Author: The Nation

  • Gunmen in army uniform kidnap businessman in Ibadan

    Gunmen in army uniform kidnap businessman in Ibadan

    Yinka Adeniran, Ibadan

     

    A businessman, Mr Wole Agboola has been abducted on his farm at Abaodo Area, Olukitibi Village, Akinyele local government, Ibadan, Oyo state.

    The abduction which took place on Monday was said to have been carried out by suspected gunmen who wore army uniform.

    According to a source who was privy to the incident, Agboola was taken away at gunpoint on his farm located around the Kola Daisi University, on the Ibadan-Oyo Express road axis of the state.

    The source said, the gunmen numbering about six with guns and cutlasses led 47 years old Agboola into the bush after harassing all the persons working on the farm including the farm guard.

    Read Also: Oyo votes N732m for 500 projects

    It was not clear if the abductor left Agboola alone but some of the workers on the farm are said to be currently missing.

    A family source hinted that the case has been reported at Moniya- police station as well as to the Amotekun corps.

    As at the time of filling this report, the family source said the abductors have not reached back to the family members on the whereabouts of Agboola.

    Efforts to reach out to the police Spokesperson, Olugbenga Fadeyi proved abortive as calls put through to his lines were not picked.

     

     

     

  • Second wave of virus posing serious challenge against response efforts – PTF

    Second wave of virus posing serious challenge against response efforts – PTF

    Bolaji Ogundele, Abuja

     

    The Presidential Task Force (PTF) on the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic has expressed frustration over the adverse impact of the second wave of the virus on the national response efforts.

    Chairman of the PTF and Secretary to the Government of the Federation, SGF Mr Boss Mustapha, who said this on Tuesday during the task force’s media briefing, noted that the 52nd week of the national response had witnessed the highest recorded cases of confirmed infection in the country.

    He, however, said the PTF is working on critical issues including oxygen supply and case management, taking into consideration the increasing number of infections and hospitalization.

    “Our National Response is passing through a challenging phase due to the seriousness of the second wave of infections in Nigeria. Week 52 has so far given us the highest number of infections, in a single week, to date. Our TPR analysis shows that 16 out of every 100 tests carried out are positive.

    “We are also seeing increasing transmission among younger people and this is not considered good and safe. We must therefore exercise utmost restraint by taking responsibility.

    “The PTF, this afternoon, discussed two very critical issues namely (i) Oxygen supply and (ii) Case Management. With the increasing number of infections and hospitalization, our objectives are to: ensure that infection, prevention and control (IPC) is properly instituted to minimize spread and exposure of health care workers to the virus; ensure that those who require hospitalization are well managed; those requiring medical attention for other ailments gain access to Treatment at medical facilities; and critical care is available and deployed especially where oxygen is needed. The situation in Abuja and its environs has been of concern to the PTF,” he said.

    He also noted that despite the resources made available to the states across the country, testing had remained very low across states in varying degrees, adding that this is not helping the national response and that some states had not reported any infections in several weeks.

    He further revealed that during a conversation with health authorities including the CMDs of Federal Tertiary Institutions in Abuja: – National Hospital; Jabi and Gwagwalada on Tuesday, the PTF directed that the level of Infections, Prevention and Control as well as case management should be prioritized immediately.

    He reminded all that as the New Year (2021) is just a few days away and advised that citizens should, in addition to the non-pharmaceutical intervention (NPIs) and the hope given by the arrival of vaccines, be committed to personal survival and compliance with protocols, which he said will remain critical.

    He, therefore, urged Nigerians to make this part of their New Year resolutions.

    Read Also: COVID-19 vaccination to be free for Nigerians, says PTF

    While noting that protocols recently issued to states are actively being implemented by many, he urged those who are yet to do so to begin to them to practice.

    “You will recall that we recently issued some protocols to States to which a number of States have been actively implementing. We thank these States and urge others to follow suit.

    “Closely related to these protocols, is the fact that the strategy of testing to detect and treat remains central to the role Sates are expected to play. Data shows that despite the resources already made available to sub-national entities, testing is very low across States in varying degrees. This is not helping our National Response. Indeed, some States have not reported any infections in several weeks.

    “Reports received also point to the fact that laboratories recently established in the States are not working optimally. You will recall that we moved from two laboratories to about ninety (Public & Private) located in all states of the Federation. Their inability to function optimally has resulted in unacceptable levels of delay in receiving results and pressure on the National Reference Labs.

    “We wish to urge all States to reopen all laboratories and ensure that testing is expanded and turnaround time for results is substantially reduced. In the same vein, States should please keep their Isolation/Treatment Centres open because of the rising cases of infection nationwide”, he said.

    On travels, the SGF remarked that the PTF has worked out additional quarantine protocols to be observed by travelers arriving from the UK and South Africa.

    According to him, this is in keeping with the task force’s determination to minimize any possibility of importation of the virus.

