Terrorists attacked Nigeria’s Presidential Guards Brigade Monday, wounding three military personnel.
The attack occurred along Bwari-Kubwa road in the capital Abuja while the guards were on routine patrol.
The brigade provides security for the presidential villa, the nation’s capital and neighboring communities.
Three soldiers were wounded during the attack and have been evacuated for medical attention.
The spokesman for the brigade, Captain Godfrey Anebi Abakpa, confirmed the attack.
He noted that the ambush occurred within the general area of Bwari.
He said the wounded soldiers were immediately evacuated to the military hospital for immediate medical attention.
“Yes, they were attacked, and the attack was successfully repelled. We had a few wounded in action who have been taken to the hospital and are receiving treatment.
“At the moment, our troops are still combing the general area to get rid of the criminals that have been threatening the general area. It is advised that residents go about their lawful business and keep cooperating with us by giving us timely information to enable us to win the fight against the criminals,” he added.
The attack came barely 24 hours after terrorists in a video on Sunday named President Muhammadu Buhari, Malam Nasir Rufai and other government officials as the next targets.
Most of Nigeria has the perfect climate for growing coconuts and yet it imports 70% of the popular fruit, which is widely used as a snack, a drink and to make everything from oil to cosmetics. With demand for coconuts increasing both domestically and around the world, plans are now afoot to make Nigeria self-sufficient in coconuts.
In the neighbourhood of Isolo in the heart of Nigeria’s commercial hub Lagos, Toyin Kappo-Kolawole runs a small factory processing coconuts into milk, water, flour and snacks.
She started her business, De-Cribbs Cocogry Coconut, in 2018, sourcing the coconuts from the coastal town of Badagry, the centre of the country’s coconut industry.
As production expanded, she struggled to find enough coconuts in Nigeria and had to import the fruit from Ghana.
“It makes my product expensive. That means I’m losing customers,” she says.
Ms Kappo-Kolawole is among a growing number of entrepreneurs who have been attracted to the industry.
Everything from the husk to the flesh can be processed into a wide range of products – food, beverages, cosmetics, textiles, charcoal and even soil and energy.
Global demand for coconut-based products has risen steadily since the early 2000s.
As a result, Nigeria has seen a surge in processors entering the industry, keen to take advantage of its vast opportunities.
Demand for products remains stable even during difficult economic periods. This meant that when global supply was low in 2021, the average price of coconut oil soared by 62%, reaching $1,636 (£1,370) per tonne.
Last month Nigeria launched a coconut planting initiative in Badagry as part of a drive to promote the fruit as a cash crop.
It’s part of a wider plan led by the National Coconut Producers, Processors and Marketers Association of Nigeria (Nacoppman) to help the country become self-sufficient.
Togo is among the countries in West Africa that export coconuts to Nigeria
Last year, Nigeria imported more than 500,000 tonnes of coconuts to process into products such as oils, food and beverages, official figures show.
I visited a farm a mere two-hour drive from the capital Abuja to see how a couple – Ray Davies and her husband, retired army Major General John Davies – branched out into coconut farming.
It was huge, set on 150 hectares of land with the dry rocky hills characteristic of the region forming a wall of mounds in the distance. But the land was covered with green shoots – the beginnings of 4,000 coconut trees.
From small seedlings a mighty coconut tree may grow
The couple set up the farm six years ago, largely growing fruit and vegetables including lemons, bananas and soursop. However in 2021, they added coconuts to the mix, planting seedlings on 20 hectares of land.
With many manufacturers forced to import the fruit from countries such as Togo, Ghana and Ivory Coast, farmers like the Davies hope to fill this gap.
“We don’t have enough to service our own industries. There’s a market for it here,” Ms Davies says.
Nacoppman President Nma Okoroji says that people are increasingly seeing coconuts as a cash crop.
“It’s a huge money-spinner for the economy. Coconuts can increase the revenue of the country drastically,” she says.
“We have the arable land. We have the manpower. We have the favourable weather to plant and get the best out of it. So we should be exporting instead of importing,” Ms Okoroji adds.
Coconuts are a popular snack and drink across West Africa
Ms Okoroji is working on a government-supported initiative, known as Coconut Sufficiency in Nigeria (Cosin), which aims to plant 10,000 hectares of coconut trees in most of Nigeria’s 36 states by 2027 in order to boost the domestic supply.
