Wednesday, 27 March 2019
Ajimobi not happy with Oyo governor-elect
Oyo State Governor, Abiola Ajimobi, has advised the Governor-elect, Mr Seyi Makinde, to focus on developmental issues instead of his campaign of calumny against his person, family and administration.
He said Makinde’s move was aimed at tarnishing his image and rubbishing his “eight-year selfless service” to the state.
The governor’s position was contained in a statement by his Special Adviser, Communication and Strategy, Mr Bolaji Tunji, on Tuesday.
He said the Peoples Democratic Party ought to start talking about its plans for the state and how to build on the foundation laid by his administration instead of carrying on with its acrimonious campaign.
Ajimobi said he was appalled by the unprovoked media attacks by opposition parties, especially sympathisers of the PDP and its governorship candidate, who he said were still practising politics of bitterness.
He said, “It is disheartening that more than two weeks after the election, the opposition parties, especially the PDP, have carried on as if they are still campaigning.
“Now that elections have been won and lost, there should be an end to acrimonious and incendiary comments. Political discussion has moved from the pre-2011 era. Our focus is on politics of issues and development.
“That is what we expect from them, not personal attacks and falsehood-laced statements indicating their unpreparedness for governance.
Punch
Wife set house ablaze after husband came home with pregnant side chick
Mrs Ireen Kalenga (28) burnt the house occupied by her family last night while her husband, Mr Kalenga and his pregnant side chick were asleep.
The side chick, identified as Tina Mofya, narrating the incident to police said, the 1st wife has not been able to conceive after 3 years of marriage, while she luckily got pregnant for Mr Kalenga.
Kalenga however gave his 1st wife an option to accept Tina into the home or move out..
Ireen is said to have waited until midnight while her husband and his "Tina" the side chick
were fast asleep, before taking out her belongings and setting the house on fire.
Police has launched a search for Ireen Kalenga, on accounts relating to attempted murder.
Tuesday, 26 March 2019
Nigerian ex beauty queen dies during buttocks enlargement surgery
The Face of Democracy Transformation, 2013 Winner, Onwuzuligbo Nneka Miriam has reportedly died after unsuccessful buttocks enlargement surgery in Lagos.
Nneka died on February 3rd after 31 days in coma from December 30th when the surgical operation was proceeded.
According to reports, an American Surgeon based in Lagos, who conducted the surgery has taken to her heels after killing the Nigeria Beauty Queen in a failed fat transfer surgery for buttocks and hips enlargement.
According to investigations, the American uncertified Surgeon, Dr. Anu proceeded on the fat transfer surgery at her Med Contour Cosmetic Surgery after having several cases and records of surgery failures and complications. Infact, recently two top Lagos Big Babes have been victims of her misplaced professional ethics and operations, which led to improper shift of their buttocks during the surgeries conducted by Dr. Anu.
The surgery went soar, when fats that where meant to be transferred to her hips got into her lungs and caused her to drift into coma, even after she was immediately rushed to Vedic Hospital in Lekki, where she was placed on life support, before she was transferred to Lagos University Teaching Hospital, which was where she died 32 days after while in coma.
Meanwhile, organiser of Face of Democracy Nigeria Pageant, Alexander Ajagbonno has expressed regrets and bitterness over the loss of Queen Miriam Onwuzuligbo, who was the 2nd runner-up in the 2013 edition of Face of Democracy Nigeria, an outcome which the deceased refused to accept claiming that she merited the 1st crown.
She dragged the organisers to court for legal interventions until last year when the case was finally dismissed. The death of Queen Miriam may be disheartening, but also a lesson to other young ladies, who would not carry out critical research in a particular clinic before engaging them in such sensitive services.
The American citizen, Dr. Anu has had several professional scandals, ranging from poorly conducted surgeries to complications as a medical practitioner.
Real Madrid Football Academy in Port Harcourt to be ready by May
Real Madrid Madrid Football Academy in Port Harcourt will be completed and commissioned in May 2019 , Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Ezenwo Wike has announced.
Speaking with journalists after projects inspection on Tuesday, Governor Wike said that the Academy would groom International football stars.
The Governor said that the project will create talented soccer players and manpower that will positively impact the economy of the state.
He said: "This project will be completed and commissioned before the end of May this year. As you can see, the facilities are almost set.
"This facility will create International soccer stars and develop the economy of the state".
Governor Wike said contrary to propaganda by the opposition, the Real Madrid Football has been developed since it was initiated.
"Already 12 coaches are already in training in Madrid to work at at the Academy. This academy will help the state".
He noted that so many soccer enthusiasts have applied for admission into the Academy.
Governor Wike also inspected the cinemas at the Port Harcourt Pleasure Park. The facility will be completed before May ending .
"This cinema will develop tourism across the region. We will build a five star hotel in Pleasure Park ", he said.
Mozambique needs help as Cyclone Idai takes over 1000 lives
Cyclone Idai has caused unprecedented havoc in southern Africa. More than 1,000 people are feared dead.
Vast areas of Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe are under water and cut off from the world. Families are suddenly left homeless. They urgently need food, water and shelter.
“We urgently need food, corrugated iron, water, sanitation, shelter and seeds.” says Antonio Anosso, humanitarian worker at Caritas Mozambique.
Saturday, 23 March 2019
Armed thugs seen in many polling units in Kano
Armed thugs were seen in many polling units visited on Saturday morning during the supplementary governorship election in Kano State.
Many voters and supporters of a political party claimed the thugs were there to intimidate them from voting.
A PREMIUM TIMES reporter who observed the elections witnessed the presence of the thugs with various weapons such as sticks and knives around some of the polling units visited in Rimin Gado Local Government Area and other parts of Kano.
“High presence of political thugs with heavy weapons is observed in all the polling units visited so far.
“However, they stay a distance away from the polling units,” said Sani Tukur, a journalist observing the elections.
When Mr Tukur and other journalists arrived Rimin Gado, they were confronted by residents who alleged that “no election is going on anywhere because all the ballot papers have been pre-thumb printed.”
Also, a member of the House of Representatives for Gwale constituency, Garba Disu, arrived the Divisional Police Station in Rimin Gado and complained that “all the ballot papers have been thumb printed.”
However, the Resident Electoral Commissioner for Zamfara state, Asmau Sani, who is one of three RECs deployed to Kano to help in the conduct of the elections, said everything was going on normally.
She spoke in an interview with journalists at Atawa village of Rimin Gado Local Government Area.
“So far so good,The everything is going on smoothly,” she said.
Before the journalists left Rimin Gado, they observed that the thugs had moved away from the polling booths but were still seen within the voting area, a situation that could intimidate many voters.
In Rimin Gado local government, elections are taking place in Attawa, Tammawa, Dika, Gulu, Rimin Gado and Jilli.
Apart from Kano State, supplementary governorship elections are also holding in Sokoto, Benue, Bauchi, and Plateau states.
Tuesday, 19 March 2019
15-year-old pupil drowns in Lagos river
A 15-year-old pupil of Waymark Image Live Community School, Oke-Ira, Oko Afo, off the Lagos-Badagry Expressway, Lagos, Elijah Okiki, has reportedly drowned in a river in the area.
It was gathered that 10 of the pupils of the school, between the ages of 13 and 15, left the school after the closing hour on Monday and headed for the Doghokiri community, Oko Afo, to bathe in the river.
In the process, Okiki was said to have disappeared in the water.
A resident of the area, who did not want his name in print, said Okiki was later brought out of the water and taken to a hospital, where he was confirmed dead.
According to him, the incident happened around 3.45pm when people were still in the river taking their bathe and washing clothes.
He stated that the incident was unfortunate, adding that the river was usually calm all year round and that such an incident was uncommon around the area.
The resident stated, “Many of us were in the river bathing. We saw the pupils but since they were many, we thought they could adequately take care of themselves.