    He said the new policy, which started from Monday, 28th December, 2020 include: requirement for passengers for two additional documents; permit to travel/QR code obtained from the travel portal after payment for the day seven post-arrival test; and COVID 19 PCR negative test with a validity now shortened to 96 hours or 4 days

    “The PTF shall remain vigilant on this matter and our relevant agencies are also working on the sequencing to determine the strain found,” Mustapha declared.

    He disclosed that with effect from 1st January, 2021 the passports of the first 100 passengers that failed to take their day seven post-arrival PCR test will be published in the national dailies. The passports, as deterrence, will also be suspended till June 2021.

     

     

  • I won’t return to Umahi’s govt, says ex-SSG

    I won’t return to Umahi’s govt, says ex-SSG

    Our Reporter

     

    A former Secretary to Ebonyi State Government, Prof. Benard Odoh, has dispelled rumours that he has dumped the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    He said despite being in the same party with Governor David Umahi at the moment, he is not considering returning to “an administration he disagreed with on the basis of principles”.

    Odoh made these known while hosting his supporters to a Christmas party in his Umuezeokoha country home, Ezza North Local Government Area.

    He explained that the clarifications become necessary given the heightened speculations of the defection of Umahi from the PDP to the APC had generated.

    Odoh encouraged his supporters and all Ebonyians to always hope for a better tomorrow, maintaining that he was still actively part of the APC family

    His words: “I am still part of the APC family. I have not defected to any party. I don’t operate in the dark. If I have any reason to do otherwise, I will communicate with our people as and when due.

    “For now, I am fully deep in APC activities. So, there is no reason for our supporters and Ebonyians to panic because there’s no election at the moment.”

    The former governorship aspirant in the 2018 primaries of the APC in the state also asked his supporters never to express any worry or anxiety over  “discriminatory treatments” meted out to them in the APC since Umahi became a member of the party.

    Odoh later told reporters that he would not return to the Umahi government, saying “I will run for an election” in 2023.

    Said he: “I don’t waiver on issues and I am consistent in my style. So, if the issues that led to my exit has not been addressed, though we are now the same Party members, as a loyal Party man, when critical decisions are important, the Party will take decisions.

    Read Also: Umahi declares war against cultists

    “I’m not against any man but I am strongly against the wrong priorities of government whether in my party or outside it.”

    The former SSG said whereas he wishes the governor well in the APC, his position that whatever policy that must be driven should be that which lifts the people from poverty and not that which escalates it.

    He added: “We should talk more about governance and development now than to focus on an election that will come in (about) three years. I have encouraged my supporters to focus on things that will improve their lives and on governance issues that will help our people.

    “But as for 2023, definitely, I will run for an election, but then, INEC and political parties are yet to declare activities for the election and so, it is too early in the day to begin to heat up the system.”

    Reacting to impressions in certain quarters that the APC was unpopular in Ebonyi State before Umahi’e entry, Odoh countered that the party has been largely successful in the state even in the last general elections.

    The former governorship aspirant cautioned some political actors in the state to stop supporting and encouraging youths to go into cultism and empowering them with guns and cutlasses to maim and kill themselves.

     

     

  • PDP slams Fed Govt for dismissing failed state warning

    PDP slams Fed Govt for dismissing failed state warning

    By Gbade Ogunwale and Jide Orintunsin, Abuja

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has slammed the Federal Government for dismissing a recent Editorial by the Financial Times of London warning of Nigeria’s gradual slide into a failed state.

    The Nigerian authorities had dismissed the report, insisting that the country was making progress and moving in the right direction.

    In a statement on Sunday by its spokesman Kola Ologbondiyan, the PDP carpeted the APC administration for what it called its arrogant trivialisation of the nation’s tragic descent into a failed state.

    The statement said: “Indeed, the Editorial by the Financial Times is only stating the obvious, as our nation under President Muhammadu Buhari has presented all the trappings of a failed state, including having a rudderless government with a dysfunctional command structure that cannot guarantee security, manage our economy or even perform very simple tasks of governance…”

    Read Also: I resisted pressure to abandon PDP for APC, says Wike

    But the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) faulted the main opposition’s endorsement of the Financial Times Editorial.

    In a statement on Sunday in Abuja by its Secretary to the Caretaker/Extra-Ordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC), Senator James John Akpanudoedehe, APC described PDP’s action as “unpatriotic”.

    “From the economy to security, it is easy to sum up Nigeria with some recent recorded security incidents and the economic downturn. However, this government has displayed the political will and capacity to contain any criminal/terrorist activity and return the economy to growth.

    “President Buhari’s administration, which sees the urgent need to have a better policing system for the country, is embarking on sweeping police reforms and supporting community policing, is definitely not governing a country close to becoming a failed state.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Gunmen kidnap ex-council boss’ parents

    Gunmen kidnap ex-council boss’ parents

    By Justina Asishana, Minna

    Gunmen have kidnapped parents of the former chairman of Munya Local Government of Niger State, Mallam Yahuza Mohammed.

    They also abducted 15 others.

    The incident occurred at Kuchi community in Munya Council.

    The attack, which happened about 11pm last Saturday, lasted for about two hours.

