Author: The Nation

  • Murder: Arowolo’s counsel fined for wasting court’s time

    Justice Lateefat Okunnu of a Lagos High court, Ikeja, on Wednesday came down heavily on Akolade Arowolo’s counsel, Mr. Olanrewaju Ajanaku, for employing delay tactics in the trial of the defendant.

    For this, the court imposed a fine of N10, 000 on Ajanaku for wasting the court’s time following his failure to submit the defence team final written address.

    Arowolo is arraigned for alleged murder of his banker wife, Titilayo Omosoje at their Lagos home in June 2011.

    The trial judge observed that the court acceded to Mr. ajanaku’s request for accelerated hearing only for him to continue disobeying the court order for an early conclusion of the matter.

    Justice Okunnu expressed disappointment that the defence counsel failed to regularise his position by forwarding their final written address to the court since May this year.

    Mr. Ajanaku was expected to file his final written argument but has consistently failed to do so.

    She thereafter adjourned the matter to October 31 for the defence counsel to file his final written address.

     

  • Terrorism: Court hears Ndume’s appeal November 1

    Terrorism: Court hears Ndume’s appeal November 1

    The Court of Appeal, Abuja, on Wednesday fixed November 1 for definite hearing of an appeal filed by a serving member of the National Assembly, Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume.

    Ndume is facing terrorism related charges before the Federal High Court, Abuja.

    He is accused of sponsoring the Boko Haram sect, and failing to disclose the cell phone number of a spokesman of the sect, Ali Sanda Umar Konduga, which was in his (Ndume’s) possession.

    Ndume is appealing two court rulings delivered on December 11 and 12, 2012.

    The trial judge, Justice Gabriel Kolawole had in both rulings admitted, as evidence against Ndume, alleged call logs from a telephone firm, which indicated that the Senator had telephone conversation with Konduga.

    Justice Kolawole also admitted in evidence certain digital video discs (DVDs) containing call-data records, including findings based on investigations carried out by a Special Investigation Panel (SIP), of the State Security Service (SSS).

    SSS operatives, who investigated the case, had, before the ruling, told the trial court that there were 73 instances of communication between Ndume and Konduga.

    A Nokia E7 phone allegedly belonging to Ndume, was said to have been used in communicating with Konduga, whose phone identity the SSS gave as Nokia 2700.

    In his appeal, Ndume wants the appellate court to invalidate the admitted evidence on the ground that the trial judge erred in law when he admitted the non admissible materials.

    The Senator described the admitted materials as radically and fundamentally against him.

    Before the court chose the new hearing date, appellant’s lawyer, Rickey Tarfa (SAN) withdrew a motion he had filed seeking that his client’s trial before the Justice Kolawole be stayed pending the determination of his appeal.

    He withdrew the motion filed on February 20 this year to enable the court deal with the substantive appeal, because parties have filed their briefs in relation to the main appeal.

    The three-man panel, headed by Justice Amiru Sanusi consequently struck out the motion.

     

  • FG to provide healthcare loans

    FG to provide healthcare loans

    If the arrangement being put in place by the Federal Government scales through, money would no longer be a problem in accessing health care facility in the country.

    Federal Government is mulling the idea of making loans available to Nigerians to enable them access the health services under the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) program.

    The report is expected to be presented to the Federal Executive Council (FEC) for ratification, before its implementation.

    The Acting Executive Secretary of NHIS, Dr. Abdulrahman Sambo, made the disclosure on Wednesday in Abuja when he received the report on Hospital Capital Improvement Project.

    The committee among other things was asked to put in place modalities for the establishment of hospital capital improvement fund.

    Besides, the committee according to Sambo, also looked at the feasibility and practicable interest rate.

    He said, “Critically examine when the program is feasible and practicable at an interest rate that is fair to all the health seekers, the federal government was looking into investing and injecting funds into the scheme to meet the needs of Nigerians on universal healthcare coverage.”

    Sambo revealed that government was committed to the provision of low-interest loans to assist Nigerians access health at an affordable rate.

    He pointed out that government was interested in finding alternative ways to fund the NHIS so as to make access to healthcare inclusive.

     

     

     

  • Nigeria @ 53: Tottering on the edge of disaster!

    As Nigeria performs the ritual of celebrating the country as it marks 53-years as an independent nation and a member of the international community, without the usual pomp and fanfare that has been associated with such celebrations, this time would have added insult to our collective injury, the journey to democracy and nationhoodhas been tortuous.

