Category: Uncategorized

  • Kidnapping: Ihejirika backs South East governors

    Kidnapping: Ihejirika backs South East governors

    THE Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika, yesterday rallied behind South East governors in their plan to use the army in tackling robbery and kidnapping in the zone.
    Gen Ihejirika is convinced that with the initiative coming from the governors the twin problems would soon “be put behind us.”
    The army chief spoke at the end of this year’s Regimental Sergeants’ Major (RSM) Convention hosted by the 82 Division of the Nigerian Army, Enugu.
    He said: “The issue of kidnapping is a problem the army is very familiar with, having dealt with kidnappers in the past in Abia State, and having helped to restore normalcy to Aba. As you are aware, the kidnappers are aided by the use of GSMs and the proliferation of weapons. But what will help most is the cooperation of people in giving out vital information to the security agencies.
    “It’s a very welcome development that the South East governors have come together just like the Northern governors have all come together to help tackle the menace of terrorists. So, with this type of interest shown by the governors, I believe the problem of armed robbery and kidnapping in the zone will be put behind us.”
    On the RSM Convention Gen. Ihejirika said: “The RSM sending off today has been quite successful and the turnout was quite impressive. All the RSMs of all units of the Nigerian army are in attendance except those involved in operations currently. And the topics discussed boarder on the contributions RSMs must make towards enhancing the performance of the Nigerian army, maintenance of discipline among soldiers, preserving our ethics and values amongst others. So I believe that with the turnout and the level of enthusiasm shown, it has been a success.”
    The five South East governors, at a meeting with security stakeholders in Enugu last week set up a committee headed by the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 82 Division, Nigeria Army, Enugu, Major General Oluwaseun Oshinowo to proffer solution to the insecurity in the zone.
  • Floods: 40,000 sacked in Kano, Benue

    Floods: 40,000 sacked in Kano, Benue

    49 Cross River communities threatened 

    ABOUT 40,000 people in Kano and Benue States, many of them women and children, have been displaced from their homes by floods in the last one week.
    Their property, including farms and livestock estimated at millions of naira, are also under water or washed away.
    Forty-nine communities in Cross River State may be next to be affected, according to a report yesterday.
    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) estimates that 25,000 from 14 communities are now homeless in Makurdi and environs in the aftermath of the overflowing of River Benue.
    The authorities in Cameroun were said to have released massive water from the Lagdo Dam into the river precipitating the overflow.
    The other 15,000 people were displaced from five villages in Warawa Local Government Area of Kano State by water from Tiga Dam.
    Submerged are Laraba Jigawa, Katarkawa, Garundau, Wambanto and Litau villages.
    Farms and livestock of the residents have also been submerged or washed away.
    Five camps have been created for the victims at Token Primary School, NALDA Secretariat, Emawa Primary School, Laraba Jigawa and Dan Hawan Giwa Primary School,according to the  Director of Personnel of  Warawa Local Government, Alhaji Ahmed Haruna Bichi.
    However, the displaced people have cried out about inadequate shelter, food and medication.
    One of them, Hajiya Amina Yusuf, a mother of eight said government officials are hardly available to cater for the needs of the displaced people.
     She said: “It was only this afternoon that they brought us gari and sugar. I have about eight children with me, what can we do with three cups of gari? This is pathetic and I call on those in authority to do something urgently to alleviate our plight.
    “We did not cause the flood. We are victims of  a natural disaster and that does not mean that we should not be treated as human beings. In everything, we give Allah the glory that all of us survived the flood.”
    Alhaji Bichi has pledged that efforts are being made to make the victims as comfortable as possible.
    He said the situation could have been worse if the people had failed to heed the warning by NEMA to leave their villages.
     “We have started making plans for their resettlement. As you can see, some relief materials have just arrived the camp and more efforts are being put in place to get them more provisions, particularly, food items,” he said.
    Relief materials already distributed to them included 60 bags of gari, 30 bags of sugar, 1,300 loaves of bread and 500 bags of sachet water.
    Nineteen people were reportedly killed by earlier flooding in 30 Local Government Areas of the state.
    In Makurdi, the raging River Benue submerged farms and houses up to five kilometres away from its banks.
    NEMA says although it has set up three camps for the displaced people, many of the victims are reluctant to relocate.
     It was gathered that many of them find the cost of transporting their property beyond their means.
    The Cross River State Emergency Management Agency  said yesterday that over 49  coastal communities across   seven Local Government Areas of the state are  at the risk  of severe flooding from  water from  Lagdo Dam in Cameroon.
    The affected local government areas are Yala, Ogoja, Ikom, Obubra, Abi, Biase and Odukpani.
     The  Assistant Director of Information of the agency, Mr David Akate, said in a statement  that farmland in some  communities have already been submerged, destroying yams, cassava, vegetable cocoyam, melons and other cash crops worth millions of naira.
    He said 11 persons have been reported killed by flood in the state this year while hundreds of houses have been submerged and pulled down, displacing thousands.
     Also hundreds of houses have been flooded while over 10,000 livestock have been affected, the statement indicated.
     Speaking in Isejah, one of the affected communities in Obubra Local Government Area, Director General of SEMA, Mr. Vincent Aquah, o expressed fears that the magnitude and severity of damage to lives and property would increase as the level of flood rises.
  • Zimbabwean PM defies court, goes ahead with wedding

