Tag: blackmail

  • How sabotage, blackmail, undue delays are killing  the Judiciary (1)

    How sabotage, blackmail, undue delays are killing the Judiciary (1)

    The courts are supposed to be where justice is dispensed. But, with trials taking ages before they are concluded, the so-called ‘long-arm of the law’ appears to have been amputated. Relative to Nigeria’s population, the number of convicts per capita is extremely low. JOSEPH JIBUEZE discovers that sabotage, blackmail, corruption and undue delays are behind the snail speed of the justice system

    It has a beginning. It has an end too. But the end usually takes longer than expected. It takes so long that many believe it actually has only a beginning and no end. This is the story of Nigeria’s criminal justice system where criminal trials last endlessly. The result is that impunity reigns supreme. Shockingly, most times the pattern is the same: undue delays in trials, sabotage by state officials and blackmail of judicial officials by accused persons. A new dimension in the art of delaying criminal cases was witnessed in Ekiti State prior to the swearing in of Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose.

    Fayose was under trial for allegations of financial misappropriation during his first term as governor between 2003 and 2006 when he was removed from office through an impeachment. Contrary to reports, EFCC said it had not dropped the charges against Fayose, who won the June 21 governorship election.

    Prior to the swearing-in, a group, E-11, and others challenged Fayose’s eligibility to contest the election. In a determined bid to stop the case from being heard, all hell was let loose. Judges, lawyers, court officials, and journalists felt the brutality of thugs.

    The first attack occurred on September 22. Thugs allegedly loyal to Fayose invaded the Ekiti State judiciary headquarters where Justice Isaac Ogunyemi was to deliver a ruling on the case. The thugs beat workers black and blue while the presiding judge and lawyers had to run for dear lives. They smashed windows and furniture.

    In the words of the Chief Judge, Justice Ayodeji Daramola, “the policemen and other law enforcement agents deployed within and without the premises in large numbers were looking on completely uninterested and unconcerned while these thugs were on the prowl beating and maiming workers and court users.”

    On September 25, thugs invaded the High Court premises, beating judicial officers.

    Justice Daramola recalls: “The thugs invaded my court where I was to deliver a judgment in a land matter, tore the Record Books, beat the court officials and vandalised the furniture in Court No. 1. The political thugs descended on Hon. Justice J. A. Adeyeye the presiding Judge in Court No. 3, beat and dragged him on the ground.

    “The judge’s suit was also torn into shreds. I could not gain entrance into the premises of the court and had to hurriedly turn back on being alerted that I was the prime target of the hooligans.”

    Consequently, the Chief Judge ordered the closure of the court until the safety of judges, magistrates and staff could be guaranteed by the law enforcement agents.

    Unconfirmed sources said the Presidency directed the military and the police to ensure that the courts remain sealed until after Fayose’s inauguration as governor on October 16.

    Soldiers and policemen barricaded the court premises as from October 7, turning back judges, lawyers and litigants on the basis of an alleged “bomb” threat. The siege moved from courts in the state capital to all others within the state, including customary courts.

    On October 13, the NJC directed Justice Daramola to make a formal announcement to reopen the courts. He did on October 14, after two weeks of forced closure, even as workers stayed off. Two days later, Justice Daramola swore in Fayose as governor.

    There was outrage over the attacks. The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), human rights groups, retired judges, senior advocates of Nigeria (SANs) were unanimous in their condemnation of the action.

    There are fears that a horrible precedent had been set. All the corrupt need to do is to sanction the disruption of a criminal trial by sending thugs to beat up judges and force a shut-down of the “helpless” judiciary.

     

    The case of the ex-bank chiefs

    Unlike the Ekiti sage, the trials of ex-bank chiefs have witnessed more civil means of prolonging adjudication.

    In mid August 2009, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) “hammer” fell on five bank chief executives, namely Sebastin Adigwe (Afribank), Okey Nwosu (Finbank), Erastus Akingbola (Intercontinental Bank), Cecilia Ibru (Oceanic Bank) and Bath Ebong (Union Bank).

    The CBN governor at the time, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, said they were sacked due to the banks’ high level of non-performing loans and non-adherence to best practices in risk management.

    The five banks were subsequently rescued in a N400billion government bail-out as they were found to have low cash reserves because of bad loans and corrupt practices.

    Three weeks after their sack, the sensational trial of the bank chiefs began. The news media celebrated their arraignment. Before their court appearance, journalists kept vigil at the Lagos office of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), giving updates on their interrogation by the commission. Reports of their arraignment were the leading stories in every media outlet.

    However, five years after their arraignment, the cases are still pending in court with no end in sight. The EFCC arraigned four of the bank chiefs at the Federal High Court in Lagos on charges of fraud, concealment and grant of loans without adequate collateral running into about N625billion. Akingbola, who was initially at large, later returned and was arraigned.

    Of the five bank chiefs, only the case against Ibru has been concluded – after she pleaded guilty in a plea bargain.

    On October 8, 2010, the court sentenced her to 18 months imprisonment for mismanaging depositors’ funds and granting credit facilities worth $20million and N2billion far above CBN’s approved limit.

    The jail term ran concurrently, so Ibru spent about six months in ‘prison’. She was allowed to continue with her treatment at a highbrow Reddington Hospital in Victoria Island after her sentence.

    Ibru forfeited assets worth N191billion comprising 94 choice properties in the United States and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. She also gave up shares in about 80 listed companies on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) and in 20 unlisted companies. She was ordered to reimburse N1.29billion.

     

    The Akingbola case

    What many see as a deliberate ploy to delay trial through loopholes in the system has delayed judgment in Akingbola’s trial, for instance.

    While the case at Federal High Court was pending, the EFCC charged Akingbola and the others at the Lagos State High Court, Ikeja, with theft of depositors’ funds.

    On May 31, 2011, Akingbola and an associate Bayo Dada were arraigned before Justice Habib Abiru on a 22-count charge bordering on conspiracy and alleged stealing of N47.1 billion belonging to the bank.

    After much delay, caused by preliminary objections and application for stay of proceedings, which were all dismissed, trial began. Witnesses testified. There was excitement that for once, a high profile criminal case was about to be concluded quickly. But there were twists.

