Tag: caught

  • ‘How we ‘caught’ businessman with cloned SON logos’

    The Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday heard how 147 cartons of NSNOWS gas refrigerants with cloned Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) logos were allegedly found with the Managing Director of Agastorm Ltd, Nonso Udoye.

    A prosecution witness, Aladesuyi Oluwadare, told Justice Saliu Saidu that a SON patrol team discovered the products at the warehouse of Agastrom Ltd in Ebute-Meta, Lagos.

    Udoye, of 36, Ayilara Street, Surulere, Lagos, is standing trial on a 15-count charge of forgery and counterfeiting.

    The defendant has been on remand following his inability to perfect his bail terms.

    At the beginning of proceedings yesterday, Oluwadare was led in examination-in-chief by SON’s counsel, Amaka Allen-Ngbale.

    The witness testified that he was part of a five-man team investigating the case following a petition by SON’s director-general to the inspector-general of Police (IGP).

    Oluwadare said: “It was stated in the petition that on December 7, 2017, during a patrol by a SON patrol unit, they intercepted a warehouse at 137, Borno Way, Ebute-Meta, belonging to the defendant. On inspection of the goods inside the warehouse, they discovered cartons of NSNOWS gas refrigerants and cylinders with unauthorised SON seal. So they locked up the warehouse.”

    He told the court that following Udoye’s arrest, the businessman took the police investigative team to another warehouse, “where another product, Chap gas refrigerant cylinder, was discovered.”

    The witness testified that SON told the police team that it did not authorise the use of its seal on the products.”

    Following a brief cross-examination by defence counsel, Emmanuel Okoroafor, Justice Saidu adjourned till May 18 for continuation of trial.

    According to the charge, Udoye allegedly “made an impression of a production registration counterfeit seal … on 147 cartons of NSNOWS gas refrigerants of 12 cylinders each stored at the warehouse.”

    The court also heard that he imported “1,441 cartons of refrigerant gas that did not comply with industrial standard, among others.”

    The alleged offences contravened sections 465, 467, 467(4)(v) and 468 of the Criminal Code Act, 2004 and sections 26(2) (b) and 26 (2) (b) (iii) of the Standard Organisation of Nigeria Act, 2015.

  • ‘I caught my wife, driver making love’

    A businessman, Moses Ojiekomhan, yesterday told an Ebute-Meta Chief Magistrates’ Court, that he caught his wife, Joy, in bed with his driver Emeka Osuh, at their Lagos home.

    Ojiekomhan, the Managing Director of Legend Logistics and Integrated Concept Limited, Ikeja, stated this during Joy’s arraignment on a two count-charge of conspiracy and stealing.

    Joy pleaded not guilty.

    The mother of two, through her counsel Mr. J. Uwabuche, accused Ojiekomhan of abducting their 18-month-old baby.

    According to the police, in a charge marked G38/2017, last June 30 around 11:30am, Joy,  37, conspired with Osuh, who is now at large, to steal N1,136,400 belonging to Legend Logistics and Integrated Concept.

    According to prosecuting counsel, Mr. E. I. Onine, the alleged offences are contrary to and punishable under Sections 411 and 287 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    Uwabuche, who urged the court to admit Joy to bail on liberal terms, said the matter was between husband and wife, and that reconciliation was ongoing between their family members.

    This was not opposed by Onine.

    Before her ruling, Chief Magistrate Helen Omisore turned to Ojiekomhan and sought confirmation of the duo’s relationship.

    Ojiekomhan replied: “We once lived together as husband and wife but we are now separated. They have charged me to court for child abduction. I caught Emeka, who is a driver in my company, sleeping with her in my house.”

    The prosecutor added that police investigation found that the two were once husband and wife, but separated after Ojiekomhan found Joy and Osuh in his bed.

    Uwabuche, however, pointed out that Ojiekomhan took away their 18-month-old baby from the defendant.

    “An Ogba Chief Magistrates’ Court, in Court 4, has even issued a warrant of arrest against him,” the defence counsel said.

    He stated that Joy’s arraignment was a ploy by the police to prevent her from appearing in court today to testify as a witness on the child abduction charge against him.

