Category Archives: News

Who said I will probe Obasanjo

President Goodluck Jonathan and former President Olusegun Obasanjo

President Goodluck Jonathan on Saturday said contrary to media reports, he had no intention of probing the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

Jonathan made the clarification in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati.

He said he was constrained to state again that there was no truth in reports on Saturday, that he intends to probe the Obasanjo administration because of the former President’s constant criticisms of the Federal Government.

He said rather than probing Obasanjo, he remained fully focused on the tasks of ensuring peace, security and stability across the country in order to create the right conditions for rapid socio-economic development.

The President said he would not be distracted from this objective by attempts to drive a wedge between him, respected elders and leaders of his party.

The statement read in part, “The President has nothing but the greatest respect for Obasanjo’s very notable contributions to national growth and development over many years and far from taking offence or seeking retaliation, will always welcome objective criticisms and advice from the very highly-regarded elder statesman.

“What is more, President Jonathan regards his administration as a continuation of the unbroken chain of PDP-led governments started by Obasanjo in 1999 which have worked tirelessly to entrench democratic governance and achieve rapid socio-economic growth in the country.

“Rather than order a pointless probe of his predecessors, he will continue to do his utmost best to build on the solid foundations for national progress laid under previous PDP administrations.

“Speculations and suggestions of an impending probe of the Obasanjo administration by President Jonathan are therefore nonsensical and should be dismissed by all right-thinking Nigerians as the product of the fertile imagination of mischievous political jobbers.”

Punch

Access Bank’s Female Marketer Dies Of Hypertension Over Inability To Meet 1 Trillion Naira Target In 6Months

For those in the competitive banking industry in Nigeria would know that setting targets for marketers is the order of the day. Most times, staffs’ employment confirmation are based on meeting some huge targets set by the bank to the intending employee of most banks.

In order to attract more customers, especially the highly rich businessmen and women in the society, sexy ladies and very handsome guys are employed by banks to carry out the job as marketers.

These ladies so employed as marketers are sometimes seen as bank ‘prostitutes’ because they have to device all means to woo ‘big fishes’ to the bank by being seductive enough to make an ‘Herod’ or ‘Pharoah’ change his mind.

According to reports, last week Friday, beautiful female marketer with Access Bank Business Unit at Simbiat Abiola, Ikeja, Lagos branch, Solabomi Olugbemi reportedly lost her precious life after battling with hypertension when she could not meet the target of one trillion Naira set for her and her team.

Continue reading Access Bank’s Female Marketer Dies Of Hypertension Over Inability To Meet 1 Trillion Naira Target In 6Months

We are never going to grow-

Q*U*E*S*T*I*O*N!
Why The Young Never Grow in Nigeria.
**You are the Leaders of Tomorrow!

They enjoyed their own youth and our own time, they deny us the opportunity to be a leader or even taking positions of responsibility.

Our respected Elders, see and treat us like ‘Mr Obi’, always a boy.

**ACN Chairman: Chief Bisi Akande (73) was deputy governor, later governor of the old Oyo State (Osun and Oyo) 33 years ago.

**CPC Leader: Maj Gen Mohammadu Buhari (70) was Nigerian Military Head of State, 29 years ago.

**PDP Chairman: Dr. Bamanga Tukur (77) was the Governor, Old Gongola State (Adamawa & Taraba) 33 years ago.

REMEMBER THAT:
Yakubu Gowon was only 32 years when he was the Head of state of Nigeria.
Chukwuemeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu was 33 years when he was Governor of Eastern Nigeria.

Today, at 30s, Nigerian youths are still taking JAMB Examination, not to mention that majority of Nigerians are still begging to apply for jobs that are not there, even when they are ‘hitting’ close to 50 years.

These men that enjoyed the best of Nigeria are today depriving us of leadership apprenticeship and positions as they continued to hold offices tight to their chest.
The even brainwashed most us to see them as mini-gods, expect us to kill or abuse anyone that do not support their aspiration or political views.
Our Future means nothing to them, as the best is meant for their children and grandchildren, while we roam the streets with cap in hand.

The question is, when will Nigerian youths wake up from their shocking sleep?
Lastly my other question to these our Elders who has sworn that the young ones will never take over the running of our the Nation’s affairs, is, when will our own leadership for Tomorrow, start? – Aliyu Bello, Oxfordshire.

Source: Hope for Nigeria.

Asari Speaks out

VOLCANO***************
Alhaji Mujaheed Dokubo- Asari On Nigeria.
**on anti North talk: the mother of my children is Northern Fulani.
**for 55 yrs, they destroyed Nigeria, No road, no electricity, worst education standard.
**north ruled for over 40yrs, nothing to show for it in the north.
**the biggest farms in Cyprus belongs to a current Northern governor, yet his people are hungry.

ON THE PRESIDENT.
Goodluck has been there for two years, and every problem since 1956 when Nigeria got self-government, 57 years today, for 55 years they have been ruling.

But only two years, he is clueless, he is dumb…so if he is clueless, with the intelligence Balewa had, Gowon had, Muritala Mohammed had, Olusegun Obasanjo had, Shagari had, Buhari had, Babangida had, Abacha had, Ernest Shonekan had, then Abudulsami Abubakar, then Obasanjo again, for 55 years, they destroyed everything. No road, no electricity, our education is the worst thing that anybody can give to us. What did they achieve?

ANTI-NORTH Accusation.
People say I am anti-north, but I have a northern Fulani wife, from Yobe State . She has children for me. My lawyer, one of the closest people to me, who handle my businesses, is a northerner from Bida.

POVERTY IN THE NORTH.
There should be dialogue. For over 40 years, the north ruled Nigeria , but today, there is nothing to show for it in the north. The ordinary northern is poorer than any other person. I just returned from northern Cyprus , one of the biggest farms in Cyprus belongs to an incumbent governor from the north.

If that governor builds that farm in the north, will it not help the zone? They keep taking their wealth outside their region, who do they expect to come and develop their region for them? But if Goodluck attempts that kind of thing and refuses to develop and attract investment in our area, we will show him.

BOKO HARAM’S THREATS.
The arrogance of Shekau and his group is unislamic. Which President if not Goodluck, will accept somebody to tell him to become a Muslim or resign?

What kind of insult? Is that what the Prophet Sallalahualihiwassalam did? Become a Muslim or this…? That is an insult. You don’t push somebody beyond the point he can go. The insult is too much. Did you do it to Abacha, IBB? They are not
the only ones that can kill. I don’t know why they will not listen.

They are behaving like the deaf, the dumb and the blind. Death and starvation are coming to their house, yet they are showing arrogance. Let nothing happen to Goodluck, because if anything happens to him, the world will know.

WAY OUT.
The easiest way to solve the problem is to convocate a national dialogue where we will all sit down and talk. But if we continue to postpone it, we are only postponing the doomsday because as the attacks continue in the North, and if they continue to kill the Igbos, one day, one mad Igbo man will get up and say enough is enough, and he will go to Ama Hausa (Hausa Community) in Enugu, Owerri, Aba and in all the Igboland and attack and kill innocent northerners. Then, there will be reprisal this way and that way.

Then, Goodluck will not be able to hold anybody again. If they see any Ijaw man to kill in the North, maybe a Police Officer, Immigration or Customs or Managerial staff in NNPC in the North, but if Ijaw people decide to kill Northerners, every major household in the North will cry because in Bonny Island alone, all the prominent Northern families are there in LNG and in other oil companies there.

I can go home today and ask them to close up Bonny Island and the place will be closed. There will be no way for anybody to escape and they will all be killed. If that happens, the cream of majority of North in the oil and gas business will be affected. So what we are saying is that it is the north that needs peace more than us. We have the resources in our hand, even the presidency is in our hands now, so they are the ones that need peace.

And everybody must impress it on them that they need peace. This road they are going will not help them. They say he who the gods want to destroy, they first make him deaf. So, the north must understand they need peace more than any other person. We can live together but we need to sit down and dialogue.

This arrogance will not help them. They see the truth and refuse to say it. The north should ask their leaders: the IBBs, Buharis, Abdusalamis and all of them, what did they do at the period they were ruling? Why did they fail to develop the North? So, what I am trying to say is that Goodluck must convoke a national conference whether he likes it or not.

This is the truth that they have not learnt. People will pay VAT in Lagos , and you will share the VAT from Lagos in Yobe. Then somebody says he does not drink alcohol. It is haram to drink alcohol, to buy alcohol, to receive proceed from alcohol. So, everybody in the north has been eating haram. VAT from alcohol is being distributed. Why? Is that justice? So, please, let us sit down and talk.

There is need for national discourse. It is only by sitting down and dialoguing that we can find solution to our problem. In the North, they should set up Neighborhood Vigilante and make sure that this Vigilante protects the people: the Church, the Mosques and palaces of the traditional rulers. Because, the people throwing bombs are human beings like them. – vanguard news.

 

Since My Father is a Witch, Let him Die first- Pastor kills father and uncle

The police in Ebonyi State have arrested a 22-year-old man, Udoka Onwe, for allegedly killing his 60-year-old father, Mr. Peter Onwe, and uncle, Mr. James Elum, 52, in Umuogodo-Akpu Ngbo in Ohaukwu Local Government Area of the state.

Our correspondent gathered that upon interrogation by the police, Onwe , who is the founder and pastor at Christ Rimites Church, confessed to killing his father and uncle on the suspicion that they were wizards who wanted to use occult means to kill him.

The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Mr. Sylvester Igbo, who confirmed the incident, said the alleged murder was carried out on Thursday, around 5am.

Igbo said the matter was reported at Ohaukwu Police Station by a woman, Mrs. Onyemaechi Onwe, from Umuogodo-Akpu Ngbo village in the area.

Pastor kills father, uncle in Abakaliki

He said as soon as investigation was completed, the suspect would be charged to court.

He said, “This morning (Thursday), around 5am, a case of murder was reported at Ohaukwu Police Station by a woman, Mrs. Onyemaechi Onwe, from Umuogodo-Akpu Ngbo village in Ohaukwu Local Government Area of the state.

“She reported that one Udoka Onwe, male, 22 years, murdered his father and uncle. The suspect has a church called Christ Rimites Church and when he was asked the reason he murdered his father and uncle, he said that they were wizards and that they wanted to kill him.

“He has been arrested and he is still with the police. The corpses of the deceased have been taken to Ngbo General Hospital mortuary where an autopsy is expected to be carried out on the bodies.”

Do you think the pastor was right or should he have waited to have evidence first?

Source: Punch

Either Your Brain or God Is Fake- A Must Read

TAKE TIME TO READ. It’s worth reading it. Trust me 🙂

Professor : You are a Christian, aren’t you, son ?

Student : Yes, sir.

Professor: So, you believe in GOD ?

Student : Absolutely, sir.

Professor : Is GOD good ?

Student : Sure.

Professor: Is GOD all powerful ?

Student : Yes.

Professor: My brother died of cancer even though he prayed to GOD to heal him. Most of us would attempt to help others who are ill. But GOD didn’t. How is this GOD good then? Hmm?

(Student was silent.)

Professor: You can’t answer, can you ? Let’s start again, young fella. Is GOD good?

Student : Yes.

Professor: Is satan good ?

Student : No.

Professor: Where does satan come from ?

Student : From … GOD …

Professor: That’s right. Tell me son, is there evil in this world?

Student : Yes.

Professor: Evil is everywhere, isn’t it ? And GOD did make everything. Correct?

Student : Yes.

Professor: So who created evil ?

(Student did not answer.)

Professor: Is there sickness? Immorality? Hatred? Ugliness? All these terrible things exist in the world, don’t they?

Student : Yes, sir.

Professor: So, who created them ?

(Student had no answer.)

Professor: Science says you have 5 Senses you use to identify and observe the world around you. Tell me, son, have you ever seen GOD?

Student : No, sir.

Professor: Tell us if you have ever heard your GOD?

Student : No , sir.

Professor: Have you ever felt your GOD, tasted your GOD, smelt your GOD? Have you ever had any sensory perception of GOD for that matter?

Student : No, sir. I’m afraid I haven’t.

Professor: Yet you still believe in Him?

Student : Yes.

Professor : According to Empirical, Testable, Demonstrable Protocol, Science says your GOD doesn’t exist. What do you say to that, son?

Student : Nothing. I only have my faith.

Professor: Yes, faith. And that is the problem Science has.

Student : Professor, is there such a thing as heat?

Professor: Yes.

Student : And is there such a thing as cold?

Professor: Yes.

Student : No, sir. There isn’t.

(The lecture theater became very quiet with this turn of events.)

Student : Sir, you can have lots of heat, even more heat, superheat, mega heat, white heat, a little heat or no heat. But we don’t have anything called cold. We can hit 458 degrees below zero which is no heat, but we can’t go any further after that. There is no such thing as cold. Cold is only a word we use to describe the absence of heat. We cannot measure cold. Heat is energy. Cold is not the opposite of heat, sir, just the absence of it.

(There was pin-drop silence in the lecture theater.)

Student : What about darkness, Professor? Is there such a thing as darkness?

Professor: Yes. What is night if there isn’t darkness?

Student : You’re wrong again, sir. Darkness is the absence of something. You can have low light, normal light, bright light, flashing light. But if you have no light constantly, you have nothing and its called darkness, isn’t it? In reality, darkness isn’t. If it is, well you would be able to make darkness darker, wouldn’t you?

Professor: So what is the point you are making, young man ?

Student : Sir, my point is your philosophical premise is flawed.

Professor: Flawed ? Can you explain how?

Student : Sir, you are working on the premise of duality. You argue there is life and then there is death, a good GOD and a bad GOD. You are viewing the concept of GOD as something finite, something we can measure. Sir, Science can’t even explain a thought. It uses electricity and magnetism, but has never seen, much less fully understood either one. To view death as the opposite of life is to be ignorant of the fact that death cannot exist as a substantive thing.

Death is not the opposite of life: just the absence of it. Now tell me, Professor, do you teach your students that they evolved from a monkey?

Professor: If you are referring to the natural evolutionary process, yes, of course, I do.

Student : Have you ever observed evolution with your own eyes, sir?

(The Professor shook his head with a smile, beginning to realize where the argument was going.)

Student : Since no one has ever observed the process of evolution at work and cannot even prove that this process is an on-going endeavor. Are you not teaching your opinion, sir? Are you not a scientist but a preacher?

