Tag: allegation

  • Allegation of corruption against me  baseless, says Babatope

    Allegation of corruption against me baseless, says Babatope

    A Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Board of Trustees (BoT) member and Chairman, Governing Council, Yaba College of Technology, Yaba, Chief Ebenezer Babatope yesterday dismissed the allegation of corruption against him and the Rector, Dr. Kudirat Ladipo.

    Describing the allegation that Mrs. Ladipo gave him N75 million as a deliberate attempt to malign him, the former Transport Minister said the allegation was malicious and mischievous.

    He added that he would reflect on the damage to his reputation in his memoir.

    Babatope said the allegation was spurious, wondering why some elements could think that he could suddenly indulge in corruption, which he had shunned in the last 72 years.

    He told reporters in Lagos that his lawyers have also taken up the case.

    Babatope said: “The allegation that the rector gave me N75 million was baseless. What do I want to do with N75 million. My law firm is taking up the matter. I am 72. I have served the country as a minister and in other capacities. No one born of woman can prove any allegation of corruption against me.

    “I was trained by our great leader, Chief Obafemi Awolowo. He taught me to be contented and avoid corruption.”

    The Chairman of the Governing Council said the council was satisfied with the achievements of the rector in the last two years, especially in the areas of human capital and infrastructural development.

    The former minister lamented the campaign of calumny against the rector, saying that it was a deliberate attempt to divert her attention and bring her down through falsehood and character assassination in the media.

    Babatope added: “The petitions against her are not new. The inspector-general of police, head of service of the federation, the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) and the Governing Council have investigated the allegations. “The petitions are frivolous, spurious, provoked by vendetta to fan the embers of parochialism. The petitioner has continued to deepen his evil conceptions and fabrications, based on shameless and blatant lies.”

    The rector also denied the allegations, saying that she had made transparency and accountability her watchword.

    She said: “I have served Yabatech as a teacher for 22 years before my appointment. I saw my appointment as a divine call to serve to improve the infrastructural development of the college and move the great institution forward.

    “I have been running around soliciting for funds to develop the school. I met abandoned projects. We have improved the IGR and we have been able to sustain the projects through the IGR.”

  • Why probe of Obasanjo’s allegation against government is stalled

    Why probe of Obasanjo’s allegation against government is stalled

    The National Human Rights Commission(NHRC)  cannot proceed, for now, with its planned probe of an allegation that the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan has been training snipers to deal with perceived political detractors.

    The commission  is unable to raise  the   N150million which it had asked from government to enable it probe the allegation.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo  made the allegation in a December 2, 2013 letter.

    He also  alleged that  the Jonathan  administration had   over 1,000 people on political watch  list  and  other  armed personnel  secretly.

    The alarm forced the presidency on December 23, 2013, through the Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN), to order the  investigation of  the  allegations.

    But 15 months after, the NHRC has not made any headway with  the probe despite the increasing outcry by the opposition that some of its leaders are under security watch.

    It was gathered that  the NHRC submitted a budget  of  N150million to the federal government for the probe.

    The budget was for media coverage(including pre-hearing advertorials); panel sittings in designated venues across the country;  honouraria for consultants, researchers , external counsel, verbatim reporters, translators and so on;  travels to conduct investigations;  secretariat;  logistics; and servicing of panel sittings.

    However, a  government source   said  the Ministry  of Justice  considered  the matter not to be an issue because the annual budget of the NHRC can accommodate such investigation.

    “At a point, the NHRC reduced the budget for the probe to N75million and even offered the ministry to appoint an external counsel, but the requests were turned down. There is no way the NHRC cannot afford  N75million.

    “And the government refused to appoint any counsel for the commission in order not to be seeing as a judge in its own case,”  the source said.

    Last week, the Chairman of the NHRC, Dr. Chidi Odinkalu  blamed the uncooperative attitude of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mohammed Adoke (SAN), and Obasanjo for the hindrance facing the probe.

    Odinkalu said: “What happened was very straightforward. We need materials and evidence from different people. We have written to the Attorney General of the Federation to give us his evidence. We have written to General Obasanjo to give us his evidence. And we have heard from neither side. Now, we have repeated the demand and we have heard from neither side.

    “The process is facts-based. It is evidence-led. We are not going to sit down here and manufacture evidence. We want to give everybody a chance before proceeding. Again, we want to convene the public hearing. But again, it is close to the elections.

    “So, we took a deliberate decision that we did not want to make that a factor. After the elections, we are going to convene that hearing. But if the attitude continues, which is that neither side is willing to give us evidence, we will adjourn it  indefinitely.”

    The Presidency asked the NHRC to “investigate the allegations bordering on the human rights violations contained on pages 9-10 of the letter dated December 2, 2013, written by former President Olusegun Obasanjo (GCFR) to President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan (GCFR) attached to the memorandum under reference.

