Category: Featured

  • One feared killed as youths raze houses, vehicles in Ebonyi

    One feared killed as youths raze houses, vehicles in Ebonyi

    At least one person was reportedly killed in Akaeze, Ivo local government area of Ebonyi on Sunday following a protest in the area by the youths.

    The youths were protesting the alleged torture and killing of one Nnaogo Anyim by operatives of Ebubeagu security outfit in the local government area.

    A video of the torture and death of Anyim had gone viral on social media, which enraged the youths who took to the streets on Sunday to protest the killing.

    Bearing placards, the youths were said to be on their way to the House of the Council Chairman, Onyebuchi Agbadu when they were attacked.

    Details of the incident were still sketchy but a source in the community said the youths were allegedly attacked by youths loyal to a politician in front of the Chairman’s House.

    During the attack, one of the protesters whose name could not be immediately ascertained, was reportedly shot and later died in a hospital.

    A video of the victim was also uploaded on the social media on Sunday.

    This enraged the youths who went on rampage in the community, burning houses, cars and other properties.

    It was gathered the Chairman’s residence was among houses burnt.

    A provision store in n the area was also allegedly burnt.

    Vehicles, including cars and a bus were also set ablaze.

    Police spokesperson, Loveth Odah said she was not aware of the incident.

    She promised to get back to The Nation after talking with the DPO of the area.

    She was yet to do at the time of this report.

    The Chairman of the Council did not respond to calls and numerous messages to his phone line.

  • BREAKING: Omeruo, Awoniyi back in first XI vs Tunisia

    BREAKING: Omeruo, Awoniyi back in first XI vs Tunisia

    Super Eagles coach Austin Eguaevon has restored defender Kenneth Omeruo and striker Taiwo Awoniyi to the starting lineup of the Round of 16 tie with Tunisia at the ongoing AFCON 2021 in Garoua, Cameroon.

    Also back are midfielder Ayo Aribo and Samuel Chukwueze, who were dropped for the last group game against Guinea-Bissau.

    Read Also: VIDEO: Garoua residents mobilising support for Super Eagles against Tunisia

    See the starting lineup below:

    XI: Omeruo, W. Troost-Ekong, Aina, M. Simon, Ndidi, Iheanacho, T. Awoniyi, J. Ayodele-Aribo, S. Chukwueze, Z. Sanusi, M. Okoye

  • Corpses burnt beyond recognition as fire guts mortuary, market in Anambra

    Corpses burnt beyond recognition as fire guts mortuary, market in Anambra

    A section of the mortuary at the General Hospital, Onitsha, Anambra State was at the weekend gutted by fire.

    A food market near the Federal Polytechnic, Oko in Orumba North Local Government Area of the state was also razed by fire.

    The Nation gathered that all corpses at the morgue were burnt beyond recognition while items worth millions were destroyed in the market.

    An eyewitness said the police, who arrived the scene shortly after the incident, quickly barricaded the area to prevent people from looting the shops.

    Confirming the hospital incident, Director, State Fire Service, Engr. Martin Agbili, said the fire which occurred around 12.34pm was caused by bush burning.

    “Yesterday, 22-01-2022 by 1243hours, fire gutted the Onitsha General Hospital Mortuary as a result of bush burning from a nearby hospital’s quarter. All the deposited corpses were burnt beyond recognition,” he said.

    Police spokesman, Ikenga Tochukwu, who confirmed the market fire incident, said the Commissioner of Police, Echeng Echeng had ordered for comprehensive investigation into the incident.

    He said: “The Commissioner of Police, Echeng Echeng is worried by recent fire incidents in market at Oko and food vendor/furniture workshop near state secretariat junction by Ifite road which resulted to loss of valuable properties.

    “Preliminary Information reveals that the fire took place in the early hours of the morning period and no life was lost.

    READ ALSO: 2023: Obi missing as Atiku’s campaign team storms Anambra

    “The Police Operatives quickly responded, cordoned off the area to avert hoodlums from taking advantage of the situation to loot and contacted the Fire service department.

    “The fire was successfully put off and the cause of the fire is yet to be ascertained.

    “The CP advised members of the public to always take precautionary measures to avert such ugly incidents and avoid storing highly combustible materials in their homes, offices or business premises as these are capable of causing a raging inferno.

    “He admonished citizens of negligent acts such as unbriddled dropping of cigarette butts, uncontrolled bush burning, use of fire crackers and other explosive, careless handling of receptacles for trash, poor handling of electrical appliances and other human actions or inactions capable of causing fire outbreak.

    “The CP enjoined parents and guardians to keep tabs on their children and keep inflammable substances away from the reach of children.

    “Also in the event of an unavoidable fire outbreak, members of the public are advised to use fire extinguishers, and promptly call Fire Service Station/office, the police and other disaster management outlets nearest to them for necessary assistance.”

  • Buhari charges Supers Eagles to lift AfCON Cup

    Buhari charges Supers Eagles to lift AfCON Cup

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Sunday morning charged the Super Eagles ahead of their second round match against Tunisia on Sunday night in the ongoing Africa Cup of Nations (AfCON) tournament.

    Speaking via video conference from the Presidential Villa, Abuja, the President spoke with Coach Augustine Eguavoen, Captain Ahmed Musa , Amaju Pinnick, President of Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) and Ambassador to Cameroon, Gen Abayomi Olonisakin (Rtd).

    Mentioning two of the players, Kelechi Iheanacho and Moses Simon, by name, Buhari urged the Super Eagles to continue making Nigerians happy not only by winning the second round match but to eventually lift the trophy.

    According to a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr Femi Adesina, the President said: “You’ve been doing Nigeria proud. You’ve been winning.

    “Please keep on winning. The Federal Government is supporting you, and I say thank you to all the technical crew and the players. Please keep doing the country proud.”

    The President applauded the good work by Minister of Sports and Youth Development, Sunday Dare, saying the country appreciates it.

