Author: The Nation

  • Turkey election: Erdogan, Kilicdaroglu head to a runoff

    Turkey election: Erdogan, Kilicdaroglu head to a runoff

    Turkey is set for a second round of voting after neither President Recep Tayyip Erdogan nor his main challenger, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, were able to secure an outright majority in Sunday’s presidential election, the country’s electoral authority said.

    Erdogan received 49.51% of the vote, while his main rival, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, came in second at 44.88%, according to the figures.

    The third presidential candidate, Sinan Ogan, a nationalist politician, finished third at 5.17%.

    With no candidate having crossed the 50% threshold for the presidency, Turkey is set for a runoff for the first time ever.

    The second round of voting in the presidential election has been penciled in for May 28. 

    Both candidates have said they would accept a second round. Turnout was high at over 88%, Ahmet Yener, the head of the Supreme Electoral Board, told the press, as reported by DW journalist Julia Hahn.

    “But if people take us to a second round, we will respect that too,” Erdogan told his supporters.

    Erdogan appeared confident that he would secure another term in office.

    “I wholeheartedly believe we will continue to serve our people in the coming five years,” the 69-year-old leader said to huge cheers outside his party’s headquarters.

    Erdogan is Turkey’s longest-serving leader and served as prime minister from 2003 until 2014, after which he stepped down as party leader to be the president. Overall, he has been in power for the last two decades.

    He commands fierce loyalty from pious Turks who once felt disenfranchised in secular Turkey. His political career has survived an attempted coup in 2016, as well as numerous corruption scandals.

    However, his political standing was severely damaged by rising inflation and the devastating earthquakes in February this year.

    Kilicdaroglu promised that if he wins, he will return to orthodox economic policies from Erdogan’s heavy management. He has also said he would seek to return Turkey to the parliamentary system of governance, from Erdogan’s executive presidential system passed in a 2017 referendum.

    Kilicdaroglu has also promised to restore the independence of a judiciary that critics say Erdogan has used to crack down on dissent.

    He expressed confidence that he would win in a runoff as he spoke alongside leaders of the six-party alliance he led into the election.

    “If our nation says second round, we will absolutely win in the second round,” he said. “The will for change in the society is higher than 50%.”

    The 74-year-old has been chairman of the secular Republican People’s Party (CHP) since 2007.

    Turkish fact-checker Gülin Cavus told DW that people are more vulnerable to disinformation in highly charged environments like the elections. “This polarisation deeply affects this Turkish election and the amount of misinformation,” she said.

    “It’s really important to understand the dynamics and atmosphere in Turkey’s media ecosystem. People actually don’t trust the media that much. They consume and get news from social media channels,” Cavus said.

    The election’s outcome shows a “quite polarized” country, according to Sinem Adar, a Turkey researcher at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.

    2.

  • Makinde to Iganna residents: maintainpeaceful coexistence

    Makinde to Iganna residents: maintain
    peaceful coexistence

    Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde has urged the people to learn to live together peacefully.

    He spoke when he visited Iganna in Oke Ogun area of the state to assess the situation over a clash between some Fulani and Yoruba members of the community.

    The governor warned that his administration would not allow anyone to take the law into his hands.

    He cautioned the people to avoid reprisal, saying the law would take its cause.

    Speaking during an on-the-spot assessment of a Fulani settlement at Iganna in Iwajowa Local Government, Makinde said his administration would provide amenities and ensure more government presence in the area.

    The Sabigana of Iganna, Oba Azeez Oyemonla Soliu, hailed the governor and security agencies for their quick response, saying the incident was unfortunate.

    He called on the residents to live harmoniously with non-indigenes.

    Spokesman for the Fulani community, Seriki Mahmud Yusuf, who is the leader of the Seriki Fulani Youths in Oyo State, said the indigenes were peace-loving and law-abiding, adding that the crisis was needless.

  • Yoruba race won’t forget Oba Adeyemi’s legacies’

    Yoruba race won’t forget Oba Adeyemi’s legacies’

    The children of the late Alaafin of Oyo Oba Lamidi Adeyemi have said the legacies their father left behind would never be forgotten by the Yoruba race.

