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Founder and Presiding Pastor at Household of God, Reverend Kris Okotie, is once again bidding for the coveted seat of Nigeria’s presidency come 2019.

The man of God, on Sunday, 15th July 2018, made this known at a special thanksgiving service to mark his 60th birthday.

Speaking, Okotie said he had written letters to chairmen of both the ruling APC and PDP seeking to be adopted as their consensus presidential candidate in 2019. “I have written to the two big parties to be made their joint presidential candidate and I promise to make a difference. I will run a government of national reconciliation and reconstruction,” stated the former pop star turned cleric.

Okotie, at the service, read and distributed to the audience copies of the letters he addressed to both Adams Oshiomhole, National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) counterpart, Prince Uche Secondus.

The cleric, in the letter, urged the two parties not to conduct primaries for aspirants to the position of president but adopt him as their consensus presidential candidate.

Okotie said he is God anointed for the office of president in 2019, lamenting that Nigerians had been confronted by “existential threats that seek to engender the fragmentation and disintegration of our nation as a holistic entity.”

Nigeria has become a divided and segregated society like never before, he said, adding that the people have become polarised by ethnicity; and have become balkanised by religious fundamentalism. “We have become fractured by political insensitivity and leadership disability,” he stressed.

The cleric said that he is fully persuaded that Nigeria needs a man who is credible, dependable and trustworthy; a God fearing man who is embroidered with compassion and love for country; a man who will be readily accepted as a symbol of national unity, who can bring genuine reconciliation and guarantee peace and tranquility in our nation,” and that man, he said is him.

 

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JUST IN: Reps Order NERC To Suspend Implementation Of New Electricity Tariff

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The Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has been requested by the house of representatives to halt the introduction of the new price.

Following the passage of a motion of urgent public significance on Tuesday, the lower legislative chamber passed the resolution in plenary session.

Nkemkanma Kama, a Labour Party (LP) politician from Enonyi state, sponsored the resolution.

On April 3, NERC approved an increase in electricity tariff for customers under the Band A classification.

The commission said customers under the category, who receive 20 hours of electricity supply daily, would begin to pay N225 per kilowatt (kW), starting from April 3, up from N66.

 

More to come…

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BIG STORY

Nigeria Will Be In Darkness If FG Doesn’t Hike Electricity Tariff — Minister Power Adelabu

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Minister of power, Adebayo Adelabu, says the country will be thrown into darkness if the federal government does not hike electricity tariff.

Recall that the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), on April 3, approved an increase in electricity tariff for customers under the Band A classification.

The commission said customers under the classification, who receive 20 hours of electricity supply daily, will now pay N225 per kilowatt (kW), starting from April 3, up from N66.

Appearing before the senate committee on power on Monday, Adelabu said although citizens are bearing the brunt of the increase, it would “catapult us to the next level”.

“The entire sector will be grounded if we don’t increase the tariff,” the minister said.

“With what we have now in the next three months, the entire country will be in darkness if we don’t increase tariff.

“The increment will catapult us to the next level. We are also Nigerians, we are also feeling the impact.”

Adelabu said if distribution companies (DisCos) do not provide 20 hours of power for seven consecutive days, the customer should be billed on the old tariff.

“We made it a conditional tariff, we made it a service reflective tariff, that the only condition that can make a discriminate company charge the new tariff of N225 per kilowatt hour is they must ensure they supply a minimum of 20 hours to that consumer everyday,” he said.

“If they cannot sustain this within a period of seven days, such consumers must be granted the old tax.

“Any consumer that can get supply for 20 hours, they can pay N225 per kilo as against the N66 in the old regime. And we also put in some monetary and tracking framework to ensure that these posts are compelled to comply with this tariff order.

“And this was displayed in the first day or the first week of this new regime, when it was discovered that a particular DisCo was not supplying for up to 20 hours and was charging the customers. A penalty of N200 million was slammed on this DisCo.”

The minister added that the fine has served as a deterrent to DisCos.

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BIG STORY

Senate, Reps Set To Resume Plenary In New Chambers After To Years Of Renovation [PHOTOS]

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Members of the senate and house of representatives are set to resume plenary in renovated chambers.

The legislators will resume plenary on Tuesday (today) after a break spanning more than five weeks.

The parliamentarians had begun their Easter and Eid el-Fitr vacations on March 20.

They were supposed to meet again on April 16, but the meeting was rescheduled.

On Monday, the house of representatives’ leadership, led by Speaker Tajudeen Abbas and his predecessor Femi Gbajabiamila, examined the green chamber.

The renovation of the chamber began in April 2022.

Since then, the legislators have been using a temporary chamber in one of the committee rooms.

In 2019, the national assembly budgeted over N30 billion for the renovation of the complex, but the amount had sparked criticisms.

The sum was later reviewed to N9 billion.

See photos of the renovated green chamber below;

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