Category: Featured

  • World Cup Qualifiers: Osimhen, Musa score as Eagles beat Liberia 2-0

    World Cup Qualifiers: Osimhen, Musa score as Eagles beat Liberia 2-0

    Victor Osimhen and Ahmed Musa were on target as Nigeria defeated Liberia 2-0 in their 2022 Fifa World Cup qualifying match on Saturday.

    Despite coming back from international retirement, Al Shabab striker Odion Ighalo did not make the match day as Gernot Rohr went for Nantes’ Moses Simon, Leicester City’s Kelechi Iheanacho and Napoli’s Victor Osimhen in the attack.

    The visitors started the match on the strong foot and it did not take long for them to open the scoring at the Stade Ibn Batouta.

    Iheanacho made a fine run to the penalty area when goalkeeper Boison Wynney brought him down and referee Youssef Essrayri instantly pointed to the spot.

    Osimhen stepped forward and brilliantly converted from the penalty in the 15th minute to give the Super Eagles the lead.

    Everton star Alex Iwobi was in fine form for Rohr’s side from the middle of the park and they continued their dominance in ball possession.

    Following his fine contributions from the left flank, Jamilu Collins put the ball into the back of the net in the 29th minute but it was ruled out for offside.

    Read Also: Osimhen: We’re happy to have Ighalo back in Super Eagles

    Nigeria’s midfield stood out in the opening 30 minutes and shortly after the disallowed goal, Osimhen was through on goal but failed to hit the target to double the visitors’ lead.

    Towards the break, Maduka Okoye was called to action and he made some eye-catching saves within five minutes to preserve the Super Eagles’ lead.

    In the last minute of the game, Osihmen was brought down by the Liberian goalkeeper and Musa stepped forward to convert from the penalty spot.

  • Controversy as hit and run driver confesses to killing missing journalist

    Controversy as hit and run driver confesses to killing missing journalist

    QUESTIONS are now trailing the alleged confession of  an Abuja commercial driver on how he killed a  Vanguard reporter, Tordue Henry Salem, who went missing on October 13.

    Clement Itodo was paraded yesterday by the police who said they found Salem’s  body at the morgue of the Wuse General Hospital,Abuja,on Thursday with several personal documents confirming his identity.

    Salem’s primary constituency –the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) said it did not believe the police story.

    It demanded an independent inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the death of the journalist.

    Governor Samuel Ortom of Benue State, Salem’s home state, and Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege, were similarly skeptical.

    Omo-Agege said the police claims raised further questions on what happened to the late journalist while Ortom  said the circumstances of Salem’s death looked  suspicious.

    Salem was until his disappearance the House of Representatives correspondent of the Vanguard.

    Itodo had told reporters during his parade yesterday that  he knocked down the victim with his 2004 Model Camry with number plate BWR 243 BK at about 10:00 pm on the fateful day  around Mabushi area, Abuja.

    The suspect said he did not stop after the incident for fear of being attacked by armed robbers who, according to him, always lurk around the spot.

    He claimed that as he moved farther from the scene, he  ran into  a police checkpoint and reported to the officers on duty that he had hit someone.

    He said the police men then asked him to go to the Wuse Police Station to report himself, but he refused to do so and proceeded to Good Friends Garden where he normally parked his car, and then went home.

    His words: “On the 13th of October, I was coming from Jabi, going to Wuse Market. I was driving at 100kmph.

    “After the Mabushi Bridge towards Wuse Market, I saw people rushing to cross the road. The first person crossed while the second person ran into my vehicle and was knocked down. But I moved on.

    “The reason why I did not stop there was because I was attacked there by robbers earlier in October.

    “ I told the policemen at the nearest check point that I knocked someone down. Then, I went to park my damaged car. I had a serious injury in my hand.

    “Truly. I didn’t follow the advice of the policemen I met to report the case to the Wuse Divisional Police Station. “Where I used to park my car, they know me as a taxi driver. The next morning, I called a panel beater to fix my car, and found out that there was a smashed phone stuck in the windshield wiper.

    “I thought it was an armed robber who was chasing a victim that I knocked down so I left. On seeing the phone, I simply threw it away.”

    Force Public Relations Officer, CP Frank Mba, told reporters at the parade that Itoro was arrested by  Intelligence Response Team (IRT) detectives who were saddled with the responsibility of investigating Salem’s  disappearance.

    Their probe, Mba said, led them to trace Salem’s  phone found at Good Friends Garden.

    “When Clement hit Tordue, the victim’s phone, an iPhone fell on the car’s windscreen. The suspect however disposed of the phone at Good Friends Garden where he usually parked his car. But the phone was picked by some boys working in the garden and some parts of the phone were sold by the boys.”

    He  said the boys also tried using the SIM cards for calls, which made it easier for the police to trace the phone.

    The Police spokesman said further investigations led to the arrest of Itoro, while  Salem’s corpse was found at about 11:30am on Thursday, November 11, 2021 at the Wuse General Hospital Morgue, Abuja.

    Found on Salem’s body were  his  Keystone Bank debit card,  Union Bank debit card, and ID cards issued in his name by Vanguard Newspapers , the  Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ)  and  the National Assembly Media Corps.

