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North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by sarrki(m): 3:05am On Oct 15, 2017
FEATURED
North got lion’s share of World Bank projects under Buhari — Documents

Published October 15, 2017
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President Muhammadu Buhari
Bayo Akinloye

Contrary to President Muhammadu Buhari’s claim on Friday that his discussion with the President of the World Bank Group, Jim Yong Kim, was twisted, a huge chunk of the financial institution-backed projects in partnership with the Federal Government is based in the North, SUNDAY PUNCH can report.

The President has always been accused by his critics of favouring the northern part of the country, citing lopsidedness in various appointments made by his administration.

The latest criticism took place when Kim, divulged that Buhari had asked the bank to concentrate on northern Nigeria.


The Presidency, however, said what the President asked for was “rebuilding of the beleaguered North-East.”

But critics argued that the explanation was not tenable because Buhari was not a president of the North or North-East alone and should be canvassing for development of all parts of Nigeria, equally affected by different types of disasters.

SUNDAY PUNCH’s findings on Saturday on the World Bank website, projects.worldbank.org, showed that out of the 14 World Bank-sponsored projects in the country, seven are exclusively for the North, while six others are meant for the whole nation (South-West, South-South, South-East, North-West, North-East, North Central and North West); and the remaining one is for Lagos State. Titled ‘Projects and Operations’, these projects were listed under June 2015 – June 2017 projects.

The implication is that in addition to solely getting the lion’s share of the projects, the North also shared in the remaining 50 per cent with the South-West, South-East and South-South.

The projects exclusive to the northern region worth $1bn are: Multi-Sectoral Crisis Recovery Project for North-eastern Nigeria ($200m; Borno, Yobe and Adamawa); State Education Program Investment Project ($100m; North-East states); Community and Social Development Project ($75m; Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Bauchi, and Gombe); Youth Employment and Social Support Project ($100m; Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Bauchi, and Gombe States); Additional Financing Nigeria State Health Investment Project ($125m; Bauchi, Borno, Gombe, Taraba and Yobe) and the Third National Fadama Development Project ($50m; selected area in the North-East). The seventh northern project worth $350m is for the Kaduna State Economic Transformation Program-for-Results Project $350m. The KSETPRP, which was approved in June 2017, is expected to close on March 31, 2021.

Projects worth $2.9bn were earmarked for the nation which northern states are also expected to benefit from. They are: Better Education Service Delivery for All ($611m); Mineral Sector Support for Economic Diversification Project ($150m); NEITI Reporting Compliance ($0.32m); the Polio Eradication Support Project ($125m); National Social Safety Nets Project ($1.8b); and $200m-Agro-Processing, Agricultural Productivity Enhancement and Livelihood Improvement Support Project specifically designed for Kano, Kaduna, Lagos, Cross River, Kogi, Enugu and three other states.

There was also the Third Lagos State Development Policy Operation ($200m), a stand-alone project which was approved on June 26, 2015 and ended on December 31, 2016.

The World Bank documents did not contain any programme or project specifically designed for the South-East, South-South and the Middle Belt regions since Buhari got into power.

A document containing the details of the project on the bank’s website explained the purpose of the Kaduna project thus: “The development objective of Kaduna State Economic Transformation Programme-for-Results Project for Nigeria is to improve the business enabling environment and strengthen fiscal management and accountability in Kaduna State. This operation is fully aligned with the World Bank. Group’s Country Partnership Strategy for the Federal Republic of Nigeria for FY14–FY17. This Programme-for-Results focuses on increasing the number of jobs in the modern private sector and boosting the productivity of traditional economic sectors. Another important and complementary focus of the PforR is to support Kaduna State to increase its fiscal space and enhance expenditure effectiveness to boost investments in human capital and physical assets sustainably.”

According to the bank’s documents, the $200m-MSCRP, meant for only North-East states, is to “support the government of Nigeria towards rehabilitating and improving critical service delivery infrastructure, improve the livelihood opportunities of conflict and displacement-affected communities, and strengthen social cohesion in the North-East states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa; and in the event of an eligible crisis or emergency, to provide immediate and effective response to the said eligible crisis or emergency.”

Similarly, the SEPIV’s objective is to finance activities to support the Federal Government’s emergency programme for the North-East to address teachers’ needs in conflict-and-displacement-affected areas; strengthen school-level management and accountability for the improvement of education quality through school grants funding; “and to enhance technical assistance to address the needs of the North-East.”

For the CSDP, the World Bank will finance the costs associated with scaling up project activities in Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Bauchi, and Gombe states to support the provision of basic social and natural resource management infrastructure and services to returnees and host communities with the main goal of assisting their resettlement, recovery, and welfare.

The fund, the document said, would also be “used to provide trauma and psychosocial support to returnee households and internally displaced groups and individuals, as a form of social assistance intervention.”

Shedding light on why half of the projects were exclusively allocated to the North and no special projects for the other regions, the World Bank boss at a press conference in Washington DC, United States, on Thursday, had disclosed that the bank focused more on the region based on Buhari’s request.