    “In order to properly delineate the issues within your sphere of competence, particularly as other issues raised in the letter are being investigated by appropriate agencies of government.”

    The letter cited two offensive paragraphs in Obasanjo’s letter for investigation by the NHRC.

    Section 5(b) of the 2010 (Amendment Act) of the NHRC empowers it to conduct such an enquiry.

    The section reads in part: “The commission shall deal with all matters relating to the protection of human rights as guaranteed by the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the United Nations Charter and the Universal Declaration on Human Rights and other international treaties on human rights to which Nigeria is a signatory.

    It continues: “The commission shall monitor and investigate all alleged cases of human rights violation in Nigeria and make appropriate recommendation to the President for the prosecution and such other actions as it may deem expedient in each circumstance and assist victims of human rights violation and seek appropriate redress and remedies on their behalf.”

  • Allegation against Amb. Giwa untrue – media officer

    Allegation against Amb. Giwa untrue – media officer

    The Marketing Director  and the acting Media Officer of Premier League clubside, Giwa FC, Sammy Adesoji, has denied the indictment allegation levelled against the Proprietor of the club, Ambassador Chris Giwa, by the Plateau State Football Association Chairman, Sunday Longbap as false and baseless!

    Adesoji, when confronted by journalists, was asked about the allegation levelled against his boss by the FA Chairman, said it’s a joke of the century!

    According to him: “How can an indicted person by the Government in 2004 still return and be made the Sole Administrator of the club in 2005, 2006 and 2007 football seasons in the same Plateau United by the same Government of the day?

    “You can now see why I said the allegation is ridiculous and laughable! But the FA Chairman, Sunday Longbap, called me and denied the write-up credited to him.”

    It will be recalled that Ambassador Chris Giwa left Plateau United as the Sole Administrator on the 20th of June, 2007.

    Meanwhile, Ambassador Chris Giwa, has said that he has yet to believe the rumour spreading around that the Plateau State FA Chairman, Sunday Longbap, said he will not nominate him for the post of the Presidency.

    “Although I have received series of calls about this particular false allegations alleged to have been levelled against me by Longbap, but am not bothered because I know I don’t have any skeleton in my cupboard or neither will I imagine the PFA Chairman going all out to be used against me despite all God has used me to do for football development in the State and Nigeria at large,” Giwa said.

  • I’m ready to defend N6bn debt allegation, says Nyako

    I’m ready to defend N6bn debt allegation, says Nyako

    Three die as youths protest plot to sack Nasarawa governor

    Former Adamawa State Governor Murtala Nyako remained defiant yesterday, saying he is ready to defend his integrity.

    Security agencies and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) are after Nyako, who was impeached in hazy circumstances on Tuesday, but he remains in high spirits, according to an aide.

    Nyako is accused by Acting Governor Umaru Fintiri of plunging the state into a N6billion debt.

    He said the loans he took, including the controversial N6billion, were approved by the House of Assembly.

    Also yesterday, The Nation learnt that former Deputy Governor Bala James Ngillari was under pressure to go to court to seek his reinstatement as acting governor “because he was forced to resign”.

    Nyako, who spoke through his Director of Press and Public Affairs, Ahmad Sajoh, said he had nothing to hide on his tenure.

    He said: “Admiral Murtala Nyako is ready to defend himself on any allegation in an open court and under a fair system.

    “But he said in a system where impunity is the order of the day, he cannot get a fair hearing. How do you expect a goat to get fair hearing in a court presided over by wolves?”

    On the alleged N6billion debt left behind by Nyako administration, Nyako’s spokesman said: “The Acting Governor has not even settled down; he has not been briefed by those in charge and he is declaring debts of about N6billion.

    “This shows that the Acting Governor is acting a script. We knew the script was written long ago; they will release sleaze materials to vilify Nyako. That is why they have sent security agents and EFCC operatives after him to cast aspersion on Admiral Nyako.

    “If Nyako left N6billion debt, all the loans or debts were approved by the House of Assembly, which was presided over by the Acting Governor in his capacity as the Speaker. So, you can see that they are acting a script.

    “The whole thing borders on what Nyako said about how President Goodluck Jonathan is tackling the insurgency in the country. They were not happy and they decided to remove him from office. But is he not being vindicated now?”

    Ngillari’s plan to go to court is believed to have the backing of

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chief, including some National Assembly members.

    The plot will lead to Fintiri’s removal.

    Investigation by our correspondent revealed that some stakeholders were unhappy that Ngilari was forced to resign without following the provision of the 1999 Constitution. A source said: “Ngillari was either forced or frightened to write the resignation letter by members of the House of Assembly.

