Category: Featured

  • How landgrabbers sacked us from our  ancestral land, by Ibeju-Lekki community

    How landgrabbers sacked us from our ancestral land, by Ibeju-Lekki community

    Exiled by notorious Lagos landgrabbers, Okunu Eleku families in Oko Olomi Village-Ibeju Lekki Lagos are counting their losses, five years after they were forcefully banished from their ancestral land. Taiwo Alimi captures their struggles as landgrabbers use fake documents to sell their land to unsuspecting buyers. 

    The landgrabbers came with a plan. To maim, destroy, displace, dispossess and kill.  Dateline was April 16, 2016 and their target was the fast rising Oko-Olomi Village, Ibeju Lekki Local Government Area of Lagos state. The vast land measuring 96.492 hectares is the ancestral home of Okunu Eleku family of Oko-Olomi Village in Ibeju Lekki Local Government Lagos State.

    The landgrabbers came in their scores with dangerous weapons catching their unsuspecting guests unawares. They came at dawn and by dusk they had forcefully thrown out the bonafide landowners to become the new landlords.

    Caught in the web were indigenes of Jegi and Ita Pampa and villages that got displaced from their ancestral homes.

    Next was the destruction of houses and properties belonging to people born and raised in the community.

    What followed was the balkanisation of the community, as large hectares of lands were sold to unsuspecting buyers with fake documents. While the landgrabbers allegedly masterminded by notorious landgrabber, Mutairu Owoeye, have kept smiling to the bank, the legitimate landowners have been left in panic and penury.

    With the massive and fast-paced development going on in that axis, the Ibeju Lekki attraction is understandably high, making land speculators, estate developers, dealers, house owners, builders and artisans to flock there in their hundreds for business and daily bread.

    It is home to Lekki Free Trade Zone and is the most sought-after Lagos community by property investors, due to its rapid development and ongoing multimillion dollars projects; among them, the Dangote Refinery, the $450million Lekki International Airport and the 4th Mainland Bridge.

    land grabbers

    •From right: Prince Adegunwa Adeboyejo, family head, Okunu Eleku, Lateef Eleku,
    Baale Oko-Olomi, and Kamoli Agoro, Baale Jegi. Photo: MUYIWA HASSAN.

    It is also the target of professional landgrabbers who look out for lucrative properties to possess.

    This is in spite of the existing Lagos State ‘Properties Protection Law’ passed into law on August 15, 2016, under Governor Akinwumi Ambode.

    The 15-section law prohibits forceful entry and illegal occupation of landed properties, violent and fraudulent conducts in relation to landed properties in Lagos State and for connected purposes, save would-be property owners and investors from being harassed and exploited by landgrabbers. The main objective of the law is to ensure that investors, businessmen, and the general populace carry on their legitimate land/property transactions without hindrance or intimidation.

    With the passage of the law, a Special Anti-land Grabbing Task force was born and this was followed by fervent execution, leading to the arrest and prosecution of feared landgrabber kingpins and their thugs.

    It was actually in the thick of the incessant attacks on Ibeju Lekki villages that the law bill was signed into law by former governor Ambode and many landgrabbers were arrested and charged to court.

    Of note was the arraignment of Owoeye on November 2016 alongside his son Ganiyu Owoeye (aka Garba) for forceful dispossession of residents of their legitimate rights to land ownership. Several suspected thugs were also picked up and charged to court.

    According to Prince Adegunwa Adeboyejo, family head of the Okunu Eleku, the same Owoeye is alleged to be the tormentor-in-chief who led his ‘boys’ to Oko-Olomi, on the infamous day.

    He said: “Oko-Olomi is our ancestral land and it has been there since inception. I was born there and it is from there I used to walk to Igbogije for Primary School education. I grew up there and got married, had my children there and built my house there.

    “It was on April 16, 2016 at 9 AM, we saw a lot of people trooping into the community with Mutairu Owoeye and his son Garba in the lead. There were also many policemen with them. They came with excavator to demolish our houses. Youths bold enough to challenge them were brutally dealt with. They were maimed and injured. Our cars and other properties were damaged and this led to the villagers scampering.

    “That was how they took over our ancestral lands and started partitioning them for sale. Since then, I have not been able to set foot on the land, as they have their men dressed in police uniform manning every part of the community. I’ve been on the run ever since because they are looking for me. My family is now scattered; my wives are no longer together; same for my children. They came and scattered our lives. Since 2016 that we were chased out, we have not been able to return to our homes. We sleep outside like birds without nest.”

    Oko-Olomi exasion
    •Oko-Olomi exasion in
    Lagos State Gazette of 2007

    According one of the chiefs in the community, Lateef Eleku, (Baale Jegi Ibeju Lekki), thereafter, the family went to court to seek redress against Owoeye’s Toll System Development Company Limited.

    “We went to court and were given an order of interlocutory injunction by the High Court of Lagos State in the Epe Judicial Division restraining Toll Systems Development Company Limited, Owoeye and their agents from erecting any structures or further demolition of structures on the lands, but the order was not obeyed. They demolished all our houses and sold the lands.”

    The order read in part:  “That on the 27th day of June 2016, Hon. Justice A.J Bashua of the Epe High Court in suit no. EPD/047/2016 in Chief Tajudeen Mojeed Eleku & two others vs Toll System Development Company Limited & three others granted the following reliefs:

    “An Interim injunction is granted restraining the 1st defendant, its agent, and privies led by one land warrior/agent, Alhaji Mutairu Owoeye from embarking on construction of any structure on the claimant’s land measuring 96.492 hectares more particularly described in area verged in survey plan no. A00/793/015/2016/LA at Oko-Olomi village, pending the hearing and determination of the Motion on Notice for Interlocutory Injunction.”

    An order of interlocutory injunction was again granted the villagers by Justice G.A Safari on 14th of February, 2017.

    “Toll Systems and Owoeye did not honour any of these injunctions,” said Agoro.

    Further investigation by The Nation’s reporter, unearthed a record of the disputed lands as recorded in the Lagos State of Nigeria official Gazette of 2005 and 2007.

    Captured in No. 19 Vol. 40 in page 126, the record read in part: “All the parcel of land at Oko-Olomi village in Ibeju-Lekki Local Government Area of Lagos State of Nigeria, containing an approximate area of 36.170 Hectares, the boundaries of which are described below: Starting at a concrete pillar marked PBS 60841, the co-ordinates of which are 714943.132 metres North and 583165.048 East of U.T.M (Zone 31) origin; boundaries run in straight lines, the bearings and lengths of which are as follows:”

    “The burial grounds of our fore-fathers and the shrines are intact and that is our claim to the lands,” the family head added.

    So, how could landgrabbers just walked into a community and throw out its inhabitants?

    In his reaction, Owoeye maintained that he acted on behalf of his client Toll Systems Development Company Limited, citing an order taken at a Lagos State High Court sitting in Epe to recover possession of 1,561 hectares of land in Lakowe Village, Ibeju Lekki- Lagos.

    Justice Muftau Olokoba made the order in Suit No. LD/4320/2014 pursuant to an application for possession entered by the firm against the defendant, an ‘unknown person.’

    The application was supported by a 20-paragraph affidavit and a seven-paragraph further affidavit filed and deposed to by Mr. Adewale Odutola of 1, Mekunwen Road, Off Oyinkan Abayomi Drive, Ikoyi.

    The applicant averred that Toll Systems Development was the genuine owner of the 1,561 hectares by virtue of a Certificate of Occupancy No: 17/7/2003T dated October 27, 2003.