    Reporters asked  why the management of Wuse General Hospital did not report the incident to the Police almost a month after finding  Salem’s documents.

    Mba pledged  that the Police would address the issue of alleged negligence on the part of the hospital management and even the policemen at the Wuse Checkpoint on the night of the accident after serious investigation.

    He said: “When that case was reported to the Police, the IGP Usma Alkali-Baba, gave very clear instructions to our detectives in the Force Intelligence Bureau to take up this matter which was already being investigated in different departments at the National Assembly police station and the FCT CID.

    Read Also: Benue Journalists mourn slain Vanguard reporter, Tordue Salem

    “The Intelligence Bureau was mandated to take over and consolidate all the case files and conduct a very discreet investigation into that case.

    “Acting on that directive, detectives from the IRT swung into action. Henry’s movement was trailed up to BJ Gardens located somewhere in Garki close to old CBN. A young lady that had an interaction with him on the night of disappearance was located and detectives spoke to her.

    “A major breakthrough was however made following some digital and forensic leads. The phone and iPhone 6 that had already been smashed into pieces were traced and found in a garage somewhere in Mpape called ‘Good Friends’ garage.

    “It was discovered that a call was made from his SIM card and following detailed and intensive digital and forensic analysis on both his CDR and IMEI and the scrap phone, a major arrest and breakthrough was made.

    “That accident reportedly happened at about 10pm. The driver stated that after knocking down an unknown pedestrian, he did not stop and continued his journey, and immediately ended his activities that day. He drove his vehicle to ‘Good Friends’ garage where he normally parks his vehicle every night for a fee.

    “At that point in time, his vehicle was already badly damaged. The windshield suffered major damage. The image of the damage was retrieved from his phone. He parked his car and left it there and went away.

    “The next morning when he arrived at the garage, he found a phone broken and stuck in between the smashed windshield.

    “The phone itself had already been smashed. He pulled it out and threw it away.

    “But some other young persons playing in that garage eventually picked up that phone. Part of the components of this phone was allegedly sold off by the kids while they tried to make a  call with the SIM card.

    “On the strength of this, detectives moved to the General  Hospital that covers that area. “Yesterday (Thursday), the 11th of November, 2021, after a lot of painstaking search, a body believed to be that of Henry Tordue Salem was found at about 11:20am at Wuse General Hospital morgue.

    “In addition to that physical and positive identification, detectives also searched the body of the late journalist and these items were re covered: A Keystone Bank debit card bearing his name, a Union Bank debit card bearing his name, an ID card issued by Vanguard Newspapers identifying him as Henry Tordue Salem and a staff and a temporary ID card from the National Assembly identifying him as a member of the House of Reps, Press Corps.”

    Mba said police detectives had already contacted the family members and that the body had been positively identified by them as that of the missing journalist.

    NUJ dismisses Police story,demands  independent inquiry, autopsy

    However, Salem’s colleagues in the  Abuja council of the NUJ said they were not buying the police story on Salem’s death.

    They demanded an independent inquiry and autopsy on his death.

    Chairman of the council, Emmanuel Ogbeche, asked  President Muhammadu Buhari and the Attorney General of the Federation to set up an independent inquiry and to also conduct an independent autopsy to determine the time and  cause of death.

    He said the Nigerian government would do itself a favour on its press freedom index which is already bad by not adding  Salem’s death to it.

    He pleaded with  the international community to weigh into the matter.

    Ogbeche, spoke when the Chairperson of the House of Representatives Press Corps, Comrade Grace Ike, submitted a petition on Salem’s mysterious death at the NUJ Secretariat in Utako, Abuja.

    He described  journalists  in the country as endangered species citing the  manner in which Salem died.

    He charged journalists to be security conscious and always stand together “to fight the common enemy out there waiting to devour us one at a time.”

    He said: “We remember very clearly that the Force Public Relations Officer, Mr Frank Mba, told us that six persons were being interrogated as per Mr Tordue’s disappearance, that they had tracked his phone.

    “So it is surprising that it took almost four weeks for the police to come up with the story that it was a hit-and-run driver that Mr Salem’s phone got stuck on the windscreen of the driver. And it was where he went to park in Mpape that some boys picked up the phone after he threw it away.”

    He said the police story revealed a lot of loopholes and wondered why  Vanguard was “the only media organisation that was privy to the discovery of Mr Tordue Salem.”

    Ogbeche said: “Not until today did we get to know that it happened in Mabushi, that the vehicle was recovered in Mpape. There are so many disjointed or many missing links to the story that has been peddled. For us at the NUJ, we have studied this carefully, we are going to issue a statement and a petition, but before then, one of the resolutions we have reached is for an interdependent inquiry into the death of Mr Tordue Salem.

    “We call on President Muhammadu Buhari and the Attorney General and Minister of Justice to set up an independent inquiry and to also conduct an independent autopsy to determine the time of death and the cause of death. Those are the only factors that can determine when he died and how he died.

    “That autopsy is going to tell us the time and for those that have had the opportunity of viewing Mr Salem’s at the morgue, it does not indicate that he died about four weeks ago.