(The class was in uproar.)

Student : Is there anyone in the class who has ever seen the Professor’s brain?

(The class broke out into laughter. )

Student : Is there anyone here who has ever heard the Professor’s brain, felt it, touched or smelt it? No one appears to have done so. So, according to the established Rules of Empirical, Stable, Demonstrable Protocol, Science says that you have no brain, sir. With all due respect, sir, how do we then trust your lectures, sir?

(The room was silent. The Professor stared at the student, his face unfathomable.)

Professor: I guess you’ll have to take them on faith, son.

Student : That is it sir … Exactly ! The link between man & GOD is FAITH. That is all that keeps things alive and moving.

P.S.

I believe you have enjoyed the conversation. And if so, you’ll probably want your friends / colleagues to enjoy the same, won’t you?

Forward this to increase their knowledge … or FAITH.

By the way, that student was EINSTEIN.

Creativity in Nigerians But no opporturnity

Creativity in Nigerians
I know you may not like the man or his odd works but think about giving him the chance to make him shine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Until looters see opportunity in us and appreciate us our economic status will not change as a country. If this Boy can make this with his resources as available,

what do you think he will do if he is giving an opportunity with resources.

Lets talk.

Continue reading Creativity in Nigerians But no opporturnity

Police arrest 7 fake pastors over sham deliverance

…parade security guard, 8 other suspected robbers
LOKOJA—Kogi State Police Command has paraded seven persons for allegedly posing as bishop, pastors and prophets during a revival programme in Lokoja, capital of Kogi State.

Those paraded include Bishop Bamidele Abraham of Eagle Kingdom Church, Lokoja and Pastors Chucks Ingalis Kelvin, Chinedu Okosisi, Samson Prince, Osita Chuckwu, Samuel Ike and Nnenanaya Anthony Ikechukwu. They were said to have come from Port Harcourt, Rivers State into Lokoja.

State Commissioner of Police, Muhammed Kastina who paraded the suspects said they were arrested while conducting ‘deliverance’ for people at a revival programme organised by one of them in Lokoja.

According to Muhammed, Bishop Bamidele who is the pastor-in-charge of Eagle Kingdom Church, Lokoja was said to have contacted Pastor Chuks from Port Har-court to help raise money for his book launch.

Sources said Chucks, who was an expert in such ventures came with members of his team, some of who acted like mermaid; deaf and dumb persons while others claimed to have been afflicted with other sicknesses during the revival to sway the sympathy of those in attendance.

However, a member of the congregation who felt uncomfortable with the way the pastors were conducting the deliverance, reported them to the police which moved in swiftly and arrested the suspects.

One of the suspects, Pastor Chuks, however defended his action saying, “This is not robbery, its pure professionalism. Every profession has its own way of surviving. The police have their own way, the lawyers have their own way; even you journalists have your own way; what I did is pure business and survival instinct.’’

Also, Pastor Osita Chukwu who posed as mermaid said she was promised N16, 000 while leaving Port Harcout to Lokoja but they only got N1, 000 pending the conclusion of the botched revival programme.

Meanwhile, Lagos State Police Command Tuesday paraded a nine-man syndicate of suspected armed robbers, including a security guard and his two brothers. The gang allegedly stole exotic vehicles from the employer of the security guard and sold the vehicles for N10 million.

The vehicles, which have been recovered by the police were a Fortune SRS Jeep and four 2011 Toyota Camry cars, stolen from an Indian company in Lagos.

The state command’s spokesperson, DSP Ngozi Briade disclosed that the vehicles were recovered from Ikot-Ekpene, Akwa-Ibom State, by detectives attached to the Lagos State Anti-Robbery Squad, SARS, led by SP Abba Kyari.

According to her, the incident, which occurred on May 19, was reported at the Area ‘J’ Command, Lekki, by the management of the company before it was transferred to SARS.

Briade said the security guard, who allegedly masterminded the operation, connived with his brothers, who later co-opted others that stole the vehicles and disposed of them to a receiver in Akwa-Ibom State.

The police spokesperson, however, disclosed that the vehicles were recovered in batches following the confessional statements of the suspects, adding that the suspects were in police custody, except one who was currently receiving treatment in a hospital.

She said the suspects would be charged to court for robbery as soon as investigation was concluded.

However, Vidani, while expressing happiness over the outstanding performance of the Police, stated that he was amazed about how the police was able to recover the vehicles and arrest the suspects within a short time.

The Indian businessman observed that the Nigeria Police could do much more, if given the necessary support and logistics.

Defying the courfew in Kadunna and Another Crisis

Fresh violence in Kaduna metropolis yesterday resulted to the loss of many lives while properties worth millions of naira were also damaged.

Signs of problem began to emerge Monday night when sounds of gunshots were heard in areas like Kakuri, Badarawa, Barnawa and other parts of the city.

Not long after residents of the city have commenced their routine businesses yesterday, news of riots in areas like Tudun Wada, Barnawa, Unguwan Shanu and other areas filtered into Kaduna metropolis. This development forced people to lock up their shops while government offices were also put under lock and key.

The desperate running for safety by residents that followed the news of the riot worsened the situation as rumour mongers seized the opportunity to spread unsubstantiated stories.

In Badarawa, Unguwan Shanu and Kawo areas of the city, where our correspondent visited, a church and a mosque were burnt down on Karaye Road and Unguwan Yaro of Badarawa area. A water vendor, who was said to have taken water into Unguwan Yaro to sell, was hacked to death.

Our correspondent also saw many cars with smashed windscreens on the Unguwan Sarki-Kawo Road. The owners of the cars had abandoned them in the middle of the road while they ran away for their dear lives. A team of Air Force personnel rescued a woman and her infant from rioting youths at the Unguwan Shanu axis of the Unguwan Sarki-Kawo road after her car was attacked by the rioters.

Reports from other areas of the city indicate that both Muslims and Christians took advantage of the riot to attack on each other, depending on which was in the majority. This led to many casualties.

What could be on His mind?

 

President Goodluck Jonathan

“Life isn’t about waiting for the storm to pass,
it’s about learning to dance in the rain.”

Are u thinking what i am thinking?

Some inner truth told me that the North are trying to frustrate this man and he might be thinking of how to let them succeed or fail.

How can one explain not having intelligence report of the crisis that is happening almost every day?

Almustapher saga, dead and buried,

Sanusi donation- dead and buried

Now Lawan= may be will die too.

Insurance may increase premium on Nigerian carriers considering the DANA crash.

AFRICAN aviation stakeholders yesterday in Johannesburg, South Africa said the crash of DANA Flight 0992 in Nigeria would engender a massive increase of the insurance premium for all Nigerian airlines.

Fadugba

At the 21 African Aviation’s “Air Finance” conference hosted by Nick Fadugba, Chief Executive Officer of African Aviation and former Secretary General of African Airlines Association in Johannesburg, South Africa, said the DANA crash would be factored into the future premium benchmarks for carriers in the country.

With the crash and expected payout of insurance claims, the overall insurance premium per aircraft and the entire fleet of DANA Air is expected to jump by 850 per cent, according to an aviation insurance expert who pleaded anonymity.

Other contributors on the panel included Zakhele Thwala, director of Civil Aviation South Africa, Captain Colin Jordaan, A340 pilot; John Somiolis, Clyde and Co; Steve Doyle, director Willis Aerospace, UK, Scort Smit, director Airborne Insurance South Africa.

They noted that the insurance premium of an airline also “shoots up as the potential liability of a carrier changes with the type of international passengers it carries.”

The panelists observed that in most African countries, “aviation is often not accorded priority until a major crash redirects everyone to critical roles they play.”

Aviation analyst, Francis Ayigbe told The Guardian that overall, the insurance premium paid by Nigerian airlines was high in view of the fact that international underwriters see Nigeria as a high risk end of the aviation market.

Speaking with The Guardian from Johannesburg, Fadugba noted that Africa airlines were doing well in general as strong members of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the clearing house for global airlines.

On the flip side, however, Fadugba observed that the continent’s airlines lacked capacity for networking and opening themselves up to finance opportunities.

He said although African airlines were working hard at safety, competition might knock them off their strides.

Fadugba regretted that rather than collaborate, African airlines work hard to put one another out of business, even as they lack the strength to stave off massive competition from Europe, America and the Middle East.

According to him, said most airlines in West Africa, would need to work on their business model to make it in the larger, competitive space.

The former AFRAA scribe stated:  “The principle of insurance is that the losses of a few will be paid by many. The age of an aircraft does not matter in insurance claims.”

Vanguard

30 Practical Ways to Improve Yourself

You Need to invite some one.

Today is our blog’s sixth birthday.  Over the past six years we have touched on hundreds of tips, tricks and lessons that have the potential to improve your life.  So to celebrate this milestone, we’re going to take a stroll down memory lane and review some of the best tips from our previous articles.  Together, we believe the 30 tips below are the cornerstone of practical self improvement advice.  Each tip links back to its original corresponding article, so you can read more at your leisure.  Enjoy…

  1. Maintain a positive attitude. – Positive thinking is at the forefront of every great success story.  The mind must believe it can do something before it is capable of actually doing it.  So be aware of your mental self-talk.  We all talk silently to ourselves in our heads, but we aren’t always conscious of what we’re saying or how it’s affecting us.  Start listening to your thoughts.  If you hear negative thoughts, stop for a second and replace them with positive thoughts.  As the Dalai Lama once said, “The way to overcome negative thoughts and destructive emotions is to develop opposing, positive emotions that are stronger and more powerful.”  For some practical positive thinking guidance, I recommend reading The Power of Positive Thinking.
  2. Be kind to yourself. – If you had a friend who spoke to you in the same way that you sometimes speak to yourself, how long would you allow that person to be your friend?  The way you treat yourself sets the standard for others.  You must love who you are or no one else will.
  3. Embrace problems as a natural part of growing. – Part of living and growing up is experiencing unexpected troubles in life.  People lose jobs, get sick, and sometimes die in car accidents.  When you are younger, and things are going pretty well, this harsh reality can be hard to visualize.  The smartest, and oftentimes hardest, thing we can do in these kinds of situations is to be tempered in our reactions.  To want to scream obscenities, but to be wiser and more disciplined than that.  To remember that emotional rage only makes matters worse.  And to remember that tragedies are rarely as bad as they seem, and even when they are, they give us an opportunity to grow stronger.
  4. Continue reading 30 Practical Ways to Improve Yourself

Police contact banks in search for Lawan’s $620,000 bribe By Yusuf Alli, Abuja 1 hour ago

SUSPENDED lawmaker Farouk Lawan yesterday appeared before the Police Special Task Force probing the bribe-for-clearance scandal.

The police are searching for the $620,000 bribe businessman Femi Otedola gave Lawan, chairman of the House Committee which probed the fuel subsidy scandal. Lawan has confessed that he collected the cash, saying it was to prove that Otedola bribed him.

The Zenon Oil chair says the lawmaker put pressure on him to part with the money, which security agents gave to him to facilitate a sting operation against Lawan.

Continue reading Police contact banks in search for Lawan’s $620,000 bribe By Yusuf Alli, Abuja 1 hour ago

Police say a man upset over his daughter’s lifestyle chopped her head off with a sword and then paraded it through his village before surrendering to authorities….

Indian man beheads daughter in rage over lifestyle

Police say a man upset over his daughter’s lifestyle chopped her head off with a sword and then paraded it through his village before surrendering to authorities in western India.
Marble miner Ogad Singh’s 20-year-old daughter had been living with her parents in the Rajasthani village of Dungarji after leaving her husband two years ago.

Police Superintendent Umesh Ojha says Singh was upset by his daughter having affairs with men, and became enraged when she eloped with one of them two weeks ago.

Ojha says Singh forced her to return home Sunday, and beheaded her Monday with a sword.

Rapidly modernizing India faces increasing social clashes as youths resist traditions like arranged marriage or limits on women venturing outside their parents’ or husbands’ homes.

Continue reading Police say a man upset over his daughter’s lifestyle chopped her head off with a sword and then paraded it through his village before surrendering to authorities….

Kaduna: Jonathan considers State of Emergency- Is This Man Reactive?

President Goodluck Jonathan, in a closed-door meeting he held, yesterday, with Senate President David Mark; the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Dahiru Musdapher and the Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshall Oluseyi Petinrin was said to have discussed the possibility of imposing a state of emergency in Kaduna should the reprisal attacks continue.

Continue reading Kaduna: Jonathan considers State of Emergency- Is This Man Reactive?

Damaturu in flames, Police and Army pesronel in Pains at the Specialist Hospital… Help!

Boko-Hram-1

DAMATURU, the Yobe State capital erupted in several bomb blasts yesterday in coordinated attacks masterminded by the Boko Haram Sect. In the ensuing melee, the Divisional Police station at the Central Roundabout, Damaturu, several patrol vehicles of the Joint Task Force (JTF) and churches were set ablaze. Some churches in the Jerusalem ward were badly affected.

Continue reading Damaturu in flames, Police and Army pesronel in Pains at the Specialist Hospital… Help!

Recalled Lagos doctors give conditions to Lagos state Government

Babatunde Fashola

Despite passionate appeals by the former Governor of Lagos State and Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, and other party stalwarts which led to the recall of sacked Lagos doctors under the umbrella of the Medical Guild by Governor Babatunde Fashola on Thursday, they said they would not go back to work.

The doctors rejected the recall on the grounds that it was not accompanied by  reinstatement letters.

The Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) said the doctors would not go back to work unless “letters of recall are sent to each of them by the state government”.

Asiwaju Tinubu had on Thursday engaged Governor Fashola in a discussion at a closed-door meeting before he agreed to reinstate the doctors.

Tinubu, at the meeting, tabled the appeals of  the leadership of the party, well-meaning Nigerians and organiastions committed to people’s welfare,  urging him to be more flexible in handling the issue of the striking doctors.

The ACN National Leader said there was need to work and build institutions that would develop people and prioritise the welfare of the masses, saying there was no   problem without a solution.

His words: “The governor has agreed to suspend the dismissal and advise that they should go back to work and follow the right procedure. I don’t see a point of no return here and since people are the cornerstone of the progressive policy of the state, I want to thank the governor for looking at it from the point of view of the people, the general concern and I want to advise and appeal to the doctors to immediately resume their work in earnest and forget about this intractable position.”