    The defence counsel, which initially included three Senior Advocates of Nigeria, Messrs Felix Fagbohungbe, Deji Sasegbon, and Rickey Tarfa, tried to stop the arraignment. Even after the EFCC filed the charges, the matter suffered three adjournments before the arraignment took place.

    It did not hold when the accused were first produced in court on May 10, 2011 because the EFCC, which held the defendants in custody, did not bring them to court early enough. There were two further adjournments on May 16 and May 23, 2011, due to a motion by the defence challenging the court’s jurisdiction to entertain the charges. The objection was on the basis that it was the Lagos State Attorney-General and not Attorney-General of the Federation through the EFCC that ought to file the charges.

    Justice Abiru, in a ruling on May 31, 2011, dismissed the application and ordered that Akingbola be arraigned. After he pleaded not guilty, the judge adjourned for trial and fixed three initial dates – July 20, 26 and 27, 2011.

    As the EFCC sought to open its case, the defence sought a stay of proceedings pending the determination of their appeal against his May 31 ruling.

    Justice Abiru dismissed it and held that Section 277 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Laws of Lagos State and Section 40 of the EFCC Act did not give room for stopping a trial in criminal proceedings before the delivery of judgment.

    The defence then sought adjournments on the ground was that the prosecution counsel, Mr. Emmanuel Ukala (SAN), served them a counter-affidavit to their pending motions late.

    They also sought an adjournment because the court was on vacation; therefore, the judge lacked jurisdiction to entertain the case.

    Besides, they said they had two applications, one which sought an adjournment pending the hearing and final determination of their appeal before the Court of Appeal and the other which sought to quash the charges.

    Justice Abiru heard the applications in October 2011 and struck them out for lacking merit.

    After these delays, EFCC called its first witness, Intercontinental Bank’s Chief Inspector Abdulraheem Jimoh, who testified that he led the bank’s investigation on five transactions by Akingbola involving £8.5million, £1.3million, N10billion, N2.5billion and N8.6billion.

    Jimoh alleged that Akingbola’s transfer of N2.1billion from the bank breached a number of banking procedures. The trial continued till April 15, 2012 when the EFCC closed its case with the testimony of its operative and second witness, Nkechi Ibekaku.

    Rather than open their defence, the defendants filed an application for a no-case submission (in which a defendant seeks acquittal without having to present a defence).

    It was adjourned for EFCC to file its counter-affidavit. After it was argued, it was adjourned for ruling. Justice Abiru, on May 30, 2012, dismissed the no-case answer.

    Eventually, the defence called four witnesses, including Akingbola and Dada, who denied all the allegations by the EFCC. Akingbola, who was the last defence witness to testify, denied allegations of theft against him, describing them as “false, incorrect and malicious”.

    On September 11, 2012, Fagbohungbe accused the judge of bias. His grouse was that the judge overruled his request for an adjournment to continue leading Dada in evidence on another day.

    Fagbohungbe said he wanted an adjournment to carry out investigation on “certain things”. He also complained that the judge was not writing down part of Dada’s testimonies. But the judge said the request for an adjournment was unnecessary.

    On October 22, 2012, the defence team sought an adjournment because they were unable to produce a witness they had promised to bring.

    Justice Abiru refused the prayer, and ordered defence to close their case. The judge said his order followed an undertaking by Fagbohungbe that the defence’s case would be closed if the witness was not produced in court that day.

    Justice Abiru then adjourned till November 15, 2012, for adoption of final written addresses by parties. A date for judgment would have been fixed that day, but it never happened. Instead, the unexpected happened.

    It was announced on November 2, 2012 that Justice Abiru had been elevated to the Court of Appeal. In effect, the case, which was almost concluded, would start de novo (all over again) before another judge.

    The Supreme Court’s decision on the case of Ogbunyiya vs Okudo (1979) All NLR 105 is often cited as the reason why a case cannot continue before a judge who has been elevated to the appellate court.

     

    More twists

    Akingbola and Dada were re-arraigned before Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo on February 26, last year. Again, EFCC went through the process of recalling its witnesses. When it closed its case, Akingbola again made a no-case submission.

    On July 15, 2013, Justice Onigbanjo dismissed the no-case application, holding that it lacked merit and that a prima facie case was established against the accused. He directed Akingbola to open his defence.

    But there was a further twist in the tale. The judge was redeployed from the court’s criminal division to the commercial division. This development again cancelled previous proceedings in the case. The trial would begin de novo once again.

    The Chief Judge, Justice Ayotunde Philips (now retired) re-assigned the case to Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo.

    Akingbola was billed to be re-arraigned on December 9, last year. Curiously, the court’s registrars ‘erroneously’ failed to include Akingbola’s case in the list of matters for the day. This led to a further adjournment till March 24 this year. The re-arraignment never held.

    Akingbola, through his new lawyer, former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) president Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), challenged Justice Lawal-Akapo’s jurisdiction to hear the case.

    The defence counsel also sought to quash the charges on the basis that they related to banking and capital market issues which he said were within the Federal High Court’s jurisdiction.

    On May 2, Justice Lawal-Akapo dismissed the objections for lacking in merit and assumed jurisdiction in the case. On June 23, Olanipekun prayed the court to stay proceedings in the trial until an interlocutory appeal against the May 2 ruling is determined at the Court of Appeal.

    The appellate court, after hearing the case on October 16, reserved ruling on the interlocutory appeal.

    As at the time of filing this report, judgment has not been delivered, and there is no end in sight.

     

    The Abacha case

    The Federal Government charged Mohammed, son of the late Head of State Gen Sani Abacha at the Federal Capital Territory High Court with receiving receiving money stolen from the government’s coffers by his late father between 1995 and 1998

    The defendant sought to quash his trial on the ground that the immunity his father enjoyed while in office extended to the acts which constituted the offence for which he (the son) was charged.

    It took over 10 years for the Supreme Court to rule on the interlocutory appeal, numbered SC.40/2006. The case was to resume at the lower court, but it never did.

    On June 18, the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) withdrew the N446.3billion theft charge instituted against Abacha.

