Author: The Nation

  • Group laments states failure to be accountable

    Group laments states failure to be accountable

    A civic technology organisation, Paradigm Leadership Support Initiative has lamented what it called the failure of some states to open their books to citizens.

    The organisation, committed to fostering accountability in Nigeria, said 21 states failed to make available details of their audit reports online.

    Executive Director of PLSI, Olusegun Elemo said this during the unveiling of the Subnational Audit Efficacy (SAE) Index 2022 themed: “Sustaining Accountability Reforms for Subnational Development in Nigeria,” on Wednesday in Abuja.

    He said: “We also found out that 21 states didn’t publish their audit reports online. What they published was their audited financial statements which ordinary citizens can hardly understand.

    “What it means is that accountability is poor at the subnational level and the information that will enable citizens to understand the accountability games are not being made available to them.”

    The report ranked Akwa Ibom, Yobe, and Katsina States among the best performing states in terms of making its books open. .

    He said only two states have made progress in implementing financial autonomy for audit offices.

    Elemo also said none of the 36 States produced standard performance audit reports on government programs, projects, or policies in 2021, adding that only five of the 36 states had an effective Public Accounts Committee in their Houses of Assembly.

    He said: “We discovered that there are only two states that have made progress in implementing financial autonomy for audit offices at the subnational level despite the fact that more than 30 states have either enacted or amended their audit laws.

    “Some recommendations offered by PLSI touched on the need for Governors to exhibit strong ‘political will’ to enhance effective implementation of Audit Laws, capacity strengthening for auditors, timeous review of audit reports by State Houses of Assembly and publishing full audit reports as well as citizens’ accountability reports online to enhance civic participation in the audit process.”

  • Kogi 2023: Group challenges Bello on credible successor

    Kogi 2023: Group challenges Bello on credible successor

    Grassroots Arise for Growth and Development (GAGaD) has appealed to Governor of Kogi State Yahaya Bello to ensure that only a credible candidate succeeds him in office.

    The group said this would help preserve some of the gains the governor recorded during his eight years administration.

    National Coordinator of the Group, Osasona Omoleye, stated this on yesterday at a news conference in Abuja, stressing that the sheer number of aspirants jostling for Lugard House signified the health of democracy in Kogi.

    He said the next governor of Kogi State should be someone who is willing to sustain the current momentum orchestrated by the Bello administration, carry everybody along to ensure equity, peace and harmony.

    He said: “It amounts to taking a step forward and ten steps backward, if after the brilliant performance of the last eight years is handed over to a slack hand. Besides, the ruling APC in the Confluence State cannot afford a ‘hard to sell’ candidate.

    “We want that to continue. And the only way that can be sustained is by Governor Yahaya Bello beaming a searchlight on his inner circle, picking a competent, credible and charismatic candidate and supporting him or her. Because in the final analysis, winning the next election is the utmost target of every political party.”

     The group urged the governor to look in the direction of the Chief of Staff,  Mohammed Jamiu Asuku, who they described as one of the best heads among the contenders.

  • Bayelsa governorship: Group urges APC NWC to stick with electoral Act

    Bayelsa governorship: Group urges APC NWC to stick with electoral Act

    Ahead of the Bayelsa state governorship election coming up in November, 2023, a group under the auspices of Progressives Minds of Bayelsa has cautioned the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Working Committee (NWC) leadership to take steps to prevent the party from running into litigations that may affect its chances of fielding a candidate for the election.

    According to the group, there are less than 30 days until the primaries and some persons who bought nomination forms for the contest are still holding political appointments contrary to the provisions of the new electoral Act.

    The group in a statement signed by its National Coordinator, Chief Raymond Ayebapreye drew the party’s attention to Section 84 (12) of the electoral Act as amended that stipulates thus; “that no political appointee at any level shall be a voting delegate or be voted for at the convention or congress of any political party for the purpose of nomination of candidate for any election.

    “Section 84(13) reads: “Where a political party fails to comply with the provisions of this act in the conduct of its primaries, its candidate for the election shall not be included in the election for the particular position in issue.”

