Category: News Update

  • ‘JTF killed over 40 young men in Maiduguri’

    ‘JTF killed over 40 young men in Maiduguri’

    The Joint Task Force shot dead dozens of young men in Maiduguri during raids in four areas considered strongholds of a radical Islamist group, residents and a morgue attendant told AFP Friday.

    Residents of Maiduguri, the home base of Boko Haram Islamists, said the troops who swarmed late Thursday ordered males in their teens and early 20s to separate from others in the neighbourhood.

    In the Kalari area, they told the young men “to lie face down on the ground,” then asked the rest to look away.

    “All we heard were gunshots. They shot them on the spot,” said the elderly resident, who did not want to be named.

    “They did the same in three other neighbourhoods. We went to the morgue to collect the bodies and we found 48 in all.”

    A resident of the city’s Gwange area told AFP that the alleged massacre was “like a movie scene.”

    The troops “picked young men from their homes and were shooting them dead before everyone and took the bodies away to the hospital. I have never seen something like this,” he said, also requesting that his name be withheld.

    The Sabon Lamba and Gomboru neighbourhoods were also said to have been raided.

    A morgue attendant at the Maiduguri General Hospital said they “received 39 bodies yesterday which were brought in by soldiers. They all have fresh gunshot wounds.”

    A military source declined to comment on the allegations when contacted by AFP, saying only that if such killings had taken place, they were “unjustified.”

     

  • Three -year old girl dies in school toilet

    A three -year old girl identified as Imiefan Omokaro was on Thursday afternoon found dead in the toilet of her school, known as Kingdom Heritage Model School, along Sapele road in Benin City.

    She reportedly fell into a bucket of half- filled water.

    Sources said a teacher who found the little girl at the toilet raised alarm and she was taken to the Winners Chapel Church, owners of the school, where pastors battled to revive the girl.

    The source told our correspondent that the child was confirmed dead two hours after she was taken to the hospital.

    The Nation gathered that when the girl’s mother came to the school to pick her daughter, the teacher said they were looking for the child.

    The father of the girl, who gave his name as Omokaro Jolly, said he dropped Imiefan at the school hale and healthy and was surprised that the school authorities could not tell him what happened to his daughter.

    “When I dropped my daughter in school, she said I should come and pick her up so that I can buy her chocolate. But I can’t see my daughter now.

    “The hospital said my child was brought dead. Until now, nobody has told me what happened to my baby.”

    “I can’t bring a baby to school and they expect me to collect a lifeless baby. It is their responsibility to tell me what happened to my daughter, “the distraught father told our correspondent.

     

  • FG targets 5,000 MW by December

    FG targets 5,000 MW by December

    Nigeria is to attain 5,000 megawatt of electricity by December 2012, a top official in the ministry of power said on Friday.

    He said this is attainable since the country has achieved a national peak of 4,321 megawatts on August 31.

    The Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Power, Dr. Dere Awosika, disclosed this on Friday at the seventh Session of the West Africa Power Pool General Assembly in Abuja.

    To achieve this, he said works have commenced on the renewable energy projects in Katsina State.

    Aside from increasing the nation’s power supply to 5,000 megawatts, the renewable energy projects in Kaduna are Nigeria’s way of meeting the order given to all West African countries that five per cent of their electricity generation should be renewable energy by 2020.

    “The updated master plan will reinforce the transmission interconnections and provide additional generation capacities. An interesting aspect of mandate of the master plan is the recommendation that five per cent of the national generation should be derived from renewable energy by 2020,” Dr. Awosika said.

     

  • NYSC postpones date of orientation course in Bayelsa

    The National Youth Service Corps has postponed the orientation date for the 2012 Batch ‘C’ corps members deployed to Bayelsa to enable the state fix structures affected by the recent flood disaster.

    The state NYSC coordinator, Mr. Abiodun Sanusi, told the News Agency of Nigeria (on Friday in Yenagoa that the exercise scheduled to hold on Monday had been moved to Wednesday.

    “Generally, the date for the orientation course for the 2012 batch `C’ service year is Monday, November 5, but because of the situation of the structures affected by the flooding in the state, the state government approached the management of the NYSC to extend the date,’’ he said.

    Sanusi said the NYSC had in recent times considered crises situations in some states by allowing for shift in dates and in some situations, a movement of the orientation camps to safer places for the security and wellbeing of the corps members.