Continue reading Recalled Lagos doctors give conditions to Lagos state Government

10 of the World’s Greatest Jobs

Paradise island caretaker

Paradise island caretakerBen Southall, 34, of Petersfield, beat out nearly 35,000 applicants from around the world for the dream assignment to swim, explore and relax on Hamilton Island in the Great Barrier Reef, while writing a blog to promote the area. He was selected for the $111,000 gig – a six-month contract to serve as caretaker of a tropical Australian island. He now has to live rent-free in a three-bedroom villa, complete with pool.

Before getting the job he had to spend four days on the island for an extended interview process, which required applicants to snorkel through crystalline waters, gorge themselves at a beachside barbecue and relax at a spa. He also had to demonstrate his blogging abilities, take swimming tests and sit through in-person interviews. (Link)

Luxury bed tester

Luxury bed testerA student from Birmingham City University has landed her dream job…literally! Sleeping on the job and having a lie-in will no longer be a problem for a girl, who has been selected to test out luxury beds for a month and get paid for it.

Roisin Madigan, 22, is earning £1,000 to sleep in designer beds every day for a month. The student is helping with a “sleep survey” carried out by luxury bed specialists Simon Horn Ltd. The company sells luxury Savoir Beds, originally made for the Savoy Hotel. General manager Craig Roylance said Roisin will not only provide an objective view of the beds on sale, but will also be part of a look into what brings a good night’s sleep. She will spend 10am to 6pm in beds in the company’s showroom in Edgbaston, and then will blog about her experiences. (Link | Photo)

Continue reading 10 of the World’s Greatest Jobs

Nigerian varsities: Saddled with ageing infrastructure

Nigerian varsities: Saddled with ageing infrastructure

by SAMUEL AWOYINFA (Lagos), MIKE ODIEGWU (Yenagoa), AKINWALE ABOLUWADE (Ibadan), MUDIAGA AFFE (Calabar), FEMI MAKINDE (Ekiti), SUCCESS NWOGU (Ilorin), and JAMES AZANIA (Edo)


Nigerian varsities: Saddled with ageing infrastructure

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Except for the new ones, the average public university in Nigeria is at least three decades old. Unlike old wines that mature with age, however, facilities in these tertiary institutions seem to age as the year passes, with many vice-chancellors promising to upgrade them. From our investigations, many of the universities lack basic infrastructure like regular water supply, sufficient accommodation, well-equipped libraries or functional rest rooms in the halls of residence or in lecture arenas. The story is the same all over, as reported bySAMUEL AWOYINFA (Lagos), MIKE ODIEGWU (Yenagoa), AKINWALE ABOLUWADE (Ibadan), MUDIAGA AFFE (Calabar), FEMI MAKINDE (Ekiti), SUCCESS NWOGU (Ilorin), and JAMES AZANIA (Edo).

The Lagos State University, Ojo, established by the Governor Lateef Jakande administration in 1983, has its own fair share of infrastructure challenges. Though it operates a multi-campus system, its main campus in Ojo has not experienced so much transformation since it was founded 29 years ago. It is still largely an off-campus university because the majority of the students either live in adjoining settlements like Iba, Okokomaiko, Volkswagen, Igando, among others; or come from far flung areas like Victoria Island, Ikoyi, Ikeja, Ogba, etc.

It has other campuses in Epe, Ikorodu Road; and another one housed at Progress College, Abule Egba, among others.

Until the management of the Zenith Bank Plc built an ICT Centre in the institution, the university has only one central library, which could not be classified as an E-Library. Admitting this, the school’s Acting Director of Information, Press and Public Relations, Dr. Sola Fosudo said the ICT Centre built by the bank had become a centre of attraction for students who go there to browse, do their assignments and carry out research via the Internet.

Again, the only department that could be said to be working towards having its own library is the Faculty of Law, housed in a new two-storey building.

Dearth of infrastructural facilities and decay of same where available, are noticeable in almost all the faculties. At the Faculty of Arts, the toilets that serve the students are in bad shape, as many do not have running water. The water closets in one of the toilets built on the open field very close to the L and H lecture rooms have darkened with use, while some of the lids are in various states of disrepair.

Out of the four toilets in this bungalow, three have no doors. And since water does not flow, a big plastic bowl is placed under a tap, which runs in epileptic mode, from which users could draw water for personal cleaning up and flushing.

 

Continue reading Nigerian varsities: Saddled with ageing infrastructure

God will save us

A 35-year-old man, who claimed to have the powers to exorcise evil spirits, was, yesterday, charged with N600,000 fraud before a Yaba Magistrate’s Court, Lagos.

The accused appeared before Magistrate S.K. Matepo for allegedly defrauding Mrs Franca Iboi of N600,000 under the guise of offering prayers to cleanse her business centre of evil spirits, he pleaded not guilty.

The prosecutor, told the court that the accused had no fixed address and was unemployed. He said the alleged offences were committed between February 11 and 16, in Ikotun area of Lagos.

He told the court that his accomplice was at large. He said the complainant owned a car wash business of which he claimed was infested with evil charms.

Eruada told the court that the accused and his accomplice claimed to be prophets, “whereas, their intention was to defraud. They asked the complainant to pray and fast and that in three days, they were going to remove the evil charms. On one of the days, the accused and his accomplice offered some prayers in her car wash business and when fire gushed out from a corner of the compound, she believed in them. This made her to give them N600,000 to purchase items for the cleansing of the centre.”

Said the complainant was also asked to sell her car in addition to the money already collected from her.

“The request for additional money made things clear to the complainant that she was being duped. She informed the police who laid in wait for the accused when they came to collect the proceeds from the sale of the car. When they came, the spiritualist was arrested, but the other man escaped.”

The prosecutor told the court that the alleged offences contravened Sections 278, 285, and 409 of the Criminal Code, Laws of Lagos State.

The magistrate granted the accused bail in the sum of N200,000, with two sureties in like sum.

Yop and Katherine here asking what do you think can be done about the issue of spiritualists in our society??

HUSBAND: My Wife Is Using Night Vigil To Commit Adultery

Mr. Daniel Folorunsho, a 43-year-old Lagosian, on Thursday told a Grade ‘A’ Customary court in Ojo, Lagos State, that his wife was engaging in adultery, under the guise of attending church vigil.

Daniel, a resident of Oke-Afo on the Lagos-Badagry Expressway is seeking the dissolution of his 10-year-old marriage to his wife, Yemi, over her infidelity.

Testifying during the hearing, Daniel said on February 25, he went early to Festac town to see his brother, only to see his wife emerging from a road in the vicinity with a man.

He said that he was shocked to see her as she had claimed to be heading for a vigil and he knew her church to be along the Oke-Afo axis, not some 40-kilometres away in Festac town, Lagos.Daniel told the court that he immediately crossed over and stopped Yemi and her partner, but she said she had gone for the vigil in the Festac district of her church and introduced the man as the District Pastor.He said that after the incident, his wife continued to leave home frequently – under the pretext of attending night vigil – until March 13, when he acted on a tip-off from a neighbour and caught her with the same man.

Continue reading HUSBAND: My Wife Is Using Night Vigil To Commit Adultery

What is responsible for the mass failure in Neco, Jamb, Weac, and in Our Higher Institutions.

The National Examinations Council (NECO) has recorded another mass failure in the November/December Senior School Certificate Examinations (SSCE).

The registrar to the examination body, Professor Promise Okpala, made the announcement on Wednesday, while releasing the results at the council headquarters in Minna, Niger state.

Continue reading What is responsible for the mass failure in Neco, Jamb, Weac, and in Our Higher Institutions.

AUC backs Okonjo-Iweala for WB presidency

The African Union Commission (AUC) says it has nominated Nigerian Finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to contest the World Bank (WB) presidency.

In a statement AUC said Okonjo-Iweala, possessed undisputed credentials in technical and managerial expertise, as well as a strong track record as a development professional, both inside and outside the WB.
The AUC said it attached great importance to the on-going selection exercise for the next president of the WB and was happy to note the commitment to an open, transparent and merit-based process.

“The crux of development issues in the world today really resides in Africa and therefore, the success of the World Bank in achieving its mandate will be judged, to a large extent, by its accomplishments on the continent,” the commission said.

“The AUC, on behalf of African countries, is pleased to endorse the Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala candidacy in the strongest possible terms.”

Continue reading AUC backs Okonjo-Iweala for WB presidency

Face Transplant

Richard Norris is seen before (L) and after (R) his face transplant surgery in this combination of undated handout photos released by the University of Maryland Medical Center. Surgeons from the University of Maryland Medical Center on March 27, 2012, detailed what they said was the world's most comprehensive face transplant, allowing the 37-year-old Virginia man to emerge from behind a mask 15 years after a gun accident that almost took his life. Norris of Hillsville, Virginia, was shot in the face in 1997 and lost his nose, lips and most movement in his mouth. Since that time, he has had multiple life-saving and reconstructive surgeries but none could repair him to the extent where he felt he could return to society. He wore a prosthetic nose and a mask even when entering hospital for the transplant. REUTERS/University of Maryland Medical Center/Handout
Richard Norris is seen before (L) and after (R) his face transplant surgery in this combination of undated handout photos released by the University of Maryland Medical Center. Surgeons from the University of Maryland Medical Center on March 27, 2012, detailed what they said was the world's most comprehensive face transplant, allowing the 37-year-old Virginia man to emerge from behind a mask 15 years after a gun accident that almost took his life. Norris of Hillsville, Virginia, was shot in the face in 1997 and lost his nose, lips and most movement in his mouth. Since that time, he has had multiple life-saving and reconstructive surgeries but none could repair him to the extent where he felt he could return to society. He wore a prosthetic nose and a mask even when entering hospital for the transplant. REUTERS/University of Maryland Medical Center/Handout

Reuters

Mali junta leader Captain Amadou Sanogo speaks at the Kati Military camp, in a suburb of Bamako, March 22, 2012  Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2110278,00.html#ixzz1qQIfkWiq
Mali junta leader Captain Amadou Sanogo speaks at the Kati Military camp, in a suburb of Bamako, March 22, 2012
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2110278,00.html#ixzz1qQIfkWiq

Under a sickle moon a large man with dreadlocks, a sparkling purple cloak and white moccasins climbed the stairs of the house that has become Mali’s new nerve-center. He was a marabout — a West Africa holy man — summoned by the 40-year-old army captain everyone in Kati is now calling le President. The new power in Mali is Amadou Sanogo, a career soldier whose improbable coup d’etat has upturned one of Africa’s strongest democracies. On Monday night he sought strength from the spirit world. He needs whatever help he can get.

It is a week since Sanogo led a mutiny at the garrison in Kati — a sleepy commune of cinder-block bungalows just north of the capital — that intensified into a coup. Swiftly condemned by the international community for daring to upset a rare — if perhaps superficial — African success story, Sanogo and his junta, the self-importantly named Comite national pour le redressement de la democratie et la restauration de l’ Etat (CNRDRE for short), must work out quickly how to cope with a sudden halt in economic and military assistance at a time when Tuareg rebels wage a devastating blitzkrieg in the north, protesters march and public figures bewail democracy’s death.

At the two-story house in Kati, formerly the camp commandant’s headquarters, Sanogo meets with a flurry of diplomats, soldiers and power-brokers, who wait on a first-floor verandah lined with ornamental plants. He smiles bashfully as he shakes the Algerian ambassador’s hand, as though he’s still growing into the role he’s plucked for himself. There’s a hint of the young Vladimir Putin, trying to project a persona that’s bigger than he is, and it’s easy to see why his American mentors (he attended multiple training programs in the U.S.) never marked him out as future leadership material as, apparently, is the case.

TIMETIME.com World

W. African bloc intends to restore Mali democracy

People march along a central street as thousands rallied in a show of support for the recent military coup, in Bamako, Mali Wednesday, March 28, 2012. The body representing nations in western Africa has suspended Mali and has put a peacekeeping force on standby in the most direct threat yet to the junta that seized control of this nation in a coup last week. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
People march along a central street as thousands rallied in a show of support for the recent military coup, in Bamako, Mali Wednesday, March 28, 2012. The body representing nations in western Africa has suspended Mali and has put a peacekeeping force on standby in the most direct threat yet to the junta that seized control of this nation in a coup last week. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

BAMAKO, Mali — A bloc of west African nations suspended Mali’s membership and is sending five presidents to Mali to try to “restore constitutional order” a week after soldiers ousted the democratically elected leader of this vast and impoverished country.

The Economic Community of West African States, or ECOWAS, is also putting a peacekeeping force on standby but the junta leaders are working hard to give the semblance of normalcy here. The airport serving the capital and the country’s land borders reopened on Tuesday and a nighttime curfew was lifted. Traffic was heavy, as offices reopened for the first time since the coup.

The junta showed images on TV of goods looted by soldiers being returned to their owners.

Alassane Ouattara, the president of Ivory Coast who holds the rotating chair of ECOWAS, told reporters after an emergency meeting in the capital of his nation — that itself was shot up and bloodied in a political crisis last year — that Mali’s democracy cannot be abandoned. The delegation of five African presidents was to head to Mali this week.

“We cannot allow this country endowed with such precious democratic instruments, dating back at least two decades, to leave history by regressing. It’s why Mali needs to immediately return its democratic institutions to normal,” said Ouattara. “This position is nonnegotiable.”

There is no immediate plan to deploy the peacekeepers, said Kadre Desire Ouedraogo, the president of the ECOWAS commission. The move suggests the bloc may consider force if the mutinous soldiers do not stand down.

Already, the United States, the European Union and France have cut off all but essential aid, a loss of tens of millions of dollars. Continue reading W. African bloc intends to restore Mali democracy

FG records N365.06bn deficit in 4Q

THE Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, yesterday, increased the number of institutions excluded from sanctions associated with its cashless policy, with the exemption of all foreign agencies and missions in the country from adhering to the new rule on cash transaction.

CBN, in a circular to all stakeholders in the cashless policy project, entitled, ‘Industry policy on retail cash collection and lodgment (IITP/C/001) as it affects specialised international institutions,’ said this becomes necessary following the various treaties in which Nigeria is signatory to, which exempts  these institutions from all fees and charges in their host countries.