“You know, in my very first meeting with President Buhari, he said specifically that he would like us to shift our focus to the northern region of Nigeria and we’ve done that. Now, it has been very difficult. The work there has been very difficult.

“Focusing on the northern part of Nigeria, we hope that as commodity prices stabilise and oil prices come back up, the economy will grow a bit more. But very, very much important is the need to focus on what the drivers of growth in the future will be,” the bank’s president had said.

Weighing in on the matter through a series of tweets, a former World Bank Vice President and ex-Minister of Education under ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, Oby Ezekwesili, said, “I want everyone to know that the statement made by the World Bank president is not as it sounds. I should know; I was VP (vice president) there (the bank). Our president and his government should seize the moment to conduct a diversity review of the administration. The current tension is, of course, triggered by context of existing tension occasioned by our president’s poor management of our diversity.”

Ezekwesili, however, berated Adesina for worsening the situation, “The terribly indecorous press release by Femi Adesina worsens a fractious debate. This FG (Federal Government) cannot be leaders of toxicity in public debates. Healthy debates are important for managing our diversity. The government of President Buhari should rein in his media team and re-train them to be effective.”

On Saturday, prominent Nigerians and the major opposition party in the country, the Peoples Democratic Party, further expressed their views on the matter.

Commenting on the cost of the projects, a renowned professor of Economics, Sheriffdeen Tella, pointed out that inasmuch as the North-East might require substantial rehabilitation, the same should be for the Niger Delta.

“The figures show that $650m projects are specifically for the North-East, while about $2.9bn worth of projects is for the whole of the country, including the northern states. The ones for Kaduna and Lagos states are state-requested loans, not federal. Just as the North-East deserves special attention, so also is the South-South where oil spillage has devastated many areas. There should have been specific financial commitment for that also.

“The amount committed to the North-East is worth it if we are to keep them from coming to the South to create social and economic problems in the nearest future. But attention must also be paid to specific problems of special areas in the South, more so when large proportions of the funds to offset the loans will come from resources in the South – particularly from the South-South with oil spillage problem.”

According to the Peoples Democratic Party, the President’s approval of more World Bank projects for the North, as revealed by Kim, was not in the interest of the country.

Reacting to the comment, the spokesman for the major opposition party in the country, Prince Dayo Adeyeye, said, “We’ve always said Buhari is not acting as the president of the country. He has demonstrated that through his lopsided appointments. That’s all we can say.”

Similarly, a nationalist and elder statesman, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, told SUNDAY PUNCH that Kim only confirmed what people already know about Buhari’s preference for the North.

“Is it those he surrounds himself with? Is it about the lopsided appointments he’s made? Buhari telling the World Bank president that more attention should be given to the northern region shows which section of the country matters most to the president. Buhari can never change. He’s a sectional leader,” he said.

Speaking further, Tella noted that if what the World Bank president claimed Buhari told him was true, such a gesture would be unfair to other regions in the country.

“There are other parts of the country to focus on. It is not the fault of Nigerians that the North in general is lagging behind. The northerners should hold their state governments and political elites responsible for any backwardness. Just as the southern states collect money from the Federal Government, so do northern states. What have they done with their resources?”

The Executive Chairman of the Centre for Anti-Corruption and Open Leadership, Debo Adeniran, people should not be quick to criticise the President.

“Let’s agree it’s nepotism and nepotism is a form of corruption. I also believe that the common wealth of the country should be evenly distributed. Be that as it may be, we must not trivialise equity. It’s not out of place to allocate more projects to the North-East because of the challenges of that area. It may not sound fair. We want the President to defend his action. He has a responsibility to justify it.

“You should now realise why people clamour for a rotational presidency; give a madman a hoe, he’ll make ridges for himself. If a president comes from the North or South, it’s expected he’ll take care of his own first. Admittedly, this is antithetical to democracy,” Adeniran said.



http://punchng.com/north-got-lions-share-of-world-bank-projects-under-buhari-documents/
Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by sarrki(m): 3:08am On Oct 15, 2017
The hatred coming from my generation is shocking. The ability to discard comprehension, commonsense and context, makes one despair.

In 2015, a newly elected President Buhari met separately with the G7, the World Bank and President Obama. He kept talking about how much rebuilding was needed in the North East.

Do we have any idea of how devastated the North East was by Boko Haram? How they bombed infastructure: roads, schools, bridges, telephone masts, electricity transformers, businesses, agriculture, EVERYTHING sef, into the stone ages?

Nigeria has the largest number of internally displaced refugees living in camps in the WORLD. Millions of children are in danger of starvation.

And in 2015, while the President was talking to world leaders and agencies about how this crippled region needed rebuilding urgently, Boko Haram were still fighting back tenaciously. Bombs were going off regularly. Schools were permanently closed. Businesses were dead. Fear ruled supreme.

Let us pause and think about that?

