Tag: blasts

  • Blasts: Buhari seeks more vigilance, strategies against terrorists

    Blasts: Buhari seeks more vigilance, strategies against terrorists

    The presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress,  Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, has condemned the latest bombings in Yobe and Kano States, and called for greater vigilance and new strategies in dealing with the insurgents.

    A statement signed by the Director of Buhari Campaign Organization, Mallam Garba Shehu, quoted the former head of state as regretting that the latest blasts came on the eve of the first anniversary of the Buni Yadi terror attack which killed several students of a Federal Government College in their sleep.

    While regretting the frequency at which terrorists destroyed lives of innocent people, the statement said that a situation where terrorists get bolder with every passing day calls for serious reflection and concern.

    While commending the efforts and sacrifices of the counter-terrorism forces in fighting the insurgents, Buhari said there is the need for greater vigilance and new strategies.

    He said further the APC recognises the complexity of terrorism and its peculiar challenges and called for more and tougher strategies.

    The APC candidate added that a situation where the criminals outsmart the system is disturbing.

    He called on the Federal Government to take proactive steps to stem the frequency at which the terrorists penetrate security cordon and checkpoints with maximum ease and strike their targets with extreme cruelty.

  • Eedris blasts fellow artistes over Jonathan

    Eedris blasts fellow artistes over Jonathan

    As the date for the presidential election inches closer and the political climate heats up, more people have continued to take sides along what has come to be regarded as a largely two-party divide.

    And among musicians adding their voice to the discussion, is rapper Eedris Abdulkareem, who aired his grouse at the present administration in a video currently trending on the internet.

    The rapper also took his colleagues supporting President Goodluck Jonathanto the cleaners, especially those who in 2011, sang campaign songs.

    Referring to Dbanj in particular, Eedris accused some artistes of jumping ship now that it appears that things are going bad for the President Jonathan.

    You don sing for am, you chop the money; come outnow,” he said, sounding bitter in the 4:53 minutes video.

    “Goodluck has problems now, come and support him. Come out. You cannot, because you guys are stupid upstairs. You took money from him. You don’t know what you did as an artiste. I would rather take money from a government that I know the money would go back to the people. I wouldn’t take money from the government that I know one day, the people of Nigeria will hold me responsible.”

    Eedrisalso took shots at those who came together to sing for the president yet abandoned the Occupy Nigeria cause in 2012.

    “Listen, I grew up on the streets,” he said. “I aint scared of anybody. Una too small. I am EedrisAbdulkareem, I stand for the people, I speak for the people and I will always be there for the people…I am a revolutionary. Without me, there will never be you. It is simple. I have raised the Olympic torch. It is bigger than the MTV Base Awards. Olympic torch talks about unity and I’m bringing peace to my people. And love and togetherness.”

  • APC blasts Ondo Assembly

    APC blasts Ondo Assembly

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State have criticised the House of Assembly for its failure to pass the Local Government Autonomy Bill.

    A statement by the State Publicity Secretary, Abayomi Adesanya, said the Assembly was a stooge of the Olusegun Mimiko-led executive.

    The APC lamented that the wishes and aspirations of the members of the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) in Ondo State have been dashed by the Assembly.

    It said: “The action is a pointer to the fact that the Mimiko led-government is not concerned about the welfare of people.”

    Adesanya assured the people that APC would produce credible lawmakers who would be proactive, dedicated and committed to the development of the state.

    He urged the electorate to vote out the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which had rendered the legislature useless.

    “Ondo Assembly has become an extension of the executive, APC lawmakers are intimidated by the Speaker Jumoke Akindele, who is acting out the script of the governor.

    “What we are sure of is that by next year, our people will be delivered from the hands of this political pharaoh who has not allowed the “Sun of the State” to shine.”

  • Kano bomb blasts

    •Maximum use of local intelligence, by security agencies, will help to defeat Boko Haram

    For a city that has had more than its fair share of terrorists’ onslaught, last week’s attack, by Boko Haram, on the Central Mosque in Kano during the Jumat service, speaks to the fierce urgency of collective action to bring the activities of the murderous group to an end.

    Black Friday indeed it was, when three Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) — two reportedly planted inside the mosque and the other outside — ripped through the hallowed ground of the ancient mosque, where the Emir of Kano traditionally leads the Friday prayers.

    In the end, more than 120 worshippers lay dead, with multiple scores injured. There have since emerged reports – although uncomfirmed – of residents foiling an attack by female bombers on Murtala Specialist Hospital Kano, where many of the injured were taken for treatment.

    Considering that it has been nearly five years since the Christmas Day bombing in Madallah, a suburb of Abuja, the Kano massacre immediately indicates how far the nation still has to go in its battle against the Boko Haram sect — and what little dent we have made on this murderous menace.

