Tag: Abuja

  • Suspect in Abuja bombing pleads guilty

    Suspect in Abuja bombing pleads guilty

    One of the five men accused of being involved in the October 2 bomb explosions in Nyanya and Kuje, suburbs of Abuja, Abdullahi Nasiru, pleaded guilty on Thursday to being in possession of 12 Improvised Explosive Devices and other materials used for making the bomb.

    Nasiru (23 years) was arraigned before the Federal High Court, Abuja on Thursday with Abdulazeez Muhazab (26), Ishiaka Salihu (25) and Mohammed Jimoh (33) and Abdullahi Nasiru (34), who pleaded not guilty to all the five counts of the charge brought against them.

    Nasiru, who was not fluent in English, spoke in pidgin English when the charge was read to him. He pleaded guilty to the fourth count, which relate to being in possession of 12 IEDs and materials used for manufacturing them.

    The charge was read and interpreted to Nasiru  and the fifth accused person, ‎Abdullahi in pidgin English.

    Nasiru pleaded not guilty to the first three counts of conspiracy and the carrying out of the bombings in the separate locations, but when the fourth count was interpreted to him, he pleaded guilty but said the items found on him belonged to his friend.

    “I’m guilty, but no be me get am, na my friend get am,” Nasiru said in pidgin English.

    Following his guilty plea to the fourth court, his lawyer, Nurein Sulyman, sprang up from his seat, sought the court’s permission to speak with his client. He approached the dock (where Nasiru stood with others) and asked him if he truly understood what he pleaded guilty ‎to.

    Nasiru maintained that he was guilty of the charge of the possession of the IEDs and the other materials.

    The five men were accused of conspiring among themselves of carrying out the bombings of Kuje town and Jikoyi park in Nyanya on October 2 resulting in “the death of scores of innocent citizens and many others sustained various degrees of injuries as well as destroying properties” being acts punishable under sections 17 and 2(a) of Terrorism (Prevention) Act 2013”.

    It was alleged,  in the fifth count,  that between August and October 2015, Jimoh and Salihu aided Abdulazeez Muhazab (first respondent) “to store and conceal” the items suspected to be used for manufacturing of IEDs, an act punishable under section 2(g) of the law.

    The accused persons are said to all hail from Kogi State. They were said to have been arrested with already-made 12 IEDs and other materials used for manufacturing the explosives in Unguwar Ebira, Karamajiji area, behind Military Cemetery along Airport Road in Abuja on October 6.

    The materials they were allegedly arrested with included 27 pieces of detonators, aluminium powder, hexomine, hydrogen peroxide, sulphur powder, sodium azide plus nitrate, iron II oxide, soldiering wire, sugar, pH litmus paper, sodium carbonate and thermometer.

    Others are chlorate, filter paper, strings, potassium chlorate, 12 ready-made IEDs and full bag of fertilizer.

    Following their arraignment, lead prosecution lawyer and Director, Public Prosecution of the Federation, Mohammed Diri, said he would still lead evidence to prove the guilt of all the accused persons, including Nasiru with regard to the count he had confessed to.

    Sulyman, who represented all the accused persons, said after court proceedings that he was yet to have access to his cleints.

    He said by the nature of the charges against his clients, Nasiru was still at liberty to change his plea to not guilty should he wish before judgment.

    “Pleading guilty is actually not a big deal. This is a capital offence, he is at liberty to change his plea to not guilty if he wishes,” Sulyman said.

    Trial judge, Justice Abdulkadir Abdulkafarati ordered that the accused persons be moved from police custody and remanded in Kuje prison.

    He adjourned to November 17

  • LBS Northern region alumni meet in Abuja

    Alumni of Lagos Business School (LBS) in the North gathered at the Northern Zonal Dinner organised by the LBS Alumni Association (LBSAA) for high-level networking and entertainment.

    The yearly event, which held last week  at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja was one of the most anticipated social events of LBS outside Lagos.

    President, Northern Zone of LBSAA, Nze Chidi Duru, said the Abuja Zonal Dinner was memorable as many institution’s alumni who have distinguished themselves in their chosen fields and other key business leaders in Abuja and its environs attended.

    “The event created a platform for high-level networking among icons of the Nigerian business community and highlight the School’s leading role in nurturing Nigeria’s business leaders,” he said.

    According to Ms Bunmi Afolabi, director, Alumni Relations, LBS, alumni who reside and work in the north, enjoyed the evening, which offered great learning and entertainment.

    She said: “We had two profound professionals – Mr Babatunde Fowler, Chairman Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and Mustapha Bello, Chairman, Invest in Northern Nigeria Limited – speak on some critical business issues at the dinner. The event was spiced with rib-cracking comedy and pleasant music.”