A major challenge facing farmers is the ability to access high-quality seedlings to help boost annual yields once the trees fruit.
The best for commercial farming is the Hybrid tree – a crossbreed of the indigenous West African Tall and the Dwarf which originates from Asia.
The Hybrid fruits in four to five years, slower than the Dwarf which fruits in two-and-a-half to three years, but the Hybrid has been specifically developed by researchers for commercial farming.
Abiodun Oyelekan, who runs a two-and-a-half-hectare farm in Badagry, says it is important to use Hybrid seeds due to their “very high” annual yield. However, at around $6 per seed they remain out of reach for many farmers.
“If you want to [replace] what you have planted before, you may you have to invest more so you need financial support,” Mr Oyelekan says.
This makes it difficult for many smallholder farmers like Mr Oyelekan to ramp up production.
Coconut factories need power
The Lagos state government’s Coconut Development Authority (Lascoda) is tasked with helping the coconut sector to boost productivity and to become more commercial.
Lascoda general manager Dapo Olakulehin says the state is the biggest producer of coconuts in the country, but production is struggling to keep up with manufacturers’ needs because there has been a surge in processing over the past 10 to 15 years.
“In the last three years, when we saw the surge, we have been encouraging a lot of people to go into cultivation to meet the processing need. The result of this effort will start showing in the next four, five years when the trees are fruiting.”
Nigerian businesswoman Ebun Feludu makes a wide range of products from coconuts
Plantations owned by Lascoda are used to produce seedlings to distribute among farmers within the region.
Last year they handed out 200,000 free seedlings to coconut producers, but resources are limited. This year they can only offer 80,000 seedlings. This means that coconut processors will continue to import the fruit for now.
The government sees the growth of the industry as a priority in order to tackle high rates of unemployment, and to reduce Nigeria’s reliance on oil exports as a foreign currency earner, says Kaura Arimiye, a senior official in the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment.
“Beyond becoming sufficient in coconut production and consumption, we also want to get to the international market,” Mr Arimiye adds.
Ebun Feludu – the founder ofJAM The Coconut Food Company, whichmakes premium products from the fruit, including snacks, oil, cosmetics, and charcoal – believes that for the government to achieve its objective it needs to improve basic infrastructure.
Nigeria is notorious for power cuts, and roads are not good either.
Ms Feludu says that she rarely has electricity at her factory in Lagos’ Ajah suburb.
“I think it’s fantastic that the government is really pushing for non-oil exports. But what will help is [addressing] these issues of power and roads, and the costs of getting our products to international markets,” she says.
In this file photo illustration taken on Aug. 10, 2020, a Twitter logo is displayed on a mobile phone in Arlington, Virginia. A seven-month ban on Twitter use in Nigeria was unlawful, according to a court ruling by West Africa’s regional bloc ECOWAS seen by Agence France-Presse on Thursday (Friday in Manila). AFP PHOTO
Lagos, Nigeria: A seven-month ban on Twitter use in Nigeria was unlawful, according to a court ruling by West Africa’s regional bloc ECOWAS seen by Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Thursday (Friday in Manila).
The Abuja government suspended Twitter in June last year after the social media giant deleted a tweet by President Muhammadu Buhari. It lifted the ban in January.
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) court issued its ruling following a suit brought by a Nigerian NGO called the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) and rights campaigners.
In a summing-up statement sent to AFP the court said the ban, which drew international approbrium, was unlawful, infringed freedom of expression and access to media, and ran counter to provisions both of the African Charter and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
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In declaring the ban unlawful the court also ordered the Nigerian authorities never to repeat it.
Abuja lifted the suspension after talks with Twitter representatives but laid down conditions, including Twitter registering its operations in Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy.
With three-quarters of Nigeria’s population of 200 million aged under 24 the country is hyper-connected to social media.
The ban shocked many in Nigeria, given Twitter’s major role in political discourse, as evidenced by the #BringBackOurGirls hashtag deployed after Boko Haram extremists kidnapped nearly 300 schoolgirls in 2014.
Young activists also turned to Twitter to organize the #EndSARS protests against police brutality that eventually grew into the largest demonstrations in Nigeria’s modern history before they were repressed.
