Category: Law

  • ‘How media can boost rights protection’

    ‘How media can boost rights protection’

    Lawyers and journalists have examined the state of human rights administration. They set agenda for the government and the media on ways to ensure effective rights protection. ERIC IKHILAE reports

    How can human rights be better protected in Nigeria? This was the question media and legal experts sought to answer at a forum organised by the National Association of judiciary Correspondents (NAJUC), Abuja chapter.

    It had the theme: The role of the media in promoting human rights.

    Speakers assessed the human rights performance of successive administrations and suggested ways the media could boost human rights protection.

    Speakers, including Prof Dakas C. J. Dakas (SAN) of the University of Jos, Tobi Soniyi of ThisDay newspapers and Reuben Buhari of the Leadership newspapers said unlike what existed during the military era, there is improvement in the observance and promotion of human rights under the current administration.

    They were also of the view that despite the achievements so far, there was need for improvement both on the side of the government, its agencies and the media, in constantly keeping them (government and its agencies) on their toes.

    They urged the media see the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act a ready tool to be deploy to seek openness on government and demand protection for the rights of the people. They urged the media engage in continuous training to keep abreast of current development and know when to raise questions and demand actions.

    They argued that although the right to freedom of expression was a universally acknowledge and respected right, the media should exercise such right responsibly and refrain from inaccurate, irresponsible reportage capable of inflaming the society.

    Dakas, who gave the keynote address suggested efforts must now be directed at the ensuring the realisation of what are now classified as the second and third generations of rights as against the much emphasised first generation of rights, which are basically civil and political rights, provided for in Chapter Four of the Constitution.

    “The rights to life, the right to personal liberty, the right to human dignity, the right to freedom of expression and the press, the right to freedom of religion, among others. These are basic fundamental rights that are civil and political in nature that you find encapsulated in Chapter four of the Nigerian Constitution.

    “There is also a second generation of rights, which are essentially economic, social and cultural in nature. They include the right to food, the right to education, the right to health, the right to housing, among others. These rights that are economic, social and cultural in nature are not expressly provided for in the Nigerian Constitution in the sense in which a deprived citizen can seek redress in court.

    “At best, what you have in the Constitution are the “fundamental objectives and directive principles of state policy,” contained in Chapter two of the Constitution, which the Constitution itself, makes non-justiciable.

    “There is also the third generation of human rights, which are essentially the solidarity rights. They include the right to safe and clean environment, the right to international peace and security, among others.

    Dakas noted that while the existing legal regime guarantees the civil and political rights, as provided in Chapter Four of the Constitution, it made a halfhearted effort at addressing the economic, social and cultural rights in Chapter two, which it made non-justiciable.

    He argued that the huddle created by the non-justiciability of Chapter Two can now be sidestepped with the activation of the African Chatter on Human and People’s Rights (ACHPR), which the country has domesticated.

    Dakas further argued that with the domestication of ACHPR, Nigerians can now to go to court to activate the judicial process on the basis of violation of the provisions of the ACHPR, which encapsulates all the generations of human rights and makes them justiciable.

    “So, even for those, who argue that because Chapter Two of the Nigerian Constitution is not justiciable, but simply provides for fundamental objectives and directive principles of state policy, they need to acknowledge that the ACHPR is now part of Nigerian law. And by reason of the domestication of the ACHPR, it is possible to go to court and activate the judicial process in order to ensure the enforcement of the rights provided for in the ACHPR, including those rights that are economic, social and cultural in nature,” he said.

    Dakas noted that as against past experience, particularly during the military era, efforts are being made to protect the rights of the citizens under the current administration.

    Dakas pointed at the plausible roles played in recent time by the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) . He said although the commission was created under the military, with limited powers, the recent amendment to its establishment Act has provided a framework for the commission to have a robust engagement with the subject of human rights.

    The Law Professor, who noted that there are positive developments that are ongoing, in terms of the works the NHRC has done and is still doing in the area of rights protection and enforcement, also noted that with the recent amendment to its Act, the commission can issue an order that has the force of a High Court order.