    Many corporate organisations supported the event. They included Grand Towers Plc, Airtel Nigeria, Fidelity Bank plc, Niger Delta Power Holding Company Limited and MessageWise Limited.

  • FAAN to build Abuja airport’s second runway

    FAAN to build Abuja airport’s second runway

    The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) said yesterday that it is stepping up efforts to build a second runway for the Abuja airport.

    FAAN’s Managing Director Saleh Dunoma stated this at the weekend.

    According to him, a second runway is very important because it is key to our operations.

    Dunoma said due to increase in passenger and airline movement at the airport, the building of a second runway would prevent the deterioration of the existing one.

    He envisioned that given the present rate of growth in the industry, the existing runway might not effectively sustain traffic.

    He explained that a committee comprising officials of the authority and the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) has been set up to determine what the runway would look like, including facilities to be included in its design.

    Dunoma added that a survey to determine the location of the second runway at the airport has been carried out so that the new facilities to be provided would work smoothly with the existing ones.

    His words: “Well, the second runway is very important; it is key to our operations. The present runway has deteriorated so much such that we need to do a major work on it to make it better.

    “So the second runway will be necessary. You cannot afford to close Abuja airport because it is the seat of government and it is important to our economy.”

    “A committee was setup last year between FAAN and FCDA and we have come out with a scope of what we want in terms of the facilities that should be included in the second runway design.

    “That scope have been developed, we have advertised also both in the nationally and internationally for consultant that will develop that scope into working drawings and bill of quantities so that we can both tender them. But we are yet to select the consultation because the process of procuring a consulting firm is what we are doing.

    “Already, preliminary survey had been carried out in Abuja by our in-house engineers; we have a fair idea of the location of the second runway and the facilities that we need to provide there.”

    He added: “Because we need to provide link taxiways, taxiways, aprons and some other things that will make both the new and the existing facility work together as an airport.

    “These locations have been identified, it is part of the brief that we are going to give the consultant; that this is the area that we want the second runway to be located and these are the facilities we want to be included in this project and the consultant will go ahead to do a detailed survey, detailed design and a detailed bill of quantity will come out with which government can go to tender.”

     

  • The ironic twists in the way I married my wife- Abuja-based hotelier Ini Akpabio

    The ironic twists in the way I married my wife- Abuja-based hotelier Ini Akpabio

    Abuja-based urbane hotelier, Ini Akpabio, was groomed from an early age to manage a family business. From choice schools in Nigeria to Europe, he returned home to take over the family business which today has interest in different sectors of the economy. But Akpabio is more known in the hospitality and tourism industry with his Nanet group of hotels. A stalwart of tourism bodies in the country, Akpabio advocates for an improved hospitality and tourism industry in the country. But just as he works hard, Akpabio also enjoys the good life along with his wife. Said he: “We do not just work and talk tourism, we also practise what we preach.” In this interview with PAUL UKPABIO, he shares his  lifestyle with us.

    You seem to have grown up as a silver spoon kid?

    I was brought up by parents who in those days could be termed middle class; all those who came up from that background in those years could be refered to as silver spoon. We were exposed to the best schools right from kindergarten and ended in schools abroad. Right from when I was very young, we started going for holidays outside Nigeria. And we were always living in the best part of town wherever we found ourselves.

    What fond memories do you have of childhood?

    My set started the Federal Government College in Kaduna. So I have friends from all over Nigeria. One of my best friends is from Adamawa, a Muslim. We lived around the country, from Kaduna to Abuja, Enugu, Port Harcourt, Lagos and so on.

    How did you meet your wife?

    That is interesting, I wouldn’t say it was love at first sight because we sighted ourselves early in life. We even had pictures taken when we were in our teenage years. Our parents knew each other while they were in Kaduna. They had also been friends when my late father was working in England in the same hospital and in the same department.

    I had known my wife for a long time. All through the time I was a small boy and my wife was a small girl, it did not cross my mind that she would be my wife. What happened was, after I finished my first degree in Nigeria, I went to England for the second degree. I ended up living there for quite a while,. and got to the age of marrying. I was about marrying a lady over there, who holds a British passport, my mother came over to London but the lady in question had never been to Nigeria and insisted that she was not going to come over to Nigeria with me. And I wasn’t ready to stay in England married to her and then choose to return after 30 years or so. It wasn’t going to work out.

    So what did you do next?

    I came back. However, because my mother had seen that I was nearly married and that marriage was what young men tried to dodge for as long as possible then, there was pressure on me. I am from Akwa Ibom State but at that time, I had three women that I would have got married to. First was my present wife who is a Yoruba; then an Ibo and an Hausa girl. And because I had not been living in my part of the country, I had hardly had  a girlfriend from Akwa Ibom.

