Governor Henry Dickson and His Multi Billion Naira Office Complex

This is Henry Seriake Dickson. He is the Governor of Bayelsa State.

Henry Dickson. Relaxing in an unknown location.

Henry Dickson.
Relaxing in an unknown location.

Thisday reports that he is building an official office for himself at the cost of 33.8 Billion Naira. His media office has since denied the report. His spokesman claimed that the new office will cost the people of Bayelsa the sum of 3 Billion Naira. However, the Bayelsa State Commissioner for Works told journalists that the new office will cost the Bayelsa State government the sum of 33.8 Billion Naira. Listen to him here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZaymrsSwkB4

So where is the money coming from?

Okay. Let us say the Governor deserves a good office, but what about the Children of Bayelsa? Don’t they deserve good schools? The picture below is one of the many schools in Yenagoa, the capital of Bayelsa State.

Children learning without desk in a Primary School in Yenagoa

Children learning without desk in a Primary School in Yenagoa

Be the judge! Let us know what you think about Governor Dickson.

President Jonathan commiserates with Alamieyeseigha on his son’s death

President Goodluck Jonathan has reacted to news of the tragic death of the son of the former governor of Bayelsa State, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha.

In a statement signed by Reuben Abati, the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, the Jonathan expressed “shock and immense sadness” at the news of the death of Oyamuyefa Alamieyeseigha who died in yet unclear circumstances in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

The statement reads: “President Goodluck Jonathan has received with shock and immense sadness news of the death of Mr. Oyamuyefa Alamieyeseigha in Dubai at the weekend.

“On behalf of his family and the Federal Government, President Jonathan extends heartfelt condolences to Oyamuyefa’s father, Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha and his entire family on the untimely loss of a very dear son in the prime of his life.

“The President and the First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan share their pain and grief over the death of Oyamuyefa in circumstances that are still unclear.

“President Jonathan assures Chief Alamieyeseigha and his family of the full support of the Federal Government as they strive to unravel the true circumstances of the young man’s death.

“He prays that God Almighty will receive Oyamuyefa’s soul and comfort his grieving parents and siblings, he said.

President Jonathan served as deputy governor during Diepreye Alamieyeseigha’s administration in Bayelsa.

Alams, as he is fondly called, was later convicted on corruption and money laundering charges.

2016: ‘Nobody can stop Dickson’

Dickson of Bayelsa State for his re-election in 2016.

Commander of the militia group, General Akotebe Darikoro said that the Governor deserves a second term based on his outstanding performance and zeal to leave a lasting legacy for Bayelsa State.

 “Dickson will contest in 2016 because of two things; he is  qualified to do so under the law and secondly, he has performed well  to the extent that those who voted him in 2012 are willing to do so again,” he stated.

General Darikoro backed his support when he declared that, every Bayelsan governor who performs well has the right for two terms in office.

“Nobody has the right to stop him from contesting. All the appointments made by the governor cut across local governments, and the various developmental projects in the state are self explanatory. Now tell me why such a performing leader will not be re-elected to continue the good works he has put in place to be completed in the next four years?

“Our parents at home are thanking the governor for making them to feel the impact of good governance. Dickson has made them by putting food on their table. This was not experienced in the past administrations.

The governor copied the decentralization policy of Chief Melford Okilo of blessed memory when he was governor in old Rivers state, where local people especially in southern Ijaw felt the impact of his administration”, General Darikoro stressd.

NIGERIAN PILOT

GUBER RACE: MINISTERS, AIDES QUIT OCT 20

Ministers and aides of President Goodluck Jonathan who have governorship ambition have been given Monday, October 20, 2014 to quit the cabinet and their portfolios.

At the last count, nine ministers, a presidential aide and the secretary of a federal agency had indicated interests to become governors in 2015.