“Besides, the incidence of people drowning here is not common. That is why this one came to us as a surprise. There is no time of the day you come to this place without seeing people.
“In my view, the pupils were young and inexperienced, that might be responsible for his drowning.”
The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, DSP Bala Elkana, confirmed the incident, adding that the victim drowned around 3.45pm on Monday.
He added that immediately he disappeared into the water, other students contacted the residents of the community, who dived into the water to rescue him.
The PPRO added that Okiki was brought out from the water and taken to a hospital for treatment, but the doctor on duty confirmed that he was dead.
He said, “We received information that 10 pupils between the ages of 13 and 15 from the Waymark Image Live Community School, Oke-Ira, Oko Afo, left the school after the closing hour for the Doghokiri community in Oko Afo to bathe in a river.
“In the process, one Elijah Okiki, about 15-years-old, drowned in the river. Community people were alerted and he was brought out of the water and rushed to the Ademola Hospital, Oko Afo, where he was confirmed dead by a doctor. His body has been deposited in the hospital’s morgue. Investigation into how he drowned is in progress.”
Copyright PUNCH.
Ship conveying over 2000 cars, 365 containers to Lagos catches fire and sinks
The fire stricken Italian ship, MV Grande America, owned by the Grimaldi Group, has sunk in the Bay of Biscay in water depth of 4,600 meters off the coast of France.
According to France’s Marine Nationale, the ship, a container-roro carrier, sank on Tuesday at 1526 local time about 180 nautical miles off the French coast.
Fire broke out on the Grande America on Sunday night as the ship was underway in the Bay of Biscay during a voyage from Hamburg, Germany to Casablanca, Morocco. The fire was primarily located in cargo containers in the forward portion of the ship. Several containers fell off the ship into the water while it was burning before it eventually sank on Tuesday afternoon.
All 27 crew members abandoned ship in a lifeboat and later rescued by British frigate HMS Argyll and were taken ashore to the French port of Brest. No major injuries were reported, although several of the crew members were treated for smoke inhalation.
The 213-meter, 27,965 dwt Grande America was built in 1997. It was carrying over 2000 cars and 365 containers bound for Lagos, Nigeria
Nigerian should brace up for an increase in Value Added Tax - FIRS
The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), on Tuesday, urged Nigerians to brace for an increase in Value Added Tax (VAT) by between 35 and 50 per cent in 2019.
This will raise the VAT from the current five per cent to between 6.75 and 7.25 per cent.
The Chairman of FIRS, Mr Babatunde Fowler, dropped the hint when he appeared alongside other top officials in the Federal Ministry of Finance before the Senate Committee on Finance in Abuja.
He said the impending VAT increase was one of the areas being looked at by FIRS to meet its 2019 revenue generation target of N8 trillion.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the officials appeared before the committee to give details of the 2019-2021 Medium Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper.
Fowler’s announcement came shortly after the Senate passed the National Minimum Wage Act (Amendment) Bill in which it approved N30, 000 as the new minimum wage for the workers in the country.
More details later (NAN)
Court stops INEC from collating Bauchi gubernatorial election results
A Federal High Court in Abuja on Tuesday ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission not to go ahead with its plan to collate, conclude and announce the results of the governorship election in Bauchi State held on March 9.
The judge, Inyang Ekwo, made the order based on an ex-parte application filed by the All Progressive Congress (APC) and the incumbent governor of Bauchi State, Mohammed Abubakar.
The restraining order is to last till the determination of the suit brought before the court by the two plaintiffs.
In the ex-parte motion, the APC and Mr Abubakar prayed for an order of interim injunction restraining INEC from resuming, concluding or announcing the result of Tafawa Balewa Local Government Area of Bauchi State in respect of the governorship election.
The election was initially declared inconclusive by INEC due to incidents in Tafawa Balewa local government area.
INEC later announced it would go ahead with collating and completing the results sourced from backup result sheets, a move Mr Abubakar, who scored the second highest votes in results so far collated, rejected.
The governor wants supplementary polls to be conducted. On Monday, he met with President Muhammad Buhari and vowed to challenge INEC’s volte face in court.
Justice Ekwo had earlier ordered INEC to appear before the court on Tuesday to explain why the order sought by the two plaintiffs ought not to be granted.
The electoral body, represented by a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Tanimu Inuwa, instead filed a motion challenging the court’s jurisdiction to hear the matter.
Objecting to the application of INEC, the counsel to the plaintiffs, Ahmed Raji, informed the court that the order issued on Monday asking the electoral body to show cause why the requests of the plaintiffs should not be granted had not been obeyed.
Mr Raji told the court that the business before the court was to determine whether the earlier order had been complied with.
Responding, Mr Inuwa admitted that the order had not been complied with and requested to address the court orally on the issue. His request was refused by the judge.
The court held that since the ex-parte application was in writing and duly served on INEC, it behoved of the defendant to appear before the court with a written or formal response.
In his bench ruling, the judge granted the interim injunction restraining INEC from resuming, concluding and announcing the governorship election result in the state pending the determination of all issues raised by the plaintiffs in their originating summons.
Mrs Ekwo also granted accelerated hearing on the matter and ordered parties to appear before the court on March 20 to present their positions in the substantive matter.
Premium Times
Court orders uniform cut-off mark for all Unity Schools
LAGOS — A Federal High Court sitting in Lagos has granted an order mandating the Federal Government to apply a uniform cut-off mark to all candidates seeking admission into Federal Government Colleges, also known as Unity Schools, irrespective of their states of origin. Trial judge, Justice John Tsoho, in the landmark decision, declared as unconstitutional, the state-based admission inequality in Federal Government colleges.
Former President of the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, Mr. Olisa Agbakoba, SAN, in the suit against the Federal Government and the Minister of Education, had challenged the prescribed different cut-off marks for different states, based on candidates’ gender and their states of origin, arguing that same violates the candidates’ fundamental rights to freedom from discrimination guaranteed by Section 42(1) of the 1999 Constitution. He had argued that Section 42 of the 1999 Constitution prohibits administrative or executive actions by government that discriminate between Nigerians on grounds of ethnicity, gender, religion and place of origin.
He had asked the court to declare that the administrative act of the respondents, particularly the Minister of Education, which prescribes and applies different requirements including cut-off marks for candidates seeking admission into Federal Government colleges, based on gender, ethnicity, states of origin, etc., is discriminatory against applicant’s grandchildren and the group or class they represent, on grounds of ethnicity, states of origin, gender, etc. and therefore violates Section 42(1) of 1999 Constitution. He also prayed for: *An order directing the respondents, particularly Minister of Education to apply uniform admission requirements, especially cut-off marks to all candidates seeking admission into Federal Government colleges, notwithstanding their gender, states of origin, ethnicity, etc.
*An order of perpetual injunction restraining the respondents, particularly the Minister of Education, whether by itself, its agents, servants, privies or otherwise howsoever from further acts of discrimination in admission to Federal Government colleges.
Agbakoba in a 19-paragraph affidavit had averred that since the inception of the Unity Schools, the Federal Government had maintained great disparity in admission requirements for candidates wishing to be admitted into Federal Government colleges. In particular, he had argued that the Federal Government prescribed different cut-off marks for different states, based on candidates’ gender and their states of origin. After hearing arguments from counsel to parties, the court ordered that the Federal Government and Minister of Education should apply uniform cut-off mark to all candidates seeking admission into Federal Government Colleges, irrespective of their states of origin.
Vanguard
Teenager loses sight after SARS torture
Two years after being allegedly tortured by the Special Anti-Robbery Squad personnel in Saki, Oyo State, an 18-year-old hotel attendant, Samuel Ogundeji, has lost his sight.