    “But they shot themselves in the foot when they asked him to write the resignation letter to the Speaker, instead of the governor.

    “What happened was that Ngillari, on Tuesday, wrote the governor on his resignation from office.

    “But in their desperation to remove the former governor, the House of Assembly asked Ngilari to write the Speaker directly because Nyako was in Abuja and it would take time for him to communicate Ngillari’s decision to the Assembly.

    “Ngilari withdrew the resignation letter he sent to the governor and wrote a fresh one to the Speaker, which was a violation of Section 306(5) of 1999 Constitution.”

    Sajoh had in a statement said: “We wish to state categorically that Section 306 (5) of the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as amended requires that the deputy resign not to the House of Assembly but to the Governor. As at the time the supposed resignation was said to have been tendered in the House, Murtala H. Nyako was the governor of Adamawa State.

    “No such was written to him, none was received by him and none was approved by him. It should, therefore, be known that in the eyes of the law, the deputy governor has not resigned. Barrister Bala James Ngillari is still the Deputy Governor of Adamawa State.

    “This clarification is necessary to avert another subversion of the constitution, since the order processes relating to the impeachment saga have all been in contravention of the constitution and the law. We wish to observe that the continued abuse of the constitution and the law of the land will spell doom for our democracy.”

  • APC’s allegation unfounded, says PDP

    APC’s allegation unfounded, says PDP

    The leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has denied the allegation that the impeachment of the Adamawa State Governor Murtala Nyako was instigated by President Goodluck Jonathan and the PDP.

    In a statement yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, the PDP described the allegation as wild and unfounded, adding that it was meant to cause confusion and incite the people against the President, the PDP and institutions of government.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) accused Jonathan and the PDP of instigating and bankrolling Nyako’s impeachment and the gale of impeachment threats hanging over other APC governors.

    The PDP said: “While we do not wish to join issues with a party that has become notorious for falsehood, deceit and blackmail, we wish to alert Nigerians that this is part of the  orchestrated plot by the APC to discredit and blackmail institutions of government, particularly the legislature, the citadel of democracy and stronghold of the will of the people and ultimately set the stage to destabilise the polity.

    “We note that this onslaught against the legislature is not spontaneous. Nigerians may indeed recall the vicious attack on the National Assembly early this year wherein the APC also raised a false alarm that federal lawmakers were being induced with millions of dollars to defect to the PDP.

    “We invite Nigerians to note the anti-democratic and anti-Nigeria actions of the APC. Indeed, never in the history of this country has an opposition constituted itself into a rebellion against our dear nation and its corporate existence.

    “Never in the history of this country has the opposition sought spiritedly to cause confusion to destabilise our nation using wild allegations and lies; never has an opposition resorted to supporting insurgency and instigating violence through their utterances for political capital; never has an opposition taken it upon itself to continue to insult and attack the person and office of the President and government institutions for parochial interests.

    “We in the PDP believe in democracy and the principle of separation of powers as enshrined in our constitution. As such, we have never and will not for any reason whatsoever interfere in the activities of the legislature at any level.

    “Our advice to the APC is that resorting to blackmail and unfounded allegations will not help them. They must understand that in a democracy, the will of the people and the rule of law are paramount.

    “Nobody is above the law or above the will of the people. Also they must note that the law does not exonerate an erring official simply because he is in the opposition”.

     

  • Ex-director denies forgery allegation

    A former director in the Federal Ministry of Justice, Mrs Eunice Oddiri (nee Esiso) has debunked media reports that she was involved in an alleged registration and forgery scandal over her late father’s estate.

    She said contrary to the reports, she was duly appointed by her mother as a director in the companies, including Gateway Estates Limited and Oil Field Transport Services Limited.

    According to her, the companies had her late father Mr E. A. Esiso and mother Chief Iketiti Esiso as founding directors. Following her father’s death, she said her mother appointed her and three of her siblings as directors.

    Mrs Oddiri said she could not have forged any of the documents regarding registration of the companies’ directors as insinuated in the reports.

    She said her father, in a personal statement to the police and his banker while alive, also affirmed that he duly donated his Power of Attorney to her.

    The police, she said, had in 2008 investigated an allegation that she forged the Power of Attorney and issued a report, signed by the Inspector-General of Police on October 20, 2008, clearing her of allegations of forgery.

    She said her elder brother, who allegedly petitioned the police Special Fraud Unit (SFU) again this year on the same issue on which she was cleared six years ago, had also filed a suit at the High Court in Isiokpolo, Delta State, to challenge the validity of the Power of Attorney, but did not wait for the court to determine his suit before writing another petition.

