Proverbs 11:24 (NIV) - One person gives freely, yet gains even more; another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty.
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Proverbs 11:24 (NIV) - One person gives freely, yet gains even more; another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty.

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One person gives freely, yet gains even more; another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty.
Proverbs 11:24
BBC chiefs have irritated music bosses with demands for them to supply talent to enter Eurovision - only for them to fare badly on the night
LOL. They've only just figured out what the rest of the world has been laughing at for decades.
JAMB releases 14,620 UTME results under investigations, withholds 93 others – Official
JAMB releases 14,620 UTME results under investigations, withholds 93 others – Official
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has cleared and released the UTME results of 14,620 candidates that were hitherto under investigation while withholding the results of 93 other candidates. Dr Fabian Benjamin, the board Head, Media and Publicity, who disclosed this in a statement in Abuja, on Tuesday, said the results were released, following the consideration and approval of…
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#QuoteOfTheDay (20210625): "Allahu Akbar, ketika Allah menahanmu dari sesuatu, Dia akan mendekatkanmu pada sesuatu yang lebih baik." (Syeikh Mutwally Asy-Sya’rawiy) Sebagian kita sudah mempersiapkan rencana indah di musim liburan akademik ini. Namun apa daya, pandemi semakin melonjak. Mungkin ada yang anggota keluarganya terpapar, lalu jatuh sakit, bahkan meninggal; sehingga mengubah semua rencana. Tahan diri dan bersabarlah. Syaikh bin Baaz menasihati, "Jangan benci sesuatu yang Allah pilihkan buatmu. Setiap sakit ada ganjarannya, setiap jatuh ada bangkitnya." Kalau kita tidak memahami dimensi akidah ini, kita akan selalu overthinking, kesal lalu marah. Padahal Allah sudah menjanjikan, "Siapa yang bertakwa, Allah akan berikannya jalan keluar dan memberinya rezeki dari arah yang tiada disangka." (QS. 65:2-3). Memakai pikiran dan logika terlalu dominan melemahkan kerja hati dan keyakinan. Sigmund Freud saja bilang, “In the small matters trust the mind, in the large ones the heart.” #Allah #withholds #something #bring #closer #better #faith #heart #patience Telegram Channel: https://t.me/xQoTD https://www.instagram.com/p/CQjtLcfgdEq/?utm_medium=tumblr

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Breaking News: President Buhari withholds assent to PIGB
New Post has been published on https://www.thisdaynews.net/2018/08/29/breaking-news-president-buhari-withholds-assent-to-pigb/
Breaking News: President Buhari withholds assent to PIGB
President Muhammadu Buhari has withheld assent to the Petroleum Industrial Governance Bill (PIGB). The decision is coming after 17 years of rigorous consultations and legislative hassles on the document.
Sources said yesterday that Buhari hinged his action on the argument that the bill reduces the president’s control of an industry that contributes the largest chunk to the national economy.
“The president said those he contacted among his ministers, especially the attorney general and minister of justice, claimed that presidential powers have been passed to a technocrat who might undermine the interest of the president.”
In the works for almost two decades, the PIGB has passed through both the House of Representatives and the Senate. In its torturous journey to the president’s table, contributions were taken from industry operators, oil-bearing communities, and all levels of government.
The bill was particularly being championed by Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, who described it as the solution to the problems bedeviling the nation’s oil industry.
Originally called Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) when it was presented, it was whittled down to accommodate all the variables against its passage before it received the nod of the House of Representatives as PIGB in January this year. The House and Senate versions were harmonised on March 28 before it was presented for assent.
A source said the bitter politics between the presidency and the leadership of the National Assembly could be the reason the bill was rejected.
It is also feared that Nigeria might lose its membership of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), if Buhari signs the bill.
This warning came from Joseph Ellah, former Group General Manager, Corporate Planning and Development Division at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).
In a new report, ‘Implication of the PIGB for Nigeria,’ published by the Claude Ake Chair of Political Economy of the University of Port Harcourt and made available to newsmen, Ellah argued that if Buhari signs the bill, thus paving the way for government divestment, the country would contravene an OPEC resolution, which requires members to own as much as 55 per cent of their oil wealth, if they were to exercise considerable influence over it.
The PIGB states that government shall within five years from the date of incorporation of the National Petroleum Company divest in a transparent manner not less than 10 per cent of the shares of the company, which will be created after the unbundling of the NNPC. Furthermore, it is expected that within 10 years, the National Petroleum Company should divest not less than an additional 30 per cent of its shares to institutional or strategic investors.
Ellah explained that the concept of divestment, which the PIGB is designed to achieve, is actually aimed at putting the country’s future in the hands of oil multinationals and private foreign capital or their local fronts, as well as a few genuine Nigerian investors. According to him, signing the PIGB into law will succeed in recreating conditions that prevailed in the 1960s before OPEC was formed.
He observed that the National Assembly’s quest to privatise national assets not mired in debt, suggests either the country is under pressure from international financial institutions and is bowing to that pressure or that the National Assembly does not know the move is detrimental to the interest of the country.
Ellah, who was also a World Bank consultant to the Ministry of Finance, recommended the commercialisation of the NNPC and its subsidiaries, implying total elimination or drastic reduction of political interference and nepotism.