    The victims included the father and mother of the ex-chairman, a doctor, two nursing mothers with their babies, among others.

    It was learnt that about 50 gunmen stormed Kuchi on motorcycles and raided the place.

    Read Also: Gunmen kill three policemen, two others in Benue

    The Nation learnt that members of vigilance groups were overpowered by the bandits because of the sophistication of their weapons.

    A resident said there is no security in the community.

    The lawmaker representing Munya Constituency in the House of Assembly, Andrew Jagaba, confirmed the incident.

    He said the attack devastated the community, adding: “Security agents have been mobilised to the area to ensure protection of lives and property.”

     

  • How cyber criminals clone ATM cards, fleece bank customers of savings

    How cyber criminals clone ATM cards, fleece bank customers of savings

    The heinous practice by cyber criminals of cloning automated teller machine (ATM) cards and using them to defraud unsuspecting bank customers is on the rise. Many bank customers have lost their life savings to the fraudsters even when their ATM cards are not lost or stolen. You also risk all you have laboured to save if you are unmindful of where and how you use your ATM cards, INNOCENT DURU reports.

    • Bank officials responsible for most frauds – ICT, legal experts

    • Ex-NBA chief recalls how bank duplicated client’s corporate account for fraudsters

    • How to identify compromised ATM, PoS machines

    On November 3, Ayo, a freelance journalist, was in the comfort of his room drawing a list of what he would need for his impending wedding and to set up a business for his wife to be. For these, he relied mainly on the money he had saved from his toils over the years.

    But while he was busy drawing the items, his phone was being hit by messages in quick succession, but he was too engrossed with the task at hand to be distracted by them. By the time it occurred to him to check the short messages on his phone, he realised, to his chagrin, that they were debit alerts from his bank. The money he had banked on for the execution of his plans had been pilfered from his account. Surprisingly, the message in the debit alert indicated that the withdrawal had occurred two days earlier (November 1).

    Ayo’s major shock was how it was possible for a third party to withdraw money from his account while he had his ATM card and mobile phone with him.

    “When I went to my bank to complain, they searched and found that the money was withdrawn through a modern online payment system. I subsequently reached out to the company and they confirmed what the bank had told me,” he said.

    Lamenting the situation, he said: “They have spoilt all my plans. They have returned me to ground zero. Where would I start from again?”

    Checks with security and banking experts revealed that Ayo’s experience was one in the long list of ATM cards cloned and used to steal money from the accounts of innocent bank customers. According to ICT experts, most of such crimes are done with the connivance of bank officials.

    Bakare, a colleague of the reporter, also tasted the bitter pill recently. He was also at home with other members of his family on a weekend when text messages started hitting his phone in quick succession. By the time he checked, he found a long list of debit alerts. His entire savings had gone.

    He said: “I was troubled and kept wondering what could be going on. My phone was not stolen and my ATM card was also with me. So, how could my money have been withdrawn?

    “When I went to the bank to complain, they asked if I transacted business with anybody, and I said no. They asked if I gave my ATM card to anyone and I also responded in the negative.

    “They did some search and told me they found that the money was withdrawn in Maryland. When they said so, I thought they were talking about the Maryland in Lagos but they said it was the Maryland in the US!”

    Unlike Ayo, who at press time was still battling to recover his money, Bakare said the bank immediately refunded his money.

    “I guess they found out it was an internal fraud. So to avoid embarrassing themselves, they refunded the money so that the matter would die naturally.”

    But another victim, who identified herself simply as Mummy Rachael, was not as lucky.

    She said: “I had gone to Lagos Island to buy goods and make payments, so I went to an ATM point to withdraw money, after which I left for my house.

    “Later that night, I started receiving debit alerts on my phone. Goose pimples enveloped my whole body immediately. I reported but nothing came out of it.”

    ICT experts said she could have been a victim of an ATM machine that had been compromised.

    Yet another victim, Abel, suffered a similar fate after he lost his ATM card but ignorantly did not block or retrieve it.

    He said: “I did not see any need to block it because there was no money in the account.

    “Unfortunately, I asked someone to send money to me, not knowing that some fraudsters had taken possession of the card.

    “Shortly after the money was sent to me and I got an alert, I started receiving debit alerts. They cleared the whole money.

    “It was after that ugly experience that I blocked the ATM card.”

    Of course, Abel’s loss could be blamed on ignorance. But how would one describe that of Ogonna, a kinsman of the reporter had a massive loss to fraudsters.

    Ogonna had received a call from fraudsters pretending to be bank officials, requesting that she should provide her ATM details to help rectify some problems with her account.

    “Once I provided the details, they cleared all the savings I had made in 10 years. It is one hell of experience I hate to talk about,” she said regretfully.

    ATM cloning not limited to Nigeria 

    Online checks revealed that ATM cloning is a global issue.

    Writing on lovemoney.com, Felicity Hannah, a Briton, raised the alarm about card cloning as she recalled how her husband lost his savings to cyber criminals.

    She said: “Last week, we saw how this kind of fraud works first hand. My husband received a text from his bank asking if he really was buying £950-worth of stuff in Sports Direct.