    Adoke asked Justice Mamman Kolo to strike out the charges on the grounds of “fresh facts” that emerged concerning the case.

    In the nine-count charge, Abacha was accused of “dishonestly receiving stolen property” and was said to have “voluntarily assisted in concealing the money.”

    Following withdrawal of the charges, Abacha is now a governorship aspirant in Kano State on the platform of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

     

    The Joshua Dariye trial

    In September 2004, British authorities in London arrested then Plateau State Governor Joshua Dariye on allegations of money laundering and seized about £90,000 in cash from him. Dariye allegedly skipped bail and returned to Nigeria to resume office.

    In April 2007, an English court sentenced Dariye’s associate to three years in prison for laundering more than £1.4million of public funds found to have allegedly been stolen by the governor.

    When Dariye’s tenure expired, EFCC charged him with 14 counts of money laundering. Seven years later, the case is still pending.

    The EFCC’s frustrated effort to prosecute him is a perfect case study of the court’s ability to generate delays so extreme that they are almost a form of impunity.

    Soon after he was charged, the Federal High Court granted him bail, and his lawyers subsequently filed a motion asking that all of the charges against him be dismissed.

    When the motion was denied, Dariye appealed. The lower court halted proceedings until Dariye’s appeal could be heard.

    In June 2010, the Court of Appeal ruled against Dariye. As trial was to resume in January 2011, Dariye appealed to the Supreme Court, where cases last as long as five years or more.

    In April 2011 Dariye won election to the Senate. A final verdict is yet to be rendered in his case, and the last may have been heard of it.

     

    The unique case of an ex-governor

    In March 2007, then-Rivers State Governor Peter Odili obtained a remarkable Federal High Court injunction restraining the EFCC from investigating his tenure.

    Soon after he left office, he secured a “perpetual injunction” – widely condemned as a mockery of the judicial process – that permanently restrained EFCC from “arresting, detaining and arraigning Odili on the basis of his tenure as governor.”

    Justice Ibrahim Buba of the Federal High Court, who made the order, added that the EFCC had no power to “in any manner howsoever investigate the account or financial affairs of a state government.”

    In March 2008, “for the avoidance of doubt”, Justice Buba issued an order that the EFCC could not “arrest, detain, arraign and/or prosecute (Odili) on the basis of its alleged investigations into the affairs of Rivers State” during Odili’s tenure.

    The judge declared that the “purported findings” of the EFCC’s investigations were “invalid, unlawful, unconstitutional, null and void.”

    It remains unclear why EFCC has not contested the ruling. It was learnt that an EFCC official claimed that through some unexplained error, the commission was never even aware that the 2008 injunction had been issued until the time to appeal it had expired.

    “These professions of total ignorance are hard to fathom considering that this was one of the EFCC’s most important cases,” a source said.

    It was learnt that EFCC appealed Justice Buba’s 2007 ruling in October 2008, but it is unclear what stage the case is at. When our reporter enquired, an EFCC spokesman in Lagos directed him to the Head of Media, Wilson Uwujaren, who declined comments.

     

    The Lawan/Farouk case

    A former chairman, House of Representatives Ad Hoc Committee on Fuel Subsidy, Farouk Lawan and its Secretary Boniface Emenalo, were charged with collecting $620,000 as bribe from oil magnate Femi Otedola. It was in order to remove the name of his company from those indicted by the committee which probed monumental oil subsidy fraud and uncovered a defrauding of the country.

    They were arraigned on February 1, last year at the Federal Capital Territory High Court in Gudu, Abuja. There was an alleged video evidence of the bribery, in what the federal authorities claimed was a ‘sting operation’, which in the developed world would have made the trial fairly straightforward, so as to establish the culpability or innocence of the accused persons. But it never happened.

    Their trial started under Justice Mudasiru Oniyangi. As progress was being made, the judge, as in the Akingbola case, was elevated to the Court of Appeal. After the loss of several months, the case was re-assigned to a new judge, Justice Adebukola Banjoko on June 11.

    On November 18, Justice Banjoko surprised a packed courtroom when she announced that she was withdrawing from the trial and would no longer adjudicate the case.

    Her reason: to stem an unfounded allegation that sought to impugn her integrity. The judge ordered the casefile to be returned to the FCT Chief Judge, Justice Ibrahim Bukar.

    Earlier, Lawan, through his lawyer, Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN), filed an application dated October 29, asking the judge to quit the case.

    Apart from the application, Lawan also petitioned the FCT Chief Judge, accusing Justice Banjoko of likely bias based on an alleged close relationship between her and Otedola, a proposed witness and the accuser in the case.

    “In my 17 years on the bench, six years as a magistrate and 11 years as a judge, I have never been confronted with a scandalous challenge of my integrity,” the judge said bitterly.

    According to the judge, “justice is rooted in confidence,” therefore, she could no longer continue to hear the case since the accused had first exhibited his lack of confidence in her.

    “In the prevailing circumstances, I do find it difficult to continue this case. This case is returned to the honourable Chief Judge for re-assignment,” Justice Banjoko ruled.

    The case, when re-assigned, will be handled by a third judge and will begin all over again.

     

    Judicial cover for criminal suspects

    In May 2007, a number of governors completed their eight-year terms of office. Having lost the immunity conferred on them by Section 308 of the 1999 Constitution, EFCC invited them for questioning on the basis of petitions alleging diversion of public funds running to billions of naira by them.

    Some reported for interrogation while others sought interlocutory and perpetual injunctions restraining the EFCC from arresting, investigating or prosecuting them in any manner whatsoever and howsoever.

    Among those who were charged to court, only two have been convicted and given sentences which many consider as “slaps on the wrist.”

    The criminal justice system has been unable to conclude the trials of others.

    Senior lawyers have continued to approach the courts to halt the investigation and prosecution of high profile criminal suspects.

    In Bukola Saraki v. Inspector-General of Police (Unreported Suit No: FHC/ABJ/CS/231/2012), the plaintiff sought to restrain the Special Fraud Unit (SFU) of the Nigeria Police Force from investigating an allegation of N9 billion fraud leveled against him. After reporting for investigation, Saraki filed a fresh suit seeking to stop the police from prosecuting him.