Now, what leader will NOT plead with the world to help rebuild that region? If GEJ had asked the world to rebuild the North East, I would have applauded that.

There is nothing hidden about PMB asking for help for the North East, and getting promises of loans and grants. It was in the press back in 2015. Widely covered too.

Yes, all Nigeria needs investment and infastructure and rebuilding, but in 2015, the situation in the North East was beyond dire. The region was in danger of collapsing. It NEEDED help urgently.

Thus when I heard how this had been twisted into a North/South debate, I shook my head, and disengaged mentally for a few hours.

The WB president will not know how his innocent words have been twisted by a nation so determined to see nepotism and tribalism in the President, they will fish it out where it does not exist.

Please Oga World Bank, let us educate you that Nigeria is not North and South oooo! Please learn all awa regions o! Ehen ;-)..."

~ Bucky 2017

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Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by HungerBAD: 3:09am On Oct 15, 2017
Reading
Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by GavelSlam: 3:12am On Oct 15, 2017
sarrki:


FEATURED
North got lion’s share of World Bank projects under Buhari — Documents

Published October 15, 2017
Share Tweet Share Pin it +1
President Muhammadu Buhari
Bayo Akinloye

Contrary to President Muhammadu Buhari’s claim on Friday that his discussion with the President of the World Bank Group, Jim Yong Kim, was twisted, a huge chunk of the financial institution-backed projects in partnership with the Federal Government is based in the North, SUNDAY PUNCH can report.

The President has always been accused by his critics of favouring the northern part of the country, citing lopsidedness in various appointments made by his administration.

The latest criticism took place when Kim, divulged that Buhari had asked the bank to concentrate on northern Nigeria.


The Presidency, however, said what the President asked for was “rebuilding of the beleaguered North-East.”

But critics argued that the explanation was not tenable because Buhari was not a president of the North or North-East alone and should be canvassing for development of all parts of Nigeria, equally affected by different types of disasters.

SUNDAY PUNCH’s findings on Saturday on the World Bank website, projects.worldbank.org, showed that out of the 14 World Bank-sponsored projects in the country, seven are exclusively for the North, while six others are meant for the whole nation (South-West, South-South, South-East, North-West, North-East, North Central and North West); and the remaining one is for Lagos State. Titled ‘Projects and Operations’, these projects were listed under June 2015 – June 2017 projects.

The implication is that in addition to solely getting the lion’s share of the projects, the North also shared in the remaining 50 per cent with the South-West, South-East and South-South.

The projects exclusive to the northern region worth $1bn are: Multi-Sectoral Crisis Recovery Project for North-eastern Nigeria ($200m; Borno, Yobe and Adamawa); State Education Program Investment Project ($100m; North-East states); Community and Social Development Project ($75m; Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Bauchi, and Gombe); Youth Employment and Social Support Project ($100m; Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Bauchi, and Gombe States); Additional Financing Nigeria State Health Investment Project ($125m; Bauchi, Borno, Gombe, Taraba and Yobe) and the Third National Fadama Development Project ($50m; selected area in the North-East). The seventh northern project worth $350m is for the Kaduna State Economic Transformation Program-for-Results Project $350m. The KSETPRP, which was approved in June 2017, is expected to close on March 31, 2021.

Projects worth $2.9bn were earmarked for the nation which northern states are also expected to benefit from. They are: Better Education Service Delivery for All ($611m); Mineral Sector Support for Economic Diversification Project ($150m); NEITI Reporting Compliance ($0.32m); the Polio Eradication Support Project ($125m); National Social Safety Nets Project ($1.8b); and $200m-Agro-Processing, Agricultural Productivity Enhancement and Livelihood Improvement Support Project specifically designed for Kano, Kaduna, Lagos, Cross River, Kogi, Enugu and three other states.

There was also the Third Lagos State Development Policy Operation ($200m), a stand-alone project which was approved on June 26, 2015 and ended on December 31, 2016.

The World Bank documents did not contain any programme or project specifically designed for the South-East, South-South and the Middle Belt regions since Buhari got into power.

A document containing the details of the project on the bank’s website explained the purpose of the Kaduna project thus: “The development objective of Kaduna State Economic Transformation Programme-for-Results Project for Nigeria is to improve the business enabling environment and strengthen fiscal management and accountability in Kaduna State. This operation is fully aligned with the World Bank. Group’s Country Partnership Strategy for the Federal Republic of Nigeria for FY14–FY17. This Programme-for-Results focuses on increasing the number of jobs in the modern private sector and boosting the productivity of traditional economic sectors. Another important and complementary focus of the PforR is to support Kaduna State to increase its fiscal space and enhance expenditure effectiveness to boost investments in human capital and physical assets sustainably.”

According to the bank’s documents, the $200m-MSCRP, meant for only North-East states, is to “support the government of Nigeria towards rehabilitating and improving critical service delivery infrastructure, improve the livelihood opportunities of conflict and displacement-affected communities, and strengthen social cohesion in the North-East states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa; and in the event of an eligible crisis or emergency, to provide immediate and effective response to the said eligible crisis or emergency.”