    Oddiri, through her lawyer, Mr Nelson Ogbuanya of Novena Partners, has filed a suit at the Federal High Court in Warri, challenging her brother’s handling of her late father’s estate using a letter of administration purported obtained in a court.

    The reports, according to Oddiri, also claimed she and her other brother would be arrested and arraigned at a Magistrate’s Court in Warri for alleged forgery.

    “We’re apprehensive about our safety. We believe it is my elder brother who is misleading the police. My father did not put his name as a shareholder in any of the companies. The article was designed to embarrass and destroy my reputation,” Oddiri said.

  • My travails for three and a half years over child trafficking allegation —Bisket

    My travails for three and a half years over child trafficking allegation —Bisket

    Bisi Dan Musa, a.k.a. Bisket, bestrode the social scene like a colossus in the 80s, 90s and early 2000. Now 66, her life is one that movie makers can make a fortune from. As a fabric merchant, she was already comfortable enough to build her own house at 24. And by the time she clocked 30, she was already a mother of eight children. Tall, graceful and endowed with benevolent disposition, it is no surprise that celebrities were always flocking around her. As a matter of fact, her business office, called Bisket Store, on Allen Avenue, Ikeja, Lagos, was always a beehive of activities. It was the first to run a 24-hour schedule. She later became a born-again Christian and before any of her top society friends knew it, she had become seriously involved in ministry work. She founded a church and intensified her work in humanitarian services, picking up orphans and destitute and rehabilitating them. It was a success story that turned into a nightmare when she was arrested for alleged child trafficking in 2001. It was one incident that shook her life to its very foundation and forced her into a quiet life when she got over the storm that lasted for three and a half years. She went down memory lane as she discussed these and more with PAUL UKPABIO

    IT is not unusual to hear that you are in Jerusalem, Rome or some other holy cities on pilgrimage. How does one reconcile this with the fact that you were once accused of child trafficking?

    I believe that in the journey of life, God will always take you through different phases. The Bible tells us that there was a time in Joseph’s life that God gave him a vision, the vision backfired and he went solo like I did. But that did not deny God’s promises upon his life and the vision was made manifest. When God wanted him to go solo, he went solo. When God wanted him as a slave, he became one. When God wanted him in prison, he was in prison. But the promise of God upon him, he never missed. And those channels of suffering became the channels through which God elevated him.

    A vision is like a divine promise. Before something can materialise in your life, you and God must share a vision together. He will first give you a vision; not necessarily in a dream. It may be an idea in your heart. It may be something that you visualise that is coming to you and you are excited about it.

    You went into fabric business early in life and made great fortune from it. How did you get involved with the poor and the destitute?

    I did not go into fabric business, I was born into it. I am always a dreamer. I diversified into supermarket line and I happened to be the first to run a 24-hour supermarket in Nigeria. Up till now, nobody has achieved that feat. I did the business when Nigeria was tensed up during the military era. There were guns everywhere and I did a 24-hour supermarket business because God gave me the inspiration to do it. And anything I have an inspiration to do, I go for it and I achieve it.

    God also gave me an inspiration to serve him. Up till now, people cannot understand the calling. Not even my family members, my children, my husband, my late mother and other people who are close to me. None of them could understand why somebody at the highest level of her career would suddenly divert into taking care of the ordinary people on the streets. They believe that most people who divert into such callings do so out of frustration or career breakdown. But I was still in limelight and at my prime, because at the time I answered the call, I was still in my 30s.

    I did so many things very fast in life. Even my tenants thought that my building belonged to my mother. I had been delivered of eight children before I reached 30. Some preferred to believe the rumour that I had no children. In between all that, I was still working, travelling overseas and importing goods in containers. I was fine and I already had five branches of the supermarket. At 20, I was doing all that. I was never a wayward woman. No man in Nigeria can stand up today and say he invested in me. No man can say he has gone out with me, and no governor or minister can say he helped me or gave me a contract. I have never gone out for such largesse in my life. It was my sweat and the benevolence of my husband.

    As a wealthy woman, what is your take on success and wealth?

    My children are in their late 30s and above now. They tell me that I am a genius. They compare me to Bill Gates. They and others who know me would tell you that money is not my priority. If I were to value money, I would be one of the richest women in Nigeria today. I see many opportunities I can make money from, but I don’t go for it. Rather, I give out to people. Many whose lives I have touched are living witnesses to my generosity. I am rather careless with money. I give out more money than I make. That is why I say I don’t value money the way other people see it as a matter of life and death. Some people are so eager to achieve and do not care if they hurt anybody in their shrewd desire to make money. People hurt me. Even those that I have helped hurt me, but I just look at them and laugh. They don’t even know how to say thank you.