    He commended the government for the passage of the Freedom of Information Act, which was rejected by the Obasanjo administration. He highlighted the benefits of the Act and argued that the people can leverage on the opportunity presented by the Act to lift the veil of secrecy that often pervades the conduct of government affairs, and demand that government businesses are conducted in manners that are credible.

    He observed that the people, particularly journalists are not leveraging as much as they should on the FOI Act. “As journalists, if you leverage on the FOI Act, you will find that you will be impacting greatly in the fight against corruption, economic and financial crimes in the country.”

    Despite the noted achievements, the lecturer identified existing challenges, which he said must be addressed. They include the for the military and intelligence agencies involved in the current efforts against the insurgents to ensure that they conduct counter-terrorism in a manner that is human rights compliant.

    “It is in the interest of the security and intelligence community to ensure that counter terrorism administration reckons with the reality of human rights and mainstream human rights into counter terrorism administration.  Otherwise, you will find that they leave themselves vulnerable to prosecution by Nigerian authorities, and where the Nigerian authorities are unwilling, they will be prosecuted by the International Criminal Court (ICC),” he said.

    He urged the government to domesticate the Kampala Convention, a continental initiative to address the plight of the Internally Displaced People (IDP). He contended that it was not enough for the Nigerian government to ratify the convention, but that it should take a further and necessary step of domesticating the convention to allow for its municipal invocation as required under Section 12 of the Constitution.

    Dakas urged the government to also do more to alleviate the plight of the IDPs as it relates to meeting their basic subsistence and their rights to vote in the coming elections.

    He urged the government to direct efforts at addressing economic, social and cultural rights, arguing that the government cannot ignore the people’s rights to shelter, education, health, among others on the basis of lack of found.

    “The government should demonstrate that it is prioritising theses rights and that it is not frittering away resources in the name of corruption and pretending that there are no funds. It is one thing to have resources and it is another to ensure that the little that is realised is prudently utilised.

    Dakas noted that the media has a major role to play in promoting respect and protection of human rights. He said journalists must be vigilant and alert in reporting cases of rights abuses to keep government and its agencies on their toes.

    He reminded journalists that the right to freedom of expression and of the press, guaranteed by the Constitution, is not an absolute right that should be exercise to the detriment of the larger society. He said journalists, in the course of performing their responsibilities, must ensure accuracy. He also advised them to engage in constant self-improvement to prevent instances of inaccurate reportage of court proceedings

    “As judiciary correspondents, if you do not understand the nuances and fundamentals of human rights investigation, monitoring and reporting, you will be looking in the wrong places and be looking for the wrong things,” he said.

    Soniyi noted the increasing responsibility modern society has placed on the media, which now include reporting, analyzing and commenting on issues and events as they unfold. He stressed the need for journalist to always be guided by the interest of the larger society and avoid being influenced by the government or concerned interests.

    “The media, in reporting rights violations, should look deep into the problem and provide solutions. Mere reporting of the facts is not enough. It should give reasons for the problem, the nature of violations and proceed to give solutions,” he said.

    Buhari, who noted that the media was not doing enough to report the various rights abuses being perpetrated in the troubled Northeastern part of the country, urged media owners to empower journalists to put in their best.

    He said Nigerian journalists can compete effectively with their foreign counterpart if well equipped and protected.

    Buhari gave an instance where he was harassed and threatened with detention by the police for publishing pictures of killings and destructions in Southern Kaduna during one of the crisis.

    He said rather the being commended, the police, who wanted everything hidden from the public, accused him of publishing inciting materials.

    Buhari urged the journalists not to be deterred by existing challenges, but to seek creative ways of overcoming such challenges.

     

  • Enforce printing laws, govt urged

    Enforce printing laws, govt urged

    The Chartered Institute of Professional Printers (CIPPON) has urged the Federal Government to enforce laws on printing.

    One of them is the CIPPON Act of 2007 which empowers the institute to regulate printing in Nigeria.

    At a press conference in Lagos which has as theme: Industrialising a nation through printing: Using the provisions of the law, the institute’s President Mr Wahab Muhammed Lawal sought the support of law enforcement agencies, especially the police and the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS).

    “Nigeria can only be industrialised through printing if the government could strictly comply with the provisions of the law on patronage of local printers, while the law enforcement agents enforce positively on regulation of practice,” Lawal said.