Similarly, the SEPIV’s objective is to finance activities to support the Federal Government’s emergency programme for the North-East to address teachers’ needs in conflict-and-displacement-affected areas; strengthen school-level management and accountability for the improvement of education quality through school grants funding; “and to enhance technical assistance to address the needs of the North-East.”

For the CSDP, the World Bank will finance the costs associated with scaling up project activities in Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Bauchi, and Gombe states to support the provision of basic social and natural resource management infrastructure and services to returnees and host communities with the main goal of assisting their resettlement, recovery, and welfare.

The fund, the document said, would also be “used to provide trauma and psychosocial support to returnee households and internally displaced groups and individuals, as a form of social assistance intervention.”

Shedding light on why half of the projects were exclusively allocated to the North and no special projects for the other regions, the World Bank boss at a press conference in Washington DC, United States, on Thursday, had disclosed that the bank focused more on the region based on Buhari’s request.

“You know, in my very first meeting with President Buhari, he said specifically that he would like us to shift our focus to the northern region of Nigeria and we’ve done that. Now, it has been very difficult. The work there has been very difficult.

“Focusing on the northern part of Nigeria, we hope that as commodity prices stabilise and oil prices come back up, the economy will grow a bit more. But very, very much important is the need to focus on what the drivers of growth in the future will be,” the bank’s president had said.

Weighing in on the matter through a series of tweets, a former World Bank Vice President and ex-Minister of Education under ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, Oby Ezekwesili, said, “I want everyone to know that the statement made by the World Bank president is not as it sounds. I should know; I was VP (vice president) there (the bank). Our president and his government should seize the moment to conduct a diversity review of the administration. The current tension is, of course, triggered by context of existing tension occasioned by our president’s poor management of our diversity.”

Ezekwesili, however, berated Adesina for worsening the situation, “The terribly indecorous press release by Femi Adesina worsens a fractious debate. This FG (Federal Government) cannot be leaders of toxicity in public debates. Healthy debates are important for managing our diversity. The government of President Buhari should rein in his media team and re-train them to be effective.”

On Saturday, prominent Nigerians and the major opposition party in the country, the Peoples Democratic Party, further expressed their views on the matter.

Commenting on the cost of the projects, a renowned professor of Economics, Sheriffdeen Tella, pointed out that inasmuch as the North-East might require substantial rehabilitation, the same should be for the Niger Delta.

“The figures show that $650m projects are specifically for the North-East, while about $2.9bn worth of projects is for the whole of the country, including the northern states. The ones for Kaduna and Lagos states are state-requested loans, not federal. Just as the North-East deserves special attention, so also is the South-South where oil spillage has devastated many areas. There should have been specific financial commitment for that also.

“The amount committed to the North-East is worth it if we are to keep them from coming to the South to create social and economic problems in the nearest future. But attention must also be paid to specific problems of special areas in the South, more so when large proportions of the funds to offset the loans will come from resources in the South – particularly from the South-South with oil spillage problem.”

According to the Peoples Democratic Party, the President’s approval of more World Bank projects for the North, as revealed by Kim, was not in the interest of the country.

Reacting to the comment, the spokesman for the major opposition party in the country, Prince Dayo Adeyeye, said, “We’ve always said Buhari is not acting as the president of the country. He has demonstrated that through his lopsided appointments. That’s all we can say.”

Similarly, a nationalist and elder statesman, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, told SUNDAY PUNCH that Kim only confirmed what people already know about Buhari’s preference for the North.

“Is it those he surrounds himself with? Is it about the lopsided appointments he’s made? Buhari telling the World Bank president that more attention should be given to the northern region shows which section of the country matters most to the president. Buhari can never change. He’s a sectional leader,” he said.

Speaking further, Tella noted that if what the World Bank president claimed Buhari told him was true, such a gesture would be unfair to other regions in the country.

“There are other parts of the country to focus on. It is not the fault of Nigerians that the North in general is lagging behind. The northerners should hold their state governments and political elites responsible for any backwardness. Just as the southern states collect money from the Federal Government, so do northern states. What have they done with their resources?”

The Executive Chairman of the Centre for Anti-Corruption and Open Leadership, Debo Adeniran, people should not be quick to criticise the President.

“Let’s agree it’s nepotism and nepotism is a form of corruption. I also believe that the common wealth of the country should be evenly distributed. Be that as it may be, we must not trivialise equity. It’s not out of place to allocate more projects to the North-East because of the challenges of that area. It may not sound fair. We want the President to defend his action. He has a responsibility to justify it.

“You should now realise why people clamour for a rotational presidency; give a madman a hoe, he’ll make ridges for himself. If a president comes from the North or South, it’s expected he’ll take care of his own first. Admittedly, this is antithetical to democracy,” Adeniran said.



http://punchng.com/north-got-lions-share-of-world-bank-projects-under-buhari-documents/



No sh.it.

