Connect with us

News

Umahi: Tinubu conceived Lagos-Calabar coastal highway idea when he was governor

Published

on

Please Kindly Share This Story

President BolaTinubu conceived the idea of the Lagos-Calabar coastal superhighways when he was governor, according to Transportation Minister, Engr. David Umahi.

He made the disclosure on Wednesday during the inspection visit to a segment of the 258-kilometre, three-lane Carriageway (Section 2, Phase 2A: CH 120+000-CH 378+000) in Gulumbe, Kebbi State.

Umahi said- “The idea for the Coastal Highway project, which runs from Lagos to Calabar, originated with the President during his tenure as Governor of Lagos State, nearly twenty-five years ago.”

At the site representing a significant portion of the 1,068-kilometre Sokoto-Badagry Super Highway, Umahi, whose comments were conveyed by Mohammed Ahmed, spokesman of the Ministry, described the project as a dream come true for him.

The Minister, who also commended the President for approving funds, as well as providing leadership for the construction of the Highway, said: “This is a true reflection of Mr. President’s stance that every region of this country matters, and no region should be left behind or shortchanged.”

He lashed at those he referred to as “darkening counsel without knowledge,” and reaffirmed that the four Legacy Road Projects initiated by the President encompass all six geopolitical zones of the country, adding that when aggregated, the Northern zones accounted for 52 percent of them.

Nasir Idris, Governor of Kebbi State, while expressing his gratitude to the President for his support and the numerous projects being executed in the state, emphasised that the inspection underscored the administration’s commitment to improving infrastructure and transportation as vital enablers of growth, as outlined in the eight-point Renewed Hope Agenda.

 

 

 

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

News

Court of Appeal stops Sanusi’s reinstatement as Kano Emir

Published

on

Please Kindly Share This Story

The court of appeal on Friday suspended the enforcement of its own ruling, which had overturned a federal high court decision invalidating the Kano state government’s repeal of the 2019 Emirate Council Law.

The appellate court’s decision puts a hold on its January 10 judgment, pending the outcome of an appeal filed at the supreme court

It would be recalled that on May 23, 2024, the Kano house of assembly passed the amended bill, which Abba Yusuf, the state governor, signed into law. This paved the way for Sanusi’s reinstatement as Emir of Kano.

The law repealed the 2019 version, which divided the Kano emirate into five jurisdictions and was relied upon to dethrone Muhammadu Sanusi II as emir in 2020.

Aggrieved by the decision, Aminu Agundi and Sarkin Babba of the Kano emirate approached the federal high court to restrain the respondents from enforcing, implementing, and operationalising the law that reinstated Sanusi.

On May 23, Abubakar Liman, a high court judge, ordered the defendants to “suspend” and “not give effect to the Kano State Emirate Council (Repeal) Law, 2024, as they affect all offices and institutions of the Emirate Council created according to the provisions of the Kano State Emirate Council Law, 2019”.

Although the defendants had challenged the court’s jurisdiction to hear the suit and the locus standi of the applicants, Liman on June 13 held that the applicants were at liberty to contest the legality of their dethronement.

In another ruling on June 20, Liman nullified all actions by the Kano state government repealing the Kano Emirates Council Law of 2019 and ordered parties to maintain the status quo pending the determination of the case.

However, in the verdict by the appellate court, Gabriel Kolawole, who delivered the lead judgment, held that the federal high court erred when it assumed the jurisdiction to hear the suit.

Kolawole then made an order to return the case file to the chief judge of the Kano state high court for reassignment to another judge.

Although Mustapha Mohammed and Abdul Dogo, the other presiding justices on the appeal court panel agreed with Kolawole that the federal high court had no jurisdiction to hear the issue, they disagreed that the matter should be sent back for retrial.

Consequently, the two justices struck out the proceedings of the federal high court for want of jurisdiction.

In a ruling on Friday, a three-member panel of the appeal court led by Okon Abang held that the two applications with numbers CA/KN/27M/2025 and CA/KN/28M/2025 filed by Aminu Agundi was meritorious.

Agundi, through his application filed on February 6, 2025, sought an order restraining the respondents from enforcing the appellate court’s judgment while an appeal was pending at the supreme court.

“The law is settled. The court is enjoined to exercise its discretion judiciously and in the interest of justice,” the court of appeal held while ruling on the application.

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading

News

Lawyer petitions Wike, gives VIO 7-days to vacate FCT roads

Published

on

Please Kindly Share This Story

A human rights activist and public interest lawyer, Abubakar Marshal, has warned the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, over the continued operations of the Directorate of Road Traffic Services, known as VIO, despite a court order barring them from impounding vehicles and imposing fines.