Ogundeji, told PUNCH Metro that all efforts made by his parents for him to regain his sight had proved abortive, adding that three different hospitals in Saki; Ilorin, Kwara State; and a border town in Benin Republic, had confirmed that his eyes had become defective and that he would need to be operated upon abroad in order to regain his sight.
Recounting his ordeal, he said, “On January 10, 2017, I applied for the job of a bar attendant at the Neagle Club and Resort, Saki, and was offered the job on a salary of N10,000 monthly. I was in the bar till February when a girl, Oyin, who was working in the hotel, resigned; so, I was transferred to the hotel section.
“Another guy, Sola, and I began working in the hotel and we changed duties on a regular basis. But on May 1, 2017, a customer, who works at the Zenith Bank, Saki West branch, lodged at one of the rooms. And the following morning, around 6.45am, the driver came and took him to his office. That day, I was on night duty and closed around 8am and went home without any inkling that I would be dealt with for a crime I knew nothing of.
“Normally, I resumed by 8pm, but on my way home, the manager called me and said that the man (banker), who lodged at the hotel the previous night, reported that he lost his wallet in the room and I said I didn’t know of any missing item or a wallet containing some cash.
“The Chief Executive Officer, Omotoso Abdulahi Niyi, was also around and he came in and said we should look for the wallet at all cost, otherwise, we would be dealt with. And the PA to the CEO and the manager came in with SARS personnel and arrested me and Sola.
“Mr Agbo of the SARS handed us over to their colleagues, Victor and Gbenga, who took us to an uncompleted building and started beating us. While the beating lasted, blood covered my eyes, yet they didn’t stop until later in the day, when Mr Oyesikun Oyerinde Samson (manager) and the PA, Abiodun Ajibade, drove into the station and were told about my condition.
Punch
Delta State Govt reacts to the viral video of Miss Success and her 'kpako' school
There have been a lot of interesting comments and divergent views on the viral video of Little Success who was sent home by authorities of her school for not paying a levy.
A lot has been said and done about that issue but the Delta State Commissioner for Education, Chiedu Ebie finally reacts to the issue that has generated several comments and attracted a lot of interest for the last few days.
In a press statement signed by the commissioner, Delta State Government has suspended the head of Okotie Eboh Primary School, Sapele.
The statement reads
Since the video of Miss Success of Okotie Eboh Primary School, Sapele broke and went viral last Friday, I have been inundated with messages and calls primarily for two reasons:
i. The state of the infrastructure of the School.
ii. The unauthorised levies and fees unilaterally imposed on the pupils by the School vis a vis a child being sent away from school with the added threat of being flogged for inability to pay ‘school’ fees.
Over the weekend, we conducted preliminary investigations on the matter ahead of my trip to Sapele today Monday 18th March, 2019 to officially address the matter. For purposes of clarity and to address the initial issues which the video threw up, I state as follows:
1. That by virtue of the Universal Basic Education (UBE) Act, Education at the Basic Education Level is FREE. However in Delta State that provision is also extended to Senior Secondary Level with the resultant effect being that Basic and Secondary Education (primary, junior and secondary) in Delta State is and still remains FREE.
It therefore means that the Head Teacher of the School had no right to impose any levy or fees on the pupils of her School. In my brief encounter with the Head Teacher this morning, there appeared to be numerous inconsistencies in her response on this issue as she was unable to categorically state who authorized her to impose the levies or fees which is in clear breach of the extant rules. Consequently I have directed the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) to suspend the Head Teacher pending the outcome of a formal enquiry into the issue of unauthorized levies/ and fees imposed by her in the School.
2. On the state of the infrastructure; it is important to clarify that Okotie Eboh Primary Schools I and II, Sapele exist in two locations in the same neighborhood and within a minute's walk of each other. Having discovered the dilapidated state of the infrastructure in the Schools, steps were immediately taken by the State Government, through the Ministry of Basic & Secondary Education, to carry out a phased renovation and upgrade of the infrastructural facilities beginning with Okotie Eboh Primary School II. It is important to place on record and for the avoidance of doubt that the Contract of the first phase was awarded on the 29th of December, 2018 and work has since commenced.
As a responsible and responsive government, it is our duty to address issues that affect the citizenry of the State and in doing so, we will ensure that renovation works are carried out satisfactorily and within reasonable time to ensure that we continue to provide a conducive learning environment for our pupils and students.
Chiedu Ebie
Hon. Commissioner
Basic & Secondary Education, Delta State
Declare me winner of presidential election, Atiku tells tribunal
Atiku Abubakar, presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has filed a petition before the presidential election tribunal to challenge President Muhammadu Buhari’s reelection.
Atiku filed the petition before the tribunal in Abuja on Monday, asking it to declare him authentic winner of the election or order that a fresh poll should be conducted.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had declared Buhari as winner but the PDP candidate rejected the result, alleging widespread irregularities.
Addressing journalists, Emmanuel Enoidem, PDP national legal adviser, said: “We asked that our candidate who won the election massively across the country be declared the winner.
“In the alternative, we also asked that the election be set aside on the ground of irregularity which was apparent across the country.”
He also said Atiku and the PDP have in their team 20 senior advocates of Nigeria (SAN) “so we are confident.”
“We have also lined up more than 400 witnesses that are going to testify in this petition,” he said.
Segun Sowunmi, spokesman of the Atiku Campaign Organisation, also told TheCable that the development is “the first step to getting Nigeria working again”.
He said: “The judiciary should do what is right; examine the issues and deliver to Nigerians the kind of judgement that represent the fundamental operating principle of why we are in democracy and why the judiciary is the last hope of the common man.”
ATIKU’S GRIEVIANCES
The PDP presidential candidate had described the election as the worst in Nigeria’s history.
He had alleged there were irregularities on the part of INEC staff as well as “heavy militarisation” of the electoral process.
Atiku had also alleged the “disruption of voting in strongholds of the PDP in Lagos, Akwa-Ibom, Rivers and diverse other states, with the authorities doing little or nothing and in some cases facilitating these unfortunate situations.”
He was defeated by Buhari with over three million votes but his party claimed it has the “real” results from the polling units across the country.
Monday, 18 March 2019
Hundreds of Nigerian doctors scramble for recruitment to practice in Saudi Arabia
“I truly want to be a specialist, but if I stay here I will never reach my potential. Never,” a doctor at a private clinic in Abuja, told BBC in 2005.
Fourteen years after, the situation seem to have gone from bad to worse and the loss of Nigeria has been the gain of other countries.
Year in, year out, the UK, US, Saudi Arabia, to mention just few, recruit a large number of Nigerian trained doctors who are perhaps frustrated or desperate to seek greener pastures overseas.
On Saturday, doctors in their hundreds, thronged a popular hotel in GRA, Ikeja, Lagos, where officials of Saudi Arabia health ministry conducted test ahead of recruitment.
TheCable
Twelve Christian villages wiped out in four days killing spree in Plateau State
Most of the victims were in their homes sleeping when the attacks began … when Muslim Fulani militant herdsmen began their killing spree in Nigeria that lasted four days, Thursday through Sunday evening and into Monday.
In only days, a dozen villages in Nigeria’s Plateau state were wiped out. The affected communities surround the city of Jos—known as the epicenter of Christianity in northern Nigeria’s Middle Belt.
According to our on-the-ground sources, as many as 200 Christians had been killed, however, some residents fear the death toll may be even higher, as more bodies are yet to be recovered, while others were burned beyond recognition. On Sunday, 75 of the victims were buried in a mass grave.
We are still gathering information about the violence, but the details we have from our sources on the ground so far reveal the scale and brutality of the attacks, in many cases more extensive than have been reported elsewhere:
120 people who were attending the funerals of an elderly member were hacked to death as they returned home.
In another attack, in Gana Ropp village, a pastor, Rev. Musa Choji, was killed, as were his wife and son.