Isn't it clear that an area devastated by insurgency leaving several million internally displaced would require greater effort and support?

Some headlines only serve a single motive.

5 Likes 3 Shares

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by conductorV8: 3:15am On Oct 15, 2017
[s]
GavelSlam:


No sh.it.

Isn't it clear that an area devastated by insurgency leaving several million internally displaced would require greater effort and support?

Some headlines only serve a single motive.
[/s]
The entire area of Southeast was ravaged by British fighter jets and missiles. How many World Bank loans and aids were focused on that region?

I know you're a yoromoozlem tryring to cover up the attrocities of your master, the terrorist senile dullard called Chinakwe's dog. wink

37 Likes 2 Shares

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by sarrki(m): 3:16am On Oct 15, 2017
GavelSlam:


No sh.it.

Isn't it clear that an area devastated by insurgency leaving several million internally displaced would require greater effort and support?

Some headlines only serve a single motive.

That's why we will bring the topic down here to educate them

They are bent in self destruction

We won't allow such to happen

They are our brothers and sisters

3 Likes 3 Shares

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by GavelSlam: 3:17am On Oct 15, 2017
conductorV8:
[s][/s]
The entire area of Southeast was ravaged by British fighter jets and missiles. How many world bank loans and aids were focused on that region.

I know you're a yoromoozlem tryring to cover up the attrocities of your master, the senile Chinakwe's dog. wink

You guys got £20, the equivalent of N250,000 today.
How many other citizens got the same?

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by influenz: 3:19am On Oct 15, 2017
GavelSlam:


No sh.it.

Isn't it clear that an area devastated by insurgency leaving several million internally displaced would require greater effort and support?

Some headlines only serve a single motive.
If South East had gotten a fraction of these after the Civil War, I may not really be concerned. Note also, that BH is there own making. They manufactured it, sponsored, ensured that it blossomed and then they suddenly became helpless and started looking for assistance to quell it.

13 Likes

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by sarrki(m): 3:21am On Oct 15, 2017
conductorV8:
[s][/s]
The entire area of Southeast was ravaged by British fighter jets and missiles. How many world bank loans and aids were focused on that region.

I know you're a yoromoozlem tryring to cover up the attrocities of your master, the terrorist senile dullard called Chinakwe's dog. wink


Alex ekwueme as vice was a consolation

Houses returned to the owner's was also part of it

No victor No vanquish caps it all , it allows quick integration with other parts if the nation

Though not written have you seen any part of a republic seeking secession allowed back into the country politically the way Nigeria did ?

Alex ekweme during shagari .

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by conductorV8: 3:26am On Oct 15, 2017
[s]
GavelSlam:


You guys got £20, the equivalent of N250,000 today.
How many other citizens got the same?
[/s]
LMAO. Nizoria and these eductated illitates they call graduates sha. No kill me here o? grin grin

Son, firstly £20 is about 9000 naira.

Secondly, nobody gave the Igbos £20.

Awolwowo, the rogue Finaince minister of the zoo back then stole all the money Igbos had in their bank accounts and exchanged it with 20 nigerian pounds. That's about 20 naira of today's zoo money only that the zoo had a stronger currency back then and that 20 naira/20pounds might be up to 200 naira - less than half the value of 1 British pound.

Teach their children History and give them quality education, the zoo no gree. Na only to shout One Neajeria and chewing gworo up and down them sabi. grin grin grin

25 Likes 1 Share

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by sarrki(m): 3:30am On Oct 15, 2017
conductorV8:
[s][/s]
LMAO. Nizoria and these eductated illitates they call graduates sha. No kill me here o? grin grin

Son, firstly £20 is about 9000 naira.

Secondly, nobody gave the Igbos £20.

Awolwowo, the rogue Finaince minister of the zoo back then stole all the money Igbos had in their bank accounts and exchanged it with 20 nigerian pounds. That's about 20 naira of today's zoo money only that the zoo had a stronger currency back then and that 20 naira/20pounds might be up to 200 naira - less than half the value of 1 British pound.

Teach their children History and give them quality education, the zoo no gree. Na only to shout One Neajeria and chewing gworo up and down them sabi. grin grin grin


Just thank your star

That we didn't allow KANU to succeed

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by conductorV8: 3:32am On Oct 15, 2017
[s]
sarrki:



Just thank your star

That we didn't allow KANU to succeed

[/s]
To succeed in breaking Fruad Luggard's contraption? If that's what you're talking about, don't worry the day of Nizooria's armageddon is very closeby , Mr. wink

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by baralatie(m): 3:33am On Oct 15, 2017
see incredible loooooopsideness !
there is no way PMB can clear himself from the accusation that he is heavily biased against the other members of the Nigerian state and he is still asking for another $5.5 billion for the n.e


Jesus have mercy!