    “Apart from Nigeria, I know of no other country which allows criminal suspects to have criminal cases suspended or adjourned sine die on flimsy grounds,” Lagos lawyer Femi Falana said.

    While criminally orchestrated delays may top the list of the commonest abuses of court process, the levelling of unfounded allegations against judges, which turn out to be mere smokescreen to buy time or seek a more pliable judge, is one tactics that has been described as nauseating.

    Critics have described as worrying the fact that some judges fall for lawyers’ tricks without exercising their powers to punish for contemptuous conduct committed before them.

    Many accused persons, without any iota of proof, resort to writing frivolous petitions against judges, accusing them of bias. The National Judicial Council (NJC) would summon the judge and parties in the petition while the trial would be suspended, which is the petitioner’s aim.

    Most of the judges, such as Justice Banjoko, are cleared of any wrongdoing, and when the heat raised by such serious allegation is in the public domain, the accused or their lawyer simply apologises, while the judge most times withdraws from the trial, which is what the accused merely wanted to achieve. Criminal cases are thus frustrated and derailed by the use of blackmail.

     

    Lessons from abroad

    Several cases swiftly concluded abroad have exposed the Nigerian judiciary as being fundamentally weak. Some of these include those of Akingbola, former Delta State Governor James Ibori and the Halliburton case.

    While Akingbola’s trial for theft drags on, a civil suit was instituted against him in a British court by Access Bank Plc.

    A High Court of Justice, Queen’s Bench Division, London, in August 2012, ordered Akingbola to pay the bank £654million (about N212billion) allegedly diverted from the bank illegally. It was learnt that Akingbola had refunded £9 million out of the total sum.

    On April 17, 2012, the Southwark Crown Court in London sentenced Ibori to 13 years after he pleaded to 10 counts of money laundering and conspiracy to defraud, having been accused of stealing US$250million from the public purse.

    However, in Nigeria, 171-count charge of money laundering, fraud and corruption filed against Ibori at the Federal High Court, Kaduna was discontinued in his favour.

    The Court of Appeal also held his trial in Kaduna was illegal as the alleged crime was committed in Delta. As there was no Federal High Court in Asaba, the Delta State government reportedly donated two buildings – one to house the court and the other to house the judge.

    Upon his arraignment, Ibori pleaded not guilty and raised a preliminary objection against the charge. The trial judge, Justice Marcel Awokulehin, struck out the charge and freed Ibori. However, as EFCC took steps to re-arraign him, Ibori fled to Dubai where he was arrested and deported to London.

    In the Halliburton bribery scandal, several investigation panels indicted three former heads of state, a former Inspector-General of Police, former ministers, permanent secretaries and other officials of the Federal Government. Although some of the suspects indicted in the inquiry made confessional statements, they were never charged to court.

    Some of the privies of the principal suspects, who were eventually arraigned, were let off the hook for want of diligent prosecution. In exasperation, the trial judge struck out the charges.

    The official connivance in sweeping the scandal under the carpet has since exposed the nation to underserved ridicule at home and abroad.

    It was found that Halliburton and its officials who bribed the indicted Nigerian officials pleaded guilty to the charges of bribery and corruption before criminal courts in the United States and were accordingly convicted.

    While Halliburton was ordered to pay fines of millions of dollars, the convicted officials were sentenced to prison terms. But in Nigeria, their accomplices walk about free.

     

  • Akpabio: A doubting Thomas’ blackmail and self-entrapment

    Akpabio: A doubting Thomas’ blackmail and self-entrapment

    EVERY responsible practitioner of journalism in Akwa Ibom Ibom State would heave a sigh of relief at what seems as a rescue of the profession from the clutches of one of the most notorious blackmailers and medium the State has witnessed these past years. I am referring to journalism enfant terrible of the sponsored lowly Anti-Akpabio newspaper based in Akwa Ibom State. The paper has earned for itself the unenviable distinction of serving as a benchmark and a reference point in quackery as far as the practice of journalism is concerned. And the character has also acquired the notoriety of “Journalism Boko Haram” of Akwa Ibom State.

    The mischief-making local tabloid debuted when Governor Akpabio stood at the barricade of public interest against a certain politician’s interest who wanted to stampede the governor into fleecing the State in his favour.

    Because Governor Akpabio refused to accede to that request, the bubble burst and hell was let loose with the man’s fury knowing no bounds. It was from such miasma of anti-people’s interest that this platform of serial blackmail was birthed.

    The arrow-head, an incompetent user of English language has not disappointed his paymasters. In halted English often replete with grammatical somersaults, he has remained relentless in the demonization of Governor Akpabio and his administration. There is no prefix or lexical item capable of disparaging someone that he has not freely employed against the person of the governor. Sometimes, it is so flagrant that one wonders whether the pen-assassin remembers that the man he is often referring to is the executive governor of his State. The idea of screaming headlines like: “Akpabio is a Rogue”; “Akpabio is a Thief”; Akpabio Caught in London with 75 million U.S. Dollars”, with a rider, “Assam Assam to the Rescue”; are all manifestations of intemperate rage against an office that should be protected.

    Recently, this media mercenary decided to be more inventive and brazen. Not content with the series of publications in the anti-Apabio newspaper that has made him an object of dread and nuisance and extremely contemptuous to Akpabio and his administration, he purported a recorded message that is the subject in issue. He is reported to have gone to Edidem Umoette, the Paramount ruler of Etinan and Edidem Ime Udousoro Inyang of Ibiono Ibom to play for them a tape of a purported conversation he had with one of the members of a team of assassin the governor is said to have empanelled to kill the two paramount rulers. According to him, one of the assassins called him and he decided to record the message.

    Allegedly, the message purports that a meeting was held in the country home of Senator Emmanuel Ibokessien in Ikot Ekpene with Governor Akpabio, Chairman of Essien-Udim LGA and chairman of ALGON, Honourable Nse Ntuen, Commissioner for Special Duties, Emmanuel Enoidem in attendance where the assassins where commissioned to kill the persons of Edidem Umoette and Edidem Ime Udo-Usoro Inyang. This serial character deformer informed the paramount rulers that the matter concerning their elimination was urgent and would be executed with dispatch.