Around 40 million Nigerians, or around 20 percent of the population, have a Twitter account.
Abuja initially announced an unlimited ban, accusing the platform of allowing activities it said threatened the country’s existence citing posts by separatist agitators from the country’s southeast, where a civil war five decades ago killed one million people.
Nigeria’s National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) director general Kashifu Inuwa Abdullahi at the time said there were “unscrupulous elements” using Twitter “for subversive purposes and criminal activities, propagating fake news, and polarising Nigerians.”
The ban came two days after Twitter took down a tweet from President Buhari warning he would take action and treat those users “in the language they understand.”
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Court has declared unlawful the suspension of Twitter by the government of President Muhammadu Buhari, and ordered the administration never to repeat it again.
This is coming after a suit was filed by the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) and 176 concerned Nigerians, according to Kolawole Oluwadare, SERAP deputy director.
The Court also stated that the act of suspending the operation of Twitter is unlawful and inconsistent with the provisions of Article 9 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights both of which Nigeria is a state party.
“The Buhari administration in suspending the operations of Twitter violates the rights of SERAP and 176 concerned Nigerians to the enjoyment of freedom of expression, access to information and the media, as well as the right to fair hearing, ” the court stated.
The Court also ordered the Buhari administration to take necessary steps to align its policies and other measures to give effect to the rights and freedoms and to guarantee a non-repetition of the unlawful ban of Twitter.
Following the deletion of President Buhari’s tweet, Lai Mohammed. the Minister of Information and Culture announced the suspension of Twitter in the country. The government also threatened to arrest and prosecute anyone using Twitter, while the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) asked all broadcast stations to suspend their patronage of Twitter.
However, in the judgment delivered today, the ECOWAS court declared that it has the jurisdiction to hear the case, and that the case was therefore admissible.
Read also: Can Elon Musk pull out of Twitter deal?
The Buhari administration was also ordered by the court to bear the costs of the proceedings and directed the Deputy Chief Registrar to assess the costs accordingly.
“We commend the ECOWAS Court for the landmark judgment in the case of SERAP v Federal Republic of Nigeria in which the Judges unanimously upheld the human rights of community citizens to freedom of expression, and access to information. Even though the Court had granted an interim order of injunction last year which restrained Abubakar Malami SAN, the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, from prosecuting Nigerians who defied the Twitter ban, SERAP deserves special commendation for pursuing the matter to a logical conclusion,” Femi Falana, SAN SERAP lawyer said.
The suit which was filed read in part: “if this application is not urgently granted, the Federal Government will continue to arbitrarily suspend Twitter and threaten to impose criminal and other sanctions on Nigerians, telecommunication companies, media houses, broadcast stations and other people using Twitter in Nigeria, the perpetual order sought in this suit might be rendered nugatory.
“The suspension of Twitter is aimed at intimidating and stopping Nigerians from using Twitter and other social media platforms to assess government policies, expose corruption, and criticize acts of official impunity by the agents of the Federal Government.
“The free communication of information and ideas about public and political issues between citizens and elected representatives is essential. This implies a free press and other media able to comment on public issues without censor or restraints, and to inform public opinion. The public also has a corresponding right to receive media output.”
A disappointed Cameroon Gabriel Zabo believed his team were Nigeria’s equals in their TotalEnergies WAFCON 2022 quarterfinal, but that the Super Falcons’ experienced helped them prevail.
“The game was won on fine details. They were not stronger than us, but they used the experience they have in the big competitions. And in this game, when it comes to utilizing their experience, they are unbeatable,” bemoaned Zabo after his team’s 1-0 loss to the Nigerians.
The coach refused to blame refereeing decisions on the loss, but instead turned his attention to the FIFA World Cup match Cameroon will play on Sunday against Botswana.
“It’s not all over, we still have a chance to qualify for the World Cup this Sunday. My players showed by their level of play tonight that they were happy to be globalists,” said Zabo.
He knows, though, he will have to quickly remobilize his troops.
“We have a few hours to watch the video this match, see what was going on and what was wrong. I will give the girls some time to digest this elimination. But I assure you that we will get back on track very quickly,” he concludes before leaving the press conference room.