    This position is coming on the heels of allegations that the Minister of State for Petroleum, Timipre Sylva has been cleared by the APC screening committee to contest for the election

    Consequently, the group raised alarm that allowing the minister, who has remained in office to this moment to contest the primary, will be counterproductive for the party as other political parties mindful of the provisions of the law will definitely make a case that may jeopardise the chances of the APC in the election.

    The group further urged the party not to forget in a hurry the outcome of similar situations in the state in the last election where the party won the governorship election at the polls but lost out in court over pre-election litigations.

    “Recall that David Lyon won the governorship on the platform of the APC but was sacked by the Supreme Court. Although the circumstances may differ but bottom-line remains that the party lost in court. What this teaches is that we must as a party pay close attention to the provisions of the electoral act and the constitution generally to avoid a repeat of the ugly situation,” the group added.

  • Rivers APC celebrates Tinubu @ 71

    Rivers APC celebrates Tinubu @ 71

    embers of Tony Okocha-led All Progressive Congress(APC), Presidential Campaign Council (PCC), in Rivers State have called on the President-elect, Bola Tinubu to  fix the economy and address  security, ethnic and religious bigotry in the country.

     Okocha, who was the chairman of the Local Organising committee(LOC), for Tinubu and Kashim Shettima joint  Presidential rally in the state, last month, spoke at  a Praise, Worship and Prayers to mark the 71st birthday celebration of the incoming President in Port Harcourt, the state capital yesterday.

     He identified the trio (insecurity, ethnic and religious rivalries) as hydra-headed virus clogging the progress, development and growth of the country, hence the need for the incoming government to address it.

     He said: “A lot of things need to be fixed in this country, security, issues of ethnicity and religion must be discussed and addressed, because they are the reasons why the country is not doing very well;

     ” if I were in his shoes, I will convoke a conference on the subject matter or invoke reports of the previous conferences on them, if there was any of such, look at them, fine-tune where necessary and run with it for the desired peace and progress of the country.”

     The former Chief of Staff to the government, also expressed his support for restructuring  for equity, fairness and justice.

     “I support the call for restructuring 100 per cent.”

     The birthday celebration yesterday was the first edition as President-elect, but he asked for a low key event this time, dropping all the usual fanfare that hitherto accompanied his special day, instead he requested that prayers, and intercessions be made particularly for the peace of the country, his incoming administration an also prayer for the outgoing President, Muhammadu Buhari.

    Read Also: Tinubu: my mandate best birthday gift from Nigerians

     Addressing the crowd of members who came to celebrate the incoming President, Okocha said that the celebrator directed that his Special day should be used to offer prayers for him, his administration that will soon come to place, the outgoing President and the peace of the country at large.

     “The President has demonstrated the highest measure of patriotism by opting that Nigerians should pray for the outgoing President and the entire nation.

     “It is rare for President-elect of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to ask that his first birthday as a waiting President be dedicated to prayers, praying for the country, the outgoing President and the incoming government, rather than what some other person in same shoes would have asked for auspicious celebration, funfare.

     “He may have received a Private Jet today from Lobbyists who would want to be part of his government, but he prioritized the need to pray for peace for the country, the outgoing President, and the incoming government for strength to carry on the job, enablement, wisdom and s among other things instead of any personal gains.

     Okocha described Asiwaju as an icon in all ramifications, a paragon of excellence, judging by the insurmountable record he set in Lagos State nearly 25 years ago, which some governors in other the states  have struggled to catch up with  let alone to surpass.

     He recalled that it was under Tinubu’s regime that Lagos economy was built to what gave the state the status of Centre of Excellence it today prides itself.

     “And what did he do differently to gain the feat, was to build the state economy. Lagos State was before Tinubu because Governor was generating N500million, but when he assumed office, the state Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), rose to N6 billion, annually.”

     Earlier in the celebration, the group had granted Asiwaju’s requests to intercede for the country, his incoming and the outgoing government.

     Shortly after cutting the birthday cake,  the group gave a toast for the health of the celebrator, wisdom, capacity and enablement for the President-elect, for progress and exponential development of Nigeria under Tinubu’s watch.