    Following the conflicting claims, Magistrate Omisore called for the case file, examined it, and ruled on the defendant’s bail.

    She said: “The defendant is hereby granted N500,000 bail with two sureties in the like sum. One of the sureties must be a relative to the defendant, have three years tax certificate payable to the Lagos State government. Both the home and office addresses of the sureties must be verified by the prosecutor.”

    The case continues on September 27.

  • Man ‘caught with’ bag of clothes

    A20-year-old apprentice, Izuchukwu Odinko, who allegedly stole a bag containing clothes worth N20,000 and N5, 000 cash, belonging to one Friday Omege, was yesterday arraigned in an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court.

    The defendant, however, denied committing the offence.

    Magistrate B.O. Osunsanmi granted him N50,000 bail with one surety in the like sum and adjourned till September 14.

    Odinko, who resides at Ejigbo is facing a two-count charge of conspiracy and stealing.

    Earlier, Prosecuting Inspector Simeon Imhonwa said the defendant committed the offences on July 10, at about 2.17pm, at pipeline, Ejigbo, Lagos.

    Imhonwa said the defendant attacked and threatened Omege with a knife while he was at a bus stop in Ejigbo.

    “The defendant stole the bag and the money and then took to his heels.

    “He was apprehended by some passers-by who gave him a chase, and handed him over to the police,” he said.

    Imhonwa said the offences contravened Sections 295 and 297 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

  • Caught in  the vortex  of a dirty war

    Caught in the vortex of a dirty war

    WARIZ Alimi is one of those who bid the brown rusted roofs of Ibadan farewell for the commercial city of Lagos, in search of greener pastures. His Idi-Arere hometown had failed his dream of a comfortable childhood that his daily bread was subject to his quotidian hustle.  His determination was to ensure his adulthood was not recruited a general in the hierarchy of poverty. His mother died before he clocked ten and was left in the care of his aged grandmother. His mother, father, uncle, aunt, cousin and all was encapsulated in Mama Agba. He had no link whatsoever with his relatives; after Mama Agba was nothing else.

    But he had some street brotherhood that had a work base in Lagos. The nature of their work did not have a clear definition but they returned to Ibadan once or twice in two weeks, with a trimmed appearance and some big loaves of bread from Iwo Road. Although the financial returns were neither substantial nor massive, they were  an improved version of what obtained at Idi-Arere.

    Teenager Alimi was soon forced to abandon his bus-conductor job and Mama Agba to join the brotherhood gang. He hitherto would tag along commercial buses on rounds through the city  to make a token but soon departed it. He had acquired no skill or learnt any vocation except conducting, and on leaving, he didn’t need more than a T-Shirt,a pair of trousers,a pair of sandals, his soul and body.

    Life in the weed wielding country of Akala

    The derivation of Mushin’s synonymy with violence, notoriety, crafty pick pocketing, acute knack for weed wielding, marijuana resourcefulness, prostitution and other shades of boisterous lifestyle come from a grand sponsorship of the country of Akala. The not-so-long but mighty street sits behind Adedoja and Igbarere streets, off Ogunmokun Road, Mushin, Lagos State. Its in-house nomenclature is the ‘Ghetto’. The ever-smoky haven of the finest of miscreants knows no boundary with carbon emissions. In fact, the climate change campaign of limiting human activities that boosts toxic concentration of carbon-dioxide is an alien rhetoric that may never gain reception. A newbie might erroneously launch a hunt for a burning building, vehicle or even dial the 767 code to alert the Lagos State Fire Service for a rescue mission. It’s a country of sleepless citizens who hardly go a second without the weed-oxygen.

    It also boasts of a fierce army of youths predominantly between ages 12 to 30. The alarming rate at which adolescent girls were recruited in this force is a near-perfect archetype of the peril of poor girl-child education. Their slim legs flock the street with shorts in discord with the knee, scary dark eyelashes, pro-rainbow hair attachments, multiple pierced ears laced with rings, hole in the nose and vampire shaped nails and of course a golden or silver tooth chewing ever elastic gum. Worse is the fact that fragile newborns are raised in the murky terrain of a hopeless future.