    According to him, it is the government’s duty to enforce laws it made, adding that the provisions of the Printers Act No. 24 of 2007 enjoins the government and print buyers to patronise local presses.

    “If the government is strictly complying with the law it assented to, there should be no capital flight of printing jobs to foreign countries without the professional input of a regulatory body established by an Act of parliament, which is CIPPON,” he said.

    The CIPPON president said adequate enforcement of the laws on printing would empower employers of labour to expand their investments by setting up paper mills, ink manufacturing companies, which will employ more people. “Government alone cannot provide employment,” Lawal said.

    The institute said print operators need government’s support through tax incentives as the industry is capital intensive. He recalled that Malaysia, for instance, once declared a tax-free period for its printing sector.

    CIPPON wants applicable laws applied to ensure correct payment of duties/tariff on printing materials as approved by the government; strict enforcement of payment of duties on importation of printed books; enforcement of the Local Content Act, as well as provisions of the Printers Act.

    Lawal urged the government reduce tariff on raw materials that cannot be produced in Nigeria, adding that while the country’s paper mills are dead, Malaysia has no fewer than 30 mills, which makes it difficult for Nigerian printers to compete with their counterparts abroad.

    “It is possible that people are benefiting from importing printing papers; maybe that is why they want to kill the local industry. The only functioning paper mill produces craft papers. People cannot invest without the government’s support. The government should support employers of labour. Issues like double taxation, power problem, high import cost must be addressed,” he said.

    Lawal said printing can be a vehicle for national development if an enabling environment is provided for employers of labour to manage their investments, and if the relevant laws are adequately enforced.

    On why the industry needs support, the CIPPON president said: “Printing is one of the highest employers of labour due to its many facets. It is the beginning of civilisation. Eighty per cent of what we know come from the printed word.

    “Printing lubricates the operational wheels of a nation’s economy and is the engine-room of qualitative and productive education. The most economical way to disseminate information and preserve knowledge is through printing.”

     

  • ‘Lawyer petitions ministry over children’s ‘expulsion’

    ‘Lawyer petitions ministry over children’s ‘expulsion’

    A  Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Dafe  Akpedeye, has urged the Ministry of Education to probe the alleged expulsion of his client’s children from the International Community School (ICS), Abuja.

    The petition was also sent to the United States embassy, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools and the Council of International Schools.

    The children’s mother, Ms Natasha Akpoti alleged that on April 9, last year, her teenage son and seven of his classmates, during a class project, stumbled on pornographic contents on the computer belonging to the school’s assistant computer teacher.

    According to the petitioner, the boy and his siblings were expelled because the boy reported what he saw to his mother and because she insisted on proper investigation.

    As an elected member of the Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) executive with a moral obligation, the mother said she decided to bring forward the teacher/porn episode which her son mentioned to her for a lasting and proactive solution.

    She shared the report and expressed concerns as to why the school allegedly failed to put in place safety internet filters to protect the children. Her report, she said, bothered the parents who took the matter up with the school’s management.

    According to Akpoti, the school later sent messages to the PTA members exonerating the teacher, saying he was innocent of the allegations levelled against him.

    Following her demand for justice based on her personal investigations, she said the school’s board of directors, last December 23, sent her a brief mail advising her to withdraw her children from the school, which she refused to do.

    She insisted it would be best to submit the evidence in her possession to relevant regulatory bodies for a fair investigation.

    Matters, she said, got to a head when on January 5, the children were expelled from the school.

    Akpedeye questioned the school’s investigation of the incident, and wondered why three innocent children, two of who had nothing to do with the case, should be expelled for speaking up against a moral wrong while the teacher remains allegedly unpunished.

    He added that no child deserves to suffer retribution leading to public ridicule and physiological trauma simply for exposing a school’s “error”.

    “In retrospect, rather than expelling the child, he should have been applauded for his courage because his singular act, which enunciates the various International Children Internet Protection Laws, has saved a lot of ICS children from harmful online content and abuse within the school premises,” the SAN said.