    Money is nothing in this world. It is only those who God has given the vision that understand the power of the source. They are the ones who know the value of life and also know that money is not everything. Money is good. I pray for it every day. I pray for my generation not to taste poverty. But one thing I used to tell my kids any time they feel bad and say, “Ah, Mummy, you are nice to a fault,’ is that life and power are transient. Everything that has a beginning also has an end. Nothing is too big to gain and nothing is too big to lose.

    I was in the office of an influential government official who is close to retirement. He was telling me that all he needed in his life was N3 million so that he could retire to his farm. I looked at him and I felt like weeping, because I know what that means. Some months ago, I gave someone a property worth N8 million free of charge. My children were angry, but I pacified them that God has favoured us and we have never lacked. I told my children that the ones they needed, I had already given them.

    Tell us about your background

    I was born into affluence. My dad and mum were very rich. My father, Chief Zacheaus Adekoya Okeowo, brought power to Ijebu-Ode. He owned the first petrol station in Ijebu Ode, and at a time, he was one of the finest politicians in the progressive politics of that era. And my mother, Chief (Mrs.) Christiana Alaba Okeowo, was one of the pioneers of the fabric business in Nigeria. She started in Lagos and went up to have her own factory. She didn’t stop employing foreigners to work in her factory. So I grew up with silver spoon. I have never tasted poverty in my life. I don’t even know what they call poverty. My parents bought me my first car at the age of 16. So, I have never tasted poverty. Maybe that is why money is not a big deal to me. When I see people running after money like life and death and they are ready to hurt anybody because of money, I feel sorry for them. Even when they accused me of stealing children, I just laughed. The question I first asked is how much would I sell them? As an individual I built my first house at the age of 24. I know how much I get from rent alone. Up till now, I live on rent because I decided not to work again. I retired at the age of 40.

    What has life has taught you?

    There are some positions God put us in, though they make us unhappy or uncomfortable, they are part of the packages that will locate our destiny. I always tell my kids that I know I may have hurt you, you may not be happy with me as your mother, maybe I wasted opportunities in which you would have been swimming in money, but it could also be that I am preparing your future. You will enjoy it. I tell them to trust me that my seven generations will reap the fruits of what I am sowing. I may not reap it, but I pray that God will give my children the grace to reap it. That’s because He works according to His grace.

    If Jesus can die at the age of 33, who am I to query God for my own cross? Jesus’ short time on earth did not deprive Him of God’s promise upon his life. Today, He is worshipped and adored globally. Before Adolph Hitler died, he confessed that Jesus was the greatest and most popular entity in the world. Even Times magazine at a time adjudged Him the Greatest Personality of the Century. Even Muslims appreciate Him. They say He is not the son of God, but they still accept him as a prophet of God. I just came back from Jerusalem and I visited where Jesus was buried. It is Muslims that are watching over the place. And it is a mosque that is beside Jesus Christ’s burial ground. They said the land is owned by Muslims and the Muslims were very careful; they were watching us. They didn’t want us to damage the place or do anything evil to it. So, they hurry you out so that you don’t overstay your visit. They say they open the place in the morning and close it in the evening. They are very watchful of the place, so that nobody will come and bomb it or do any evil to it.

    So, if God can glorify Christ up to that level and Christ promised us as His followers that ‘when you take my step, I will never owe you,’ I say that God will not owe me. It may take time for people to realise who this woman is, but God will never owe me.

    Do you regret helping abandoned children and destitute after you were accused of child trafficking?

    Thank God, one of the children they said I stole is in The Bells University today. We spend over a million naira on him in a year, but the papers are not reporting that, I don’t care. All I care about is what God asked me to do. That child (points to a sleeping baby) is a child to one of the children they said I stole. I am taking care of the mother and I am taking care of the child. Nobody is seeing that. They accused Jesus more than that. People fight what they don’t understand. My children too don’t understand, but I know with time, they will understand that I have a purpose on earth. I have a vision that I am pursuing. Nobody is seeing that vision, but I don’t care. It is not about money. God has given me a time to enjoy. I have enjoyed money. I have entered presidential jets many times. I have been to places in England where it was white people that opened the gates for me and white executives chauffeured me. So, God has given me my good times.

    Even now, I am still having my good time because at my age, I have no sickness: no diabetes, no high blood pressure, no headache, nothing. People see me and they cannot believe my age. Some people even see me and they say it to my face that all your friends are old, why are you looking young like this? It is the grace of God. Because what I have gone through, they have not gone through it. They have stayed in the limelight. They have enjoyed their lives. They are mixing with their likes while I have been mixing with the low class for the pass 20 years. I still enjoy being around them and I am not complaining. I don’t want to be in the limelight. But I do tell my children if you want the limelight, go for it.