    “Since he was at work (and isn’t exactly a fan of sports fashion), it was fairly obviously not him. But what confused us was that his card hadn’t been stolen; it was still in his wallet. And we take card security very seriously.

    “When paying in shops or restaurants, he knows not to let the credit card out of his sight and he certainly hadn’t used any disreputable website – the only recent purchases had been booking a holiday on a travel comparison site and paying for a book on Amazon.”

    How your ATM card can be cloned

    Some ICT experts shared with The Nation how cybercriminals clone ATM cards.

    One of the experts said: “There are many ways an ATM card can be cloned. There is a device they can slip into the ATM that will read your card and give them the details.

    “There are people who could stand at a distance and see how you punch in your details. If they get your card number with the pin, they can activate it.

    “Another is when you hand over your card to a PoS operator. He is putting your card in a machine which to you looks like a PoS but might be a machine that reads the details on the card.

    “It is up to the authorities to find all the different ways. Any system you use can be breached. Nigerians have not yet met real hackers.

    “One of the ways we are open to fraudsters is when you are buying things online and you are entering your details.

    “Sometimes, some people put a fake site where you enter your details thinking that you are buying things. Suddenly, it will tell you “error” without you knowing that they have collected your details and they will start using it.

    “The field is so open and so wide.”

    Another expert, Mr Olusola Teniola, said : “You can fall for this incident even when  you claim to have your ATM cards with you and your pin or signature attached to the phone have not been disclosed. Unfortunately some ATM machines, if they have cloning devices attached at the point of card entry into the machine, they can copy your ATM information, which is the card number.

    “They can, through hacking techniques, get your pin number associated with the card.

    “The most prevalent is that as a society we tend to in some cases give sensitive and private information to others to carry out transactions on our behalf without knowing that you are now exposing not only your ATM number but also the pin to a third party and that third party may share the information through their contacts.

    “That is the easiest way to get people to clone your ATM card and use it without your knowledge.”

    Bankers behind most ATM card frauds —ICT, legal experts

    Relying on their wealth of experience, some ICT experts told The Nation that bankers are responsible for most ATM card frauds.

    One of them, Bayo Banjo, said: “Most bank frauds are insider jobs. We haven’t had a situation where professional hackers would come and do everything from outside.

    “The most common is from within the bank and the next is about being careless with your card.”

    He described Ayo’s experience where the fraud was said to have been committed using an online payment portal as strange.

    He said: “It could be that a staff of the online payment organisation is lifting details. How can someone duplicate that if it is not an insider’s job?

    “If no code was sent to the owner of the account before payment was made, the first person they should hold responsible is the online portal.

    “That is why every company that handles payment portals that read your card has to get thorough approval and have so many safety methods.

    ‘For instance, Interswitch will send a code by SMS to process transactions. But other ones that are external to the country are not detailed. They will just take your card number and the three digits at the back and the computer will check that the name matches the expiry date matrix.

    “With those ones, you can read the details of someone’s cards. The banks should also put in place necessary control so that they can tell where the fraud is coming from.”

    Former Second Vice President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Monday Onyekachi Ubani, shared Banjo’s line of thought.

    “It is clearly sometimes the collusion of bank officials,” he said.

    “The moment this thing happens and you come to them, they will first of all accuse you of compromising your pin. It is always the first accusation they will haul at you and you will begin to defend yourself. It then becomes my word against your own.

    “But most times, if a deeper investigation is carried out by the security agencies, it will actually underpin those that are behind this criminal act. Most times, the banks don’t even give out information for that comprehensive investigation to be done.”

    Ubani proceeded to share a disturbing experience of how a bank used his client’s details to open an account for suspected fraudsters.

    He said: “I have a particular case now and, in fact, we are filing the suit this week against a bank where my client has a corporate account. The bank went and opened the same corporate account to fraudsters who are using that name to dupe people of various sums of money running into millions.

    “The People they dupe will pay big money into the fraudulent account and they (fraudsters) will pay about N100,000 into the genuine account. They were doing this in collusion with the bank officials.

    “Before you know it, they will empty the fraudulent account and take out all the money. The person who has paid the money would complain to the police who will block our client’s account.

    “My client will say I never had any dealings with this person that paid N100,000. Meanwhile, it is the same company’s name. When you go and check this company’s name, it will be changed to an individual’s name in the same bank.

    “Meanwhile, the payer would have paid into a corporate account.  There is no way that would have happened without an insider’s collusion.

    “Luckily for us, we have a print out where this money was paid into the company’s account. The bank has quickly paid the lawyer who is coming to give evidence in our favour.

    “There is a lot of evil going on in the banking sector. Bank officials now take undue advantage of the fiduciary relationship of trust. Bankers we used know were the most trustworthy people on earth.

    “When you begin to have armed robbers in the banking sector, you know that that bank is not safe and people’s money is not safe.”

    Lamenting the magnitude of compromise in the banking sector, Olusola Teniola, an ICT expert, advised that banks must adopt what he called four eyes system to check internal fraud.