    But the school, through its legal counsel Mr. Isaac Okpanachi, said although there was indeed a pornography information on the school’s computer, it was a device used by both students and teachers and so it was difficult to know how the material got into the system.

    ICS said: “The management has strengthened controls on the computers by ensuring that such sites are blocked. No student is allowed to use any computer except with the permission and under the strict supervision of a teacher.

    “It should be noted that as per the ‘evidence’ which was much later handed over to the school, the times and dates shown did not correspondent with any particular teacher’s presence in the school.”

    ICS management said the petitioner’s children were not expelled.

    “Ms Akpoti’s children were never expelled from the school. She had not paid any fees for them for that quarter (terms) and still had outstanding fees for the previous quarter. Also, she was threatening to take the school to court and before ‘other bodies’ because she was not satisfied with our investigations, claiming it (sic) was sweeping the matter under the carpet.

    “In view of this and statements she mailed to the PTA, expressing her dissatisfaction with the school, the board of directors wrote to her advising her to keep the children at home until these issues were addressed,” the school said.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • ‘How to make oversight  functions more effective’

    ‘How to make oversight functions more effective’

    The National Assembly’s oversight functions can be more effective if those indicted by its probe reports are promptly prosecuted.

    This is the view of some speakers at the Annual Law Week of the Nigerian Bar Association ( NBA) Eket branch.

    They urged the lawmakers to amend the Constitution to give powers to the law enforcement agents to prosecute those indicted during such oversight functions.

    Among the speakers were former NBA president Okey Wali (SAN).

    He spoke on the topic: Oversight functions of the legislature: a conflict with the  doctrine of separation of powers.

      Wali took a historical view of the origin  and definition of the doctrine of separation of powers.

    He examined cases and situations where the doctrine was applied  by the courts in its pursuit and determination of cases before it.

    He also traced the constitutional basis of the doctrine in Section 88(1) of the Constitution (as amended).

    Wali praised the framers of the constitution for introducing the doctrine which helps to expose corruption  and waste in governance.

    The senior advocate cited instances where  the legislature carried out such oversight functions and concluded that some were inconclusive and did not achieve the much desired results.

    Participants made contributions to the discourse, agreeing that though the oversight function was well conceived to checkmate corruption and waste in governance, its application has been abused.

    According to them, such oversight was not carried out with  good intentions as in some cases nobody is sanctioned despite reports of infractions or misdeeds.

     

  • No military for polls, says group

    A civil society coalition,OneVOICE, has warned against deployment of soldiers during the general elections.

    It said doing so would go against recent court pronouncements.

    It said if soldiers must be used, they must be restricted to crisis-prone areas.

    “Prof Attahiru Jega should ensure that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is not further blackmailed by the military hierarchy and the National Security Adviser and the Service Chiefs should desist from usurping the constitutional responsibility of the INEC and the Nigeria Police Force,” OneVoice said.

    The group urged Nigerians to ensure that free, fair and credible elections are held to further consolidate democracy.

    OneVOICE members include Women Advocates Research and Documentation Centre (WARDC), Access to Justice (AJ), New Initiative for Social Development (NISD), Network on Police Reform in Nigeria (NOPRIN), Nigerian Automobile Technicians Association (NATA), Socio- Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), Centre for Constitutionalism and Demilitarisation (CENCOD), Human Rights Law Services (HURILAWS), Independent Advocacy Project (IAP) and Center for Constitutional Governance (CCG).

    Its Media Committee Chair Pastor Deji Adeleye at a briefing and rally at the Dr. Beko Ransom Kuti Memorial Park in Lagos, said the elections any further would be unconstitutional.

    OneVOICE said the distribution of the PVCs is now far above the initial figures before the previous postponement, while the Card Readers have been tested successfully in 12 states across the six geo-political zones.

    The coalition advised that INEC to embark on confidence building measures through daily press briefings and public service announcements, including in local languages, to bridge gaps on electoral preparedness and voting procedures.

    It also urged it to increase voter education efforts to demonstrate to the public the use of new technology such as the PVCs and card readers.

     

     

     

     

  • Legal and ethical issues in election reporting

    Legal and ethical issues in election reporting

    Being the paper presented by Femi Falana (SAN) at the First Annual Public Lecture Series of the Mass Communication Department, Lagos State Polytechnic, Ikorodu. 

