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The Kwara State Governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed says the State has witnessed significant development across all sectors in the last 14 years.

Governor Ahmed, who spoke through a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Communications, Dr. Muyideen Akorede, said Kwara State has recorded visible progress since 2003 as his administration and that of former Governor Bukola Saraki have elevated the State and its people despite spending the bulk of federal allocations on salaries and pensions.

The statement noted that the Ahmed Administration has completed most inherited projects and has equally implemented new projects while several are ongoing across the State.

It highlighted some of the projects implemented by the present administration to include renovation and equipping of five general hospitals into state-of-the-art facilities, International Vocational, Technical and Entrepreneurship College (IVTEC) Ajase Ipo, KWASU’s ultra-modern Engineering Complex, urban and rural electrification and water projects as well as youth empowerment and Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) development under which more than 60,000 youths and entrepreneurs have benefited.

The statement added that the state government has rehabilitated 17 waterworks across the State, expanded its Community Health Insurance scheme and carried out reforms such as the establishment of the Kwara State Internal Revenue Service (KWIRS) and Kwara Infrastructural Development Fund (IF-K) which have ensured sustained infrastructure development and prompt payment of salaries and pensions to State workers and pensioners.

According to the statement, these reforms have also enabled the state government implement several road projects across the State despite the limited resources at its disposal.

Stressing that development is an ongoing process and that governance is a continuum, the statement listed the ongoing projects to include Geri Alimi Diamond Underpass, the new KWASU Campuses at Ekiti and Ilesha Baruba, its Postgraduate School in Ilorin, dualisation of Kulende-UITH road and the solar-powered streetlights project, “Light Up Kwara”.

Continuing, the statement noted that the previous administration of Dr. Saraki, the current Senate President, implemented several infrastructural projects such as the Kwara State University, Malete, Harmony Advanced Diagnostic Centre, International Aviation College, Ilorin, Shonga farms, numerous urban and rural roads and electrification projects, remodelling of the Ilorin Township Stadium as well as pioneered the innovative Community Health Insurance Scheme.

The statement stated that the projects have expanded access to higher education, boosted health care for Kwarans, established the State as an aviation hub, created thousands of local jobs and significantly developed the State.

Providing further explanation, the statement noted that any attempt to assess the utilization of monetary inflows into Kwara since 2003 must recognise the fact that as a civil-service dominated State, Kwara utilizes up to 70% of allocation for payment of salaries and overheads.

It, however, maintained that despite this, the State government has implemented several developmental projects across all sectors, stressing that ‘’Kwara of today does not bear any semblance with Kwara of 2003 development-wise”.

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BREAKING: EFCC Declares Yahaya Bello Wanted [PHOTO]

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Yahaya Bello, the former governor of Kogi state, has been declared wanted by the EFCC.

He reportedly evaded arrest yesterday when the commission visited his home to enforce arrest.

More to come…

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ECONOMY: CBN Not Using Foreign Reserves To Defend Naira — Olayemi Cardoso

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The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, asserts that the nation is not defending the value of the naira with its foreign reserves.

He made this known on Wednesday in Washington, DC, where he is attending the International Monetary Fund-World Bank Spring Meetings.

Cardoso said $600 million came into Nigeria’s reserves account within the last two days.

The naira has appreciated against the dollar in recent weeks, gaining over 40%, from about N1,900/$ to about N1,000/$1 now. But while the naira rebound, Nigeria’s foreign reserves are dwindling, dropping to about $32.29 billion on April 15 — the lowest level in over six years.

Cardoso said, “What you’ve seen with respect to the shift in our reserves is normal in any country’s reserves where for example, debt is due and certain payments need to be made because that is also part of keeping your credibility.

“Other times money comes in, it takes it up again. Between yesterday and today, about $600 million came into the reserves account. We are looking towards a market that operates by itself, willing buyers, willing sellers and price discovery.

“The shift in our reserves has really little or nothing to do with defending naira and that is certainly not our objective.”

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Troops Rescue Pregnant Chibok Girl With Children 10 Years After

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Lydia Simon, a Chibok girl who had been kidnapped by Boko Haram terrorists for several years, has been rescued, according to Nigerian Army troops stationed in the northeast.

Lydia, one of the abducted girls from Chibok Secondary School, was rescued along with her three children by troops conducting Operation Desert Sanity III around Ngoshe in the Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State. Lydia’s serial number was 68, according to a statement from the Department of Army Public Relations.

Lydia was five months pregnant at the time of her rescue and claimed to be from Pemi Town in Chibok.

In addition, the statement stated that on Tuesday, April 16, 2024, Nigerian Army forces stationed in the North Central region for counterterrorism operations effectively ambushed and eliminated three terrorists who were determined to cause chaos.

Statistics provided by the parents of the abducted schoolgirls show that 271 students were taken on that tragic day in 2014, but 57 of them managed to escape soon after; 103 were freed thanks to federal intervention; 20 more were set free by state efforts; and 92 students remain in captivity.

There have been many mass kidnappings of schoolchildren since the Chibok incident, attracting global outrage. From Chibok to Dapchi, Kankara, Kagara, and many others, terrorists have in the last decade seized thousands of schoolchildren in mass kidnappings. While some of the students eventually regain freedom, others have been perpetually detained in the enclaves of their abductors and sexual abusers.

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