Category: Featured

  • BREAKING: Abducted Jonathan’s cousin regains freedom

    BREAKING: Abducted Jonathan’s cousin regains freedom

    Jephthah Robert, cousin of former President Goodluck Jonathan, who was kidnapped on January 24, has been released by his captors.

    Robert, who spent 14 days in the kidnapper’s custody, was abducted in front of his residence at Biogbolo-Epie suburb of Yenagoa, the state capital.

    Read Also: Three kidnapped Warri lawyers, driver regain freedom

    Austin Ekeinde, a media aide to the victim’s younger brother, Azibaola Robert, confirmed his release in a statement on Monday.

    He said: “We give all the thanks to God for the safe return of our brother Jephthah Robert Yekorogha, from the kidnappers’ den.”

    Details shortly…

  • JAMB introduces self-registration for UTME/ DE applicants in Lagos, Abuja

    JAMB introduces self-registration for UTME/ DE applicants in Lagos, Abuja

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has introduced self-registration outlets in Abuja and Lagos for the 2022 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) and Direct Entry (DE) examinations.

    The Board said the system would, in the long run, reduce the crowds at Computer-Based Test centres (CBT) in these cities.

    The conception of this noble idea is to, besides advancing the digital competence of candidates who feel they can do the registration on their own, expand the registration access points in line with COVID-19 protocols,” JAMB said.

    In its weekly bulletin released to reporters in Abuja on Monday by its Head of Media and Information, Dr Fabian Benjamin, JAMB said it was leveraging on the digital competence of its increasing number of computer-savvy candidates to ease registration processes.

    The Board said the service provider, Bankfort, expressed optimism about the immense potential of the seamless registration mode, stating that it is the norm rather than the exception in more-developed climes.

    Meanwhile, the Board has adopted 66019 as an additional and optional USSD code besides the 55019 code that had been in operation since 2018 for UTME/DE registration and other essential services offered by the agency.

    JAMB explained that this was done to facilitate a hitch-free 2022 UTME/DE registration exercise by ensuring that there is no difficulty whatsoever in the creation of profiles by candidates, especially in a situation whereby many of them would be sending their requests via just one USSD code as hitherto the case.

    Read Also: JAMB to introduce self-service registration outlets in Abuja, Lagos

    “In essence, the 55019 and 66019 are to be used to create their profiles for registration by candidates sitting the 2022/23 UTME/DE.

    “As usual, candidates are required to send their National Identification Number(NIN) via either of these USSD codes for their details to be pulled from the NIMC database before they proceed to any accredited centre for biometric capturing.

    “It would be recalled that the Board had earlier given indications that, in its efforts to eliminating all bottlenecks associated with the creation of profiles, it was perfecting arrangements aimed at adopting an additional USSD code (66019) besides the 55019, which the Board had used exclusively since 2018 for its UTME/DE registration and examination exercise,” the bulletin said.

    In a related development, the Board said it has introduced the use of WhatsApp as additional support and complaint platform.

    “With this extra platform, candidates and other stakeholders would have the benefit of instant messaging and solutions to whatever query they might have regarding any of the operational processes of the Board,” the bulletin said.

    “To this end, ASD Technologies, the developer of the WhatsApp solution, announced that the platform would provide help with such things as “step-by-step” registration procedure, for instance, as well as providing a feedback mechanism for effective service delivery.

    “The platform is not meant to replace but complement the existing ticketing system, thereby expanding access to critical services, among others,” the Board said.

  • Gunmen attack Kogi Area Police Command

    Gunmen attack Kogi Area Police Command

    Gunmen on Sunday evening launched an attack on the Okene Area Command Headquarters of the Nigeria Police Force in Kogi State.

    Kogi Command spokesman William Aya, confirmed the attack.

    Aya, a superintendent of Police (SP), in a statement on Monday, explained that the gunmen launched the attack around 10pm.

    He said the yet-to-be identified gunmen attacked the police formation with sporadic gunshots and explosives chanting ‘Allahu Akhbar’.

    He however added that personnel on duty repelled the attackers and gunned one of them dead.