    “We have been doing it in some of the crises states like in Yobe and Borno where we have the Boko Haram issues.

    “In those areas, we have had to move the orientation camps to other areas for security reasons, and it had to commence at another date. That has been the practise of the NYSC in addressing issues in crises areas,’’ Sanusi said.

    He explained that in the case of Bayelsa, the NYSC was not moving the camp to another location, adding that the floods did not affect the orientation camp at Kaiama in the Kolokuma/Opokuma Local Government Area of the state.

    “Rather, the orientation camp has been used to house many of the victims of the floods, as well as affected corps members in Kaiama,’’ he said.

     

  • World Bank promises aide to Burma

    World Bank promises aide to Burma

    The World Bank has approved an $80m (£50m) grant and pledged lending for Burma, the second poorest country in Asia, for the first time in 25 years.

    The money will go to rural communities to build roads, bridges, schools and health clinics, the World Bank said.

    It comes after the current government began implementing economic, political and other reforms, BBC reports.

    Last month, the United States lifted sanctions and restrictions on financial institutions lending to Burma.

    “I am heartened by the reforms that have been taking place in Myanmar [Burma] and encourage the government to continue to push forward with their efforts,” said World Bank President Jim Yong Kim in a statement.

    Another $165m will be made available to Burma once the country has cleared its overdue debt to the bank, said Pamela Cox, World Bank vice-president for East Asia and the Pacific, in a conference call to reporters.

    Discussion will continue in coming months on how to allocate those funds.

    “We want to target to creating opportunities for all the people of Myanmar, especially the poor and vulnerable,” she added.

    Reforms have been taking place in Burma since elections in November 2010 saw military rule replaced with a military-backed nominally civilian government led by President Thein Sein.

    Under his administration, many political prisoners have been freed and some censorship lifted.

    The party of freed pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi has rejoined the political process – after boycotting the 2010 polls – and now has a small presence in parliament.

     

  • Jonathan to preside over Eko 2012 flag hoisting

    Jonathan to preside over Eko 2012 flag hoisting

    The Local Organising Committee of the 18th National Sports Festival said on Thursday that President Goodluck Jonathan had been scheduled to lead Saturday’s flag hoisting ceremony for the festival in Lagos.

    The festival, tagged “Eko 2012” is scheduled for November27 to December 9 at the Teslim Balogun Stadium.

    According to a statement signed by Kweku Tandoh, the Secretary of the committee, in Lagos, Jonathan will be joined by the 36 state governors and the FCT minister.

    ‘’The event symbolises the participation of all the federating units that make up Nigeria in the forthcoming festival.

    “On Saturday, November 3, Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State would be hosting Mr. President and all the other state governors at the flag hoisting ceremony.

    ‘’The importance of this is to confirm the participation of all the states and to show that the festival is about the unity of Nigeria as one entity,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Tandoh as saying in the statement.

    The statement said that 11,000 athletes were expected to participate in the fiesta.

    Based on initial registration figures, the LOC envisaged a maximum of 11,500 athletes, but the number is expected to drop after the zonal elimination, where some state teams failed to qualify, the statement added.

     

  • NCAA re-certifies Dana’s aircraft

    The management of Dana Airline said on Thursday that the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) had begun the re-certification of its five aircraft ahead of its planned resumption of commercial flight operations.

    This followed the lifting of the suspension on the airline’s operations by the Federal Government on September 5, after the June 3 aircrash at Iju Isaga, a suburb of Lagos.

    This was contained in a statement signed by Mr. Tony Usidiamen, Spokes man of Dana, in Lagos.

    Usidiamen added that the company had signed a five-year contract with FLYHT Aerospace Solutions Limited for its flagship Automated Information Reporting System (AFIRS) 228 at about N159 million.

    According to him, the contract requires the Canadian firm to install the AFIRS 228 on all the five Boeing MD-83 aircraft in its fleet, to provide real-time flight data monitoring and to assist in achieving maintenance and operational efficiencies.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that during the crash that involved a Dana aircraft flying from Abuja to Lagos, about 160 passengers lost their lives and ground property running into millions of naira were damaged.

    He explained that the re-certification was a standard safety measure taken by the authorities to ensure that all the aircraft in the fleet were fully serviceable.