They are: Senator Bala Mohammed (Federal Capital Territory), Mr. Labaran Maku (Information), Chief Emeka Wogu (Labour), Mr. Nyesom Wike (State, Education), Dr. Samuel Ortom (State, Trade, Industry and Investment) and Senator Musiliu Obanikoro (State, Defence), Special Duties, Kabir Tanimu Turaki, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu (Health) and Tammy Danagogo (Sports). 

The presidential aide is Prof. Sylvester Monye and Barrister Ntufam Fidelis U. Ugbo is Secretary of the National Planning Commission, NPC.

While Senator Bala wants to succeed Governor Isa Yuguda of Bauchi State, Maku plans to replace Governor Tanko Al-Makura. Wogu is eyeing the Abia Government House while Wike and Danagogo are going for Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State’s seat.

Ortom is vying for Benue State Government House while Obanikoro wants to be the next governor of Lagos State. Prof. Chukwu has already been adopted as the PDP consensus governorship candidate of Ebonyi State, just as Prof. Monye wants to govern Delta State. Similarly, Ugbo is bidding for the governorship position in Cross Rivers State.  

Maku confirmed the deadline yesterday when he publicly declared his ambition to become the next governor of Nasarawa State at a special Mass and Thanksgiving at St. Patrick’s Parish, Akwanga, Catholic Diocese of Lafia, Nasarawa State.

The Minister, who donated N7.6 million on behalf of his family and his friends both in cabinet and outside for the Cathedral in Lafia, said all he had achieved from 1999 till date was by the grace of God.

He said it was time to sacrifice the comfort of a ministerial position at the center to go to Nasarawa State to stop the killings, miscarriage of justice and liberate the people in the state as the next governor.

The minister said he rose from grass to grace because of God’s favour as he is a child of peasant farmers who did not even record the date of his birth in a village that is likened to the biblical reference that “can anything good come out of Nazareth.”

Maku said he was not going to politics for the gains of office but to free his people.

He told the congregation to “thank God for me, just pray for me because by next week October 20th, anyone in the cabinet that wants to contest election must step down because the time has come for us to do that. It is time to make my interest known, by the grace of God, I will sacrifice the comfort of a minister to go into the wilderness. I want to sacrifice the comfort of the high office that I am in now to join my people in the wilderness in Nasarawa State to fight for peace and justice in this state.”

“There is too much bloodshed here, there is too much evil taking place here, there is too much destruction going on in Nasarawa State. The time has come for us to ask God to bring this era to an end. And it is only God that can do it, we are asking God that as we step out voluntarily which is very important to me, that as we go into the wilderness that God as He did for Moses he will lead us to cross the red sea of politics, rip water from the rock, give us manner from heaven, pull down the walls of Jericho.

“There may be giants out there, all over, but like Caleb we trust God, we are able to conquer, we are able to subdue. So all we need is prayers and thank God for what He has done for me, not for what we are looking at, being governor will not really add anything to my name, I think I have made all the name I could make in Nigeria. But this sacrifice is for my people, to liberate my people”, he said.

Citing Psalm 113, the minister said it was significant to him because like King David, “I’m here to thank God just like he took David from the bush to be king over his brothers, God has been good to me. The summary of my life is that I’m here by the grace of God. God can go to the unlikely places and raise a leader.”

In his sermon, Rev, Fr. Jerry Ngbaya, taken from the Gospel, Matthew 22:1-14, said banquet is celebrated by the kings that have the money and has nothing to do with the poor.

He said God appears at moments of pain and despair and invites His people to a banquet to wipe away their tears.

Rev. Fr. Lawrence Soja Ayabugu, presented the Catholic version of the Holy Bible to Maku and urged him not to engage in politics of acrimony.

Below is list of those to leave President Jonathan’s cabinet come 20th October, 2014.