  • Stress, hypoxia, hypertension, depression, worry everywhere

    Stress, hypoxia, hypertension, depression, worry everywhere

    Initial Labour Party (LP)  thunder claps of ethnic irredentism  have diminished to mere flashes in the pan and  hopes of a Lagos conquest to mirages. But the stormy weather left many people breathless, oxygen deficient (Hypoxia), stress up and set for blood sugar blues and depression.  If anyone has had his or her health impacted, he or she is to blame, because this column warned over five weeks that those storms were coming and they should all dive for cover.

    The season of unreason, as  I call political campaigns and general elections, has taken its leave of us. But before we can  rebalance our brains, it may impact us with FORGET ME NOT SIGNS.  My wife always made a joke of a FORGET ME NOT sign on my forehead untill about 10 years ago.  It was an injury which had healed since the early 1980s, leaving a dark spot. My childhood heartthrob impacted it with a sharp object before she walked away. The FORGET ME NOT SIGN of the season of unreason is a far more dangerous sign.

    In the election campaigns, political violence killed some people, raised blood pressure nationwide. Many people must have experienced blood sugar spikes with  complications such as brain, nerve, kidney and other organ damage. Many people may be on the verge of depression. Worried about Lagos  State for obvious reasons, I found sleep difficult on March 17, 2023, eve of the governorship elections. My mother came to live in Lagos in the 1930s, her mother and uncle 10 years earlier. In 1948, my mother was handed out in marriage  in a house on CLIFFORD STREET Yaba, owned by one of my maternal uncles, Pa Torimiro, from Ijebu Isoyin. My grandmother’s younger brother left Clifford Street to build his first two houses on 10 and 12 Odunukan Street, Abule-Ijesha, where three of their cousins built theirs.

    Violence unleashed by the Ibo-driven N.C.N.C against the  Yoruba party, ACTION GROUP,  forced us to  relocate as refugees to another house of Pa Torimiro on Okesuna Street, Shomolu. On that street were many houses built by Isoyin people, including Papa S.A. Deru, father  of the well known Otunba Femi  Deru, I CAN president in his life time and a great figure in the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry Community. Some of us children almost drowned in the swamp behind the  house as we fled through the  backyard, to, first, Christ Apostolic Church, near Myong  Army  Barracks and, from there, through  Morocco Road to Shomolu. The problem with our house was that Mr. Ganiyu Daudu, then organsing secretary of the Action Group (A.G.), a Yoruba party, was one of the tenants and the N.C.N.C, a former Yoruba party taken over by the Ibos, sought to kill him. This was in 1959 or 1960.

    Refugee life for us was not a good life. Thus, my uncle, Pa Alphaeus Taiwo Olunaike, a thrift collector better  known by his alias, ORI MI PE BI TI BABA ALAJO  SHOMOLU, decided to build another house in Shomolu. This was a genesis of 77  OLORUNKEMI STREET, SHOMOLU. No fewer than eight Isoyin folks followed him. My father, too, joined them. This was an Ijebu zone.  So was the Fadeyi end  of Yaba College of Technology. The Ijebus who were done with Abule-Ijesha began to move into Shomolu, to join forces with Ijebus pushing in from Ikorodu Town until they met at OJOTA. Meanwhile, the Egbas were pushing in from Sango Ota, past Agege and Mangoro towards Ladipo, Alasia,Oshodi,Matori, Mushin, Idi-Oro e.t.c.  These developments became possible because all these areas were parts of Western Region which the A.G. of Chief Obafemi Awolowo was opening up with housing and industrial estates in Ikeja, Ilupeju, Yaba,  Oshodi, Isolo, Apapa for manufacturing companies to flood in from Europe to create jobs in Nigeria.

