Category: Uncategorized

  • UI don sues four for  alleged threat to his life

    UI don sues four for alleged threat to his life

    THE Director of the General Studies Unit of the University of Ibadan (UI), Prof. Adewale Dasylva, has sued four men over alleged threat to his life.
    In the suit filed before Magistrate P.O. Adetuyibi, the don is seeking an order mandating the defendants to sign an undertaking that he would not be harmed by them under any guise.

    He alleged that he had circumstantial evidence to prove that the suspects, led by Femi Eyiowuawi, had the intention to intimidate, harass and even kill him.
    The professor of English, who was led in evidence by the prosecutor, Adamson Ocheni, told the court that the suspects were allegedly after his life because of the role he is playing in two cases of admission fraud against them.

    The cases, which are being heard by courts in the same jurisdiction, involves a suspected syndicate of six persons that specialises in “admission racketeering.”
    Though he admitted that he was not around when the suspects invaded his office last month, the don averred that the telephone calls he received earlier from some unidentified sources convinced him that his life was in danger.

    He dismissed claims by counsel to the respondents, Titilola Dauda, that the suspects wanted to see him over other cases, adding that 6pm to 8pm could not be the right time to do so. Hearing continues in the matter today.

     Dasylva argued that if there was going to be any plea at all, it could only have been between the two counsel since the case in question was not between him as a person and the accused, but, between the University and the accused.

    Dauda, however, insisted that there was nothing to suggest threat to the claimant’s life as being alleged because nothing incriminating was found on the suspects when arrested and that the message referred to by the UI don was not suggestive of threat to his life.

    He sought for short adjournment to enable him secure the copy of the petition written to the police by the claimant to enable him further cross-examine the him (claimant).
    The request was granted by the Magistrate. Further hearing was adjourned to today (Tuesday).

  • Ondo Poly workers begin three-day warning strike

    Ondo Poly workers begin three-day warning strike

    Barely a week after non-teaching staff of the Adekunle Ajasin University (AAU), Akungba-Akoko, Ondo State, began a three-day protest over alleged poor conditions of service, their counterparts at the Rufus Giwa Polytechnic, Owo (RUGIPO), yesterday began a three-day warning strike.

    The workers said the Olusegun Mimiko administration refused to pay their 16 months arrears, despite losing three of their union leaders to “the struggle” in 2010.
    In a joint communique by the Chairmen of Academic Staff Union of Polytechnic (ASUP), Mr. Oluwabanji Kumuyi; the Staff Association of Nigerian Polytechnic (SSANIP), Saibu Ifedayo; and Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU), Agbi Nelson, the workers said they would go on an indefinite strike, if the government refused to address their grievances.

    The ASUP Chairman told reporters that the 21-day ultimatum given by the workers to the government had expired and that the Mimiko administration was yet to address their requests.

    He said the unions informed the government’s representatives of the workers’ decision to begin the strike, adding that they had held a series of meetings with the governor’s aides though without result.

    Kumuyi said: “It is legal for workers to embark on a strike, if their demands are not after necessary consultations. The government is owing us 16 months’ arrears. Do you expect us to keep quiet?”

    Rights activist Mr. Morakinyo Ogele has said the strike by the workers’ unions was justified.  The lawyer urged the unions to continue the strike until their demands to the management of the institution are addressed.

    He said: “The university has become the private property of the Labour Party (LP). The national chairman of the LP is the Pro-Chancellor of the university; Governor Olusegun Mimiko is the visitor.”

    Ogele said it was bad that the governor’s brother, Prof Femi Mimiko, is the Vice-Chancellor of the university.  He said: “The money that the state government is spending on …thuggery is enough to pay the members of the union. I am going to mobilise all the students, market women, artisans and youths to reinforce the union’s action.”

    The activist said he would sue the management of the university to pay the unions’ allowances without further delay.