    Their grooms similarly decorate the street round the clock in circles of betting, fight, and bottle stripping among others. Bigger boys and interested allies across the state also cruise in – in their sophisticated machines (vehicles) for relaxation at a relatively low cost environment where they could pass freely on anonymity.

    Unlike the auspicious fashion of some Lagos foreigners from the hinterland, Akala country-people usually have no relative or prepared accommodation, since its loving arms eagerly await them. The nature of Akala and its modus operandi are what attract and reassure this set of tourists.

    Alimi, on arrival from Ibadan, soon  found abode at Akala where his ‘area brothers’ dwelled. In no time he had  integrated into the system and earned himself a signature, ‘Sobo’ just like his predecessors.  The name is boldly tattooed on his chest alongside a big figure on his right arm signifying strength. He continued his conducting job and found a new boss at Oshodi, another ‘centre of excellence’ and managed to gather N30,000 through a thrift collection.

    The Akala/ Alamutu debacle that doomed Alimi

    Like other traditional markets in Lagos, the Alamutu market was developed by a group of traders and farmers who planted jute leaves. It became reputed for freshly harvested Ewedu and food vendors, especially from Amala kitchens, topped its lists of patrons. The Old Olosha market was concurrently a huge market for seasonal fruits ,chiefly oranges, but the need for expansion arose and traders moved downwards Alamutu. It gradually expanded and became a mainstream market for plantain and other produce directly sourced from the farms. Bendel traders predominantly shipped in Garri; Ondo, plantain; while Ishan, Ibadan and other interstate traders generally brought in various products depending on the season. Mango is the fruit for the current season. As early as 4am, produce laden trucks would barricade the market, with their customers eagerly waiting to get the pick of the bunch. Retailers from Obalende, Ikoyi, Surulere, Orile and Alaba among others were regular subscribers.

    Then emerged a certain Sakiru whose mother runs a huge business in the market. He was said to have chaired a committee that taxed traders for several years until rival factions began to question his operations. The Akala boys were much interested as the homeowners otherwise termed ‘Omo Oniles of Alamutu’. The market leadership waded in and took over the collection of dues since they were the operators. The move pleased neither of the factions and it culminated into several attacks unleashed on the market.

    The fiasco climaxed around 8am on April 24 when Akala boys pounced on those from Alamutu,racing  about 12 shops. Of course, it didn’t pass without sporadic shots that left a number of people dead and others seriously injured. In the heat of the fight, Alimi was returning to Mushin from Oshodi, where he didn’t find his boss. He and a friend decided to cruise down the heart of the imbroglio at Idi-Oro for a glimpse. He had barely moved past LUTH  Junction in Mushin when a stray bullet pierce through his chest, leaving a slight tear and a deep hole close to his heart. Without a second thought, he bolted away with profuse bleeding and the painful image of a 20-year-old grandson of Mama Agba on the verge of death, who was not rich yet, who had not married or bore a child and who had not taken home the gains of Lagos.

    My encounter with Alimi

    At 10:09am on that fateful day, I was assigned to report the fight. Barely had I got past LUTH Junction when I encountered Alimi in a pool of his own blood. He sped as fast as he could, sobbing and pleading with fearful onlookers for a second chance at life. “Please don’t let me die! Please I beg you. You won’t meet the corpse of your child at home. Help me!”, were the lines he chanted repeatedly to no avail. The motorcyclists were sternly unwilling and equally apprehensive to assist him for fear of implication. Since he hadn’t collapsed yet, I pleaded with a motorcyclist who eventually agreed to rush him to the hospital on the condition that someone went with him. We got to the Aisha Hospital at Idi-Araba but he was rejected on the ground that he had no police report.

    We proceeded to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, (LUTH) where a female doctor promptly assessed the injury. She left us in hopeful wait but returned with a disenchanting tale of dearth of space and exhaustion of resource beds.