    Read Also: Gunmen kill 11, injure many in Southern Kaduna

    “This forced the attackers to flee before the arrival of back up teams from the neighbouring divisions,” the statement added.

    Aya said Kogi Commissioner of Police (CP) has ordered the immediate deployment of re-enforcement consisting of Counter Terrorism Units, Police Mobile Force, Intelligence team as well as Quick Response Unit along with the mlitary and other security forces, to Okene and environs.

    Aya said that the team has been mandated to track and arrest the gunmen so that they can be made to face justice.

    The statement quoted the CP as assuring law abiding citizen of the state of their safety, saying there is no cause for alarm.

    The CP further said that the command in synergy with other security agencies in the state will ensure a safe and secure environment for all to go about their lawful activities.

  • ASUU begins mobilisation for another strike in varsities

    ASUU begins mobilisation for another strike in varsities

    University lecturers are heading for another strike over the re-negotiated 2009 agreement with the Federal Government, it was learnt at the weekend.

    There are indications that the National Executive Council of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) will meet on February 14 to review the implementation of some components of the agreement and decide on industrial action.

    It was learnt that the re-negotiated agreement has five components, including funding for revitalisation, autonomy for universities and welfare.

    The committee, which re-negotiated the agreement, was headed by Prof Munzali Jibril, Pro-Chancellor, Federal University Lafia, Nasarawa State and Chairman, Committee of Pro-Chancellors of Federal Universities.

    An ASUU leader, who preferred not to be named, said there had been a lack of progress in the agreement since it was re-negotiated last May.

    The source said the government team on the committee proposed certain figures which were adopted with an assurance that the government team had the authorisation to push through the agreement.

    He said: “The government side proposed something (new salary) and ASUU asked the government team if they had the mandate of their principal regarding what they proposed and of course, they answered yes, but said they will have to go back to consult.

    “After the re-negotiation had been concluded, they said they had to go back and discuss with their principal. That is where we are with negotiations on all five chapters.

    “The five chapters of the 2009 FG-ASUU are funding for revitalisation, the autonomy of universities, welfare of lecturers and four and five are related. These are things we bring up each time we go on strike.

    “Let them go and sign the re-negotiated 2009 agreement. It has always been like this with the government.

    “The antics of government regarding ASUU is always like this: We go on strike for government to come to the table for us to negotiate. After concluding the negotiation, we always have to go on strike for them to sign it and again go on strike for them to implement.

    “It has always been like this right from 1992. It is not new; it is the character of the government.

    “What is playing out now is what has been since 1992. Three stages: you will go on strike for them to negotiate, you will go on strike to get them to sign the agreement that they willingly negotiated then the final stage you go on strike to get them to implement.

    “This is not going to be the last strike. People should know that because after this, there will be another strike probably for them to implement that agreement.”

    ASUU President Prof Emmanuel Osodeke dismissed as mere promises the comments by President Muhammadu Buhari that the Federal Government was committed to meeting ASUU’s demands to prevent another round of strikes.

    Osodeke said the appeal for understanding by the president was a mere promise they have heard before.

    The ASUU President, in an interview with The Nation in Abuja, said most of the demands of the union have not been met by the Federal Government.

    He listed some of the demands to include: non-signing of the re-negotiated FGN-ASUU 2009 agreement, non-payment of the balance of Earned Academic Allowances, non-deployment of UTAS, non-payment of lecturers on sabbatical, and proliferation of universities by state governments.

    Buhari had, during a meeting with members of the Nigeria Inter-Religious Council, led by Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammad Abubakar III and the President of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Rev. Samson Ayokunle, said the Federal Government was committed to honouring promises made to ASUU to prevent strikes in universities.

    The President also appealed to the union to note the fiscal pressures that the government was currently facing.

    The ASUU President accused government officials of wasting resources on foreign trips.

    He said ASUU leadership would meet soon to take a decision.

    Osodeke said: “We have heard him so many times and nothing happened. Except when we start seeing something concrete being done the plea will just be like any other plea we have heard; mere promises.”

    He added: “If they are correct, no problem. But, are they correct? Is he correct that there is no fund? Are we not seeing things that are covering billions of naira? Bailing out banks, and others and having multiple travels by governors, principal officers of government – all consuming dollars?