In Gidin Akwati, the whole community was burned down. Local sources say that some of those displaced are still hiding in the bush, as they haven’t yet been able to find their way to a safe haven.
A pastor with the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA) denomination, who wanted to remain anonymous for security reasons, said that following an attack on Saturday, his entire village was reduced to ashes, and more than 100 people lost their lives.
The ECWA pastor said more than 50 heavily armed Fulani herdsmen surrounded the village of Nghar, in Gashes district, at around 3:30 a.m. They burned down all the houses, as well as two churches. Only a few people were able to escape.
His wife’s family was decimated. The assailants killed 14 members of her family, including her mother and sister. Others who had come to visit them were also killed. In total, 27 people lost their lives in the same house. They were all burned to death. Only one person—his wife’s younger brother—survived, as he managed to escape through the roof.
World Watch Monitor reports that on the day of the attack in Nghar, only two soldiers and one policeman were in the village, but they reportedly ran for their lives when the herdsmen launched their attack.
ATTACKS WERE PEAK OF ONGOING VIOLENCE
Reportedly, the violence in the attacked areas has been happening for the last two weeks. Over the weekend, the violence reached a peak. Pastor Steve Kwol, chairman of the Pentecostal Federation of Nigeria for Plateau North, which includes the attacked areas, said that herdsmen were ambushing people going to their farms or traveling on their motorbikes.
Since Thursday, the herdsmen militants had launched “very serious attacks” on the whole communities, he said. Despite the current dusk-to-dawn curfew and the presence of military, the attacks are still ongoing, he says. Two villages—Kwi and Dorowa—were badly damaged on Monday.
In Dorowa, most of the properties were burned down, including four church buildings. The adjoining buildings, such as pastors’ houses, were also destroyed by fire.
In Kwi, a number of buildings, including churches, were also set on fire. The exact number of people killed there is not yet known, but many were displaced and are now living in camps in neighboring villages.
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“We’ve been living peacefully with [Fulani herdsmen]” Pastor Kwol said. “Since this crisis started in Plateau in recent months, our people have not killed one Fulani man. Instead, they have been killing our people one by one. We just buried them and carried on.” he said. As a result of the ongoing insecurity, there are places where people can no longer go to farm,” he said, “because when they go, the Fulani will come and take their cows, or attack them.”
“Just two weeks ago, they shot my wife’s young brother. But he survived. He was discharged on Wednesday and had returned home on Thursday, only to get killed in the last attack, on Saturday.”
‘IT’S PART OF A GRAND PLAN TO ISLAMIZE NIGERIA’
The attacks have some local sources saying that the ongoing violence is part of a “grand plan to Islamize Nigeria.”
“The killings are becoming no longer herder and farmer clashes” but a “deliberate attempt to conquer and occupy the land of the people’s ancestral heritage,” said Dr. Soja Bewarang, who also denounced the attack on a Bible school that trained African missionaries in Gana-Ropp village.
Reverend Gideon Para-Mallam, of the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students in Jos and founder of the Citizens Monitoring Group working with Christians and Muslims in Nigeria, notes that the violence is part of a pattern, an emerging agenda, saying that it is “another Boko Haram in disguise.”
The same Fulani people who have been living in peace with farmers suddenly have changed from using sticks to tend their cows, all of a sudden going to the farmlands, killing Christian farmers. their wives and children, surrounding whole villages. It’s a pointer … because Plateau state is the epicenter of Christianity.”
PAINFUL MEMORIES OF BLOODSHED
The violence forced the state governor, Simon Lalong, to cut short his time at a national convention and return to Jos, the state capital. President Muhammadu Buhari, who is seeking a second term in the coming 2019 elections (due in February), was also attending the convention.
Criticized for his perceived ‘lukewarm’ attitude towards the ongoing Fulani violence in the country, President Buhari condemned what he called “painful” and “regrettable” killings and expressed his “deepest condolences to the affected communities.”
In his address to leaders of farmers and Fulani communities on Monday, Nigeria Vice President Yemi Osinbajo denounced the manner in which people are being “mercilessly” killed in Plateau state, and pledged that the federal government will bring the perpetrators to justice.
“There is no reason for killing any Nigerian,” he declared. “We were told that herdsmen sacked an entire community; this is condemnable and I don’t understand what those people think, but the federal government will take immediate action to ensure that this madness is put to a stop. It is unfortunate that some people want to make some gains out of this, and are taking advantage of innocent women and children.”
But for many, particularly among the Christian communities in the Plateau and the other Middle Belt States like Benue and Nasarawa where Fulani militias have attacked, the weekend of violence brings back memories of the March 2010 attacks when more than 500 people were massacred by herdsmen in Dogon Na Hauwa village.
Between 2010 and 2012, Plateau was the epicenter of the violence in Africa’s most populous country, but in the next five years, the state even became known as a model state as violence decreased.
However, since September last year, the violence has resumed with repeated attacks against Christian communities. It has escalated further this year, particularly in Riyom, Barkin Ladi, Bassa and Bokko local government area. Bassa is still under curfew following previous violence in March of this year.
Open Doors USA
Meet 26-year-old Bob Otobong who won a seat in A/Ibom HoA
As results began to trickle in for the House of Assembly elections which took place nationwide on March 9, one of the winners caught our attention – Bob Otobong, a 26-year old lawyer who contested in the Nsit Ubium state constituency election in Akwa Ibom.
Bob, who turned 26 in August 2018, contested under the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).
He spoke to us his inspiration going into politics, his winning strategy, and advice to young Nigerians who want to go into politics.
Here’s what Bob shared with us.
***
What inspired you to go into politics?
Just like every other Nigerian, I have always believed that the government owes Nigerians more. I believe there is always more the government can do to make Nigerians happy. In essence, the citizens are the number one priority of any government.
I equally understand that there can never be too many progressive individuals with a heart full of genuine love for service to the people in government.
Secondly, considering that I am young, with fresh ideas, I believe I am part of a generation that will chart the course of our nation’s future.
Did you dream of going into politics when you were little, or it came along the way?
Yes, I did. I had the rare privilege of being raised by a man who has lived a life that epitomizes effective service to his people.
My father (Senator Effiong Dickson Bob) served at different levels of government through his lifetime, while holding his head high in excellence. So I was exposed early to the intricacies of being a politician in a country such as ours, as well as thriving while holding on to the principles that drive your vision. This sparked a keen interest and an early desire in me.
In my younger days, I would imagine myself in a position of leadership, being responsible for the interests of so many people and standing firm through the rigors of Nigerian politics. This scared me sometimes, I must say. However, as I grew older, the better I understood that it was ultimately God’s responsibility to determine my destiny. So I continued to live my life, believing that God’s will would eventually come to manifestation.
What were your strategies to winning your party’s mandate and then the election afterwards?
The very foundation of my strategy is God Almighty. I have grown to believe wholeheartedly that those who put their trust in God can never be ashamed.
I was equally blessed to have a strong, hardworking and passionate team to work with. We pursued this project with rigor, full commitment and dedication.
By committing to consolidating on the achievements of my predecessor while providing assurances of a fresh and new approach to uniting and developing our constituency, we were able to find a balance that afforded us a chance to appeal to the electorate, cutting across age and gender. We are charged with a vision to unite our constituency under one strong voice and to facilitate development to ensure that there is room for everybody, old or young, male or female, to be carried along.
Did you experience ageism? How were you able to deal with it?
Of course I did. This is Nigeria. It was the renowned author Chinua Achebe who described Nigerians as a people who respond more to the symbolic than the actual. Our cultural values have molded us to believe that age is a parameter for competence, maturity and capacity. Many have forgotten that the founders of Nigerian democracy, such as Sir Tafawa Balewa included youths in his cabinet, such as the late M.T Mbu, who was appointed Minister of Labour at the age of 24. He had no prior experience, he was just a young man who was determined to work for his country.