    Between then and now, the terrorists have grown bolder and more sophisticated; just as their capacity to inflict damage on the nation and the Nigerian military have since gone on steady rise. Inversely, the state’s capacity to deal with them appears greatly and tragically diminished.

    Today, they have somehow upped their pyschological advantage choosing, as it were, soft targets whenever and wherever it pleases them. In the course of their murderous activities, nothing is seen or held by the group as sacrosanct; schools, hospitals, churches and mosques are simply fair game in their warped vision to create their Islamic enclave.

    Ominously, the group has since gone from hit-and-run guerilla tactics, with bases in the bush, to as far as carving up strategic towns and villages as their territories.

    There have, understandably, been a lot of condemnations in the aftermath of the latest bloodbath by the maniacal group.  These condemnations are in order. Boko Haram’s ritual of shedding innocent blood deserves to be condemned by every right-thinking citizen.

    If it seems ironic that a group that describes itself as “Islamic” would not see anything wrong with mass slaughter of Muslim children as we have seen in Buni Yadi, Gujba, both in Yobe, or even the School of Hygiene in Kano among others, it seems even more unimaginable that the group would ever care to draw the line when it came to a mosque.

    Beyond the routine of angry denunciations and the resort to the blame game, however, it seems about time citizens banded together to confront the menace which threatens us all.

    It is in this context that we find the statement credited to the Emir of Kano to the effect that the attack took over two months in planning rather puzzling, if not unsettling.

    We are minded to ask: how did the revered monarch come by the information? What use did he make of them? Did he alert the security agencies when he got the information?

    If no, why not? If he did, what steps did the security agencies take to forestall its occurence? These questions are pertinent because in matters of intelligence, every piece of information is supposed to count. And to the extent that absence of critical intelligence is said to be a major issue in the current war against the insurgency, it is expected that those who have privileged information should make them available to the security agencies.

    Going forward, there are important lessons to take from the collaboration between the Civilian Joint Task Force and the Military Joint Task Force.

    While it may seem premature to conclude that the collaboration would sooner extirpate the activities of the group, there is increasing evidence to suggest that local knowledge and intelligence from the Civilian-JTF are actually helping in the war against the terrorists.

    We urge the military to work more closely with the local people in its continuing engagement with Boko Haram.

  • Keshi blasts critics

    Keshi blasts critics

    Out-of-Contract Super Eagles Coach Stephen Keshi has reacted to criticisms about his selection policy and style, saying he’s open to inviting ‘fresh faces, if he sees them.

    The former Hawks of Togo Coach has come under intense scrutiny and criticism lately about his invitation policy and how certain players are always left out of the national side. But the ‘Big Boss’ as he’s fondly called has defended himself saying he’s very much open to inviting new players to the team as is being craved for, only if he spots them.

    He says:”If I see fresh faces that are good and can bring something tangible to the team, why not, I will invite them.

    “It’s their country, they are entitled to play for Nigeria, so why not. If I see and they are willing to play for Nigeria, why not, I will,” he said on Brila FM.

    Former footballers have been calling for a change in how players are called to the Super Eagles, with some seeing it as a ‘closed circuit’ where a particular group are always invited irrespective of how they fare at their clubs, even when they hardly get games.

    The latest of the former footballers is Garba Lawal, a former Super Eagles midfielder who said “It is obvious that we need fresh players in the team because whatever the coach is doing is not going right at the moment.

    “As a coach you need to change, a positive change. But he keeps insisting but for how long,”

    A list of invited players for October’s double header AFCON 2015 qualifiers against Sudan is expect out at any moment and Nigerians surely are expectant to see if some ‘fresh faces’ will be called up, most notably Kelechi Iheanacho and IK Uche.

  • Dickson blasts senator over disaffection with Jonathan

    Dickson blasts senator over disaffection with Jonathan

    •PDP says First Lady not hijacking it

    Governor Seriake Dickson of  Bayelsa State has lifted the lid on the much speculated disaffection between him and President Goodluck Jonathan.

    He is blaming a Senator said to be close to the president for engineering the rift.

    Dickson also accused the senator whom he did not name of plotting to destabilise his government by misrepresenting him before the president.

    The governor, who was responding to questions at the just-concluded transparency briefing in Yenagoa at the weekend said some Abuja-based politicians from the state had made it their past time to spread rumour about his administration with a view to distracting the people, and creating confusion in the state.

    He, however, said that such politicians would not succeed in breaking up the relationship between him and the president, whose political son he claimed to be.

    He said: “I don’t dwell on rumour. If I listen to rumour, we will not be where we are today in this state. There are people who have appetite for rumour mongering and all they do is to spread small stories around without knowing that I am the president’s first son politically.