    “If education is really the priority of this government, would we be saying there is no fund? How many countries in the world allocate five or six per cent of their budget to education?

    “Nigeria is the country that allocates the lowest budget to education. That is the problem because they don’t believe in it because their children are not in this country.

    ”If their children were here and probably in public universities today, they would not be treating education like this. In some countries, they give 25 to 30 per cent of their budget allocation to education, but Nigeria is six per cent.

    The budget is even worse than it was. This is the problem we are having. We speak and we don’t implement.

    “The allocation in the 2022 budget is less than what was given in the 2021 budget. This is why people don’t really believe in what the government is saying.

    “We are meeting soon and the NEC of the union will take a decision.”

    The ASUU president also chided the Federal Government for failing to implement the re-negotiated FG-ASUU 2009 agreement.

    Osodeke said 10 months after negotiations on the agreement were concluded, the Federal Government has failed to take action.

    ”The most important one is the issue of the 2009 FGN-ASUU Agreement. We agreed that we will negotiate the agreement up till now, nothing has happened.

    “Last year, ASUU and the government reached an agreement and a draft for signing and they reverted back to their principal. Up till now they have not come back to us on whether they agree or not, since May last year – that is almost 10 months now; nothing has been done,” Prof Osodeke said.

    He also accused the government of failing to deploy the University Transparency Accountability Solutions (UTAS) – the payment platform developed by the university lecturers despite passing the integrity test conducted by the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) last year.

    Prof Osodeke said: “We have the issue of UTAS. Thank God, everybody has confirmed that IPPIS is a fraud.  The Auditor – General of the Federation has confirmed that it is a fraud; just to siphon money and they are telling lies. And we said we will give them an alternative which the government agreed they will implement if we produce it.

    “We produced and went for a test. Even with their fraudulent test, it passed more than 80 per cent of the test. Yet, they are not implementing.

    “The major fraud that we have found out is that in order to ensure that the thing doesn’t go in, they started inputting things that are not our own; even plagiarising people’s work. People who have done some work and they were negative, they went and plagiarise it, picked it word for word and put it and reported it negative and we have all the evidence.

    “Meanwhile the IPPIS that has been ruining the country was never tested by NITDA, they just brought it and implemented it and we are seeing the adverse effects today as reported by the Auditor General of the Federation.”

    He also said the Federal Government was yet to release the arrears of Earned Academic Allowances since May last year.

    “We also have the issue of Earned Academic Allowances. We have arrears. The government said they have mainstreamed it. So, we are looking at this year’s budget. But, there are still a lot of arrears remaining.

    “And the government promised they were going to give a tranche in May last year. Until now that tranche was not released.

    “The visitation panel report that was set up early last year – February, till now the white paper has not been released. Which means something is going,” he said.

    The ASUU leader added: “None of the issues have been fully resolved. Some of our members are still owed between two, three and give months. Those who are on sabbatical are not even earning their money.

    ”Our colleagues who were promoted two or three years ago have not gotten the arrears of their promotion. You know in academics when you are promoted, those in the professorial cadre will have to go for external assessment and by the time they come, the actual date of implementation would have been exceeded and the arrears are paid. Till now, nothing is being paid.

    “Some people who have been promoted can’t even get their main salary; the Accountant – General’s office pay them whatever they like through their so-called IPPIS.

    “All the issues are still on board. State governors are still proliferating universities when they cannot fund the ones they have. Abia State recently announced a new university. Meanwhile, the one they have they cannot fund it. These are the issues, none have been implemented.”

  • JUST IN: Immigration releases Odili’s passport

    JUST IN: Immigration releases Odili’s passport

    The Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) has released the international passport it seized from a former Rivers Governor Peter Odili.

    NIS’ lawyer, Jimoh Adamu, told a Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday that Odili’s daughter, Njideka Nwosu-Iheme, a serving judge of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), collected the passport for her father on December 20, 2020 at the Immigration headquarters in Abuja.