    They described the monarch as an embodiment and custodian of Yoruba culture because of his efforts towards the development of Yorubaland.

    Speaking in Oyo town on behalf of Oba Adeyemi’s children, at the one year remembrance “Inter Religious Prayer” for the late monarch, his eldest son, Israel Adeyemi, said the monarch fought for the betterment of traditional institutions, adding that history would never forget Oba Adeyemi as a foremost traditional ruler in Yorubaland and Nigeria.

    He said: “Oba Adeyemi’s dressing, his speech and everything about him was an embodiment of culture. Traditional institutions and monarchs should emulate him.”

    He thanked Oyo people for their support during and after the life of Oba Adeyemi, which, according to him, was worthy to be remembered.

    The Oyo Central Senator-elect, Dr. Yunus Akintunde, said Oba Adeyemi would not be forgotten by Oyo people, describing him as a man, who would continue to be great in the mind of the Oyo.

    The lawmaker representing Afijio/Atiba/Oyo East/Oyo West Federal Constituency, Akeem Adeyemi, said the last discussion he had with his father was when he asked him about the possibility of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu emerging as Nigeria’s president.

    He added that everybody knew that the late monarch wanted Tinubu to become the president.

  • Court orders Customs to release petroleum marketers’ nine trucks

    Court orders Customs to release petroleum marketers’ nine trucks

    A Federal High Court sitting in Abeokuta, Ogun State capital, has ordered the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) to release nine impounded trucks to the owners or bring them to the court premises on or before June 5.

    The trucks are part of the 24 trucks loaded with Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), seized and impounded on November 9, 2019 at Idiroko, Ogun State by men and officers of the NCS.

    The owners are judgment creditor – applicants, including Olamitide International Ltd, Tonifans Nig. Ltd, Vicket Petroleum Ltd, registered trustees of Ipokia/ldiroko Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria and four others.

    The applicants’ application was filed by their counsel, George Oyeniyi Esq, against the duo of Nigeria Customs Service Board and ACG B. A. Amajan, the Coordinator, Boarder Drill Operation Zone.

    When the matter came up yesterday for further hearing of the application before Justice A. A. Demi-Ajayi,  counsel, George Oyeniyi, told the judge that of the 24 tanker trucks loaded with PMS and impounded by the NCS, 15 of them had been auctioned by the same Nigeria Customs.

    Oyeniyi argued that the action was in disobedience to the judgment of the court delivered on August 9, 2022, directing the NCS to release the 24 tankers and their contents to the applicants.

    The applicants’ counsel also informed the judge that the remaining nine trucks had been taken away by the NCS from where they were previously parked by the same NCS and prayed the court to help the applicants retrieve their properties.

    Responding, counsel for the respondents, Onyeka Chinwe Anigbogu, who appeared alongside Mr. Oluwole Adesoye, told the court that the respondents had not yet filed any response because they could not ascertain the availability of the said impounded trucks.

    Anigbogu also informed the court that because the contents (PMS) of the trucks could not be kept for long, they had been disposed of by the NCS, but said she would take action in respect of the matter.

    Justice Demi-Ajayi, after listening to the arguments of both counsel, ordered the respondents to release the nine trucks to the applicants or bring them to the premises of the Federal High Court, Abeokuta on the next adjourned date.

    The court thereafter adjourned the matter till June 5.

  • Ondo govt demolishes over 40 houses

    Ondo govt demolishes over 40 houses

    Ondo State Government said it demolished over 40 houses and structures because they were erected on its land designated for industrial purposes.

    It said the land, located behind Automat, along Akure/Owo highway, was acquired when the state was under the defunct Western Region.

    Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Mrs. Lola Fagbemi, said the demolition was carried out to reclaim government’s property in possession of land grabbers.

    She said: “Sometime ago, the Ministry of Lands, Housing and Infrastructure informed us that government land designated as industrial areas have been grossly encroached on.