    LAGOS QUESTION

    Two questions grossly unrelated to good or bad governance were the dominant questions in the presidential and governorship elections in Lagos. These questions were: WHO OWNS LAGOS? and is LAGOS A NO MAN’S  LAND? Both questuons are related. The Yorubas of  Southwestern Nigeria say Lagos is their political capital and that LAGOS is not  a NO MAN’S LAND. Ibos say LAGOS is NO MAN’S LAND. This means everyone can come to Lagos and do whatever he or she likes with Lagos. They cite the cases of Nigerians becoming Mayors in  the United States. But they forget to remind us that the U.S IS NO MAN’S LAND because Europeans who fled their continent when life became unbearable for them there forcibly took the land from American Indians. In Nigeria, save for the Funlani conquest of the Hausa states, no other nationality conquered another and colonised it. Yorubas do not even have land boarders with Ibos. On January 1, 1852, Oba AKINTOYE of Lagos, not THE OBI OF ONITSHA, signed off Lagos to  Great Britain which declared Lagos a colony on  March 5, 1862. This ended the quarrel for the throne with Kosoko who fled to Epe, his mother’s town, to become Paramount Ruler under the Awujale of Ijebuland. The Eletu Odibo blocked Kosoko’s way to the throne. Kosoko avenged this later by putting the old Eletu in a drum of oil, set fire on it and threw his remains into the lagoon. Eletu himself had exhumed the remains of Kosoko’s mother from her grave and threw them into the lagoon.  This was Yoruba  royal politics, not Ibo politics, almost 200 years ago, to which the incumbent Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Babatunde Osuolale Aremu Akiolu, alluded in 2019. AKINTOYE himself had once fled to Badagry and, from there, to Egba. Relationships among Lagos, Egbe, Ijebu-Ode and Lagos, Badagry and Egba show Lagos has been an integral part of Yoruba land, and not Ibo land,  for  hundreds of years. Yoruba land has a large Moslem population. Ibos are predominantly  Christians. The first mosque in Yoruba land was built in 1850 in OYO ILE or OLD OYO. Iwo town  built the second in 1865. Lagos  built its own, Shitta Bey, between 1894 and 1897.

    Nnamdi Azikiwe cunningly tried to become Premier of  Western Region but the Yorubas prevented him and made Chief Obafemi Awolowo their Premier. Lt. Col Emeka Odumgwu-Ojukwu, the Biafran leader, tried to militarily invade Lagos and the Western Region, but the Yorubas stopped him at ORE. For some time, since then, the Ibos have joined forces with opposition to the establishment in Lagos to take it over. But each time, they  failed.

       Thus, the 2023 general elections were another such effort to, this time, directly through the Labour Party (LP) “conquer Lagos”. Ibos jubilated when the February 25, 2023 Presidential election gave LP a 16,000 win over the establishment APC. The victors did not realise the victory was an amalgam of Ibo and prostest Yoruba votes and that Yorubas could solve their local problems and politically re-assert themselves in their land.

    PROPAGANDA

    Ibos are better propagandists than other Nigerians.  In Biafran War,  Uche Chukwumerije and Okokon Ndemi sold Biafra better to the world than did Nigeria. In their quest to conquer Lagos in 2023 and secure the Presidency for PETER OBI, their Presidential candidate, aggressive lie telling on the internet knew no  bounds. Recall a few…

    1. Before the voting for President opened, a viral post said  that President Muhammadu Buhari had voted Peter Obi,  to generate bandwagon votes for Obi. Buhari had to show on camera his vote for Tinubu.

    2. An internet post went viral in which Chief Bode George, a leader of the PDP, said  INEC chairman, Mahmood Yakubu, flew to Lagos in the night hours after Presidential voting to see Tinubu at home and then flew back to Abuja before dawn in Tinubu’s private jet! This was to  discredit the polls. Bode George denied the post.

    3. An internet post went viral  in which the DSS (Secret Police) found  billions of Naira in Tinubu’s Lagos home. The idea was to paint Tinubu as a vote buyer and  to discredit the polls. The DSS said its never searched Tinubu’s house.

    4. Another viral post said Nigerian Chief Justice Olukayode Ariwoola camouflaged in wheelchair in London to meet with  President-elect Bola Tinubu at a time Tinubu was in France and the CJN was in Abuja. The motive was to discredit the Supreme Court in advance if Obi lost its appeal before their Lordships.