    Read Also: Odili: Court issues final warning to immigration lawyer over seized passport

    Adamu, in a motion he filed on Monday, exhibited a letter of request by Odili and other evidence showing that he has received the passport.

    Justice Inyang Ekwo, before whom the case came up on Monday, noted that the fresh motion was not yet before the court.

    Upon an oral application by Adamu, Justice Ekwo stood down proceedings briefly to enable Adamu get the motion from the court’s registry.

    Details shortly…

  • Reward for loyalty  elixir for trust, fidelity

    Reward for loyalty elixir for trust, fidelity

    Eshanekpe Israel aka Akpodoro was the leader of ex-agitators in Niger Delta. Currently, he chairs the National Task Force of Association of Nigeria Refineries Petroleum Marketers (ANRPM). He speaks on challenges of his association, and how President Muhammadu Buhari neglected his National Coalition of Niger Delta Ex-agitators. He urged the Buhari administration to reward loyalty. CHINAKA OKORO reports.

    Before now, he was a known leader of ex-agitators in Niger Delta. His agitation was for the benefit of the region’s inhabitants and ecosystem. He is Eshanekpe Israel (aka Akpodoro), who has joined forces in the search for peace and security of the country’s critical infrastructure, especially in the oil sector.

    His embrace of peace as well as negotiation to solve problems and settle feud ushered in new vistas that engendered economic prosperity instead of the displeasing situation that make attainment of peace and tranquillity taxing.

    In the search for peace and economic stability, he was appointed chairman of the National Task Force of the Association of Nigeria Refineries Petroleum Marketers (ANRPM) owing to his impressive record at the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), where he was coordinator of Sector  ‘C’, covering Delta State.

    According to some watchers of developments in the petroleum sector, since Akpodoro assumed duty as chief gatekeeper against oil thieves, he has done well in curtailing the rate at which oil vandals operate.

    However, it seems there is no job satisfaction in his effort to help the country achieve economic greatness.

    Narrating his experiences, he said the job has been a taxing one.

    “It’s been a Herculean task to monitor petroleum marketers in the distribution chain of the downstream sector of the petroleum industry due to dearth of logistics and poor support from security agencies,” he said.

    He alleged that most security operatives have compromised the war against oil thieves. Besides the odds, he expressed his happiness that he and his team have been recording success.

    “We have been recording success in our strides to rid the sector of criminal activities,” he said.

    If his allegation that his team is not getting the support from security agencies could be true, what could have informed the situation?

    Akpodoro said: “Ours is to gather intelligence, locate areas of criminalities in suspicious areas and feed that into the security networks but unfortunately before we arrive the following day, information must have got to the perpetrators making it difficult to arrest and bring them to justice. This is because people within the ranks of the security apparatus must have leaked the information to the oil thieves for pecuniary benefits.”

    One thing is to get the information, another is to ensure that the information is credible and from the right source.

    Authenticating the credibility of his information and the sources, he said their mode of operation is intelligence-driven and that they also send their men out to suspected communities and forests.

    His words: “We have executives in the states who engage locals to locate those vulnerable areas where petroleum products are being stolen. We identify black spots and call on the conventional security operatives. We have a presence in Imo, Delta, Bayelsa, Edo, Cross River, and Ondo states, including Abuja. We are still building structures across the country.

    “We process our information from the field and forward same to those security agencies in which we have confidence, excluding men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).”

    On what informed the exclusion of NSCDC personnel among those to receive information on locations of oil thieves, Akpodoro alleged: “They are complicit in the crime of oil theft, adulteration, vandalism and illegal bunkering of petroleum products. They are deeply involved across the board. We know them. There was a case of the arrest of a truck laden with stolen products by my men in Benin-City, Edo State, where NSCDC men fought my men … questioning the motive behind arresting and handing the suspects and the truck to the police…’’

    He spoke on challenges he and his men encounter in the discharge of their duty.

    Read Also: Jonathan, Jackrich, others preach peaceful agitation in Niger Delta

    “We lack logistics. Trust and confidence is hard to find among security agents. This makes the job difficult. This is so because the man you feed intelligence may go behind to sell out; making you a victim of the attack, and that amounts to huge risks. You arrest suspects; those who are supposed to prosecute them will turn around to negotiate gratification to set them free. These are some of the challenges we experience.”

