed Abubakar to contest the election, although there were concerns that it might not be possible to provide ballots with Abubakar's name by 21 April, the date of the election. On 17 April, a spokesman for INEC said that Abubakar would be on the ballot.
According to official results, Abubakar took third place, behind PDP candidate Umaru Yar'Adua and ANPP candidate Muhammadu Buhari, with approximately 7% of the vote (2.6 million votes). Abubakar rejected the election results and called for its cancellation, describing it as Nigeria's "worst election ever."
He stated that he would not attend Umaru Yar'Adua's inauguration on 29 May due to his view that the election was not credible, saying that he did not want to "dignify such a hollow ritual with my presence."
Post Vice-Presidency
Third presidential run
Following the 2007 elections, Abubakar returned to the People's Democratic Party. In October 2010 he announced his intention to contest for the Presidency. On 22 November, a Committee of Northern Elders selected him as the Northern Consensus Candidate, over former Military President Ibrahim Babangida, former National Security Adviser Aliyu Gusau and Governor Bukola Saraki of Kwara State.
In January 2011, Abubakar contested for the Presidential ticket of his party alongside President Jonathan and Sarah Jubril, and lost the primary, garnering 805 votes to President Jonathan's 2736.
Relationship with President Obasanjo
On 30 March 2014, Nigerian media reported that a delegation from the Northern Youth Leaders Forum visited Obasanjo at his home in Abeokuta and pleaded with him to "forgive your former vice-president, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of whatever political sin or offence he might have committed against you." In response Obasanjo is quoted as saying that "as a leader and father, I bear no grudge against anybody and if there is, I have forgiven them all."
Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM)
In August 2013, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) registered two new political parties. One of them was the Peoples Democratic Movement. Local media reports suggested that the party was formed by Abubakar as a back-up plan in case he was unable to fulfill his rumoured presidential ambitions on the PDP platform. In a statement Abubakar acknowledged that the PDM was founded by his "political associates", but that he remained a member of the PDP.
All Progressives Congress
On 2 February 2014, Abubakar left the Peoples Democratic Party to the join All Progressives Congress. with the intent of contesting the Nigerian presidency in 2015 on the party's platform.
On Friday, 24 November 2017, Abubakar announced his exit from the All Progressives Congress (APC), a party he helped to form.
Return to PDP
On December 3, 2017, via a Facebook Live broadcast, Abubakar announced his return to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The announcement followed consultations the former Vice President had with party leaders and stakeholders from across the country. He said he decided to 'return home' to the PDP now that the issues which made him leave the party had been resolved.
Fourth presidential run
Abubakar declared his candidacy for the presidential nomination of the PDP mid 2018 and won the nomination at its convention on October 7. He defeated 11 other contestants and got 1,532 votes, 839 more than the runner-up, the Governor of Sokoto State Aminu Tambuwal.
Atiku Abubakar continued his campaign rally in Kogi State as he promise to complete abandoned projects in the state.
Philanthropy and promotion of education
American University of Nigeria (AUN) is the first American-style university to be established in Sub-Saharan Africa. It was founded in Yola, the capital of Adamawa State as American University of Nigeria (AUN) by Abubakar in 2005. He has said that having benefited from the U.S. system of instruction as a young man, he was eager to make available in Nigeria an American trained faculty – emphasising critical thinking, small classes, student participation, problem-solving. AUN has received special recognition from Google.
In 2012 Abubakar donated $750,000 to the National Peace Corps Association in the United States, "to fund a new initiative featuring global leaders who will discuss Peace Corps's impact." It was the largest ever individual donation in the Association's history.
In his speeches and commentary Abubakar is a vocal advocate of the importance of Nigeria's educational system. In August 2013 he sponsored a students' essay contest to generate solutions to Nigeria's most pressing institutional educational challenges. Entrants were asked to write between 2,000 and 5,000 words on the topic 'More Learning to More People: How can Nigeria be more innovative in bridging its literacy and skills gap?'.