    5. Iwuchukwu Oknowo gave reasons in the internet why Ibos should not look back on the “conquest” of Lagos. The idea was to strengthen Ibo imperialist’s intent on Lagos. Iwuchkwu Oknowo said:

    “Lagos is an Island, adjacent  to Yoruba territory, Kaliningrad is an enclave adjacent to Germany. If Russia can own Kaliningrad far away from its boader, and US can own Pearl Harbour in Asia, why would it be impossible for Easterners to own Lagos Island near Western Nigeria? Anyway, the weak will have their say, and the strong will have their way. Like nature, we do not hurry. Like nature, we accomplish our objective, as the wind as the Earth as the water and as fire we keep the pressure, untill our opponents cave. Igbo are as inexorable as death, the Masters of Africa”.

    6. On  March 19, 2023, CHARLES IDEHO, a presenter on JORDAN FM radio station in Lagos, offered another ammunition for campaigners that LAGOS IS NO MAN’S LAND. He said  Chief Lateef Jakande, Governor of Lagos State from 1979 to  1983 made the statement in his inaugural speech, and promised his largely  pro-Ibo callers that he would post the full text on a website.

    As Mr. Richard Olawole, 73, a  retired Nigerian U.S. soldier  posted:

    “We voted in Lagos today not along political lines but along the lines of Heritage. We voted for  our pride. We made a statement that our liberal nature should never be abused. What we won’t attempt in yours, do not force on us. We voted to retain Lagos”.

    APC VICTORIES

    The trumph of APC in Lagos and Abuja should not dampen Ibo Nigerian spirit. Yorubas do not “carry” victory on their heads,  “wear” it on their faces or swirl the  sword any how. They will be the first to scream if anything is going wrong. They are not clanish. They are equitable, accommodating  and trustworthy.   Were they not the leading fighters for Vice-president Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan to become Acting President and, later, encouraged him to be President?  Many IBOS, too, are good and reliable people. The trouble is that a people can be stereotyped by the persons among them who  negatively impact  on other persons.  A respectable, helpful and Christianly  Ibo woman and I had a long talk on governorship election day. She is  married to a Yoruba and asked me a question which touched my heart.

      ” WHY DOES EVERY-ONE HATE US?”.

    In such situations, I am blunt.  How would I, too, feel if everywhere I go I am negatively stereotyped?

       I told her:

    ” Every nationality has its own good, bad and ugly persons. There  are miscreants among Yoruba and Hausa/ Fulani as there are among Ibos. A nationality may run into trouble with others if it  does not check its ugly ones who are disturbing the peace of  other people. The Ibos ought to have checked those among them who are creating  tension in relationship with their hosts in Lagos”.

     I mentioned to her IFY ONYEGBULUE, a radio  presenter in STAR FM station in 2019 when the OKOTA CRISIS broke. Frankly, she told her people  on radio several times that they  were ” tenants” in Lagos and that “tenants” must respect their “Landlords”. My journalism training began  on  March 8, 1971 under Mr GEORGE OKORO, Chief sub Editor of the Daily  Times. He was a rare professional and gem of  a trainer. We came in with Higher School Certificate of Cambridge or London Universities. Many of our Yoruba seniors did not show interest in our on- the- job training. Not GEORGE OKORO. For some of us, our training did not end on the desk at work. He took us to clubs and, because  I lived  near him, I always ended up in his apartment. I owe alot to him.

     Before I went to university, I had the priviledge of coming under another Ibo, Mr ANGUS OKOLI, a thorough gentleman. How can I ever forget Prof. HUMPHREY NWOSU at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka(UNN). He did not care who  you were  or where you came from if you could stand up to him and challenge his opinions. In his exams, I took positions contrary to his, especially in the turbulent course such as GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS OF NIGERIA, which his own Professor, EME AWA, also taught. I wasn’t surprised, therefore, that, as the electoral umpire in the 1993 Presidential  election, he withstood physical assault by soldiers to let us  know  Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola (a.k.a.M.K.O) won the polls.

    There was a gentleman I remember now simply as EARNEST. He was our office assistant at the Lagos Weekend newspaper. REMI GBADEBO was our Secretary. One day, she paid Junior staff the monthly salary  via pay envelopes but forgot  about 20 of them  on her desk in her rush to catch a free car ride home. To her shock on Monday morning, all the envelopes were intact!. Later, he died in a vehicle crash between his village and Lagos. I was at UNN then. Tears ran  down my  cheeks when I learned that a  Yoruba woman in  the office  adopted his children and kept them in school.