    These challenges could hamper the smooth running of the operation to secure the country’s critical assets.

    In bid to solve some of these glitches, Akpodoro  said: “We have written to Nigeria National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited, Nigerian Petroleum Development Company Limited (NPDC) and some other relevant agencies. We are still engaging them until they accede to our requests.

    “On security, we are in talks with the Nigerian Army, which is relatively trustworthy with information, to collaborate with us to achieve more results.”

    As a staunch Buhari ally, one wonders if he has not granted him an audience on activities of the security agencies as it concerns their complicity in oil theft. He may have not as he said “we are still engaging the government through its agencies and we hope that they will respond. The process of seeing President Buhari is worse than what the security operatives do to compromise information.

    “The demand to see the President is too high so, what we do is to write to him through the Office of the Chief of Staff to the President.

    “It’s ironical that the man I met in 2013 in Kaduna without anyone asking me for bribe money to see him; who freely attended to me at Defence House, Abuja, after the 2015 elections and told me to calm Niger Delta; it has become so difficult to see the same man now. To see him, you must be ready to satisfy some interests.

    ‘’All the work my coalition did for him in Niger Delta to enable him to emerge the President in 2015 is unrewarded because the President is a ‘saint’, who doesn’t reward loyalty but would rather empower opposition elements to fight his foot soldiers. We have called on him several times to reward us …”

    Has Akpodoro any regret for his support for the Buhari administration?

    ‘’I regretted working for Buhari as a person. However, I do not regret my solidarity for the Nigerian state. When I saw armouries capable of sinking Nigeria securely stocked in Niger Delta waters then, I wrote several times to security chiefs to alert them of the imminent danger.

    “I began to raise the alarm shortly after the 2015 election. No one responded until the Avengers struck in mid-2016. It was then they saw reasons to call me. That’s to tell you the level I went to save this country under President Buhari. Yet, there’s nothing to show for it.”

    What does Akpodoro want from President Buhari and his administration?

    He said President Buhari should believe in the reward system. “He should reward my coalition with jobs, patronage, empowerment…

    ‘’We deserve the best of Buhari’s government because we helped to enthrone him. We deserve to be patronised by the President but he has forsaken us. He can instruct the intervention agencies in the region to work with us for developmental reasons and not to work against the progressives on whose crest their appointing authority came to power.”

    On the 2023 general election, he said his coalition is still watching political developments as the President plays his game with stakeholders, staunch allies, and dependable friends.

    “We are watching to see the sainthood in President Buhari as it concerns rewarding well for good.”

    Assessing All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in terms of which to support, Akpodoro said: “At the centre, I am working for APC but in my Delta State, I am PDP. APC has no candidate in Delta State, who can win the election.”

     

  • No territory under terror group, says Fed Govt

    No territory under terror group, says Fed Govt

    The Federal Government is not ‘sleepwalking into disaster’, the Presidency said yesterday.

    In a reaction to an article by David Pilling in the Financial Times.

    Presidential spokesperson Garba Shehu in a statement condemned the writer for describing the Nigerian government as “a government sleepwalking into disaster”.

    The report claimed that President “Buhari has overseen two terms of economic slump, rising debt and a calamitous increase in kidnapping and banditry.

    “The one thing you might have thought a former general could control. As said of India, Nigeria grows at night, while the government sleeps which is hardly surprising that some libertarian tech entrepreneurs want the government to withdraw and leave the private sector in charge.”

    Shehu criticised the publication for leaving out the security gains by the government, adding that the Boko Haram terrorists have no territory at the moment under the Buhari-led government.

    The statement reads: “We wish to correct the wrong perceptions contained in the article ‘What is Nigeria’s Government For,’ by David Pilling, Financial Times (UK), January 31, 2022.

    “The caricature of a government sleepwalking into disaster was predictable from a correspondent, who jets briefly in and out of Nigeria on the same British Airways flight he so criticises.

    “He highlights rising banditry in Nigeria as proof of such slumber.