But a past president of the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists, Mayowa Afe, disagreed, saying the PIGB is advocating the unbundling of the NNPC and not privatisation as portrayed in some quarters.
He said the idea of unbundling the corporation is to make it more viable, profitable and accountable and not raise money, as is the reason for most privatisation moves.
“For instance, the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) is doing very well today because it is an autonomous exploration and production arm of the corporation. Not every country that produces oil is a member of OPEC. We can as well do the same if OPEC is against the PIGB. What is the big deal being in OPEC?”
Also, the chief executive officer at Cowry Asset Management Limited, Johnson Chukwu, said: “If really and truly OPEC is taking this position, it might be premised on false assumptions. Apart from the PIGB, there are other provisions for host communities, which will ensure that they are being carried along. Equity holdings of the joint ventures will be sold to the public. Nothing in the law applies that the oil assets will be sold to the international oil companies. Countries that apply the welfarist approach to managing their oil assets have always ended in crisis. Venezuela, with its huge oil asset, is an example.”
Furthermore, the immediate past executive secretary, Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria, Femi Olawore, said: “I don’t think the PIGB should affect Nigeria’s membership of OPEC. I don’t think it will make sense if Nigeria is pushed out of OPEC because of the PIGB. I don’t think one of OPEC’s objectives is to have member states run national oil companies that are fully owned by government.”
The Bureau of Public Procurement, meanwhile, has insisted that the Federal Government is determined in its support for local content, to ensure that the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) is achieved.
The Director General of the BPP, Mamman Ahmadu, stated this at the annual conference of the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply Management of Nigeria (CIPSMN) in Abuja yesterday.
Breaking News: WAEC withholds results in Niger over N694 million debt
New Post has been published on https://www.thisdaynews.net/2018/07/23/breaking-news-waec-withholds-results-in-niger-over-n694-million-debt/
Breaking News: WAEC withholds results in Niger over N694 million debt
The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has withheld results of candidates that sat for the 2018 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) in Niger State over the state government’s indebtedness to the Council to the tune of N694 million.
Consequently, the fate of the over 49, 000 candidates who sat for the examination in the state remained uncertain, as they may not be able to access their results for admission into tertiary institutions except the state government pays the debt.
The immediate past administration in the state paid WAEC and NECO fees for all eligible candidates, including non-indigenes writing both examinations, but the current administration reviewed the incentives, thus paying for only WAEC for certain categories of students.
It will be recalled that indigene and non-indigene students had been competing favourably in tertiary institutions in the state, and were paying same tuition fees and other levies lately, but all that is now history, as non-indigenes are made to pay almost twice what indigenes in tertiary schools pay and this cuts across all courses.
Just recently, the state governor, Abubarkar Sani Bello, agreed to pay for only 36, 397 candidates who passed the mock exams conducted by the state Ministry of Education out of the 48, 715 that sat for the said exams.
Investigations revealed that due to inability to pay for the 36, 397 candidates as earlier promised, about 12, 000 other candidates, whose WAEC examination registration fees were paid by their parents/guardians, were now caught in the web of state government’s indebtedness to WAEC.
To recover their N694 million, WAEC is now withholding the entire results of candidates who sat for their 2018 exams in Niger State, thereby frustrating the students’ chances of getting admission tertiary institutions.
Some of the parents, who spoke to our correspondent, lamented the frustrations they and their wards had been subjected to in getting them admitted into tertiary institutions due to the failure of the state government to off-set the debt.
“The immediate past administration pay WAEC and NECO fees for all eligible candidates, indigenes and non-indigenes but we are in change era,” one of the victims said, adding that, “the government promised to pay for only WAEC but even at that, they still select only indigenes; we struggle to pay for our own,” said a victim.
One of the parents, Mrs. Helen (not real name), had lamented that, “After struggling to raise money to pay for our children, WAEC refused to release the results. We are hearing that it is because the state government refused to pay N694 million debts to WAEC.
“As a parent, many of us had to sell our personal belongings just to raise money and pay for WAEC and NECO of our children because the state government refused to pay for them; we are now suffering the consequences of the state government’s inability to pay the outstanding debt because WAEC has refused to release the results. This government is not being fair to us.”
Meanwhile, Niger State commissioner for Education, Hajiya Fatima Madugu confirmed that the state government is owing WAEC, N694 million. She however quickly added that some money will be advanced to WAEC last Friday to ensure the immediate release of the results.
Madugu also told our correspondent that there was an understanding between WAEC and the state government for a N30 million monthly installments and promised that the money would be released last weekend, a promise that was never kept as at the time of this report on Sunday.
“It is true that the state government is indebted to the tune of N694 million; because the money is much, we agreed to be paying N30 million monthly to WAEC. Hopefully, we will pay some money tomorrow so that they will release the results.”
U.S. Withholds $65 Million From U.N. Relief Agency for Palestinians
The agency funds schools and health clinics that serve nearly two million people in Lebanon, Jordan, the West Bank and Gaza Strip. As funding declined recently, the agency began significant layoffs of teachers and health workers, many of them refugees themselves.
Mr. Trump has turned American policy sharply in favor of Israel and against the Palestinians. He has formally recognized Jerusalem as…
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