    “We don’t talk while we are working because it is our work that will speak for us. We are busy in the engine room and some people are abusing the work. Most of the rumour mongers want to reap where they did not sow.

    “In Imo State, and other non-PDP states, the senators assist the president, but in our own Bayelsa, it is not like that. A senator (I won’t mention his name) claims to be living inside Mr. President’s bedroom.

    “But what has he done for the people? He is busy building houses and spreading rumour that there is hunger back home.”

    Meanwhile, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Bayelsa State has denied speculations that the First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, is in the process of hijacking the party machinery ahead of the 2016 governorship election.

    The party in a statement by its state Chairman, Col. Sam Inokoba (rtd), described the alleged moves as the handiwork of mischief makers.

    Inokoba referred to the state PDP as a formidable family adding that the report was designed to disrupt the existing peace and cordial relationship between the first family and Governor Seriake Dickson.

    He said that Dickson has remained resolute in his commitment in promoting an all-inclusive, peaceful and stable polity in the state.

    He said: “Governor Dickson remains the leader of the party and we are not aware of any plan of any person or group of persons to hijack the structure of the party from him.

    “There is cordial relationship between the president and the governor contrary to the report being orchestrated by some elements that do not mean well for the state.”

    To demonstrate its support for the president and the governor, he said the state leadership of the party recently passed a vote of confidence in Dickson and Jonathan.

  • Champions League defeat: Celtic boss blasts Efe Ambrose, teammates

    Nigeria defender Efe Ambrose and his Celtic teammates have been heavily criticised by manager Ronny Deila following their embarrassing 4-1 loss to Polish side Legia Warsaw in a UEFA champions league qualifying match on Wednesday night.

    The Super Eagles defender got the marching order just before half time in Poland, as his teammates failed to get anything from the game despite opening scoring in the eighth minute and Deila hasn’t hidden his disappointment at his team’s display on the night.

    “It was a very poor performance and worst of all was the commitment, the energy, I need much more energy in the game.We didn’t stay together for 90 minutes.

    “We started well and got the first goal but then gave way to pressure and we lost our heads and started giving the ball away in midfield so many times and mistakes in the back four, some were high, some were low, instead of being together.

    “But what is done is done, we have to learn from this very quick, we got the away goal and we still have a chance,” he told the Scottish media after the game.

    Deila however remained confident the Hoops can still progress to the group stages of the Champions League.

    “It is possible to win 3-0 again – like we did last year in the play-off – with the help of the supporters and we will do everything we can to do that. But we have to learn from this week.We need a whole different attitude and discipline in our play.”

    Ambrose has hardly had a rest since helping Nigeria to a round of 16 finish at the World Cup in Brazil, where they lost 2-0 to France. He will miss the return leg against the Poles, but should be available for the start of the group stages, should Celtic progress.

  • Our close shave with death in Kaduna blasts -Injured survivors

    Our close shave with death in Kaduna blasts -Injured survivors

    July 23, 2014 might have passed like any other day, but not so for 37 innocent Nigerians who are currently receiving treatment in major hospitals in Kaduna. They will remember the day for yers to come as a black Wednesday.

    That was the day a twin bomb explosions rocked the Kaduna metropolis. The blast dispatched no fewer than 49 persons to the world beyond. Their 37 kinsmen are also in agonising pains just because they were unlucky to be at the right place at the wrong time.

    At the time of writing, majority of the victims were at the military hospital in the heart of Kaduna metropolis, receiving treatment on mattresses placed on bare floor.

    One of the injured survivors, nine-year-old Abubakar Usman, had left his family house at Hayin Damani in company with two of his siblings to Kawo Market to shop for Sallah wears. It was in that process that a deafening sound swept his feet off the ground.

    Damani said: “I heard the sound and the ground shook. At first, I thought I had gone deaf with the echoes of the sound from the explosion resounding in my ears. I could not hear what people were saying any longer. And I thought that was all until I tried to get up but could not. That was when I started feeling pains in my legs.

    “Some government workers came an carried me. They brought me to this place and told me that my leg is broken.”

    While two of Abubakar’s siblings survived the blast, he may have to celebrate his Sallah on his sick bed at 44 Army Reference Hospital. He sustained first degree burns and a fracture on his left leg.

    For Abdulrazak Suleiman, a generator repairer, it was the drive for business that turned him into a victim of bomb blast. His shop is located on Kano Road, about two kilometres to the scene of the incident. He told our correspondent that he was only honouring the call by a client to come and check a faulty generator.

    “I received the call with excitement, believing that I was going to make some money because I had been sitting down all day long without a job. So, I quickly jumped on my bike and rode down to Kawo.