    Of course, this caused extreme panic and fear as the two paramount rulers had to go into hiding. Severely troubled by the strange development, the paramount ruler of Ibiono in line with traditional mores sent a traditional injunction to the governor through the latter’s paramount ruler and to Hon. Nse Ntuen. Tension came upon the State like a plague with its attendant deepening of ethnic mistrust. Politicians cashed in with all manners of insinuations and interpretations. The fact is, when one pointedly accuses a governor of plotting the elimination of the citizens he is expected to govern like paramount rulers or any other important personality, especially if such persons come from an ethnic divide other than that of the governor, wrong signals are sent which flag the health of that polity.

    Journalism as a profession operates with a body of ethics. As a profession, it requires a period of training which enables the acquisition of skills and exposure to its dynamics. It is such exposure that breasts practitioners with the overriding need to preserve national interest over and above other considerations. It also imposes on them the moral demand to ensure that stories are balanced. But in Akwa Ibom, the practice is peopled more by quacks than professionals. For them, they delight in maligning public office holders for pecuniary recompense from their sponsors or for sheer illusory fame. But fame does not come from infamous actions. It comes from sterling contributions. And for a writer from works that can influence society positively. This should be food for thought for the likes of the doubting Thomas at the centre of what could be rightly called the most horrible embarrassment to Fourth Estate of the Realm in Nigeria.

    •Akpaide, a public affair analyst, wrote in from Oron, Akwa Ibom State

  • Presidency: it’s blackmail

    Presidency: it’s blackmail

    The Presidency responded swiftly yesterday to the All Progressives Congress (APC)’s position on the state of the nation’s  security.

    Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati issued a statement, saying: “We consider it most unfortunate that the chairman of the APC will use the opportunity of the situation in the country namely the abduction of the girls of GSSC, Chibok to engage in partisan blackmail.

    “The issue of national security should go beyond partisan politics. This is a very serious moment requiring seriousness. But to reduce all of that to partisan politics is in bad taste, it is irresponsible one-upmanship.

    “One, Nigeria is not on auto pilot. There is a government in place; there is a President who is also the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. He is doing his very best to provide quality leadership and to reassure Nigerians that government stands ready always to defend their best interest.

    “‘We are on top of the situation’ that Chief Akande referred to is an English idiom and indeed, the government is on top of the situation. Government’s primary responsibility is to ensure that when issues come up, it stands firm to do its very best to protect the people.

    “This administration has continually showed courage and commitment in the face of whatever challenge that may arise.

    “To give the impression that the President is doing nothing is dishonest. This government is not mouthing meaningless phrases; this government is not engaging in blame game. This government has a job to do and it is doing the job.

    “They cannot say that government is on auto pilot in the face of all the achievements of this administration in the rail sector, health, aviation, foreign relations, transportation, trade and investment and in every sector.

    “If Chief Akande wants to be honest with himself; he will say the truth and the truth will be that this country has been moved forward by President Jonathan, that we are not at the level we were at the time President Jonathan assumed office  in 2011,

    “So to say the country is on auto pilot is unpatriotic because it is a lie.

    “Chief Akande has made a number of recommendations. This administration welcomes suggestions and recommendations. If he had limited his contributions to just making these recommendations, he would have sounded like a statesman.

    “But let him be informed that even those recommendations that he has made are things that are already in place. These are steps that had already been taken by this administration. So there is nothing original in his recommendations that is unknown to the administration.

    “But he went beyond making recommendations to begin to engage in politics. We will like to advise people like him that where national interest is involved, we should come together and work hand-in-hand with the government.

    “This is not the occasion for politicking, campaigning about 2015 and trying to run down the country.

    “In fact, it is people like him who run down their country that are creating problems for the country.

  • Politicians out to blackmail Akpabio, says commissioner

    Akwa Ibom State government has cried out that some politicians are determined to blackmail Governor Godswill Akpabio.

    According to a statement by

    the Commissioner for Information and Communications, Mr. Aniekan Umanah, the politicians are out to discredit

    Akpabio, who is also the chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party Governors’ Forum (PDPGF).

    The government urged the public to be wary of contemptible politicking, adding that politics should be about issues not people.

    It said those who hoped to use smear campaigns in next year’s governorship election should know that a wrong road could not lead to a right destination.

    The government warned a former state official, who is the sponsor of the media onslaught against Akpabio and the state to tell the state the justification for his ambition, rather than seeking to sacrifice ethnic and historical ties at the altar of selfish ambition.

    The Information and Communications commissioner said it was regrettable that the disgruntled politicians were irked by Akpabio’s public advice to the state that in line with the principles of equity, fairness and justice, the governorship seat should go to Eket.

    Umanah said instead of masterminding several invidious messages through different avenues such as the mass media and the Internet, to undermine the governor, they should explain to the state the justification for their ambition.

    He said it was unfortunate that some politicians based in Abuja and working in concert with their colleagues in the state had resorted to lies and misinformation against the governor, embarking on a smear campaign, using fictitious groups to churn out disparaging statements against the governor.

    According to Umanah, “part of their strategy is to make unfounded allegations against Governor Akpabio and create a bad blood between him and political leaders in the country, particularly in the Presidency.”

    He said he had faith that the Presidency would see through their veil of lies, adding that their evil plot would not succeed.

    “In a fight between truth and falsehood, truth will always prevail.

    “It is our duty to alert the public that a plot has been uncovered that in the coming days, more advertorials will be published in the newspapers to tarnish the image of the governor and blackmail the Akwa Ibom State government.

    “We urge the public and the media to be wary of the antics and stay on the path of truth and objectivity.”

    Contrary to allegations in some quarters that the governor is nursing an ambition to become the president or vice-president next year, government has said that there was no in the allegations. It described them as an “invidious campaign of calumny and blackmail.”

    In a statement by the Secretary to the State Government, Mr. Udom Emmanuel, government said the smear campaign, which had been on in the print, electronic, social media as well as Internet and bulk SMS, was part of a conspiracy to misrepresent Akpabio and cause tension in the polity.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, we wish to state in clear and unambiguous terms that Governor Akpabio is not interested in and not nursing any presidential or vice-presidential ambition,” the statement said. It urged President Goodluck Jonathan; his wife, Patience; the Governors’ Forum; the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Nigerians to “disregard the evil conspiracy and campaign of lies and falsehood.”