  • Jonathan mourns Adeosun

    Jonathan mourns Adeosun

    President Goodluck Jonathan has said the death of former banker, Chief Oluwole Adeosun, was a sad loss. The President said the late Adeosun’s contributions to the nation’s development as the Secretary of Transport, Aviation and Communications under the Interim National Government (ING), headed by Chief Ernest Shonekan in 1993, were commendable.

    In a statement by his spokesman, Dr Reuben Abati, the President said: “As Chairman of the National Pensions Commission (PENCOM), Chief Adeosun contributed immensely to pension reforms. The nation will no doubt miss his uncommon experience and expertise.”

    Dr Jonathan commiserated with the Adeosun family, the government and people of Ogun State over the death of the late Osi of Egbaland.
    He prayed God to grant his soul of the departed eternal rest.

  • Don’t go on strike, Orji begs teachers

    Don’t go on strike, Orji begs teachers

    Abia State Governor Theodore Orji has urged the state’s chapter of the Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) not to go on strike as directed by the national body.
    NUT is planning to go on strive over the non-payment of the new Teachers’ Salary Structure (TSS).

    Orji said the state is willing to pay the new salary structure, but cannot afford it. He said it would be paid as soon it can. Orji spoke in Umuahia during a meeting with the union’s leaders, led by the Chairman, Mr. Olua Omeoga, on how to prevent the strike.

    He said Abia pays teachers higher than most states in the country and urged the teachers to negotiate with the government. The governor said labour has the right to agitate for better pay and the government is not interested in fighting the union over the payment of TSS.

    He said: “NUT has listed Abia among the 14 states that have not paid the TSS. There is no crime in owing, so long as one is willing to pay, and we have never said that we will not pay. We will pay when our economy improves.

    “On level five, we are paying N23,062, while other states around us are paying lesser, except those who have started paying the TSS. The only states paying higher than Abia in the Southeast are those receiving higher allocation from the Federation Account.

    “If Abia gets the type of allocation its rich neighbours are receiving, we will pay higher.” On the arrears of the minimum wage, Orji said they would be paid.  They later went into a closed meeting, after which Omeoga said the union has reached an agreement with the state government.

    He said: “I will not tell the public what we discussed and the agreement we reached until I relay our discussion to the national body. “Our problem with the state government is a national issue. After our meeting with our national office, we will get back to the governor.

    “We are not going on strike and the schools have reopened. We do not just go on strike; we act on written documents from our national office.”