A longlist was announced on 21 October 2013, and the winners a week later. The joint first prize went to Kenechukwu Nneka Lily Nwagbo and Emeka Chigozie Ezekwesiri.
Upon the release of the dismal results of the May–June 2014 West African Examinations Council (WAEC) results, Abubakar said, in a statement:
″Our country’s educational institutions are clearly not providing quality learning. Our teachers need to be taught. This situation is a new development—of the past 10 years or so. The steady decline of education in Nigeria is a reflection of our country’s relegation of education to the background of national essentialities. That is where the change must begin. Teachers are important—as important as senators and doctors. Indeed, teachers determine the quality of senators and doctors. And so, the entire country stands to suffer the effects of this neglect in future. Nigeria must once again make education a priority. We must return to the basics.″
In a bid to alleviate the educational decadence in Northeastern Nigeria, Abubakar issued scholarship to 15 escapees of the Chibok schoolgirls kidnapping.
Jefferson William bribery and money laundering case in the United States
Abubakar is banned from travelling to the United States for a reason unknown to the public. Atiku was implicated in an international bribery scandal along with William Jefferson and one of Atiku's wives, Jenifer Atiku Abubakar. In January 2017, the U.S. government released a statement saying it would need the consent of the politician before it can disclose the true state of his immigration status to the United States. Abubakar has publicly claimed that the true reason is that his visa is still being processed, a statement the spokesperson for the Nigerian president called "curious".
However, In recent times, Atiku in company with Bukola Saraki visited the United States January 17, 2019 with the aid of Brian Ballard.
Honours and awards
In 1982 Abubakar was awarded the chieftaincy of the Turaki of Adamawa by Adamawa's traditional ruler, Alhaji Aliyu Mustafa. The title had previously been reserved for the monarch's favourite prince in the palace, as the holder is in charge of the monarch's domestic affairs.
In 2011, while celebrating the 50th anniversary of the US Peace Corps in 2011, the National Peace Corps Association (NPCA) – an independent 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organisation, separate from the Peace Corps, that serves as an alumni association for Returned Peace Corps Volunteers – honoured Abubakar with the Harris Wofford Global Citizen Award.
At the presentation of the award, the National Peace Corps Association described Abubakar as one individual who contributed to the development of higher education on the continent of Africa. "No private businessman in Africa has worked harder for democracy or contributed more to the progress of higher education than Atiku Abubakar," the NPCA said.
At the presentation of the award, the National Peace Corps Association described Abubakar as one individual who contributed to the development of higher education on the continent of Africa. "No private businessman in Africa has worked harder for democracy or contributed more to the progress of higher education than Atiku Abubakar," the NPCA said.
In June 2017, Abubakar was awarded the chieftaincy title of the Waziri of Adamawa, and his previous title of Turaki was transferred to his son Aliyu.
Social media
Abubakar has been active on Twitter since the 2011 elections, but stepped up his engagement in May 2013. In August 2013, he became the only second Nigerian politician to be verified, after Lagos State Governor Tunde Fashola. As at November 2015, he had more than 390,000 followers. He currently has 450,000 Facebook fans. Also in 2013, he launched a blog.
In an August 2013 post, he shared his views on the role and relevance of social media to governance and democracy in Nigeria.
True Federalism campaign
Abubakar launched the True Federalism campaign in 2017. He has been delivering speeches all over the country inspiring Nigerians on the need to restructure the country. He has been receiving massive endorsement for his stand on True Federalism.
He recently declared at an event where he was conferred the award Hero Of Democracy by Hall of Grace Magazine.
“Political decentralization will also help to deepen and strengthen our democracy as it will encourage more accountability. Citizens are more likely to demand accountability when governments spend their tax money rather than rent collected from an impersonal source.”
He also said: "True Federalism will encourage states to competes to attract investments and skilled workers rather than merely waiting for monthly revenue allocation from Abuja"
Many of his speeches have caused positive stir nationwide as Nigerians are supporting the idea of True Federalism which involves allowing states to have control over their resources most especially the South South and South East of Nigeria.
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