    Idowu Eleku

    •Idowu Eleku with injuries
    sustained during the takeover

    The court order reads partly, “In the result, it is hereby ordered that the claimant herein do recover possession of land measuring 1,561.20 hectares covered by a Certificate of Occupancy registered as no 17 page 17 in Vol. 2003T situated at Lakowe village, Ibeju Lekki, from any person who occupies same without the consent or permission of the claimant.”

    So, it was upon this judgement that the company forcefully entered the Oko-Olomi Village and other nearby villages in the area to claim their lands, he claimed.

    Prince Adeboyejo punctured a hole in Owoeye’s claim, insisting that Oko-Olomi either by its representatives or in their individual capacity was not a party in the suit mentioned above.

    “The land size measuring approximately 1,561 hectares from Lakowe could not have extended to Oko-Olomi family land, considering the distance. Whether the unlawful taking of Oko-Olomi and lta Pampa family land is not an act of illegality, it is a common knowledge that landgrabbing is an offence under the Land Grabbers Laws of Lagos State.”

    Kamoli Agoro Baale Jegi Village corroborated Prince Adeboyejo’s argument. “There is a permanent injunction restraining them from demolishing and construction on the land, but they bluntly refused and went ahead to bring our house down, claiming the lands are virgin lands up for sale.

    “They have been using Lakowe deeds to sell our lands that are not in any way near Lakowe,” he added.

    The Oko-Olomi family is calling on the Lagos State government to call Owoeye and his agents to order. “All we want the government to do for us is to help us reclaim our ancestral lands. The court of the land has given an order and all we expected of Owoeye and his agents, was to obey that order; but five years after, they have not. Our houses have been demolished and lands worth billions of Naira have been sold with fake deeds,” said Prince Adeboyejo.”

  • Nigeria’s resilience gives hope to the world – NIIA DG Osaghae

    Director-General, Nigerian Institute for International Affairs (NIIA) Prof. Eghosa Osaghae, in this interview with ASSISTANT EDITOR BOLA OLAJUWON, speaks on why Nigeria’s resilience gives hope to the world in the face of numerous challenges; the institute’s new focus on Nigeria’s foreign policy as well as how external factors shape global challenges and new orders.

    Congratulations on the 60th anniversary of the NIIA. If you look back, how can you rate the contribution of the NIIA to the formation and implementation of the Nigerian diplomatic agenda or foreign affair policy?

    The NIIA is the country’s foremost think-tank. And what the NIIA has done over the years has been to first meet its statutory obligations as a government strategic resource for foreign policy, and as an advisory on international affairs. I am sure the NIIA has superbly met the expectations, because it has moved very strongly in the direction of not only looking at matters of foreign policy and international affairs, but also how they interface with issues of the domestic environment. I’m sure that every practitioner of foreign policy and international politics recognises that you cannot have foreign policy, if you don’t have a formidable and stable domestic environment. So, the NIIA has done that very well.

    I am sure that in the memory of Nigerians, NIIA comes across as an agency that has been at the forefront of policy-making, in the forefront of global interventions, and in the forefront of making Nigeria and Africa relevant to global discussions. This is not only at an intellectual level, but also, as you say, at the diplomatic level. This is in consonance with what the founding fathers of NIIA had in mind at its foundation in November 1961. It’s on record that the late Prime Minister of Nigeria, Alhaji Tafawa Balewa thought of the NIIA as an institute that was going to bring the world to Africa and Africa to Nigeria, and Nigeria to Lagos in that, Lagos was going to become the window through which the world was going to envision Africa and engage Africa. The NIIA has very consciously done things to first promote the national interests of Nigeria, within the framework of the changing dynamics and developments in the global arena.

    You would know that in the 60s, the years of Africa’s emergence as a continent of value, and very strongly so, was when Nigeria asserted its leadership roles on all fronts, but one of the things that seriously pedigreed Nigeria’s claim to fame was the fact that Nigeria had very eminent state persons, great international civil servants, the super permanent secretaries that we had. All of them who were active in the Bretton Woods Institutions – the IMF and World Bank and others. And that took us through the 70s, through the 80s until structural adjustment and neo-liberalism took over. So, if you look at the progression from the point of independence to the 1960s and 1970s and 1980s and even the early 1990s, you will see that the NIIA was very prominent in the whole firmament of policy-making.

    Today, there’s talk of the Concert of Medium Powers, which Bolaji Akinyemi, one of the most distinguished Directors-Generals of the NIIA, contributed to the world at a time when the Cold War was raging and people were already beginning to imagine that the non-aligned movement was in decline. And so, he thought the concept of the notion of medium powers would fill in a gap that was beginning to evolve, the kinds of things that you will see with BRICS today. Those things led to the kinds of movements, even the ACP movements, the strengthening of the AU, and the emergence of the regional bodies all over Africa. All of those things came out of the notion of pursuing the notion of medium powers. Then, of course, there was Africa at a zenith in the early 1980s, when it was time to talk about openings of new perspectives that were Africa-centered and home-based.

    This was a time when it was fashionable to talk about self-sufficiency, African solutions to African problems, notions of self-determination, when the West’s sovereignty reigned supreme and people were more interested in ensuring that Africa was able to do things for Africa, from Africans’ own perspectives and paradigms.

    But again, Africa was looking for tentative frameworks for adjustment. And the NIIA was an integral part of that debate that led the Economic Commission for Africa to publish the African alternative to structural adjustment in 1985.

    But the institute was at a period in decline…

    The other day, somebody was saying to me that it would appear that by the 2000s, there was some kind of decline in the NIIA space; and I said, well, what didn’t go into decline in Nigeria? What happened in NIIA is not to be taken in isolation of what happened in other spheres of the country. We have had our season of anomy, recession; and the country gradually recovered. By the time we got into the present civilian democratic dispensation in 1999, it was a surer way to recover and I think that the NIIA has also recovered increasingly.

    If you say NIIA has recovered, what are the indices?

    The glory of the NIIA has never been lost. Glories never get lost. Glory is our reference point and they are ebbs and flows. They rise, they go down and they rise and rise again. What things made up the indicators that were considered when we talk about the golden years of the NIIA? It’s a robust intellectual and scholarly culture. It’s an environment that is filled with very rigorous academic work that has the research, interrogations, examinations, reviews and so on. And the NIIA has always gone by its work through researches – cutting-edge researches, sometimes in partnership with similar bodies elsewhere. It has scholars who have seminars every week; we have our journals, we have our policy papers, we have our round-tables, we have our colloquiums, and we have our public lectures. Now, these are the more conspicuous indicators that you can see, the rest of it, of course, is what feeds the following policy process and that is not for public consumption.

    Read Also; FUNSHO OYENEYIN: I joined Nigerian Army as ‘recruit’, retired as Brigadier–General

    Today we are trying to see how we can increase the more conspicuous public sides of the NIIA. So, one of the greatest anchors of the NIIA’s fame and global record is the library. And that library never disappeared anywhere. You may know that the NIIA library is the depository for all of Nigeria’s agreements and treaties. And they are there. The NIIA has a press library, which is the best of its kind in the world. And I say that very decidedly because we’ve had inquiries from outside the country; we’ve had people visiting to understudy and to familiarise themselves with the operations of the press library. Even the Library of Congress that also has press library has come around to seek partnership with the NIIA…

    What has changed in NIIA?