     Can I also  forget Uncle Maurice? He was my day security-man when I was Editor of THE GUARDIAN newspaper. He was so honest and trustworthy I gave him keys  to  my house. He took  my children to school and brought them home. Every months, I personally topped his official pay. 

       If  Ibos we interface with are like such men, who would ever feel uncomfortable with an Ibo? Unfortunately, it is the business class Ibo we frequently meet. He sells fake spare parts and   pharmaceuticals,Tramadol, Codeine, import  Cocaine, takes his  landlord or landlady  to court when  his rent is due or topped, brazenly tells you your people are  stupid because Ibos have  bought up your land and they are  the new owners and, during an election such  as this, provokes you, believing you are a spineless simpleton who would flee at  the slightest flex of muscles. He forgets how the Biafran Army was defeated at ORE, how Dr Azikiwe was  shown the way back to the Eastern Region. He is poorly educated. All he does is count and worship money which single public policies may evaporate. He tells you Ibos built Lagos. You wonder what the Aworis did from Badagry to Lagos, what  the Ijebus did  from Ikorodu to Yaba, if he knows the Yorubas built SURULERE to re-settle persons relocated from congested Lagos Island. He  sees only the property acquired with drug money. He does realise Lagos has  built an export  Free Processing Zones (EPZ) on which is sited the biggest petroleum refinery complex in Africa. He does not realise Lagos has built a sea Port near  Epe and is building another in Badagry. He probably does  not appreciate what it means for Lagos State on its own to build the FOURT MAINLAND BRIDGE, one of the longest in Africa, or of IMOTA RICE MILL, the fourth largest world-wide which would create about 250,000 jobs. This man does not realise that when Lagos trains  begin to run at full steam, his motor spare parts business would be gone. What, also, would happen if  Lagos State, builds 5,000 corner street Eko  PHARMACY stores and empowers Yorubas Pharmacy graduates with soft loans to acquire  them and end the era of fake medicines? Can we flash his mind back to the First Republic Chief Obafemi Awolowo  built industrial and residential estates in Ikeja, Yaba, Ilupeju, Oshodi, Isolo, Apapa, Matori. Was it the Ibos who built them and brought manufacturing companies there to create jobs which brought many Ibos to Lagos? What did Dr Azikiwe do in Ibo states outside the UNN?

    FINALLY

    We need to prevent  ethno-political tension in Lagos now and in future. There are about  25 million people  in  Lagos. There are just about seven exist routes out of lagos( Lagos-Ibadan/Lagos- Ota- Abeokuta/Lagos- Epe/Lagos-Ikorodu/the air ports and the seaports.  If trouble explodes, and they are blocked, how are we 25 million inhabitants going to survive food bockade, and how  many of us will  be able to escape through  whichever route we choose? Let us learn from history. This was  a great challenge in the 1966 northern riots and in the Ibo exodus from Lagos during the ABIOLA death crisis and the Jonathan- Buhari succession fears. We pray it never happens. The semblance of it  I experienced as a 10 year-old in Abule-Ijesha is still fresh in my memory. Thanks to Ify Onyebule and to that  chairman of the  Ibo market in Ladipo who promptly denied Ibo claims on the  internet that Yorubas were killing Ibos in the market! They deserve a peace award of Lagos State Government. Finally, Ibos meet regularly nation-wide on village or town basis. That  woman I spoke  with who asked: “WHY DOES EVERY-ONE HATE  US?” asked an appropriate question.  The “ugly” Ibos or “red”  Nigerians clash with  their  hosts in South-Africa, Benin Republic, Ghana, Cote D’Ivoire, China, Lybia, Ukraine,I ndia and even Dubai. Can the good Ibos not check these bad eggs in their basket? Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in Awka recently, said people who say people everywhere are afraid of them should make friends of people who fear them.