    Read Also: VIDEO: Garoua residents mobilising support for Super Eagles against Tunisia

    Responding, Coach Eguavoen said: “We are so excited that His Excellency, President Buhari, has come to speak with us this morning. On behalf of the players and the technical crew, I want to say thank you very much sir.

    “The group stage has passed, and your speaking to us is a morale booster. Thank you for your support, Mr President, we also thank the Hon. Minister, and the NFF President. We are so privileged, and want to promise that you should just relax, we’ll come out victorious. We won’t let the nation down.”

    Ambassador Olonisakin said the over 4 million Nigerians living in Cameroon have been giving robust support to the Super Eagles since they arrived Garoua, Cameroon on January 5 “and they will continue to do so.”

    Ahmed Musa, on behalf of the players, appreciated Mr President, noting that it is not easy to speak with the leader of a country, and they count themselves privileged.

    “We will make Nigeria proud, now that we have the blessings of the father of the nation,” Musa said.

    NFF President, Amaju Pinnick described the video conference as “a priceless privilege,” and thanked President Buhari and the nation at large for their prayers and support.

    He said under the current dispensation, Nigeria has won the Under 17 football tournament twice, “and we want to win the Africa Cup of Nations too.”

  • 2023 Presidency: PDP governors close ranks, move to corner ticket

    2023 Presidency: PDP governors close ranks, move to corner ticket

    By ‘Dare Odufowokan, Assistant Editor/Ernest Nwokolo, Abeokuta

    • Plot indirect primaries to pick party’s flagbearer 

    • Obasanjo to NWC members: I’ll never return to your party

    The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in next year’s election may emerge from the ranks of the party’s 13 state governors as they fine tune their strategy for the polls.

    The governors, during preliminary discussions on the matter, have agreed in principle to ensure that one of them flies the party’s flag during the election.

    Newly elected national chairman of the PDP, Prof. Iyorchia Ayu, yesterday led other chieftains of the party to Abeokuta to confer with former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    Details of their closed door meeting were not immediately known, but Obasanjo told the delegation after their talks that he was not interested in returning to the party come what may.

    Ayu had told him not to be “tired of us as we come knocking asking for advice. “

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that the governors are determined to consolidate on their success at the recent national convention of the party where their favoured candidates emerged as members of the PDP National Executive Committee (NEC).

    To achieve their objective of producing the presidential candidate, the governors, party sources said, have also resolved to encourage the party leadership to adopt the indirect mode of primary election to nominate the presidential candidate later in the year.

    This, it was learnt, is part of a grand plan to prevent other presidential aspirants, especially former Vice President Abubakar Atiku, from getting the presidential ticket.

    A PDP senator said the governors are banking on their current hold on the leadership of the party to achieve their aim.

    The source said: “At the just-concluded national elective convention of the PDP in Abuja, majority of the governors elected on the platform of our party, working together, showed their might as they literally hand-picked members of the next National Working Committee (NWC) and other national officers of the party.

    “Though a couple of governors appeared left out of the arrangement back then, it appears they have now been appeased as the PDP Governors’ Forum has taken firm charge of the party, and is in a vintage position to decide who will fly the party’s presidential ticket in 2023.

    “Attempts by other stakeholders in the party including former Vice-President Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, ex-Senate President Bukola Saraki and former Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido, to wrest control of the party from  the governors were unsuccessful as seen in their attempt to install Col. Olagunsoye Oyinlola (rtd) as Deputy National Chairman of the party.

    “The governors muscled Taofeek Arapaja into the position with their collective influence and delegates. This is a foretaste of what awaits us all when the contest for the presidential ticket of the PDP finally takes off.”

    A member of the party’s Board of Trustees (BoT) corroborated the view, saying the governors made it clear during the crisis ridden days of the party’s former NEC that they were left with no choice than to take over the leadership of the PDP.

    “They are not pretending about what they intend to do,” our source who pleaded anonymity said.

    “During the discussions to decide who would lead the party after Secondus, several interests and caucuses attempted to take charge.

    “The governors, presidential aspirants, party elders and the National Assembly caucuses; they all struggled for control. But the governors had their way eventually largely because of their number and privileged positions.

    “And from day one, nobody was left in doubt about their plans.

    “Recently, at a meeting with some BoT members in Abuja, a couple of governors revealed that what is best for PDP in 2023 is for the party to repeat its 2007 model when two governors emerged as presidential candidate and running mate.

    “Their argument is that the party needs funds and widespread mobilization for its campaign, and it is only a group like the Governors’ Forum that can marshal such funding and mobilization in the current circumstance.”

    The Nation further gathered that the governors are convinced that only a concerted effort on the part of the group can stop the plan by Atiku to pick the PDP ticket again.

    Sources said Governor Duoye Diri of Bayelsa and Ahmadu Fintiri of Adamawa, who were initially not part of the plot executed by their colleagues to take over the party last December, were reconciled to the larger house shortly before and after the convention respectively as part of efforts to ensure unanimity in the actions of the governors going forward.

    “PDP governors are all on the same page on these issues as we speak. They are working together,” one of the sources said.

    A zonal Vice Chairman of the party in the immediate past NWC told our correspondent in confidence that with the outcome of the last elective convention, the governors have announced themselves as the undisputed owners of the party.

    “Presidential aspirants of the party, including Anyim, Atiku, Lamido, Kwankwaso and Saraki, already know what they are in for. They know the governors would have a big say in the 2023 presidential contest.

    “What it means is that without the support of the governors, you can’t win a big position in the PDP of today. This is the message I think everyone took home from that convention,” he said.

    “It is common knowledge among leaders of the party that the governors are working in that direction since after the convention.

    “And one of the plans is to foist indirect mode of primary election on the party for the nomination of the presidential flag-bearer.

    “The talks are already on and the leadership of the party that will decide is firmly under the control of the governors.

    “But if you ask me, I will say there is nothing wrong in what they are doing because we are all politicians.”

    The Nation gathered that the governors are trying to convert more party members to support their plot.

    At one of their meetings, it was resolved that governors would move against any consideration of direct primary by the PDP.

