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Flawed Recruitments, Poor Funding Fuel Nigeria’s Insecurity, Says Betara

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By Ubong Ukpong, Abuja

Former Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Army, Hon. Muktar Betara (APC, Borno), has raised alarm over chronic underfunding of Nigeria’s security institutions, warning that the country cannot win the war against insurgency and banditry without a complete overhaul of military financing and procurement systems.

Speaking on behalf of the North-East during the House of Representatives special debate on national security, Betara noted that despite a ₦1.
3 trillion defence allocation in 2025, the spending pattern remains “disturbingly skewed.”“The Air Force has no capital budget at all — only recurrent. Out of the ₦1.2 trillion recurrent allocation, ₦900 billion is overhead.
How do you expect them to procure equipment, aircraft or technology?”he asked.Betara said long-standing concerns raised during his tenure as committee chairman still persist.“There are issues with military procurement — very serious issues — and if we do not address them, the insecurity challenge will continue,”he warned.Former Deputy Speaker Hon. Ahmed Idris Wase said no amount of funding will produce results if the recruitment system continues to admit criminals into the security forces.“There was a time Boko Haram members appeared on the Army recruitment list. Armed robbers and gang members were also found on lists for the Army and Police,”he revealed.He urged lawmakers to stop recommending unfit candidates for security jobs.“If you put criminals in uniform, you cannot solve the insecurity problem. We must recommend people of integrity,” Wase said.Representing the North-West, Hon. Sada Soli (APC, Katsina) described insecurity in the zone as a structural and environmental crisis, not just criminality.“A purely kinetic or military response will not work. We must address land issues, climate pressures and rebuild trust in state institutions,”he argued.Hon. Kafila Kogbara (APC, Lagos) insisted that state governments must take greater responsibility for security.“The President cannot be in all 36 states. Governors must do more,”she said.Kogbara also advocated a national safe-schools framework, compulsory deployment of security teams in high-risk schools, CCTV coverage, early-warning sensors and stronger communication links with security agencies.

POLITICS

Reps Accuse DisCos of Crippling Nations’ Power Supply System

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By Ubong Ukpong, Abuja

The House of Representatives on Wednesday, accused the electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos) in the country, of crippling the nation’s electricity supply system.

The House Ad hoc Committee investigating Nigeria’s power sector reforms and expenditure from 2007 to 2024, said that the DisCos wallowed in years of poor investment, inadequate expansion, and failure to meet obligations outlined in their original business plans.

Speaking during an investigative hearing, Chairman of the committee, Arch. Ibrahim Almustapha Aliyu, said most distribution companies had misled the government at the point of acquisition, presenting impressive business plans but failing to deploy the required resources to upgrade substations, transformers, and distribution networks more than a decade after privatization.

He expressed shock that despite claims by the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) that it can wheel up to 8,000 megawatts, the DisCos continue to take only about 4,000 megawatts due to limited infrastructure, a problem he said is self-inflicted.

According to him, the power distribution firms have “refused to invest, refused to expand, and refused franchising options,” thereby creating the conditions for energy theft, meter bypassing, and consumer apathy across the country.

“You have caused this problem because you could not expand from what you inherited,” he said. “For 13 to 14 years now, if you had made the necessary investments, substations, up-to-date transformers, proper network expansion, there would be no issue. You would uptake more energy, the cost would be lower, and Nigerians would be happy.”

He noted that many consumers resort to illegal connections because they are billed monthly for electricity that is either not supplied or grossly inadequate.

“How do you expect someone whose monthly bill equals his salary to keep paying? People will look for alternatives. And your refusal to invest has contributed to this unholy attitude of bypassing and stealing energy,” he said.

The committee chairman reminded the DisCos that Nigerians enjoyed better supply under the defunct NEPA/NITEL-era systems in some areas, and expected significant improvements after private investors took over the assets.

He further challenged the DisCos to reconcile their earlier claims of competence and financial capacity with their current inability to meet tariff obligations, network expansion expectations, and service delivery benchmarks.

Chief Regulatory and Compliance Officer of Kaduna Electric,  Dr. Mahmood Abubakar said about 60 percent of electricity supplied nationwide is subsidised, a situation the company said has continued to weaken investor confidence and limit the ability of distribution companies (DisCos) to make the necessary capital investments.

He said during the hearing that only about 40 percent of electricity, largely consumed by Band A customers, is cost-reflective, while the rest depends heavily on government subsidies that are often delayed or unpaid.

According to him, the current subsidy structure distorts billing, revenue collection, and the ability of DisCos to expand infrastructure more than a decade after privatisation.

“If we go strictly by the multi-year tariff order, about 60 percent of the energy consumed in Nigeria is subsidised by the government. Only Band A pays the reflective tariff. Even then, we have Band A feeders recording up to 80 percent energy losses due to theft and bypasses, making full recovery impossible,” he said.

Abubakar explained that because DisCos cannot recover their full revenue requirement, they cannot secure investments or loans needed to upgrade their networks.

He added that the delay in the payment of subsidies affects the entire value chain, particularly affecting generation companies’ ability to pay for gas, thereby affecting power production.