    As a popular society figure then, a lot of people must have swam around you…

    From youth, I was happily married and started rearing children. I have never lacked anything. So, nothing prepared me for such a huge challenge. I was giving birth to children every year. Some people even said to me, pretty women like you don’t normally have kids, how come you are having children every year? God has been too kind to me. So, when the other side came, it was like a big blow. It knocked me on the floor that I couldn’t even pray. There was a time I was no longer praying. Since I gave my life to God, I have never done anything fetish and I will not do it until the day I die. But in that period of tribulation, I was just blank.

    It was not even the incident per se, but the way people disappointed me. It was something I never thought could happen. The first day they took me to court, I was thinking that I would see thousands of people waiting there to fight my cause and say, ‘No, Bisket is not like that!’ But I got there and saw only those who wanted to persecute me. The mob was shouting. They were carrying stones. I looked into the heavens and said God, I am not Jesus Christ. Jesus is your son, you both died together in heaven, but I am a child of faith. This woman is about to break to pieces. I was praying to God in my heart.

    That is why my husband, Dan Musa, no matter who they say he is, I can never leave him. My marriage to him may not be a bed of roses. People said I should leave him, but I will never because during my trying moments, he was there for me. God used him. He stood as a man to the last minute, and for that, I can never abandon him. He is with me and we will be together for life. That is my destiny. But the whole episode made me to see life from a different perspective and that really weakened me for a couple of years.

    So, how was the issue resolved?

    I pursued the case for three and a half years before I was discharged and acquitted. They could not prove any case against me because God knows that I don’t have any case, and I proved myself in the court of law. No policeman or law enforcement person can say that I bribed him with one naira, and the heavens witnessed that. I intentionally did it so that I can still trust God. If I had bought my way out, I might not trust God again. I wanted to see whether the righteous would be punished, because according to His word, the child of the righteous will never be a victim of misfortune. I wanted to establish that biblical fact.

    When I first came, the Magistrate was very hostile. But when I proved my case that I take the children with me to England, I take them on holidays, and how much will I sell them in Nigeria? Even if they say they are selling children every day in Nigeria for N500,000, the money I spent on their return ticket to London for holidays alone is more than that. So, any magistrate who knows her onions can see the proof, with their passports. The hospital they were attending was Eko Hospital. They were not going to General Hospital. And I told the magistrate to go there and check the records. There was another hospital we used on Norman Williams Street, Ikoyi. I said go and check. So, how much will I sell them? The magistrate became sympathetic. I read it in her. But she was hostile when the case started. They even begged her to give me a seat in the dock. But when she saw the reality of the case, she changed.

    Chief Rhodes insisted that I should go into trial, because they wanted to set the case aside. I have forgotten the term they used in law, but Chief Rhodes said if what I had told him was true, I had no case. He said I should not go for the easy way out because my enemies might bring the case back in 10 years’ time. He said, ‘Let them put you in the dock. If you have passed through this and you have not collapsed up till now, you can’t collapse again.’

    So, I went into the dock. By the time we finished the case, people were on my side. When I am testifying, people shed tears. By the time I was discharged and acquitted, the whole court was jubilating. People were clapping. If they didn’t believe in the discretion of the magistrate, they would have hissed or protested. But when they counted charge one, discharge and acquitted; charge two, discharge and acquitted up to charge 21, the whole court started clapping.

    People said you cried on TV

    That was because the children were not allowed to follow me. I couldn’t clap, so I was crying. That is why people who saw the television footage thought I didn’t win the case. They saw me crying on TV and thought I had been sent to jail. And you know after that case, I went into my shell. So, everybody thought I went into jail. They never knew that I was discharged and acquitted. But my joy was not completed because I said I am going home but these children are going into detention with no care and love. As a mother, what is my joy?

    It was three and a half years later, through the favour of God under Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration, Barrister Opeyemi Bamidele, who was the Commissioner for Sport and Youth Development, assisted and the children were returned to me. May God continue to favour these two people. One of the children is at The Bells University. Others are in other higher institutions.

    We hear that you have a new passion caring for animals…

    That is funny, because I never grew up in the village. I grew up in the city. But I have the tendency to love not just animals but anything that has life. I don’t play with life. I don’t also believe that it is my doing. It is God that creates human beings and He will just create you the way He wants you to be. I always explain this to my kids that the fault you see in me is exactly how God created me. There was a time my daughter’s friend came from England into my house. She saw me spoon-feeding a kitten. She looked and went to tell my daughter that ‘your mother has a problem o. She is now spoon-feeding animals.’ I appreciate anything that has life. That is how God created me and that is who I am.

    And your beauty has stayed over the years. How do you do it?

    There is no secret to it. I relax. I don’t worship money. If one has stroke, that means wheel chair. You can’t enjoy that money again. God didn’t allow me to beg my enemies for food. That means I am a rich woman in the Lord. So, I always thank God.