13 Likes 2 Shares

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by GavelSlam: 3:39am On Oct 15, 2017
conductorV8:
[s][/s]
LMAO. Nizoria and these eductated illitates they call graduates sha. No kill me here o? grin grin

Son, firstly £20 is about 9000 naira.

Secondly, nobody gave the Igbos £20.

Awolwowo, the rogue Finaince minister of the zoo back then stole all the money Igbos had in their bank accounts and exchanged it with 20 nigerian pounds. That's about 20 naira of today's zoo money only that the zoo had a stronger currency back then and that 20 naira/20pounds might be up to 200 naira - less than half the value of 1 British pound.

Teach their children History and give them quality education, the zoo no gree. Na only to shout One Neajeria and chewing gworo up and down them sabi. grin grin grin

I was hasty with my conclusion on the exact worth of £20 from 1969 but the site below captures its worth.

It is worth 230 pounds today.

Please convert to Naira value.

http://www.moneysorter.co.uk/calculator_inflation2.html#calculator

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by Desyner: 3:40am On Oct 15, 2017
sarrki:


FEATURED
North got lion’s share of World Bank projects under Buhari — Documents

Published October 15, 2017
Share Tweet Share Pin it +1
President Muhammadu Buhari
Bayo Akinloye

Contrary to President Muhammadu Buhari’s claim on Friday that his discussion with the President of the World Bank Group, Jim Yong Kim, was twisted, a huge chunk of the financial institution-backed projects in partnership with the Federal Government is based in the North, SUNDAY PUNCH can report.

The President has always been accused by his critics of favouring the northern part of the country, citing lopsidedness in various appointments made by his administration.

The latest criticism took place when Kim, divulged that Buhari had asked the bank to concentrate on northern Nigeria.


The Presidency, however, said what the President asked for was “rebuilding of the beleaguered North-East.”

But critics argued that the explanation was not tenable because Buhari was not a president of the North or North-East alone and should be canvassing for development of all parts of Nigeria, equally affected by different types of disasters.

SUNDAY PUNCH’s findings on Saturday on the World Bank website, projects.worldbank.org, showed that out of the 14 World Bank-sponsored projects in the country, seven are exclusively for the North, while six others are meant for the whole nation (South-West, South-South, South-East, North-West, North-East, North Central and North West); and the remaining one is for Lagos State. Titled ‘Projects and Operations’, these projects were listed under June 2015 – June 2017 projects.

The implication is that in addition to solely getting the lion’s share of the projects, the North also shared in the remaining 50 per cent with the South-West, South-East and South-South.

The projects exclusive to the northern region worth $1bn are: Multi-Sectoral Crisis Recovery Project for North-eastern Nigeria ($200m; Borno, Yobe and Adamawa); State Education Program Investment Project ($100m; North-East states); Community and Social Development Project ($75m; Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Bauchi, and Gombe); Youth Employment and Social Support Project ($100m; Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Bauchi, and Gombe States); Additional Financing Nigeria State Health Investment Project ($125m; Bauchi, Borno, Gombe, Taraba and Yobe) and the Third National Fadama Development Project ($50m; selected area in the North-East). The seventh northern project worth $350m is for the Kaduna State Economic Transformation Program-for-Results Project $350m. The KSETPRP, which was approved in June 2017, is expected to close on March 31, 2021.

Projects worth $2.9bn were earmarked for the nation which northern states are also expected to benefit from. They are: Better Education Service Delivery for All ($611m); Mineral Sector Support for Economic Diversification Project ($150m); NEITI Reporting Compliance ($0.32m); the Polio Eradication Support Project ($125m); National Social Safety Nets Project ($1.8b); and $200m-Agro-Processing, Agricultural Productivity Enhancement and Livelihood Improvement Support Project specifically designed for Kano, Kaduna, Lagos, Cross River, Kogi, Enugu and three other states.

There was also the Third Lagos State Development Policy Operation ($200m), a stand-alone project which was approved on June 26, 2015 and ended on December 31, 2016.

The World Bank documents did not contain any programme or project specifically designed for the South-East, South-South and the Middle Belt regions since Buhari got into power.

A document containing the details of the project on the bank’s website explained the purpose of the Kaduna project thus: “The development objective of Kaduna State Economic Transformation Programme-for-Results Project for Nigeria is to improve the business enabling environment and strengthen fiscal management and accountability in Kaduna State. This operation is fully aligned with the World Bank. Group’s Country Partnership Strategy for the Federal Republic of Nigeria for FY14–FY17. This Programme-for-Results focuses on increasing the number of jobs in the modern private sector and boosting the productivity of traditional economic sectors. Another important and complementary focus of the PforR is to support Kaduna State to increase its fiscal space and enhance expenditure effectiveness to boost investments in human capital and physical assets sustainably.”