    Teniola said: “Banking is about trust. They have to ensure that their staff or employees have effective background checking.

    ‘The system that they actually adopt into their processes or business model should be able to have what I call four eyes. By this I mean there shouldn’t be an individual with a pair of eye carrying out sensitive operations without someone else overlooking it.

    “The four eyes principle is the most effective way to find out if there is connivance. There is no way two people can deny a crime. It is easier for one person to deny and the other one knows that they committed the crime.

    “The four eyes principle is the best way I think banks would have adopted in addition to ensuring that the systems are operated by trustworthy employees.”

    He implored banks to move from using text message and emails to alert customers to fraudulent practices to embarking on mass campaign, using local languages.

    “We are in a society that is evolving. Our educational system needs to be improved because we have a high percentage of young people who cannot read and write. The jingle of speaking in their dialect is much more appropriate in terms of communicating than using text messages in English.”

    How to identify compromised machines

    Explaining how to identify a compromised ATM machine, Illinois Bank & Trust in a post said the first step is to know what to look for and know the different kinds of skimming devices.

    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has recommended the following on knowing what to look for:

    Card-reader overlays – The most common ATM skimmer, and perhaps the easiest device to detect, is the card-reader overlay. It is made of plastic and fits over the slot where you insert your card. As you insert your card, the device reads the data from your card and stores it. Before inserting your card, look at the card reader for signs it has been altered, loose, crooked, damaged and if your card doesn’t easily slide into the machine. Other possible signs could include glue, adhesive tape or other signs of tampering. The plastic around the card reader should look permanent and professional. All pieces should be securely affixed to the machine.

    Hidden cameras – While banks typically have security cameras near their ATMs to keep an eye on the area, thieves sometimes hide tiny cameras on or around ATMs. There are instances where the camera could be inside the device. Also, know that business and financial institutions do not point cameras toward the keyboard.

    PIN-capture overlays – Criminals have been known to attach dummy keypads over an ATM’s real keypad to record and capture PIN numbers as they are entered. The keypad might be fake if it looks too thick or different from what you’re used to seeing.

    Fake ATM faceplates – Some thieves go as far as placing a fake ATM cover that could contain card-reader overlays, hidden cameras and PIN-capture overlays over some or all of a real, fully operating machine. Look for flaws like loose wires, seams that are not flush and key pads that look out of place.

    CBN mum, security expert, police react

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has refrained from commenting on the menace. The Director of Corporate Communications, Osita Nwanisobi, after asking that questions on the matter be sent to him, declined response to subsequent calls and text message.

    A security expert and university don, Dr Bala Abdulahi Husaini, in a chat with our correspondent lamented the rising cases of ATM cloning.

    Husaini said: “It is a global phenomenon. The country is lacking in cyber experts. It is a new development here, but on the global scene, it had been there and they have been able to mitigate it to a certain level. Here we don’t have much people who can do that.

    “I was able to interview someone who is also a guru in that. He told me he can hack any bank he feels like hacking just for 10 minutes. He said whatever transaction you are doing with that bank will go to his account and you will receive alert and that there is no way they can trace that one.

    “If we can have these people, it can also help in mitigating the crime.”

    He added: “If you have an ATM card that has not been configured and you put it in a fridge to get to a certain degree Celsius, you can use it to withdraw money. It works. Nothing is hidden now in this global village.

    “I know of someone who can recharge your phone by hacking telecommunications providers’ systems. Once he does that, you will see the alert of any amount he feels like giving you on your phone. I argued with him and he tried it on my phone and it worked.

    “When you go to a shopping mall, you buy things slotting your card into the machine that also has memory. It stores your information. If they like, after you must have left, they can retrieve your pin number and start using it to your detriment.”

    Efforts made to speak with the spokesman of the Nigerian Police, Frank Mba, were unsuccessful as he did not respond to the calls made to his phone.

    The spokesman of the Lagos State Police Command, Muyiwa Adejobi, however told The Nation that the IGP had just launched a Cryptography and Cyber Crime Unit in Abuja to tackle the problem of cybercrime.

    He said: “I am sure various offices have been handling cases like this, including the Lagos State Police Command. Many of our units have been on most of these cases.

    “We have ICT and forensic experts who have been handling cases like this. The police have arrested many of the fraudsters. In fact, some of them are in our custody in Ikeja now. We have been arresting them and we will continue to arrest them.

    “The police as an institution have established anti-cybercrime office in Abuja. When we have cases like that, we will always be in touch with them to do proper investigation for us.

    “Besides that, we have the Technical Intelligence Unit (TIU) in Abuja, which runs certain investigations on issues like these. We sympathise with the victims. The police with the establishment of these units know what to do. They will be liaising with the CBN and other banks to see what we can do to forestall other occurrences of this crime.

    “If someone’s money has been withdrawn illegally and you don’t report to the police, we would not be able to know.

    “All cases must be reported to the police so that we can have a very good statistics of these crimes to help us appraise our strategies and develop other strategies to curtail them.”