    To achieve this, members were asked to sensitise NASS members in their various states and get their support for the plot.

    “Already, members of the NWC from all the states controlled by the governors are in their kitty and will readily agree to the dictates of the governors.

    “The challenges they have now are in states not governed by the PDP.

    “To overcome this challenge, they plan to use the zonal leadership of the party to control these states. That explains the fierce political wars in some zones over party positions.

    “The Southwest, North-central and the South-south are good examples.

    “While the governors can confidently boast of pulling their plot through in the 13 PDP-controlled states, they are working hard to penetrate the other states where they don’t have one of their own in charge.

    “These states are the hopes of Atiku and others. But if the governors go into the race united and the other aspirants split the available states, you can guess what will happen.”

    Obasanjo to Ayu, others: I’ll never return to your party

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo yesterday told the Iyorchia Ayu-led PDP delegation that visited him in Abeokuta that he was through with partisan politics and nothing would take him back to the PDP.

    But he said the party would remain part of his history, having been president on its ticket twice.

    He said: “I have been with the party right from inception. Whatever I do in my own life, because I became president on the platform PDP, PDP will continue to be part of the history of my life.

    “But having said that, the day that my ward decided to tear my PDP card was the day I ceased to be a member of PDP, and that day, I vowed that I would not be a member of any political party again. But I will remain a statesman in Nigeria, in West Africa, in Africa and indeed in the world.

    “I retired 14 years ago and I remain retired by the grace of God. But if I retired from partisan politics, if politics is welfare of the people, I must not retire from the welfare and wellbeing of the people whether in my own community, in my own state, in my own country, anywhere in Africa or indeed anywhere in the world.

    “I want to emphasise that I’m no longer in partisan politics and there is nothing that will bring me back to partisan politics. But I will always be interested in what is good for Nigeria, and anybody who wants to have my advice, I will give it in the best interest of Nigeria and in the best interest of Africa.”

    He prayed that God might help Ayu “carry the load placed on his shoulder” by virtue of his position as PDP national chairman.

    PDP will restore Nigeria’s glory —Ayu

    Ayu, in his remarks, said the PDP would restore Nigeria’s glory if it wins next year’s elections.

    He regretted what he called the huge debts accumulated by the Buhari administration, saying the debt profile would subject generations unborn to servitude.

    He hailed Obasanjo for treating all Nigerians as equal during his tenure.

    He said: “Over these years that you were in power, you saw every Nigerian as one family; you didn’t discriminate against the South, the East, the West or the North.

    “Even though in your first tenure the South West didn’t actually support you, you brought them back on board and they supported you in your second tenure and that was an achievement.

    “As the first president in this Republic, your period as president on the platform of PDP is seen as the golden era of the PDP and Nigeria, because not only did you lay the foundation to grow the economy to become the biggest economy in Africa, you were able to remove Nigeria from slavery by negotiating and cancelling so much of our foreign debts that would have made it very difficult to run the country.

    “By the time you left office, Nigeria was totally set free. Direct foreign investment was on the increase on a daily basis and we were respected in international community and everywhere we went.

    Those on the visit included former governor of Anambra State, Dr. Peter Obi; former governor of Ondo State, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko; National Secretary of PDP, Senator Sam Anyanwu; Deputy National Chairman, South, Amb. Taofeek Arapaja and former governor of Cross River State, Liyel Imoke.

    Former governor of Jigawa State, Sule Lamido, former Police Affairs Minister, Adamu Waziri; National Women Leader of PDP, Prof. Stella Effah-Attoe; Deputy National Chairman (North), Amb. Umar Iliya Damagu; former Minister, Special Duties, Tanimu Kabiru Turaki, SAN; and former governor of Cross River State, Donald Duke and  National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba were also in the delegation.

  • JUST IN: Gunmen kill four Plateau mining workers

    JUST IN: Gunmen kill four Plateau mining workers

    Suspected gunmen on Saturday evening killed four workers at a mining site in Dong village Plateau State.

    Reports from the community hinted that the gunmen stormed the mining site and shot the workers dead.

    It was gathered that no fewer than four men were shot dead while a woman who survived the gun attack is receiving treatment in the hospital.

    A community leader Emmanuel Dong confirmed the attack.

    According to him, the attack occured around 6pm.

    Plateau Police spokesman ASP Gabriel Ubah confirmed the attack to The Nation. 

    Ubah, said: “We are aware of the attack and four people were killed.

    “The Command has deployed armed police men to the area and calm has returned.”

  • Lagos hawker gets N100,000 monthly salary, receives scholarship letter from Obi Cubana

    Lagos hawker gets N100,000 monthly salary, receives scholarship letter from Obi Cubana

    Ekuma Jeremiah, the Lagos hawker caught in a viral video giving out money to inmates in a Correctional Service van in Ajah, has received a letter of scholarship from businessman and socialite Obi Cubana.

    Cubana, on his Instagram page, disclosed that one Mr & Mrs Afuah, based in Canada, has placed Jeremiah on a N100,000 monthly salary till he finishes his education.

    The Nation reports Jeremiah was caught on camera in the Ajah area of Lagos last week giving money to inmates being transported to prison in a Nigerian Correctional Service van.

    In the seven-second video, the hawker is seen carrying a crate of bottled water on his head while giving out some of the money he had made.

    His gesture earned widespread commendation from many Nigerians.

    Read Also: Why I dropped out of varsity, by Lagos hawker who gave inmates money

    They applauded him for his love and generosity.

    Obi Cubana on his Instagram page on Saturday, said: “And God has remembered Jerry!! @jerryluck_ God used Rocky @rockyemmyphotography to make that video! And God used @daddyfreeze to connect me and Jerry!

    “He has collected his letter of scholarship from Cubana Group! Thank God for His uncommon Grace! Mr & Mrs Afuah @iam_hymans who are based in Canada, we ran into ourselves last night at Cubana Lagos, and he introduced himself and said he wanted to reach out to Jerry.