    “So the Nigerian government would do itself a whole lot of favour on its press freedom index which is already bad by not adding Mr Salem’s death to it. Journalists have been killed for too long in this country without justice. It is in this regard that we call on the international community to weigh into this matter and if any official of the Nigeria government is found to have been involved in this despicable act, such a person should be denied visa opportunities, not just for himself but for his family and should be barred from countries that truly practice democracy and have respect for the rule of law and for human dignity.

    “We would write a petition to the office of Inspector General of Police (IGP) and the Attorney General of the Federation, requesting for an independent investigation as well as an autopsy. In the meantime, we express our profound condolences to his family and to our colleagues and to all journalists in Nigeria. At this moment, we urge all of us to take our security seriously. If they succeed with Mr Tordue Salem today, it could just be any one of us tomorrow. So we must watch and stand for each other. We must bury our animosities. We must set aside our differences and know that there is a common enemy out there waiting to devour us one at a time. But we are confident that after Dele Giwa we have survived till now, we will survive those that have set out to oppress us.”

    Earlier, the Chairperson of the House of Representatives Press Corps, Comrade Grace Ike, said going by accounts of those who were invited by the police Intelligence Response Team, the police had Salem in custody and was investigating him for sundry allegations.

    “However, after the series of protests led by your humble self to the Force Headquarters, with no information as to whether he was dead, we are shocked to hear the Police saying that he was killed by a hit-and-run driver

    “In the estimation of the Corps, our colleague may have been killed in police custody under suspicious and questionable circumstances, and for that we demand for justice.

    “We therefore call on your good office to mobilize the media in solidarity for Tordue Salem, just as we demand that his death should not go unpunished and without justice. Enough is enough and an injury to one is an injury to all!”

    Omo-Agege to  police: provide missing puzzle on his death

    Also reacting to the development yesterday, Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege, said the parade of the  commercial driver raised further questions on the circumstances leading to Salem’s demise.

    Omo-Agege in a statement through his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Yomi Odunuga, called for conclusive investigations that would  unmask all those involved in the journalist’s death.

    Read Also: Sit-at-home: hoodlums attack journalists in Anambra 

    He said: “The news of the killing of Mr. Tordue Henry Salem came to me as a rude shock, especially as it came barely 48-hours after the Senate and House of Representatives passed separate resolutions tasking security agencies to intensify efforts to find him and reunite him with his family.

    “I am particularly worried that this is happening at the heart of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). Reports abound of kidnappings and other security breaches in the nation’s capital.

    “While we await further briefing from the Police on who deposited Tordue’s corpse in the morgue and when it was deposited, the sad development has added to the list of unresolved killings of journalists like Dele Giwa, founding Editor-in-Chief of Newswatch magazine; Godwin Agbroko of ThisDay; Bagauda Kaltho of (The News); Bayo Ohu (The Guardian); Edo Sule Ugbagwu (The Nation) and Abayomi Ogundeji (ThisDay),  who were all murdered in the course of discharging their constitutional duties.

    “I extend my condolences to the family, friends and associates of the deceased, the government and people of Benue State, the Vanguard family, House of Representatives Press Corps, Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) and pray God to give them the fortitude to bear this irreparable loss.”

    Ortom: Circumstances surrounding  Salem’s death suspicious

    Governor Samuel Ortom of Benue State said in Makurdi that he was surprised at the sudden and mysterious recovery of the body of Salem.

    Ortom, in a statement by his  Chief Press Secretary, Nathaniel Ikyur, said the recovery of the journalist’s body  was suspicious and deserved to be thoroughly investigated.

    He asked the Inspector General of Police, the Director-General of the Department of State Service (DSS) and other sister agencies to do everything possible to unravel the mystery surrounding the gruesome murder of the Benue-born journalist.

    The  Benue State government, he said, remained committed to the safety of all its citizens both at home and in the diaspora and will not rest until the perpetrators of the heinous act are punished.

    I feel sad,says Senate President Lawan

    No less sad was  Senate President Ahmad Lawan who said the concern of the National Assembly  when the Senate and the House of Representatives passed separate resolutions over the disappearance of Mr Salem, was that he was quickly found and reunited hale and hearty with his family and colleagues.

    “It is therefore shocking to hear that the journalist had all the while been killed by a hit and run driver in an accident,” he said yesterday.

    Continuing, he said:”This is a very unfortunate and heart-rending development.”

    He sent condolences  to the bereaved family,the management of Vanguard Newspapers, the National Assembly Press Corps and the Nigeria Union of Journalists(NUJ).

    Minister expresses shock     

    Federal Capital Territory Minister  Muhammad Bello, also  expressed shock over the death of the Tordue Salem.

    Bello condoled with the family of Salem and prayed that God Almighty grants them comfort in this difficult period.

    He  commended the Police Force Intelligence Bureau for “unravelling the circumstances leading to the demise of the journalist and called on members of the public to promptly report all suspected criminal matters to the security agencies.”

    He assured residents of the FCT of the administration’s commitment to ensure the safety of all lives and property within the nation’s capital.