  • FORGETFULNESS

    FORGETFULNESS

    For the first few days in the month of Ramadan, every year, there is a tendency for some Muslims to forget that they are fasting and thus break their fasts inadvertently during the day. Naturally, the possibility of eating or drinking accidentally due to sheer forgetfulness in the early days of Ramadan is apt. This often occurs to Muslims who hardly fast outside the month of Ramadan.

    If it happens to you, there should be nothing to worry about. As soon as you remember, just recondition yourself to the regulations of Ramadan fasting and continue your fast. Do not tell anybody. Let it remain a secret between you and your Lord. It does not matter whether you remember while eating and drinking or thereafter. In Islam, actions are judged according to intentions. And who else judges both actions and intentions other than Allah, the All-seer and All- knower. Even in the five obligatory Salats observed daily by all genuine Muslims, provisions are made for rectification of errors committed through forgetfulness. This is done in terms of ‘Sujudus-Sahwi’. Thus, like in Salat, the forgetfulness in Ramadan involves neither drunkenness nor sexual intercourse nor cheating of any kind.

    As a Muslim, you are not supposed to eat any forbidden food or drink any intoxicant in the first place, Ramadan or no Ramadan. To be drunk, therefore, in the month of Ramadan, under the pretext of forgetfulness is a confirmation of hypocrisy or infidelity.

    As for sexual intercourse which should only occur legitimately between a husband and his wife, it is impossible to be done out of forgetfulness. At least if the husband cannot remember Ramadan, the wife should. Sexual intercourse cannot be done unconsciously.

    But if intercourse occurs in your dream and you suddenly wake up to discover that you are already wet, all you need to do is to clean up with a purification bath (Janabah). And, then, you continue your fast. Fasting, especially in Ramadan, is a means of rejuvenating spiritual consciousness and renewal of good intention. Anyone who   breaks his/her fast in error due to forgetfulness should immediately repent and abstain from any situation that can cause its repetition. Allah is forgiving and merciful.

    RAMADAN KARIM!

  • Supplementary polls: Police warn miscreants

    Supplementary polls: Police warn miscreants

    The Police Command in Sokoto state have issued warning to potential miscreants and violators of the law to steer clear from getting involved in actions that are totally repugnant to natural justice, equity, fairness and good  conscience.

    Briefing reporters yesterday in Sokoto ahead of the April 15th, supplementary elections, the Commissioner of Police, Mr Mohammed Usaini Gumel said the command in conjunction with other agencies were closely sustaining vigilance and taking proactive measures against disgruntled elements.

    Gumel also assured the law-abiding people of the state of the police preparedness to provide the best form of security for the forthcoming elections and required relevant stakeholders to cooperate with the security officials with high degree of honesty for the sustenance of the peace.

    Gumel said the command would not spare those taking advantage of the recent elections victories and losses to engage in crimes capable of disrupting the peace being enjoyed in the state.

    The police chief said the command had experienced some disturbing cases of crimes across Tureta, Sokoto North, Gwadabawa and in Sokoto metropolis by desperate persons involved in threats, direct or indirect including causing grievous harm, criminal intimidation, extortion, looting, arsons, mischief or head-bent, warning that they should desist from that.

    He said “criminal conspiracy, attempt to commit homicide and mischief, wanton destruction of property” were among the various offences perpetrated during victory celebrations of the governorship election in the state.

    He recalled that no fewer than 79 arrests were made by security agencies for violating the movement restrictions order and other offences that contravened the Electoral Act such as engaging in vote buying, destruction of ballot boxes, thuggery, threats and inciting public disturbances at polling units, among others.

  • How Nigerian boys are trafficked to Ghana, Liberia others for Internet fraud

    How Nigerian boys are trafficked to Ghana, Liberia others for Internet fraud

    Fourteen-year old Nigerian boys  are now being trafficked to Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone and forced into internet fraud, the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) said yesterday.  

     NAPTIP Director General , Prof. Fatima Waziri-Azi said traffickers lock them in a room, seize their passports and properties , give them a crash course on internet fraud otherwise known as Yahoo and they are given daily targets to meet.

     She said those unable to meet their daily targets are beaten or starved by traffickers who initially lured them with promises of good jobs and a better life in those countries.