    “We all met this afternoon here in lagos. He has promised Jerry (and started paying immediately) a salary of 100k monthly from today till he is done with school!

    “God has really remembered Jerry! Do Good, be nice, be generous! God will definitely remember you someday.”

  • N/DELTA SOOT ARMAGEDDON: Nightmare for citizens, cash  cow for criminals, security agents

    N/DELTA SOOT ARMAGEDDON: Nightmare for citizens, cash cow for criminals, security agents

    • How security operatives aide, abet oil theft

    • Govt’s ineptitude boosts demand for stolen products

    • FG, states watch while citizens die slowly, painfully

    Residents of Rivers and other states in the Niger Delta are living on borrowed time from systematic organ failure, if medical prognoses of the effect of prevailing soot pollution are anything to go by. Hapless in the face of governments’ indifference, corrupt security operatives’ collusion with criminals, residents are wondering, when, not if, they would pay the supreme prices. SOUTH-SOUTH REGIONAL EDITOR, SHOLA O’NEIL, strings together connections between Federal Government’s failures, corrupt security operatives connivance, acquiescing state and local leaders; how it weakens the fight against pollution, effects on the delicate balance of peace, security and pollution across the Niger Delta.

    In the early hours of Tuesday, January 18, 2022 this reporter left Mile 1 area of Port Harcourt, driving through the popular Aba Road where Governor Nyesom Wike is completing the last of six flyover bridges to tackle the infamous traffic gridlock that has made driving in the city a horrendous task. The governor is revitalizing infrastructure, especially roads, and the city is regaining its lost glory.

    Early morning is the best time to explore the rejuvenated city, as the roads are freer (of human and vehicle traffics), with just few pedestrians, mostly street sweepers, early morning joggers and other early risers, on the road. It was a good time to be up, out and about

    It was almost sunup (at 6am) – but a thick cloud of darkness enveloped the landscape. Rather than crisp morning air, the sky was heavy and the air thick and pungent. A first time visitor could easily mistake the ominous cumulous overhead for Harmattan or rain, but it is indeed a specter of death that is steadily spreading across the skylines of the Niger Delta, as oil thieves become more emboldened and prosperous from their nefarious acts.

    One could feel the wind scorching its way through the nostril into the lungs. As the vehicle traipsed through eight-lane highway from Air Force Base towards Artillery, the overcast overhead grew thicker, the air even more so, and its sting harsher. By the time the vehicle ascended the Artillery flyover, there was the eerie feeling of being caught in toxic haze. The distress was not only felt in the nostril and lungs, but there was a stinging sensation in one’s bleary eyes.

    Two hours later, the sun was yet struggling to break through the fog, but it was eclipsed by the sheer weight of the pollution. The dark apocalyptical fog was even larger, covering every space of the sky that the eyes could see atop the Eleme Flyover and the burning sensation on the eyes was unbearable, same with the harshly peppery sting on the skin. It was like showering under toxic rain of fine molecules.

    Hours later, well over midday, the gloom over the city continued to defy and subsume the sun. There was no sight of the blue sky. It was one of the worst days since the deadly pollution over five years ago. Its wing spanned over the city from Obigbo to Choba, through Emuoha to outside the city.

    This is a regular feeling residents have been contending with for several years in the face of soot invasion. Soot (also known as lampblack or carbon black) has become a familiar feature in skylines of towns and villages of the oil producing areas.

    Experts say soot is “a product of incomplete combustion,” which effects could be fatal for victims, as those in Rivers State. Illegal crude refiners have taken over the Niger Delta, unleashing pollution on a scale that is unseen or felt since oil was first discovered in Oloibiri in the 1950s.

    Illegal bunkering and local refining of crude oil started in the 1990s when youths took up arms to protest the region’s relegation in the scheme of the Nigerian state. From selling crude oil to international rogue traders in exchange for arms, they learnt how to produce fuel to power their speed boats. Now it has become a booming business for criminals, including ‘repentant militants’. As their operations spread, the pollution from the unregulated ‘industry’ has increased.

    The footmarks of this killer are felt in every home. Every day, people wake up to black particles in their living homes. Housekeepers spend hours mopping floors to remove the unwanted visitor, but the victory over soot is only momentary, because the purveyors never stop. Air-conditioner filters now need to be changed more frequently because of the constant invasion of the dark particles that penetrate and clog them.

    People, including the aged, children even day-old wake up with pain, their nostrils are darker than the exhaust pipes of smoky cars; phlegm from their throats is blacker than a chimney pipe. Mrs. Happiness Josiah, a resident of Igboetche Road said: “No matter how many times you shower in a day the water will come out black.”

    Chest pain and respiratory diseases are more commonplace than malaria and other ailments. In 2020 a report produced by the Prof. Roseline Konya-led technical team showed that over 22,000 persons were either admitted or required medical treatment for respiratory tract related ailments in five years. But medical experts at the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH) and other health centres said the number has more than tripled just two years after.

    Konya, a former Commissioner of Environment in the state, blames pollution resulting from illegal bunkering activities and gas flaring. The finding only affirmed what residents and other groups already knew. Most of those who spoke on the situation said they were aware that the putrid air poses severe health hazards.

    There are no official records of the number of deaths resulting from the pollution, but it is believed to be in thousands. The situation is worrying enough for wealthy inhabitants and those with options to seek safer places away from the polluted areas. But there is no option for those without means and others whose jobs are in the area.

    “What can we do? Even if I want to relocate, I don’t have the money. If I get a job that will take me out of this pollution, I will not think twice about leaving. This is not the Port Harcourt we lived in in the ’90s and early 2000s,” a resident of Akpajo suburb of Port Harcourt told our reporter

    Chigozie (surname withheld), a driver who lives in Oyigbo, told Sunday Nation that the pollution is worse in communities around Imo River, Eleme, Ogoni, where numbers of illegal, local refineries have grown vastly in the last few years. He is one of those who has root in the area and so cannot leave. He has spent his savings to complete his dream home.