In a statement, Mr. Gaius Emokpae, Ag Director, Banking and Payments System Department, CBN, said, therefore, that it has exempted all embassies, diplomatic missions, multilateral and aid donor agencies in the country from penalties and charges on cash withdrawal and deposits with regard to the policy.

He said, “Nigeria is a signatory to several treaties which exempts these institutions from all fees and charges in the host country. As a matter of fact of international practice, sovereign states do not impose financial penalties on other sovereign states; it has become necessary, therefore, to extend the exemption on cash withdrawal/deposit to these institutions.”

FG overspent by N365.06 bn.

Continue reading FG records N365.06bn deficit in 4Q

FBI Launches Inquiry into Phone Hacking

SKY NEWS

1407N.News-Corporation.jpg - 1407N.News-Corporation.jpg

 

The FBI has launched an investigation into allegations that Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation tried to hack the phones of 9/11 victims, an official has confirmed.

The announcement follows calls from senior politicians in the US for an inquiry as shockwaves from the phone-hacking scandal continue to reverberate.

The FBI field office in Manhattan has confirmed it is looking into the allegations against the company, said Sky’s US correspondent, Greg Milam.

In Washington, Democrat senator, Jay Rockefeller has urged an investigation into whether parent company News Corporation had violated US law because of the British paper’s activities.

The allegation of hacking 9/11 victims comes from the Daily Mirror, which said an American investigator had rejected approaches from journalists who showed a particular interest in British victims of the terror attacks.

It cited no evidence that any phone had actually been hacked by the News Of The World or any other paper.

If there was any phone hacking of Americans “the consequences will be severe”, Mr Rockefeller, chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, said.

A report in The Wall Street Journal (WSJ), which is part of News Corp, said Murdoch met with advisers in recent weeks to discuss possible options, including the sale of his remaining British newspapers.

The WSJ reported that there did not appear to be any buyers, given the poor economics of the newspaper group.

Meanwhile, some members of the Bancroft family that once controlled the WSJ said they would have opposed selling the paper to Murdoch in 2007 had they known about the hacking allegations then.

“I probably would have held out,” Christopher Bancroft said in a story published by the non-profit group ProPublica and The Guardian.

The story was written by a former executive of WSJ publisher Dow Jones & Co.

Meanwhile, politicians in Murdoch’s country of origin are also urging action following the phone-hacking scandal.

Australia’s government will consider a review of national media regulation and laws, Prime Minister Julia Gillard has announced.

“I’ve truly been disgusted to see it. I anticipate that we will have a discussion amongst parliamentarians about this, about the best review and way of dealing with all of this,” Ms Gillard told Australia’s National Press Club.

The influential Greens Party, which controls the balance of power, has called for Ms Gillard’s government to hold an inquiry into whether a new statutory media watchdog is required, with parliament to consider the issue in August.

Soyinka Faults Proliferation of Tertiary Institutions

Wole-Soyinka
Wole Soyinka

 

Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, Tuesday faulted the proliferation of higher institutions of learning in Nigeria, saying government should look for ways to address some of the problems facing the education sector.

Soyinka said this against the backdrop of the recent merger of Tai Solarin University of Education (TASUED) with the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) and the administrative consolidation of the four Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Polytechnics into one by the Ogun State Government.

Soyinka who spoke in Abeokuta, at the second day of the Ogun State Investors’ Forum, with the theme: “Ogun State: Open for Business”, condemned the move, saying: “The mindless proliferation of institutions was uncalled for.”

He said schools should not be established without the wherewithal to nurture them and urged governments to invest in “quality not quantity.”

He deplored also the centrist nature of the nation’s polity and called for a return to the epoch of healthy competitions of the 60s, which existed amongst states/regions that constituted the then Nigeria.

While commending the initiatives of the Ogun State government for organising the event, he cautioned that no state could maximise its potentials without the country returning to genuine federalism.

In his remark, the deputy governor, said the government and entire good people of the state welcomed everyone present to the second day of the state Investors’ Forum, saying “today’s programme would give us an added opportunity of cross-fertilisation of ideas and I believe we would come up with viable recommendations that would ensure that your businesses would grow while the economy of our dear state, in particular, and Nigeria, in general, would continue to be buoyant.”

He added: “This Investors’ Forum is aimed at ensuring economic growth and development of our dear state. We want the outcome to touch every sector of the state’s economy. As an administration, let me assure you all that every suggestion and recommendation made, at the end of this programme would be thoroughly considered, for effective utilisation and implementation, in conjunction with the Five-Cardinal programme which is pivot of the Senator Ibikunle Amosun led-administration’s ‘Mission to Rebuild Ogun State’.”

‘First of all, are the mics on?’ Obama makes a joke of his hot mic missile defense comments Read more

‘First of all, are the mics on?’ Obama makes a joke of his hot mic missile defense comments

Speaking to the microphones intentionally this time, President Barack Obama today assured he had no hidden agenda with Russia for a second term, as he joked about his controversial gaffe that bounded all the way to the campaign trail at home and back again.

Obama got caught on tape on Monday telling Russian President Dmitry Medvedev that he would have more room to negotiate on missile defense after getting through a November election, presumably expecting to win and not have to face voters again.

Obama’s Republican rivals back home pounced, accusing him of secretive plotting and dealing over American national security. So one day later, with Medvedev at his side again, Obama tried some on-the-record candor and humor to put it all to rest.

U.S. President Barack Obama, left, chats with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
Private conversation: President Barack Obama, left, didn't realize microphones were picking up his boast to outgoing Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev, right, that he would win reelection in November
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2121330/Barack-Obama-makes-joke-missile-defense-comments.html#ixzz1qPx4vuHO

Continue reading ‘First of all, are the mics on?’ Obama makes a joke of his hot mic missile defense comments Read more

Regulator, enabler and provider

DPM Teo Chee Hean speaks at the Administrative Service Dinner & Promotion Ceremony. Photo by WEE TECK HIAN

Govt should focus on these 3 critical roles, says DPM Teo in speech to top public officials

SINGAPORE – When it comes to addressing national issues, there will be some who expect their governments to play a bigger role, while others think the government should take a step back.

Such is the “paradox of governance” faced by governments all over the world, and rather than grapple with this, it may be more productive “to focus on doing the right things, and doing these things right”, said Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean.

Mr Teo, who is also the Minister-in-charge of the Civil Service, was speaking at the Administrative Service Dinner and Promotion Ceremony yesterday evening. Those in the audience included the elite of Singapore’s Public Service, who fill the leadership positions in the ministries, statutory boards and armed forces.
Continue reading Regulator, enabler and provider

New names for 27 Pretoria streets

pta street names
Tshwane executive mayor Kgosientso Ramokgopa inspects the parade before delivering his State of the City Address. Photo: Masi Losi
Twenty city streets are set to be renamed, executive mayor Kgosientso Ramokgopa revealed on Tuesday. He said a decision on which streets would undergo name changes and which would retain their names would be taken at the Tshwane Metro Council’s monthly meeting on Wednesday.
The municipality has identified a number of streets, spread across the Tshwane metro area, which are set for change.
Addressing a media briefing after his State of the City address at the Pretoria City Hall on Tuesday, Ramokgopa said a final decision would be taken by the full council on Wednesday.
He noted that the municipality had started with the

Twenty city streets are set to be renamed, executive mayor Kgosientso Ramokgopa revealed on Tuesday. He said a decision on which streets would undergo name changes and which would retain their names would be taken at the Tshwane Metro Council’s monthly meeting on Wednesday.

The municipality has identified a number of streets, spread across the Tshwane metro area, which are set for change.

Addressing a media briefing after his State of the City address at the Pretoria City Hall on Tuesday, Ramokgopa said a final decision would be taken by the full council on Wednesday.

He noted that the municipality had started with the process of renaming 27 streets in 2007.

“In spite of successfully concluding the mandatory participation process, the city never finalised the renaming process, and we wish to conclude this process by the end of this financial year.

“We are encouraged by the sheer determination and resoluteness of all political parties represented in the council to conclude this matter is a manner that realises social cohesion.

“We are not reinventing the wheel but are taking the process forward,” he said.

Ramokgopa said the name change issue was not an ANC issue and that all political parties represented in the council had been consulted on the matter.

He added that the new names would represent all racial groups, including Afrikaners.

“There are those Afrikaner religious leaders and academics who played an important role in the country’s liberation struggle,” said Ramokgopa. “We must really tell the true story,” he added.

There was a need to ensure that there was racial harmony and cohesion in the city. “We need to demonstrate to the entire country how we can resolve an emotive issue,” said Ramokgopa.

Indications are that Paul Kruger and Pretorius streets could retain their names.

According to Ramokgopa, the whole section of Paul Kruger Street between the Pretoria railway station, passing through Church Square to the Pretoria Zoo, would be upgraded to demonstrate how the council intends to adapt, shape and improve the inner city to be more accommodating for non-motorised commuting.

On the issue of the Pretoria/ Tshwane name change, Ramokgopa said they would seek a meeting with Minister of Arts and Culture Paul Mashatile to provide clarity on his assertion for further consultation.

“It should be remembered that council has fulfilled its legislative obligations on this matter, and it is now in the hands of the minister to give final determination. We commit to inform the residents of Tshwane and the country on the outcomes of our engagement with the minister,” he said.

According to Ramokgopa, Mashatile has indicated that there is a need for wider consultation on the matter.

Ramokgopa said they would like the matter to be finalised “so that we can concentrate on service delivery issues”.

Touching on the bus rapid transit issue, Ramokgopa stated that construction from Pretoria’s CBD to Menlyn, via Sunnyside and Hatfield, was expected to start in July.

The first BRT station would be constructed in Hatfield by the end of July and, according to Ramokgopa, the process of procuring the first BRT buses for the implementation of the system was in progress.

“The public is called upon to participate in the naming of the BRT, and this process should be concluded by the end of April,” he said.

Ramokgopa said the “notoriously unreliable” Tshwane Bus Service (TBS) was receiving the council’s urgent attention.

“It is appropriate at this time to apologise profusely to the loyal users of the TBS for the poor service. We will be considering and approving a turnaround strategy for the TBS by the end of April 2012,” he said.

According to Ramokgopa, the turnaround will address the need to replenish the fleet; retire some of the fleet; electronic fare collection; scheduling of routes; and overall management of the TBS.

“An efficient, reliable and safe TBS will serve as a feeder and distribution service to the BRT as part of the Integrated Rapid Public Transport Network,” said the mayor.

Meanwhile, the municipality is expected to conclude a partnership agreement with the Tsela Tshweu Consortium on the new municipal headquarters, Tshwane House.

The agreement will cover issues around the design, construction, financing and full service operation of the headquarters for a period of 25 years from completion of construction in 2014.

Pre-construction work on site will begin next month with the delivery of the first building materials. A new state-of-the-art council chamber is expected to be completed as early as February 2014, and the last building three months later.

“In order to make way for site works leading to later construction, all staff located in the present Munitoria will be moved to the Isivuno Building across the street from the site in April 2012,” said Ramokgopa.

Pretoria News

Google launch digital archive on Nelson Mandela

Nelson Mandela
Nelson Mandela:
Nelson Mandela and Bikitsha around 1941. Photo courtesy GOOGLE

JOHANNESBURG – Google, in partnership with the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory (NMCM), launched a digital archive on Nelson Mandela today.

The annals include over 1,900 unique images, documents and videos and will continue to grow over time, said Mr Luke Mckend, country manager for Google, South Africa.

The digital records house Mr Mandela’s correspondence with family, comrades, and friends, as well as diaries written in his 27-year imprisonment on Robben Island and notes he made while leading negotiations that led to the end of Apartheid in South Africa.

The archive will also have the earliest-known photograph of Mr Mandela, rare images of his prison cell and never-seen drafts of Mr Mandela’s manuscripts for his autobiography “Long Walk to Freedom”.

Mr Steve Crossan, director of the Google Cultural Institute said: “The Mandela Digital Archive Project shows how the Internet can help preserve historical heritage and make it available to the world. We’ve worked closely with the NMCM to create an interactive online experience with powerful search and browsing tools, so that users can explore Mr Mandela’s inspiring life story.”

Continue reading Google launch digital archive on Nelson Mandela

Arik Air blows hot and cold over South Africa

Nigeria’s Arik Air, Nigeria’s biggest airline, blew hot and cold within a spate of 24 hours over whether it should continue flying passengers to South Africa, over the refusal of the immigration authorities to allow 125 Nigerians, not carrying the yellow fever vaccination paper, enter the country.

Twenty four hours after it announced it was suspending further flights, Arik swallowed its vow, by announcing the resumption of flights to the former apartheid enclave.

“Arik Air is reinstating flight operations between Lagos, Nigeria and Johannesburg, South Africa effective immediately with tonight’s (Saturday, March 3) scheduled service departing from Lagos,” a statement said.

Continue reading Arik Air blows hot and cold over South Africa

Independence Day bomber’s remains smuggled out of Kuje Prison – MEND

Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, alleged, Sunday, that the remains of Francis Osuvwo, alias General Gbokos, arrested in connection with the October 1, 2010 Independence Day bombing, were smuggled, Saturday night, out of Kuje Prisons, Abuja, where he died, to an unknown destination.

The group, in a statement  by its spokesperson, Jomo Gbomo, said it “received without surprise, news of the death of Mr. Francis Osuwo.

Charles Okah

“For refusing to cooperate with two Nigerian government informants, an employee of Agip and  an employee of Daewoo, Yenagoa, to testify falsely against Henry Okah, Osuwo was arrested and accused of complicity in the MEND bombing of  October 1, 2010.

“Francis Osuwo and all other detainees in State Security Service, SSS, custody wrongly arrested in connection with our October 2010 attack on Eagle Square, Abuja, have been held under the most appalling conditions and exposed to toxic fumes in their cells.

“Francis Osuwo died as a result of such exposure and neglect by his jailors. His body was smuggled out of Kuje prison, Abuja, on March 3, to an unknown destination, shortly before midnight.”

Meanwhile, Niger Delta activist, Ankio Briggs, weekend, called on the Inspector General  of Police, IGP, to probe Osuwo’s death in Kuje Prisons,  Abuja, last Saturday.

the suspects of Independent Day bomb blast, among them is late Francis Osuvwo, alias General Gbokos being led out of the Court where they were arranged by the SSS, at a Chief Magistrate Court, Abuja

Briggs, in an interview, called on the IGP to order the Commissioner of Police, Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Abuja, to investigate the circumstances surrounding Osuvwo’s death in prison.