     

  • Abubabar Malami: Caught  in eye of the storm

    Abubabar Malami: Caught in eye of the storm

    Abubakar Malami, Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) and current Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), is always in the news for various reasons, especially in the course of his duty as Nigeria’s Minister of Justice. Last Wednesday, he was credited with a statement that says there is no going back on the federal government’s decision to commence deducting $418million from the 36 states’ accounts to settle their indebtedness to consultants and private firms concerning the Paris and London clubs refund.

    This is despite the governors’ opposition to it and the recent order issued by the Federal High Court in Abuja stopping the deduction of the money from the accounts of the 36 states to settle the judgment debts. The debts had accrued from court judgments awarding some consultants and contractors to the states and local governments, various sums of money which currently stand at $418 million. Expectedly, the statement attracted a lot of reactions with some individuals and groups, accusing the Minister of working for consultants instead of defending the interests of the country.

    Malami argued that it was too late in the day for the governors, through the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) to backtrack on the indebtedness having earlier agreed to pay. But the governors, in a reaction that further drew attention to Malami, accused him of backing contractors and private firms by insisting on the payment of the disputed consultancy fees. NGF’s Chairman, Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State, wondered why the AGF was bent on enforcing the payment of the arbitrary consultancy fee when cases relating to the loan refund are still pending in the court.

    Clarifying that the disputed fee is $419 million, and not $418 million, as previously claimed by the minister, Fayemi urged Malami to allow the court to determine the case. He further traced the genesis of the controversy to the activities of an illegal faction of the forum, led by former Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang. And express concerns that the minister, who is aware of all the shady details of the case, is on the side of people ‘intent on defrauding the country.” But in spite of the growing opposition to his position on the matter, the AGF is insisting that Nigeria must respect its earlier commitment and pay the claimants.

    While that was still on, a fake Chief Superintendent of Police, Lawrence Ajodo, arrested alongside others over the invasion of the residence of Supreme Court’s Justice Mary Odili, called out the Malami with a claim that he is a consultant to the Minister. The suspect however clarified that the AGF did not send them to carry out the invasion. “I am not an officer of the Nigeria Police Force, but I am a consultant for the AGF. He did not send us on the raid on Mrs. Odili’s house,” he said. Not a few people took to the social media to wonder what manner of consultancy services Ajodo could be rendering to the Malami and or his office.

    Read Also: Governors: AGF Malami working for consultants

    Not to be cornered, the AGF was swift in denying Ajodo and his claims. An outraged Malami asked the Police to also find out those bent on destroying him. He denied ever hiring the fake CSP to consult for him. He said with the array of professionals at his beck and call, only an insane person would believe he would need the services of a fake CSP as a consultant. In a statement signed on his behalf by his Media Aide, Dr. Umar Geandu, the AGF asked Ajodo to disclose where, how, and for what purpose he would keep him as a consultant. He described the suspect as “a drowning man scavenging for a dying partner.”

    A few days earlier, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) had joined those dragging the Minister when it said Malami risks losing the SAN title over the same issue. Olumide Akpata, President of the NBA, described the raid on Justice Odili’s house as egregious, adding that it was reminiscent of how operatives of the Department of State Services in 2016 raided the homes of seven judges and how a former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen (retd.), was “illegally removed from office,” ahead of the 2019 general elections.

    Apata vowed that the NBA would stop at nothing to ensure that those behind the latest operation were unmasked and punished, to put a stop to “the assault on the judiciary.” He said the NBA would not accept the flurry of denials by the AGF and security agencies that they knew nothing about the operation. He said the NBA also rejected the panel being set up by the AGF to investigate the matter because the AGF himself has a case to answer and he could not be a judge in his own case. Akpata called on President Muhammadu Buhari to set up an independent panel to investigate the matter.

    And as if the above weren’t enough for just one man in a week, news broke that the House of Representatives’ Ad Hoc Committee on Assessment and Status of All Recovered Loots Movable and Immovable Assets from 2002 to 2020 by Agencies of the Federal Government of Nigeria for Effective Efficient Management and Utilisation, is likely to invite the AGF over a claim that he ordered a bank to convert revenue collected in dollars to naira before remittance. Keystone Bank had told the committee that Malami instructed it to remit part of the $136m in its custody in naira while also determining the exchange rate, a revelation that the lawmakers criticised.

    The Executive Director, North and Public Sector Directorate, Keystone Bank, Lawal Ahmed, in a presentation before the committee, said, “Our position, as confirmed by the CFO of NNPC, was that we have remitted all the funds that were with us at our last meeting. You asked for clarification regarding some reversals from the statements of account, which we reviewed and confirmed that they were actually failed transactions. We are using NEFT. We sent the money; it reversed and it was sent again. So, it was showing in and out on the statements. It was part of the documents that we submitted.

    “You asked for where we got the rates and we provided the letter from the Attorney-General of the Federation directing us to make the payment and the rate with which to transfer. We also submitted that with our letter.” The Chairman of the committee, Adejoro Adeogun, hinted that the committee will further investigate the matter with a view to unraveling the contentious issues therein. Members of the committee called for the invitation of the AGF to defend allegations by Ahmed and other respondents. The Minister is yet to respond to this development.