NIGERIAN PILOT

#33.8 BILLION BAYELSA STATE GOVERNOR’S OFFICE: THISDAY NEWSPAPER WAS RIGHT, NEW EVIDENCE PROVES

New evidence has emerged that confirming that THISDAY newspaper did not make any typographic error when they reported that the Bayelsa State Governor’s Office would gulp 33.8 Billion Naira. An audio recording provided by Sahara Reporters TV caught  the State Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure gushing about how the 33.8Billion Naira edifice will be among the best in Nigeria and West Africa.

Below his the transcript of the recording.

Q: How Much has gone into that project?

Commissioner: “Well that contract sum is N33.8b and when you go there you’ll know the cost is worthwhile it, but in terms of how much have gone there I won’t be able to tell you but I know we’ve already sunk 50-60% of the contract sum that is why you see the contract is at the stage where it is now. When you got there they were doing the finishing which is more of electrical, plumbing and fitting. When we went into the chamber the ACs are already there. So I can tell you as soon as we give them additional money which we’ve promised to give to them in the next one or two weeks. We are targeting December thinking that the governor will spend the christmas in his new office all things being equal that is our target but you know man proposes but God disposes, all things being equal (ceterus peribus) as the economists will always say we believe we should be able to achieve that. We’ll speak full on other projects we’ve visited as the time comes but as you’ve asked as part of the building projects we’ve inspected I can assure you the money we’ve sunk there is worth it. You need to know what we’ve done there before we got to this stage that we are, we sand filled almost 2mitres from the ground and you can see despite that filling water is still threatening the area and what we’ve just discussed with the contractor is to do a concrete reinforcement about 3,4,5mitres away from the building towards the river side and if you go there you’ll see the quality of work not only the quality of work but the movement and flow within the office. And I keep saying this our governors office is one in Nigeria and to some extent one in West Africa, I don’t know of any governors office that will beat this in West Africa.”

Thisday Newspaper had on the 10th day of October 2014 broken the news about the outrageous amount the government is spending on the office. On its part, after over ten hours, the Government came out with a rebuttal, through the Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, claiming the newspaper erred and that the actual cost of the edifice is N3.8Billion, which in my not so humble opinion is also tragically outrageous.

The statement from Daniel Iworiso-Markson reads “Bayelsa state Government strongly debunks media report by a national newspaper (THISDAY) for erroneously reporting that, the new Governor’s office will gulp N33.8b as against N3.8b as disclosed by the commissioner for Works and Infrastructure, Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo, during a routine inspection of projects executed by the Governor Seriake Dickson administration.”

Concerned SAYELBANS, however challenged the Government to compel the Newspaper house to write a retraction if they indeed erred.

One such SAYELBAN is Don Afortunado Igbeta. Hear him ”

Don Afortunado IgbetaSAYELBA

15 hrs · BlackBerry Smartphones App ·

Parting Shot!!!

I’m challenging the Bayelsa State Government to enforce whatever means available to compel Thisday Newspaper to publish a corrective news article on the controversial 33.8Billion/3.8Billion new Governor’s Office building project, if truly it is Thisday’s error as claimed by the government.

Anything short of that…??? Your guess is as good as mine.

I rest my case on this issue.” (https://www.facebook.com/groups/sayelba/)

Listen to the Youtube audio

https://m.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DZaymrsSwkB4%26feature%3Dyoutu.be&h=PAQEbIq7A&s=1

IJAW YOUTH COUNCIL AND ITS UNENDING CRISIS IN LEADERSHIP, THE WAY FORWARD – By Lloyd lloyd

These are indeed interesting but highly disturbing times for the Apex youth body of our father land.

What started as personal acrimony within the National Exco between mobilization, president and secretary has degenerated to suspension and counter suspension.

Preamble

The issues in council today are clearly the issues that led to serious crisis during the election when constitutionalism was jettisoned and powerful interest override the general interest of the body. The result was the selection of a man who didn’t win the election because of certain interest . After several attempt from leaders to INC, to Pa clark and finally to Founding fathers represented in Hon Kingsley Kuku, T K Ogoriba, Dan Ekpebide, Von kemetimiware, Jonjon, Asari etc. the end point was the perfection of an agreement which ceded power to indents to be a caretaker president until after the election.