  • Jonathan’s unearned  harvest from Southeast

    Jonathan’s unearned harvest from Southeast

    The parable of the sower as told by Jesus has been discountenanced by President Goodluck Jonathan in the Southeast of Nigeria. According to the Bible story, the seeds which fell by the wayside were devoured by the birds. Those that fell on stony places which did not have much soil immediately sprang up, but when the sun rose, they were scorched and withered away. For those that fell among thorns, they were choked by the thorns that sprang up. Only those that apparently based on concerted effort fell on good ground, yielded; some hundred folds, some sixty and some thirty.
    The Bible also says unequivocally, that what you sow is what you reap. But that didn’t reckon with President Jonathan. Indeed, in my local parlance, in the olden times; it will be totally strange to sow cassava during the planting season, and when it is time for harvest you are seen coming out from the farm with tubers of yam on your head. In those times, the ekwe would sound with the ferocity of the early rain thunder. Once the people gather and the story is recounted, the entire feet and fury of the people will move to the homestead of the culprit.
    Within seconds of reaching their destination, a public trial is conducted, and in the absence of a cogent and compelling explanation, a once convivial family is thrown into mourning, as the culprit is heckled to the fringes of the village, on the way to permanent banishment. But the whitemen then came with their bayonet, and as Chinua Achebe recounted in his epic novel, Things Fall Apart, the falcon can not hear the falconer, the centre can no more hold, mere anarchy is loosened upon the earth. Now people freely harvest, even when they never neared the farm, talk less of planting any type of crop during the planting season. You doubt it? Compare Jonathan’s performance and his endorsement by leaders of Southeast.
    Now back to the parable. President Jonathan, despite sowing only on the wayside, stony and thorny places, has harvested bountiful political support for 2015 in the Southeast. According to former Anambra State Governor Chukwuemeka Ezeife, the interest of Ndigbo in the Presidency must wait on that of President Goodluck Jonathan’s. He is not alone. The apex socio-cultural organisation of the Southeast, Ohaneze Ndigbo tongue is in cheek on the rules of harvest, to serve President Jonathan’s interest. Also Governor Peter Obi of Anambra State and most of his colleagues have remained at the vanguard of Jonathamania, employing all manner of subterfuge, even committing political patricide, so that President Jonathan may harvest where he has not sown.
    Recently a pregnant woman, who had the misfortune of travelling on the Anambra end of the Enugu-Onitsha dilapidated and abandoned expressway, lost her seed, which until the trip had fallen on good ground. Her faith may yet befall those that will travel through the Niger Bridge, during the Christmas period. About a month earlier, a promising young man from my village, travelling along the abandoned Enugu-Port Harcourt expressway, was guillotined, as his vehicle and an oncoming articulated truck struggled for space along the narrow gauge that was formerly an expressway.
    As President Jonathan harvested political yams some weeks ago in Anambra state, just after sowing political thorns in the hearts of  Ndigbo, in the ignominious way he sacked Professor Barth Nnaji, who had served him meritoriously; I became reassured that in our country, what you reap is what you can. Never mind what you sow, go after what your heart desires, after all the termites have eaten the ekwe. The celebration of President Jonathan’s visit, for coming to commission the same fathom port that former President Shagari also used as political gimmick in the 1980s, was like celebrating a man who just defecated in your sitting room.
    The President no doubt knows our love for commerce, particularly among Ndi Anambra. Also from reports reaching him from the fuel subsidy probe, he understands that in Nigeria, huge payments can be received, when nothing has been supplied, as long there are labour henchmen to heckle any person foolishly seeking probity. So the President came, and as we beat the drum, he gladly danced on our shame. Indeed when I read my colleague, Steve Nwosu’s recollection of the periodic political rapes of Ndigbo, recently in his column in this paper, I felt his pain, but doubt his logic. You don’t serially rape a person because of who he or she is, but because you are sure there will be no consequences. Again in this paper last week, a concerned Waheed Odusile, asked rhetorically, who will speak for Ndigbo?
    I guess the state of anomie in the country affects different races of Nigeria in peculiar ways, and the reactions are somewhat different. Ndigbo seems to have found solace in individual efforts, and that affects their chance of uniting against their oppressors. The North is stymied in violence and increasing regression into abyss. The South-West effaced after their recent pacification with an Obasanjo presidency and the recent gains of the progressives are slightly better for now.  While Ndigbo deserve to be President of Nigeria, and should get the support of others, their political leaders need an alternate strategy.
    My worry for Ndigbo is that there is no alternative political platform. All our eggs are in President Jonathan’s basket. If the President continues to ignore his promises for which he was baptized Azikiwe, or orchestrates a disagreement once he again secures our support for 2015, we will remain mere spectators. My take is for a younger progressive leadership to emerge and team up with progressives in the South-West and North, to form a deterrent against itinerant harvesters.
  • Court stays order on Umeh

    Court stays order on Umeh

    An Enugu State High Court yesterday refused to vacate the exparte order it made on July 25 restraining the National Chairman of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Chief Victor Umeh, from convening the national, state or local government executive committee meeting of the party.

    The court presided over by the state’s Chief Judge, Justice Innocent Umezulike, gave the interim order following a suit filed by a member of the party, Mr. Ichie Okoli.
    Okoli alleged that Umeh was occupying the office illegally and his actions were capable of causing anarchy in the party.

    Yesterday, Justice Umezulike refused to vacate the order on the grounds that it was pending before another court. He said Umeh has approached the Court of Appeal, sitting in Enugu, praying it to vacate the interim order.

    Justice Umezulike said: “I am bound to wait for the decision of the Court of Appeal as to whether the interim order was right or wrong. I should not be seen to be locking horns with the Appeal Court in this matter.”