She said: “We are calling for an autopsy to determine the real cause of death.  Osuvwo, 32, was from Kalafiogbene in Delta State. He died in Kuje prison a few days ago, where he was held since his arrest.”

He was accused of playing a part in the bomb blast in Warri in 2010. “The circumstances under which he died are worrisome. The story we got was that he died from inhaling fumigation fumes with other prisoners that were locked up in their cells while the fumigation was ongoing.

“Knowing what fumigation fumes are like, I find it hard to believe, though not surprised to hear that Nigerian prisons are fast becoming killing fields.  Indeed this is the second time we are hearing about these stories about fumigation from Kuje prisons.

“I am the first to condemn the killing of any human being for any reason. To kill prisoners before they have been found guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction is inhuman, criminal and must be condemned, so that it does not happen again.

Ike Mba
Man Will Fall Some Day

•President Jonathan, his wife, Patience, and Chukwuemeka Ojukwu Jnr, paying their last respect to Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu at Nnewi.

Ojukwu’s body was lowered into a grave in his palatial residence, after a requiem mass was held at the next door St. Michael De Arch-angel Catholic Church.

Before the interment, Ojukwu’s body was laid-in-state in his compound, with family members and dignitaries paying their last respects.

President Goodluck Jonathan, accompanied by his wife, Patience led a federal government delegation to the funeral to pay his last respects to the deceased Igbo leader.

The president was received by the host governor, Peter Obi of Anambra State.

In a condolence message, the president extolled Ojukwu’s virtue of selflessness.

“I am here with my wife to pay respects to our leader Ojukwu whose life symbolises service to the people. May his soul rest in peace,” Jonathan wrote in a condolence register opened at Ojukwu’s home.

One of Ojukwu’s heirs, Chukwuemeka Jnr, also paid tributes to his dad describing him as “a hero to all”.

“He was a champion of the people. Someone who stood up when the country needed somebody to stand up; and he did that selflessly,” he said.

The Biafra leader’s son rejected the tag of “rebel” being associated with his dad for spearheading the botched secession of the Republic of Biafra from Nigeria, which resulted in a 30-month long bloody uprising.

“My father was not a rebel. My father was a freedom fighter. He was a man that fought against injustice,” said the younger Ojukwu.

The Nnewi town, where Ojukwu holds the revered traditional title of the Ikemba of Nnewi, throbbed as dignitaries from far and near came to honour the departed Ezeigbo Gburu-Gburu – supreme leader of the Igbo race.

Among the dignitaries are the Chief of Army Staff, Gen Ihejirika, Emeka Anyaoku, former head of the Commonwealth, politician Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, and APGA National Chairman, Chief Victor Umeh.

Ojukwu died, aged 78, on 26 November last year, in London, after suffering a stroke. He is survived by his widow, Bianca and many children.

Enough of this insult – Reps, MEND

Sharp criticism to the call by northern governors for the reduction in derivation proceeds to oil producing states continued weekend with members of the House of Representatives from the region, leading stakeholders and the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta, MEND angrily rebuffing the quest.

While MEND threatened dire consequences as its response, spokesman of the defunct Niger-Delta Liberation Front, NDLF, a militant group founded by the late “Gen” John Togo, “Captain” Mark Anthony, accused the northern governors of playing on the seeming quietness of President Goodluck Jonathan to railroad what he described as their provocative agenda.

Rep. Victor Ogene, particularly, charged northern governors to situate their call against what he described as the lopsidedness in the local governments of the country which he claimed has given the north a disproportionate leverage in the funds to the local governments of the country.

Erstwhile Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, Mr. Emmanuel Arigbe-Osula was also among those that condemned the demand.

In separate interviews with Vanguard, the members of the House of Representatives from the South-South region said it was illogical for the northern governors to make their demand for derivation proceeds when they were isolated from the problems of oil exploitation.

In his reaction, Hon. Ken Chikere (PDP Rivers) said while asking for more money is a legitimate demand by the ACF and the northern governors, the timing of the demand was wrong as their demand amounted to incitement.

“It is legitimate to ask for more money. Every governor would want the revenue accruing to his state to be more so that he can develop the state. But what is wrong with the call for more money by the northern governors is the fact that the call is predicated on the report of the revenue accruing to oil bearing states. It is wrong to predicate their call based on the revenue accruing to these states because of the problems associated with these states where oil is coming. The resources that are given to them by way of derivation is to help them confront the numerous problems.

“It is irresponsible to ask for additional funds based on the funds given to oil bearing states at this time of gross upheaval in the polity. It is like incitement and it is unexpected of governors and leaders to incite Nigerians, even their own people at this time of security threat in our country” he said.

In his reaction, Hon. Eseme Eyiboh said rather than ask for more funds from the federal government, every state in the country should explore ways of generating more money for itself to fund its programmes and project.

“What I expect is that as leaders we should concentrate on the issue of diversification of our revenue base, on the issue of sustainable alternatives not only sharing and sharing. People are threadbare, hungry and hopeless. Leadership is becoming more complicated and intriguing by the day.

Nigeria is one nation on the surface of the earth that is very blessed. The weather is very fair, no natural disaster. What leaders should be thinking about now is how to replicate the groundnut pyramid in Kano, Cocoa revolution in the South West and Palm oil in the East. We should return to Agriculture. Natural resources abound in this country. This should be developed rather than insist on sharing” he said.

In his reaction, Hon. Kehinde Oduneye (ACN Ogun) said ‘rather than the leaders calling for more revenue for the northern states, I think we should be looking at fiscal federalism. Fiscal federalism will ensure fairness and equity and every state of the federation will be equally and fairly treated’.

In his reaction, Hon. Victor Ogene (APGA Anambra) said: “While I do not quarrel with the Northern clamour for more money, I do not, however, share their sentiment. Instead of concentrating on funds from the Continental Shelf, why wouldn’t the Northern governors push for increased mining activities in their area to increase the federally collectible pool? Would they give up the additional income that they get from a lopsided Local Government system? What of the South East that gets less than the other zones because of the fewer states they are saddled with? In a democracy, these are ever-present challenges, which cannot be resolved merely on the say-so of one party. Equity, justice and fair-play must be the watchwords as we continually interrogate these issues that define our complex nationhood”.

S-South deserves apology for the insult — Osula

Hon Arigbe Osula asserted in an interview: “Decades of irreparable damages done to the Niger-Delta region by years of gross neglect by the military, whose leadership were mostly Northerners cannot be compensated for by a few years of marginally improved revenue represented by just 13 per cent revenue derivation.”

He continued: “What the Nigerian state has done to this region is a criminal destruction of unimaginable proportion, which will continue to have infinite consequences on all imaginable lives.

“In the face of the absolute tragedy which oil and gas discovery and exploration have been to the people of the oil and gas producing area, it is deeply disturbing to note the contention of the Northern Governors questioning of the meager and sorry current revenue derivation formula which is very insulting to the people of the region compare to the disastrous consequences it has foisted on them.

“It is even more painful when you compare this formula with historical antecedent of past formulae used when groundnut and cocoa were our major sources of revenue without the attendant adverse effect of oil exploration in the name of national revenue generation.”

Don’t take S-South for a ride

Hon Abel Oshevire a former member of the Delta State House of Assembly in his response in an online statement made available to Vanguard, weekend, said: “I am an advocate of a strong, united Nigeria, where every Nigerian will be entitled to his or her rights and privileges so as to realize his or her full potentials. This is why I want to advise the northern governors, elders and leaders, to watch their utterances in order not to compound the present volatile situation in the country”.

He, however, stated: “It beats my imagination as to why these leaders chose this period of all times to introduce such a provocative and vexatious issue as the reduction in the 13 per cent derivation to oil producing states.

“These northern leaders must be very, very careful as not to lend credence to the information flying all over the place that they instigated the Boko Haram mayhem in order to hold the country to ransom and use it to negotiate for their selfish interests.

“How else can one explain the timing of their demand for a review of the revenue allocation formula and the reduction in the 13 per cent derivation to the oil producing states? Are the northern leaders using their demand as a bargain for something they are keeping close to their chests?”

Wake-up call

Ex-militant leader, “Captain” Anthony, said: “The call by Northern governors on reduction of revenue derivation of South-South states is very provocative and clearly shows how arrogant the north is to the south-south.

“It is a wake-up call to the people of south-south to come together to tackle this arrogant north by pushing that derivation should be increased to 50 per cent, as it was done when cocoa, groundnut, palm oil were the mainstay of the nation’s economy”, he said.

He said Niger-Delta youths would give the north more than it could chew when the time comes since “they believe that they can use Boko Haram and all these antics to distract President Goodluck Jonathan”.

Clashes in Afghanistan over ‘Quran burning

Protesters in Kabul shouted "Death to America," as anger towards US forces grows (Al jasera)
magickaydiary: Protesters in Kabul shouted "Death to America," as anger towards US forces grows (Al jasera)

Hundreds of protesters have clashed with police and security forces in Afghanistan in a second day of angry demonstrations over reports that copies of the Quran were burnt at an airbase used by NATO and coalition troops.

Several people were reported wounded on Wednesday as demonstrators blocked a major highway outside Camp Phoenix, a US base in Kabul. Police said protesters threw stones, smashed car windows and charged at police lines.

At least 11 people were reported wounded when shots were fired into a crowd of demonstrators trying to march on the city centre, according to the AFP news agency. Protesters shouted “Death to America!” and “Death to (Afghan President Hamid) Karzai!”
“People are marching towards Kabul. Police are trying to stop them. We have sent more reinforcements to the area,” the spokesman said.But a police spokesman denied that police officers had shot at protesters.

A second protest erupted in west Kabul, involving about 100 university students, a police spokesman said, adding that riot police were present and the demonstration was under control.

According to AFP, one person was killed and 10 were wounded when shots were fired at anti-US demonstrators in the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad. Protesters there praised the leader of the Afghan Taliban, shouting “Long live Mullah Omar!”, Reuters reported.

The US embassy said on Wednesday it was locked down and had suspended all travel in Afghanistan.

Continue reading Clashes in Afghanistan over ‘Quran burning

Mugabe scoffs at calls to retire

magickaydiary

Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s president and Africa’s oldest leader, has celebrated his 88th birthday, denying reports he has cancer.

Mugabe declared himself “fit as a fiddle” on Tuesday, scoffing at calls to retire and pushing for new elections this year.

“The day will come when I will become sick,” Mugabe said in an interview on state-owned Radio Zimbabwe, dismissing fears about his health.

Making light of numerous media reports of his sickness, Mugabe, a Roman Catholic, said: “I have died many times – that’s where I have beaten Christ. Christ died once and resurrected once.”

Presidential officials said he would celebrate his birthday at a family dinner at his home in the capital Harare, with a  celebration rally taking place in eastern Zimbabwe on Saturday.

Power-sharing deal

Mugabe, in power since independence from Britain in 1980, said he will stand again in new elections that he insisted should be held this year – with or without the new constitution required under Zimbabwe’s power-sharing deal with Morgan Tsvangirai, the prime minister.

“I came from the people and the people, in their wisdom, our members of the  party, will certainly select someone once I say I am now retiring, but not yet,” Mugabe said.

Mugabe was chosen in December by his ZANU-PF party to stand again as its presidential candidate.

“There is no one who can stand and win at the moment,” he said of the contenders in his party jostling to succeed him.

“We just must have elections. They just must take place with or without a new constitution. If others don’t want to have an election then they are free  not to participate.”

Continue reading Mugabe scoffs at calls to retire

African envoy in Senegal to defuse tension- OBJ

Ex-Nigerian President Obasanjo hopes to mediate political standoff while police once again fire tear gas at protesters

Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has arrived in Senegal to mediate the country’s political standoff, while police once again fired tear gas to disperse protesters in the capital.

The demonstrators want President Abdoulaye Wade to step down, instead of running for a third term in this weekend’s election.

Obasanjo said on Tuesday that his message was “this country is very beautiful, and nothing should be done to destroy it.”

He is in Senegal as the head of a joint mission between the African Union and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

An ECOWAS statement said Obasanjo’s mission was “to engage all the political stakeholders in Senegal with a view to promoting dialogue and ensuring peaceful, fair and transparent elections.”

Wade’s camp said Obasanjo was welcome to observe the election but made it clear there was nothing to mediate.

Music icon and opposition activist Youssou Ndour was injured in the leg after being hit by a projectile at the scene of a banned rally in Dakar, his entourage said.

“Youssou Ndour was injured in the left leg, he has been seen by a doctor, but he doesn’t want to make a big issue out of it and we won’t be giving any more comment,” said Charles Faye, spokesman for Ndour’s Fekke ma ci boole (I am involved) movement.

Earlier, witnesses said police fired tear gas and opposition demonstrators hurled stones in central Dakar.

‘Dictatorship’

A few hundred metres away from Independence Square, policemen were locked in a standoff with a group of protesters headed by former Prime Minister Idrissa Seck, who is contesting the vote, and Ndour, whose candidacy was rejected by the constitutional court.

“Dictatorship is going [on] in Senegal, because all the rights that are protected by the constitution and the laws of this country are being thrown out by this candidate,” Seck said.

“This situation is the situation Mr Wade created in Senegal. He doesn’t have the right to be a candidate in this election,” Ndour said.

magickaydiary
Senegalese music star and political activist Youssou Ndour attended an opposition protest in Dakar [Reuters]

Hundreds of supporters gathered around the two opposition leaders’ vehicles, chanting in the Wolof language, “Get out, old man”, in reference to Wade who, at 85, is Africa’s second oldest head of state.

Waving Senegalese flags and holding up placards, protesters screamed “Must go” and “Wade is dead”], and “You have to surrender”.

“By no means did this standoff with riot police relate to some of the worst aspects of violence in Senegal – particularly Dakar’s suburbs – this past month,” Al Jazeera’s Andrew Simmons said.

“But it shows the determination of leading opposition

 

figures and protest movements to converge on a symbolic focal point: Independence Square. There is every indication that the situation will escalate.”

Violence

Six people have been killed in election-related violence so far. Opposition supporters have increasingly sought to defy bans on protests by the authorities, leading to cat-and-mouse street battles in the capital and other towns.