    Zimbabwean PM defies court, goes ahead with wedding

    THE Zimbabwean prime minister went ahead with wedding celebrations yesterday despite a court ruling that cancelled his marriage license on allegations that he would be committing bigamy.
    Morgan Tsvangirai, 60, and his bride exchanged vows and rings at a luxury convention facility in Harare but did not sign the legal marriage register.
    A court on Friday declared Tsvangirai already married under tribal law after seeing video footage of traditional bride price being paid last November to the family of another Zimbabwean woman. Polygamy is recognized in tribal law but not in Zimbabwe’s national laws.
    The Herald newspaper, controlled by loyalists of longtime President Robert Mugabe, yesterday accused widower Tsvangirai of promiscuity and said errors of judgment in a string of alleged affairs made him unfit to lead the country.
  • Iheanacho, former minister released

    Iheanacho, former minister released

    •Alleges plot to cripple his business
    FORMER Minister of Interior, Captain Emmanuel Iheanacho, returned home a free man yesterday, 24 hours after his arrest in connection with alleged stolen petroleum products.
    The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) claimed on Friday that   petroleum products diverted from a hijacked vessel, M.T.Grace were traced to the tank farm of Integrated Oil and Gas Limited owned by Iheanacho.
    He was handed over by NIMASA to the State Security Services (SSS) for interrogation.
    He was, however, released yesterday.
    The conditions attached to his release were not immediately known.
    Iheanacho was arrested on Friday while three management staff  were arrested on Thursday.
    The tank farm was also sealed off.
    The former minister, The Nation gathered last night, alleged that his arrest and that of his staff and the sealing of the tank farm were aimed at crippling his business.
    He vowed to institute legal action against NIMASA and the Nigerian Navy should they continue to occupy his facility.
    When The Nation contacted him on phone yesterday to react to his arrest the call was picked by a man who was hostile and declared that the ex-minister was not prepared to answer any question.
    However, sources close to him said he was not taking the matter lightly.
    Sources said the vessel that was allegedly used to move 3,000 metric tonnes of Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) otherwise known as diesel obtained clearance from the Nigerian Navy (NN), the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), NIMASA, and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) before it discharged its cargo at the tank farm. The sources added that the ex-minister’s company accepted the cargo of the ship after it produced proof of the statutory clearance from the government agencies.
    A senior official of the company who craved anonymity said the NN clearance issued to MT Grace was signed by the Commanding Officer of NNS Beecroft on August 28 while the DPR clearance to discharge was issued a day later.
    The official said NIMASA’s clearance for the ship to sail was signed by the agency’s Director of Operations and Shipping Development on August 31, 2012.
    “We do not discharge any vessel that does not have clearance from the relevant authorities and this particular ship had all the necessary clearance. We only leased out the facility to the owners of the cargo. The cargo is not ours and we have nothing to do with it.
    “The owner of the cargo is clearly stated on the documents, so why don’t they go after him? Why do they keep harassing us here always? They have crippled us and I believe there is an ulterior motive to this. We have not traded product on our account for about four months yet we are subjected to all these harassments,” the official said.
    But speaking with The Nation over the plan by the former minister to challenge NIMASA in court, the agency’s Deputy Director, Public Affairs, Hajia Lami Tumaka said the agency has no regret over its action.
     “The man was arrested by our officials and handed over to the men of State Security Services (SSS). We have no regret over his arrest because it was done based on the information at our disposal and it was done in the cause of performing our responsibility and the job given to us as an agent of the Federal Government,” Tumaka said.
  • Akume condoles with Benue flood victims

