Saturday 16 March 2013

AMNESTY OFFICE LAUDS KANO ON AIR PILOT SCHEME …WARNS EX-AGITATORS OVER FALSE CLAIMS

PRESS STATEMENT

AMNESTY OFFICE LAUDS KANO ON AIR PILOT SCHEME
…WARNS EX-AGITATORS OVER FALSE CLAIMS  

The Presidential Amnesty Office has described the initiative of the Kano State Government to train youths of the state as aircraft pilots as very commendable.
The state government on Thursday commenced a pilot training programme for 100 graduates of the state origin in a televised deployment of the beneficiaries.
Chairman of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, Hon. Kingsley Kuku, said the initiative will go a long way in stemming youth restiveness in the state and in the country.
He said it is heartwarming that a state government was taking after an initiative of the Federal Government, which through the amnesty programme is bridging the global shortage of qualified pilots and core aviation industry personnel.
“The aircraft pilot training scheme of the Kano State Government is very commendable. It not only complements what the Federal Government is doing through the aviation training component of the amnesty programme, but it also contributes towards bridging the shortage of qualified pilots and core aviation professionals globally. Figures from Boeing show there is a global need for close to 500,000 more commercial pilots by 2029, which is an average of 25,000 new pilots a year,” Kuku said.
The PAP chairman, who is also Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta, urged states in the Niger Delta, whose youths continually besiege the Amnesty Office to be engaged in its training programme, to borrow a leaf from Kano.
In a related development, the Amnesty Office has warned some leaders of the former Niger Delta agitators making false claims of non-payment of travelling allowances and special salaries to desist forthwith.
It said those making the claims were being economical with the truth.
“In December 2012, no fewer than 68 leaders of the former agitators, in two batches, went to South Africa for a week-long non-violence/business development training. Every one of them was paid his travelling allowance and other logistics expenses. It is not true that the chairman promised to pay them any other allowance apart from what was due to them for the trip. Those making the claim need to show proof that they did not receive their travelling allowances.”
The office also dismissed as unfounded the claim that there was no evidence of items purchased for victims of last year’s flooding in five Niger Delta states as the presentation of the items was widely reported in both the print and electronic media.
“The items purchased with the donations by the former agitators were presented in November 2012 to the flood relief committees in the affected five states of Edo, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers and Cross River, which had the responsibility of distributing the items to victims of the disaster. The various presentations were shown on television and reported in various newspapers across the country. It is indeed malicious for a few of them to now claim there was no evidence of purchase of these items.
“The Amnesty Office feels strongly about these unfounded allegations and warns those feeding the media with falsehood to desist forthwith from impugning the hard-earned reputation of the PAP chairman, Hon. Kuku.”

DANIEL ALABRAH
HEAD, MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS
PRESIDENTIAL AMNESTY OFFICE
ABUJA

Wednesday 13 March 2013

300 NON-MILITANTS IN NIGER DELTA TO BENEFIT FROM AMNESTY PROGRAMME-KUKU



Abuja, March 13, 2013 (NAN) The Presidential Amnesty Office (PAO) says 300 non-militant youths living in the violence and militancy impacted communities in the Niger Delta will benefit from the amnesty programme

Mr Kingsley Kuku, the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs, made this known on Wednesday when a delegation of the Ndokwa National Union from Delta North Senatorial District of Delta, paid him a courtesy visit in Abuja.

Kuku, who is also the Chairman of PAO, said the office was looking for interested youths in the violence and militancy impacted communities to be enrolled in education programmes.

He said the decision followed President Goodluck Jonathan’s approval that ``a few youths who have the interest to be educated from the violence and militancy impacted communities in the Niger Delta should also be taken with indigent status.’’

The aide said the approval was based on the fact that all the communities and people in the Niger Delta suffered the adverse effect of oil pipeline vandalism and militancy problems in the area.

Kuku said the former militants should not be the only ones to benefit from the amnesty programme, adding that the non-militant youths living in the militancy impacted communities should also benefit.

He said that he was embarking on a visit to some communities in the Niger Delta to see their challenges, so that he would be in a better position to advise the president on how the challenges could be addressed.

Kuku promised that he would pass on to the President the message of the Delta North Union, particularly how the electricity problem facing the people of Ndokwa could be solved.

Earlier, Mr Paul Enebeli, the President-General of the union, who led the team, alleged that the National Agip Oil Company had been generating over 480 megawatts of electricity daily, but had failed to step down electricity to the communities in Ndokwa land.

``Since 2005, the National Agip Oil Company has been generating over 480mw of electricity daily from Kwale/Okpai Independent Power Plant (IPP) phase one which is in Ndokwa land.

``Out of this number, 450mw is transferred to Obosi Power Station in Anambra State, yet Ndokwa land does not enjoy this as there is no power step-down from the Kwale/Okpai plant in Ndokwa.

``There is no care for the level of avoidable devastation our people and environment suffer due to this gas exploitation,’’ Enebeli said.

The union boss said that the Ndokwa Federal Constituency had no Federal presence except the Nigeria Prison Service in Kwale.

He urged the Federal Government to provide Ndokwa land with social amenities and Federal institutions that would create massive employment opportunity for the youth. (NAN)