    “What he leaves out are the security gains made over two Presidential terms. The terror organisation Boko Haram used to administer an area the size of Belgium at the inauguration; now, they control no territory.

    “The first comprehensive plan to deal with decades-old clashes between nomadic herders and sedentary farmers – experienced across the width of the Sahel – has been introduced: pilot ranches are reducing the competition for water and land that drove past tensions.

    “Banditry grew out of such clashes. Criminal gangs took advantage of the instability, flush with guns that flooded the region following the Western-triggered implosion of Libya.

    “The situation is grave. Yet as with other challenges, it’s one that the government would face down.”

  • MTN’s new shareholders get N5.7b dividends

    MTN’s new shareholders get N5.7b dividends

    Those who subscribed to the recently-concluded public offer by MTN Nigeria Communications (MTN Nigeria) are smile home with about N5.67 billion as cash dividends.

    It is the first return on their investments.

    The regulatory filing and reports analysed yesterday by The Nation showed that with the cash payout, total return on investment (ROI) for the new shareholders who bought into the company’s offer in December 2021 has risen to 23.6 per cent.

    At the offer price of N169 per share, the cash dividend at N8.57 per share, represents a dividend yield of 5.07 per cent.

    The telecommunication service providers’ current share price at the stock market indicates capital gain of 18.52 per cent, bringing the overall return on investment (ROI) to 23.6 per cent.

    The shareholders, who bought into the company’s offer barely two months ago, have gained N39.87 on every N169 the invested.

    The MTN ROI doubles average return on high-yield government securities and provides more than seven percentage hedge against recent average inflation rates.

    The company’s forecast and dividend policy indicates that returns may double before this year (2022).

    The board of MTN Nigeria projects a minimum of 20 per cent growth in the top-line in 2022. The firm telecommunication company grew net profit by about 46 per cent in 2021, after top-line rose by 23 per cent. It subsequently increased dividend payout for 2021 by 39.6 per cent.

    The company allotted a total of 661.25 million shares to new shareholders under its December 2021 public offer. The offer, with initial size of N97.18 billion, recorded a subscription level of N135.53 billion, representing an oversubscription of 39.5 per cent.

    It offered 575 million ordinary shares of 50 kobo each to the general retail investing public at a price of N169 per share.

    Application list for the offer opened on December 1, last year and the curtain dropped on it closed by 5 pm as scheduled on the December 14.

  • Dele Momodu declares presidential ambition in Edo hometown

    Dele Momodu declares presidential ambition in Edo hometown

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dele Momodu, yesterday declared his presidential ambition at his Ihevbe hometown in Owan East Local Government Area of Edo State.

    Momodu said he remained the most qualified among the politicians currently aspiring to succeed President Muhammadu Buhari in 2023.

    The Ovation Magazine publisher was received by hundreds of Ihevbe residents.

    He said his presidential ambition was derived from the fact that he had never been a governor, senator, minister or President but had sat on the same table with eminent personalities across the globe.

    “All I want to be is President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Today (yesterday) is a day to say it finally before my people. Anybody who thinks that he is more qualified than me should come out and say so,” Momodu said.

    He said his homecoming took place 49 years after he lost his father, promising that his entry into politics was mainly to serve the people and change the narrative as far as deliverables were concerned.

    A former representative of Edo North Senatorial District, Yisa Braimah, described Momodu as the best choice to succeed President Buhari.

    The traditional head of Ugba village in Ihievbe community, Pa. Rufus Aigbevbole, also described the presidential aspirant as a son in whom the people were well pleased.

  • AFCON 2021: Mo Salah weeps as Egypt lose to Senegal

    AFCON 2021: Mo Salah weeps as Egypt lose to Senegal

    Egyptian football star Mo Salah broke down in tears on Sunday night when his team lost the AFCON 2021 to Senegal 4-2 on penalties.

    Salah was inconsolable after his Liverpool club mate Sadio Mane converted the last penalty kick that won the title for Senegal.

    Read Also: Eredivisie: Eagles goalie Okoye concedes four goals on Sparta Rotterdam return

    He wept uncontrollably, ignoring consolations for his team mate and Mane, who offered his commiserations.