Furthermore, my approach was to objectively and constructively engage with stakeholders and the electorate, encouraging the focus to be on the message and not the messenger. It was challenging but by the time the Not Too Young to Run Bill was passed, and in the light of the new wave of young leaders emerging all over the world, we were able to capitalize on all that favored us at the time, while still holding strongly to our message. By the time I emerged the candidate of the party, age began to hold less relevance.
When did you venture into politics?
It’s been just over a year now.
Is this your first time contesting for public office?
Yes, it is.
Have you worked in the government or held any public office prior to now?
No, I have not. But I have experience in the private sector as a lawyer.
Final word to young Nigerians looking to go into politics.
Like I said earlier, there can never be too many progressive individuals with a heart full of genuine love for and spirit of service to the people in government.
Bearing this in mind, we can also agree on the fact that what becomes of Nigeria over the next century is largely determined by the choices we make today on our level of involvement in government. We should start from the bottom of the pyramid so that we might walk through the stages of governance to the top. We should ensure at each level that we make the essential impact through creative and sustainable policies, so that when we reach the top of the pyramid the necessary structure is already built for rapid development.
Admittedly, delving through Nigeria’s political terrain is not a walk in the park; but with the rising level of youth participation in governance all over the world, it would be a shame if Nigeria fails to get caught up in its domino effect. I expect and encourage more young people to get involved and interested in their own way, engage with your community, and let us all jointly chart a new course to move Nigeria forward. May God bless us all.
BellaNaija
Cyclone Idai: over 200 persons feared dead in Mozambique, Zimbabwe
Cyclone Idai has had a "massive and horrifying" impact on Mozambique's port city of Beira, the Red Cross says.
It made landfall on Thursday with winds of up to 177 km/h (106 mph), but aid teams only reached Beira on Sunday.
People have been rescued from trees, homes have been destroyed and roofs were ripped off concrete buildings, head of the Red Cross assessment team, Jamie LeSeur, told the BBC.
The cyclone has killed at least 150 people across southern Africa.
More than 80 people have died in eastern and southern Zimbabwe, information ministry head Nick Mangwana told Reuters news agency.
At least 68 people have died in Mozambique, mostly around Beira, the authorities there say.
Malawi has also been badly hit. The flooding there, caused by the rains before the cyclone made landfall, led to at least 122 deaths, Reliefweb reports.
Local people in Beira, with a population of 500,000, have put in an "incredible effort" to reopen roads in the city, Mr LeSeur told the BBC's Newsday programme.
Map of affected regions
"Beira has been severely battered. But we are hearing that the situation outside the city could be even worse," a statement from the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Society quotes him as saying.
CNN
INEC may deregister 80 political parties to save time during collation of results
Less than 10 political parties may survive being deregistered by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) should the commission decide to run with the amended constitutional provision to deregister parties.
At least, 70 parties participated in the 2019 elections, an alteration on the 1999 constitution. However, section 225 of the constitution as amended empowers INEC deregister political parties on grounds of:
“a. breach of any of the requirements for registration
“b. failure to win at least twenty-five percent of votes cast in-
one State of the Federation in a Presidential election; or
one Local Government of the State in a Governorship election;
“c. failure to win at least-
“i. one ward in the Chairmanship election
” ii. one seat in the National or State House of Assembly election; or
“iii. one seat in the Councillorship election.”
Checks by TheCable showed that apart from the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) that have won seats since 2015, Young Progressive Party (YPP), Peoples Redemption Party (PRP), Action Alliance (AA), Allied Peoples Movement (APM) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP) are the only five other parties that may scale through the new requirement.
YPP won a senatorial seat in Anambra, PRP won two seats for house of representatives in Bauchi, AA also won two seats for house of representatives in Imo, APM one house of representatives seat in Ogun and SDP also got one seat for house of representatives in Ondo state.
In a statement, Femi Falana, a senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), said it is clear that INEC has the power to deregister political parties that fail to meet the fresh constitutional prerequisites, and going by the results of the 2019 elections, the 91 registered political parties may have been reduced to less than 10 that may have scaled the constitutional hurdle.
Falana further argued that deregistration of political parties that fail to win elections is likely to limit the political space to the “so-called mainstream parties” that are not committed to any political philosophy or ideology.
He added that with respect to registered political parties, INEC must fully comply with section 225(2) of the constitution by sanctioning them if they fail to submit a detailed annual statement and analysis of their sources of funds and assets, as this would go a long way to check the monetisation and manipulation of the democratic process by political godfathers.
TheCable
Unknown gunmen kill Army Garrison Commander in Bauchi
Military authorities in Bauchi were on Monday thrown into mourning following the killing of the Garrison Commander, 33 Artillery Brigade of Nigerian Army in Shadawanka Barracks, Bauchi, Col. Mohammed Barack by suspected gunmen.
The killing which has brought panic to the city, could however not be ascertained if it was a case of armed robbery attack or assassination, although unofficial and unconfirmed sources said it could be by armed robbers.
The incident which took place on Bauchi – Jos Road was said to have taken place on Sunday while the deceased was riding a power bike from Kaduna.
A source said, “The Garrison Commander of 33 Artillery Brigade of Nigerian Army (Shadawanka Barracks) Bauchi, Col. Mohammed Barack, has been shot dead. He was shot on Sunday along Jos Road, while on a power bike and was coming back from Kaduna. He is from Kano State.”
As of the time of this report, preparations are in top gear to convey his corpse to Kano for burial, according to Islamic tradition, after the necessary military rites.
When contacted, the spokesperson of 33 Artillery Brigade, Major Yahaya Nasir Kabara, confirmed the incident saying, “Yes, it’s true.”
When asked to give details of what happened, he said “Come to the Brigade because it is a matter that needs investigation; investigation is ongoing, I will get back to you when the finding is out. Let me communicate with my Commander, I will get back to you.”
Punch
Gunman opens fire on tram in Netherlands
Several people were injured after a shooting in the central Dutch city of Utrecht, police said.
The shooting began at 10.45am local time (9.45am GMT) when a gunman opened fire on a tram on 24 Oktoberplain.
Several helicopters were scrambled to the scene, Utrecht Police tweeted.
The force wrote: "Shooting incident report # 24oktoberplein in Utrecht was at 10.45 a.m. This is a shooting incident in a tram. Several trauma heli have been deployed to provide assistance.
Shots were fired near Oudenrijn Hospital, according to RTV Utrecht.
EveningStandard
The president doesn't need you to appoint me, Buhari's CJN tells NJC
Tanko Muhammad, acting chief justice of Nigeria (CJN), says President Muhammadu Buhari did not need the permission of the National Judicial Council to appoint him.
According to PUNCH, Muhammad made the claim in response to a query given to him by the NJC, the body constitutionally empowered to recommend the appointment of chief justices and heads of courts.
The NJC had issued queries to him and Walter Onnoghen, suspended CJN, in January.
While Onnoghen was asked to react to the allegations of corruption levelled against him, Muhammad was asked to clarify the reason he allowed himself to be sworn in by the president without recourse to the NJC.
In his response, Muhammad said the NJC ought to be consulted only when a substantive CJN is being appointed or re-appointed.
“In my respectful view, the National Judicial Council has no role to play in the appointment of an acting ChiefThe Justice of Nigeria in the first instance, that is to say on first appointment. The council comes in where the appointment as the acting CJN is to be renewed or extended. I humbly refer to Section 231(4) of the 1999 Constitution.”
Muhammad added that Onnoghen remained the substantive CJN, saying he was only suspended.
The acting CJN said if the appeal court or the Code of Conduct Tribunal reversed Onnoghen’s suspension, he would immediately step aside and return to his former position as a justice of the Supreme Court.