  • ‘Blackmail hindering passage of PIB’

    ‘Blackmail hindering passage of PIB’

    Dr. Godwin Uyi Ojo, is the new Executive Director, Environment Rights Action/ Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN). He succeeded Nnimmo Bassey, who recently served out his term. Ojo, is one of the founding fathers of ERA/FoEN, is on a familiar turf having been there from the beginning. In this interview with

    You recently assumed the leadership of ERA/FoEN as Executive Director, in what direction do you hope to steer the organization?

    ERA remains a formidable cutting edge advocacy group for the defence of environmental human rights, for the protection of the environment and democratisation of development. But we are injecting broader narratives to underscore our campaigns for a better society. For example, inequalities and social disparity is high in Nigeria. Many are languishing in poverty and unemployment rate is one of the highest in the world. We are beginning to apply social theory of social security to propose a National Basic Income Scheme (NaBIS) for all Nigerians who are unemployed. Such scheme is likely to unlock hidden potentials through employment generation, social security, reduction of crime rate and achieving harmony in society.

    We make this call based on the fact that environmental degradation has ravaged our country: in northern Nigeria desertification is aggravating farmer-herdsmen conflicts due to scarce grazing lands and threats to livelihoods similar to the ecological disaster that is now the Niger Delta due to impact of oil activities. In the East is gully erosion and in the West is the threat of deforestation such that throughout Nigeria, rural livelihoods come under assault and impoverishment. Thus, neither amnesty in the north or south nor east or west can resolve the natural resource conflicts. But social security NaBIS will go a long way in reducing poverty and crime.

    What do you think of the delay in the passing of Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) by the Senate?

    The legislature has simply developed cold feet, caving in partly to oil companies’ concerted lobby on the one hand and outright blackmail on the other hand. The oil industry achieved a consensus against the PIB and to threaten that if the PIB is passed as it is the oil sector would not be viable, not attractive for profiteering and then collapse. But this is a cheap blackmail. For once the legislature and civil society groups are standing firm to demand that Nigeria deserves more benefits from their natural resources, but the oil corporations are resisting change. They are resisting local participation in the oil sector and are resisting a regime of transparency and accountability through the metering of the oil pipelines to ascertain the volume of oil produced, transported or exported.

    Point of sale measurements at the export terminals alone should quickly expand to include, through the PIB, to point of production via real time digital measurement at the wellheads and flow stations. Nigeria cannot be regarded as serious if it does not have accurate record of its daily crude oil production.

    You have also mentioned the challenges of bitumen exploration in Nigeria. Why is ERA/FoEN averse to this initiative that can add value to our national revenue?

    It is time for a post petroleum economy for Nigeria as the world advances towards a post petroleum era. Oil and carbon economy is currently the cause of environmental pollution and climate change that is seriously ravaging the world and this threat will continue with much intensity and spread.

    Bitumen and other unconventional oil sources that is about 4-5 times more polluting than conventional oil will even be much more devastating.

    The killings and deaths recorded from oil and the impoverishment is such that the true cost of production and its adverse effects far outweighs any benefit. Hence, weaning the world from the greed of oil guzzling and a transition from fossil fuel economy to renewable energy sources provides means to checking climate change and rising global temperatures.

    The UNEP recommen-dation on Ogoniland is yet to be implemented two years after the release of the report. ERA mobilized outrage against this delay last year. What is the situation now?

    We also mobilized to draw attention to the non implementation of the UNEP report this year by monitoring the level of progress and mobilizing outrage against the delay. Government is complicit in UNEP report’s non-implementation. They are erecting signposts to draw attention to polluted water such as: ‘Do not swim’, ‘polluted land’; ‘don’t farm’ etc, yet alternatives have not been provided. Basic relief has not been provided.

    The people continue to drink polluted water with base metals including benzene 800 times above World Health Organization (WHO) standards.

    The UNEP report declares Ogoniland ecological disaster area. I strongly believe it is a crime scene of ecocide and the companies and those taking these decisions of ecocide will pay for this.

    The UNEP recommends $1 billion restoration fund and up till now the fund has not been set up and both government and the oil companies are failing in their responsibilities. This is totally unacceptable.

    ERA is pushing the Leave the Oil in the Soil Campaign. What is the motivation behind this initiative?

    We are advocating for a new world social order free from a hegemonic carbon economy fueling greed, driving inequalities and poverty.

    Leave oil in the soil, will refocus attention on the wastefulness and corruption in resource management in Nigeria. It will ensure transparency and accountability and the need to begin to plan the Nigerian economy as if there is no more oil. The question is; what if Nigeria’s oil dries up? Will the country go down or will it survive? If it will survive now is the time to begin planning for a post petroleum economy.

    If we ‘leave oil in the soil’ what alternative does the world have?

    The alternative is renewable sources of energy. It is about energy democracy such that energy is not left in the hands of energy monopolies but in the hands of many in a decentralized form of energy ownership. Such energy model is decentralized, community and individual driven such that ownership, energy production and distribution are by the people themselves. It is small scale and non-grid but serving the people and to the exclusion of any gigantic infrastructure and profiteering.

    ERA recently awarded its maiden Social Security Award to Governor Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti. What informed his choice and what does it mean?

    Governor Kayode Fayemi stands out as a champion of social security by direct support to Community Development Associations. Its monthly stipend of N5,000 to senior citizens of 60 years and above is backed by statutory laws. Social security is a livelihood concern and this tally with our concern for reducing social disparity, inequalities, and poverty. Ekiti State is now the flagship of social security in Nigeria, and Governor Fayemi is the flag bearer.

    , he talks about the petroleum industry bill, his focus and the challenges of environment.

  • PDP crisis: Faction alleges plan to blackmail Jonathan

    PDP crisis: Faction alleges plan to blackmail Jonathan

    The ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) seems to be sinking deeper into trouble, with the Baraje faction giving Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Bala Mohammed 48 hours to reopen the Adamawa State Governor’s Lodge.