    My uncles put pressure on me to return to the village so they could look for a wife for me. But I did not heed the call. So for someone who was nearly married to a Briton, I didn’t see myself going to the village for a wife! My mother and two sisters began a plan to get me a wife. Sooner, they opened my eyes to my present wife. I then started seeing her in a different light, no more as a family friend, no more as a small girl, but as a young lady, and from there, we became attached and eventually got married. So it wasn’t love at first sight because at the time we met as children, we didn’t know what love meant.

    Years after, how has your married life been?

    It’s been fun; we are very compatible. We understand each other; she has been able to speak 80% of my native tongue Ibibio. She participates in things I do, like power biking, motor racing. I am very involved in all that, and she has been an asset to the business, just like my mom said she would be.

    How about your style, are you a flamboyant person?

    I am rather sophisticated. I have lived in different parts of the world, Spain, Germany, England and in Nigeria, I have lived in Kaduna, Abuja, Lagos. So, I enjoy simple dressing, but well co-ordinated; 90% of my shoes are of one colour, that is black, so that means I am not very flamboyant. About 70% of my clothes are also of dark colours, blue, navy blue, dark brown, black and so on. I am not one to combine yellow and green attires, or wear white shoes. I see some of my friends wear white socks and green and yellow socks (laughs); that is their style, I bear them no grudge. Also because of my type of business, we are usually in suit and tie or formal traditional clothing.

    What appeals to you?

    I love people who are not hypocritical. We do too much hypocrisy in Nigeria; our leaders sit in church, yet do the opposite of the preachings to their fellow human beings. We have leaders who are sycophants. Having lived long in Europe, I tend to favour the transparent lifestyle. For Nigeria, I like to see a country that lives up to expectation. A country can never evolve unless her best brains are brought up to run the affairs of the country. I pray that this administration does that.

    What men’s accessories do you love most?

    I love wrist watches; I do not wear neck chains. I wear glasses as a necessity, but they have come up to become fashion statements, sometimes I match them with what I’m wearing.

    You have been in the food industry for a long time, one would expect that you would be big in size, how have you been able to keep being trim?

    I had to be careful. I wouldn’t say that because I run hotels then I have to be a glutton and become big in size. It’s true that when one becomes wealthy, there is tendency to over-indulge in food and drinks, it is a problem for men and even women. I am active. I go to the gym, I take care of my health. I have a mother who is keen on healthy living, so I learn from her. I travel with my gym bag and I power bike a lot.

    Seems you enjoy working with your wife and also playing with her…?

    (Laughs) My wife and I have actually won trophies in car racing. She is my co-driver. In Abuja, we have done motor-rallies togther and we emerged first. We also play the games of Badmington, Lawn Tennis and so on. We also travel a lot within and outside Nigeria. We do not just work and talk tourism, we also practise what we preach.

    You are known to be in the hospitality business…

    I am the Group-Managing Director of a company now known as International Nanet Group. Under this, we have subsidiaries which include Nanet Hotels Limited, Nanet Investment and Properties Limited, Nanet Farms and others. International Nanet Group is the holding company. We have seven subsidiaries.

    But you started out in the hospitality sector…

    Yes, our core strength still revolves around tourism: hotels, restaurants and fast foods, everything that makes up the hospitality and tourism sector. And now we are doing a lot of consultancy for state governments. We consult with them and work with them in repositioning in terms of tourism and ensuring creation of employment and improving their IGR through proper placement of tourism, entertainment, and other leisure issues in their state.

    Is your wife involved in running the business too?

    She is involved. Interestingly, my mother started the business. My father was a civil servant, a medical person. Though five years down the line, he resigned and teamed up with my mother, to drive the business process. We grew up in a house that was business all the time. My parents were very much involved. Later on, I was co-opted into it. But when I came back from England where I went to do Masters in Hospitality and Tourism after my first degree in Business Administration, one of the things that I told my parents was that I did not want to continue that kind of family business. That was because I wasn’t very keen on working with my brothers and sisters who were already in other disciplines which were different from hospitality and tourism.

    I believe that the mere fact that you are the son or daughter of someone that owns a particular business, does not mean you must stay in it if you are not trained in that line of business. My siblings were architects, sociologists and accountants. So I laid down the rule that if they wanted me to run the business, since I am qualified, I will not run it without my siblings. I also requested that when I marry, I did not what my wife to be part of the business. I didn’t want to be discussing business at home, in the office and every  place. That would be too tedious.