Issues

The issues could and would be sumarized to pre and post leadership.

Under the pre leadership are;

1. Lack of a legitimately conducted election
2. Interference of powerful actors.

Post leadership issues includes but not limited to the following;

1. High handedness
2. Lack of consensus building
3. Greed on the part of officers of council particularly the president
4. Ego
5. Lack of transparency
6. Arrogance
7. Lack of respect for national and zonal leaders
8. Refusing to allow pre election issues to go
9. Usurpation of functions of National officers
10. Refusal to honour the tenets of the lagos accord that specifies a clear terminal point of Caretaker Exco.

The above are clearly the issues that has ravaged the council to this near breaking point.

The way forward.

The founding fathers should quickly step in in accordance with our traditions embrace all the zonal leaderships and begin the process of an election. This is necessary as several attempts have been made by kuku to settle these crop of leaders to no avail. There is need to pursue this line of action because it was this attempt to marry in compatibles that led to the near no achievement of the Miabiye government which eventually gave birth to this crisis historically. The elders should not shy away from this position but should urgently in consultation with the three zonal leadership convoke a national convention and exercise powers of the convention and dissolve the udengs led government and begin the process of a free and fair election in conjunction with the constitutional stipulates. This will engender confidence and give the government legitimacy which the present one led by erstwhile udengs lacks. Ii am confident that this is the general expectations of the members of the council which will be free from any further dispute.

My candid opinion.

Nigeria’s ‘Mega Churches’: A Hidden Pillar of Africa’s Top Economy

The collapse of the guest house of The Synagogue, Church of All Nations (SCOAN) last month, in which 115 persons were killed probably drew attention to the books and operations of many of the modern churches in Nigeria. Given the size and spread of many of the churches, they have come to be referred to as “mega churches” as some of them are indeed big enough to sit as many as 200,000 worshippers under one roof.

Yet, the multimillion-dollar “mega churches” form a huge, untaxed sector of Nigeria, which is Africa’s top economy.

According to Reuters’ findings, hundreds of millions of dollars change hands each year in these popular Pentecostal houses of worship.

Some of the churches can hold more than 200,000 worshippers and, with their attendant business empires, they constitute a significant section of the economy, employing tens of thousands of people and raking in tourists’ dollars, as well as exporting Christianity globally.

But exactly how much of Nigeria’s $510 billion GDP they make up is difficult to assess, since the churches are, like the oil sector in Africa’s top energy producer, largely opaque entities.

“They don’t submit accounts to anybody,” says Bismarck Rewane, economist and CEO of Lagos consultancy Financial Derivatives. “At least six church leaders have private jets, so they have money. How much? No one really knows.”

When Nigeria recalculated its GDP in March, its economy became Africa’s biggest, as previously poorly captured sectors such as mobile phones, e-commerce and its prolific “Nollywood” entertainment industry were specifically included in estimates.

There was no such separate listing for the “mega churches”, whose main source of income is “tithe”, the 10 per cent or so of their income that followers contribute, as a matter of scriptural obligation.

As the churches have charity status, they have no obligation to open their books, and certainly don’t have to fill in tax returns — an exemption that is increasingly controversial in Nigeria, where poverty remains pervasive despite the oil riches.

The pastors argue that their charity work should exempt them from taxation.

“We use the income of the church to build schools, we use the income of the church to serve the needs of the poor,” David Oyedepo, bishop of the popular Winners Chapel, told Reuters in an interview. “These are non-profit organisations.”

Nonetheless, the surging popularity of the mega churches among the Christians who make up half of Nigeria’s 170 million population has propelled their preachers into the ranks of the richest people in Africa.

In 2011, Forbes magazine estimated the fortunes of Nigeria’s five richest pastors. Oyedepo topped the list, with an estimated net worth of $150 million.