The EU election observer mission expressed “its concern over the interior ministry’s ban on demonstrations”, a statement said. It added that Senegalese law allowed for such demonstrations when they involve presidential candidates.

Some minor candidates have called for Sunday’s vote to be delayed but most, including the leading opposition figures, have not, even though they say they will not recognise Wade’s candidacy.

Wade’s rivals say his candidacy is illegal because it breaches rules setting a two-term limit, and accused the octogenarian leader of backtracking on his own statements that he would not stand for re-election.

The president has argued that he is eligible to stand as the limits were added to the constitution after he had started his first term in 2000.

Al Jazeera

Be Boko Haram conscious, ex-GOC tells soldiers

The former General Officer Commanding 3 Armoured Division of the Nigerian Army, Maj-Gen. Adamu Marwa, yesterday urged soldiers to be “very conscious” of the activities of Boko Haram sect.

The sect has claimed responsibility for spate of bombings and killings in Nigeria, which had claimed hundreds of lives over the past few years.

Marwa, while addressing troops of the Division in Jos during a farewell speech, said there were people who did not mean well for men in uniform and the country.

“My tenure as GOC in the last five months has been a very busy one because of the activities of the Boko Haram sect in the 3 Division’s area of responsibility.

“The problem in the 3 Division’s area of responsibility is mainly that of threat to security, and you must take this threat as the first thing you remember every time you wake up in the morning. Continue reading Be Boko Haram conscious, ex-GOC tells soldiers

Ekpo joins Norwegian top club

Emmanuel Ekpo

Former Nigeria U-23 midfielder Emmanuel Ekpo has moved to Norway, where he signed a three-year deal with the country’s top division club, Molde FK.

A statement on the club website said, Ekpo, who signed as a free agent after playing for Major League Soccer’s Columbus Crew, would remain with the club till the end of 2014 season.

“Molde welcome Ekpo to the club and we wish him good luck,” the statement said.

After his exploit in the age-grade football, Ekpo had his Super Eagles debut against Argentina in a friendly match, which Nigeria lost 3-0. He was on for 20 minutes of the game.

The former Akwa United and Enyimba player moved to the MLS on April 15, 2008 to sign for Columbus Crew. After scoring his first goal for the club against Colorado Rapids two months after his arrival, he helped the team win the 2008 MLS Cup. He had over 80 caps for the club in his stay over three seasons.

In joining the Norwegian club, Ekpo is teaming up with another Nigerian player, Daniel Chukwu, and former Manchester United midfielder, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, who is the manager.

Solskjaer had 42 caps and 31 goals for the club between 1994 and 1996 before joining United. He returned as the manager in 2011, having managed United’s Team B since retirement in 2008. Continue reading Ekpo joins Norwegian top club

VC tackles ex-minister over alleged $50,000 bribe

Vice-Chancellor, Federal University of Petroleum Resources, Professor Babatunde Alabi

Vice-Chancellor of the Federal University of Petroleum Resources, Prof Babatunde Alabi, on Tuesday narrated how he was offered a bribe to influence the award of contracts to former Minister of State for Education, Mr. Kenneth Gbagi.

Gbagi had told the visitation panel to the school that a “top official’’, ostensibly referring to Alabi, collected $50,000 (N8m) as bribe in his presence from a company, Skygrade, owned by him to execute a project in the institution.

But Alabi, while addressing journalists at the institution in Ugbomro, Delta State, described the bribe allegedly offered him as a trap.

The VC, who presented various documents to prove that Skygrade was owned by the ex-minister, alleged that Gbagi “threw’’ the money on his laps to influence the N317m library project in the six-year-old institution.

He alleged, “When wicked people want to destroy you, they set a trap for you. Gbagi called me when he heard I was in Abuja asking me to come and know his house. Then he was still the minister of state for education.

“As the minister overseeing the ministry, there was no reason why I should suspect anything. When we got there, he was upstairs and he was told I was around.

“He (Gbagi) walked down holding a small bag and threw it on my laps. He asked me to open it, but I directed my son to open and see the contents. The minister then told me he wanted me to influence the library contract and give it to Skygrade, owned by him.”

Alabi, who is billed to retire next month, said the reason he did not return the money to Gbagi immediately was that he wanted more witnesses to know what went on between him and the minister in Abuja.

He added, “I came back and asked my Secretary to count the money. The money was then returned to him (Gbagi) through his wife, Evelyn. I wanted more witnesses. That was when I also called my Director of Works and asked him to be careful because this project can send one to jail.”

However, Gbagi said, “I could not have given him (VC) a bribe as a Minister of State for Education on behalf of Skygrade Construction Company because I had resigned as the chairman of the company as required by the constitution then, but I am aware that he (the VC) collected the money.”

There was a messy battle involving the institution’s dissolved Governing Council, the VC and Gbagi.

At a point, Alabi was purportedly suspended by the university council, which had earlier been dissolved by a Federal Government directive days before their action.

The government further directed the reversion of the installed Registrar, Evelyn, wife of Gbagi, to the former position of the Deputy Registrar and set up a panel to probe the cause of the crisis in the only petroleum varsity in the country.

Senate report: Kabiru Sokoto seen in Lagos

 Kabiru Sokoto

UNKNOWN to many, the suspected architect of the Christmas Day church bombing was in Lagos before his January 14 arrest and eventual escape. He was rearrested on February 10.

Kabiru Umar (alias Kabiru Sokoto), whose escape expedited former police chief Hafiz Ringim’s retirement, was seen on Snake Island, home of the ship repair company, Nigerdock, in Apapa, Lagos, according to a Senate Committee report.

The report of the Senate Committee on Police Affairs said: “Police intelligence revealed that prior to his arrest on 14th January, 2011, Kabiru Umar (alias Kabiru Sokoto) had been on the check list of Boko Haram sect members.

“Sokoto was reported to have been noticed within the vicinity of Snake Island, Lagos and left Lagos sometime on 13th December, 2011 and disappeared from surveillance monitoring, until 11th January, 2012. He was later traced to Abaji in the Federal Capital Territory.

“Police detectives traced him from Abaji to Abuja on the same date and further traced him to Asokoro-Abuja where he was finally apprehended at about 0240 hours (2.40am) on the 14th of January, 2012 at the Borno State Governor’s Lodge at Iro Dan Musa Street, Asokoro, Abuja.”

Senators yesterday gave a blow-by-blow account of how Umar escaped from police custody. Besides, they named his accomplices.

Umar dramatically escaped from police custody less than 24 hours after his arrest while being taken to his home in Abaji, a suburb of Abuja, for a search.

The Senate empanelled its Committee on Police Affairs to probe his escape.

The committee’s chairman, Senator Paulinus Nwagu, who presented the report, gave graphic details of how Umar disappeared.

His accomplices include the son of a traditional ruler, the Onah of Abaji in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), and a man who was shot dead as he attempted to snatch a rifle from a policeman.

The report said:

“The mob action that effected the escape of the suspect was spearheaded by the under listed persons: Adamu Salihu (son of the Onah of Abaji land), Abdullahi Sidi, alias Bamanga (at large), Abdullahi Sahabi (at large), Jibrin Aliyu, alias Kaska and Ashafa Central (Inuwa) who was shot dead as he attempted to snatch a rifle from the police during the mob action.

“Further investigation has revealed that after the mob action, the said Abdullahi Sahabi, Jibrin Aliyu, Abdullahi Sidi and Adamu Salihu all conspired and moved the principal suspect from Abaji to a village called Nuku, about 7kilometres from Abaji and handed him over to one Dauda Mohammed, who provided the suspect with shelter and feeding in an uncompleted house.

“One Alhaji Haruna Kaura, a resident of Nuku village, took over the suspect and transported him on a motorcycle to his farmland located some kilometres from Nuku village.”

The committee interracted with the National Security Adviser (NSA), the Minister of Police Affairs, the Chairman, Police Service Commission (PSC) and the Inspector General of Police.

The report went on: “The arrest was conducted by a combined team of police officers and men, comprising operatives from the Force Analytical Tracking and Intelligence Centre as well as Combat Teams from the Police Mobile Force, totalling 58 officers and men.

“The suspect was subsequently handed over to the Commissioner of Police, Zakari Biu, who was in charge of handling terrorist cases, in charge of suspects and general follow-up, for further investigation.”

The report added: “Investigation activities of the police led detectives, comprising five officers to visit the residence of the suspect in Abaji to conduct a search on the 15th January, 2012.

“On arrival at the residence of the suspect at Bulletin Quarters, Abaji, the team met one Adamu Salihu, the son of the Onah of Abaji, the traditional ruler of Abaji in the FCT who was a neighbour of the suspect.

“The said Adamu Salihu, who was later discovered to be a close associate of Kabiru Sokoto as well as a suspected member of Boko Haram, suddenly went into his room, came out with a copy of the Holy Quran, cited Quranic quotes and with a loud shout of ‘Allahu-Akhbar (God is great)’, mobilised nearby youths who attacked the police with hard objects and forcibly took over the suspect whom they whisked away to an undisclosed location.

“Immediate efforts to recover the suspect indicated that the duo of one Jibrin Aliyu, alias Kaska and one Abdullahi Sidi, alias Bamanga, had informed one Mohammed Gambo that the principal suspect was with Jibrin Aliyu.

“The same Mohammed Gambo instantly requested Jibrin Aliyu to produce the suspect at the palace of the Onah of Abaji and thereafter informed the Onah of Abaji, who requested his police escort and the army personnel on stop-and-search duty on Abaji-Lokoja expressway to re-arrest and bring the suspect (Kabiru Sokoto) to his palace, but they could not find him.

“The security team then arrested Jibrin Aliyu and he is currently undergoing interrogation.

“Consequently, a team of police detectives travelled to Nuku village and the farmland in Gwaragwada, Yawti, in search of the suspect to no avail. The team, acting on information, also moved to a village called Achabo in Kogi State and to Toto, Gadabuike, Lokorgoma and Nasarawa Toto in Nasarawa State in search of the fleeing principal suspect.

“All those who aided and abetted his escape, apart from those at large, have been arrested and are assisting the police in its investigations.

“Commissioner of Police Zakari Biu has been suspended from the service of the Nigeria Police Force and he is under further investigation over his handling of the suspect.

“Commissioner of Police Zakari Biu in the year 2000 disappeared from the Police Service and alleged that the former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, said he did not want him in the Force. He later re-appeared again after about 10 years.

“When the committee probed further, the Chairman, Police Service Commission, told the committee that he recalled Commissioner of Police Zakari Biu because he was never suspended or queried by the Nigeria Police Force.

“That Zakari Biu was officially suspended by the Commission based on the fact that the Inspector General of Police reported the case of escaped suspect in his custody to allow full investigation.”

Of the seven recommendations by the committee, the Senate adopted two – that

*the public should give security agencies information; and that

*Biu and others involved in the escape of Kabiru Sokoto should have their prosecution expedited to serve as a deterrent to other security operatives.

The lawmakers rejected the recommendation that the Office of the Co-ordinator on Counter Terrorism established in the National Security Advisers’ Office be strengthened through a legislative act.

It also rejected the recommendation for the establishment of a joint border patrol to include Police, Armed Forces, Immigration Service, Customs Service, State Security Service and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps to check the challenges of the country’s porous borders.

The recommendation that existing laws on terrorism should be strengthened such that offences under the Act should be made public was also rejected. Besides, the Senate disagreed that there should be special courts for terrorism cases.

The Upper Chamber also rejected the recommendation that the government should ensure special training for judges and prosecutors to handle terrorism offences.

The lawmakers almost dropped the report of the committee on the excuse that security agencies should be allowed to conclude their investigation.

But Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, who presided, insisted that some areas of the report should be considered.

Sings that the report might suffer a setback emerged early when no Senator wanted to second the motion for its consideration, until Ekweremadu virtually forced Senator Dahiru Kuta to do so.

 

10 interesting facts about Lent

Today is Ash Wednesday, which marks the start of Lent, a 40-day preparatory period for the celebration of Easter.

Here are some interesting facts about the Lenten season:

  1. Lent is the period of 40 days before Easter in the Christian calendar. Sundays are not included in the count. It falls on a different date each year because it is dependent on the date of Easter Sunday.
  2. Why 40 days? The number is significant in Jewish-Christian scripture: in Genesis, it took 40 days and nights of rain to cause a flood which destroyed the earth; the Hebrews spent 40 days in the wilderness before reaching the Promised Land; Moses fasted for 40 days before receiving the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai; Jesus spent 40 days of fasting in preparation for his ministry.
  3. Lent is derived from an Old English word which means “lengthen.” The last week of Lent is called Holy Week.
  4. Violet is the symbolic color for Lent, with altars, statues and other religious paraphernalia veiled in violet fabric.
  5. Why violet? The color is associated with mourning, which anticipates Christ’s pain and suffering on the cross; and royalty, which celebrates Christ’s resurrection.
  6. In most Christian denominations, Lent starts with Ash Wednesday, which is derived from the practice of placing ashes on the foreheads of the faithful as a sign of repentance to God. The ashes are made by burning the blessed palms that were distributed the previous year on Palm Sunday.
  7. Ash Wednesday is observed by fasting, abstinence from meat, prayer, and repentance. Other days of abstinence from meat include all Fridays during Lent.
  8. During Lent, the faithful are encouraged to surrender a particular vice, such as smoking or favorite food items, as a reflection of Jesus’ deprivation in the wilderness and test of self-discipline.
  9. In 2010, Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Oscar Cruz said Filipino Catholics should abstain from video games, movies, sending text messages, and even using social networks such as Facebook as a form of sacrifice during the Lenten season. Cruz followed a similar proposal by British Church leaders urging people to give up their iPods and other gadgets for at least one day.
  10. Last year, the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) launched a website that offers a “virtual experience” of celebrating Lent at the comfort of one’s own room. Visita Iglesia Online allows users to listen to the pasyon (sung readings of the Gospel account of Christ’s Passion), watch videos of the Seven Last Words, read homilies and take part in the Stations of the Cross via a computer with an Internet connection. It also features 14 shrines and pilgrimage churches, as well as reflections given by Filipino priests

NDLEA discovers fake drug laboratory

Giade

Arrests three Bolivians, Nigerian

The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has arrested  three Bolivians and a Nigerian for operating a laboratory for the illegal production of Methamphetamine.

They were arrested at Satellite Town, Lagos.