    And how is life in retirement?

    My husband lives in Kwara State, and where a man stays is where his wife takes as her home. But I am somebody who cannot just stay permanently in Kwara because of my kids. They are in the stage where they need me most. So, I need to be around them even though they may be older. They are actually in their 40s, and late 30s, but a child, no matter how old, still needs the native wisdom of the mother. Moreover, many of them are just re-settling in Nigeria. They are just returning home from the UK and the US, and they don’t know much about Nigerian way of doing things. So, I make sure I shuttle between them and my husband.

    And thank God, I have a reasonable husband who is very accommodating and caring. I live in his house here in Lagos. Dan Musa gave me a whole house I live in here in Lagos. So, I shuttle between Kwara and Lagos. I live on rent. My husband has a rice plantation with a factory in Ilorin. It is such a huge agricultural investment. He produces all brands of rice. I also have a store in Ilorin because my family is into buying and selling.

    What advice do you have for young couples?

    I believe that no woman should break up her marriage, because I believe from experience that there is no perfect human being. Anybody God has given you, just take him as your destiny. Even when you change, you will not find perfection in your new partner. So why change? And the changes always affect the children. Like I always advise my kids, the love story you see on television is different from reality. Don’t believe it. Don’t even expect it! Marriage is a reality show, and reality means no perfection.

  • ‘Air traffic controllers allegation against NAMA false’

    ‘Air traffic controllers allegation against NAMA false’

    THE allegation by members of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association (NATCA) that they are being treated unfairly by the management of the Nigeria Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) is false, it was learnt yesterday.

    NATCA’s President Comrade Victor Eyaru had accused NAMA of failing to release workers’ outstanding promotion as well as non-implementation of allowances for air traffic controllers. This differed from the content of a congratulatory letter sent to NAMA’s Managing Director, by the union’s Secretary General.

    In the NATCA’s letter by its Secretary General Olawode Banji, on October 4, the union said: “On behalf of all members of Nigerian Air Traffic Controllers Association (NATCA), I am directed to congratulate and appreciate your management for yet another feat achieved by the recent confirmation of appointment of the Director of Operations, and nothing less than 10 other air traffic controllers as general managers in one fell swoop.

    “We are not losing sight of the fact that the approval for the promotion of many assistant general managers to deputy general managers was, at the same time, gotten from the Federal Ministry of Aviation of which tens of air traffic controllers benefitted among other staff.

    “This is yet another giant stride, a record in the history of air navigation service provision in Nigeria and the great motivation to not only the affected officers, but the entire NAMA work force.

    “We continually wish your management well as you strive further to better the lots of the agency and its work force. More grease to your joints sir. Please be assured of our highest cooperation.”

    At the 42nd AGM /Conference of NATCA in Asaba, Delta State, Eyaru declared that CNS/ATM facilities nationwide were yet to be improved upon.

    Eyaru explained that no matter how beautiful an airport building will look, it will be a waste without the proper facilities in place.

    He explained that air traffic controllers at the nation’s two area control centres in Kano and Lagos, still go through a lot of herculean tasks to communicate with pilots.

    Eyaru stressed the need for redundancies for radar facilities in a bid to have reliable alternative whenever there was power failure.

    He said: “One of the fundamental challenges we face today inspite of the transformations and remodeling in the industry deals with ageing workforce in all the parastatals, dearth of professionals in the critical areas of NAMA, NCAA and NCAT arising from the retirement of well trained and highly skilled professionals without commensurate replacement through well established and sustained process of recruitment of suitable qualified persons”

    NATCA President noted that political appointees without cognate experience in support group instead of in the core areas of the agencies, adding that it was a source of worry to NATCA and called on the government to have a re think with a view to do the right thing to salvage the critical sector of Nigeria’s economy from total collapse.

    NATCA boss called for the release of all outstanding promotions of deserving workers and in particular those of the ATC. He called for a review of scheme of service for ATCs and their remunerations including their professional allowances.

    Eyaru decried the threat to sustenance of agencies through paucity of funds and policy somersaults which has affected the agencies negatively.

    The air traffic controllers association, a communiqué at the just-concluded meeting in Asaba condoles with the government on the crash of Associated Aviation Embraer 120 crash in Lagos.

    The association said it fully identifies with efforts by the ministry of aviation through the various agencies to fix major airports through the remodeling project.

    The communiqué reads: “We commend the upgrade of air navigation services, in particular the commencement of area radar control and performance based navigation implementation in the Nigerian airspace.

    “The association appreciates the laudable gestures of NAMA in the recent promotion of deserving officers and confirmation of all officers who were appointed in acting capacities.