  • Jonathan enjoys freak revival

    Jonathan enjoys freak revival

    By Idowu Akinlotan

    Rumours of Goodluck Jonathan revival began to run rife recently when some northern politicians suggested that the former president could be drafted to run for the presidency in 2023 on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC). Proponents of the idea, nearly all of them northern irredentists and hegemonists, were said to have calculated that a second Jonathan presidency would limit the time the North would be out of power after 2023, if the region must relinquish office. The calculations were of course too far-fetched to gain traction or currency, and too few people were converted to that heresy. In 2023, zoning or no zoning, southern unity or no southern unity, the North could not hope to hang on to power without recognising the incalculable cost of doing so. Northern and southern powermongers are not so stupid as not to know the cost of sustaining hegemonic hold on power, especially in a federation, and at a time when President Muhammadu Buhari has shown both the possibilities and limitations of nepotism.

    Few believed the rumours about a Jonathan political resurgence or second attempt at the presidency. They believe instead that the APC would try to court his support to keep the ruling party in office in 2023 rather than keep the North in power. Dr Jonathan’s resurgence may in fact be completely unrelated to keeping the North in power or mounting the stool himself a second time. In any case, the rumours have died down, probably permanently discredited, regardless of the praise songs many politicians have composed about him in the past three weeks or so. But he is nevertheless enjoying resurgence, whichever way it is viewed. Absence makes the heart grow fonder, says the Roman poet, Sextus Propertius, in Elegies. And in the face of a ruthless and inscrutable hegemonist sitting regally and detachedly in office in Abuja, many more political hearts are likely to grow much fonder in the distressing and apocalyptic months ahead. Accordingly, opinions about the value of the Jonathan presidency are likely to ebb and flow in contradistinction to the manner and vigour President Buhari practices his political sorcery in Abuja.

    Two examples of how some Nigerians are rethinking the Jonathan presidency may be fairly representative. There may be no substance to their laudation, but as sentimental as they are, Dr Jonathan’s praise singers give the impression of how superficial and gullible politicians are, and just how deeply unpopular and ineffective the Buhari presidency has become. Apart from the APC delegation that visited the former president at his Abuja residence during his 63 birthday celebration in November, the public presentation of a book written in his honour by Bonaventure Melah, a former Managing Editor of Daily Times, afforded a number of public officials the opportunity to rhapsodise about his leadership qualities. Two of those rhapsodies are particularly evocative, one from the glib and comical Dino Melaye, a senator in the 8th Senate, and Governor Abdullahi Ganduje of Kano State, the sometimes immoderate and controversial Kano politician who suffers no remorse in calling a spade a spade.

    Senator Melaye may not be taken seriously, especially going by the infantile skits and dithyrambs his prolific mind inspires him to compose from time to time, and his constant buffoonery, but he rarely can be accused of being outrightly mendacious. Frivolous, a little fib now and again, given to hyperbole and insensible, undiscriminating selection of political battles, not to say his private and public lack of morality, he nevertheless retains an obsession with country that is in tandem with his private obsession with luxury. That obsession with country sometimes leads him to objective conclusions on issues and political personalities. This is where Dr Jonathan comes in, the former president who was previously excoriated by Sen Melaye in trenchant prose and phrases. The easily excitable senator was also at the book launch, leaving the public to guess whether it was a freak of nature to have him say all he said about the ex-president, or whether the book presenters were privy to his change of mind on Dr Jonathan.

    In any case, he gave an agreeable remark on the ex-president on December 15. Said he: “I Senator Dino Melaye, I want to  say openly here that after many things that have happened and events that have unfolded in recent times, I want to say openly here that once I was blind, now I can see. In 2017, I was arrested eighteen times — there were more times in 2018 — and between then and now, I have been taken to court on twelve different cases, and out of those cases, we have won eleven of them.  And that only one that borders on attempted suicide.  I wonder how someone like me who likes cars and love life so well would want to kill himself.  President Goodluck Jonathan, I want to say that on behalf of all of us who shot blindly, we are sorry. The one that I later wondered why you did was that phone call. I sometimes wondered that if you had not made that call, we would not be where we are today. But after I saw what is happening in America, where President Trump is saying I no go gree (I won’t agree), I can now see the reason for that call. There are very few people like you.I pray for that anointing…” Sen Melaye probably took a number of people by surprise with what he had to say, but what he said undoubtedly resonated with many Nigerians. The Kankara, Katsina State, teenage schoolboys had just been abducted and were still in captivity, and many northern chiefs and politicians were delivering scathing rebuke of President Buhari’s style and policies. The South was also still in a lather over the galling manner the president had alienated them from the decision-making process, not to say the overpowering manner the administration’s ineffectiveness was endangering the polity, making life miserable for everyone, and predisposing the country to either anarchy or revolution. It doesn’t need half the intensity of Sen Melaye’s rebuke of President Buhari to be convinced that the administration had lost direction in a way its predecessor never dared. Dr Jonathan never prosecuted the war against Boko Haram with the suavity of a great leader, and had even resorted to the use of mercenaries, but on the same problem, President Buhari has been chaotic, complacent, gloating and less effective. And, as the senator concluded, despite the president’s consistent reiteration of his democratic credentials, his administration had been the most cynical, abrasive and dictatorial since 1999.