According to the bank’s documents, the $200m-MSCRP, meant for only North-East states, is to “support the government of Nigeria towards rehabilitating and improving critical service delivery infrastructure, improve the livelihood opportunities of conflict and displacement-affected communities, and strengthen social cohesion in the North-East states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa;
what was buhari's intention ?
Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by MadeInTokyo: 3:42am On Oct 15, 2017
grin


Buhari is a mad man
Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by baralatie(m): 3:43am On Oct 15, 2017
Shedding light on why half of the projects were exclusively allocated to the North and no special projects for the other regions, the World Bank boss at a press conference in Washington DC, United States, on Thursday, had disclosed that the bank focused more on the region based on Buhari’s request.


emphasis on President Buhari request

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Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by GavelSlam: 3:44am On Oct 15, 2017
The Nigerian pound was the currency of Nigeria between 1907 and 1973. Until 1958, Nigeria used the British West African pound, after which it issued its own currency. The pound was subdivided into 20 shillings, each of 12 pence. The Nigerian pound (which was at parity with the British pound with easy convertibility[1]) was replaced with the introduction in 1973 of the decimal naira at a rate of 1 pound = 2 naira.[2] This made Nigeria the last country to abandon the £sd currency system.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerian_pound

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Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by Sultannayef: 3:56am On Oct 15, 2017
GavelSlam:


You guys got £20, the equivalent of N250,000 today.
How many other citizens got the same?

Are you this daft?

9 Likes

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by Sultannayef: 3:58am On Oct 15, 2017
sarrki:



Alex ekwueme as vice was a consolation

Houses returned to the owner's was also part of it

No victor No vanquish caps it all , it allows quick integration with other parts if the nation

Though not written have you seen any part of a republic seeking secession allowed back into the country politically the way Nigeria did ?

Alex ekweme during shagari .



@Sarrki.. why have you sold your soul for a pot of porridge?

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Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by GavelSlam: 3:59am On Oct 15, 2017
Sultannayef:


Are you this daft?

Look in the mirror.

Mr. Daft 2017 and for all times is there.

You see, I don't work with sentiments, I deal with facts.

A simple Internet search would reveal what 20 Pounds of 1969 is worth today.

Next time, try to upgrade your brain.

OK?

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Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by rummmy: 4:04am On Oct 15, 2017
Was SE rebuild after the civil war that is even worse than Boko haram?president Buhari have clearly shown his love and support for a certain part of the country he currently rule.....and I hate him with passion
sarrki:


The hatred coming from my generation is shocking. The ability to discard comprehension, commonsense and context, makes one despair.

In 2015, a newly elected President Buhari met separately with the G7, the World Bank and President Obama. He kept talking about how much rebuilding was needed in the North East.

Do we have any idea of how devastated the North East was by Boko Haram? How they bombed infastructure: roads, schools, bridges, telephone masts, electricity transformers, businesses, agriculture, EVERYTHING sef, into the stone ages?

Nigeria has the largest number of internally displaced refugees living in camps in the WORLD. Millions of children are in danger of starvation.

And in 2015, while the President was talking to world leaders and agencies about how this crippled region needed rebuilding urgently, Boko Haram were still fighting back tenaciously. Bombs were going off regularly. Schools were permanently closed. Businesses were dead. Fear ruled supreme.

Let us pause and think about that?

Now, what leader will NOT plead with the world to help rebuild that region? If GEJ had asked the world to rebuild the North East, I would have applauded that.

There is nothing hidden about PMB asking for help for the North East, and getting promises of loans and grants. It was in the press back in 2015. Widely covered too.

Yes, all Nigeria needs investment and infastructure and rebuilding, but in 2015, the situation in the North East was beyond dire. The region was in danger of collapsing. It NEEDED help urgently.

Thus when I heard how this had been twisted into a North/South debate, I shook my head, and disengaged mentally for a few hours.

The WB president will not know how his innocent words have been twisted by a nation so determined to see nepotism and tribalism in the President, they will fish it out where it does not exist.

Please Oga World Bank, let us educate you that Nigeria is not North and South oooo! Please learn all awa regions o! Ehen ;-)..."

~ Bucky 2017

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Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by Sultannayef: 4:07am On Oct 15, 2017
GavelSlam:


Look in the mirror.

Mr. Daft 2017 and for all times is there.

You see, I don't work with sentiments, I deal with facts.

A simple Internet search would reveal what 20 Poundstock of 1969 is worth today.

Next time, try to upgrade your brain.

OK?


Don't start quoting figures because you don't understand figures. First, that amount was a nominal value and not "real". Second, you must look at it relatively.. what was the value of 20 pounds in comparison to what each of the recipients lost whether in monetary terms or even non-monetary. Don't get me started. Some people had houses, farms, businesses, and land worth a lot more than a meagre 20 pounds. Your logic is just illogical.

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Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by Blue3k(m): 4:08am On Oct 15, 2017
6 projects in NE, 6 for whole country. The NE takes 26%. Zero for other geopolitics regions. I can agree with bolded but wonder what's point of NDDC after awhile.