      Prof Waziri-Azi said the agency last year rescued 21 boys from Ghana who were forced into fraud and another 19 years old girl of an Abuja private university who was promised a modelling gig but forced into prostitution in Ghana.

     The DG made this known  at the launch of the Anti- Human Trafficking Vanguard at the Army Command School, Lungi Barracks, Asokoro, Abuja.

     She said: “The purpose of the Vanguard is to establish a platform where young people can educate and sensitize themselves and others on issues of human trafficking and Violence against persons.

     “Last year we rescued a 19-year old girl that was in a private university here in Abuja. She met somebody on Instagram who told her that she was beautiful and he had a modelling job for her. She abandoned her studies and her parents were looking for her for three months, we ended up locating her in Ghana, where she was taken for prostitution. After the father reported to us, we collaborated with our counterparts in Ghana to rescue her.

    Read Also: ‘IDPs most vulnerable to human trafficking’

     “That is one of the tricks human traffickers use, they pretend to be the same age as their victims, befriend and recruit them.

    They put up links on social media for free scholarships and jobs, that one is called fishing, when they post and wait for it to be clicked. Now traffickers go on social media to like fine pictures like friends would and when they see that the picture is of one that would generate money for them, they start hunting the victim.

     “Another one we discovered last year is called Qnet, last year we rescued about 21 young boys with 14 years old boys amongst them. They were told they had jobs for them in Ghana, when they arrived, their passports and phones were sized, they were locked in a room and given a crash course on online scam. They were then given targets and those who could not meet the targets where beaten or starved.

        “We rescued 23 victims from Ghana last year. This crime is common In Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone but for Nigeria they traffick our young boys out to do these scams.

     “Another popular form of trafficking is sextortion, this is where you think that you are talking to a normal person on the internet, who would gradually start grooming you, make you think you are in love and ask for inappropriate pictures of yourself especially nudes, they would use the picture to blackmail you for sexual favours or money.

    “The way we used to think of human trafficking has changed and the only way to prevent it is through education because it can happen in plain sight and people might not recognise it. These days, people are trafficked by people they know than strangers.”

  • IPOB: we’re not part of Biafra govt in exile

    IPOB: we’re not part of Biafra govt in exile

    The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has said it has no hand in the formation of purported Biafra government in exile. 

    The pro-separatist group said in a statement by its Media and Publicity Secretary, Emma Powerful that IPOB was not part of the formation of ‘kangaroo’ Biafra government in exile. 

    “We once again reiterate that IPOB is not part of the formation of ‘kangaroo’ Biafra government in exile. Also, there are no factions whatsoever in IPOB, and we do not have any link with autopilot groups. Any group operating in whatever name or disguise outside IPOB under the leadership of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu and the Directorate of State (DOS) is on its own,” he said. 

    He added: “We warn all and sundry to desist from using the name of IPOB, ESN, M-Branch, or Mazi Nnamdi Kanu in their name or in any operation they carry out.”

  • Election tribunal in Akwa Ibom receives 15 petitions

    Election tribunal in Akwa Ibom receives 15 petitions

    The National Assembly and Governorship Election Tribunal sitting in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, has received 15 petitions from some parties.

    The Secretary of the 2023 Election Petition Tribunal in the state, Mr. Ibrahim Usman, disclosed this to reporters in Uyo yesterday.

    He said the petitions were filed by the All Progressives Congress (APC), Young Progressives Party (YPP), New Nigerian People’s Party (NNPP), Labour Party (LP) and Allied People’s Movement (APM).

    Usman added that of the 15 petitions received, 11 emanated from the House of Representatives and four from the Senate.

    He said two motions were filed by YPP for inspection of election materials and the motions had been granted by the tribunal.

    “Similarly, application by the APC in respect of governorship election for inspection of election materials was received and petition granted. We are in the process of effecting service of the petitions and respondents,” he said.

    The secretary said the senatorial petitions received were from Akwa Ibom North East and Akwa Ibom South senatorial districts, while no petition was received from Akwa Ibom North West.

    He said the Electoral Act allowed 21 days for the petitioner to file petition from the date of declaration and 21 days for the respondents to file their response after receiving.

    Our correspondent reports that the tribunal is yet to begin its inaugural siting.