    One of the security personnel was also quick to intimate us of the private section of the hospital administered by the LUTH management, hence not a public facility. Inquiry revealed a down payment of N50,000 must be made before the administration of even first aid. When I returned to the emergency unit, a resource bed had suddenly surfaced and Alimi was wheeled in. But to commence treatment, a prerequisite of N1,000 registration card had to be met, after which apparatuses like hand gloves, syringe, bandage, plaster and a pack of drip was recommended. He was cleaned-up and prepared for an X-ray. Alimi kept wailing, “Aunty, what will they do now. I’m dying of pains’. The radiology department was lenient enough to prioritize Alimi’s case and brought  the result on a video CD which came faster than waiting for the imprint. Viewing the X-tray constituted another roadblock as there was no available digital system or any other viewing facility at the unit.

    A training doctor was sent to another department to get the results which luckily, for Alimi, revealed absence of bullet in his body. He became relieved by the news. No sooner had they administered his drug than he started agitating for release. I explained to him that his injury needed close monitoring but he insisted on leaving the hospital for Ibadan, saying he must set eyes on his grandmother that day. That was not feasible as the Chief Security Officer (CSO) had detained both of us. It was the hospital policy to ensure that a patient had a relative or guardian to look after him all through his stay. Since I was the only one they could identify with him at that moment, they declined my request to return to my duty until the Division Police Officer of Alakara Station approved that I left. In  all, I spent six hours at the hospital.

    Brunt-bearers of the clash

    Mrs. Taiwo Ojikutu is one in scores of people writhing in pain and loss from the deadly clash. The 45-year-old began trading at Alamutu market 15years ago and had witnessed  numerous clashes but none to compare with this . She and her elder sister who came to sympathise with her from Orile were locked in the narrow passage of her  bungalow home situated in the heart of the crisis zone. They were separating rusty grains of old rice from the fair ones when The Nation visited. Her preoccupation that morning was how to feed the rude protestors in her stomach but she managed to air her painful experience, regardless.

    “It’s was about 30  days ago when the initial fight broke out. “Hey! Cut them! Kill them! Catch them!” was all we heard from our hiding. On the second attack, they began to destroy shops and looted several goods. A Phamacy shop  was emptied, our shop was broken and our stock  stolen. It started around 9pm in the evening through the midnight and policemen followed them. The tear gas canisters they fired  are  still in our compound. We couldn’t go out or do anything. The matter got to the Panti Divisional Police station and some landlords were invited.

    “This last chaos began around 8am on Monday. We just heard threats from some boys on the other side (Akala area) challenging us to make any slight move. The next thing we saw was tear gas everywhere. Our shops were set on fire that morning while the Police accompanied those boys with armoured vehicle. The boys wielded cutlasses and guns. My sister was already here by then. I lost N80,000 in that inferno apart from my goods including soft drinks and two freezers. I cannot estimate the amount of goods destroyed. The boys here in the market resisted them and insisted they shouldn’t destroy people’s wares as this is a market. In the first attack property like generators, television sets  among others were carted away. This time about 12 shops were razed and scores of people wounded. A young man who was carrying a sack of Garri was shot and he died instantly. Our hope was shattered seeing the market leveled to the ground. The market boys who were defending were the ones arrested by the police and charged with possessing weapons. The following Tuesday some people were here with petrol to further destroy the market. It took the effort of well-meaning people to contain the fire.

    The police have not done well in securing us.

    “That Ghetto (Akala) is a terribly worrisome den of criminals. You find homeless young boys and girls there devouring hard contents. When night falls they wake up to the call of stealing by their bosses and they flee after wreaking havoc.”

    On the night of the crisis at Labinjo Street, about three streets away from Idi-Oro, the cry of Mrs. Bilikisu Adeyemo at 9:25pm was what forced  Chief Imam Bashiru Ajani and Alhaji Asimiyu Esupofo out of their rooms. Unfortunately Adeyemo missed her steps as everyone fled the veranda on sighting armed policemen who were chasing some residents. The last she heard before tripping was a forceful bullet entry through her butt-cheek. It was one of those dark evenings.

    On her sick bed at Aisha Hospital, Idi-Araba, her fervent prayer was that she survives the agonizing process. Speaking tearfully, Adeyemo said: “”There was heat inside the room and we sat outside.