    “From morning to night there is no break. Sometimes we wake up from sleep in the middle of the night choking; it is like breathing in chemical that you don’t see yet it is burning your chest and every other part of your body. You try to cough but it is dry and your nose is blocked. When you finally cough the mucus is black like condemned oil. We cannot open our windows, even if there is no light, because it will be worse,” he lamented.

    Those living around those areas for prolonged periods of time risk early death, numerous reports have revealed. A study by the Centre for Peace and Environmental Justice (CEPEJ), an NGO, said soot particles, which are easily inhaled or absorbed through the skin, and/or assimilated into the human body, can caused up to six kinds of cancers – lung, breast, pancreatic, prostrate and sarcoma.

    Speaking at a ‘Stop the Soot’ conference organized by Rotary Club Eco in Port Harcourt, Dr. Denye Briggs said research undertaken at the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH) found “structural abnormality in the sperm cells of majority of men living in Port Harcourt.” Such defects, he said, could affect their ability to impregnate their spouses.

    Worried residents, NGOs and CLOS have embarked on protests to draw the attention of government and environmental agencies to their plight. Yet, there has been no action, until recently, and the air quality has worsened.

    The menace is not restricted to Port Harcourt or Rivers State, according to CEPEJ Country Chair, Comrade Sheriff Mulade, who hails from Kokodiagbene in Warri Southwest LGA of Delta State. He said the situation is worse in the suburbs, villages and communities with oil locations and pipelines right of way.

    Travellers on the East-West Highway from Elele junction through Ahoada to the Bayelsa State axis as well as on the Port Harcourt – Enugu Expressway would agree. The suffocating air around those paths is a bother for travelers on the busy roads.

    The situation is even worse in riverside communities, where soot has added to the devastation of the ecosystem; the air, water, land, and everything within are blackened, corrupted and polluted by illegal refinery operators who pour waste and oil in drinking water sources and farmland without caution.

     

    FEDERAL GOVERNMENT’S FAILURE, ILLEGAL REFINERS’ GAIN

    Illegal refineries, which produced crudely extracted diesel and kerosene from oil stolen from pipelines and wellheads, have defiantly waxed stronger in a nation where government-owned refineries are wobbling and fumbling. Law enforcement agencies frequently reel out figures of numbers of illegal refineries they destroyed and set afire, still more are springing up in huge numbers and at locations that question the sincerity of those involved in the fight.

    An industry expert, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said  up to 60% (or higher) of diesel sold at petrol stations, including those of major marketers, are sourced from illegal refineries.

    “Some of them simply blend the unskillfully extracted diesel (kpofire in local parlance) with imported ones. The percentage of kpofire and pure diesel depends on the greed, mood and temperament of the sellers. Even some tank-farms are not left out in this brisk business: what separates one from the other is the ratio of pure to kpofire.”

    Our source said because of the huge profit involved, marketers from all over the country are joining in the business “From far and near they are financing locals to refine and sell directly to them,” he revealed.

    Numerous factors are responsible for increased demand for cheaper products in recent years. Among the drivers of this growth are the high cost of importation in the face of falling naira, inflation and failure of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration to tackle endemic corruption in various institutions within the oil and gas sector.

    “Demands have gone up for kpofire because it is cheaper. The crude oil used is stolen, the ‘industry is not regulated and provides a local alternative to the essential fuel as kerosene and diesel that manufacturing companies, all industries, SMEs and even households rely on run plants. Epileptic power supply nationwide also means that businesses and individuals operate their own ‘power plants’ and other means to cut the cost of diesel are welcome,” a small business owner said condition of anonymity.

    “At a pump price of N230 per litre, kpofire diesel is 50% cheaper at just around N120 per liter, depending on purity and proximity to the source. Kerosene sells for N441/liter making Nigerians pay more for it than any other oil producing country in the world. Data from globalpetrolprices.com shows that N441 would get a drum (200lt) of kerosene in Iran, where it sells for N2.15. This is why despite risk of explosion risk most households continue to cling to this cheaper option, which sells for about N120/l.”

    The recent astronomical rise of cooking gas price also pushed consumers to explore the use of the locally refined kerosene. In 2021, the prices of cooking gas went up 200 percent: refilling a 12.5kg cylinder spiked to N13,000 in some parts of the country from N4,4000.  For poor families already battered by high cost of living, falling purchasing power, the switch to stoves powered by kerosene was an easy choice.

    BOOMING BUSINESS AT THE ‘EXPORT TERMINALS’

    –              Military, police collaboration

    Hundreds of trucks leave northern states and other parts of the country for the Niger Delta daily. In the past they brought farm produce and livestock, and went back with ‘products’. Now they come mostly empty just to load petroleum products. These trucks have fabricated massive storage tanks, different from their fuel tanks. These have capacity to conceal up 100 drums (up to 20,000 litres) kpofire products.

    The main ‘loading bays’ for these trucks are scattered across communities in all oil-bearing states. Some of the busiest points are between Elele-Junction and Ahoada, and Koko-Ugbenu junction (Delta State) on the East-West Highway, as well as earth roads in hidden locations across the zone.

    From midday they start trickling into the point around Ahoada. By dusk the line of trucks and tankers would increase until they totally choke the highway, sometimes reducing traffic to a single lane. The bolder ones could start filling their tanks in broad daylight; while others wait for the cover of darkness to take the stolen goods. The volume of these products lifted from the areas is not known, but it easily runs into millions of liters weekly.

    Smaller vehicles fitted with stronger suspensions are used to transport the products from different locations. Motorcycles specially tweaked to carry up to 400 litres loaded in nylon packs or jerry cans are the preferred ones for trucks taking smaller capacities.

    It’s good business for its sponsors, owners of tankers, who could be marketers, drivers, hirelings, menial workers at the site of production, motorcyclists and cart operators, who easily earn the national minimum wage in hours.