    “On approaching my client’s shop, I was suddenly thrown off my bike and I hit my head on the ground. I still thank God that I didn’t die,” he said.

    Suleiman was being treated for head injury on account of the incident.

    A female victim, also at 44 Nigerian Army Reference Hospital, identified as Habiba Adamu, said she had travelled all the way from Birnin Kebbi to attend the grand finale of Sheik Dahiru Bauchi’s Ramadan Tafsir. She said she arrived in Kaduna safely, and like many other admirers of the Sheik, she waited to wave at the great Islamic scholar as he was driving out of the venue of the Tafsir.

    She said: “I was at the roadside when the Sheik passed. So, I wanted to leave immediately too, but I didn’t know what happened next until I woke up in the hospital in the night.

    “Now, look at me, It is as if hot water was poured all over my body. If I had known, I would not have left Birnin Kebbi yesterday. Now my children will have to celebrate Sallah without me.”

    At Yusuf Dantsoho Memorial Hospital, the victim still on admission there was a young man whose eye was blown off by the blasts. He was crying for help from government so that he could be flown abroad for treatment.

    The 18-year-old man named Ahmadu Bala was in critical condition on his hospital bed when The Nation correspondent visited the hospital.

    Narrating his ordeal to our correspondent in a faint tone, he said he was caught by the blast after leaving the venue of the Ramadan lecture by Sheik Dahiru Bauchi.

    According to him, “I was on my way back from the Tafsir (Ramadan lecture) at Murtala Square when I heard a loud sound. Before I knew what was happening, I found myself on the floor far away from where I remember standing.

    “I felt my head was very heavy. Before I realised it, my right eye had been blown off by the bomb and I lost consciousness. I was rushed to Yusuf Dantsoho Hospital here by a good Samaritan, as I was told after I regained consciousness.”

    The bomb victim said he came from a village called Labar, near Jaji, in Kaduna State just to attend the Sheik Dahiru Bauchi lecture. He pleaded with the concerned authorities to come to his aide so that he could stay alive.

    “I am pleading with the Kaduna State Government to look into my plight and take an urgent measure to save my life and the lives of others affected by the bomb,” he said.

    The Nation gathered from a source at the hospital that out of the five victims brought to the hospital, Bala’s case was the most serious. “His right eye is blown off. When they brought him in, we quickly took him to the operating room, took care of the wound and he is now stable and partially responding to treatment,” a male worker in the hospital said.

    He however said that Bala needed to be flown abroad for treatment. “We suggest that the government should, as a matter of urgency, fly the young man abroad for proper treatment because his eye as well as part of his skull was affected by the blast. If it is not treated promptly, the wound can get infected and it may have a long-term effect on the victim,” he said.

    He added that five victims of the bomb at Alkali Road were brought to the hospital when the blast occurred on Wednesday, but four of them came in with minor injuries and had been treated and discharged.

  • PDP condemns blasts

    PDP condemns blasts

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has condemned Wednesday’s twin bomb attacks in Kaduna.

    Over 85 persons were killed in the attacks.

    The party described the bombings as dastardly and unfortunate.

    In a statement yesterday in Abuja by its National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh, PDP mourned the victims of the blasts.

    The party also joined other well-meaning Nigerians in thanking God for saving the lives of General Muhammadu Buhari and Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi, whose convoys were affected in the attacks.

    “We sincerely sympathise with General Buhari. Our hearts go out to him and all those affected in these wicked attacks,” it said.

  • Edo APC chair blasts defectors

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) Chairman in Edo State, Anslem Ojezua, took a swipe yesterday at defectors, asking “what is new in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)?”

    Speaking to reporters in Abuja, Ojezua said: “What worries me more is not that they left, but their destination.

    “Because they are going to PDP where they came from. Now my question to them is now what has left PDP now that was not there when they left that they are now going back to.

    Can a man really swallow his own vomit? I think these are pertinent questions that only they can answer.

    “But for me I think it was very unwise and I expect that sooner than later some of them may find out that they have made mistakes and they can correct them.

    “For us, APC is a party that is open to old and new members. We will continue with our membership drive as a permanent aspect of our political development.”

    “Conversely, when some politicians complain about a governor and the people are happy,  then you can draw your conclusions.

    “The truth is that money or resources that are meant for development cannot also be used to patronise politicians.

    “And it is time for us to know that a party that professes change must also do change.”

    He promised that  inaugurated officials of the party would provide effective and proactive  leadership to build a functional party.

    “We are building an organised party that will prepare for mobilisation, particularly as it pertains to elections.”

    According to him, the Edo APC under his watch, will be able to sustain the acceptance of the party in the state and ensure that there is no distraction from any source, including the opposition.

    He vowed that the party will ensure that the people  get the best in terms of dividends of democracy.