    The building, which was being used as a temporary secretariat of the faction, was sealed off Saturday night on the orders of the minister —an action seen by the Baraje camp as an attempt to blackmail President Goodluck Jonathan. It is situated in highbrow Maitama, Abuja.

    The faction was forced to relocate to the lodge after the police, on September 1, sealed off a building it acquired for its national secretariat.

    A statement by the National Publicity Secretary of the New PDP, Chief Chukwuemeka Eze, said yesterday that the minister’s action was informed by his lack of understanding of the building’s status.

    The party demanded a public apology from the minister to the government and people of Adamawa State.

    The statement said: “What the minister has brazenly done is to indirectly attack the people and government of Adamawa State in his desperation to impress the PDP tin god, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur.

    “This unwarranted and rash action by Senator Mohammed can be equated with the recent attack against the Nigerian Embassy in Bissau by the Guinea-Bissau authorities, which sparked outrage and for which that country’s government swiftly apologised.

    “We advise the misguided minister to, within 48 hours, not only apologise to the people and Government of Adamawa State, but also to unseal the lodge, which serves as our temporary national secretariat following the sealing off of our national secretariat by the police.

    “The Government of Adamawa State has not committed any offence by allowing us to use the lodge as contact office.”

    The Baraje faction called on President Goodluck Jonathan to call to order and to impose the appropriate sanctions against him for portraying the government as lawless, evil and anti-people.

    Describing the minister’s action as unjustifiable, the faction accused him of usurping powers that do not belong to him.

    This, according to the Baraje group, was yet another evidence of impunity by some overzealous people in government intent on blackmailing President Jonathan and portraying him as a draconian and an undemocratic leader.

    “Finally, we urge our members and supporters neither to worry nor be demoralised by the rascality of the Tukur faction, as we are ever ready to ensure that undemocratic elements do not near the leadership of our party anymore.

    “We are on course and by the grace of God, we shall surely come out victorious for the greatness of our party and growth of democracy in Nigeria”, the statement added.

    But the Special Assistant (Media) to the FCT Minister, Mr. Nosike Ogbuenyi, said the aggrieved members of the New PDP should seek redress in court, if indeed their rights had been trampled on.

    “Why are they giving ultimatum when the courts are there for them to seek interpretation of the FCT law? Nobody should be greater than the law. What we operate is the rule of law. Since they are not in denial that they are using the place for party affairs, then the place is justifiably locked. You cannot continue to use a residential building as an office space in Abuja. That is the position of the law.

    “In any case, those who seek equity should go with clean hands. The Development Control Department of the FCT wrote them and it was after that they moved in to seal the place. If they feel we have trampled on their rights, the courts are there to right the wrongs. It is not in their position to give ultimatum because this is a legal matter.”

    The faction derided the Umaru Dikko-headed National Disciplinary Committee of the PDP set up by the Bamanga Tukur-led National Working Committee.

    Describing the committee as a tool for witch hunting members of the Baraje faction, the faction said it was evident that Tukur and his team had demonstrated their unwillingness to embrace peace.

    The statement continued: “By reviving the so-called disciplinary committee at a time the party leader, His Excellency, President Goodluck Jonathan, is busy holding peace meetings with the Baraje-led PDP, shows that Tukur is working at cross purposes with Mr. President.

    “To call a spade a spade, it is tantamount to anti-party activity and exposes Tukur’s hypocrisy and vindicates our stand that he is an obstacle to peace in our great party.

    “If indeed a disciplinary committee has been set up by Tukur, we make bold to say that he should be the first with his illegal NWC members to appear before it for usurping the office of the national chairman of our party even when he is not legally a member of the party; as he did not revalidate his membership of the party during the 2011 revalidation exercise.

    “We commend our brother, Chief Olisa Metuh, the former National Publicity Secretary of our party, on his theory of institutional memory loss. Ironically, Metuh was referring to himself as he succeeded in exposing his ignorance about the party he assumes to be speaking for.”

    The statement went on: “How can any sound member of PDP describe a party that still has Atiku Abubakar, the former Vice President of the Federal Republic, as a member as not knowing the history and records of the party?

    “For the record, Atiku Abubakar, apart from being a principal member of the PDP, also recruited both Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, Alh. Gambo Jimeta, Senator Jonathan Zwingina and Chief Joel Madaki, among others, to the party in 1988 through Chief Nat Yaduma.

    “Metuh should properly research into the records of people in the Baraje-led PDP before trying to deceive Nigerians with his lies arising from institutional memory loss.”

    The faction also said if the Umaru Dikko committee was actually serious with its task, it should immediately start to investigate why Tukur, whom it described as a non-member of the party, should be elected national chairman.

    “If this step is not taken, the committee should try and save the nation from looking at our party as a funny and unserious group by dissolving itself on its own accord.

    “In this regard, we still maintain that all actions assumed to have been performed by Tukur since his assumed election in 2012 as our party national chairman stand null and void and of no effect.

    “This includes the last disputed special convention of the party where somes of the aides of President Jonathan who were not delegates voted to elect the outgone NWC of PDP,” the statement added.

    The Baraje faction expressed disappointment with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for turning down its, saying however that Chapter IV, Section 40 of the Constitution recognises the right of its members to associate amongst ourselves.

  • Sheer blackmail

    Sheer blackmail

    SOME supporters of the President Goodluck Jonathan presidency have in recent times launched vitriolic attacks against the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) insinuating that the body is a threat to the constitution and the democratic process. For instance, the political adviser to the President, Ahmed Ali Gulak, has accused governors of turning their states to their personal fiefdoms.

    On his part, a leading chieftain of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) from Adamawa State, Professor Jubril Aminu, also castigated the governors saying, “I have worked in many countries and have not seen anything like such a forum. The governors’ forum is what is used to oppress everybody, including the President”. Perhaps the most trenchant criticism of the forum has come from the prominent Ijaw and South-South leader, Chief Edwin Clark. Describing the governors’ forum as “oppressive and dictatorial”, Clark accused the governors of “deliberately breaching with impunity the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the constitution of the PDP without any challenges. The Forum has now become a threat to the peace and stability of Nigeria. Most of the governors today are more dictatorial than the then military governors”.