    Today, we are in the age of digitisation. The NIIA has also been involved in capacity-building and skills acquisition, skills impartation, diplomacy and statecraft. And those are not things that would be for immediate public consumption. The NIIA has discharged all of those responsibilities. So as the world has become more complex, as the dynamics have changed very dramatically, in many instances, the challenges of the NIIA have also become even more enormous. But let me say that today, there has been, if you like, a large assemblage of both state and non-state institutions and agencies that seem to do things that are similar to what the NIIA monopolised for a long time. So, all those things considered, you will say, has the NIIA had the resources to cope with these challenges? That’s where you will begin to talk about the capacity of the institute.

    At 60, what are the critical challenges the NIIA is facing, apart from funding of its research activities?

    Well, funding seems to be the all and end-all of everything, because it is said that if you have the resources, there are really no boundaries and there are no limits to what you can do. So, funding has always been a critical issue. But everyone who manages this scarcity would know that you can never get enough to do all that you want to do. So, we make efforts all the time to see how we can diversify our funding sources, and how we can have smart partnerships with development partners, and how we can raise funds, through competitive grants, and so on.

    Now, you’re asking, are there other challenges? Yes, of course, part of the very serious challenge is in the area of even human resources. If you look across the country today, you will see that there’s been some decline in the quality of overall capacities in our universities and tertiary education sector. The NIIA itself is not exempted from this, coupled with the fact that we have serious restrictions and limitations, in terms of how many researchers we can have on board. Those things can be quite challenging. And we have to think of how to do all that is required of us with even more severely limited capacities, in terms of the researchers that are available on ground and so on.

    But we recognise that in today’s world, it is difficult for institutions to go just like countries to go the whole hog alone. There’s a lot you can do with partnerships. And that’s one vista we have identified and which we are pursuing very vigorously. We will see that there is a challenge of infrastructure; dilapidation is what comes with age. There is really very little you can do about that. There’s infrastructural regeneration, which the NIIA needs. For instance, the NIIA needs upgrading in several areas, especially the facilities that we have. This is a jet age, where things change very rapidly. We have a strong ICT unit, but it can always be better. We need capacities in that area, even in the operations of our library, the conventional libraries where you have what they call the books, the hardware. But the modern library is soft, it’s “e” (electronic) driven by the latest in the ICT world. So, all of these things challenge us, but the thing about challenges is that they give you targets that you have to meet.

    Apart from the changing dynamics of what you are bringing on board, we also realised that you have been youth-compliant in terms of imbibing the right attitude of peace and conflict resolution in youths. You have many interns, who are youths. What is behind this method?

    First is that the knowledge that we seek, the one we produce, the one we propagate has to be transmitted across generations. Part of the limitation we find in many institutions in our country is that when they aged, the institutions disappear. So, we need to build continuous capacity, so that we can have things that we are able to transmit from generation to generation. That’s the overall principle. But it’s also because we have a duty to expose our youths to the kinds of things that are now in very short supply in our country. We have many young people who don’t have the basic knowledge that you will need to function in the area of International Affairs or in foreign policy. We don’t have young people who have the tools to engage, to understand, the complexities that we’re dealing with.

    So, for instance, there are many young people in Nigeria, who consider the super powers to be so benevolent, that each time we have domestic issues, even of accountability, and human rights and so on, they expect that the U.S. and other European countries would come to do things for us. It tells you that we need to re-frame our youths. And that’s why, we expose the youth to things that emphasise the value of nationalism, patriotism, and of love of country.

    The world sees Nigeria in its greatness, because of the kinds of citizens that we have had. I mean, the world knows Nigeria through the literary giants that we have had: the Chinua Achebes, Soyinkas, Chimamandas – all these great writers. And then in religion, we have the Catholic Church, Islam and great scholars of Nigerian origin. The Biden’s administration is building its government with no fewer than four to five Americans of Nigerian descent who are making waves. Not to mention the sports world and what our people have become. Everywhere, contrary to what we think, we are seen as a great country, we are seen as a leader in Africa.

    Do you think that the assertion can stand the test of what is obtainable with the way Nigerians are being treated abroad, and even our diplomats?

    Now, you might ask, what has changed? When you increasingly get involved in some of the, let’s call them, more perverse phases of globalization, where you find people in irregular and illegal migrations across borders, find people in child trafficking, you find people in these things that have become a global problem; they are push and pull effects. Quite naturally, those things can be understood. But things change the complexion of the perceptions that people have, and so on. I give you one example, in America, it is believed that Nigerians are very smart people; very intelligent, and highly respected. For that reason, in the rest of Africa, you will hear things like if Nigeria has not spoken, Africa has not spoken. And that’s the reality of the case.

    Nigeria has managed so far, to prove itself to be so highly resilient, that the world outside thinks it has a lot to learn from how Nigeria has behaved. For instance, Nigeria is about the leading country in the world with an almost 50-50 balance between Christians and Muslims.

    There’s no other country in the world that approximates that. There will be problems every now and then, but it’s the resilience and the ability to overcome these things. How many countries have fought civil wars and survived? America is one of the better examples to show that countries can come out of civil wars even stronger. So, I think that if we all have the understanding that makes the world envy Nigeria, we would be the better for it.

    What is your position about the issue of the youths abusing the government and writing negative things about the country? Don’t you think that this may also have an implication with the way the world sees the country?

    No, no, no. The world itself has, fortunately, a better understanding of the circumstances. There are many scholarly frames that explain why people revolt – the effects of relative deprivation, the effects of extreme poverty and so on. For instance, there is a theoretical perspective that attributes aggression to frustration. These things are known. So, if, increasingly, youths go to schools and schools are closed for extended periods, they manage to graduate and they are not immediately able to find jobs and so on; if people would rather go to die in the Mediterranean waters than remain here and so on. These things are not the original condition of the country. These are contingent outcomes, and the point is, how can we mitigate them? How can we reduce them? I think that what the youths have done, the anger of the youth, is a way of knocking on the door. Parents know when children are not happy; sometimes they can go to the extreme, to say what they want to say.

    However, the youth must not allow themselves to be driven by violent extremism, to be driven by cultism, and to be driven by what has become Yahoo Yahoo industry.

    Do you think the issue of kidnapping, banditry, cyber-crime and corruption have any effect in the way the world sees us?

    We have now, not only the criminal and crime mobility, in terms of the technologies of the crimes, in terms of the personnel; we also have diffusion for all of these things. So, what happens in one country gets replicated in many other countries and so on. So, the point is, these things are not peculiar to Nigeria. It’s just that Nigeria now seems to be one of the receiving ends; you might say growth centres to some of these things. And the point is, why is it easy for our youths to embrace these things at all or to appear to be involved? It is because we have had several years of decay in many sectors. Like I said, over several years, our schools have not function the way they should, employments closing up, frustration, maybe, you can say, has increased in the land, and the geo-strategic and geopolitical location of Nigeria also make Nigeria a target for many of these things. When you talk of banditry, you will find that many people in Nigeria see it as alien. These are not things that we are used to and like the rest of the world, they are new formations that we are trying to understand and reconcile ourselves to. What has become obvious is that there is no way we can deal with some of these issues acting in isolation. We cannot go the whole hog alone. So, multilateral action, concerted actions are called for. So, I think that this is a phase in our evolution, especially our more recent evolution, economic progressions. Those kinds of things will pass, and it is remarkable that we have had interventions that are making a difference.

    Are we getting gains from what we’ve really invested in bringing peace and harmony to the world, especially in places like Liberia, Sierra Leone and other countries? Even look at South Africa’s disposition to Nigerians. What’s your perspective?

    When you talk of gains in profit and material terms, it’s like you think that what we did in all those times, in terms of our involvement in the search for peace in Africa and outside, was some kind of investment. When people say put your money where your mouth is, what you call the dividends of peacetime psychological operations, you build roads, you send peace teams, you send peacekeeping forces, you do all of these things.