    “These plots of land were acquired by the defunct Western Region government and was designated as industrial land for economic, commercial and other industrial purposes.

    “This place remained an industrial area upon the creation of Ondo State on February 3, 1976 and this is one of the greatest immovable assets we have as a state.

    “Records at our disposal also showed that compensations were paid to the initial owners when the land was first acquired.

    “We are using this medium to call on the people affected that this area is an industrial area and no residential building will be allowed there. It should as well be noted that government cannot in anyway be intimidated.

    “We have been on this issue since 2016 and occupants have been served with notices that the land is owned by the government.

    “This has been done even when some of these houses were still at the foundation level, but they all turned deaf ears.

    “Let it also be on record that none of the houses built on this land has the required land documents to prove their ownership, no C of O and neither do they have land use permit. These are plots of land taken over by land grabbers.”

  • Tribunal dismisses APP’s, NNPP’s petitions against Abiodun, APC

    Tribunal dismisses APP’s, NNPP’s petitions against Abiodun, APC

    The Governorship Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Abeokuta, Ogun State, yesterday dismissed two petitions filed by two parties, Action People’s Party (APP) and New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP), against the re-election of Prince Dapo Abiodun during the March 18 governorship election.

    The APP had filed its petition challenging the return of Abiodun as the Governor-elect in the Ogun State Governorship Election held on March 18. It, however, deposed in its application for discontinuation moved “this morning that upon the re-evaluation of the grounds and facts of the petition, the petitioner is not reasonably convinced about the sustainability of the grounds of the petition as currently constituted before this honourable tribunal.”

    APP said the withdrawal of the petition was based on the fact that upon a further evaluation of the petition, the petitioner had found that the respondent polled the highest number of lawful votes as duly recognised by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and permitted by law.”

    The NNPP Chairman in the state, Sunday Oginni, had disclosed that the party, which filed a petition against Abiodun before the tribunal over the alleged omission of the party’s logo on the ballot papers for the governorship election by INEC, was ready to withdraw.

    “The New Nigeria Peoples Party, Ogun State chapter, under the leadership of Comrade Olaposi Oginni Sunday, hereby steps out of the court and withdraws the suit with petition number: EPT/OG/GOV/01/2023,” he said.

     “We came to realise that on that same date (March 18), despite the fact that the INEC did not comply with an electoral act that stipulated that the name and logo must be on the ballot, the electorate still managed to vote for some of NNPP’s candidates and some of our candidates won in some places. For example, in Kano State, the governorship candidate of our party and candidates of NNPP for the House of Assembly and House of Representatives were declared winners,” Ogini said.

    The chairman of the tribunal upheld the applications of the two parties and dismissed the petitions accordingly.

  • Bill aiming to stop doctors from seeking green pastures crashes

    Bill aiming to stop doctors from seeking green pastures crashes

    • Fed Govt says not workable, counters existing laws

    Those seeking to stop doctors from seeking greener pastures outside the shores of Nigeria lost the battle yesterday. The Federal Government objected to a bill proposing an amendment to the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) Act.

    The bill, before the House of Representatives, is to curb the brain drain.

    The government position was disclosed by the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, while reacting to the threat by members of the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) to embark on a five-day warning strike.

    The association served a notice to begin the warning strike tomorrow over issues bordering on their welfare, including the alleged plan to bar them from obtaining practicing license for five years after qualifying as doctors.

    Read Also : Creating greener pastures for doctors at home

    House of Representatives member Ganiyu Johnson (representing Oshodi/Isolo II Federal Constituency) is sponsoring the bill labeled “A Bill for an Act to Amend the Medical and Dental Practitioners Act, Cap. M379, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.”

    The bill aimed “to mandate any Nigeria-trained medical or dental practitioner to practice in Nigeria for a minimum of five years before being granted a full license by the Council in order to make quality health services available to Nigerians; and for related matters (H B.2130).”

    But responding to a question on the warning strike, after an extraordinary Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting chaired by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Ngige said the bill will go against extant Labour laws, adding that he did not support and will not support it.