     

  • We didn’t kill Oyerinde – Suspects

    We didn’t kill Oyerinde – Suspects

    The suspects arrested by the State Security Services on Thursday said they were tortured and “promised many things” to admit to the killing of Private Secretary to Governor Adams Oshiomhole, Comrade Olaitan Oyerinde.

    Oyerinde was killed on May 4 at his Benin City residence at about 2am.

    The three suspects spoke to Journalists shortly before they were arraigned before an Oredo Magistrate Court.

    They said they had participated in several robberies but were not involved in the killing of Olaitan.

    The suspects are Raymond Dregbo (24), Edeh Chikezie (32) and Mohammed Ibrahim.

    Raymond said, “They beat me to say what I didn’t do. I didn’t go to Oyerinde’s house. I don’t know his house. I took them to the house we robbed where we collected N48, 000 and I got N8, 000. We didn’t shoot anybody there. They are holding us for robbery but we didn’t kill Oyerinde.”

    The second suspect, Mohammed, said he was arrested along Water Resources and that the SSS promised many things for them to admit to killing Olaitan.

    He said it was his personal phone that the SSS paraded as Olaitan’s and that the gun also paraded was not theirs.

    “I admitted because of the dehumanising treatment they gave us. We later discovered that what they were saying about us didn’t concern us.”

    Presiding Magistrate, Edo Asemota, ordered the suspects remanded in prison custody and requested that the case file be duplicated and sent to the Directorate of Public Prosecution for advice.

     

  • Reps order total closure of Kogi Assembly

    Reps order total closure of Kogi Assembly

    The House of Representatives on Thursday ordered the full closure of the Kogi State House of Assembly pending the report of its mediation on the crisis rocking the House.

    The lawmakers in a letter directed the Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, the Director General of the State Security Service (SSS), Ekpenyong Ita and other relevant security agencies to ensure full compliance with its order.

    The letter dated October 30, 2012 was signed by the Deputy Chief Whip and Chairman House of Representatives Ad-Hoc Committee to mediate in the Kogi State House of Assembly crisis, Hon Murktar Ahmed.

    The same letter was also addressed to all members of the Kogi State House of Assembly and the Clerk of the House.

    The lawmaker also directed the Clerk of the House and all other supporting staff of the Assembly not to recognize any group of members or its leadership pending the outcome of the Ad-Hoc committee’s mediation.

    It would be recalled that 12 members of the 25 member Kogi Assembly last month sat and impeached the Speaker of the House, Hon Abdullahi Bello and other principal officers of the House.

    The action of the members has been variously condemned as illegal.

    Analysts have said the group did not meet the mandatory two- third majority members required to carry out the impeachment.

     

  • No true democracy in Nigeria – Belgore

    No true democracy in Nigeria – Belgore

    Former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Alfa Belgore (Rtd.), has decried the ubiquitous presence of infrastructural decay in all parts of the country, saying with the decay the country was yet to experience true democracy.

    The retired jurist, who on Thursday delivered the fourth Justice Bola Babalakin annual lecture organized by the Osogbo branch of Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) in Osogbo, Osun State capital, said that it will take some time before Nigeria gets true democracy where people’s wish and what is good for the country shall prevail.

    In the lecture titled: “Nigeria Constitution: What is the future?” Justice Belgore, who is the Chairman of the Constitution Review Committee set up by President Goodluck Jonathan, berated the political class for the nation’s infrastructural decay.

    He said it is preferable that Nigeria is called a federation rather than the federal republic.

    “I will like our country to be called federation of Nigeria rather than the federal Republic of Nigeria, because we are not a true republic as our culture does not reflect the republican tendency.

    “What type of republic is this that has traditional rulers – the Obas, the Obis, the Emirs and others? The truth is that we are a federation and not a republic. Whenever there is crisis in this country, these traditional rulers mobilize the populace for peaceful settlement. We cannot do without them.

    “I believe entirely in the united, peaceful and economically vibrant nation of Nigeria, but we have to have a rethink of the constitution without the interference of the military,” he said.

    He noted that from 1979 till date the country has only had constitutions that are irrelevant, difficult to practise and very expensive.

    He said: “We do not have to be like United States, because our history, our cultures and our ambitions are different from any of those so called advanced countries,”

    Represented by his deputy, Mrs. Grace Titi Laoye-Tomori, the Osun State governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, faulted the 1999 Constitution.

    He called for the immediate review of the present constitution which, according to him, did not provide necessary provisions for the present democratic system.