“The subsidy is not forthcoming as and when due. It comes whenever the government decides to pay. That is the reality, and it affects everyone. We cannot pay our market invoices fully, the Gencos cannot fulfil firm contracts with gas suppliers, and the whole chain is weakened,” he said.

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POLITICS

Labour Party Ward Congresses Kick Off Across States

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By Mike Odiakose, Abuja

The Labour Party has commenced its congresses across the states with the exception of Abia state, with the election held across all the electoral wards in Nigeria.

According to the party’s guidelines, the ward Congress holds today Tuesday December 2, while the Local Government Congress will hold Thursday December 4.

The State Congress is expected to hold on Saturday December 6 at the party headquarters across the states.

The LP Spokesman, Obiora Ifoh said in a statement that the Abia state Congress was put on hold after a State High Court in Abia restrained the party from going ahead with the Congress in the state pending the determination of charges filed against the state leadership of the party.

Though the party resolved to comply with the order, even though the court lacks jurisdiction, the party’s legal department has already taken steps to vacate the order. This will enable Abia state to hold its own Congress at a later date.

The supervision teams sent by the national leadership to some of the venues have returned positive reports on the progress of the congresses nationwide.

At its NEC meeting held on Friday, November 28 and attended by officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission, the party resolved to reposition the party by ensuring that leaders of the party across board emerge democratically and in line with the electoral law and the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

The Labour Party is calling on Nigerians to embrace the party ahead of the 2027 general election. We are repositioning to improve on our capacity to drive the leadership of this great nation soonest.

“However, we are not unmindful of the activities of the fifth columnists planted in the party to create unnecessary friction and to destabilize the unity in the party. While some of them have repented and are being absorbed back into the party, some have nonetheless chosen to stay and continue to play out the script of their paymasters.

“We want to inform them that disseminating falsehood all in the name of propaganda, is a serious crime. In the Criminal Code Act, Section 59 makes it a crime to publish false statements, rumors or reports that are likely to cause fear and alarm to the public. This attracts a huge consequence for the peddlers of such fake news.

“Publishing a fake news that a court has cancelled the Labour Party Congresses nationwide, while knowing that it was done falsely and for the intent of causing panic amongst Nigerians particularly, Labour Party members is a crime and can attract dire consequences. We therefore warn these merchants of falsehood to desist from such shenanigans or we will have no option but to commit them to prison.

“The Julius Abure leadership of the Labour Party is determined to move the party forward by making it attractive for every Nigerian desirous of leadership to achieve their political ambition. We have therefore taken the painful decision to move on, leaving behind anyone not willing to meet up with the pact.”

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Senate Pushes Bill for Toll-free Emergency Number Nationwide

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By Eze Okechukwu, Abuja

The senate has kick-started pushing for a bill seeking to establish a uniform, toll-free national emergency number for all across every state in Nigeria.

The legislation titled: ‘A Bill for an Act to Establish the National Emergency Toll Service (NETS) to Provide Uniform, Accessible and Rapid Emergency Response Through a Dedicated Toll-Free Number Nationwide, to Empower the Nigerian Communications Commission as the Regulator and for Related Matters, 2025 (SB 402)’ was brought to the floor of the Senate yesterday by Senator Abdulaziz Yar’adua (Katsina central).

Leading the debate on the general principles of the Bill, he said the proposed law would harmonise Nigeria’s multiple emergency helplines into a single, easy-to-remember three-digit number, such as 112 or an alternative agreed after a public hearing.

Speaking further, Senator Yar Adua revealed that countries like the United Kingdom and the United States have improved emergency outcomes with 999 and 911, while India adopted a unified emergency number in 2014 and wondered why Nigeria should operate several helplines for police, fire service, ambulance response, domestic violence, child protection and disaster management.

He said that Lagos alone has several toll-free numbers linked to different agencies, describing the idea as confusing and counterproductive during emergencies.

“Therefore, a toll-free emergency number would go a long way in ensuring that Nigerians in distress are just a call away from the relevant emergency institutions,” the senator said.

“The number would provide a one-stop shop for receiving distress calls from the public and dispatching the same to appropriate response agencies, who will respond to the needs of callers.”

He said calls or text messages to the national emergency line would automatically route to the nearest response centre, taking advantage of the fact that many Nigerians use mobile phones.

Ali Ndume, senator representing Borno south, supported the bill and described it as “timely, very important, and urgently needed”.

 “If we do this, we will be enhancing our security architecture and contributing significantly to solving the criminalities affecting the country,” he said.

“One of the impediments we are facing during this security crisis is lack of communication by various security agencies.”

Tahir Monguno, senate chief whip and senator representing Borno north, also backed the proposal.

He said the country must provide a simple and obstruction-free channel for citizens to report suspicious activities.

 “This bill gives muscular expression to the need for the general public to report what they see,” he said.

Barau Jibrin, deputy senate president, who presided over the plenary, described the bill as a “wonderful arrangement to help the people of this country whenever it is implemented”.

The bill was referred to the senate committee on communications to report back in four weeks.

If passed, the bill will empower the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) to regulate the system and ensure nationwide accessibility to emergency services.

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