NDLEA Chairman/Chief Executive Ahmadu Giade  said the laboratory was detected by operatives attached to the Lagos State Command.

Items recovered at the laboratory include: 41.150kg of ephedrine, 4.8kg of methamphetamine, other chemicals and sundry gadgets used in the laboratory. Three vehicles, a Honda Accord Saloon car, a Honda CRV  Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) and a Toyota 4 Runner SUV, were also impounded.

The three Bolivians arrested are: Yerko Artunduaga Dorado, 19; Ruben Ticona Jorge, 21; and Hugo Chavez Moreno, 39. The fourth suspect is a 23-year-old Nigerian, Uba Ubachukwu Collins.

Two others, Solomon Azuka Uzoka and Basil Ikechukwu Uzoka, are wanted by the anti-drug agency.

Giade said: “It is important to stress that such buildings are not safe for habitation. A house used for the illicit production of methamphetamine is simply a death trap. Tenants moving into new buildings are hereby advised to carry out discreet investigations on the previous occupants.

“Besides the environmental pollution, gullible and unemployed youths are being used to smuggle these drugs to countries with high demand. Several methamphetamine traffickers have been caught at the airports and land borders.”

Tribunal dismisses Akunyili’s petition against Ngige

L-R Ngige, Akunyili

 

The Election Petitions Tribunal in Awka on Tuesday struck out the petition filed by Prof. Dora Akunyili against Chris Ngige’s victory in the Anambra Central Senatorial poll last year.

Former Minister of Information Akunyili had been locked in legal battle with former Anambra State Governor Ngige to be declared the winner of the election.

Akunyili contested the election under the banner of the All Progressive Grand Alliance while Ngige represented the Action Congress of Nigeria.

Ruling on an oral application for the striking out of the petition made by counsel for Ngige, Mr. Emeka Ngige, the Chairman of the tribunal, Justice Pat Onajite-Kuejubola, held that the tribunal lacked the jurisdiction to continue to try the petition.

Onajite-Kuejubola said the petition was dismissed based on the recent Supreme Court’s decision that the 180 days given for the determination of election petitions at the tribunal level could not be altered in any way.

She said, “The 180 days cannot be extended, not even by an order of the Court of Appeal. Accordingly, the tribunal no longer has jurisdiction to try the petition. Consequently, all the proceedings of the tribunal from the day the petition was returned from the Court of Appeal for retrial are now a nullity. The petition is hereby dismissed.”

Earlier during the proceeding, Ngige’s counsel had drawn the attention of the tribunal of the Supreme Court’s decision of February 14 and 17, 2012, barring the tribunal from further hearing in the petition.

Continue reading Tribunal dismisses Akunyili’s petition against Ngige

Man accused of raping 12-year-old girl four times

Commissioner of Police Lagos State Police Command, Yakubu Alkali

Like any observant parent, Mrs. Kehinde Oduntan became concerned when she wanted to wash the clothes of her children and noticed what looked like semen in her 12-year-old daughter’s underwear.

She quickly summoned her husband, Peter, and informed him of her discovery. Peter confirmed that what she saw was actually semen.

The parents questioned their daughter (name withheld) and after much threat, she told them their 47-year-old neighbour, Mr. Lateef Amuda, was the one that had sex with her.

“We asked her how many times he had had sex with her and she refused to tell us,” the mother told PUNCH Metro.

It was learnt that the girl later told nurses at a hospital that Amuda had had sex with her four different times.

When our correspondent visited the family at their home in Meiran area of Lagos, the girl maintained that the man actually raped her four times.

Her mother said, “We were angry; we could not fathom why Amuda, whom we have always seen as a family friend, could do such a thing to a young girl. My daughter said Amuda would come to our apartment and ask her to follow him. She said those times he slept with her, my husband and I were not around.

“She told us the last time he slept with her, she was sleeping on the bed and Amuda entered our apartment, woke her up and asked her to follow him.

“We then reported at the Oke-Odo Police Station and the police arrested him. While Amuda was locked up, his relatives came to beg us to get him released.

“They apologised to us to forget about the matter, that what had been done could not be undone. We were furious. I told them I was not a fool that the police would decide what to do with him.” Continue reading Man accused of raping 12-year-old girl four times

Failed subsidy promises: NLC, others blast Jonathan … ask government to revert petrol price to N65

NLC President, Mr Abdulwaheed Omar

THE stage appeared set for another round of showdown between President Goodluck Jonathan and labour unions on the issue of fuel subsidy with labour on Tuesday asking the Federal Government to revert the pump price of petrol to N65 per litre.

The Nigeria Labour Congress and the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria said the Jonathan administration had no option other than to reverse the price from its present N97 to the old N65 per litre since the President had said he was rethinking the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment programme.

Jonathan on Monday reportedly told chieftains of the Peoples Democratic Party at their  58th National Executive Committee meeting in Abuja that implementation of the palliatives to cushion the effects of subsidy removal were no longer feasible.

The President said the palliatives had been based on the 100 per cent removal of subsidy on local consumption of fuel.

“This (SURE) is developed with the expectation that we were going to completely deregulate the Downstream sector of the oil industry, the 100 per cent removal of subsidy… we will still come up with a document based on what we get,” he told the PDP members and ordered them to withdraw the circulated SURE document.

The SURE programme had been hurriedly designed in January to douse the tension generated by the sudden removal of subsidy and consequent jump in the pump price of petrol.

The Senate has said it is backing the action of the President. Leader of the Senate, Victor Ndoma-Egba, said Jonathan made the plans based on zero-subsidy arrangement and for which the 2012 budget was prepared.

“The President said he wanted to remove subsidy, Nigerians said they don’t want it removed. Now that he was not able to realise his plan, where will he get the money to carry out that policy,” Ndoma-Egba said.

He, however, stated that the President would still need to work with the savings made from the partial removal of subsidy.

“The President will have to look at the proceeds from partial deregulation and work with what is saved. That is the reason why the document earlier produced should be revised to reflect the current realities,” he said.

Apart from the NLC and the ASCN, the House of Representatives also on Tuesday took a swipe at the President and said it was vindicated concerning its pessimism over the government palliatives.

The Acting General Secretary of the NLC, Mr. Owei Lakemfa, in a telephone interview with one of our correspondents on Tuesday said  the Federal Government  had no option but to revert the fuel pump price from the current N97 to the pre-2012 pump price of fuel.

He said that a recent advertisement in a national daily in which the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, claimed that the Federal Government realised N15b allocation from the proposed subsidy savings supported the claim that the Federal Government was making some money from the regime change in the pump price of fuel and that the funds realised from the fuel price increase should be adequately utilised to execute projects.

According to Lakemfa, the Federal Government is only trying to prepare the minds of Nigerians against expecting results from the increase in the pump price of petrol in the country by announcing the withdrawal of the programme.

He urged the government to fulfil its promise to use the proceeds of fuel price increase to construct roads, build a second Niger bridge, and other promises contained in the SURE document.

He said that the Nigerian citizenry was seriously interested in what the Federal Government could do with the proceeds from the increase in the pump price of petroleum products.

He called on the Federal Government to ensure that the Ministries of Petroleum and Finance were cleansed based on the serious discoveries made at the Subsidy Probe by the House of Representatives.

“Right from the onset, organised labour believed that the Federal Government was not sincere with this programme but the government claimed that we were going to get results in six months. What government is saying now is that we should not expect results,” the NLC scribe said.

Also, the House of Representatives said that it was not surprised that the President withdrew its promised fuel subsidy removal palliatives.

The House noted that the development vindicated its opposition to the SURE programme, particularly the “hurried manner” the executive introduced the document without consulting the National Assembly.

The Chairman of the House Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Mr. Zakari Mohammed, explained that the legislature had consistently held the view that Nigerians needed to be consulted on the programme.

He added, “We have been vindicated because we had initially opposed the hurried manner the SURE document was put together.

“We were saying that the funds for this programme needed to be properly appropriated by the National Assembly and more so that we needed to have the details of the programme.”

Mohammed, however, commended Jonathan for realising that something went wrong and retracing his steps.

The Minority Leader of the House, Mr. Femi Gbajabiamila, who shared the same view, told THE PUNCH in Abuja that the palliatives were a “dummy right from the start.”

He argued that the President was merely attempting to “pull the wool” over the faces of  Nigerians by promising palliatives that were theirs by right.

Gbajabiamila stated, “Under Section 17 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), government is mandated to provide the same services it has promised as palliatives.

“The issues of health, transport and all that; these are the fundamental duties that government owes the citizenry.

“You cannot give me what rightly belongs to me in the guise of palliatives, while taking away the subsidy that I ought to enjoy.

“So, I am not surprised that they have decided to withdraw it; it was a dummy that I never ever bought.”

Criticising the President, the National Publicity Secretary of the CPC, Mr. Rotimi Fashakin, said the administration was not committed to responsible governance.

“All along, as a party,  we knew the idea of SURE was a knee-jerk response to the people’s protest and not a well thought-out intervention to stymie the dire impoverishment of the people,” Fashakin said.

President, Campaign for Democracy,  Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin, said it was evident from the outset that  Jonathan was not committed to the implementation of the SURE programme.

“They never meant it (SURE). It was just propaganda to make people swallow poison. Corruption still persists so how can anyone trust the regime to implement SURE. Cosmetic palliatives can never cushion any effect,” she said.

The Secretary-General of ASCSN and founding Secretary-General of the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria, Mr. Solomon Onaghinon, in an interview with one of our correspondents said, “There is social crisis in Nigeria.”

He said, “There were no palliatives in the first place; I have always said that those palliatives do not make sense because government said they would be paying salaries on the 20th of every month but have they paid? There is no palliative.

“For those people who really listened carefully, they would have known that there was no palliative. If the President said the palliatives are no longer feasible, let him bring the fuel price back to N65 per litre.”

http://www.punchng.com/

A country and its harvest of militancy

The resumption of attacks by the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta in the oil producing region is no doubt an additional security concern for the Federal Government that is currently battling to calm the Boko Haram sect, which has executed several bomb attacks leading to the loss of hundreds of lives and destruction of property.

Goodluck Ebele Jonathan

The February 4 attack on Agip trunk line in Bayelsa State, which MEND claimed responsibility for and said it was to serve as a reminder of its presence in the creeks and to mark its resumption of hostilities in the region, came to many as a surprise.

MEND had announced this new phase of its ‘struggle for justice,’ adding that it would pay considerable attention to dealing with security forces and traitorous indigenes of the Niger Delta.

Although recent events such as the Shell Bonga oil spill and the fire incident on Chevron’s near offshore facility, have led to further destruction of the Niger Delta environment and could have triggered the new phase of violent agitation, analysts believe that the impunity of Boko Haram and the seeming inability of government to handle the challenge have emboldened the MEND and other militant groups in the country.

It would be recalled that the violent activities of MEND were once so high that they resulted in an over 70 per cent drop in Nigeria’s oil production and loss of several lives including women and children, in a literally full-fledged war between the militants and the military.

However, after the 50th independence anniversary day bombing in Abuja, and with the amnesty programme, during which over 15, 000 militants surrendered their weapons, MEND became silent and remained so for the past one year, until recently when it began to issue threats of retaliation against Boko Haram.

The President of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People, Ledum Mitee, told our correspondent that the renewed violent agitation in the Niger Delta was an extreme expression of the feelings of the people of the region and a result of the system operated by the government which celebrated violent militants.

“What you see is a product of a system that gives visibility and even celebrates people who take up arms and engage in violence. When you run such a system and reward people who become violent without dealing with the issues, the system would definitely breed more violence.

“The classic Niger Delta struggle is non-violent and is focused on the issues of the environment, issues of development, issues of resources not reaching the grass roots; the place where this oil is taken, issues of neglect by government. The problem has been like that over the years because of the attitude of government, and even the press, has been highlighting violence and rewarding those who choose to express themselves violently. So you will have more who want to benefit from the struggle by being violent,” he said.

Mitee pointed to the report of the United Nations Environmental Programme, which showed the extent of damage of the environment of Ogoniland, which is a part of the Niger Delta. He said the Federal Government had ignored the report so far because the people of the area had not been agitating violently.

“Six months ago, UNEP came out with a report highlighting the level of environmental degradation of Ogoniland, till now government has not done anything about it, because the people have not carried arms,” he said.

Some leaders in the Niger Delta, who have condemned MEND’s resumption of violence are of the opinion that if the group goes ahead to reduce oil production to zero and chase multinational oil firms away, as it has pledged, the action would be a disservice to the Niger Delta, because the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan, who is the first Nigerian president who hails from the region, would most likely be destabilised.

However, Mitee argued that “Jonathan is the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, not of the Niger Delta. So the struggle of the Niger Delta, of which the violence is an extreme expression of it, is not against anybody. Some people who think that once oil flows, there is peace; not caring about how it affects the people in the area would have to think again.”

In the South-East, the threats of militancy have been mainly directed at the Boko Haram sect, and with threats to carry out revenge attacks on members of the Islamic sect.

One of such groups, Ogbunigwe Ndigbo, earlier this year, vowed to employ ‘extreme violence’ to protect Igbo people.

The leader of the group, Gen. Red Devil Nwokolo, said, “Ogbunigwe Ndigbo, has sworn to the protection of Ndigbo and to avenge any drop of blood of our brothers shed anywhere in Nigeria. We will use extreme violence to protect ourselves where necessary. We have watched the killing of our people all over the North by Boko Haram terrorist group and we are declaring war on this group and any other group that sheds the blood of our people.”

Similarly, the leader of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra, Ralph Uwazuruike, warned that if security agencies were not able to bring the perpetrators of the violent attacks in the North to book, the group would have no other option but to avenge the deaths of Igbo in those attacks.

Despite these threats, former Governor of Anambra State, Chukwuemeka Ezeife, a prominent leader in the South-East, told SUNDAY PUNCH that at present, there was no group in the region that was taking up arms.

He said, “There has been a lot of posturing and acting, but no actual militancy in the South-East. As I’m speaking to you, I don’t know of any violent militant group in the South-East. MASSOB is not violent presently but that does not mean it cannot be. It’s members can change. Generally, I believe that when some people continue to act with impunity, it is likely to trigger some other people to try to do the same thing.”

Similarly in the South-West, concerns have been raised over groups threatening to resort to violence, especially in response to the recurring killings of innocent citizens in the North.