    He said the court would continue to entertain the originating summon, which sought to explain some sections of APGA’s Constitution. The Court adjourned the case till September 24 for final arguments in the originating summons.

    Umeh had told the court through his counsel that the plaintiff lacked locus standi in the matter, adding that APGA was not a party in the suit. He also argued that the court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the suit, insisting that it was APGA’s domestic matter.
    But the plaintiff, in his counter motion, said he wanted the court to interpret the provisions of APGA’s constitution as it relates to the plaintiff and the defendant.
    Okoli said Umeh’s tenure expired in 2010, but the embattled chairman has continued to remain in office without organising a convention.

    The interim order aborted the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting slated for Abuja on August 1. The meeting has not been rescheduled due to the order.

  • MTN donates five vans to Anambra

    The MTN Foundation yesterday donated five patrol vehicles to Anambra State to boost security.
    Handing over the vehicles to Governor Peter Obi at the Government House in Awka, the state capital, MTN Foundation’s Director Mr. Akinwale Goodluck said security is crucial for growth.

    Akinwale said: “Today may probably be my third visit to Awka. The passion demonstrated by the governor regarding things that concern Anambra State is unparalleled. Every time he reads the newspaper and sees something that the foundation is doing, we get a phone call.

    “The governor is always looking for something for Anambra and we are always looking for something to come and do here. His Excellency has made the state safe for business. We cannot operate a business such as ours without security and that is why we have come to support the state today with five Hilux vans.

    “These vehicles are specially made for security work. They come with state-of-the-art radio and a few other things. We have put in place a plan to ensure that these vehicles remain on the road and enhance security.”

    Obi thanked the company for its continuous support to the state. He urged MTN to assist Anambra in erosion control.

  • Jonathan hails Ogbemudia at 80

    Jonathan hails Ogbemudia at 80

    Former Governor of the defunct Midwest and later Bendel State, Dr. Samuel Osaigbovo Ogbemudia, clocked 80 yesterday. In a congratulatory message to Ogbemudia by his media aide, Mr. Reuben Abati, President Goodluck Jonathan praised the former governor for his “enduring patriotism, courage, productive leadership and uncommon administrative acumen”.

    The statement reads: “I write on behalf of my family, the Government and people of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to express my warm felicitations to you on the occasion of your landmark 80th birthday.

    “Your administrative acumen over the years has earned you a prestigious place of honour in the annals of our national development history. “Decades after you left office, your astounding achievements as Governor and Minister continue to be acknowledged with reverence and nostalgia. It is a testimony to your abiding faith in Nigeria that continue to willingly give of yourself in active service of our fatherland and avail the younger generation of your wise counsel.”

    The President wished the retired army general a happy birthday, God’s blessings and good health. During the celebration yesterday at his home in Benin, the Edo State capital, Ogbemudia said he has prepared his final resting place within his compound.

    He said: “Outside there, you will find a nice building with a cross on it. There are two graves inside it. One belongs to my mother who died in 1968 and the unoccupied one is for me. It has been there for a few years now.
    “When I was younger, whenever I was told that somebody was celebrating 80 years, I used to think of the disadvantages of being an 80-year-old man, especially memory loss.
    “I thank God for giving me him good health, a sound mind and good memory. God has been extremely kind to me.”
    Ogbemudia said at a time, he thought his strict up-bringing was a punishment, but later appreciated his parents when the discipline inculcated in him became useful to him in the army.
    He urged parents to train their children to face future challenges, adding that “the only immunity against hunger is hard work”. Ogbemudia hailed Governor Adams Oshiomhole’s achievements and said the state has enough resources to make life meaningful for its citizens.

    He said: “Many people have been coming to my house through this beautiful road. As a governor, I could not build the road, but somebody felt I deserved to have a good road leading to my house and did it.

    “I repeat without any apology that what I have seen in terms of development in the last three years is something that many people that will come later cannot equal.”
    Ogbemudia urged leaders to show good examples and thanked his guests for coming.