Marshal, in a letter dated March 12 to the minister, warned that failure to comply within seven days would result in legal action.

A Federal High Court in Abuja had, on October 20, 2024, restrained the Directorate of Road Traffic Services from stopping vehicles on the road, impounding or confiscating vehicles, and imposing fines on motorists.

Justice Evelyn Maha issued the order in a judgment on a fundamental rights enforcement suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/1695/202 declaring that the actions of the VIO either through their agents, servants, and assigns, from impounding, confiscating the vehicle of motorists, or imposing a fine on any motorist as doing so is wrongful, oppressive, and unlawful by themselves.

Despite the ruling, VIO officials have allegedly resumed operations, leading to confrontations with motorists.

Although the VIO has appealed against the judgment, the Appeal Court has yet to give its verdict on the matter.

However, Marshal, in his letter, accused the agency of openly defying the court’s order and also harassing motorists.

Marshal said, “Sadly, the officials of the Directorate of Road Traffic Services in utter violation of binding and subsisting orders, have resumed the stoppage, impounding, confiscation of cars and the imposition of fines within the FCT.

“We have been inundated with calls over the renewed illegal activities of the VIO within the FCT and have moved around the capital city to confirm their illegal operations, which have led to violent confrontations between some of these officials and vexed motorists. Video evidence abound.”

He further emphasized that as a senior member of the legal profession, Wike must ensure that agencies under his authority do not act in “egregious and contemptuous disdain of an express order of the court.”

Marshal said, “As a senior member of the legal profession, we are perturbed that officials under your command and authority could embark on such egregious and contemptuous disdain of an express order of court.

“On account of the foregoing dear minister, you are hereby required to employ the instrumentality of your good offices to restore compliance with the foregoing positive and binding orders pending the final determination of the appeal and cross-appeal processes.

“Please note that upon failing to comply with the foregoing request, seven days commencing from the date of receipt of this letter, we shall take all legal steps to commit you to prison for contempt of the orders of the court.

‘Whilst anticipating your cooperation and understanding, please accept my esteem and professional regards.”

 

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading

News

Kabir Dangogo: A Luminary in Multiple Realms, Farewell

Published

on

Please Kindly Share This Story

A Tribute by Aliu Akoshile

“How subconscious knowledge that Malam Dangogo had, indeed, endured protracted illness for the past year tempered my bewildering shock,” revealing and emotional tributes the former MD/Editor-in-Chief of Daily Times penned for the Union Bank’s ex-spokesman and doyen of PR

I was deeply saddened by the death of Malam Kabir Dangogo on Thursday, March 6, 2025. I had thought of him earlier that day, but I realised his mobile phone was out of reach. So, I forwarded my messages to his children – Ahmed, Sadiq, and Khadijah (the first and last of whom were named after his parents) – in the hope that their father was hale.

It was not until the early hours of Friday, March 7, that I saw Sadiq’s terse message breaking the grim news. I later discovered that Ahmed, too, had sent me a message at midnight, shortly after his demise. I responded to both of them with the traditional Islamic words of comfort prescribed for such a moment of grief – _innā li-llāhi wa-ʾinna ʾilayhi rājiʿūn_ (Indeed, we belong to Allah and, verily, to Him we will return). What tempered my bewildering shock was the subconscious knowledge that Malam Dangogo had, indeed, endured protracted illness for the past year.

Two years ago, he shared with me his plans to travel abroad for surgery. He had then just recovered from the debilitating impacts of a stroke. So, I understood his reservations about having the surgery done locally. But after weighing the pros and cons of the foreign option, we eventually decided on a private medical centre in the Idu axis of Abuja. I promptly arranged an appointment for him with the surgeon. But before his arrival from Katsina, I met with the doctor several times to revalidate our decision. On one occasion, the Turkiye-trained Ugandan surgeon graphically explained to me the intricate procedure of a thoracic vertebrae surgery. Reputed for his skill and experience, he was teaching me as a professor of medicine would to a sophomore in the medical school.

Thankfully, Mallam Dangogo’s surgery was successful, and he was discharged a few days later, after which he returned to Funtua to recuperate. He made a few follow-up visits to the hospital in Abuja. Interestingly, he never showed any sign of melancholy. Instead, he was cheerful and fully alert, occasionally discussing national and international affairs, his forte. During another visit, while we waited to see the doctor, he engaged in a discussion with a fellow patient an Islamic theological issue regarding the use of _tasbih_ (rosary beads) to count the Muslim litanies instead of using fingers!

