The High Cour in Awka, presided over by Anambra State Chief Judge, Justice Peter Umeadi, has ordered the State Independent Electoral Commission (ANSIEC) to conduct local government elections within 90 days. Umeadi gave the order in his judgment on a suit brought by the All Progressives Congress (APC) and its 21 chairmanship candidates challenging the constitution of caretaker committees to run the affairs of the 21 local government areas (LGAs) in the state. The party and its 21 local government chairmanship candidates, representing all the councils, in the suit titled: A/182/2016: APC & Others vs. ANSIEC and Others, had prayed the court to declare the constitution of caretaker committees illegal. The respondents in the suit are the state electoral umpire, its chairman, the Attorney General of Anambra State, Governor Willie Obiano, and Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), the Anambra State House of Assembly and the Speaker.
Nigeria's last remaining shuttered oil terminal is resuming exports just days before the West African nation heads into OPEC talks - potentially awkward timing for a country that was exempt from the first round of output cuts.
A
second vessel, the Densa Orca, arrived on Monday at the Forcados
terminal after the Astro Perseus tanker loaded the first cargo in seven
months late last week. At least one additional tanker is expected to load a cargo of Forcados this month.
As a result, exports of the
grade could return to their usual 200,000-240,000 barrels per day (bpd)
by June, bringing Nigeria's production nearly back to levels seen before
militant attacks in 2016.
The attacks throughout 2016 in
the Niger Delta oil hub hobbled production - keeping Forcados shut for
all but a few weeks since early 2016 and gaining the nation a reprieve
from 1.8 million bpd worth of output cuts agreed between the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other
producers.
Attacks, however, largely
abated this year following visits by Nigerian Vice President Yemi
Osinbajo to the restive Delta region, and a near-tripling in the budget
for a militant amnesty programme.
Maintenance on the Bonga
oilfield in March, itself a more than 200,000 bpd export stream, held
Nigerian output below normal for at least two months, and the closure of
the primary export pipeline for Qua Iboe, the nation's largest export
stream, also limited exports.
But both are edging back to
normal, which would bring crude oil output close to the 1.8 million bpd
level that oil minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu said in January would
prompt his country to join oil producers' production cuts.
The rebound, which coincides
with global outages at a six-year low, could press Nigeria to come into
the fold of cuts should an extension deal be reached in Vienna this
week. (REUTERS)
POSTED BY:OPUOMONI PRIYE
DATE:05/22/2017
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