“The figures show that $650m projects are specifically for the North-East, while about $2.9bn worth of projects is for the whole of the country, including the northern states. The ones for Kaduna and Lagos states are state-requested loans, not federal. Just as the North-East deserves special attention, so also is the South-South where oil spillage has devastated many areas. There should have been specific financial commitment for that also.

Desyner
Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by GavelSlam: 4:10am On Oct 15, 2017
Those that wish to compare the remediation done to the East since 1969 should sincerely ask themselves if it has been the same president who made decisions since then.

There is a humanitarian crisis in the North East.

A few of you on this forum often refer to it, sometimes to mock.

If the president of today is proactive enough to plough resources to an area devastated by insurgency, I believe he should be applauded.

If you wish to live in your own cocoon of hate and bigotry, it wouldn't be long before you the result.

2 Likes

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by clevvermind(m): 4:16am On Oct 15, 2017
ALL THIS ARE MERE TRICK. PART OF THE MONEY WILL STILL FIND ITS WAY INTO BUHARI'S POCKET.
Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by GavelSlam: 4:21am On Oct 15, 2017
Sultannayef:


Don't start quoting figures because you don't understand figures. First, that amount was a nominal value and not "real". Second, you must look at it relatively.. what was the value of 20 pounds in comparison to what each of the recipients lost whether in monetary terms or even non-monetary. Don't get me started. Some people had houses, farms, land, worth a lot more than a meagre 20 pounds. Your logic is just illogical.

What is illogical?

It is easy to bandy figures around for many years as if what was given was worth nothing.

The truth stares you in the eyes.

The equivalent of 230 pounds today. was given to those of eastern descent, affected by the war.
We must say it as it is.

Is this to say the government should not have done better? Perhaps they should have but were the resources even available for such?

Have successive other governments done any better?

Has the government of today been in power since 1969?

Is the government of today doing the same (giving 230 pounds equivalent) to the North East?

No.
They are building social and security infrastructure to get the people back to a somewhat normal situation.

To envy such acts, or to make political juice out of it, is seriously evil.

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by aariwa(m): 4:32am On Oct 15, 2017
At the end of the civil war Gowon promised that igbo land will be rebuilt after the devastation of the war.The only promise Gowon fulfiled was he gave every igbo man 20 pounds irrespective of whether you had 1m pounds or more before the war cos awolowo changed the currency during the war as finance minister.The resultant effect was that people like C.T Onyekwelu, tigerman etc saw their millions of pounds turned into tissue papers.Igbos never gave up,through sweat and blood from hardwork igbo land was rebuilt without any assistance from FG safe for the good roads that were constructed by ukpabi asika of blessed memory

10 Likes 2 Shares

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by Firefire(m): 4:40am On Oct 15, 2017
Buhary is a FRAUD!

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by Nobody: 4:47am On Oct 15, 2017
sarrki:


SUNDAY PUNCH’s findings on Saturday on the World Bank website, projects.worldbank.org, showed that out of the 14 World Bank-sponsored projects in the country, seven are exclusively for the North, while six others are meant for the whole nation (South-West, South-South, South-East, North-West, North-East, North Central and North West); and the remaining one is for Lagos State. Titled ‘Projects and Operations’, these projects were listed under June 2015 – June 2017 projects.

The implication is that in addition to solely getting the lion’s share of the projects, the North also shared in the remaining 50 per cent with the South-West, South-East and South-South.

The way they are trying to defend this unjust statement from a president, you would think other regions dont have humans in them or contribute nothing..

1 Like

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by conductorV8: 5:42am On Oct 15, 2017
GavelSlam:


I was hasty with my conclusion on the exact worth of £20 from 1969 but the site below captures its worth.

It is worth 230 pounds today.

Please convert to Naira value.

http://www.moneysorter.co.uk/calculator_inflation2.html#calculator
For Christ's sake this guy does not know the the difference between 20 Nigerian pounds (which the govt changed to 20 naira years later) and 20 British pounds.

I know you're thick in the head but try and understand that Zimbabwean dollars (which is millions of times lesser in value) is different from US dollars. Same way Nizoorian pounds is different from British pounds. Tufiakwa grin

Imagine Nigeria dashing 30m Biafrans 230 British pounds each yet couldn't build Enugu-Onitsha Expressway cheesy cheesy?

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: North Got Lion’s Share Of World Bank Projects Under Buhari — Documents by GavelSlam: 5:49am On Oct 15, 2017
conductorV8:

For Christ's sake this guy does not know the the difference between 20 Nigerian pounds (which the govt changed to 20 naira years later) and 20 British pounds.

I know you're thick in the head but try and understand that Zimbabwean dollars (which is millions of times lesser in value) is different from US dollars. Same way Nizoorian pounds is different from British pounds. Tufiakwa grin

Imagine Nigeria dashing 30m Biafrans 230 British pounds each yet couldn't build Enugu-Onitsha Expressway cheesy cheesy?

See later comments on the thread with evidence of the worth of the Nigerian pound as compared to the GBP.

Next time, seek caution before frothing spittle up and down a thread.

2 Likes 1 Share

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