“It was for the larger interest of the judiciary and the constitutionality that I accepted to be sworn in as acting CJN with the conviction that if the order of January 23, 2019 is eventually set aside, the status quo would be restored,” he reportedly said.
“But before it is set aside, there should be no vacuum in the office of the CJN and the chairman of the NJC.”
Recalling how he was sworn in by the president, Muhammad said he was summoned to the presidential villa by Buhari and shown the certified true copy of a motion ex parte granted by the CCT and signed by Danladi Umar, its chairman.
“On January 25, 2019, I was summoned to the Aso Villa at the instance of the President. Prior to the summons, I was not aware of the fact that the Code of Conduct Tribunal made any order on January 23, 2019,” he said.
“Furthermore, beyond what I read in the newspapers and watched on the television just like any other Nigerian, I was not privileged to see any of the processes filed by the parties before the tribunal. Hence, I could not really appreciate the merit or demerit of divergent positions.
“On the 25th day of January, the President swore me in as the acing CJN and not as the substantive CJN. Justice Walter Onnoghen remains the CJN until he is removed from office in accordance with the provision of the constitution. He is only suspended.”
He, however, said he had nothing to do with the speech delivered by the president wherein the suspended CJN was accused Onnoghen of frustrating his anti-corruption war.
Muhammad admitted that he was a member of the NJC panel that removed Obisike Orji of the Abia state high court for accepting to be sworn in as chief judge by the state government without a recommendation of the NJC.
He, however, said his own case was different because he was only appointed as an acting CJN.
Muhammad said the substantive head of the judiciary had been suspended by a valid court order which made it right for him to take over in acting capacity.
The acting CJN therefore appealed to the NJC to dismiss the petition written against him.
I can't wait to get married so that I can rape my husband 12 times in a day - Sexycendy
A Twitter user identified as @sexycendy has got herself trending on the platform after she revealed the nasty thing she will do when married.
According to the young lady, she is eager to get married because she plans to be raping her husband 12 times a day.
”I can’t wait to get married so I can rape my husband 12 times a day”, she tweeted.
❤️miss independent❤️
@sexycendyy
I can't wait to get married so I can rape my husband 12 times a day 🙄🙄🙄
Falcon striker, Abasi Umotong graduates with First Class in UK
Akwa Ibom born Super Falcon Striker, INI- ABASI UMOTONG graduates with First Class in Economics from the University Of Southampton. She had once won the most valuable player and highest Goal Scorer Awards in Wimbledon.
She represented Nigeria in the 2015 FIFA Women World Cup.
Lagos ramshackle school where hoodlums defecate in classrooms
For Ndidi Godwin, switching her children’s education from a private to a public school has turned out to be a huge mistake. The Methodist Primary School, Ewu-Tuntun, which her two daughters attend has gradually – but steadily – become a shadow of itself over the past years. And there seems to be no succour in sight.
“I removed them from private school and brought them here because I know what I got in a public school,” said Mrs Godwin, who runs a shop near the primary school.
“It’s public school I went to in Lagos State. For primary, I went to Ajubiliee Primary school, secondary is Bolade Grammar School, then Lagos State Polytechnic, have I not achieved?”
But the current state of Methodist Primary School, Ewu Tuntun in Oshodi, Lagos, is a far cry from what Mrs Godwin experienced in her days.
Established in 1953, the school with a pupil population of 374 consists of three buildings housing 18 classrooms. Ten of the classrooms are not in use while the remaining eight are in advanced stages of disrepair – no windows, broken ceilings, cracked walls, and tattered, leaky roofs.
A haven for hoodlums
Methodist Primary School, Ewu Tuntun, is situated in Oshodi, a bustling community in the heart of Lagos popular for hosting major motor parks as well as housing hoodlums. About 10 kilometres from the school, the state government’s ambitious multi-billion naira Oshodi Transport Interchange springs into view as the project enters its final stages of completion.
But the decrepit state of facilities in the primary school at Ewu Tuntun remains in need of urgent, total rehabilitation. In the meantime, it serves as a haven for hoodlums who not only come to smoke Indian Hemp but also defecate on the premises. The abandoned classrooms have been turned to sleeping spaces for the homeless.
During a recent visit by a PREMIUM TIMES correspondent, the stench of stale urine and overnight faeces hung thick in the air.
A classroom turned toilet for hoodlums at Ogundele community where Methodist School, Ewu-tuntun, Oshodi is located
The smell filters into the pupils’ classrooms during school hours.
“All the classrooms are in totally bad states, if you enter the classrooms, they smell like drainage,” said Mrs Godwin.
“No fence, no security for our children, even the classrooms are not good for learning. Many big people attended this school, in fact, there are many old students of the school living in this area, but nothing has been done.
“We hope that the government will do something about the condition of the school.”
Another parent said the school premises have become a playground for hoodlums.
“There was even a time a classroom got burnt as a result of remnant of a cigarette left in the classroom. Bola Tinubu visited this place when that happened but nothing has been done about the school,” said the parent who preferred not to be named.
Premium Times
8-year-old Nigerian refugee crowned chess champion in New York
Tanitoluwa Adewumi, who lives in a Manhattan homeless shelter with his family, won the kindergartener through third grade category in New York's chess championship last weekend with an undefeated performance, according to New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof.
:
Tanitoluwa, known as "Tani," learned to play chess just one year ago, and now tells the Times that he wants to be "the youngest grandmaster." The Adewumis, including Tani, his parents and older brother, reportedly arrived in New York after fleeing Nigeria in 2017 due to fear of terror attacks from the group Boko Haram.
:
Tani learned chess with his classmates at New York's P.S. 116, and joined the school's chess club. The club's organizer waived the fees for Tani because of his family's financial situation. Though he started out as the lowest-rated member of the club, he quickly improved and is now bringing his school statewide recognition, according to the newspaper.
:
P.S. 116's principal, Jane Hsu, told the Times that Tani's win is "an inspiring example of how life's challenges do not define a person," and credited the third-grader's supportive parents despite being homeless.
:
The Adewumis have applied for asylum, and are reportedly set for an immigration hearing in August. The hearing will take place just three months after Tani competes at the elementary national chess championship.
:
"I feel American," Tani told the Times.
Sunday, 17 March 2019
Ggbenga Daniel announces plan to join APC 24 hours after 'retiring' from politics
Gbenga Daniel, former director-general of Atiku Abubakar Campaign Organisation, says his supporters have been pleading with him to lead them to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).
He made this known 24 hours after Daniel resigned his membership of the the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and announced that he was quitting partisan politics.
On Sunday, he invited his supporters to a meeting at his Sagamu residence and they reportedly told him that they were satisfied with his decision to leave PDP but he should lead them to the ruling party.
Daniel played a significant tole in the emergence of Dapo Abiodun, governor-elect of Ogun, having directed his supporters to work for Abiodun, who contested under the APC.
Abidoun defeated Adekunle Akinlade, his Allied Peoples Movement (APM) rival, with less than 20,000 votes.
Abiodun had expressed gratitude to Daniel whom he held a private meeting with moments after Daniel announced that he had left PDP.
Details of the meeting which took place at Daniel’s Maryland, Lagos residence, were not made public.
But on Sunday, the former governor told reporters that his supporters were mounting pressure on him to lead them to APC.
“Basically, they said I could resign from PDP… they said I must lead them to APC and they also said I could not retire from politics. That is the summary of what I heard,” he said.
Asked if he was ready to join APC, Daniel said, “What else can I say? My people have spoken.”
In his letter to Uche Secondus, national chairman of the PDP, Daniel recollected how he toured the country canvassing votes for Atiku.