    The country is in dire straits. At the time of departure of our colonial masters, Nigeria was considered to be one of the emerging great nations of the world, like the proverbial child of great promise. After a civil war, military rule and now, democracy, with greedy and self-serving elite as leaders, the country has continued to slide deeper into underdevelopment despite the advantages which oil wealth conferred on us.
    Let’s not be deceived by the ruse of a sombre celebration, typical of our government, it is a decoy, meant to pave way for a more elaborate, yet misguided, multi-billion naira celebration in 2014 to mark the centennial anniversary.
    The trouble with Nigeria, title of late Chinua Achebe’s book, gives a fitting and explicit description of the state of the nation. “Nigeria is not a great country. It is one of the most disorderly nations in the world. It is one of the most corrupt, insensitive, inefficient places under the sun. It is one of the most expensive countries and one of those that give least value for money. It is dirty, callous, noisy, ostentatious, dishonest and vulgar. In short, it is among the most unpleasant places on earth.”
    Add to that, a country of “kleptomaniacs,” whose insatiable quest for power have put a country of great potential and promise on an almost irreversible track of imminent implosion. Those who had predicted 2015 as the tipping point may not be far off the mark considering the fraud being perpetrated in the name of governance and the fact that we’ve been on the wobbly part for too long. Something has to give. Nothing else captures the picture of the sorry state of our nation at a time like this.
    We celebrate independence, at a time when insecurity in varied forms like terrorism, kidnapping and armed robbery are at an all time high. Government says the economy is growing when factories are either shutting down or functioning far below installed capacity; they are winning the war against corruption but indicted persons in monumental frauds like the fuel subsidy scam are cosseting with their co-travelers in corridors of power.
    Misrule and its resultant poverty are traced to the rise in religious extremists in northern Nigeria. Boko Haram have crippled the economy of the north and sent thousands of innocent Nigerians to their early graves, the latest, been the massacre of about 50 students of College of Agriculture, Gujba, Yobe State, while they slept in their dormitory.
    It is unfortunate, that a country that offered so much in hope and possibilities for its citizens at independence has today become a land of suffering, insecurity and near hopelessness, teeming youth unemployment, poor electricity supply, incessant ethno-religious crises, no thanks to rudderless and bumbling leaders who have failed to lead a well-endowed nation to harness the talents of its vibrant, energetic and resilient people. We can spend the next few hours cataloguing the problems of the country and we would still not scratch the surface.
    Rather than fully maximise the country’s potentials for mutually assured prosperity, a ‘privileged’ few have hoodwinked the Nigerian people. The result is what we have today; a country exhibiting all the characteristics of a failed state. The problem of Nigeria is the ruling elite and the failure of leadership. There is nothing wrong with the Nigerian land or climate or water or air or anything therein but the unwillingness or inability of its leaders to rise to the challenge of nation building.
    Unarguably, those who started the Nigerian project, the likes of Sir Ahmadu Bello, Nnamdi Azikwe, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and others had good intentions before it was hijacked by rogues and rascals donning the garb of leaders.
    The strong grip of rapacious, thieving and vacillating class of people masquerading as leaders have turned a promising country to the poster child of corruption and underdevelopment. While it will be unfair to blame the current leadership of the country for all the woes of the country, post-independence, truth is, the present administration has proved as incompetent and visionless as its predecessors in its fickle efforts to take Nigeria out of the doldrums.
    The Goodluck Jonathan government has shown little or no seriousness in moving the country forward. Over three years since the mantle of leadership fell on him, first as acting president and in 2011, elected president, the country’s future have never been this bleak. Fourteen years after the People’s Democratic Party ushered in the present democratic dispensation, the people have been left to gnash their teeth and rue lost opportunities. The nation is forlorn.
    Nigerians must turn deaf ears to the rhetoric that celebrate growth without visible development. Federal ministers at every opportunity, pontificate about job-creating-projects without jobs. Infrastructural deficit has become the opportunity cost of corruption, negatively impacting on our socio-economic development. The current cost of governance is the highest in the nation’s history.
    Recurrent expenditure gulps about 76% of our yearly national budget, leaving very little for the execution of capital projects. We must reverse the high cost of running our federal system of government comprising over 40-members of cabinet and 469 members of our National Assembly, if we are to tell a better story of the next 47-years of our independence. Some have advocated a switch to the presidential system of government .
    At the milestone of five decades and three years, we must do away with tyrannical tendencies that engender impunity, disregard for the rule of law and the fundamental rights of Nigerians. We are afforded another opportunity to define for ourselves, what the value of development means to us as a country and  if we have developed at the pace of our peers – Singapore, Brazil, South Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia. Successive leaders have failed to build on the development framework of federalism with all its essential features as given to us by our heroes past who struggled for our independence.
    There are many figures in the public domain about how much our leaders have siphoned from the country since independence. From Nuhu Ribadu, former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), we learnt that the amount is “more than six times the total sum that went into rebuilding Europe in the aftermath of the Second World War via the famous European Recovery Programme.
    The ERP programme was $13billion. The political class and the ruling elite must take the blame for the abyss the country finds itself. We must as a matter of urgency begin to build a nation of our dreams. We cannot continue to taxi but take off!
    From this tipping point we dangerously totter, the convocation of a Sovereign National Conference, that will allow Nigerians from all walks of life have a say on how they want to be governed and suggest solutions to the country’s myriad of problems, in my opinion, is the first step towards national recovery.
                                                                