    He said he used 80,000 pounds meant for him as the Military Governor of the defunct Midwest State to build the Cemetery Road in Warri, Delta State.
    Edo State Deputy Governor Dr. Pius Egberanmwen Odubu; the Esogban of Benin Kingdom, Chief David Edebiri; former Deputy Governor Lucky Imasuen; the Chief of Staff to the Governor, Mr. Osarodion Ogie; former Secretary to the State Government Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu and Chairman, Bendel Newspapers Co. Ltd. Board of Directors, Mr. Josef Omorotionmwan were at the event.

    Also in attendance were a former minister, Prof. Sam Oyovbaire; former President, Edo Customary Court of Appeal, Justice Joseph Olubor and Chairman, Transition Committee, Orhionmwon Local Government Area, Dennis Edomwonyi.

  • One dead, hundreds displaced in Ebonyi floods

    One dead, hundreds displaced in Ebonyi floods

    One person has been killed by flood in Ebonyi State, following two days of heavy rainfall. Hundreds of people have been displaced and property worth millions of naira were destroyed in the floods, which ravaged 15 communities in Ikwo, Izzi, Abakaliki and Ohaozara local government areas.

    The communities include Ogbe Hausa, Umunaga Uburu, Igbagu, Alike, Achara, Inyimagu, Akunakuna, Igbudu, Ndieche, Ndinkoshi, Okwerike, Ekahufu, Obegu and Ekpomaka.

    Speaking with reporters in Ikwo Local Government Area during a tour of the affected areas, Commissioner for Environment Dr. Paul Okorie said the state government, through the World Bank, is putting measures in place to prevent further casualties.

    Dr. Okorie said: “The state government sympathises with the bereaved family on the loss of their loved one. We are here to see things for our selves and we have taken note of the houses, the household appliances, the livestock and the farm produce that were destroyed. The level of destruction is most unfortunate.

    “The state government is collaborating with the World Bank to put in place mitigating measures to prevent further casualties. The task of putting in place a permanent measure against flood in Ebonyi is beyond the state government, but the state government would do everything within its reach to alleviate the suffering of the people.”
    Dr. Okorie praised the Nigeria Meteorological Agency (NIMET) for its regular warning to flood-prone areas across the country.

    He said the warnings have greatly reduced the number of casualties. The commissioner said the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) would compile a list of the property destroyed and give relief materials to the victims.

    The victims urged the Federal Government to find a permanent solution to the floods, which have become an annual occurrence. Mr. Ifeanyi Mbam, a farmer, said he lost everything he had to the floods and is squatting with his relations.

  • Flood kills nine, destroys property in Bauchi

    Flood has killed seven people in Gamawa Council and two in Zaki Local Government Area of Bauchi State. It also destroyed property worth millions of naira.
    Governor Isa Yuguda, while on a condolence and assessment visit to the areas, said the solution to the flood is to complete the Kafin Zaki Dam started by the Shehu Shagari administration.

    The governor was accompanied by a delegation from the Federal Ministry of the Environment. He appealed to the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to assist the affected communities with essential items.

    The NEMA Director Mohammed Sani Sidi commiserated with the victims. He advised people not to build houses on water ways, to avoid disaster.  He said the Federal Government delegation was in the areas to assess the extent of damage.

    About 5,627 hectares of farmlands and 6,120 houses in nine villages of the 11 in Zaki Local Government have been destroyed by the flood.  The Caretaker Chairman of the local government, Muhammad Babayo Katagum, told Governor Yuguda that the flood destroyed farm produce, primary school buildings, health facilities, houses, domestic animals and birds.

    He said the Ministry of Special Duties has provided 14 canoes to ease transportation, and the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) has donated essential commodities.

    Areas most hit by the flood include, Burshi, Gadai, Katagum, Mumur, Kafin Larabawa, Gumai, Mainako, Sakwa, Maiwa, Madufa, Kadabdu, Bajuwa, Gauya and Kwayamri.