    Akume condoles with Benue flood victims

    SENATE Minority Leader, Chief George Akume, has commiserated with the victims of the recent flood that ravaged some communities along the banks of River Benue in Benue State.
    In a statement which he personally signed, he expressed sadness at the level of devastation caused by the flood to the people of the area, whom he, noted, were being confronted with other challenges.
    Akume, the immediate past Governor of the state, said he was saddened that he could not personally visit the affected areas to identify with his people as he is currently out of the country.
    His words: “But for the fact that I have been away abroad at the moment and even before this misfortune reared its ugly head to carry out some of my oversight responsibilities, I would have been with you in person to show my support at this very moment.”
    Assuring the affected communities that respite is on the way to cushion their plight, Akume urged relevant agencies of government at all levels to “act quickly in a manner that is uncharacteristic of nations in this age to alleviate and bring to an end the undeserved suffering of my beloved people are passing through in the interim and to initiate measures that will forestall a reoccurrence”.
    He asked local and international organisations to provide necessary assistance to the flood victims.
  • US sends spies, drones to Libya

    US sends spies, drones to Libya

    The U.S. is sending more spies, marines and drones to Libya, trying to speed the search for those who killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. But the investigation is complicated by a chaotic security picture in the post-revolutionary country, and limited American and Libyan intelligence resources.
    The CIA has fewer people available to send, stretched thin from tracking conflicts across the Middle East, Africa and Asia.
    And the Libyans have barely re-established full control of their country, much less rebuilt their intelligence service, less than a year after the overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi.
    The U.S. has already deployed an FBI investigation team, trying to track al-Qaida sympathisers thought to be responsible for turning a demonstration over an anti-Islamic video into a violent, coordinated militant attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi.
    Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other embassy employees were killed after a barrage of small arms, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars tore into the consulate buildings in Benghazi on Tuesday, the 11th anniversary of 9/11, setting the buildings on fire.
    President Barack Obama said in a Rose Garden statement the morning after the attack that those responsible would be brought to justice. That may not be swift. Building a clearer picture of what happened will take more time, and possibly more people, U.S. officials said Friday.
    Intelligence officials are reviewing telephone intercepts, computer traffic and other clues gathered in the days before the attacks, and Libyan law enforcement has made some arrests. But investigators have found no evidence pointing conclusively to a particular group or to indicate the attack was planned, White House spokesman Jay Carney said, adding, “This is obviously under investigation.”
    Early indications suggest the attack was carried out not by the main al-Qaida terror group but “al-Qaida sympathisers,” said a U.S. intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to discuss the investigation publicly.
    One of the leading suspects is the Libyan-based Islamic militant group Ansar al-Shariah, led by former Guantanamo detainee Sufyan bin Qumu. The group denied responsibility in a video Friday but did acknowledge its fighters were in the area during what it called a “popular protest” at the consulate, according to Ben Venzke of the IntelCenter, a private analysis firm that monitors Jihadist media for the U.S. intelligence community.