    He said: “Nobody can say they (doctors) will not get a practising licence till after five years. It will run counter to the laws of the land that have established the progression in the practice of medicine.

    “I am a medical doctor. When you graduate from the medical school, you go on one year apprenticeship called housemanship or internship as the case maybe.

    “After your internship, you are now given a full licence because prior to that, what you have is a provisional licence of registration with the Nigerian Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN).

    “So, after that intensive training, you were signed off by consultants and you became a fully qualified medical doctor to attend to human beings and to work without any supervision again. Supervision then is voluntary.

    “Resident doctors are those who have that full licence and they want to acquire post-graduate specialty as surgeons, gynecologists, obstetrics, paediatrics and internal medicine of family medicine. So, they are doctors in training.”

    The bill, being sponsored privately, cannot stop anybody from getting a full licence.

    The minister said: “That document is as far as I am concerned not workable. Ab initio, I don’t support it and I will never support it. Like I said before, it is like killing a fly with a sledge hammer.

    “They should think of other ways if they are trying to check brain drain, there should be other ways.  If a doctor has read on scholarship, you bond him, if a doctor has read on bursary you can bond him.

    “If a doctor is trained, like we are doing now, on little or nothing which is like scholarship again because N50, 000 a session per medical student is nothing when their counterparts overseas pay 70,000 pounds for a session. So, I don’t support that bill but can bond them if you want.”

    Ngige described the planned strike as unnecessary since government was already engaging the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), the NARD’s umbrella body.

    He said: “On the demand for 200 per cent salary increase, the NMA is the father of all doctors and they have about four or five affiliates of which the resident doctors is an association affiliating there.

    “You have the Medical and Dental Consultants Association (MDCAN), they are the consultants who are training these medical doctors to become specialists. You also have general medical practitioners association and you also have doctors working in the private sector

    “So, NMA is discussing with the federal ministry of health, salaries income and wages commission and the Ministry of Labour and we know that NMA has accepted a salary increase between 25 and 30 per cent across board for their members.

    “I have called the NMA President to contact them because on the issue of remuneration negotiation, it’s NMA that the government deals with. So, I have told the President of NMA to contact them and we will engage them. They should not go on any strike, it’s not necessary.”

    The FEC at yesterday’s extraordinary session approved the Universal Implementation of the Employee Compensation Act (ECA) 2010 following a memorandum presented by Ngige’s ministry.

    According to the minister, the law is operated by the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), adding that it is a replacement of the old Employee Compensation Act that was known as “Workmen Compensation”.

    “The Act provides that the worker who is injured or had an accident or contacted a disease or disabled or dead in the course of work, should be compensated, remunerated and even the family, pay something when the man is no longer there. It didn’t make provision for some of the children to be schooled or educated, up to the age of 21.

    “So, today is a good day for the Nigerian workers because the decent work agenda that is contained in Convention102 of the ILO has a major branch on what they call workers’ protection in the course of work.”

  • ‘Baci placed Nigeria on global spotlight’

    ‘Baci placed Nigeria on global spotlight’

    President Muhammadu Buhari has hailed Baci for directing her energy and talent into the vocation that has placed Nigeria positively on global spotlight.

    A statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, noted that ‘Baci has shown consistency in her patriotic showings in the name of her country, having made the country a shining light through the ‘Jollof Face-off’ Competition, 2021, when she settled Nigeria leadership position in that contest.

    “President Muhammadu Buhari shares the joy of celebrations as 27-year-old gourmet chef, Hilda Bassey Effiong, aka Hilda Baci, makes history by breaking the world record of longest hours of cooking, finding her way into the Guinness Book of Records, and placing Nigeria on the global spotlight.

    “Baci’s drive and ambition have brought more interest and insight into the uniqueness of Nigerian food, as another cultural icon, with huge tourism benefits, hoping more young people will follow in her footsteps. I thank the sponsors, government officials, including Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State, celebrities and her fans for all the support that has brought glory to the country.