    The dividends don’t immediately come. But they are part and parcel of your greatness. They are part and parcel of what you call the soft power instruments of diplomacy. The goodwill, the believability, the credibility, your claim to fame and to greatness. When people say, what have you done? Those things are calculated in the kinds of things you have said; the sacrifices that Nigeria made in Liberia, for instance; those are sacrifices that Liberians can never forget, and the Sierra Leoneans have never forgotten.

    You will recall that at a point in Liberia, we had a Chief of Army Staff who was a Nigerian. And don’t forget that in some countries, we had Nigerians as Chief Justices. These are dividends that you cannot put in Naira and Kobo terms. For instance, when South Africa was constituting a Presidential Committee on its economy, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala was named Chair. I mean, that doesn’t come because South Africans are fighting Nigerians. But the perception of Nigeria, in all of these places, is a perception that is borne out not only of what Nigeria has done in the past but also of what Nigeria is doing. Africa does not joke with Nigeria, believe me.

    In forums where voice is called for, they all line up behind Nigeria. And the reason is, Nigeria has a proven history of leadership, of credible leadership, of bold leadership, of leadership that would make many other African countries wish they belong to a country like Nigeria. And I think that goodwill more than compensates for all the things that you call the sacrifices that we have made and will continue to make.

    Is the way Nigerians are treated abroad a reflection of the way Nigerians are treated in Nigeria?

    This is a very smart question. Nigerians abroad and at home are the same people. Once, I attended a conference, and a gentleman of European stock came to me and said, that guy who is also a professor, is he a Nigerian? So, I said, yes, but why are you asking? He said, because he doesn’t behave like a typical Nigerian. So I said, how does a typical Nigerian behave? He said a typical Nigeria is full of confidence, overbearing and very forward. Now, this character of the Nigerian is true inside and outside. You haven’t found many more confident people who would let you know that you don’t take them for granted. And that can be properly reconstructed along more positive lines. The only other counterpart that I have seen with such a high degree of confidence is the American. And it’s a mark of vitality.

    Now, how are Nigerians treated outside the country? I would hate to think that Nigerians are targeted. If one exhibits a kind of behaviour that is regarded as too bold, you can attract certain kinds of responses. Also, we notice that many of the people who go around the world claiming to be Nigerians are not.

    Look at Nigerian sports people. I mean, in the NBA, in the United States, they are over 200 Nigerians, at all levels. Hakeem Olajuwon is one of the more revered people in the state of Texas. He’s is close to all the governors that have been there. Look at Joshua, the boxer; look at Mikel Obi and look at Jay-Jay Okocha. If you go through the list of all the athletes, you will find that our sports ambassadors have become some of the more formidable ambassadors that we have in the world. And they are highly respected. The Nigerian doctors are all over the world doing wonderful things. There are Nigerian professors. They are the ones who we should focus on. Those are the people that move our diaspora communities. It is those ones that we should continue to say, this is the true Nigerian spirit!

  • Police rescue day-old baby allegedly stolen by couple in Kano

    By Fanen Ihyongo, Kano

    The police in Kano State on Saturday rescued a day-old baby allegedly abducted by a couple in search of a male child.

    The toddler, a twin, was in good health when he was re-united with his parents, police said.

    The baby’s father, Rabi’u Muhammad, of Gayawa Quarters, Ungogo Local Government Area, Kano State, had run to the police command to complain that one of his male twin babies was missing.

    He said his wife was delivered of the twins on Friday at Mohammad Abdullahi Wase Teaching Hospital, Kano, and was admitted.

    He said his sister in-law who was looking after the babies at the corridor of the maternity ward slept off only to wake up and discovered that the child was missing.

    Read Also: Police uncover child trafficking church in Imo

    Police Spokesman, Abdullahi Haruna Kiyawa, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), told The Nation that upon receiving the report, the Commissioner of Police, Sama’ila Shu’aibu Dikko, instructed a team of detectives led by Daniel Itse Amah, a Superintendent of Police, to rescue the victim and arrest the culprits.

    “The team immediately stormed the scene and launched a search. The Hospital was sealed off and thoroughly combed, but the child was not found immediately,” he said.

    However, with sustained efforts, coupled with intelligence sharing, the baby was recovered outside the hospital premises, police said.

    Kiyawa said the infant was recovered in the home of his abductors -one Maryam Sadiq, 22, and her 50-year old husband, Abubakar Sadiq, who hail from Rijiyar Zaki Quarters, Kano. The culprits were arrested.

    During interrogation, Maryam confessed that she took the child from Mohammad Abdullahi Wase Teaching Hospital.

    “But I acted on the request of my husband who has been longing for a male child,” she said.

    The baby’s nanny narrated that the prime suspect (Maryam) had met her in the hospital and told her that the twin-babies were very beautiful, but she did not suspect that she could turn around to ‘steal’ one of the baby boys.

    Detectives said while the search for the baby in the hospital was ongoing, they got a hint that a man whose wife was not pregnant had thrown a party to celebrate the arrival of a male child in his family, triggering doubts from neighbours.

    Commissioner of Police, Sama’ila Shu’aibu Dikko, ordered that the case be transferred to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) of the Command for discreet investigation. Dikko said the suspects will be charged to court upon completion of investigation.

  • COVID-19 claims 108 lives in 10 days — NCDC

    By Moses Emorinken, Abuja

    • Says third wave has killed more people than second

    About 108 persons have lost their lives to the ravaging third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic across the country in just 10 days, The Nation has learnt.

    According to an epidemiological report by the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) the Delta variant, is more life-threatening compared to earlier variant.

    Specifically, the COVID-19 situation report obtained by The Nation between September 1 to September 10, 2021, showed that the death toll rose from 2,480 to 2,588 deaths.

    Also, within the same period, 5,226 new cases of infections were recorded; from 193,013 to 198,239 cases. 6,780 people recovered in the last ten days; from 179,000 recoveries to 185,780 recoveries between September 1 to September 10, 2021.

    Read Also; COVID-19: Govt’s reluctance to support vaccine logistics will cause wastage, UNICEF warns

    From The Nation analysis, the third wave seems to be deadlier than the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic; with more hospitalisation, severe illness, and deaths.

    With respect to the second wave of the pandemic which lingered for about seven month – between December 27, 2020, to July 7, 2021 – the total numbers of confirmed cases were 77,963, 811 deaths recorded, with 89,364 recoveries.

    For the third wave of the pandemic, which probably started in the early days of July, barely three months till date, the total number of confirmed cases was 30,129; 466 deaths; and 21,372 recoveries.

    Therefore, from The Nation’s investigation of the data, the third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic has killed more than half of the total deaths in the second wave which lasted for about seven months. The third wave in Nigeria is barely three months.

    The NCDC as part of the precautionary measures urged Nigerians to continue to practice safe hand and mouth hygiene by washing hands with soap in flowing water, sanitising the hands with alcohol-based sanitisers, properly wearing the facemasks, avoid large gatherings and practice social distancing.

  • UPDATED: Ronaldo scores on Man Utd’s second debut

    UPDATED: Ronaldo scores on Man Utd’s second debut

    Cristiano Ronaldo scored twice on his Manchester United return as they moved top of the Premier League with victory against Newcastle.

    It took Ronaldo 47 minutes to reopen his goalscoring account for United, 12 years after his last appearance for the club.