    The U.S. had been watching threat assessments from Libya for months but none offered warnings of the Benghazi attack, according to another intelligence official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak publicly about U.S. intelligence matters.
    Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, questioned whether the consulate had taken sufficient security measures, given an attempt to attack the consulate in Benghazi a few months ago.
    Carney said that given the 9/11 anniversary, security had been heightened.
    “It was, unfortunately, not enough,” he said.
    That paucity of resources also applies to the intelligence officers available to monitor Libya on the ground.
    With ongoing counterterrorism operations in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen, as well as the civil war in Syria, the CIA’s clandestine and paramilitary officer corps is simply running out of trained officers to send, U.S. officials say, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to discuss the deployment of intelligence personnel publicly. The clandestine service is roughly 5,000 officers strong, and the paramilitary corps sent to war zones is only in the hundreds, the officials said.
    Most of the CIA’s paramilitary team dispatched to Libya during the revolution had been sent onward to the Syrian border, the officials said.
    The CIA normally hires extra people to make up for such shortfalls, often retired special operators with the requisite security clearance, military training and language ability. But the government mandate to slash contractor use has meant cutting contracts, according to two former officials familiar with the agency’s current hiring practices.
    To fill in the gaps in spies on the ground, the U.S. intelligence community has kept up surveillance over Libya with unmanned and largely unarmed Predator and Reaper drones, increasing the area they cover, and the frequency of their flights since the attack on the consulate, as well as sending more surveillance equipment to the region, one official said.
    But intelligence gathered from the air still needs corroboration from sources on the ground, as well as someone to act on the intelligence to go after the targets.
    The Libyan government, though it claims it is eager to help, has limited tools at its disposal. The post-revolution government has been slow to rebuild both its intelligence capability and its security services, fearful of empowering the very institutions they had to fight to overthrow Gadhafi. They have made a start, but they lack a sophisticated cadre of trained spies and a large network of informants.
    “The Libyans in just about every endeavour are just learning to walk, let alone run,” said Paul Pillar, a former senior CIA official and author of the book “Intelligence and U.S. Foreign Policy”.
    “There is confusion and competing elements within the new provisional government which complicates the task of creating new institutions, including the intelligence service,” he said.
    “There are still some aspects of the intelligence services that still work,” says Barak Barfi of the New America Foundation think tank, including eavesdropping on cellphone calls and spying on computer traffic using equipment from the Gadhafi era. Barfi spent months with members of Libya’s transitional government as they tried to rebuild the nation’s services and infrastructure.
    But the Libyans have not yet even taken full command of their own security services almost a year after Gadhafi’s fall, Barfi said. That’s given the tens of thousands of militiamen who helped overthrow Gadhafi the time they needed to organise and seek new targets, especially Western ones, he said.
  • Catholic bishops urge sincerity  in fight against corruption