     

     

  • APC Govs attack NASS members as direct primaries rift deepens

    APC Govs attack NASS members as direct primaries rift deepens

    The Progressive Governors’ Forum (PGF) yesterday launched a fresh tirade against National Assembly members labeling them products  of the same indirect primary they now want jettisoned for direct primary.

    The PGF which comprises governors elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) also accused the federal lawmakers of smuggling the controversial clause on direct primary into the Electoral Act Amendment Bill.

    The Director General of the PGF, Dr. Salihu Mohd Lukman, said in a statement in Abuja that the brains behind the inclusion of direct primary as the mode of determining party flag bearers for elective posts in the Electoral Act Amendment Bill were quiet on its inadequacies when it worked for them.

    Lukman, in the statement entitled  “Internal Party Democracy and Politics of Candidates’ Nomination”, claimed that “almost all elected representatives in the National Assembly are as guilty as governors,” on the allegations they leveled at the state chief executives.

    “The issue of using the indirect method as a means of imposing candidates through corrupt practices, almost all elected representatives in the National Assembly are as guilty as governors. From the Senate President and Speaker of the House of Representatives to all the APC and House Representatives members, they must have all paid for every vote they got during the internal party primary leading to their election,” the PGF-DGF said, four days after the APC governors rejected the lawmakers’ position.

    The  Governor Mai Mala Buni-led Caretaker/Extraordinary National Convention Planning Committee  had subsequently  summoned the National Assembly caucus of the party to a meeting over the proposed amendments to the Electoral Act.

    But both chambers of the National Assembly went ahead to  pass the amendments the following day.

    Lukman said yesterday: “At that time, they must have been very good loyal partners of governors.

    “There are at least 12 former governors currently serving as APC Senators. While negotiating to emerge as Senators, they must have also been working to ensure the emergence of their preferred choices who are currently serving as governors through the dreaded indirect method.

    “Could these former governors who are currently serving as Senators claim to be innocent of all the undemocratic practices associated with the indirect method? Could the current serving governors be the only promoters of the bad undemocratic practices of imposition, vote-buying, etc. through the indirect method?”

    He was particularly alarmed by the  role being played by  APC lawmakers in the matter

    He said: “It is worrisome that APC members in the National Assembly are the ones pushing for this amendment. Rather than leaders of the party negotiating among themselves on what needs to be done to produce internal agreement to resolve all challenges facing the party, increasingly, structures of the party are being abandoned and other structures outside the statutory organs of the party are being used to attempt to address perceived problems.

    “The whole insertion of the provisions requiring political parties to adopt the direct method in the Electoral Act would appear to be an afterthought.

    “This is because  the original bill, which was subjected to the joint public hearing by both the Senate and House of Representatives on Wednesday, December 9, 2020, at the National Assembly complex in Abuja didn’t contain the insertion of Section 87 Sub Sections 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. There was only the insertion of Section 87(1 and 2), which provides that:

    Read Also: Direct primary will kill god-fatherism, says Senator

    “Sub Section 1: It seeks to enact a new section 87 on the nomination of candidates by parties for elections by prescribing maximum fees payable by aspirants and restricting nomination criteria strictly to relevant provisions.

    “Specifically, the bill states that total fees imposed by a political party shall not exceed N1million on a House of Representatives aspirant; N2 million on a senatorial aspirant; N5 million on a governorship aspirant, and N10million on a presidential aspirant.

    “Sub Section 2: ‘compels a political party not to impose nomination qualification or disqualification criteria, measures or conditions on any aspirant or candidate for any election, except as prescribed under sections 65, 66, 106, 107, 131, 137, 177, and 187 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).’

    “It was during the clause-by-clause consideration of the bill after the public hearing in July 2021 that the Speaker of the House, Rt. Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila moved the motion for the amendment to allow direct primaries to be part of the amendment.

    “In the case of Senate, after passing an amendment bill, which did not include the requirement to compel parties to adopt a direct method for election of candidates, following a ‘motion for Re- Committal of some Clauses of the Electoral Act No.6 2010 (Repeal and Re-enactment) Bill, 2021 (SB. 122) to the Committee of the Whole as sponsored by the Senate Leader, Senator Yahaya Abdullahi, All Progress Congress, APC, Kebbi North’ on October 12, 2021, Sections 87 (3, 4, 5, 6, 7) were inserted and passed.

    “It will be important therefore to appeal to both the Senate President, HE Ahmed Lawal, and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila and all the leaders of the National Assembly to provide the needed leadership for the country to have the right legal framework, which can guarantee the administration of direct primary by political parties in the country as a means of entrenching internal democracy during the process of nominating party candidates for elections.

    “The proposal passed by the two chambers of the National Assembly on November 9, 2021, is highly inadequate and leaves more room for manipulation, which may produce more disaster for the country beyond what the nation is going through under the indirect method.”

    The PGF DG then advised that since the whole controversy about the proposed Electoral Act amendment is limited to the new insertions in Section 87, the National Assembly should consider reworking issues under Section 87 to make it unambiguous.

    “The reworked new provisions should go through all the legislative processes including a public hearing to enable Nigerians also contribute to making the law.

    “This is a very sensitive issue, which no Standing Order of the National Assembly should be used to block the democratic rights of Nigerians in contributing to the law.