TheCable
Ihedioha vows to recover Imo properties from Okorocha
The Imo State governor-elect, Emeka Ihedioha, has said that he would recover any property belonging to the state government, but which the outgoing Governor, Rochas Okorocha, has allegedly converted to his personal use.
One of Ihedioha’s aides, Ody Okereke, a legal practitioner, told Sunday Sun that about 5,000 such properties have been identified that allegedly belong to Okorocha, members of his family and cronies, adding that the incoming government would begin the demolition and revocation immediately it assumes office.
He said: “The incoming administration will look into the distortion of Owerri Capital Territory Master Plan drawn up in 1977 after the creation of Imo State in 1976. Areas of concern include the proposed New Government House in the New Owerri, which also had been allegedly re-allocated to the relatives and cronies of the outgoing government of Okorocha.
“Others include the illegal revocation of Nekede Mechanic Village, Owerri Modern Market at Somachi, Egbu; Orji Mechanic Village; government quarters in Shell Camp; the alleged illegal and forceful acquisition of open space in civic centre layout by Uche Nwosu, as residence; and the IBC quarters in Orji, which allegedly was equally converted to property of the outgoing governor.”
In a swift reaction, however, Okorocha’s Chief Press Secretary, Sam Onwuemeodo, said he doesn’t know why a governor-elect could be talking like that.
“He should wait until he is sworn it. Ihedioha is coming into office as a wretched man, but Okorocha got into office as a very wealthy man. We will not talk more until the publication comes out,” he said.
The Sun
US releases evidence of massive corruption, impunity under Buhari's govt
The United States Department of State has released what it termed evidence of impunity in the President Muhammadu Buhari-led Nigerian government.
The State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour, in its Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2018, said that Nigeria under Buhari, had made little progress in efforts to limit corruption in its public service.
The US Congress makes it mandatory for the executive to produce a report on the state of human rights worldwide every year.
For Nigeria, the findings in the 2018 Human Rights Report, obtained by ThisDay, were largely similar to those of the previous year’s report.
The report added that “Although the law provides criminal penalties for conviction of official corruption, the government did not implement the law effectively, and officials frequently engaged in corrupt practices with impunity.
“Massive, widespread, and pervasive corruption affected all levels of government and the security services. There were numerous reports of government corruption during the year.
“The EFCC writ extends only to financial and economic crimes. The ICPC secured 14 convictions during the year. In 2016 the EFCC had 66 corruption cases pending in court, had secured 13 convictions during the year, and had 598 open investigations.
“Although ICPC and EFCC anti-corruption efforts remained largely focused on low and mid-level government officials, following the 2015 presidential election, both organisations started investigations into and brought indictments against various active and former high-level government officials. Many of these cases were pending in court.
“According to both ICPC and EFCC, the delays were the result of a lack of judges and the widespread practice of filing for and granting multiple adjournments.
“EFCC arrests and indictments of politicians continued throughout the year, implicating a significant number of opposition political figures and leading to allegations of partisan motivations on the part of the EFCC.
“In October the EFCC arrested and indicted former governor of Ekiti State Ayo Fayose on 11 counts, including conspiracy and money laundering amounting to 2.2 billion naira ($6 million). After a Federal High Court ruling, Fayose was out on 50 million naira ($137,500) bail.”
On financial disclosure, the report stated the constitutional requirement under the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act (CCBTA) for public officials, including the president, vice president, governors, deputy governors, cabinet ministers, and legislators (at both federal and state levels), to declare their assets to the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) before assuming and after leaving office. The constitution calls for the CCB to “make declarations available for inspection by any citizen of the country on such terms and conditions as the National Assembly may prescribe.
“The law does not address the publication of asset information. Violators risk prosecution, but cases rarely reached conclusion.
“There were several reports the government or its agents committed arbitrary and unlawful killings. The national police, army, and other security services used lethal and excessive force to disperse protesters and apprehend criminals and suspects and committed other extrajudicial killings.
“Authorities generally did not hold police, military, or other security force personnel accountable for the use of excessive or deadly force or for the deaths of persons in custody.
“State and federal panels of inquiry investigating suspicious deaths generally did not make their findings public.
“In August 2017 the acting president convened a civilian-led presidential investigative panel to review compliance of the armed forces with human rights obligations and rules of engagement, and the panel submitted its findings in February. As of November, no portions of the report had been made public.
“As of September there were no reports of the federal government further investigating or holding individuals accountable for the 2015 killing and subsequent mass burial of members of the Shia group, Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN), and other civilians by Nigerian Army (NA) forces in Zaria, Kaduna State. “
The report disclosed that the 2016 nonbinding report of the Kaduna State government’s judicial commission, which found that the Nigerian Army (NA) used “excessive and disproportionate” force during the 2015 altercations in which 348 members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) and one soldier died.
It said, “The commission recommended the federal government conduct an independent investigation and prosecute anyone found to have acted unlawfully. It also called for the proscription of the IMN and the monitoring of its members and their activities.
“In 2016 the government of Kaduna State published a white paper that included acceptance of the commission’s recommendation to investigate and prosecute allegations of excessive and disproportionate use of force by the NA.
“As of September, however, there was no indication that authorities had held any members of the NA accountable for the events in Zaria. It also accepted the recommendation to hold IMN leader Sheikh Ibrahim Zakzaky responsible for all illegal acts committed by IMN members during the altercations and in the preceding 30 years. In 2016 a federal court declared the continued detention without charge of Zakzaky and his wife illegal and unconstitutional.
“The court ordered their release by January 2017. The federal government did not comply with this order, and Zakzaky, his spouse, and other IMN members remained in detention. In April the Kaduna State government charged Zakzaky in state court with multiple felonies stemming from the death of the soldier at Zaria.
“The charges include culpable homicide, which can carry the death penalty. As of December the case was pending. In July a Kaduna High Court dismissed charges of aiding and abetting culpable homicide against more than 80 IMN members. As of September the Kaduna State government had appealed the ruling. Approximately 100 additional IMN members remained in detention.
“In October security forces killed 45 IMN members that were participating in processions and protests, according to Amnesty International (AI).”
The report recalled the January 2017 bombing of an informal internally displaced persons (IDPs) settlement in Rann, Borno State, by the Nigerian Air Force, which resulted in the killing and injuring of more than 100 civilians and aid workers.
It said, “The government and military leaders publicly assumed responsibility for the strike and launched an investigation. The air force conducted its own internal investigation, but as of December the government had not made public its findings. No air force or army personnel were known to have been held accountable for their roles in the event. There were reports of arbitrary and unlawful killings related to internal conflicts in the North-east and other areas.”
The report also identified the following human rights issues in Nigeria: “unlawful and arbitrary killings by both government and non-state actors; forced disappearances by both government and non-state actors; torture by both government and non-state actors; and prolonged arbitrary detention in life-threatening conditions, particularly, in government detention facilities. Others are harsh and life threatening prison conditions, including civilian detentions in military facilities, often based on flimsy or no evidence; infringement on citizens’ privacy rights; criminal libel; substantial interference with the rights of peaceful assembly and freedom of association, in particular for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) persons; and refoulement of refugees.”
The report also identified as human rights abuse corruption; progress to formally separate child soldiers previously associated with the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF); lack of accountability concerning violence against women, including female genital mutilation/cutting, in part due to government inaction/negligence; trafficking in persons, including sexual exploitation and abuse by security officials; crimes involving violence targeting LGBTI persons and the criminalisation of status and same-sex sexual conduct based on sexual orientation and gender identity; and forced and bonded labour.
The report, however, noted that “the government took steps to investigate alleged abuses but took fewer steps to prosecute officials who committed violations, whether in the security forces or elsewhere in the government.
“Impunity remained widespread at all levels of government.
“The government did not adequately investigate or prosecute most of the major outstanding allegations of human rights violations by the security forces or the majority of cases of police or military extortion or other abuse of power,” the report added.