    Read Also : BREAKING: Hilda Baci completes 100 hours cook-a-thon

    “I wish Hilda Baci more grace for a prosperous career”, the statement said.

    Lawan lauds chef for breaking world record

    Senate President Ahmad Lawan said Baci’s feat is a reminder to the world that Nigerians are talented and are capable of excelling in any endeavour.

    “You have made us proud by again showing to the world that we have all it takes to excel in any task we set our hands on,” Lawan said.

    ‘Baci’s endurance a testament to women’s resilience’

    Lawmaker representing Oluyole Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives,  Tolulope Akande-Sadipe, described Baci’s effort as a brave testament to women’s resilience.

    “You have become a shining example of what women are truly capable of achieving. Your dedication to this extraordinary challenge inspires us all, and reminds us that there are no limits to what we can accomplish when we set our minds to it,” she said.

  • Hilda Baci sets 100 hours cook record

    Hilda Baci sets 100 hours cook record

    Guinness World Records will be verifying all claims and evidences surrounding the cook-a-ton embarked on by Chef Hilda Baci in her attempt to break the world record of the longest hours of cooking. 

    A tweet via its verified handle @GWR, said: “We’re aware of this amazing record attempt. We need to review all the evidence first before officially confirming a record.”

    It was in response to a user @AlexanderDGreat, who tagged them in the tweet, saying: ‘Why is @GWR not showing or talking about Hilda’s cook-a-ton? Can’t see anything on their pages’.

    Meanwhile, Baci early yesterday broke the record of 87 hours, 45 minutes, and 00 seconds set in 2019 by Chef Lata Tondon in Rewa, India.

    Read Also : BREAKING: Hilda Baci completes 100 hours cook-a-thon

    Hilda was initially scheduled to stop at 4pm Nigerian time culminating into her former 96-hour target. She however extended her cooking to 100 hours, thus ending at 8pm Nigerian time yesterday. She started cooking 4pm on May 11.

    She was given a cultural icon title by President Muhammad Buhari.

    Baci is no stranger to breaking records as she won the maiden edition of the ‘Jollof Faceoff’ competition held in August 2021.

    On why she embarked on the latest task, Baci said it is one of her biggest aspirations, adding that it is also an opportunity to tell some positive stories from Africa through the meals that we eat.

  • Lagos impounds 311 rickety buses in Q1, says VIS chief

    Lagos impounds 311 rickety buses in Q1, says VIS chief

    At least 311 rickety commercial vehicles were impounded by Lagos State Government in the first quarter of this year, Director, Vehicle Inspection Service (VIS), Akin- George Fashola, has said.

    He said the seizures were in renewed onslaught to rid the state of non-road-worthy vehicles.

    According to him, the impoundment exercise resumed fully after the general elections and were carried out using the vehicles’ body tags, and without inconveniencing commuters on the road.

    Fashola disclosed this on Thursday while responding to feedback that traffic enforcement officers only went after erring private vehicles, leaving the commercial ones out of their operations.

    Disabusing the minds of Lagosians the director said the VIS had the capacity to enforce the law on all classes of vehicles and commercial ones were not excluded from the routine roadworthiness enforcement being carried out by traffic enforcement agencies in the state.

    “What happens most times is that the enforcement officers out of compassion and the caution not to overburden commuters, many of who may be stranded, would rather than effect such arrest, just pick the body tags of such offending vehicle and go and effect arrest of such buses at the parks or garages,” the director said.

    Fashola stressed that the VIS and other enforcement agencies have continued to apprehend and impound rickety commercial vehicles, adding that once impounded, they often ended up being crushed.

    On the Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) Camera and the Traffic Management Solution (TMS) device deployed by the state government, Fashola said the initiative had reduced the interface between traffic enforcement officers and motorists.

    He added that the technology was a win-win procedure for both the law enforcement officers and motorists as the regular arguments on traffic laws violation would be put to rest through detailed recordings.

    The director assured that VIS officers were compliant with the State Traffic Laws and would not exert any action outside what was stipulated in the law.