    Dr Ganduje may not be as robust and melodramatic as Sen Melaye in reappraising Dr Jonathan, but he was no less effusive and evocative in his remarks on the same day. “I agree with those who call you an angel for conceding defeat,” he began extravagantly. “I salute you for that. You have made a name not just for yourself, but also for Nigeria, Africa, all developing countries, and for democracy. So, I salute you.” Still inspired, the Kano governor zeroed in on a few salient leadership subjects and remarked the far-sightedness of Dr Jonathan. Said he: “Boko Haram succeeded because they had the almajirai base for easy recruitment and indoctrination. But we salute you for what you did in that regard. We are multiplying the new model of almajiri schools in Kano. That is an important legacy you left for us. The removal of Sanusi Lamido Sanusi is another legacy you left, but it created bad blood in Kano. I personally felt he should have spoken to you privately about the issue of the missing public funds he reportedly discovered so that you could look into the matter without alerting the looters or creating unnecessary public outrage…However… when a familiar scenario began to play out in Kano… I applied the ‘Jonathan medicine’ (sacking from office) for a similar purpose, on the same ‘disease’ and on the same ‘patient’.” Dr Ganduje came under blistering attack for his sarcastic dismissal of the deposed emir, and for what some described as his tasteless put-down of a fallen traditional ruler, but he was simply lauding the ex-president more than he was characterising Emir Sanusi.

    Hearing first-hand the boisterous recantation of his former critics and opponents, and having also read in recent months the comparisons between his administration and that of his successor, much of it in his favour, Dr Jonathan, in his response, began buoyantly to declaim on the rubrics of leadership with a passion and insight few people ever associated with his administration. According to him, “The best way to assess a leader is to look at the philosophy behind his leadership. For elected people, political parties are supposed to have ideologies, but even within that persuasion, leaders must have their individual visions. I always don’t think about leadership at the level of a President or Governor based on infrastructure alone. Anybody who has money and is not a big thief would definitely provide that for the people. Apart from that, how else do you assess a leader, his thinking, his vision for leadership? My interest was to change the society through education. No matter what we do to elevate Nigeria, without education the society would find it difficult to change. That was my personal view. That was also why I intervened in the almajirai case. We needed to elevate them above that level, because of the many social problems they were causing. I strongly believe that if there must be a change in Nigeria, we must be competent scientifically and technologically, because technology rules the world today.”

    It may be uncharacteristic of Dr Jonathan to philosophise in the manner he did at the book presentation, seeing of course how little of such intellectual trimmings he displayed during his presidency; but he is absolutely right that the impact of leaders must go beyond building bridges and roads. Neither Caesar Augustus nor Napoleon Bonaparte is today remembered for the roads and hospitals they built, but for their grand ideas, and how inexorably they influenced the thinking and way of life of their people, changing and impacting them for generations. President Buhari has spent the better part of his presidency demolishing or undermining the institutions that should safeguard Nigerian democracy and reorient and reinvigorate the people’s confidence in the system going into the future; it will, therefore, be impossible for him to talk of a legacy except in the narrow, deprecative sense of empowering a section of the people to lord it over the rest. The Nigerian system is inchoate. It began to be developed haphazardly by ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo in 1999, but he was too undisciplined to solidify and strengthen the system or make it endure. Until Dr Jonathan alluded to it in his remarks two Tuesdays ago, few knew he even understood such leadership nuances. But perhaps he merely failed to articulate what he knew, and refused to surround himself with the right people to help him enunciate and promote his leadership ideals. President Buhari has not pretended to know what philosophy Dr Jonathan preached, and won’t be bothered to even try.

    Nigerians have a sense of general incompleteness when they assess Dr Jonathan. He always seemed capable of propounding and projecting the highest or even complex ideals, such as his concession call after the 2015 president poll, but he also appears capable of the most engaging submission to the gravest error and fantasy. He was the most educated Nigerian president ever, a contrast President Buhari’s disinterest in education has painted in graphic, humbling and tragic colours. But the strength of character the ex-president was unable to show in office, even though he seemed to understand and idolise it, cost him, his legacy and administration dearly. He will always be better than his successor, in gamesmanship, tolerance, appreciation of democracy and how a system works, and for his humanity and empathy, but any revival of his attributes will only be temporary because it will be inextricably linked to and underscored by his successor’s corresponding lack of depth and potential. Dr Jonathan enjoys some sort of revival now; this can only be because President Buhari is wilting in a vacuum as he leads a headless presidency that is beginning to unravel, a presidency which politicians with an eye on 2023 will and must increasingly ignore if the republic is to be saved.

  • Two certificates, one senator in Cross River

    Two certificates, one senator in Cross River

    Hardball

    The unfortunate feature about Nigerian politics is that things happen that should make us laugh, but we end with streaks of tears. They are not just comedy. They may be farce, but the word that many can associate with them is the absurd. Some call it the theatre of the absurd. Even that expression has been flogged almost to death.