He was followed by Pastor Chris Oyakhilome of Believers’ Love World Incorporated, also known as the Christ Embassy and popular with executives and politicians, on $30 million to $50 million.

T.B Joshua, pastor of the Synagogue Church of All Nations, at the centre of the recent diplomatic storm over the deaths in its guest house, was thought to have $10 million to $15 million.

The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) declined to comment on how churches fit into their GDP figures, but a source there said they were included as “non-profit”, which falls under “other services” in the latest figures.

In 2013, the category contributed 2.5 per cent of GDP, the same as the financial sector.

A former banker at United Bank for Africa (UBA), who declined to be named, recalled being approached five years ago by a church that was bringing in $5 million a week from contributions at home or abroad.

“They wanted to make some pretty big investments: real estate, shares,” he said. “They wanted to issue a bond to borrow, and then use the weekly flows to pay the coupon.”

In the end, he said, the bank turned down the proposal on ethical grounds.

One pastor bought N3 billion ($18 million) in shares in the defunct Finbank, which later merged with FCMB, after it was rescued in a bail-out in 2009, a fund manager who handled the deal told Reuters. The pastor used a nominee trust account to keep his name off the books.

In 2011, Oyakhilome was investigated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and charged with laundering $35 million of contributions to his church in foreign bank accounts. He denied all wrongdoing and the case was dismissed for lack of evidence.

Oyedepo’s headquarters, “Canaanland”, is a 10,500-acre (4,250-hectare) campus in Otta, outside the commercial capital Lagos. It comprises a university, two halls of accommodation, restaurants and a church seating 50,000 people, with a total overflow capacity of five times that.

“You can see that everything this man touches turns to gold,” Nigerian Agriculture Minister, Akinwumi Adesina, said in a speech at a reception for Oyedepo’s 60th birthday at Canaanland last month.

Other dignitaries present included twice-president Olusegun Obasanjo and former military ruler Yakubu Gowon. A choir sang gospel songs as the guests cut an elaborate six-tiered cake and popped fizzy grape juice out of champagne bottles in golden wrapping — alcohol is banned in Canaanland.

A spokesman said the church has 5,000 branches across Nigeria, and 1,000 more in 63 other countries across five continents. But Oyedepo’s empire also includes two fee-paying universities which he built from scratch, a publishing house for Christian self-help books, and an elite high school.

Other pastors have similarly diversified ways of getting the Gospel of Christian salvation out.

Oyakhilome owns magazines, newspapers and a 24-hour TV station, and Joshua draws miracle-seekers from all over the world with claims that the holy water he has blessed cures otherwise incurable ailments such as HIV/AIDS.

Guests entering Oyedepo’s birthday marquee in Canaanland would have seen a picture of the poor household in South-west Nigeria where he grew up, a testament to a rags-to-riches story that many Nigerians would love to emulate.

Like US televangelists, Winners Chapel preaches the “prosperity gospel” that faith in Jesus Christ lifts people out of poverty, and that message partly explains the explosion of the Pentecostal movement in sub-Saharan Africa, where misfortune and poverty are often seen as having supernatural causes.

“We see giving as the only way to be blessed. Blessing other people is a way of keeping the blessings flowing,” said Oyedepo, whose blessings include a Gulfstream V jet and several BMWs.

Asked about Forbes’ estimate of his fortune, Oyedepo told Reuters: “For me, to have a fortune means someone who has what he needs at any point in time. I don’t see myself as having $150 million stacked up somewhere. Whatever way they found their figures, I am only able to say I am blessed by the Lord.”

He said he could not estimate the church’s total revenues or expenditure on items such as salaries because the various departments, including education, were too diverse.

The enterprises on the Canaanland campus, from the shops selling cold sodas and bread, to a woman boiling instant noodles and eggs for breakfast in a lodge, to pop-up book stalls hawking Oyedepo’s prolific literary output, are owned by the church’s estate, which employs their staff on its payroll, workers at all the outlets, he told Reuters.