    Ronaldo, 36, who re-signed for United from Juventus in August, tapped in from close range to give the hosts the lead in first-half added time.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Ronaldo scores on Man Utd’s second debut

    He added his second just after the hour mark, driving a left-foot shot under Newcastle goalkeeper Freddie Woodman after Javier Manquillo had equalised for the visitors.

    Bruno Fernandes extended the hosts lead with a thumping long-range effort that flew past Woodman into the top-left corner before Jesse Lingard rounded off the scoring with a superb finish into the other corner after an intricate move. (BBC)

  • Buhari to doctors: Striking at this critical time isn’t a good decision

    By Bolaji Ogundele, Abuja

    • Urges them to return to their duty posts
    • Says he has a good track record of paying our debts to workers, pensioners

    President Muhammadu Buhari, on Friday pleaded with striking medical doctors across the country to call off their industrial action as Nigerians are currently in critical need of their services.

    President Buhari, who made the call when he received members of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, also asked those contemplating strike to choose amicable settlement of all grievances instead. Buhari, according to his  Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, noted that a doctors  striking at a time when the country is struggling to find its way out of a pandemic is not a good decision, the nature of grievances notwithstanding.

    He, however, urged the striking unions to opt for settlement of issues by negotiation, no matter how long it takes, assuring that all outstanding benefits owed medical doctors will be cleared, after verifications, even as he reminded them that his administration has a track record of paying its debt to workers and pensioners.

    Read Also: Buhari: I’ll stabilise security, economy before leaving

    “The lives of citizens that could be lost or damaged when doctors withdraw services, are precious enough to be worth opting for peaceful resolution of differences,” the president was quoted as saying.

    He added: “Protecting our citizens is not to be left to government alone, but taken as a collective responsibility, in which especially medical professionals play a critical role. Let me speak directly to the striking doctors. Embarking on industrial action at this time when Nigerians need you most is not the best action to take, no matter the grievances.

    “This administration has a good track record of paying all debts owed to government workers, pensioners and contractors and we have even revisited debts left by past administrations, once due verification is done. Debts genuinely owed Health workers will be settled.

    “I learnt that some of the 12 points demand in the ongoing strike were already addressed, though the Review of a new Hazard Allowance has not been fully negotiated because of the sharp and deep division within the ranks of the striking doctors.’’

    President Buhari said the outstanding issue of an Establishment circular issued by the Head of Service, removing House Officers, NYSC Doctors from scheme of service had an addendum circular from National Salaries and Wages Commission to clarify that they will continue to earn the wages attached to them on their present wage structure.

    He said: “We are also supporting initiatives to expand health insurance coverage and bring more resources to health financing.

    “We have many more challenges ahead and much more to do, for our large population.

    “In this respect, it is important to remind you that, as senior medical personnel and representatives of one of the most respected professional groups in the world, your responsibility for the health and wellbeing of Nigerians are clear.

    “It does not end only with the welfare of your members, but continues with a sense of responsibility for the entire country and its sociopolitical health and national stability,’’ he added.

    President Buhari noted that Nigeria’s source of revenue over many years was dwindling, with a rising population.

    “The global economy has been seriously affected by the pandemic, and despite recent pleasing news of more than five per cent economic growth of Nigeria in the last quarter, we are still having fiscal challenges to deal with, like most other countries.

    “The source of revenue that Nigeria has depended on for so long experienced global decline, our population is rising fast and the tension arising from both, is fuelling agitation among our youth. Organizations like the NMA could play a very useful moderating role in society.”

  • VAT: Appeal Court stops Lagos, Rivers, others

    By Eric Ikhilae, Abuja, Uja Emmanuel, Makurdi, Sola Shittu, Gombe, Augustine Okezie, Katsina and Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

    • Grants Lagos leave to be joined in FIRS suit

    • Agitating state executives insensitive, self–centred, says Kogi govt

    • Gombe governor: Court ruling in order, will prevent multiple charges

    • I’ll embrace any court decision on VAT, says Ortom

    • Sanwo-Olu signs VAT Bill into law

    The Court of Appeal in Abuja on Friday ordered parties in the dispute over the administration of the Value Added Tax (VAT) to stay action pending the resolution of all legal issues in contention.

    A three-member panel of the court  ordered parties to maintain status quo ante bellum and refrain from acts capable of jeopardizing the res (subject of the dispute).

    The court agreed with the lawyer to the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Mahmud Magaji (SAN) that, having submitted to its (the court’s) jurisdiction, it was incumbent on parties to preserve the res.

    Justice Haruna Simon Tsanami, in the lead ruling, ordered parties not to give effect to the August 9 judgment of the  Federal High Court in Port Harcourt and the VAT law enacted by Rivers State.

    The court ordered parties to hold their peace pending the hearing of the application filed by the FIRS for stay of execution of the  judgment given by Justice Steven Pam in favour of Rivers State to collect VAT in the state.

    The court equally granted leave to the Lagos State Government to bring an application to be heard in the case as an interested party  in the appeal filed by FIRS against the Federal High Court judgment.

    It noted that Lagos State’s  right would be adversely affected if not heard.

    The court then adjourned till September 16 for the hearing of pending applications, including the joinder application by Lagos.

    In his  August 9 judgement in a suit filed by the Rivers State government,Justice Stephen Pam of the  Federal High Court, Port Harcourt, had  held that the applicant (state government) and not the FIRS, has the right to collect VAT, Personal Income Tax in the state.

    He  restrained the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and FIRS (1st and 2nd defendants) from collecting VAT in Rivers and directed the Rivers State government to take charge of the duty.

    Read Also: VAT: Restructuring has begun, say SANs, Afenifere, Moghalu

    The Lagos State House of Assembly soon followed suit and passed a similar law empowering the state government to collect  VAT in the state.

    Sanwo-Olu signs VAT Bill into law

    The Court of Appeal’s order came on a day Governor  Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State signed into law the state VAT Bill as passed by the House of Assembly.

    The governor signed the “bill for a law to impose and charge VAT on certain goods and services” at about 11.45am  soon after returning from an official trip to Abuja .

     Kogis blasts ‘insensitive, self-centred leaders trying to further divide the country’

    But the action of the Lagos and Rivers State governors on the VAT issue seems not to have gone down well with the Kogi State government which, yesterday,said the states should support one another.

    Information Commissioner, Kingsley Fanwo, said the agitation for states’ control of VAT was the handiwork of those he called insensitive and self-centred leaders.

    “We are not created equally, and God that created us did not give us equal potential, and we have to support one another,” Fanwo said on Arise TV.

    He added: “This call shows that some of our leaders are insensitive, self-centred and trying to make policies that will further divide the country.

    “Kogi is bordered by about 10 states of the federation and a gateway to the North, South, to everywhere. And you know that thousands of vehicles transverse the state on a daily basis. It’s the mineral capital of Nigeria. When you look at our advantages, we should even be at the forefront of fighting for VAT to be completely retained in the state.

    “When you look at the development of the South-West in those days,the Cocoa House,and the groundnut pyramids in the North, the whole of Nigeria is reaping the benefit till today. And what we need to do at this material time as leaders is to stop thinking about ourselves alone.

    “The position of Governor Yahaya Bello (of Kogi State) on this is very clear: we will not jump on that bandwagon to call for the retention of VAT completely in the state.”

    Gombe lauds ruling

    Gombe State governor,  Inuwa Yahaya, yesterday welcomed  the Appeal Court’s ruling on maintaining  status quo on VAT collection and distribution.

    Yahaya, speaking through his Director General, Press Affairs, Malama Ismaila Uba Misili said his  state still prefers  the central collection and distribution of VAT.