    “While the reworked Section 87 is being processed as recommended, the National Assembly may wish to adopt all the other amendments and transmit them to the President for assent.

    “Unless leaders of the National Assembly are interested in blocking the possibility of amending the Electoral Act and want to shift the blame on President Buhari, it would be very inappropriate politically to expect the President to assent to the Electoral Act amendment with the provisions in Section 87 and all its ambiguities.

    “The leadership of the National Assembly should take responsibility and not pass the buck.”

    Read Also: APC governors, National Assembly await Buhari’s return to resolve direct primary logjam

    Governor Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi State who doubles as Chairman of the PGF had told reporters at the end of their Monday meeting that the forum was not comfortable with the  adoption of direct primary for picking party’s candidates by  the National Assembly.

    He said: “We discussed the pros and cons. There has been concern that political parties are voluntary organisations. We express the concern that political parties be allowed to choose from the options that they so desire. There is an Executive Order, signed by Mr. President against large gatherings. These are issues we discussed and hope that the best be achieved for Nigeria.

    “Direct primary involves supervisory role by INEC. So, if multiple political parties are doing their primaries, INEC resources will be overstretched, and I think the chairman of INEC had even commented on that.”

    Political parties,he said, should be allowed to pick the option best suited for them in picking their candidates for elective offices and argued that the NASS resolution was against the spirit of Executive Order signed by President Buhari, which frowns on large gathering in the wake of the global pandemic.

    Besides, he said direct primary was too cumbersome, unwieldy and would overstretch the limited resources of INEC, statutorily mandated to oversee primaries conducted by political parties.

    Why we okayed amendments, by Gbajabiamila

    House of Representatives Speaker, Femi Gbajabiamila, said at a different forum that direct primaries for political parties would  create a level playing ground for Nigerians to fully participate in the leadership process.

    He told a delegation of youths led by Youth and Sports Development Minister, Sunday Dare, during a courtesy visit in his office that the majority of Nigerians are happy with the development.

    “If I know that my return will depend on a few men, I may not care about you. But if I know that my return will depend on my accountability and representation to the people, I will do the right thing,” he said.

    “It is important for this generation to open the door of leadership to the next generation. We must allow every Nigerian to participate fully in the process of leadership. I, therefore, stand with direct primary.

    “That’s why I said at different fora that I’m for direct primaries. We have to do this for the sake of the institution.

    “When you gather yourselves (as youths), chances are that you’ll win. Democracy is a government of the people. Democracy is not just a general election; it starts from the primaries.”

    The passage of the amendments followed the consideration of the report of the Conference Committee of the Senate and House of Representatives on the bill which was set up in September to reconcile disparities in the versions of the bill as passed by both chambers.

     

  • US Consulate announces student Visa surge days

    US Consulate announces student Visa surge days

    The U.S. Consulate has stipulated six days to attend to students needing visas for studies in the United States.

    A statement by the U.S. Mission noted that students applying for new visas and those renewing their visas would be attended to on specific dates between November 2021 and January 2022.

    It reads: “Starting November 24, the U.S. Mission once again will be expanding operations to better serve the student population of Nigeria. This approach will be two-fold: a special procedure for students who need to renew student visas to continue their course of study, and a series of dedicated interview days for prospective new students.

    “You may be eligible for a priority student visa interview slot if you are a prospective student seeking an F1 visa appointment and you have not been refused an F1 visa in the past six months.

    “Abuja student surge days will take place on December 8, December 15, and January 12. These surge days will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis.

    “Lagos student surge days will take place on November 24, December 8, and December 15.”

    While students in Abuja are required to check www.ustraveldocs.com/ng for instructions, those in Lagos are to book their appointments by emailing their documents to LagosStudents@state.gov.

    The students in both locations need to submit completed DS-160, approved I-20, I-901 SEVIS fee receipts, GTBank (MRV) receipt for visa fee, valid passport data page, and, a scanned passport photograph.

    For students renewing visas, the statement listed separate requirements.

    It reads: “If you are currently studying in the United States, you may be eligible for a special application procedure. To qualify for this procedure, you must be renewing a student visa that is still valid or has expired within the past 24 months and are renewing your visa either to: (a) continue participation in the same major course of study even if at a different institution; or (b) attend the same institution even if in a different major course of study.

    Abuja applicants: Go to www.ustraveldocs.com/ng and follow the instructions to complete your visa application. Visit a designated DHL facility and mail the following documents:
    A printout of your Confirmation page (printed from www.ustraveldocs.com/ng)
    A completed DS-160
    An approved I-20
    A receipt for your I-901 SEVIS fee
    A GTBank (MRV) receipt for your visa fee
    Your passport containing the expired student visa (if that passport is expired, a current valid passport is also required)
    A passport photograph meeting these requirements
    Proof of continued full-time enrollment (such as transcripts, tuition payment, etc.)

    Lagos applicants: Bring all of the following to the U.S. Consulate in Lagos at 12:30-1:00pm on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays, between November 25 and January 5:
    A completed DS-160
    An approved I-20
    A receipt for your I-901 SEVIS fee
    A GTBank (MRV) receipt for your visa fee,
    Your passport containing the expired student visa (if that passport is expired, a current valid passport is also required)
    A passport photograph meeting these requirements
    Proof of continued full-time enrollment (such as transcripts, tuition payment, etc.)”