    We didn’t even suspect anything. We just saw people running because the police were chasing them. We ran as well. I wanted to jump over the gutter but people were already there so I decided to climb a plank. It was at that point a shot hit my back. I was left outside gnashing my teeth in pain before my neighbours rushed me here. I didn’t believe I could survive due to the way it happened. The news of my death had even spread.”

    Corroborating her, Esupofo said: “We were about six here in front of our house, relaxing and eating. There was no light. Suddenly we saw some policemen approach and they started questioning us: ‘Who are you!’ Everyone fled immediately and rushed into the house. The officers were about eight. But while the woman was running, they shot her in the buttocks. It was about 8.35 on Monday evening.”

  • ‘I caught my wife with her pastor in our bedroom’

    The 22-year-old marriage of Mr Tunji Oyedele, a 60-year-old Lagos businessman, may be dissolved over his wife’s alleged sexual recklessness and infidelity.

    Oyedele told an Igando Customary Court in Lagos yesterday that his wife, Romoke, a 55-year-old trader, with whom he had four children, was promiscuous.

    “Whenever I travel, my wife brings men into our house; on two occasions, I caught my wife with her lovers in our bedroom.

    “On one occasion, I came home unannounced and caught her with one of her lovers in our bedroom. On another occasion, I caught her with another man who she claimed was her pastor.  She claimed that the said pastor wanted to take her to a river for a special bath to avert spiritual attack,” he alleged.

    The petitioner claimed that his wife is fetish and was always in possession of different charms.

    “I see different strange objects in my bathing water, food and everywhere in the house.

    “There was a day I entered her room in her absence and saw feathers tied with clothes and other diabolical objects. I believe that my persistent illness, which has deferred medical solution, is as a result of her fetish acts. I have been forced to leave my own house because I don’t want to die now,” he said.

    Oyedele presented the pictures of the charms as exhibits, and begged the court to dissolve the marriage as he is no longer in love with his wife.

    Romoke debunked the allegations, stating that she and her husband had lived in peace until January last year, when he married a new wife.

    “My husband and I never fought; but immediately he married another woman, his attitude changed. His new wife accused me of sending hired killers to her and my husband turned me into a punching bag,” she said.

    Romoke said she is not adulterous.

    “The man my husband first saw in our bedroom was my classmate in primary school.

    “The other man was my pastor, who came for spiritual purpose,” she explained.

    The respondent said she was not ready to divorce her husband because she is still in love with him.

    The court president, Mr Adegboyega Omilola, adjourned

  • Nnaji caught in primitive power show

    Pig-headed impunity: On March 20, this column had picked on a two-page advertorial by Chams Consortium Limited in a national newspaper. One had been moved by the plaintive cry of Chams, a foremost indigenous technology firm over the shoddy treatment meted to its consortium by the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) to which it had a contract to work on Nigeria’s identity cards.

    In the Chams’ “Open Letter to the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, His Excellency, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, the firm had cried out that NIMC management had converted its “concession agreement into segmented contracts to ‘selected’ third parties”, among other infractions to legitimate agreements. Most touching was that every avenue for settlement, including sending of emissaries, mediations and even the law courts were rebuffed by the NIMC.

    The public outcry to the president was the only option left to Chams at that point to fight what seemed to have become a leviathan. One had been moved by the sheer injustice of the situation (in the face of it) to join in weeping for Chams. Though one is not certain how the Chams-NIMC rift eventually panned out, a similar scenario of primitive power show plays out in the matter between Professor Bathlomew Nnaji, President Goodluck Jonathan and his power ‘reform’ cabal.

    A prophet without honour at home:Prof. Nnaji, twice minister of the Federal Republic and winner of the Nigerian National Order of Merit (2004) cried out bitterly in a half page article in national newspapers April 20, 2015. Any man of conscience may not be able to hold back tears after reading Nnaji’s piece. To think that Nnaji, a world renowned professor of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering who won the US Secretary of State’s Distinguished Public Service Award in 2005 is the same one being messed up by his home government.