    Such a dimension has cropped up in Cross River state, a state known to amuse with its festivals. But this has spilled over to elections, and why not? Life is how we play and dance.

    It is the drawing of swords between two senatorial gladiators within the PDP over the just concluded senatorial bye-elections. It is a story of two candidates, two certificates of return, two court judgments. The paradox though, is that it is one election, and one senatorial seat. Who can beat that for a stage play, Nigerian style?

    After all, the two squared off at the party primary, and when it was between Stephen Odey and Jarigbe Agom Jarigbe, the National Electoral Commission was present. The first burlesque was when Jarigbe hinted he could not accept the polls result because INEC was not present. Then INEC announced there and then that they were present. Just like Donald Trump who alleged that his party, the Republican Party, was edged out of the polling area against all evidence.

    The result had shown that Odey won by a wide margin. The playgets interesting. The INEC issued Odey a certificate of return, and of course there was fanfare in Odey’s camp. Dolour draped your face if you were Jarigbe. Jarigbe, ever the optimistic politician, thought he could do what others have done in the country when they cannot win the hearts of the people. They try to capture the hearts of the judges. Win one, lose one. One plus one could give you one. It becomes Jarigbe one, Odey zero. But if there are two goals one has to be an offside, because it is not a league match. It is like the football cup final. One person must win and go home in an elimination match. At that point there was only one foal and one win. Advantage Odey.

    Jarigbe abandoned the court in his state and lined up for a court, first in Port Harcourt, and then in Abuja. That is after he scored 0-2in Calabar court.

    So, the appeal court rules in Jarigbe’s favour, and, watch this, the same INEC that gave Odey a certificate of return also handed Jarigbe one. So we have two senators certified for one senatorial seat. INEC gave a certificate without withdrawing it. So, there. Where do we go from here?

    Jarigbe now rejoices, and wants to be sworn in a senator of the federal republic. Wait there. Enter senate president. Lawan first faces stalemate, and he eventually says he cannot swear in two people. He eventually swears in Odey.

    Here we go, the drama unfolds. The question is, how can and should the court upend the will of the people. Or will it? Wait and see.

  • Suspected bandits kill village head, PDP leader in Niger

    Suspected bandits kill village head, PDP leader in Niger

    By Justina Asishana, Minna

    Suspected bandits have killed a ward leader of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at Kampala village in Bosso Local Government of Niger State, Ahmodu Mohammed.  They also killed the village head of Madaka in Rafi Local Government, Zakari Ya’u Idris.

    The PDP chieftain was killed in his home. The hoodlums kidnapped his three daughters. The village head was killed a week after he was abducted by the bandits.

    Sources told The Nation that the bandits had been after Mohammed for a long time before he was killed last Saturday.

    It was gathered that the 15 bandits were armed with sophisticated weapons, which they used to engage the deceased in a fierce gun battle for over two hours.

    The Nation learnt that the deceased was shot several times before he was killed.

    According to sources, “that was the third time the bandits would attack Mohammed.”

    The former Niger State chairman of the party, Alhaji Tanko Beji, confirmed the death of the PDP chieftain and the abduction of his daughters.

    He said they were yet to hear from the bandits regarding the daughters.

    Read Also: Niger signs 2021 budget into law

    The head of Madaka village, Idris, was killed a week after he was abducted.

    He was first kidnapped some weeks ago and released before he was abducted on December 20 by the gunmen and killed a week after.

    Chief of Staff to Rafi Local Government Chairman Mohammed Mohammed confirmed Idris’ murder, saying N800, 000 ransom was demanded from the family, but he was killed before the ransom was paid.

    He disclosed that the council got to know about the death of the village head from other people who were abducted and released after paying their ransom.   Mohammed said Idris died while being tortured by the bandits.  He said his remains had been buried in the bush by the bandits.

    Police spokesman ASP Abiodun Wasiu could not be reached regarding the deaths.

     

  • Assailants kill family of three, two others in Benue 

    Assailants kill family of three, two others in Benue 

    Agency Reporter

    Benue State Police Command said on Sunday that gunmen have killed five persons.

    It said the deceased included two persons in Gwer West Local Government and a family of three in Katsina-ala Council.

    Spokesperson DSP Catherine Anene told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on the phone that the family of three, which included a father, wife and son were killed in their room at Nagu, a village in Katsina-ala Local Government.

    She said the family, whose surname was simply identified as Jato, were attacked and killed on Saturday night as they slept, but the attackers did not attack or injure other persons.

    Read Also: Police smash Benue robbery gang

    Anene said another group of gunmen killed two persons at Naka, the headquarters of Gwer West Local Government area, adding that the police have arrested five persons in connection with the crime, while investigations have continued into the matter.

    “On December 27, about 1am, a gunshot was heard at High Level area of Naka town and police officers were deployed. Two persons were arrested on the scene, while two young men were found in a pool of blood.

    “The victims were taken to hospital but were confirmed dead. Five more suspects have been arrested and investigation is on,” she said.