    “The association advises non professionals to exercise restraint while passing comments on aircraft accidents investigation because such pre- emptive comments are against ICAO standards and recommended practices.

    That the air navigation and aerodrome system in particular control towers where air traffic control services are to be provided should be constructed and equipped in an ergonomic ally friendly manner in the interest of safety and efficiency.

    “That all outstanding unresolved or pending matters of air traffic control services remuneration and professionals allowances should be urgently concluded.

    “That while the association appreciates the enormous efforts by the government to permanently address the needs of a seamless communication system in the provision of air traffic control services, it however urges the government to sustain the efforts until the total objectives are met.

    “That air traffic control manpower shortage is becoming critical because of mandatory retirement of officers in NAMA, NCAA, and NCAT.

    The Federal Government is, therefore, invited to embark on urgent recruitment and training of air traffic controllers to stem the slide and enable the country maintain its lead role in air navigation services in Africa.”

  • Senator denies allegation on academic records

    Senator Hope Uzodimma, representing Imo West Senatorial District, has denied the allegation that he does not possess a West African School Certificate (WASC).

    He expressed his readiness to respond to a case filed by a lawyer, Festus Keyamo, challenging his (Uzodimma’s) educational qualification.

    In an ex-parte application, Keyamo is seeking the leave of a Federal High Court to apply for an order compelling the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) to release the original copy of Uzodimma’s West African School Certificate.

    Uzodimma is on President Goodluck Jonathan’s entourage to China.

    His spokesman, Declan Emelumba, said in a statement yesterday that the senator was not worried about the case because his academic records are not in doubt.

    He said Uzodinma attended Mgbidi Boys’ Secondary School in Imo State, where he obtained his WASC.

    The senator said: “If WAEC is refusing to give Keyamo my results as he alleges, let him go to the school to verify and obtain my result. Still, he can come to me and I will make a copy available to him if he so wishes.

    “ As a public figure, security agencies carried out several checks on me before allowing me to contest the senatorial election in 2011 and at no time was I found wanting or my academic credentials in doubt.

    “It is, therefore, funny that people will wake up and begin to say things to suit their purpose. I have been accused of certificate forgery by the same people but it has turned out to be unfounded but only in the minds of those that make these allegations.

    “This would not be the first time Keyamo will go to court for my sake. In 2010, during the run up to the 2011 general elections he petitioned my party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) over my credentials and integrity to contest for an elective office.

    “He alleged so many things but in the end, my party found these to be false and baseless and I was cleared leading to my winning the election by garnering 85,042 votes.”

    Uzodimma alleged that Keyamo was being used by his political enemies.

  • Council chief denies fraud allegation

    The Chairman, Ojodu Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of Lagos State, Julius Oloro has denied allegations of corruption and high-handedness levelled against him by a group, Agenda for Good Governance (AGG).

    The Chairman said there was no truth in the allegations, describing them as a design to destroy his person and administration by his political opponents.

    “I know where these allegations are coming from, there is no truth in all the allegations and my administration has been open and transparent in all we have done. I have invited the general public to come to Ojodu to verify if there is any substance in what my critics are saying before they judge me guilty or innocent,” Oloro said.

    In a widely circulated report, the AGG accused Oloro of financial recklessness, gross incompetence, disrespect to party leaders and physically assaulting two workers of the council Deji Ogunlana and Wale Olusesi.

    In a swift response, Oloro said the allegations were “wicked fabrications by my detractors”, who are bent on destabilising the peace of the local government.

    ” I know the two people they alleged I assaulted, please you need to also ask them if there is any iota of truth in the allegations that I beat them up. They will testify whether it is true or not. I do not understand why people will go to this extent to destroy another person. My administration is open and transparent, I have hidden nothing from anybody, my priority is to do the work Ojodu people have given to me and they are the ones who can judge my performance,” Oloro said.

    He said the empowerment of the youth in his council was of paramount importance adding that is why his administration initiated some empowerment programmes on coming to office in October 2012.

    “Today, we are empowering 40 people in our local council with the sum of N10, 000 each. This is to enable them engage in small scale trading. We discovered that there are people who can start businesses with as little as N2, 000. So we thought if they could do that, we should provide the sum of N10,000 and after six months we will evaluate the success of this project and know the way forward,” he said.

    He said his council engaged youths positively through skill acquisition and sports through the ‘Oloro Football Tournament’. ” In the area of education we have encouraged our teachers through the provision of teaching materials. As you know the winner of Spelling Bee competition is from our council and even the second prize winner who is a Primary six student.”

    The winner Boadley JuwonAfolarin is a Senior Secondary(SS2) pupil of Omole Grammar School while the second prize winner is 10 year old, Olayinka Ogunenika, a primary six student of Estate Nursery &Pry School, Oke-Ira.