    Ilevbare is a public affairs commentator. He can be reached via theophilus@ilevbare.com. Engage him on twitter, @tilevbare. He blogs athttp://ilevbare.com
  • Inconclusive agreement stalls Ajidua’s trial

    The inconclusive agreement between the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and lawyer to alleged fraudster, Fred Ajudua, Charles Uwensuyi-Edosomwan (SAN) on Wednesday stalled hearing in the alleged N270 million fraud case.

    Ajudua and his cohort, Charles Orie were arraigned by the EFCC before Justice Joseph Oyewole for allegedly defrauding two Dutch businessmen – Remy Cina and Pierre Vijgen, of $1.69 million.

    At the last adjourned date, Edosomwan had urged the court for an adjournment to enable the defence and prosecution reach an agreement.

    However, at Wednesday’s hearing, Edosomwan told the court there was an ongoing consultation with the EFCC and that certain agreements have been reached, although counsel to EFCC, Olumuyiwa Balogun, said he was not aware of if an agreement has been reached with the top echelon of the commission.

    Edosonwam, who said it was unfortunate the prosecuting counsel has not been briefed, prayed the court for a short adjournment to enable parties meet and report back.

    He said: ‘’A lot has happened since the defendant (Ajudua) was remanded in prison. His heath condition got worsened. We are consulting with the prosecution to reach certain agreements.’’

    Balogun confirmed that meetings were ongoing by both parties, adding that the reports will soon be made available to the court.

    After listening to the parties, Oyewole adjourned the case to October 10 for report of consultation.

    However, The Nation gathered that the consultations were to see how Ajudua, who is said to be at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital could perfect his bail conditions in order to proceed abroad for medical treatment.

    A vacation judge, Justice Ganiyu Safari had granted Ajudua bail in the sum of N50 million with two sureties in like sum on grounds of ill-health, following an application for bail by the defense team.

    Safari declared that Ajudua’s ill-health constituted an “exceptional circumstance, “for the court to grant him bail.

     

     

  • Suswam to Aliyu: Come back to PDP

    Suswam to Aliyu: Come back to PDP

    Benue State Governor, Gabriel Suswam has urged his Niger State counterpart, Babangida Aliyu, to come back to the main Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Suswam said, “You cannot build a house and run away from it leaving your family. Where there is trouble, you stay back and tackle the trouble, so Governor Aliyu should come back and tackle the problem.”

    The governor spoke while playing host to the party’s North-central executive committee led by its chairman, Yusuf Tyongo, at the Government House in Makurdi.

    Suswam said he is is optimistic that very soon the chairman of the Northern Governors Forum would return to where “he rightly belongs” because there is nothing like a new PDP.

     

  • Senate backs Jonathan on national confab

    Senate backs Jonathan on national confab

    The Senate on Wednesday said that it welcomed the announcement of convocation of a National Conference made by President Goodluck Jonathan in his national broadcast to mark the country’s 53rd Independence Anniversary.

    The upper chamber said in a statement issued by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Information, Media and Public Affairs, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, that it welcomed the convocation of a national conference which is limited in scope where the sovereignty of the country is not in any way called to question.

    It noted that it is equally important that the conference would be organized with due regard and respect to the 1999 Constitution (as amended)

    It added that it had always been Senate’s stand that there cannot be two sovereign processes at the same time.

    The Senate said that it believes that the conference would offer Nigerians the opportunity to address all the country’s structural problems that keep agitating the mind of her ethnic nationalities.

    It said, “The Senate notes also that the national confab as announced is limited to the scope where the sovereignty of Nigeria is not called to question.

    ”It is therefore given that the proposed conference is in tandem with the time tested stand of the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and as enunciated by the President of the Senate, Senator David A. B Mark in his address at the last Nigerian Bar Association Conference in Calabar and to Senators penultimate week.

    ”The Senate has always canvassed the position that it will always welcome a conference where all ethnic nationalities would converge to discuss all critical issues and proffer the very best way that will enhance national unity.