Independent
New Zealand attack: Nigerian born imam recounts his ordeal
One of the survivors of the attack on two New Zealand mosques has been identified as Lateef Alabi, an imam with a Nigerian heritage.
Fifty people lost their lives when a gunman identified as Brenton Tarrant invaded two mosques in New Zealand city of Christchurch on Friday.
Those who sustained injuries are being treated in hospitals.
Recounting his experience, Alabi, a leader in the Linwood mosque, said he was in the middle of his prayer when he heard gunshots.
He said immediately he stopped his payer and peeped out through the window where he saw an armed man “heavily dressed”.
Alabi told everyone inside to get down and before he knew it, dead bodies were already lying on the floor.
He said the gunman dropped his gun when he ran out of bullets. Then, he and a fellow worshippers followed the shooter as he left the mosque.
The other man, he said, picked up the machine gun and smashed it into the gunman’s car windscreen. After the gunman drove away, Alabi returned to the mosque.
“He shot one brother coming towards the mosque; he shot him from the head. I stopped my prayer, I peeped through the window, and I saw the person with a machine gun, heavily dressed. By the time I looked on the ground and saw dead bodies I thought this is something else, this is a terrorist,” Alabi said.
“I started picking up the bodies to know who was dead and who was alive. I never thought this would happen in New Zealand, never, never, never, believe me.
“But it’s happened, it’s happened, so it will happen anywhere and we just feel bad about those who have passed away and for their families … I will pray for them.
“I’m very sad for what has happened, but I believe this country is a peaceful country and I hope something good will happen after that and the security will become tighter.”
TheCable
Kano supplementary election: Ganduje on project spree, cash inducement in affected wards
The Kano State Government has embarked on massive projects at Gama ward of Nassarawa Local Government Area, few days to a rerun election in which the ward is a big decider.
At least three projects, comprising refuse evacuation, mass drilling of boreholes and road reconstruction were kicked off within the last three days in the community.
Gama’s result was cancelled in the aftermath of the March 9 governorship election.
The cancellation followed an attack on the local government’s collation centre on March 11 led by top officials of the Abdullahi Ganduje administration.
The attack was believed to have been led the state’s deputy governor, Nasiru Gawuna.
The altercation led to the tearing of result sheets for the ward, according to the electoral commission, INEC, and returning officers.
Mr Gawuna, the commissioner for local governments, Murtala Garo, and chairman of the local government area, Lamin Sani, were arrested by the police at the scene.
The police later issued a statement confirming the involvement of Messrs Garo and Sani, promising to charge them to court after investigation.
But perhaps to escape the charge of constitutional breach on immunity, the police said they only rescued Mr Gawuna from the scene.
However, in an interview with journalists in Kano after their release, Mr Garo disputed the police’s account, as he denied any wrongdoing.
He accused the police of complicity and giving cover to “thugs” to attack them, without taking stern action.
Project Spree
Gama, a densely populated area of Kano metropolis, is bedevilled by a number of infrastructural and development challenges.
On Friday, detachments of refuse evacuation vehicles were dispatched to the area to evacuate long-abandoned dump sites.
“These refuse sites have been a source of concern to us. From time to time they would come and pick a bit of it and leave but it seems this time around they would do it all before the elections,” said a resident of the area, Auwal Danlarabawa.
On Saturday, two other projects sprang up; asphalt overlay on Gama’s main artery, Audu Utai Road, and digging of at least 11 boreholes in the area.
“Within just today (Saturday), the road is almost completed. They started from early in the day,” Mr Danlarabawa said.
He said the water projects would ease the residents’ yearning for drinking water, a major problem in the area.
Allegations Of Inducement
Activists have condemned Mr Ganduje’s action with one of them describing it as “mass bribe and clear case of voter inducements”.
The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Mr Ganduje’s party, was earlier accused of commissioning women who go door to door to buy votes from women in areas affected by the rerun.
On Wednesday, the police announced the arrest of three men and two women on allegations of buying voters card at the cost of between N500 to N3,000. They, however, did not reveal the party or the identity of the accused persons.
Governor of Kano state, Abdullahi Ganduje.
“The ongoing road project in Gama is everything voter inducement is. You can also conveniently describe it as vote-buying because even in the law, an apparently lawful act can become an illegality if done with bad motive,” said Abba Hikima, a lawyer and activist.
“The Gama people were left by Ganduje’s government to tread a dirty, muddy road all through the rainy months of June through August despite calls and pleas, only for them to wake to up to this rushed project.”
Premium Times
Saturday, 16 March 2019
Over 6,000 Christian women and Children killed by killer herdsmen, Boko Haram in Nigeria
Church leaders in Nigeria have said that Christians are experiencing "pure genocide" as 6,000 people, mostly women and children, have been murdered by Fulani radicals since January.
"What is happening in Plateau state and other select states in Nigeria is pure genocide and must be stopped immediately," said the Christian Association of Nigeria and church denominational heads in Plateau State in a press release last week.
The church leaders said that "over 6,000 persons, mostly children, women and the aged have been maimed and killed in night raids by armed Fulani herdsmen," which is prompting their cry to the government of Nigeria "to stop this senseless and blood shedding in the land and avoid a state of complete anarchy where the people are forced to defend themselves."
The press release also pleaded with the international community, as well as the United Nations, to intervene in the Fulani attacks, fearing they might spread to other countries as well.
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"We are particularly worried at the widespread insecurity in the country where wanton attacks and killings by armed Fulani herdsmen, bandits and terrorists have been taking place on a daily basis in our communities unchallenged despite huge investments in the security agencies," they added, saying President Muhammadu Buhari has failed to bring attackers to justice.
They referenced several mass-scale attacks this year, including the slaughter of over 200 people, mostly Christians, at the end of June in raids carried out by the herdsmen on local area farmers near the city of Jos.
Although some international news media has sought to characterize the killings as a land conflict between community groups, the church leaders, along with major persecution watchdog groups such as Open Doors USA and International Christian Concern, have all said that Christians are being deliberately targeted.
"We reject the narrative that the attacks on Christian communities across the country as 'farmers/herdsmen clash.' The federal government has been so immersed in this false propaganda and deceit while forcefully pushing the policy idea of establishing cattle ranches/colonies on the ancestral farming lands of the attacked communities for the Fulani herdsmen as the only solution to the problem," the press release declared, accusing the government of also pushing such a narrative.
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"How can it be a clash when one group is persistently attacking, killing, maiming, destroying; and the other group is persistently being killed, maimed and their places of worship destroyed? How can it be a clash when the herdsmen are hunting farmers in their own villages/communities and farmers are running for their lives?" the church leaders asked.
"How can it be a clash when the herdsmen are the predators and the inhabitant/indigenous farmers are the prey? Until we call a disease by its real name and causatives, it would be difficult to properly diagnose the disease for the right curative medications."
There have been different reports on the number of Christians killed in Nigeria since the start of the year.
The International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law, Intersociety, stated on Tuesday that a combined total of 1,750 Christians, along with non-Muslims, have been killed both by the Fulani herdsmen, and by Boko Haram radicals, who are a separate terror group.
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Intersociety also warned of a genocide in its statement.
"Nigeria is drifting to [a path of] genocide through killing, maiming, burning and destruction of churches and other sacred places of worship, and forceful seizure and occupation of ancestral, worship, farming and dwelling lands of the indigenous Christians and other indigenous religionists in Northern Nigeria," it said.
Roman Catholic Bishop William Avenya of Gboko separately told charity Aid to the Church in Need that the world cannot wait for a full-on genocide before deciding to intervene.
"Please don't make the same mistake as was made with the genocide in Rwanda," he pleaded, referring to the massacre of Tutsi people in Rwanda, where close to 1 million were killed in 1994.
The Christian Post
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