  • Hit-and-run driver confesses to killing missing Vanguard reporter

    Hit-and-run driver confesses to killing missing Vanguard reporter

    A 29-year-old driver, Clement Itoro, has confessed to killing missing Vanguard reporter, Tordue Henry Salem, who was found dead on Thursday, in a hit-and-run incident.

    Itodo was paraded on Friday at the Police Intelligence Response Team (IRT) premises, Guzape, Abuja.

    Force Public Relations Officer, CP Frank Mba, while briefing reporters said Itoro was arrested following an investigation carried out by the Force Intelligence Bureau (FIB).

    He said Itoro, who was driving a 2004 Model Camry with number plate BWR 243 BK, confessed to having hit Tordue at about 10:00 pm on the night of October 13, 2021 around Mabushi area in Abuja but ran away.

    Itoro admitted he knocked off an unknown pedestrian at around 10:00 pm the same day Tordue Salem went missing.

    Itoro however said he did not stop to attend to the victim because of fear of being attacked by armed robbers in the area.

    Itoro explained that the Mabushi area where the accident occurred is known for criminal activities.

    He further explained that after driving for some miles, he came across a Police checkpoint and reported to the officers on duty that he had hit someone.

    Read Also: PHOTOS: Police parade driver who allegedly killed Vanguard reporter

    He said they told him to go to the Wuse Police Station to report himself but he refused and proceeded to Good Friends Garden where he normally parks his car before going home.

    His words: “On the 13th of October, I was coming from Jabi, going to Wuse market. I was driving at 100kmph. After the Mabushi bridge towards Wuse Market, I saw people rushing to cross the road. The first person crossed while the second person ran into my vehicle and was knocked down. But I moved on.

    “The reason why I did not stop there was because I was attacked there by robbers earlier in October. I told the policemen at the nearest check point that I knocked someone down.

    “Then, I went to park my damaged car. I had a serious injury in my hand. Truly, I didn’t follow the advice of the policemen I met to report the case to the Wuse Divisional Police Station.

    “Where I used to park my car, they know me as a taxi driver. The next morning, I called a panel heater to fix my car and found out that there was a smashed phone stuck in the windshield wiper.

    “I thought it was an armed robbery who was chasing a victim that I knocked down so I left. On seeing the phone, I simply threw it away”.

    Salem’s body was found on Thursday, November 11, more than a month after he went missing.

    An indigene of Benue State, Salem covers the House of Representatives and was last seen on October 13, 2021, a situation that led to protest and agitation by Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Abuja.

    While explaining to reporters how Itoro was arrested, Mba said: “when Clement hit Tordue, the victim’s phone, an iPhone fell on the car’s wheel screen.

    “The suspect however disposed of the phone at Good Friends Garden where he usually parked his car. But the phone was picked by some boys working in the garden and some parts of the phone were sold by the boys”.

    He however said the boys also tried using the SIM cards for calls, which made it easier for the police to trace the phone.

    The Police spokesman said further investigations led to the eventual arrest of Itoro, adding that Late Tordue’s corpse was found around 11:30am on Thursday at the Wuse General Hospital Morgue in Abuja.

    According to Mba, during a search on Tordu’s body a Keystone bank debit card, a Union Bank debit card, an ID Card issued by Vanguard Newspaper, an NUJ ID Card and a ID Card from the National Assembly Media Corps, all bearing the late journalist’s name were found.

  • JUST IN: Plateau Assembly crisis worsens as hoodlums vandalise Chamber

    JUST IN: Plateau Assembly crisis worsens as hoodlums vandalise Chamber

    Hoodlums on Thursday night vandalised the complex of the Plateau Assembly.

    The vandalisation shocked Speaker Yakubu Sanda-led faction during a visit to assess the level of damage on Friday morning.

    The faction, after the visit, proceeded to hold an emergency plenary to, in their words, consider “matters of State importance.”
    Twelve Assembly members led by Sanda held the emergency plenary on Friday.

    Sanda presided over the plenary, which lasted for just 25 minutes. He listed matters to consider as the screening of the Chairman and members of Plateau State Independent Electoral Commission (PLASIEC) as communicated by Governor Simon Lalong as well as the consideration of the 2022 appropriation bill.

    Before the discussion, the Majority Leader, Naanlong Daniel, said he “received an apology from Hon. Philip Dasun but he said he is with us. I could not get Hon. Abok Ayuba and Hon. Henry Longs on phone. I don’t know where they are but the Minority Leader said he travelled to the village, hopefully, he will join us next week.”

    Read Also: Plateau Assembly and drums of destabilization

    But the 12 lawmakers called for the standing down of the screening because the “House was not conducive.”
    It also stood down deliberations on the Appropriation Bill.

    Members in plenary through a motion raised by the Majority Leader, Naanlong Daniel, appealed that the Assembly be relocated to the Old Government House in Rayfield so that legislative businesses can continue pending when the Chamber would be fixed.