Aside from displaying mental alertness, he was also meticulous about keeping records, especially of favours done to him, so he could graciously acknowledge and possibly return them. I recall our lengthy conversation in his hotel room before the surgery, during which he listed the financial support he had received from family, friends, and associates.

Although he hinted to me that he would make a public statement about the donors, I later discovered that he had published the appreciation in _The Guardian_ of July 9, 2023 in which he stated: “Aliu Akoshile made all the contacts with the hospital in Abuja, and he offered to send some money, but I declined. Akoshile proved to be a worthy friend indeed.”

I wondered why a man with such a towering figure and a heart of gold would consider me his friend. No! Mallam Kabiru Dangogo was more than a friend. He was both a mentor and a benefactor. His remarkable act of thoughtfulness transformed my life and career.

I first met Mallam Dangogo in 1997 at a meeting of the Lagos State chapter of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR). He was then a principal manager and head of the PR department at Union Bank, while I was the PR manager of Fayusuf Group, a holding company owned by Chief Fassy A.O. Yusuf, then Ogun State Commissioner for Information, Youth, Sports & Culture. I was impressed by his cosmopolitan demeanour, intellectual rigour, and panache as a quintessential public relations professional.

One day, I visited him in his office and sought advice on job transition. After hearing my story, he asked for my curriculum vitae, which I later delivered to him. From that moment on, I never brought it up again, and neither did he. However, Mallam Dangogo surprised me nearly three years later, in 2001. I will come to that presently. Previously, he had looked for me regarding a job opening in his department that he thought I would be suitable for. At that time, mobile phones were not in vogue, so I was unreachable having travelled. When I returned to Lagos and found his note, I rushed to his office, but it was too late. Francis Barde, whom I later met and we became friends, was the lucky guy! Having missed the opportunity to join Union Bank in 1998, I continued my work at Fayusuf Group, taking on higher responsibilities.

In 1999, Isiaq Ajibola and Mallam Kabiru Yusuf, my former colleague and executive editor, respectively, at Citizen magazine, recruited me as pioneer Lagos Bureau Chief/Assistant Editor of Weekly Trust, a publication they had founded. Weekly Trust later became the Daily Trust titles under the Media Trust Group, in which I’m now a shareholder.

I had settled and was already navigating the intricacies of managing the editorial, business, and operations units of the Bureau. Then suddenly I received an invitation to a job interview with no idea of the company or how I was invited. Anyway, to satisfy my curiosity, I got prepared and decided to attend the interview on the scheduled date. Over a dozen of us were called in, one after the other, to face the five-member interview panel chaired by Alhaji (Dr.) M. I. Yahaya, then immediate past group CEO of Union Bank, which also included Mr. Emmanuel Nnorom, a cerebral chartered accountant and current group CEO of Heirs Holdings.

Weeks later, I received a job offer from NUB International Bank (now a legacy bank of the FCMB) thus making history as the pioneer head of corporate affairs of NUB. I soon discovered that it was Mallam Kabiru Dangogo who submitted the CV I had given him nearly three years earlier without any prodding. This was an incredible moral lesson on fidelity to a mentee and an act of thoughtfulness that not many mortals, including myself, could have done. Between accepting the NUB offer and retaining my Weekly Trust job, I faced, perhaps, the biggest job transition dilemma in my life. I, of course, accepted the new job offer, not merely because of the huge difference in the remuneration but as a modicum of gratitude to Mallam Kabiru Dangogo, a gentleman per excellence.

With academic degrees from esteemed institutions such as Ohio University, Athens, and the University of Leicester, Mallam Dangogo was a trailblazer with a streak of enviable accomplishments in many areas. He was a certified teacher, professional broadcaster, experienced journalist, versatile editor, creative brand reputation manager, dedicated lecturer, astute communication consultant, and rigorous author.

After voluntarily retiring from Union Bank as Assistant General Manager, PR, in 2005, Mallam Dangogo founded Timex Communications, a PR firm and communication training institute in Kaduna, where he relocated. He also published a book, _Beyond the Banking Hall_ to espouse strategic public relations management. As a testament to his commitment to quality education, he gave me ten copies of the book to donate to mass communication departments of several universities.

As I reflect on Mallam Kabiru Dangogo’s life and legacy, I am reminded of his empathy and kindness. He was indeed a true friend, mentor, and benefactor who left an indelible mark on countless lives and careers, including mine. His passing also leaves a significant void in broadcasting, journalism, and especially the PR profession, where he made remarkable strides as a pan-African thought leader.
May his soul rest in peace.

Akoshile, former Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief of Daily Times, can be reached via eic@naturenews.africa

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading

Trending