Although the threats have mostly come at press conferences and through press statements, the protest march against Boko Haram by about a thousand members of the Oodua Peoples’ Congress on the streets of Lagos, brandishing dangerous weapons, was the most practical of them all.

OPC, which was formed after former Head of State, Ibrahim Babangida annulled 1993 presidential election, and played a significant role in the crisis that ensued then, had been relatively quiet before the protest march.

The founder of OPC, Fredrick Faseun, who led the protest said, “We are against all those things that are distasteful to Nigeria, including insecurity, unemployment and terrorism.”

The protesters warned Boko Haram not to dare detonate a bomb in the South-West, or kill anybody from the region, as such action would trigger violent responses from the group.

Reps summon ex-presidential aide over N20bn NAPEP funds (KEKE NAPEP

The House of Representatives Committee on Public Accounts on Monday summoned a former Senior Special Assistant to the President on Poverty Eradication, Dr. Magnus Kpakol, over alleged misuse of about N20bn voted for poverty alleviation projects between 2004 and 2009 by the Federal Government.

Former Senior Special Assistant to the President on Poverty Eradication, Dr. Magnus Kpakol

Kpakol had doubled as the Coordinator of the National Poverty Eradication Programme.

The summons was in furtherance of a Status Inquiry into the operations of NAPEP, which the committee started on Monday in Abuja.

The Chairman of the committee, Mr. Solomon Adeola, announced the decision to summon the former presidential aide, after the committee rose from a meeting at the National Assembly.

Adeola said the summons was the next option as Kpakol had not responded to a series of invitations to appear before the committee to answer audit queries bearing on “non-retirement of funds and mismanagement of funds generally.”

He added, “There are a total of 33 queries raised by the Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation against the operations of NAPEP between 2004 and 2009; the period he was in charge of affairs there.

Continue reading Reps summon ex-presidential aide over N20bn NAPEP funds (KEKE NAPEP

THE fugitive son of former President Rupiah Banda, Henry, has resurfaced in South Africa as the Kenyan High Commission yesterday revealed that Henry, a regular in the East African country where he had business contacts, often used three different passports to enter and exit Kenya.
This was after another eye witness told the Daily Mail yesterday that he saw Henry having dinner at Signature Restaurant located in the up-market Johannesburg’s Morningside Shopping Centre last Wednesday clearly relaxed as if it was business as usual.
“Yes I saw him. I know him and the wife,” the eye witness said, “so I am surprised that there is massive speculation about where he is. Henry is here (Johannesburg) but I am not willing to go on record with this.”
The eye witness expressed frustration at the pace investigations were going even after an international warrant of arrest was issued.
He said “the Zambian investigative wings should develop more sophistication instead of relying on hearsay. In fact, they don’t even need to have too much sophistication to crack this case open”.
“The guy lives here as a free man. It’s so frustrating watching all of this knowing that if I wander around Sandton Mall even this week, I will bump into him,” the witness retorted.
The source said if Zambian authorities are serious about arresting Henry, they do not need to look further than South Africa.
And Kenya’s High Commissioner to Zambia Kipyego Cheluget said records in Kenya indicate that Henry left that country on November 23, 2011 via Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and has not returned. His father said he had not been to Kenya in six months.
He restated his country’s determination to arrest him once he enters that country, following the Interpol warrant against him.
He said Henry used Zambian passport number ZP 005673 the last time he entered and left Kenya and has previously used different passports with numbers ZP 005193 and ZP 005131.
Dr Cheluget has also said the Kenyan government is deeply disturbed by media reports in Zambia alleging that Henry is hiding in that country’s State House.
He said Kenya cannot keep or hide a foreign national who is wanted for questioning in their country, adding that the allegations are not true.
He said at a media briefing in Lusaka yesterday that relevant Kenyan government security agencies have, however, been mobilised to arrest Henry if he sets foot in that country again.
“In fact, it is The Post that made this claim in a banner headline. Kenya demands an apology for this claim from The Post newspaper, which made these false claims,” the Kenyan envoy said.
“His Excellency Mwai Kibaki and his family live in State House, Nairobi, and to claim that he is hiding a fugitive is really to belittle the dignity of our President and the Kenyan nation,” Dr Cheluget said.
“The continued unfounded media speculation on the issue may be unnecessarily injurious to the good relations between the two sister states. It is prudent that the media verifies information before publishing because wild claims may be detrimental to good co-existence with friendly states,” Dr Cheluget said.
He said the Kenyan government has checked records at entry points and ascertained that Mr Banda is not in that country “or if he is, then he did not use designated entry points”.
Dr Cheluget noted that the Zambia government through Interpol issued a notice to Interpol member countries, including Kenya, for the arrest of Henry, awaiting formal extradition.
He also said the two countries will from March 7 to 9 hold a Joint Permanent Commission on Co-operation where all matters of mutual interest will be discussed.
Henry and former Transport and Communications Minister Dora Siliya have been linked to the fraudulent sale of Zamtel to Libya’s LapGreen, a transaction that has since been reversed by President Sata as he fights graft. Henry is also said to be the master mind of the billion dollar contract of oil from Kenya that committed the government to yet billions of more dollars.
Foreign Affairs Minister Given Lubinda advised Henry more than twice to hand himself to police because in Zambia everybody is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law before his hide and seek turned into a diplomatic mess between Zambia and Kenya.

Jailing President Mills is not the answer, NPP!!

Once again, the NPP’s Kennedy Agyapong is in the news, not to attract goodwill to his party’s cause, but to continue dragging himself into the mud and to expose his party’s desperation.

Speaking at a rally in Accra on Saturday to climax the NPP flagbearer’s national listening tour, he took a turn for the worse by bad-mouthing President Mills and making very serious utterances that must not go unexamined.

Agyapong stated categorically that the Woyome scandal has largely exposed President Mills as the most corrupt president Ghana has ever had, describing the President of the Republic of Ghana as the “chief thief” in the country (Myjoyonline, February 18, 2012).

He said claims by the president that he was not aware of the payment have portrayed him as an untruthful person and a leader who doesn’t fear God. Thus, since the president failed to act appropriately on the payment, he is either corrupt or incompetent, asking him to choose between the two. And he called on President Mills to resign.

Of all, here is what turns my crank. Agyapong said President Mills’ attitude over the years has been lackadaisical and promised that if the president fails to deal with corruption under his administration, he will be jailed if the NPP comes back to power. And in his own words, “we are challenging him.”

It is true that the Woyome scandal has taken a big political toll on President Mills’ personal integrity as the leader of the government under whose watch the fraud occurred. The circumstances under which the judgement debt was paid to Woyome are still inexplicable, and the President knows how his reputation has been hurt by this scandal. But is there any evidence to directly link him with this fraud? None so far. So, considering the premise on which Agyapong based his claims, what is the justification for his allegation of corruption against President Mills and the threat to jail him if he loses power?

Here is Agyapong’s porous reasoning: “President Mills is corrupt because he sanctioned all the judgement debts paid to individuals and groups.”

Of course, by a wide stretch of analogy, we can’t tell who is more guilty: the one who wields the knife and stabs the victim or the one who commands him to do so? Can it be a case of complicity, aiding and abetting being levelled against President Mills? Where does Agyapong have evidence from to conclude that if he didn’t facilitate the fraud, then, he gave his blessing to it?

Be that as it may, we still don’t have any direct evidence to confirm that President Mills authorized the transactions that would later explode in his face as the Woyome scandal. So, again, how will a sane person jump to the conclusion that because the fraud happened under his tenure, he is corrupt—and, therefore, qualifies as the “chief thief” of Ghana?

How does Kennedy Agyapong understand corruption, and where is his evidence to pin down President Mills as a beneficiary of the judgement debt paid to Woyome for which he must brace himself up for jail time under an NPP government?

If his accusation is premised on the perception that because President Mills is the Head of State who should have known the goings-on but failed to do so, we may excuse him and see some sense in his effusions. But if he equates that lapse to a direct profit from the fraud, he is more than wrong.

Is he saying that by not acting swiftly to prevent the payment to Woyome, President Mills is corrupt? Or does he have the evidence to support his wild allegation?

In all senses—in truth and in deed—none of those in the NPP camp comes close to President Mills’s honesty and integrity as a selfless, devoted, and caring leader. Slow to act he may be, but a corrupt leader he definitely is not.

Here is why. He has a house in the Spintex area that serves his purposes and hasn’t sought to add any to it. Despite the senseless accusation that the management of Regimanuel Estate Ltd. had greased his palms to extend the perimeters of that building, the truth that emerged later on proved to us how unconscionable his accusers and those in the NPP supporting them are.

This singular display of moderation places President Mills poles apart from Kufuor whose self-acquisitive spirit goaded him to do weird things in office—the stealing of 41 million Cedis to renovate his personal residence, the acquisition of Hotel Waa-Waa, and many other underhand dealings that yielded ill-gotten wealth to his family, cronies, and friends!

We know of President Mills’ self-denial. Take his rejection of per diem allowances, for instance. What didn’t his predecessors gain from this concession—which Kufuor, for instance, abused to the point of turning it into a regular source of income as he travelled all over the world in pursuit of his own personal agenda of junketing and frolicking at the expense of the national coffers?

Had President Mills also opted for per diem allowances and devised means to go on foreign trips indiscriminately, he would have come across as Kufuor did. I am using Kufuor as the obvious example because he is part of the NPP machinery that Kennedy Agyapong upholds as the yardstick for measuring President Mills’ personality, performance, and integrity. Anybody who fails to see the difference needs more than a psychiatrist’s attention.

Immorality in government business is another area that separates President Mills from his accusers. We can’t all too soon forget the spate of immorality (wife-snatching, appointment to office based on sexual considerations—as Gizelle Yajzi would have us believe—and nepotism, manipulation of contract awards, and many other vices) that characterized Kufuor’s administration.

Under Kufuor, Richard Anane proved how unworthy of public office characters like him in the NPP could be. But what did we see? After twisting the arms of CHRAJ without success, did he not turn to his favourites in the court to overturn the CHRAJ’s incriminating findings only for Kufuor to re-appoint him to the office that he had left unfilled while the case dragged on?

For Kennedy Agyapong’s enlightenment, let me say here that the public shame that Gizelle Yajzi brought on Kufuor is unequalled, even if her accusations weren’t pursued to the full for us to know the truth. She did raise very serious questions about Kufuor’s moral being and his sense of public service. The allegations that she made were too serious to be neglected but the Kufuor government didn’t pursue the matter to its logical conclusion for us to judge who was right.

As would be expected, all manner of damage control measures were taken, including intimidating the woman and even threatening her life should she dare step foot in the country to lay everything bare. Those who were quick to dismiss her claims as the effusions of an embittered woman who lost her job helped Kufuor to weather the storm; but Gizelle Yajzi’s claims still hang around.

What did the NPP do when its former National Chairman, Harona Esseku, blew the lid off Kufuor’s corrupt practices by hijacking the kickbacks meant for the party’s coffers? Where did those kickbacks come from? Certainly, not from any genuine government business because no genuine government business will fetch kickbacks!!

How about Kufuor’s own blessing for bribery and corruption? His shocking declaration that he won’t take any action against any of his appointees accused of corruption because “corruption has been with mankind ever since the days of Adam” will go down in history as the most despicable pronouncement to have ever been made by a Head of State anywhere in the world about his attitude to that vice.

And did Kufuor do anything to fight corruption apart from his government’s targeting of those in the opposition to witch-hunt? And why did Kufuor unexpectedly interfere with the judicial process to stop the prosecution of those NDC officials? If indeed what they were being prosecuted for was an infringement of the law, why did Kufuor disrupt that process? Was it because he wanted to fight corruption by other means? No!! It was because he knew he wasn’t innocent of that vice and couldn’t be the first to cast any stone of justice against those NDC officials on trial.

There are many more instances to prove to jaundiced minds of Kennedy Agyapong’s type that what he is accusing President Mills of is nothing strange as far as it is coming from the camp of the NPP. Perhaps, he feels so emboldened to make such low-class statements because President Mills had created the room for him to do so. Had he been more resolute in pursuing the cases of corruption that many in the NDC had urged him to do when he took over from Kufuor, the situation would have been different.

Of course, by not going after those NPP functionaries, he seems to have given them the long rope with which they are now attempting to hang him. But it won’t stick. Such pronouncements as made by Kennedy Agyapong have boomerang effects and will definitely hit where they will and hurt whomever they will.

By making that promise to jail President Mills if the NPP returns to power, Agyapong has opened a window for us to take a sneak peek into the NPP’s agenda for governance. I don’t doubt such an agenda of vendetta because that is the only political tool that this party uses to either intimidate its opponents or to stifle dissension against its negative activities, including maladministration.

Jailing President Mills is not the answer, if the NPP cares to know. It may help the NPP revisit what had begun under the Kufuor government but it won’t enhance governance. Again, any move to hound President Mills will have its own implications. Under our constitution, how much protection (call it immunity) doesn’t he have, even in his post-office life?

Thus, by promising to jail him, the NPP is only giving credence to what we already know of its violent and irresponsible nature. Will it subvert the constitution to go after a former President? We wait to see; but I hope a sane mind in the NPP will come out to refute Agyapong’s threat against President Mills.

With this agenda, I wonder what the NPP thinks it will do to warrant its being returned to power. Its functionaries may be going around undermining the Mills-led government and vowing to destroy, jail, kill, or maim the NDC activists.

Whether their hideous intentions will materialize or not depends on the outcome of Election 2012 and what the electorate do in the polling booths. It doesn’t depend on the amount of steam that its leaders let out at public gatherings or in private meetings where they scheme to unleash hell and brimstone on President Mills and his appointees.

Yet, these are the people who, only a few weeks ago, gathered at Essipong near Takoradi, to seek the face of God to guide their activities. Is this how God wants them to use any grace that he may give them, that is if God is even willing to give them any grace at all?

Shakespeare may be right in saying that there is no art to see the mind’s construction on the face; but we are lucky enough to have the NPP give us that art to do so. By virtue of its leaders’ pronouncements and public posturing, the NPP is gradually helping us to see and know the construction of its leaders’ minds. Indeed, desperate people do desperate things. The NPP is desperate and will become more desperate with the passage of time. And should they lose the elections, they will come face-to-face with their avatars!!