    “The position of Gombe State is the need to retain the existing collection and distribution of VAT centrally.  This is to ensure a balance in the collection and refund system that ensures customers are not charged multiple times,” he said.

    Ortom: We’ll obey court’s decision no matter its leaning

    But  Governor  Samuel Ortom of Benue has said he would  embrace the constitutional provisions concerning the Value Added Tax (VAT) whether they affect his state positively or negatively.

    Ortom  who commended the Rivers and Lagos States governors for the step they have taken on the  VAT issue said he had directed the Benue Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice to study the law and tell him its  implication.

    “I don’t think there is anything wrong in embracing the law as long as it conforms with the constitution, whether it affects states positively or negatively,” Ortom told reporters in Makurdi on his return from Abuja.

    “I support the governors of Rivers and Lagos states for what they are doing.

    “Anything that is in tandem with the rule of law I will accept, but if anyone thinks otherwise, the best thing to do is to go to court.

    “I heard they are in court and if the case is decided otherwise by the Supreme Court we will accept it.”

    Speaking on the 2023 elections, the governor said zoning of political offices by political parties goes a long way in determining   their  victory or failure.

    The governor said that he was confident that his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) would get it right and win the 2023 election overwhelmingly to once again rule Nigeria.

    He said that the party was repositioned to give Nigerians the needed freedom they desired, considering what was happening in the country recently.

    “There is nothing the APC didn’t promise Nigerians in 2015, I was there but immediately they assumed leadership they did not keep to their promises.

    “By October, we will hold our national convention in preparation for the 2023  elections and I believe this time we will get it right.”

    On the incessant clashes between herders and farmers in the country,Ortom said  farmers should be allowed  to bear AK 47 rifles like herdsmen so that they can defend themselves.

    Ortom said a situation whereby herdsmen go about with sophisticated weapons like AK 47 and farmers are asked to defend themselves with only  cutlass and dane guns is  unfair .

    “Farmers should be allowed to carry weapons commensurate with  the weapons herdsmen are carrying  about and killing people with .

    “Let everyone have weapons so that we can face each other ,not when you have cutlass and dane guns to face someone with an AK 47,” he said.

    Katsina thumbs up court ruling; Rivers declines comment  

    Katsina State also welcomed  the Appeal Court on the ruling with Finance and Economic Development Commissioner, Qassim Mutallab, saying that allowing states to collect VAT would distort the national economy, breed multiple taxation and undermine the Federal Government’s policy on doing business with ease.

    “If you allow the states to collect VAT, it will encourage multiple taxation on telecommunication companies, banks, and corporate entities with national spread,” Mutallab said by phone.

    He added: ”It will encourage every state with different tax rates, demanding different payments from the same company and who pays the companies these differences?”

    The  Attorney-General of Rivers State and Commissioner for Justice, Prof. Zacchaeus Adangor  declined to comment when contacted by The Nation yesterday.

  • PDP crisis: Mark panel warns against sacking Secondus before Dec 9

    By Yusuf Alli, Managing Editor,Northern Operation/Gbade Ogunwale, Abuja/Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

    The David Mark Reconciliation Committee set up by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is urging caution in the party’s plan to get rid of its chairman, Prince Uche Secondus, before the expiration of his tenure.

    The committee warns the party against sacking the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party, headed by the suspended Secondus to avoid running into legal obstacles.

    But more trouble emerged on Friday for the embattled chairman after a Rivers State High Court declared his suspension by Ward 5 executive committee of the party in Ikuru, in Andoni Local Government Area of the state as valid and subsisting.

    The court also granted a perpetual injunction restraining him from parading himself as the national chairman of the PDP.

    Secondus is now awaiting the ruling of the Court of Appeal on his appeal against the restraining order slammed against him by two separate High Courts in Rivers and Cross River states.

    The Nation gathered that the David Mark Committee, in its report to the party, asked the PDP not to allow new executives to take over the affairs of the party before the exit date of Secondus team on December 9.

    The panel, headed by a former President of the Senate, Chief David Mark, said the Secondus’ NWC should be allowed to serve its term till December 9, 2021 when its tenure will end.

    It said Governor Nyesom Wike is yet to agree to withdraw all cases in court.

    The panel claimed that although Secondus agreed to withdraw all cases, it was on the condition that he would do so if Wike did the same.

    The Mark panel however said the party can go ahead with the conduct of its National Convention.

    It urged the PDP Governors Forum to be united, and recommended a five point way forward for the party.

    The recommendations were considered by the PDP governors on Wednesday night in Abuja.

    The suggestions were said to have guided the PDP National Executive Committee (NEC) on Thursday in appointing Governor Ahmadu Fintiri of Adamawa State as chairman of the National Convention Committee (NCC) and Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State as secretary.

    Also, Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi was appointed the chairman of the Zoning Committee of the party.

    It was learnt that the recommendations of the eight-man reconciliation committee of the party provided the bearing for the PDP governors.

    The panel recommended: “That Governor Wike and Chairman Secondus withdraw all court cases to allow for smooth convention. While Governor Wike has not consented to that yet, Chairman Secondus however promised to withdraw the cases if the other party does the same.

    “That the party appoints a Convention Committee that should take over the responsibilities of organizing the National Convention as soon as possible.

    “That the handing over after the convention could be delayed until December 9, 2021, to enable the current NWC to serve out their term.

    “That those beating the drums of war behind the scene are urged to stop beating the drums.

    “That the Governors Forum should point the way forward. That there is a need for the governors to continue to be united.”

    The report was signed by Senator Mark; Governor Darius Ishaku; a former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Chief Tom Ikimi; a former Minister of Communications, Haliru Bello Mohammed; a former National Chairman of PDP, ex-Governor Okwesilieze Nwodo; a former Deputy National Chairman of PDP, Alhaji Shuaibu Oyedokun; a former Minister of Women Affairs, Hajiya Inna Ciroma; and the Senate Minority Leader, Sen. Enyinaya Abaribe.

    A source close to the panel said: “This committee opted for a middle approach to the resolution of the crisis to stave off more cases in court.

    “What the panel has done is to set the warring parties aside and focus on the survival of the party, which is more important to all the stakeholders.

    “The recommendations have also created a window for all the parties to exhaust their claims and counter-claims in court. The panel however advised the parties to withdraw all cases in court.”

    Court grants perpetual injunction against Secondus 

    However, a Rivers State High Court yesterday declared the suspension of Prince Uche Secondus, by Ward 5 executive committee of the party in Ikuru Town, in Andoni Local Government Area of the state as valid and subsisting.

    The court also ordered a perpetual injunction restraining Secondus from parading himself as National Chairman of PDP.

    Read Also; PDP raises Ugwuanyi panel on zoning

    Justice Okogbule Gbasam of the Degema Judicial Division vacation court upheld  the suspension of Secondus while delivering judgment in  a case filed by Ibeawuchi Ernest Alex, Dennis Nna Amadi, Emmanuel Stephen and Umezirike Onucha (claimants) against Uche Secondus (1st defendant) and the PDP (2nd defendant).

    The judge said after careful review of the submissions made by the lawyers to the parties in the suit, he arrived at the conclusion that evidence presented by the claimants before the court clearly showed that Secondus was suspended by Ward 5 over anti-party activities on August 8, 2021 and that the Andoni LGA office of the PDP wrote a letter of acceptance of the suspension on August 10.

    The claimants, according to him, also provided evidence that the state chapter of PDP confirmed the suspension of Secondus on August 11, with another letter written to the Board of Trustee of the party on August 13.

    Gbasam noted the first defendant, who was represented by his lawyer, Godfrey Uwalaka, never challenged his suspension by his ward.