    When The Nation visited the Complex on Friday, it was littered with broken glasses and damaged furniture. Air conditioners and other items were also destroyed.
    Security agencies were drafted to keep vigil at the Complex following the vandalisation.

    When The Nation contacted the Commissioner of Police, Bartholomew Onyeka, he simply said: “I am not competent to speak on this matter.”

    But the Abok Ayuba- led faction faulted the Plenary Session before it held.

    In a statement endorsed by “Rt. Hon. Abok Ayuba (APC) – Speaker – Jos East, Hon. Peter Gyendeng (PDP) – Minority Leader – Barkin Ladi, Hon. Philip Dasun (APC) – Deputy Majority Leader – Pankshin North, Hon. Solhchang Zingtim (PDP) – Minority Whip – Langtang South, Hon. (Mrs.) Esther Dusu (PDP) – Jos North West, Hon. Bala Fwangje (PDP) – Mangu South, Hon. Musa Avia (PDP) – Rukuba Irigwe, Hon. Henry Longs (APC) – Pankshin South, Hon. From Gwottson (PDP) – Jos South, Hon. Timothy Dantong (PDP) – Riyom,Hon. Pirfa Tyem (PDP) – Langtang North – North, Hon. Daniel Listick (PDP) – Langtang North – Central,” the faction said the Plenary was against the Standing Orders of the House.

  • FG launches online portal for over 5,000 houses

    FG launches online portal for over 5,000 houses

    The Federal Government has launched an online platform for its National Housing Scheme.

    It stated that this platform, which will facilitate the ownership of affordable housing via home ownership and rental schemes in urban and rural areas, is available in 34 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Lagos State is however yet to provide the government with land while Rivers State will join in phase three of the project.

    Stressing that the initiative is a pilot and not its only solution for providing housing, the government stated it will provide over 5,000 units of houses in different stages on completion.

    It urged Nigerians to register and apply for these houses online via nhp.worksandhousing.gov.ng.

    The requirements for application are: Passport photograph, current tax clearance payslip, letter of recommendation, means of identification and evidence of 10 percent initial deposit (for mortgage subscribers only).

    The Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, who made these known in Abuja, urged Nigerians to apply for the houses through the Federal Mortgage Bank or their preferred financial institutions.

    He noted that the initiative, which started with a survey in 2015, was also instrumental to the implementation of the Federal Government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).

    “This is the first time we have a platform that every Nigerian has access to. This provides an opportunity for all Nigerians to apply and ensure a fair process of allocation.

    “We introduced the online portal from which the national housing programme will be offered to members of the public.

    “The forms are online and allow for more openness, limits human interventions, and holds us more accountable. The endgame is an economic objective.

    “During the planning, the country was in a recession. About 1,000 contractors (small and big) got contracts. No international contractors were involved but Nigerians.

    “It also gave the contractors an opportunity to sustain their staff. Also, all materials for the project were local made materials,” he said.

    Fashola noted that the least amount of house selling on the scheme is N7.2 million while the highest selling is N16.19 million.

    Read Also: Osinbajo, Obasanjo, Ooni seek solution to housing deficit

    He added: “Applicants can also take a virtual tour of the property they are interested in. They can apply and register with email and phone number. Upon verification, they can complete their application.

    “We have included the abridged drawings of each estate. When an allocation is booked on the online portal, it will show that it is no longer available. This way we avoid duplicity. The backend online staff on this.

    “We have different house types which are the result of a survey we undertook. There are 1,2,3 bedroom semi-detached bungalows. It is not only the house but it also has adjoining lands. There are also 1,2,3 bedrooms in the condominium.

    “We will soon start the official handover and tape cutting as the subscribers come in. We have maintenance and facilities managers in all the estates. We encourage people to pay through mortgages.”

  • BREAKING: Hit-and-run driver killed missing Vanguard reporter – Police

    BREAKING: Hit-and-run driver killed missing Vanguard reporter – Police

    A hit-and-run driver killed the missing Vanguard reporter,  Tordue Henry Salem, who was found dead on Thursday, Police authorities have stated.

    Read Also: Police mute over death of Vanguard reporter

    The Force Public Relations Officer, CP Frank Mba, disclosed this on Friday while parading the driver that killed Tordue Henry Salem at the Police Intelligence Responce Team (IRT) premises, Guzape, Abuja.

    Salem’s body, Mba said, was discovered at the Wuse General Hospital.

    Detail shortly….

  • JUST IN: Soludo, running mate get Certificates of Return

    JUST IN: Soludo, running mate get Certificates of Return

    Anambra Governor-elect Prof Chukwuma Soludo has been issued Certificate of Return by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    The event took place at the Commission’s head office in Awka, Anambra State

    His running mate, Dr Onyekachi Ibezim, also received his certificate.

    Read Also: PHOTOS: Anambra Gov-elect Soludo gets Certificate of Return

    They were presented to them by the National Commissioner- in-charge of voter Education, Festus Okoye.

    Okoye represented the National Chairman of the Commission, Prof Yakubu Mahood.

    Soludo won the election on the platform of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) where he scored 112,229 votes.

    He won 19 of the 21 local government areas, including Ihiala LGA where a supplementary election held on Tuesday.