    Catholic bishops urge sincerity in fight against corruption

    The Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria [CBCN] has called for sincerity by the Federal Government in the fight against corruption if it wants the citizenry to join in the crusade.
    The CBCN believes that serious allegations of corruption against former and serving top government functionaries have been left largely unprosecuted.
    The bishops  in a communiqué at the end of their week-long Second Plenary Meeting  in Umuahia regretted that those who have been identified as corrupt have either escaped from prison custody, granted indefinite bail or set free, therefore making mockery of the entire exercise.
    They cited the oil subsidy scam and called for thorough investigation and prosecution of suspects.
     The communiqué signed by the CBCN president, Bishop Ignatius Kaigama, and the secretary, Bishop Alfred Martins, said: “The Nigerian citizenry has the right to receive comprehensive reports on the management of the fuel subsidy along with the appropriate application of justice on the criminals. Fighting corruption requires sincerity and the fight has to start from the top to the lowest cadre.
     “Politics in Nigeria is still perceived by many in authority more as a self-serving opportunity for easy money and prestige than genuine service for the good of all. Recent probes on fuel subsidy have exposed the depth of corruption in the highest echelon of our government.”
     The Bishops also decried the current level of insecurity in the country, saying: “Nigerians continue to live in fear and tension despite the acclaimed efforts to beef up security in the nation. Bombings and killings of innocent Nigerians continue in the northern part of the country while periodic murders and armed robberies continue in the southern part.
     “In the face of the sustained attacks on Christians and churches in Northern Nigerian, we insist that our patient response is not borne out of cowardice, but is of universal Christ-like love, religious maturity and genuine patriotism. We fear that in the face of continued onslaught, Christians might resort to legitimate self defence.”
     They, therefore, called on government to wake up to their duty to protect the life and dignity of everybody in the country even as they advised the government to be more vigilant in checkmating foreign-sponsored terrorist activities in Nigeria.
     They nevertheless commended Muslim and Christian leaders who are raising their voices to condemn the on-going barbarism. ”We also commend all Nigerians who are earnestly working for a better, safer and more united Nigeria and ask them not to relent,” the communiqué said.
  • Lawyer dedicates SAN award to human rights community

    Lawyer dedicates SAN award to human rights community

     A newly-appointed Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Abeni Muhammed, has dedicated the award to the human rights’ community.
    Speaking at a reception organised in his honour at the Akwa Ibom House, Abuja, Muhammed said he owed his new status to his antecedent as a human rights’ activist and commitment to philosophy of humility and justice.
    The Ilorin-based lawyer said his lowly beginning as a man who had no formal secondary school education made him to perpetually pitch his tent with the under-trodden in the society.
    “I grew up in a family of seven children where I was the only one who was sent to school on the singular advocacy of my late mother who could only see me up to Modern School level.
    “I owe all my life achievements to Almighty God and I renew my pledge that no client will ever be turned back from my chamber on the account of lack of legal fee,” he declared, adding:  “That has been my policy and so shall it remain.”
    Earlier, a retired high court judge from Kwara State, Justice Banji Orilonise, who was chairman of the occasion, described Muhammed as an epitome of humility, hard work and Spartan discipline.
    Justice Orilonise stressed the need for all members of the bar and the bench to always defend the rule of law, truth and the course of justice under all circumstances.
  • Stallion Group wins Thailand award

    Stallion Group wins Thailand award

    Stallion Group has won this year’s “Thailand’s Best Friend” award. At a ceremony in Bangkok, the Prime Minister, Ms. Yingluck Shinawatra, lauded the company for winning the award for the fourth time in a row.
    Sunil Vaswani, Chairman of the Stallion Group received the award at a ceremony organised by the Thai Government. He said, “This gesture signifies Thailand’s highest regard for its partners who share a common vision of sustainable growth of trade between countries. At Stallion, we believe in progress through partnerships: the one we have with Thailand is invaluable and is critical to our future plans.”
    The Stallion Group is present in over 18 countries employing 10,000 staff. It is engaged in commodities, agri-business, automobiles, food products, FMCG, industries and services.
  • Christians denounce  anti-Islam film

    Christians denounce anti-Islam film

    Christians in Kano yesterday denounced the anti-Islam film which has sparked protests in the Arab world.
    Bishop Ransom Bello, the state chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), said the film should be condemned by all lovers of peace and true Christians all over the world.
    Bello emphasised that any action capable of desecrating any religion should not be tolerated.
    He said: “We, as Christians, don’t support such recklessness and intentional mischief to promote religious conflict. We should rather emphasise on issues that promote peace and stabilise our system.”
    He appealed for calm, saying: “We want to appeal to our Muslim brothers to understand that Christians are not involved in this and will continue to condemn any act that is capable of undermining other peoples’ faith.”