    But I give thanks to my mother who was able to convince me that my wife is very hard working, that she will be an asset to the business. I was brought up to respect my parents and their views and the fact that there was merit in what she said, I finally accepted that my wife should work with me. Right now, she is the only immediate real family member that is working with me. However, just

    less than a year ago, my first daughter finished her NYSC programme after she got a degree in Hospitality and Tourism Management. She decided to join us. So it is now back to family business.

    What is the strength of Nanet like now?

    We are approaching 15 states now for consultancy, we are in 14 states in actually running hotels physically. Some of the hotels belong to the state governments, federal agencies, while some belong to private individuals. In the past, we had been in 20 states of the federation; we have done businesses in Taraba, Bauchi to Yenegoa, Abia, Cross River and so many other places.

    What has the response from the state governments been?

    The response has been good. Sometime last year, it was ruled at the court that aside the FCT, every state can enact laws for their state, guiding the processes of culture and tourism in their states, and this has opened up a lot of opportunities in the sense that it is not likely that all the states will have similar things when it comes to tourism. Some states may have different classes of classifications, while others may have different kinds of levies. I think that it is a reflection of the fact that we are a federation. So states should have a high level of autonomy as observed in USA which we are copying. We hope maybe in future, this will flow into other activities of the states. Also the very popular one is the state police which people have been calling for, to what extent should states have power over security in their jurisdiction.

    You just mentioned states having divergent tourism plans, can you take one state for instance that you are interacting with and the kind of tourism plan that should be there?

    We are interacting with Plateau State; we have made advances to some other states like Kano, Nasarawa and some states in the southern part of Nigeria. When we had meetings with some of these states, we found out that International Nanet Group will be able to create a tourism road map for the state to use as guideline and that will create a synergy approach to tourism. A roadmap that has been overtime too, could become obsolete. In such case, there could be a need to do a re-look at them, bring them up, before we ask the state government to implement.

    Another thing we also look at is bringing up the components that we feel form the tourism framework. Some of the components can be derivatives of the roadmaps. We  also earmark some significant areas; for instance, we work on classifications of tourism components. We also look into levies, how to harmonise and streamline against double taxation. We sensitise the private sector and encourage private-public sector relationship.

    Most of the tourism players belong to associations. So the associations have to be carried along. They have to be engaged and carried along on all new creations and policies. We guide states to do this to bring less friction, more co-operation and harmony between the states and the industry players.

    Why did it take the states long to realise that tourism is important for their states?

    It’s unfortunate that tourism is still backward at the local, state and federal levels. There is this small country noted for crude oil whose Prime Minister was in Nigeria recently for a conference. When asked, the Prime Minister said his country will be known for two things, which is agriculture and tourism. So a country can take it upon herself to robustly identify with tourism despite being one of the top producers of crude oil. It shows the importance of tourism, their understanding of the limitations of making oil the only major source of their income. Same goes to the United Arab Emirates which is one of the major players in the global oil industry, but also fully involved in tourism as a priority sector.

    So our states have to realise the importance of tourism. Governors do not seem to understand the place of tourism. One of the few governors that ever understood the place of tourism is ex-Governor Donald Duke of Cross River State, who ruled the state based on an idea of tourism. So it is time to tell the states, even the Federal Government that tourism has a major role to play. Once it is in place, other things will follow. Once you have tourism as your priority, it means that you will repair your roads, you must have good houses, good electricity system; it means you must have water, security and create jobs for people. Tourism is what binds everything together. That is because there is no tourism if you do not have anything to sell.

    A place like UAE that has made its country a trading point, tourists come to buy, so it makes sense for the government to industrialise the nation. That is why we say that tourism is a win-win situation. It breeds a proper natural synergy.

    Why it has taken the states long is also that for instance, Lagos State had to take NTDC to court, that Lagos should have powers at the state level to look at its own issues on tourism and hospitality. It went on in court and later on, it was accepted that every state should be independent. That created opportunities for every state government, Commissioners of Culture and Tourism and the states themselves, to harness into the tourism bandwagon and gain all the benefits of tourism. What is the hotel and tourism situation in the North? Is tourism coming back to life there?

    Tourism has been severely affected by Boko Haram insurgency in the northern part of the country and that includes Abuja. It has been a very disastrous period for our industry. But let me divert because even before the Boko Haram came into play, we have had lots of skirmishes in the northern part of the country which bordered on religious issues. Kaduna, for instance, has been boiling for a long time; Bauchi, Kano, even Plateau as well, under different religious and ethnic issues. So the North had started experiencing a lot of turmoil. It also became apparent that during the time of politicking, there was a new dimension in political tension leading to political riots. All these were affecting the economies of these states. Then came the blossoming which emerged in Boko Haram, which did not just become a Nigerian problem, but also an internationally engineered terrorism.