    Those who are convinced that the nomination form submitted by any candidate sponsored by a political party should take advantage of section 34 of the Electoral Act by filing a suit in court for the disqualification of the candidate. Since section 318 of the Constitution prescribes education up to junior secondary level as the minimum qualification for contesting elections in Nigeria the whole debate over General Muhammadu Buhari’s school certificate is totally diversionary. Unfortunately, the army allowed itself to be discredited on the basis of its partisan role in the whole saga. A few weeks ago,  Brigadier-General Olatunji Laleye had said that the army was in possession of General Buhari’s academic documents and that he could apply if he needed them. The same officer later turned round to claim that the documents could not  be found in the retired General’s personal file!

    It is jejune to suggest that an army officer who attended post secondary school military institutions in Nigeria, United Kingdom, India and the United States is constitutionally disabled from contesting elections in Nigeria. It is particularly embarrassing that some senior lawyers who joined the fray pretended not to know that the minimum academic prerequisite for contesting any of the national elections includes the possession of a primary six certificate with 10 years’ working experience or the competence to speak English to the satisfaction of the INEC. 

     

    Reclaiming the

    welfare state

     

    To reclaim the welfare state from its obstinate opponents in government the Nigerian people have to be mobilized to ensure compliance with the various welfare laws. The press is obligated to promote the campaign for the full justiciability of socio-economic rights such as rights to education, health, employment, housing etc. These rights are enshrined in Chapter 2 of the Constitution. Although the government is required to  defend the security and promote the welfare of the people it has always complained of lack of resources. However, the resources are available but the country is run by a ruling class that is not prepared to wage a battle for the democratic control of the economy. The crisis is compounded by the fact that the country is currently  administered by an army of neo-liberal ideologues who are leading  the two dominant political parties.

    At a recent public lecture at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife, Osun State, the Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola SAN was reported to have said that the government could not guarantee access to education for Nigerians. According to him,  ”the quality of education that we can impart if children pay N50,000 to get professional training and their colleagues in private schools pay N200,000 upwards abroad to get the same training. Will they be of the same quality in a capitalist world, where quality is often determined by price?’’. The governor said that the free education policy which Chief Obafemi Awolowo  implemented in western Nigeria is no longer feasible because Nigeria has recorded an average literacy level of about 55 percent! It is curious that a progressive governor is campaigning for lack of access to mass education because we have a “literacy rate of 55 per cent” .

    Since the governor is one of the  leading ideologues of the APC  the views attributed to him on access to education should not go unchallenged. With respect,  the educational system in the capitalist world is organised in a manner that the children of the poor can access education at the expense of the State  while the rich can are at liberty to educate their children and wards in expensive private schools. Through the universal health care insurance scheme funded by the State the poor can access health in the public hospitals while the rich can afford to go to well equipped private medical centres in any part of the world. It may interest Governor Fashola to know that the tiny island of Cuba which is far less endowed than Nigeria has attained 100 percent literacy rate and has the highest number of doctors per capital in the world.

    Under Sections 17 and 18 of the Constitution the State is mandatorily required to provide free health and education including tertiary education based on the availability of resources. If the abundant natural resources of our country  have been harnessed and distributed equitably as envisaged by section 16 of the Constitution the government would have guaranteed the security and welfare of all citizens. In any case, through popular struggles, the neo-colonial state has been compelled to enact laws to provide for the welfare of the Nigerian people. One of such legislations is the Universal, Free and Compulsory Basic Education Act, 2004 which has guaranteed free and compulsory education for every child from primary to junior secondary school.

    Towards the funding of the UBE scheme, not less than two per cent of the consolidated revenue fund of the federal government shall be contributed annually. In 2012, the UNICEF disclosed that there were 10.5 million Nigerian children who were out of primary school. Regrettably, the implementation of the UBE scheme has been frustrated by the majority of state governments. Right now, the sum of N56.9 billion, which is the matching grant due to 31 states and the federal capital territory has not been accessed due to refusal  to contribute counterpart  funding. From the information at my disposal, only five states namely Gombe, Kano, Katsina, Sokoto and Taraba states have accessed their matching grants up to date!