    Most of these criticisms have clearly been spurred by the raging war of attrition within the PDP, where the governors are a powerful pressure group. This in itself is ironical since the majority of the governors being pilloried by partisans of the presidency belong to the same PDP that controls the Federal Government. We are, of course, unconcerned about the internal politics of the PDP.

    However, we find it difficult to fault the very incisive analysis of the Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, on the role of the governors’ forum in our democratic setting and its stance on the practice of federalism in the country. According to the governor: “To the best of my knowledge, the Nigerian Governor’s Forum is not written into the constitution of this country. It is a voluntary body, funded voluntarily and meetings are attended voluntarily by its members. Its decisions are not binding on the country; its resolutions are shared with the press from time to time…I am not a member of the political party that is in the majority in the governor’s forum. It is only things that we agree on that we push collectively”.

    Surely, no one can credibly question the right of governors or any other group for that matter to associate voluntarily in pursuit of their perceived common interests, at least within the law. Some of the criticisms of the governors amount to no more than sheer blackmail because of the insistence of the states that in a genuine federal system, they enjoy coordinate rather than subordinate status to the Federal Government. Governor Fayemi hit the nail on the head when he stressed, for instance, that the states are unconstitutionally kept in the dark as regards the exact amount that accrues to the Federation Account. In his words, “Section 162(2) of the constitution is very clear that every penny that comes into the coffers of the Nigerian state goes into one and one account only – the Federation Account. Not JP Morgan, not Citi bank. But over and over again, we run this federation as if it is a unitary state and our authoritarian military past is affecting us … Monies are collected by the NNPC, we do not know the amount, no governor in this country can tell you how much this country earns on a daily basis”.

    This is clearly an intolerable violation of the rule of law and the tenets of federalism. We urge the governors not to succumb to cheap blackmail. All pending cases against these constitutional infractions must be pursued to a logical conclusion.

  • Subsidy blackmail

    Subsidy blackmail

    •Request for N161.6bn for subsidy supplementary budget is frivolous

     

    PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan, through a memo read to both Houses of the National Assembly is requesting for N161.6 billion naira ($1 billion) supplementary budget to defray fuel subsidy debts purportedly owed petroleum products importers for year ending 2012.

    This extra-budgetary request takes total spending on fuel subsidy this year to over 1 trillion naira, about a fifth of the total federal budget.

    The 2012 budget reportedly set aside N888.1 billion for fuel subsidy, which the government claimed it had nearly exhausted, using that as basis for the latest demand for extra N161.6 billion. President Jonathan puts it thus: “Given the need to maintain a steady flow of petroleum products, especially in the run up to the festive season, it is my hope that the distinguished senators will kindly accord this request their … approval.”

    From the foregoing, the government could justifiably be accused of using subtle blackmail on the National Assembly. The request, if indeed genuine, ought to have been made before now because the subsidy payments balance sheet is in government’s custody. Therefore, it would be pertinent for it to tell the nation at what point it occurred to it that the approved sum would not be sufficient.

    Secondly, the fact that this administration waited till this festive period before making this claim, knowing full well the importance of December, shows that it was playing games with the subsidy ruse. For no tangible reason, fuel scarcity/shortages have been a recurring decimal since January. Yet, Nigeria is Africa’s top oil producer, with mostly moribund refineries, thus forcing it to importabout 80 percent of its refined fuel needs.

    There is too much puzzle in the subsidy schedule since it has turned out to be a conduit for uninhibited state theft. As at 2009, fuel subsidy was put at about N600billion and we doubt if any economic sense could be made of the trillions of naira astronomical increment of the subsidy in 2011, an election year, and this year?

    No doubt, there is more to it than meets the eye in all these subsidy transactions. Could it be a ploy by government to deceive Nigerians into believing that there was little or no fraud in the subsidy payments in the past? But the government would also have to tell us what economic activities made Nigerians consume so much fuel last year, making us pay far more than what was spent on subsidy in three years (2006-2008) in 2011 alone. With the numerous indicting reports of several committees against the government and some fuel importers, it seems this administration is now at a crossroads.

    Yet, the only thing that can end the fraud is not for the government to cover it or coerce Nigerians to pay for its ineptitude and corruption; but to build more refineries and then hand over to private investors to operate. We wonder why the government is shying away from this. Is it to sustain the subsidy fraud, or what?

    We are unhappy that the Senate has so hastily fallen for the blackmail that fuel would be scarce during the festive season if the additional N161.6billion was not approved and had thus given its nod to the proposal. The House of Representatives should not toe this line; rather, it should look critically into the matter and throw it out, if necessary.

    We call on the civil society groups and the citizenry to stay alert and mount pressure on the government to build more refineries. It was the heat put on President Jonathan in January when he removed fuel subsidy that brought the negligible reprieve that is now being enjoyed. The proposed N161.6billionn supplementary budget request is a pointer that the entire fuel subsidy is a huge racket.

     

  • Orji: nobody can blackmail me

    Abia State Governor Theodore Orji yesterday said it would be difficult for anybody or group of people to blackmail him.

    The governor said he has been discharging his responsibility to the people without fear or favour.

    He said he has delivered on his election promises to the people in the last five years, adding that he only needs to consolidate on his achievements.

    A statement by his Special Adviser on Public Communication, Ben Onyechere, said: “Sponsored protests by some professionals cannot divert the attention of the governor from his chosen path of planned performance.

    “The ragtag hobnobbing as opposition in the Diaspora has imbibed the culture of raising the alarm where none exists.

    “The dissemination of falsehood has the capacity to dissuade investors as much as it can mislead the public. If lawyers who were hired can descend to the abysmal level of dancing naked in the market are protesting in the middle of rainy season, what will they do in dry season, because it is possible that they have more information than the rest of the public or characteristically turning a blind eye to the fast trend of government’s development strides.”

    The governor said, the protesters cannot deny that “there are no such projects as women and youth empowerment neither will they admit the existence of conducive and secured environment for businesses to thrive, which are all verifiable because they are in the public domain.