    The President had to start by visiting the neighbouring countries because it is now more than what Nigeria can stomach. That was the climax of it. Up till today, the drop in tourism number and hospitality earnings fluctuated in the North and in some states like the three most ravaged states of Northern Nigeria, Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe, reducing to 25%. People are surviving on that. There has been a significant negative impact from political, tribal and Boko Haram insurgency, especially on tourism. Some other sectors of the economy may not be feeling it that badly. You know, even in time of war, you still have to eat; so manufacturers of food items still manage to survive. People will still speak to each other; so the GSM technology would still be working and so on. But for us, nobody in his right mind will go for holiday purposes and meetings in cities where there are problems like insecurity and so on. So we have had a bad situation.

    The new government has, however, assured us that things will soon turn out differently. Even when Boko Haram is crushed, it will still take us a few years to reposition those cities in the minds of people for tourism. Today, I had to convince some young persons who want to change their NYSC postings from Yobe and Borno to stay put there. They said they do not want to stay there. I had to tell them that I did my NYSC in Sokoto. I told them to be hopeful, that once the Federal Government crushes Boko Haram, these places will be in urgent need of services, and they would be the lucky ones, instead of looking for crowded places like Abuja, Lagos or Port Harcourt.

    On the federal level, what can you say about tourism at this point in time?

    The way I see it, there will always be problem in our tourism sector; there is no way that a wrong can turn out to be right. We have been shouting at the rooftop that the NTDC is the engine room of tourism in Nigeria, and the first thing to do to that engine room is to put the right person there to drive the process. Once you do not have a professionally qualified, professionally experienced person manning the NTDC, it will manifest into confusion, and that will degenerate into creation of other offices, wrong policies, disorganisation, inability to understand what needs to be done and a total waste of time to an agency that is directionless.

    This has impacted negatively in the country in such a way that tourism in Nigeria now is directionless. That has been the bane of tourism in Nigeria. This has been replicated not only in NTDC but virtually in all the agencies of the Federal Ministry of Culture and Tourism. It even starts with the minister’s background, can’t the position be reserved for people in the field of tourism like it is done with other professions, like we have in the Ministry of Health? When will Nigeria start to recognise the tourism sector as a specialised sector? So until those things are addressed, we shall continue to experience the hiccups in tourism as we are presently having it.

    Still about getting it right, we have a new government in the country, as a staunch member of most of the tourism associations in the country, what can you say is the expectation of the industry from the new government?

    I would even add the question that, what have we done, because, for the government to do what we ask for, we actually need to table some things before the government. The Federation of Tourism Association of Nigeria (FTAN) the umbrella body for all the tourism associations in Nigeria, took many pages in the national newspaper, welcoming the new administration and clearly outlining that will be very good in our sector. And the change we want is to have professionals in the various offices of the ministry at federal, state and local level.

    The era of medical doctors becoming ministers and commissioners in the ministry of culture and tourism should be a thing of the past, core professionals should reflect as Director Generals of agencies of the ministry, people who have the requisite knowledge of culture and tourism is about. We also appealed for a tourism bank, intervention funding, like the bank of industry which concentrates 99% on industrialisation.

    There is also the Bank of Agriculture, so we should have a Bank for Tourism. Then we also mention some laws that should be enacted at all levels of government that would make tourism easy in the country. These were things that were well articulated to the new government.

    Has your tourism body engaged the government on these issues?

    There has been a waiting game for the new ministers, as you well know, it is not easy for everybody to reach the Vice President and the President  because of their hectic schedule but we are still trying so that we can take these issues to their door step.

    You have also veered into farming…

    Yes, Nanet has been doing farming for quite some time; we have done this vertical diversification. When you are in the hospitality sector, you are prune to wonder about producing your own chicken or growing your own cassava since they are the raw materials you need. So we had been involved in large-scale agricultural farming in Kaduna, Abuja and some other states in the North in the past. We have revived them again to produce crops and poultry farms to produce thousands of birds. In the past, we had thousands of cattle and sheep and goats. Overtime, we became less focused on that. But because of the thrust of the present government on food sufficiency, and agriculture as a priority sector, Nanet is planning a comeback but we will start with agro-processing.

     

  • Economic summit opens in Abuja today

    The 21st Nigerian Economic Summit (NES) opens in Abuja today. The FirstBank of Nigeria Plc in partnering The Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) to host the event

    Titled: “Tough choices: Achieving competitiveness, inclusive growth and sustainability”, the event will highlight the role of public-private sector dialogue in national transformation.

    It is being organised to drive “consciousness and build national consensus on what is urgently required to rebuild, revamp and reinforce public-private collaboration for an all-inclusive economic growth”.