    Some local chiefs and community/youth leaders are not left out. They issue ‘operating licenses’ to operators, grant right-of-way to transport the products through their areas. Sources in various several communities told our reporter that political stalwarts, influencers and enforcers are not left out of the illegal deals.

    Last year Governor Wike ordered the demolition of a growing shanty and meeting place between buyers and sellers of the products near Ahoada. Bulldozers razed makeshift shops to the ground, but this did not stop the operators. The trucks and tankers and their collaborators started operating directly through pipeline right-of-way to load, sometimes with the assistance of security operatives.

    At 3:00pm on 19th September 2021, this reporter took a photograph of a military Toyota Landcrusier pick-up, with some armed men in Army fatigue providing cover for a heavy duty truck that was waiting to be loaded with product in public view along the East-West Highway.

    “The brazen manner in which the trucks go in and come out, even in broad daylight tells you the rot starts at the very top. Police, soldiers and other security agents now openly assist criminals to break the law under the watch of President Buhari who prides himself as pious a leader,” a resident in the community said.

    There are no roads with higher density of security checkpoints as routes where stolen petroleum passes. On every part of the East-West Highway, police and NSCDC checkpoints are so closely sited – even within hearing distance.

    Elele to Mbiama junction is a distance of 20 miles, but we counted 10 checkpoints mainly targeting transporters of stolen products. There are IGP Task Forces on pipeline vandalism, NSCDC, oil industry trade unions such as IPMAN’s and others. Men of the NSCDC use a simple testing kit – made of pet soda bottle with a string tied to its neck – to verify product sources. Our reporter watched them at work in Patani in Delta State, for over one hour. There were no arrests made, but ‘handshake’ between drivers and officers. Fees of between N1,000 and N10,000 are paid by trucks, depending on the quantity (seen from the size of tanks).

    Nights are usually busier at Ahoada loading point. As the night falls more security operative join the fray. Most of them drive their personal cars and SUVs. Among them are those on official duties (roadblocks) and those who sacrifice their personal cars for the job.

    “They are on mission targeted at the illegal products trucks, yet arrest or seizures are hardly made. The ones you see being displayed are just scapegoats who are used to justify presence on the road,” a community source at Okobe, Ahoada, told our reporter.

    The wanton manner the security agents take bribes from drivers confirm rumours that the rot reaches the high echelon of the forces. It was noticed that some of the tankers/trucks do not give money at all the checkpoints, ostensibly because they have ‘settled’ ahead of time. They simply drop a name or place a call to ‘higher authorities’ who in turn would speak to the checking officer and ask that the consignment had been cleared.

    Busoma (may not be the correct spelling), a motor-boy our reporter met at Bomadi Junction (Delta State), said: “We do not know about the arrangements; our bosses (truck/cargo owners) make the arrangements and give us number of the person to call when we run into trouble.” He added that “some ‘stubborn ofsa’ (officer)” sometimes demand ‘settlement’ in spite of the calls. He said such callous ones are usually given N500 to N2,000. It depends, also, he said, on the rank of the superior who had been settled ahead of their departure.

    Comrade Mulade, who is Country Chair, CEPEJ, affirmed that security operatives not only aid and abet the illicit trade, but are active operators who own bunkering depots across the region. He made the claim before Rivers State Government accused a Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of owning an illegal refinery in the state. A local government council chair too was allegedly stopped from invading an illegal refinery by men of the NSCDC, who were allegedly securing the site

    “They (security operatives) are working with crude oil thieves and they own most of the bunkering spots along the riverside communities. They own vessels and assets that are beyond the capacity of locals. The youths and women that you see engaging in this trade are mere casual (menial) workers for highly-placed Nigerians. That is why when arrests are made, calls from ‘high quarters’ and ‘Abuja’ lead to release of the arrested vessels and persons,” Mulade said.

    Rivers State Commissioner for Police, Mr. Eboka Friday, said the command was committed to the war against illegal bunkering and assures the public he would not spare any officer indicted, no matter how highly placed they may be. The Acting Police Public Relations Officer, Grace Iringe Koko, who spoke on behalf of the commissioner, said news of a DPO’s involvement was concerning, adding, “the officer was immediately redeployed and a panel headed by an ACP inaugurated to investigate the matter.”

    CRUDE OIL THIEVES IN POLITICAL OFFICE

    Our findings showed that beyond the influence of security operatives, some perpetrators have political connections. A secret report commissioned by one oil multinational years ago revealed participation of local politicians in the illicit deals. The report said proceeds from illegal bunkering are used to finance elections and political campaigns in return for appointments that give them protection.

    Furthermore, our independent research revealed that communities in Delta, Bayelsa and Ondo are falling into the grip of some oil thieves. “They amass arms and ammunition that give them the firepower to face military task forces. They hijack local leadership positions and security apparatuses and install their stooges. With this they acquire a platform to continue their activities.”

    Earlier this January, Rivers State Government revealed that a top director in its Ministry of Environment (names withheld) would be queried for alleged involvement in illegal bunkering activity. Kelvin Ebiri, Special Assistant to the Governor, said the Head of Service was directed to query the suspect “for abetting bunkering activities and handed him over to the police for investigation and possible prosecution.”

    The director was among a number of high profile individuals and heads of local security operatives (vigilantes) fingered for illegal bunkering in a sweeping effort to arrest the trend. Governor Wike also ordered LGA chairmen to identify sponsors and operators in their areas, go after them and destroy such operations.

    Nevertheless, Bibi Oduku, Commandant General, Riverine Security (Coast Guard of the Federation) while offering assistance in the war, urged Wike and other governors of the region to do house cleaning if they must win the battle.

    “Some governors’ aides and supporters are using the governor’s office with security agencies for illegal bunkering business. The security agencies are very much aware of the happenings in their areas. He (Wike) should change the security units in riverside communities because they are so attached to oil bunkering and they are partners too.”

    This is easier said than done. Feelers across the region indicate that operators have unions that are heavily funded from the proceeds of their crimes. They are able to ‘buy’ security operatives, including the local police chiefs, who are offered luxurious gifts, such as cars and houses. They engage good lawyers who are drafted when members run into trouble.

