Connect with us

News

Tinubu slashes entourage for international, local travel by 60%

Published

on

 

President Bola Tinubu  on Tuesday, slashed the number of people on entourages for international and local travel by 60 percent.

 

Ajuri Ngelale, presidential spokesperson, announced the development at a press briefing with State House correspondents.

 

This is coming a month after the controversy that trailed the federal government’s spending at least N2.7 billion to sponsor delegates that attended the United Nations’ annual climate summit, COP28 in Dubai.

 

Nigeria’s delegation at the conference was 1,411.

 

Ngelale said the directive  is part of cost cutting measures of the presidency.

 

He added that the measure will affect the office of the president, vice-president, first lady, ministers and heads of agencies.

 

“President Tinubu has directed that all state entourages be drastically reduced. This is not a request. It is a directive. The office of the president and staff will be affected. Vice-president, appointees are affected,” the presidential spokesperson said.

 

By this directive, there will be a slashing of expenditure on official travel by 60 percent.”

 

He said the president is limited to have 20 number of staff within and outside the country while the vice-president is limited to five aides outside the country and 15 within the country.

READ  Fake news: Okonjo-Iweala debunks statement on threat messages after meeting Tinubu

 

“The same applies to the office of first lady while that of the wife of the vice-president is entitled to five international and 10 for local trips.”

 

He also said every minister is limited to having just four members of staff on any foreign trip while chief executive officers of agencies of government are restricted to two.

Ngelale added that  Tinubu has said he would no longer travel with huge security delegations to any state.

 

He said the directive also include that if the president travels to any state, the security in the state would take care of the his safety  and the same applies to the vice-president and other government officials.

 

“President Tinubu has, by his most recent directive approved a massive cost cutting exercise that will touch across the entire federal government of Nigeria and the offices of the President himself, the Vice President and the office of the First Lady. It will be conducted in the following fashion,” he said.

 

“One, the official trips that will be undertaken within the country that is when Mr. President or the Vice President travels to any state within the country, the massive bills that accrued due to allowances and estacode for security detail coming from Abuja going and traveling into those states, will be massively cut due to the directive of the President, that the security outfits within states, whether it be police DSS, or branches of the military, will frontline his protective detail when he travels to those states, a major cost cutting initiative that will affect the Office of the Vice President as well as the office of the First Lady.

READ  BREAKING: Tinubu replaces Ondo, Cross River nominees to NDDC board

 

“Additionally, when any international travel is being approved, the following limits have been placed on all ministers of the federation.

 

“Four members of their staff, appointees and the like will be allowed to travel with a minister on official trip. For heads of agency that will be limited to two members of staff allowed to travel on an official trip.

“Henceforth, the president is insistent that the notion of government wastage, the notion of recurrent expenditure being in excess, the notion that government officials will be allowed to conduct their affairs in a way that is different from what we are asking of Nigerian citizens with respect to prudence and cost Management, those days are over.

 

“The President is insistent that the prudence of government officials must reflect the prudence and efficiency of the Nigerian citizens and this is the directive of the President.“

 

Asked if the new directive on restrictions will be put into an executive order and how it will be monitored, Ngelale said: “With respect to the adherence to this most recent directive of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, I believe we do not need to convince the officers of the federal government of Nigeria of the seriousness of the President with respect to how he will implement his directives”.

READ  Man to die by hanging in Ekiti for armed robbery

 

“If there is anybody who feels that the directive of the president is not binding on them, who feels that the president will not uphold this directive in implementation and seeks to test it, they will do so at their own peril.“

 

The break down is as follows

●FOREIGN TRIPS :

•President – 20 persons

•Vice-president -5 persons

•First lady -5 persons

•Ministers -4 persons

•CEOs of agencies – 2 persons

●LOCAL TRIPS

•President – 25 persons.

•Vice -president- 15 persons.

•First lady -10 persons.

 

 

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

News

Court refuses Nnamdi Kanu’s plea for bail, house arrest

Published

on

By

 

A federal high court in Abuja has dismissed another bail application filed by Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).

 

Binta Nyako, presiding judge, also refused Kanu’s plea to be transferred from the custody of the Department of States Services (DSS) to prison.

 

The defendant’s request to be placed under house arrest was also rejected.

 

Kanu is standing trial on a seven-count charge bordering on treasonable felony as preferred against him by the federal government.

 

BACKGROUND

In 2017, the court granted Kanu bail on the treasonable felony charges filed against him by the federal government.

 

However, the court revoked Kanu’s bail and issued a bench warrant for his arrest after he failed to present himself as required.

 

The IPOB leader was rearrested in Kenya in 2021 and extradited to Nigeria — after being on the run for a few years.

 

In April 2022, Nyako struck out eight of the 15 counts in the charge.

READ  President Tinubu returns to Nigeria from London

 

The remaining seven counts were also quashed by the court of appeal on October 13, 2022, with the judge ordering Kanu’s release.

 

However, on October 28, 2022, the court of appeal granted a stay of execution on its verdict discharging Kanu, after the federal government filed an appeal at the supreme court.