    Under the newly enacted National Health Act, at least one per cent from the consolidated revenue fund of the federal government shall be contributed to the Health Provision Fund. Although the fund will not be adequate to provide basic health care services to every indigent citizen the contribution of state and local governments to the fund ought be made compulsory.  At the federal level the National Health Insurance Act has established the National  Health Insurance Scheme with the basic objective of  protecting Nigerian families from financial hardship of huge medical bills. The scheme is funded by contributions from employers and employees based on income. For the formal sector the contributions are premiums which make up 15 per cent of a member’s basic salary. The employer contributes 10 per cent while the employee pays five per cent. The scheme covers a member, the spouse and four children. Participants from the informal sector are required to make a monthly contribution. No state government has a similar scheme in place.

     

    Political reporting and

    electoral  offences 

     

    The fundamental right to freedom of expression including freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart ideas and information without interference has been guaranteed by the Constitution. (Section 39 of the Constitution). Apart from professional ethics the law of defamation protects the reputation of individuals and corporate bodies including politicians and political parties.  Since freedom of expression is not absolute any media house or reporter who engages in libellous publications during electioneering campaigns may be sued and if found liable, ordered by the courts to pay  damages running to million of naira.    In addition to the penal codes the Electoral Act 2010 as amended has prohibited  political campaigns which are based on hate or incitement. In order to  ensure equal coverage of the activities of political parties and candidates  the  Act has criminalised certain publications with respect to political reporting. Sections 99-101 of the Electoral Act 2010 which deal with media reporting of political activities are briefly examined hereunder. 

     

    Campaign Period

     

    By virtue of Section 99 (1) of the Act, the period of campaign in public by political parties shall not commence 90 days before polling day. Although the media cannot be prosecuted under the section it is morally wrong to collude with political parties to breach the provisions of the law.

     

     

     

  • Girl, 18, arraigned for ‘theft’

    An 18-year-old girl, Mary Ogah, has been arraigned at an Ikeja Chief Magistrate court for allegedly stealing gold jewelries valued at N5 million.

    Ogah was arraigned before Chief Magistrate A. O. Komolafe.

    Assistant Superintendent of Police Eranus Nnamonu said the defendant and another at large conspired to commit the alleged offence last March 9, at Alausa Secretariat, Lagos.

    The prosecutor said gold jewelry valued at N5 million belonged to  Mrs. Folashade Ogunnaike.

    The offence is contrary and punishable under Section 409 and 285 of the Criminal Code, Laws of Lagos State of Nigeria 2011.

    Mrs. Komolafe granted the defendant bail for N1 million, with a deposit of N100,000 with two sureties, who must be a relation and a tax payer.

    She adjourned till March 30.

     

  • Lawyer  seeks peace in NLC

    Lawyer seeks peace in NLC

    Lagos lawyer and National Secretary, Labour Party (LP), Olukayode Ajulo, has urged labour leaders, particularly parties in the just concluded elections of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to bury the hatchet and allow peace to reign.

    Said Ajulo: “With the emergence of Comrade Ayuba Philibus Wabba as the new NLC President at a well attended and democratically conducted delegate conference, it is expected that all old animosities and misgivings that trailed the previous attempt to conclude the conference would be laid to rest.”

    He said the NLC deserved a hearty congratulation from all progressive and democratic elements in Nigeria over the successful conclusion of its 11th Convention held in Abuja.

    The LP National Secretary said in a statement: “It is expected that all truly progressive and democratic unionists must sheath their swords and join hands with the new leadership to clear the augean stable and forge ahead to do the task at hand.

    “The atmosphere of geniality, camaraderie and openness that surrounded the Eagle Square venue of the Convention was most heartwarming.”

    Ajulo lamented that the last eight years have witnessed the dwindling of NLC’s fortunes and plummeting of its prestige amongst the workers and suffering masses as a result of the palpable docility of the past leadership.

    “From the golden era of Hassan Sumonu, through the progressively febrile days of maverick comrade Adams Oshiomole who showed Nigerians that not only would Nigerian workers not condone military dictatorship, but that they would not equally fail to keep civilian dictatorship and executive lawlessness at bay, the NLC suddenly simmered to a mournful complacency under Omar,” he noted further.