    GOVERNMENTS WATCHING CITIZENS DIE

    Stakeholders who spoke on the effort to clear illegal bunkering are unanimous that all tiers of government need to do more to earn citizens’ trust. The government, they said, has failed to protect the people living in oil producing communities, neglected their plight in tackling the illicit trade.

    Mulade lamented dearth of health facilities in critical areas affected by oil pollution. Bassey Edoho, a commentator, was suspicious of the Rivers government’s frenzied response to the pollution, wondering if “he (Wike) did not know about them and the effect of what they have been doing for four years now?”

    Richard Yiranee, President, Luawii Student Union, however, commended the governor’s actions as “steps in the right direction.” He said Wike and his team should be applauded for the great job they are doing to stop oil bunkering.”

    Others insisted that governments have failed to protect their people from the debilitating effects of environmental pollution caused by oil exploration and exploitation activities over the years.

    For two decades, residents of Ubeji, Jeddo, Ekpan and others in Delta State, have contended with soot and gas flares from the Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company. Several protests and petitions failed to move the state government to action. A gas torch has been burning nonstop in the centre of Gelegele, Edo State for several decades.

    “Soot Armageddon is not only happening in Rivers State, the reason why we hear about Port Harcourt soot is because the governor put it on the front burner. People are dying in their 40s, 50s or 60s years. Soot in Delta is worse than Port Harcourt, but there is no one is speaking out,” Mulade said.

    He said governors of the region failed to allocate part of the 13% derivation fund to tackle effects of environmental pollution, and prepare for future health and metal fallout. He lamented the absence of functional radiotherapy centers in the South-south region. “There are three of such equipment in the country, but the nearest to the Niger Delta is in Enugu, and others in Lagos and Ibadan.”

    Mulade and other stakeholders urged federal and state governments, intervention agencies such as the NDDC and oil multinationals to take steps and provide remedial health measures for those worst hit by soot in Rivers and other affected states.

  • Outrage over attack on Borno student

    Outrage over attack on Borno student

    • I did it to secure expulsion from school, says culprit

    • Survivor fears returning to school, writes parents from hospital bed

    • State government sets up committee to investigate incident

    The decision of a senior student of El-Kanemi College of Islamic Technology Maiduguri to slit the throat of a pupil in the school has sparked widespread outrage.

    The Borno State Government yesterday constituted a five-man investigative panel to find out the remote causes of the incident and suggest ways to curtail its reoccurrence in the future.

    Some civil society organisations including the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) have also vowed to take up the matter and ensure that the victim gets justice and the system is sanitised.

    The Vice Chairman of NBA in Borno State, Barrister Yahaya Alhaji Dunoma, said his committee would be meeting with the management of the school to find out the real cause of the incident and see how the NBA could intervene to bring justice to the victim.

    Jubril Sadi Mato, an 11 year-old JSS 1 pupil in the school also known as Ramadan, was said to have been attacked by the senior student for refusing to run an errand for him in the hostel.

    According to sources within the school, Ramadan woke up in the wee hours of January 16, had his ablution and observed his early-morning prayer before he went about the day’s activities full of life.

    But by nightfall when most students of the college retired to bed, Ramadan almost had his life snuffed out by an SS2 student named Ahmed Umar Goni a.k.a. Peros.

    Peros was said to have sent Ramadan on an errand which the latter refused to go.

    Angered by Ramadan’s refusal to carry out his order, Peros allegedly led him to a quiet place that fateful night where he used a razor blade to severely lacerate his neck, injuring most of his arteries and nerves in the process.

    He then left his victim in the pool of his blood and fled the scene, following which Ramadan managed to drag himself to the principal’s office where he collapsed.

    Ramadan was then rushed to the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) where he was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of the hospital.

    The victim is said to be a son to a former judge of Federal High Court, Kano State, the late Justice Sadi Mato.

    Peros was subsequently arrested and handed over to the police for further investigation.

    Paraded by the police in Maiduguri yesterday, Peros said he committed the offence in order to get an excuse to be expelled from the school, saying that he had told his parents several times to remove him from the school but they would not listen to him.

    A family source informed that Ramadan, after regaining consciousness, wrote on a piece of paper begging his mother not to allow him return to the school for fear of being killed.

    “Mummy, I’m scared. Don’t take me back to that school; he will kill me,” he wrote.

    A family source who spoke in confidence alleged that the school authority was trying to cover up the incident but expressed joy at the manner some civil society organisations have acted on the matter.

    The source said: “We are happy that the Network for Civil Society Organisation Borno Chapter, Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), the National Human Right Commission (NHRC) And the Federation of International Female Lawyers (FIDA) have vowed to investigate the case to ensure that the perpetrator was brought to book.

    “It was also unfortunate to note that the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) also joined the Elkenemy College of Islamic Theology in documenting false propaganda over the incident.

    “In Jubril’s (Ramadan’s) file, they wrote that the child fell and got injured instead of saying he was attacked by another person.

    “For us as a family, we want Justice for the poor child as we are also planning to take him to Egypt for proper medical attention.”

    PRNigeria also quoted some sources in the college as saying that there had been similar cases in the past but were concealed by the school management without any decisive action.

    A source said: “This is not the first case of violent attacks in the college. There are several other cases relating to sexual abuse and armed violence reported in the college. But the school management always sweeps them under the carpet. Incidents like this affect the physical and mental states of children.”

    The Borno State Government yesterday constituted a five man committee with the mandate to “investigate and arrive at the remote causes of the incident and suggest ways to curtail its re-occurrence in the future”.

    The committee’s membership is drawn from the Police, DSS and NSCDC with the Director of Quality Assurance in the Ministry of Education, Hajiya Hadiza Nasir Wali, as the secretary.

    The committee is expected to complete its assignment and submit its report to the Commissioner for Education within one week.