    It will be a platform to drive stakeholders’deliberation on tough choices required to achieve sustainable competitive and inclusive growth for national economic development in line with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) which take effect from January, next year.

    Key issues to be discussed include: how to create jobs, approaches to achieving peace and security, dismantling the pillars of corruption, strengthening institutions and the attainment of sustainable macro-economic stability and inclusive growth, among other reforms.

    In a statement, FirstBank’s Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Bisi Onasanya, said the lender supports initiatives that create opportunities for the advancement of inclusive and sustainable growth.

    He further said the bank will continue to drive the discourse on how best to achieve competitiveness and inclusive growth in a sustainable way, through measurable outcomes which are crucial in defining the agenda that will help in making Nigeria’s socio-economic environment globally competitive.

    President Muhammadu Buhari is expected to lead a Presidential Policy dialogue, which will focus on key strategic elements required to make Nigeria globally competitive.

     

  • Why Nigerians must support Army

    Why Nigerians must support Army

    I just watched the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt. General Tukur Buratai on Television after he visited troops in Geidam Community of Yobe State, as a result of Wednesday’s attack by Boko Haram militants who over-ran the military.

    Tn the attack, the insurgents killed 3 soldiers, carted away many weapons and ammunition abandoned by the military on the run and looted mostly food and petroleum products from the popular Wednesday market.

    I was particularly touched by the honesty of General Buratai who was obviously angry with the troops who had run away from Geidam town.

    In his words, the General said “How can you allow these criminals over-run you? How can you run away from this rag-tag and untrained criminals? You allowed them to operate here for 12hours unchallenged. You refused to come back until they withdrew.”

    On the surface, the words of COAS Buratai are very hurtful to the image of the Nigerian Army but this is the painful reality today.

    The Nigerian Army seems to be overwhelmed and demoralized.

    The image of the Nigerian Army has suffered so much damages in the eyes of Nigerians and the international community mainly because of the way they have handled the war against Boko Haram in the past 3years.

    These insurgents have repeatedly, for over 2years, embarked upon massive propaganda using social media to demonize the Nigerian Army.

    They have through so many online propaganda and campaigns portrayed our army as a weak and a cowardly army that cannot stand to fight.

    Many online media and personalities helped the insurgents to achieve their propaganda campaigns either intentionally or otherwise.

    It is important for us to know that all wars are fought both on ground, air, sea, land and in the minds of all parties involved in the war and most importantly in the psyche of the citizens. To win this war against Boko Haram, we must conquer the minds of Boko Haram with fear, win over our allies and friends by convincing them our army is capable and reliable and also boost the confidence of our troops through citizenry support since the morale of our troops are boosted when they know the citizens of their country are solidly behind them.

    The Nigerian Army and our other security agencies are our last line of defense against these barbarians since we cannot defend ourselves against their satanic attacks. If not for the efforts of the Nigerian Military and our other security agencies, these barbarians would have taken over the entire nation, enforced their barbaric and misguided religious tenets on all of us, restricted us to their false Sambisa sharia law system, forced our Sisters into sex slavery like they have done to the Chibok Girls and make us live in perpetual fear of terror.

    [quote font_size=”18″ font_style=”italic” bgcolor=”#000000″ bcolor=”#e2e2e2″]We sleep safely at night because rough men stand ready to visit violence on those who would harm us.”  ― Winston S. Churchill[/quote]

    If not for the Nigerian Army and other security agencies, many Muslims and Christians across our country would not be able to go to the mosque on Fridays or the church on Sundays.

    Boko Haram seeks to destroy Christianity and Islam and do not wish any of us well, Nigerians, irrespective of religious consideration, party affiliation and tribal affinity, must realize that Boko Haram are our common enemies and not just the Nigerian Army’s.

    The Army means well and are doing their very best to protect us all despite the overwhelming odds, they need our support at all times.

    This was what the opposition party in the days of President Goodluck Jonathan was admonished with but they refused to listen. They politicized everything.

    Sadly, they politicized the attempt by the former president to list Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO); they politicized the procurement of arms to prosecute the war; they politicized appointments of service chiefs; they politicized State of Emergency in the North East; they politicized Chibok and turned it into a campaign tool against Jonathan.

    The PDP-led Federal Government and the Nigerian Army, for inexplicable reasons, chose to see issues as an appendage of the PDP rather than the federal government.

    Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, now governor of Kaduna State and many leading APC chieftains then referred to the Nigerian army as Jonathan’s army. They politicized everything as regards the fight against the deadly sect.

    At some point in time, their presidential candidate now President Muhammadu Buhari called an attack against Boko haram an attack against Northern Nigeria.