    He said the suit was not about the suspension of Secondus as national officer, but as a member of the PDP in his ward, his root and foundation as a member of the party.

    The judge explained that Article 53 of the PDP clearly states that any member suspended cannot participate in the affairs of the party while on suspension.

    He declared that by the virtue of Secondus’ suspension as a member of the PDP in his ward, he has lost the right to function as national chairman of the party and any function carried out by him under suspension remained invalid.

    He said: “I, hereby, hold that the court has jurisdiction to hear the suit. I hold, therefore, that his suspension and having been acknowledged by the party in the state, is valid. He shall not so act as national chairman. His suspension still subsists.”

    The judge struck out the preliminary objection by Secondus’ lawyer challenging the jurisdiction of the court to hear the matter.

    He also dismissed the objection that the matter ought not to have been filed through originating summons.

    Gbasam further dismissed the application brought by Secondus’ lawyer that the court lacked power to meddle in internal affairs of the party.

    He declared that the court had a constitutional obligation to hear matters, particularly, when political parties clearly breached their own constitution.

    The judge declared Article 59 (3) of the PDP constitution which deals with discipline of national officers as null and void saying such officers could not be judges in their own case.

    He issued a consequential order declaring Article 59 (3) of the PDP constitution void, because it is inconsistent with Section 36 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended.

    Gbasam, before reading the judgment, dismissed an oral application by Secondus’ lawyer to stay further proceedings on the matter pending the determination of his client’s suit in the Court of Appeal.

    But lawyer for the claimants, Nwosuegbe Eze, prayed the court to discountenance the oral application since there was no motion before the court for stay of proceeding.

    On the issue of fair hearing raised by lawyer to PDP (second defendant), Eugene Odey, the judge said the lawyer had ample time to represent the client and the issue of fair hearing had no basis.

    Gbasam said it had been noticed that parties, who could not prove their cases always use the issue of fair hearing to hoodwink the court.

    Embattled chairman looks up to A/Court for reprieve

    Prince Uche Secondus is currently   awaiting the ruling of the Court of Appeal on appeal against the injunction slammed against him by two separate high courts in Rivers and Cross River states.

    On the strength of the court orders, Secondus has been prevented from presiding over official functions of the PDP, including meetings of the National Working Committee (NWC), the National Executive Committee (NEC) and the National Caucus.

    The suspended party chairman had, last week, approached the appellate court in Abuja seeking to vacate the restraining orders from the two lower courts.

    But the party has moved on without the embattled national chairman with key decisions about the running of the PDP taken without his input.

    The Deputy National Chairman (South), Elder Yemi Akinwonmi, has since been presiding over key functions of the party at the NWC, NEC and the National Caucus.

    While Secondus is still battling at the appellate court to regain his seat, the party has gone ahead to constitute the National Convention Organising Committee and the Zoning Committee.

    The two committees have been charged with the task of ensuring the realisation of the October 30 date for the National Convention and to decide on which geopolitical zone the next chairman will emerge from.

    Key stakeholders, including governors, the Board of Trustees (BoT) and elders of the party, appeared to have since left Secondus to his fate as nobody seems to be bothered about him anymore.

    Also, the committee set up to mediate between the embattled chairman and the Rivers State governor, Nyesom Wike, appeared to have made little progress in the task of resolving the matter.

    It was gathered on Friday that the eight-member committee, chaired by a former Senate President, Chief David Mark, could not persuade those who obtained the two court restraining orders against Secondus to withdraw their matter from court, even though the embattled chairman had indicated his willingness for an out of court settlement.

    The body language of key stakeholders during official party functions since the chairman was suspended appeared to suggest that he may be fighting a lone battle.

  • Yoruba Nation campaigners set to resume rally in Sunday Igboho’s hometown

    By Gbenga Aderanti and Alao Abiodun

    • Community leader to agitators: shelve plan or face consequences

    Barring any last-minute change of date, agitators for the Yoruba Nation have announced plans to resume their protest on Saturday (today), September 11.

    The Nation learnt the rally is based on solidarity and support for embattled Yoruba Nation agitator Sunday Igboho who is currently in detention in Cotonou.

    In the past, The Nation reports Yoruba Nation’s rallies had taken place in Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Ekiti, Lagos and Oyo states respectively.

    Igboho’s spokesman, Olayomi Koiki, in a broadcast disclosed that the rally would take place at the hometown of his embattled principal.

    Checks by The Nation show Sunday Igboho is from Aladikun compound in Modeke, Igboho, Oyo State.

    Read Also; Gumi’s visit to Igboho a misadventure says Yoruba group

    The 48-year-old agitator who was first detained at the Brigade économique et financière (BEF), is currently at Prison Civile de Cotonou — Cotonou Civil Prison.

    In the last judgment, the Cour De’appal De Cotonou ordered that Igboho should be kept in prison custody.

    Koiki said, “Yoruba Nation Rally will be happening in the town of our Father, Chief Sunday Adeyemo Igboho Oosa – Date: 11th of September 2021 – Time: 10:00am Host: Gbogbo Omo Yoruba Agbaye”

    A community leader in Igboho has, however, advised the group to shelve the purported visit.

    In a telephone interview with The Nation, the community leader who craved anonymity said the group had been told not to come for the rally in Igboho.

    He warned that some of  pro-Yoruba Nation bloggers by their activities are attracting enemies to the group due to their reckless statements, warning  that it could jeopardise the interest of the group if care is not taken. “what they do is to attack Yoruba leaders and traditional rulers.”

    While admitting that the group sent a delegation to Igboho town, he disclosed that the people of the town made it known to them that they should shelve the visit.

    “ What are we going to benefit from the visit? Sunday Igboho is in Cotonou and they have not been able to do anything about it. One of the boys whose  dead body was taken away after being killed, nobody has been able to do anything about it.”

    He said their visit would foul the peace the town is currently enjoying.

    He disclosed that many Yoruba traditional rulers have distanced themselves from the group because some members of the group are unruly.

    “The Yoruba Nation agitators are not welcomed in the town right now because the atmosphere is not conducive for such a visit.

    “The Igboho people have told the group not to come and that they would not be entertained.

    “The people of the town are not happy right now because of what recently happened to us. The problem is too big for the town right now and it does not have the strength to shoulder it,” the community leader said.

    He warned that if the group insists on coming to Igboho, the Yoruba Nation agitators should be ready to bear the consequence of their visit if confronted by the people of the town.”

  • Horror tales of child rape in Gombe

    • Victims seek funds for second surgery after failed one
    • Activist: We’re frustrated by absence of legal instrument to deal with rapists

    By Sola SHITTU, Gombe

    IT was a bright and sunny day in Gombe, the capital city of Gombe State on December 9, 2020. Natwa Yakubu became thirsty on account of the rather harsh weather, so she sent Rifkatu, her five-year-old daughter, to buy her a sachet of iced water popularly called pure water.

    As it would later turned out, Rifkatu’s rather harmless mission turned into a tragedy that left permanent physical and psychological scars on the body and soul of the five-year-old who happened to be the only girl among the five children of the Yakubu family.

    On her way to the shop of the sachet water’s seller, Rifkatu was violently raped by an 18-year-old teenager who ambushed her on the way and took her to an uncompleted building some 200 metres away from the family house of the Yakubus at the extreme end of the Government Reserved Area (GRA) in Gombe.

    Ironically, the area is home to the high and mighty in the capital city, including senators, commissioners and many former public office holders. But Rifkatu’s family house was far flung from the serene atmosphere of the GRA. It was situated in an isolated area kept apart by a deep gully by an almost 30-metre wide gully, which makes this undeveloped part of the GRA inaccessible to both motorists and pedestrians.