  • UPDATED: Nothing will make me return to PDP, Obasanjo tells Ayu, NWC

    UPDATED: Nothing will make me return to PDP, Obasanjo tells Ayu, NWC

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Saturday stated he won’t return to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) under which he ruled Nigeria from 1999-2007.

    He told the National chairman of the PDP Dr Iyorchia Ayu and National Working Committee(NWC) members that visited him in Abeokuta on Saturday that only God will help them shoulder their responsibilities.

    The Nation had reported that the team visited Obasanjo to discuss party matters and solicit his support for the 2023 general elections.

    Obasanjo reminded Ayu that having called it quit with partisan politics over seven years ago with the public shredding of his PDP membership card, he was not going to go back.

    The elder statesman spoke while addressing the PDP NWC members and other leaders of the party shortly after a closed door meeting with them in his Penthouse within the sprawling Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    The PDP leaders in attendance were former Ondo Governor Dr. Segun Mimiko; former Cross River Governor Donald Duke; his successor Senator Liyel Imoke; PDP 2019 vice presidential candidate Dr. Peter Obi; former Jigawa Governor Sule Lamido; former Minister of Police Affairs Adamu Waziri; former Kogi Deputy Governor Yomi Awoniyi and former Oyo Deputy Govenor Taofeek Arapaja among others.

    The delegation led by Ayu was in Abeokuta was in Abeokuta to plead with the former President not to be tired of PDP and its members whenever they come “knocking, asking for advice and asking for wisdom.”

    Obasanjo, however, emphasised that he is only interested in what is good for Nigeria and anybody who wants to have his advice.

    The former Govenor said:”I have been with the party right from inception. Whatever I do in my own life, because I became president on the platform PDP, PDP will continue to be part of the history of my life, but having said that, the day that my ward decided to tear my PDP card was the day I ceased to be a member of PDP and that day I vowed that I will not be a member of any political party again, but I will remain a statesman in Nigeria, in West Africa, in Africa and indeed in the world.

    “So, I thank you very much for coming and you are living up to your word because immediately after you were given this appointment, this job, you called me, infact you sent a message and I called you and you said you will see me and I said I will see you any time and any day.

    ” I’m happy that you are here and as I jokingly said, when you said you will see me, I thought I will be probably one or two, but I really didn’t realise that your visit will be turned to an invasion.

    “You are all welcome, because I’m among friends what can I say or do with Sule or Adamu Waziri here with you or even Mimiko?

    “Chairman, let me say this, I want to specially pray that the responsibility that is put on your shoulder you will be able to carry it, God will help you carry it.

    “Your case is like the case of Idi Amin. Idi Amin came to me and he said ‘my brother, you have Africa load and it is on your shoulder, I pray God will help you carry Africa load’.

    “Iyorchia, you have PDP load with Nigeria load and it is only God that can help you to carry this load which of course, I believe if God gives you a responsibility, He will also give you the wherewithal to be able to carry that responsibility and in my hope which is also some people’s disappointment is that some of you who knew how things were done 21 years ago are still there but then some people will say here if you knew how it was done 21 years ago why have you not consistently be doing it?

    “I think you can answer that, I will not answer for you, but if you ask me, I retired 14 years ago and I remain retired and I will remain retired by the grace of God.

    “But if I retired from partisan politics, if politics is welfare of the people, I must not retire from the welfare and well being of people whether in my own community, in my own state, in my own country, anywhere in Africa or indeed anywhere in the world and that is why I have the type of responsibility that I now have in the horn of Africa which is not an easy responsibility, but it has to be done, but I will say that your own responsibility is not an easy one either, but it has to be done.

    “Bear in mind and I want to emphasise that I’m no longer in partisan politics and there is nothing that will bring me back to partisan politics but I will always be interested in what is good for Nigeria and anybody who wants to have my advice, I will distinctively give it in the best interest of Nigeria and in the best interest of Africa.”

    Responding, Iyorchia Ayu commended Obasanjo for warmly receiving them, recalling the golden era of PDP was when he served the country as President for eight years.

    Ayu said: “As soon as I emerged as the chairman of the party, it was inevitable that I have to come here.

    “Sir, we thank you for the service you rendered and the great work you have done in the PDP as the first president your period as president under the platform of PDP is seen as the golden era of the PDP because not only did you grow the economy to be the biggest economy in Africa, you were able to eradicate Nigeria from slavery by negotiating and cancelling so much of our foreign debts that would have made it very difficult to run the country.

    “By the time you left office, Nigeria was totally set free, direct foreign investment was on the increase on a daily basis, we were respected in international community, every where we went.

    “I remember I accompanied you as your Minister to a number of countries, Germany and India I saw the respect they accorded you in India and I was very proud to be a Nigerian.

    “Today, unfortunately, we don’t have the same recognition because what we have falls short of leadership that Nigeria deserves.

    ” Apart from Infrastructural intervention which you did, most of the institutions, some of them being used today to hunt people like EFCC, the ICPC and so on and so forth you actually put them in place.

    ” I remember when you took some of us to Germany to the offices to the Transparent International and we had a very useful discussion there.

    ” So, you are very passionate about this country and you did a lot and we thought we should come and thank you for what you have done not to just Nigerians but to our party and Africa.

    “Over these years that you are in power , you saw every Nigerian as one family, you didn’t discriminate against the South, the East ,the West or the North. Even though , in your first tenure , the South West did n’t actually support you , but you brought them back on board and they supported you in your second tenure and that is the spirit of democracy.

    “Even though you retired from partisan politics, partisan politics will never retire from your blood because you want the right thing done and since you want the right thing done, for life you will remain the emeritus member of the PDP.

    “You cannot build a house and leave it to collapse. You throw a challenge to me that if I have been there from the beginning why have I not done anything, may be I was doing something but it was not good enough, we will continue to contribute our own quota, we will continue to come to you, so, I want to plead with you, please don’t be tired of us as we come knocking asking for your advice, asking for wisdom because the word of elders is the word of wisdom and there is no leader here in this country than president Olusegun Obasanjo. We appreciate you and we will do everything to rebuild this country.”