    If the political class and all Nigerians had supported the then Federal Government and our security agencies in the fight against Boko Haram, may be we would have long won the war.

    The politicization of the war against Boko Haram caused more damage than good on the whole nation. Those who saw the war against Boko Haram as an avenue for them to keep scoring needless and cheap political points in the North, sabotaged the efforts of our security agencies.

    They got the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) to issue endless press releases kicking against the ban on Boko Haram and the plan of the then FG to list Boko Haram as an FTO which was needed to get arms from our allies to effectively prosecute the war.

    And finally, when Boko Haram was listed as an FTO, they began another campaign against the army saying former Chief of Army staff, Lieutenant General Ihejirika was also a sponsor of Boko Haram and was the one supplying arms to Boko Haram on the orders of former president Jonathan.

    Their allegations were so scary and consistent that our allies became skeptical of supplying us with arms, and the United States and Israel refused selling arms to us to fight the deadly sect.

    We had to turn to Russia for help. As if that was not enough, the former governor of Adamawa State, Murtala Nyako even did the unbelievable, accusing the FG of genocide against Northern Nigeria and suggested that federal troops were the ones dropping arms for Boko Haram with helicopters.

    Furthermore, it was Mallam El-Rufai that built a propaganda foundation which suggested that former President Jonathan was the one sponsoring Boko Haram against the North.

    He also tried to bring in the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, Ex-Niger Delta Militants and others as possible sponsors of the terrorist group. El-rufai ensured he poisoned the minds of young people from the North and many of his followers on social media against the then president Jonathan by maintaining this lie. He further justified this lie when he spoke at Chatham House by presenting a table to justify his propaganda theory.

    The questions all Nigerians must now begin to ask those who refused to support the former administration of Goodluck Jonathan and our security agencies in their fight against Boko Haram then and who are suddenly supporting the Federal Government and the army now is, what has changed? Is Goodluck Jonathan still the one sponsoring Boko Haram with the help of his Niger Delta ex-militants? Is CAN still the one sponsoring Boko Haram? Explanations were offered to APC on why they should see the battle against the terrorists as a national issue rather than treated as a political one just for parochial and mundane reasons, that where national security is concerned, we must not play politics with it but they did not listen.

    They threw caution to the wind and were playing loudly to the gallery. Now see where that has gotten us to, in just 120 days of president Buhari taking over, the deadly group has killed more than 1,300 Nigerians and bombed Abuja twice.

    The message here is this, the enemy is Boko Haram, not the Federal Government, not president Buhari, and definitely not our ever caring Nigerian Army and the security agencies who daily spend their days in the heat and their nights in the cold while the rest of us spend times with families in the comfort of our homes.

    The military deserves our respect and support as they remain in the forefront in the fight against these barbarians.

     

    Deji Adeyanju is a Member of the PDP

    He writes from Abuja and can be contacted:

    Twitter: @adeyanjudeji

    Email: dejiadeyanju_1979@yahoo.co.uk

    [news_box style=”2″ display=”tag” link_target=”_blank” tag=”Boko Haram” count=”8″ show_more=”on” show_more_type=”link” header_background=”#dd0808″ header_text_color=”#42a7b5″]

  • President visits survivors of Abuja explosions 

    President visits survivors of Abuja explosions 

    President Muhammadu Buhari was at the hospital yesterday to comfort survivors of Friday night’s bomb attacks on Nyanya and Kuje in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja.

    The survivors are at the Trauma Centre of the National Hospital, Abuja. President Buhari wished them full and speedy recovery.

    The President, in a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, also reassured the survivors that the Federal Government will settle their medical bills.

    He directed his Chief of Staff, Mallam Abba Kyari, to settle the N268,790.00 medical bill of a young girl in the Paediatric Ward of the hospital.

    The girl’s mother, Deborah Stephen, broke into tears on seeing President Buhari.

    She told him that her daughter was shot by armed robbers who raided their home and that the family could not afford the medical bills.

    President Buhari, who was accompanied by his personal aides and Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun, visited the intensive care unit, the paediatric unit and general ward.

    Chief Medical Director Dr Jafaru Momoh, said the visit would help the patients’ recovery by giving them a greater psychological sense of being valued and loved by their country.

  • Probe of Abuja explosions to extend beyond Boko Haram

    Probe of Abuja explosions to extend beyond Boko Haram

    Security agaents may be looking beyond the Boko Haram sect in their investigation into weekend’s explosions in Kuje and Nyanya in Abuja, The Nation learnt yesterday.

    “It may be an opportunistic crime by people with other motives. Boko Haram is not ruled out but nothing is also ruled out. It’s investigation that can determine the true situation and the investigation is in full swing,” a security source said.

    Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Abayomi Olonishakin, Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Babachir Lawal and Chief of Staff to the President Abba Kyari led the government team to the explosion site on Saturday.

    Yesterday, security agents were still combing the Kuje site for evidence. The place remained cordoned off.  No activities were allowed. Residents and pedestrians were still shocked. No fewer than 20 people died from the explosions. The 41 injured are being treated in hospitals.

    Vehicles coming into the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) were being thoroughly searched.  Security operatives at checkpoints within the city especially those along the Airport road

    At the Giri junction through to the Airport Express way, there was traffic hold up as a resut of the search.

    Vehicles spent close to 45 minutes to pass thorough the military checkpoint.

    Churches within the city and the satellite towns yesterday strengthened security.

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) also suggested that security should not limit the investigation to Boko Haram.

    In a statement yesterday, NLC President Ayuba Wabba said: “Our security agencies should not limit their intelligence or investigation to Boko Haram as there have also been recent reports that some militant groups in the Niger Delta region planned to resume violent attacks against Nigerians and the Nigerian State as a corporate entity.”

    The statement added: “The attacks may have been a devious façade to rubbish the victories of our national army and other security agencies in the battle to rid our country of terrorism and all its residues before the global community. They want the world to believe our country is not safe.

    “For us at the Nigeria Labour Congress, we believe this latest attacks should not weaken the morale of the forces involved in the battle against terrorism in our country, rather it should reinvigorate their fighting spirit and be seen by government as a challenge to arm our forces with more sophisticated and superior weapons both for intelligence gathering and combat.

    “Beyond these, we urge our government to order the immediate reinvestigation, arrest and prosecution of all those previously indicted of sponsoring terror gangs, especially Boko Haram and other such violent groups in any part of the country.

    “The freedom of those who sponsor deadly violence put the entire country seated on timed bombs that can explode at will. No matter how highly placed, whoever have been indicted should immediately be apprehended and reinvestigated now.

    “We urge all Nigerians to see the battle against terrorism as our collective battle and therefore every resident must make information about suspicious movements or behaviours in and around them available to relevant security agencies who must act on such information in our collective national interests.

    “We condole with the families of all the victims of these attacks and urge government to ensure provision of the best medical attention and treatment for the injured.”

    To the NLC, bombings “obviously by decimated terrorists” are  a call for communal vigilance by all residents. “It  has become obvious that since the massive pounding of the sanctuaries of the terrorists, fragments of the terror cliques may have organised smaller cells in communities hitherto thought not to be vulnerable.

    “These latest attacks are particularly dangerous as they were carried out at night and in locations where late purchases are made. One of the locations, Kuje, is on the route to our major international airport,” the NLC said.

  • Man who forewarned of Abuja blast deletes Twitter, Facebook accounts

    A social media user, Chima Okoro who predicted the October 2 Abuja multiple blasts about 24 hours before it occurred has deleted his social media accounts.

    Through his Twitter handle, @ChimaOkoro63, he forewarned about terrorist attacks in Abuja and Lagos.

    He posted 28 tweets between 8:34am and 9:12am,    ?on October 1, listing the areas that will be attacked.

    He said: “I pray for Nigeria. There will be a bomb blast in Abuja and Lagos. Boko Haram is going to attack and kill police, army and navy.

    “They are evil. Believe me or you leave, until you allow #Biafra to go.”

    But the tweets generated controversy after the bomb blasts with many blaming security agencies for not taking steps to avert Friday’s disaster.

    Others however felt the security agencies should have hounded and arrested the guy, who they suspected to be a member of the sect.

    As the tweets generated ethnic strive among social  media users, he deleted his accounts, to prevent further circulation.

    The ethnic verbal war forced other users to investigate his true identity and it was discovered that @ChimaOkoro has multiple identity.

    One Abdul Mahmud (@AbduLMahmud1) said from True Caller application, telephone number 08130502474 on Okoro’s facebook account belonged to one Sadiq Hono.

    However, on another social media platform, 2go, his identity was revealed as Yarima Muazam.

    Mahmud wrote: “A terrorist group or mindless terrorist will not appeal on social media using real identity. @Chimaokoro63 is one example.”

    Ayobami Oyalowo,  @ayourb wrote: “We need cyber police. Criminals like @chimaokoro63 should be taken and questioned. We can’t keep attributing everything to Boko Haram without evidence.”

    “@Chimaokoro63 appears to have left a clue to his real identity. His Facebook account has a mobile telephone number that is revealing.”

    At the time of filing this report, the Directorate of State Security (DSS) could not be reached to know if there are plans to investigate Okoro.

  • Photos: Abuja bomb blasts scene

    Photos: Abuja bomb blasts scene