Winners Chapel’s Corporate Affairs department said the church employs more than 18,000 people in Nigeria alone.

Oyedepo says the wealth the church gathers is invested in expanding it, and that if he did not use a private jet, he would be unable to oversee its many foreign operations and still return to Otta every week on time for Sunday’s worship.

Britain’s Charity Commission says it is reviewing potential conflicts of interest in his finances, and last month the Home Office (interior ministry) barred him from Britain, though it declined to say why.

Oyedepo said he knew nothing of the commission’s review, nor had the Home Office explained to him why he was barred.

A national conference to debate Nigeria’s constitution this year proposed that the mega churches should be taxed.

But with an election coming up in February, it is doubtful whether President Goodluck Jonathan, who is close to several mega pastors, would risk upsetting these influential men and their hefty congregations with a fat tax bill.

“There is no single government input on this premises,” Oyedepo told Reuters in the interview. “We supply our water, we make our roads, then you … say: ‘Let’s tax them’. For what?”

THISDAY

Renowned African History Professor, Ali Mazrui Dies at 81

131014F-Ali-Mazrui.jpg-131014F-Ali-Mazrui.jpg

Ali Mazrui

Professor Ali Mazrui, renowned Kenyan academic, is dead.

He passed away at 3 o’oclock Kenya time on Monday morning in the USA where he has been lecturing, according to a Kenyan newspaper, The Star.

Leaders from the coast led by Governor Hassan Joho and the county’s senator, Omara Hasan, eulogised Mazrui as a scholar of note.

Muhuri lobby group’s Khalif Khelif said Mazrui was unwell piror to his demise and said the scholar had wished to be buried in Mombasa.

“He had wished to be buried in Mombasa’s historical Fort Jesus area,” said Khelif.

Plans are underway to transport his body back to Mombasa for burial.

Mazrui was born in Mombasa on February 24, 1933 and is famed for his writings on politics in Africa as well as Islamic studies.

Culled from THISDAY

BREAKING BAD NEWS

Unconfirmed reports reaching Sayelba Times has it that ‎Oyams Alamieyeseigha, the last son of the first Executive Governor of Bayelsa State, Chief Dr. D.S.P Alamieyeseigha has been killed in Dubai where he is Studying.

According to the story on the streets of Yenagoa and Amassoma the young Alamieyeseigha’s body was found lying on the road side and looks like someone strangled him  then disposed the body by d road.

If this report is true, we are Sayelba Times wish to express our heart felt condolences to the Alamieyeseigha’s for their loss.

May his soul rest in peace.

President Jonathan commiserates with Alamieyeseigha on his son’s death

President Goodluck Jonathan has reacted to news of the tragic death of the son of the former governor of Bayelsa State, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha.

In a statement signed by Reuben Abati, the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, the Jonathan expressed “shock and immense sadness” at the news of the death of Oyamuyefa Alamieyeseigha who died in yet unclear circumstances in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

The statement reads: “President Goodluck Jonathan has received with shock and immense sadness news of the death of Mr. Oyamuyefa Alamieyeseigha in Dubai at the weekend.

“On behalf of his family and the Federal Government, President Jonathan extends heartfelt condolences to Oyamuyefa’s father, Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha and his entire family on the untimely loss of a very dear son in the prime of his life.

“The President and the First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan share their pain and grief over the death of Oyamuyefa in circumstances that are still unclear.

“President Jonathan assures Chief Alamieyeseigha and his family of the full support of the Federal Government as they strive to unravel the true circumstances of the young man’s death.

“He prays that God Almighty will receive Oyamuyefa’s soul and comfort his grieving parents and siblings, he said.

President Jonathan served as deputy governor during Diepreye Alamieyeseigha’s administration in Bayelsa.

Alams, as he is fondly called, was later convicted on corruption and money laundering charges.