    ”The Senate red-line and for which was aptly factored in the President’s broadcast is the conferment of a sovereign status to the conference.

    ”The Senate is happy that it is a conference that will hold with due respect to the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended. It has always been Senate’s considered stand that there cannot be two sovereign processes at a time.

    ”The Senate is therefore gratified with the development and sees it as an opportunity to address all of Nigeria’s structural problems that keeps agitating the mind of her ethnic nationalities.

    The Senate is confident that the conference’s final outcome would go a long way to cement Nigeria’s unity.”

     

     

  • Judge’s absence stalls trial of 17 Boko Haram suspects

    The absence of Justice Musa Kurya of a Federal High Court, Lagos, on Wednesday stalled the arraignment of 17 suspected Boko Haram members.

    They are Ali Mohammed – Adamu Karumi; Ibrahim Usman; Bala Haruna; Idris Ali; Mohammed Murtala; Kadiri Mohammed; Mustapha Daura; Abba Duguri; and Sanni Adamu.

    Others include Danjuma Yahaya; Musa Audu; Mati Daura; Farouk Haruna; Abdullahi Azeez; Ibrahim Bukar and Zula Diani.

    The accused persons are facing eight-count charges of conspiracy and terrorism brought against them by the government.

    At the last adjourned date, the accused were docked, but their pleas were not taken, due to the absence of an interpreter to read the charges in the language they will understand.

    Kurya then adjourned the case to October 2, following an application for adjournment made by the prosecutor, Lawal Pedro (SAN).

    In the charge, the accused were alleged to have committed the offence on March 21, at Plot 5, road 69, Lekki Phase 1 Housing Estate, and 24 Oyegbeni Street Ijora Oloye, Apapa, Lagos.

    They were alleged to possessed three packets of explosive construction pipes, 15 detonators, and 11 AK 47 rifles loaded with 30 rounds of life ammunitions, which were recovered from them at their hideout.

    It was also alleged that about 200 rounds of 7.6 mm life ammunition, two suit cases containing explosives, and one water container also harboring explosives, were recovered from the accused.

    The alleged offences contravened Sections 1, 8, 27 (1) (a), and (b) of the Firearms (special provisions) Act, Cap F28, Laws of the Federation, 2004.

    Following the judge’s absence, the matter has been fixed for October 9 and 10 for arraignment and commencement of trial.

     

  • FG not committed to resolving varsity crises – ASUU

    FG not committed to resolving varsity crises – ASUU

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) said that there is no sincerity on the part of the federal government in keeping with the 2009 agreement.

    Speaking to journalist in Makurdi, Benue State, on Wednesday, the President of the union, Dr. Nasir Fagge, said the federal government is only interested in keeping ASUU members talking but not committed to addressing the rot in the university system.

    He dismissed the federal government’s assertion that other sectors of the economy would be affected if the 2009 agreement is implemented.

    “The government has intervened in the banking sector,yet the economy did not collapse, it has intervened in Nollywood and textile industries yet the economy has not collapsed.

    The strike is not just about the lectures but efforts to improve standard of infrastructures and leaving condition in federal and state universities. We advised parent, students and stakeholders to understand ASUU’s position as not everybody can afford to send their children abroad for learning, “he stated.

     

     

  • Italy PM faces confidence vote

    Italy’s Prime Minister Enrico Letta has been addressing parliament ahead of a crucial vote of confidence in his governing coalition.

    Mr. Letta told the Senate the collapse of his government could be fatal for the country.

    BBC reports that the vote was called after Silvio Berlusconi ordered ministers in his centre-right People of Freedom party (PDL) to leave the government.

    But some key PDL figures have defied him, saying they will back Mr. Letta.

    Mr. Letta earlier rejected the resignations of the five PDL ministers.

    Berlusconi, a former prime minister, has accused Mr. Letta of allowing his “political assassination through judicial means” – a reference to Berlusconi’s criminal conviction for tax fraud in August.

    “Even though I understand the risks that I am taking on, I have decided to put an end to the Letta government,” Berlusconi said in a letter to the weekly magazine Tempi.

    However, he appeared more circumspect on arrival at the Senate on Wednesday, saying: “We’ll see what happens. We’ll listen to Letta’s speech and then we’ll decide.”

    Addressing the Senate, Mr. Letta said Italy “runs a risk, a fatal risk” if his government were to fall.

    In an apparent break with Berlusconi, his deputy and party secretary Angelino Alfano said PDL MPs should back Mr. Letta in Wednesday’s confidence vote.

    “I am firmly convinced that our party as a whole should vote confidence in Letta,” said Mr. Alfano, who is also Italy’s interior minister.