    He said the years under Omar were years of loss of confidence in a meddlesome leadership that shirked its responsibility to the generality of the Nigerian workers, while fueling  in-fighting within the Congress itself adding, “it was indeed most disheartening when at the first attempt the just-concluded delegate conference hit the rock”.

    According to him, “Nigerians today expect the new leadership of NLC to be alive to its role of defending the economic interest of organised labour, providing leadership for the working people in the continue struggle against the neoliberal policies foisted African and Third World countries by the Bretton Woods institutions and engaging in politics up to partisan level as informed stakeholders rather than self-aggrandising labour aristocrats.

    “In practical terms, and in the immediate, this translates to the following: the new leadership of NLC must continue to ensure that at all levels national minimum wage is adhered to and reviewed as at when due; it must demand and struggle to ensure that salary arrears and emoluments of workers are promptly paid, especially now that most states of the federation are owing workers upward of three months’ salary; it must wage a relentless struggle against actualisation; it must insist on restructuring, devolution of powers and economic diversification in order to ensure viability of the states; and  it must also insist on the implementation of all pro-labour and pro-people resolution of the 2014 National Conference”, he counseled.

    Ajulo however lamented what he described as “ the discordant tunes, distractions and morale-dampening anti-union activities” allegedly being mooted by the defeated old guards within NLC.

    He accused them of threatening to divide congress that was handed down by their forebears, on selfish grounds by hold alternative delegate conference.

    Ajulo advised those he described as old brigades in the congress to acknowledge the fact of their popular rejection at the polls and to stop  whipping up sentiment and romancing of illegality.

    He urged them to accept the fact that NLC is a legally recognised body with standing not only in Nigeria but also internationally.

    “Our advice to them is that these disgruntled elements need to be more circumspect in whatever steps they take in the nearest future, admitting humbly the need to rub in the ointment of defeat as a necessary balm for self-criticism and  the rebirth needed to face a common challenging future full of hope for the working people of Nigeria,” he added.

     

     

  • Deeper Life Church sued

    The Incorporated Trustees of Deeper Christian Life Ministry (also known as Deeper Life Bible Church), has been sued at the Ogun State High Court, Abeokuta, over a landed property measuring 41.44 hectares.

    The Baale and Village Head of Agbodi Village in Obafemi Owode Local Government Area of Ogun State, Chief Taiwo Ogunkayode and his chiefs are claiming N1 million damages against the church for alleged trespass.

    The claimants are Oluhunmi Esuruoso, Ezekiel Afolabi Sobowale, Olanrewaju Okanmolu, Chief Taiwo Ogunkayode, Alani Idowu and Prince Muraina Olatunji Bamjoko.

    They are also praying the court to restrain the Deeper Life Bible Church, her agents, servants or privies from further trespassing or dealing with the said parcel of land.

    According to them, the land in dispute, situated at Agbodi Village in Obafemi Owode Local Government, Ogun State form part of the village land which is possession of different families in the village.

    The claimants stated that sometime around 2008 they noticed that the defendant (church) entered the disputed land, attempted to fence it and erected signboards with inscription that the land is the site for her proposed university.

    They claimed to have immediately challenged the church and vehemently opposed the defendant adding that this eventually led to series of meetings convened by the church in which the church gave various contradicted, uncoordinated and unsubstantiated story of how she acquired the land.

    “That further to the above the claimants aver that they simply demanded that the defendant should produce her document of title in respect of the land in dispute or any part thereof or that the defendant produce the person(s) that alienated the land to her or bestowed title on her in any manner which demand the defendant refuses, neglect or fails to satisfy up till date”, they stated.

    The claimants, however, prayed the court to declare that they are the persons entitle to the Right of Occupancy in respect of all the parcel of land being at Agbodi Village, along Lagos Expressway, Obafemi/Owode Local Government, Ogun Sate measuring approximately 41.444 Hectares and bounded in the front by Eruku village, back by Greenland Estate; Right by Akinde Family Land/Maaba village and left by Olowotedo Village.