    As the 18-year-old devil’s reincarnate violently defiled the hapless five-year-old, her father, a security guard, was at work while her mother was waiting patiently at home for the water she had sent her to buy.

    The violent act perpetrated against Rifkatu caused her to suffer serious tears that covered the entire section from her vagina to her anus, such that faeces now comes out through her vagina instead of her anus each time she defecates. And the situation has persisted in spite of a surgery that was carried out to correct the damage.

    Gombe Rape

    But Rifkatu is not alone in the ugly fate that befell her. May, another rape victim, is currently battling with the injury she sustained after she was raped by an unidentified suspect.

    May, daughter of a herdsman, had been sent by her parents into the bush to look after their cattle in the absence of her brother. Her brother later came over to take charge of the cattle, but May was raped on her way home and the perpetrator of the heinous crime has since been at large while she is still lying in the hospital.

    “A surgery had been done before, but she had to come back for the second one because she is still defecating through her vagina,” said Christiana Agbo, the Kishimi Shelter and Care Foundation officer in charge of adolescent girl and child protection in Gombe State.

    She said, however, that the most worrisome rape case in her charge was that of Rifkatu who requires financial help to go for the second surgery in the bid to correct the damages done to her private parts by the man that raped her.

    “Imagine, we called the father to ask how much he had and he said he wanted to sell his goat to take her back to the hospital,” Agbo lamented.

    Rifkatu’s mother, 40-year-old Anyway Yakubu, a full time housewife, looked helpless when she spoke with the reporter, saying that they were hinging their hope on good hearted members of the public for a solution to the problem.

    She said: “The incident occurred on 9th December, 2020, and since then, we have been battling with how to correct the anomaly caused to her system by the rapist.

    “Sometimes I look at her and the pains she is going through at her tender age, and I break into tears. It is even more painful to me as a mother because I am helpless and cannot do anything to help my daughter.

    “I feel guilty that I was the one who sent her on errand and sometimes blame myself for what happened to her.”

    Although eight years old Daharatu Abubakar, another rape victim and eldest of the four children of 25 years old Zainab Abubakar now looks better after she was raped by a 65-year-old man who has since been charged and sentenced to 20 years imprisonment by a law court, the scars of the attack linger.

    “It all happened around 6 pm on December 6, 2020,” said Daharatu’s mother, Zainab. “I sent her to buy me flour to make chinchin but she was attacked by the 65 years old man who grabbed her in the throat and covered her mouth.”

    Rape Victim in Gombe

    Daharatu’s father, Garus Musa Abubakar, said he was in the market when he received a call that told him what happened to his daughter.

    “I cried on that day because she was in a very bad shape. She sustained serious injuries and had to be rushed to the hospital. As a father, I felt so bad about the incident,” he said.

    For Mrs. Grace Tony Samuel, the Executive Director of Kishimi Shelter and Care Foundation, the battle against rape and the attendant damages to the body and the psyche of survivors is becoming a frustrating one because the legal instrument to deal with the perpetrators, the Child Right Act, is yet to be domesticated in Gombe State.

    She said: “The state House of Assembly held a public hearing on it last week and we are not sure whether it is going to see the light of the day because there were some pockets of reactions there. Some people were kicking against the castration of rapists. It means they are not seeing it as a capital offence.

    “So, to me, it is frustrating and I feel that everybody must take responsibility — individuals, parents, CSOs, government and religious bodies — because the thing is skyrocketing. If we put ourselves in the place of the victims, maybe it will make us become more sensible.”

    Asked why perpetrators engage in rape, Mrs. Samuel dismissed the argument that the way and manner of dressing by victims often encourage it. According to her, rape has more to do with the mental status of the perpetrators.

    She said: “The survivors of rape, some are two years old and some are five years old. For God sake, what has this got to do with dressing? They don’t even know what dressing is all about.

    “So I will not subscribe to the argument that dressing is the issue. I think it is a psychological issue. And the moral decadence in the society is also part of it, because I don’t understand how a father will rape his own daughter.

    Christiana Agbo,  Kishimi
    •Christiana Agbo, Kishimi Shelter
    and Care Foundation

    “Sometimes I begin to think whether it is occult, because we have seen cases of elderly persons who are 65 or 70 raping less than 10 years old girls. So I don’t get it.

    “Actually, I am confused about the whole thing because you can’t really point at any exact reason for rape.

    “During the COVID-19 lockdown, there were lots of rape cases and they were attributed to the lockdown which made everything to stand still and people clustered in one place. But now the lock down is over, so why is it still happening?”

    The Commissioner of Police in Gombe State, Ishola Babaita, however, believed that the battle against rapist in the state was being won and that rape cases had reduced drastically.

    Babaita said: “The offence of rape has become a very notorious crime and we are already making a very strong move to curb it drastically.

    Mrs. Grace Tony Samuel
    •Executive Director, Kishimi Shelter and
    Care Foundation, Mrs. Grace Tony Samuel

    “First, we have made sure that anyone caught with the offence of rape has no hiding place. Such a person will be charged to court. And we collaborate with the judiciary on this.

    “Some of the perpetrators have been seriously dealt with under the ambit of the law.

    “We also collaborate with NGOs for advocacy about the evil and create awareness on it. So with all these collaborations, it has come gradually under control.”

    Babaita said although it has been very difficult to find a clear reason for rape, it can be influenced by poverty.

    “What I mean is that it is poverty that makes parents to send their little children to hawk on the streets thereby exposing them to the danger of being raped. Some families depend on whatever little things their children could sell for them to survive.

     Natwa Yakubu

    •Rape victim Rifkatu’s
    mother Natwa Yakubu

    “Another reason could be traced to drug addiction. These days, you find so many youths and even adults engaging in drug addiction. When they are on drug, they can do anything including raping a little girl.

    “Some also say they do it for ritual purposes. But I am a policeman and I know we that cannot proof that before the court of law.”

    The state Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Barrister Zubair Umar, said the Child Rights Act is already going through some processes for it to be domesticated in the state.

     

    According to him, those areas that are considered controversial by stakeholders are already being addressed while advocacy is going on to ensure that the law scales all the hurdles.

    “We are working on it, and the state government under Governor Inuwa Yahaya is committed to seeing that the law is domesticated in the state,” he said.

    According to statistics from the office of Gombe State Commissioner for Internal Security and Ethical Orientation, Adamu Kufto, the state recorded 200 rape and 37 sodomy cases in year 2020 alone, with five other cases recorded in January of the year 2021 alone.

    He said 61 persons were also arrested for acts of gross indecency.

    According to the Commissioner, 40 rape cases were lodged in Gombe alone while 39 attempted rape cases were reported in the entire state.

    Commissioner of  Police Ishola Babaita
    •Gombe State Commissioner of
    Police Ishola Babaita

    He lamented that the cases were often between fathers and their female children and all the victims are underage.

    “Thirty-seven were arrested for unnatural (gay and lesbianism) offences and 61 for act of gross indecency,” he said.

    The breakdown of rape and other unnatural offences in the 11 local government areas of the state showed that Gombe leads with 40 reported cases, followed by Akko 28 and Billiri 22.

    Others are Funakaye 17, Balanga 15, Nafada 15, Yamatu Deba 13, Dukku 13, Kwami 12, Kaltungo 12 and Shongom 2.

    Kufto noted that gender-based violence had been recognised as a human rights abuse “that leads to high rates of mortality including gynecological.”