 

On December 15, 2023, a five-member panel of the apex court reversed the verdict of the appeal court and ordered Kanu to resume his trial before the federal high court.

 

BAIL APPLICATION

In the fresh bail application, Kanu asked the court to restore his bail which was revoked in 2017.

 

In the alternative, he asked to be removed from the custody of the DSS and placed under house arrest, or to be remanded in prison.

 

The defendant said contrary to the federal government’s claim, he did not jump bail or breach any of the conditions of the 2017 bail, but had to flee the country when soldiers allegedly invaded his house in Abia.

READ  BREAKING: Aiyedatiwa presides over Ondo excos’ meeting

 

He told the court that he would have been killed if he had not escaped the way he did, and accused the federal government of misleading the court in getting the bail revoked.

 

He also asked the court to set aside the arrest warrant issued against him by the court while he was out of the country.

 

He also alleged that he does not get proper medical services in DSS custody and he is unable to properly prepare for his defence due to restricted access to his lawyers.

 

Delivering the ruling, Nyako refused the application of the defendant.

 

She noted that those who stood surety for the defendant in 2017 had approached the court and applied to be discharged after Kanu escaped from the country.

 

She held that the sureties, in their applications, claimed that they were not aware of the whereabouts of the defendant, a scenario that forced the court to order the forfeiture of their N100 million bail bonds.

READ  CNN’s Christiane Amanpour reveals battle with ovarian cancer

 

According to the trial court, the issue is currently pending before the court of appeal.

 

The court held that having refused Kanu’s request for bail on several occasions, the only option available to him was to take the matter before the appellate court.

 

However, the judge ordered the DSS to always grant Kanu access to his lawyers not exceeding five persons on every visiting day.

 

It ordered that Kanu must be given “a clean place” to consult with his lawyers at the DSS detention facility, adding that he must be granted access to a doctor of his choice.

 

Nyako warned that any attempt by Kanu’s legal team to file similar applications before the court would be regarded as a gross abuse of the judicial process.

 

“You have an option of appeal, please exercise your right of appeal,” the trial judge added.

Continue Reading

News

Coup attempt in DR Congo: Three Americans among arrested suspects

Published

on

By

 

Three Americans have been reportedly listed among suspects responsible for Sunday’s coup attempt in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

 

Sylvain Ekenge, DRC army spokesperson, said the attempt involved “foreigners and Congolese”.

 

“These foreigners and Congolese have been put out of action, including their leader,” Ekenge said, adding that several suspects were detained and that the situation is now under control.

 

The army spokesperson did not provide further information concerning the incident.

 

Lucy Tamyln, US ambassador to the DRC, said she was shocked and very concerned to receive reports of American citizens being involved.

 

Pictures of two men with their hands clasped were published in local media, alongside pictures of a passport that indicated one was a 36-year-old US citizen born in Maryland.

 

“Please be assured that we will cooperate with the DRC authorities to the fullest extent as they investigate these criminal acts and hold accountable any U.S. citizen involved in criminal acts,” Tamlyn tweeted.

READ  BREAKING: Tinubu replaces Ondo, Cross River nominees to NDDC board

 

The army’s announcement of successfully thwarting a coup attempt came hours after armed men attacked the house of Vital Kamerhe, former chief of staff and close ally of President Felix Tshisekedi.
Kamerhe’s residence is about two kilometres from the presidential palace.
Michel Muhima, Kamerhe’s spokesperson, had said the gunmen clad in military uniform engaged the politician’s guards in a shootout, leaving three people dead.

Continue Reading

News

Raisi’s vice expected to be sworn in as president of Iran

Published

on

By

 

Iran’s first vice president, Mohammad Mokhber, is expected to assume the presidency after Ebrahim Raisi’s death in a helicopter crash as the country gears up for early elections.

The Iranian constitution stipulates that the first vice president take over “in the event of the president’s death, dismissal, resignation, absence or illness for more than two months”.

 

Raisi, who died on Sunday along with Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and other officials, was nearing the end of his first four-year term as president.

 

Mokhber’s interim appointment requires the approval of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final word in all state affairs.

 

Presidential elections to pick a permanent successor are to be held within 50 days, according to the constitution.

 

A council made up of the parliament speaker, head of the judiciary and the vice president are to be tasked with organising the national vote.

 

READ  President Tinubu returns to Nigeria from London

Mokhber, 68, was appointed vice president as Raisi took office in August 2021.

 

The vice president was born in Dezful city in the southwestern province of Khuzestan, where he held several official positions.

 

For years since 2007, Mokhber chaired the Execution of Imam Khomeini’s Order, a governmental organisation tasked with managing properties confiscated following the 1979 Islamic revolution.

 

The foundation, established in the 1980s, has over the years grown to become a major state economic conglomerate with shares in various sectors.

 

Iranians head to the polls for presidential elections every four years since the Islamic Republic’s first vote in 1980.

 

The constitution sets a two-term limit for Iranian presidents.

 

The position of prime minister does not exist in Iran, and the president — assisted by several vice presidents — is responsible for appointing and directing the cabinet.

AFP

Continue Reading

Trending News