    The story in a nutshell is that Prof. Nnaji in collaboration of the Aba business community, the United State Agency for International Development (USAID) and a consortium of banks had nearly ten years ago gotten a concession from the Federal Government to supply electricity power to Aba (including Ariaria areas), Abia State.

    The big idea was to build an integrated power project for this commercial area; a business model for power development in Nigeria that can stand alone, be self-sustaining and can be easily replicated in other major industrial and commercial cities of Nigeria.

    With a Federal Government concession agreement in its kitty in 2005, began work on the 141megawatts Aba Integrated Power Project (AIPP or Aba Power). Some of the infrastructure built, according to Nnaji, include 141MW power plant with standard equipment from General Electric; rehabilitation of the entire distribution network in Aba and 105km of overhead transmission lines in Aba metropolis.

    Aba Power also built numerous substations of varying sizes, new control building and 27km of gas pipeline among other gas infrastructure to ensure a reliable and no down-time fueling of the power plant. All of these cost about $500 million or N100 billion  according to Prof. Nnaji.

    So why wouldn’t Aba Power be switched on if it was ready to go since November 2013? It is said that at about this time, power privatisation was completed and the entire Southeast zone was ceded to the Enugu Electricity Distribution Company (EEDC) – including Aba metropolis. Since then, the management of EEDC has refused to let go and the Federal Government would not take a stand and affirm Aba Power’s agreement and legitimacy over Aba metropolis.

    Hear it from Prof. Nnaji: “…The painful fact is that this critical issue has been left festering since November 2013. It costs the company $3.5 million in bank interest charges alone; plus more than N30 million for insurance coverage; and other operational expenses every single month to carry a project that is not yielding any revenue due to deliberate, hostile and crippling action of Enugu Disco and the BPE over 15 months ago.”

    He noted further that about eight committees, including committees of the National Council on Privatization (NCP) and the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and the Ministry of Power have investigated the matter and came up with the same recommendation: government should respect its agreement with Aba Power.

    This travesty has been cruel to us all,” Nnaji cries out in his piece. “We have made all efforts to get the BPE to correct what (for choice of a better word) may be called an “error”. So far, they have not yielded to doing the correct thing. Rather, they have sought to justify this error and have sought to justify this error and have continued to politicize the situation unnecessarily…”

    Recall that Prof. Nnaji, acclaimed to be the best of President Goodluck Jonathan’s ministers was ‘removed’ unceremoniously as Power Minister over the privatization of Nigeria’s power assets. Recall also that the EEDC was controversially awarded to the current owners in spite of vehement protests by stakeholders from its zone of operation. EEDC has the entire five state of the southeast under its control – a very large expanse which it has managed very shoddily so far. Why would it illegally hold on to Aba which had been ceded to another if it has over a dozen other major cities of the southeast to tend to?

    It is sad that the Jonathan administration chose to grow a reputation as a government that breaches it agreements and makes light of serious matters of state. Petty politicking and impunity almost became its brand identification signature.

    If a man of Prof. Nnaji’s caliber could be meted with this manner of treatment one can only wonder what happens to ordinary Nigerians in the course of their routine relations with government. One is only at a loss as to why Nnaji and his group did not drag the Jonathan administration to court over this blatant show of primitive power.

  • Man caught with 16.4kg of cannabis

    A 34-year-old trader has been caught by anti-narcotic officers for allegedly attempting to smuggle 16.335kg of cannabis concealed in foodstuff to Dubai. The suspect, who sells clothes at Ikorodu, on the outskirts of Lagos, was invited for interrogation at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport (MMIA), Ikeja, during the screening of passengers on an Etihad flight. Ten parcels of the illicit item were found inside his two bags.

    NDLEA Commander at the airport, Mr Hamza Umar gave the name of the suspect as Obi Chinweike, adding: “Our search team detected 16.335kg of dried weeds that tested positive to cannabis at the luggage screening area. The substance was hidden in a false bottom of the bags containing yams, garri and other food items. The suspect, Obi Chinweike, who is a trader, is currently assisting the investigation team.”

    The suspect, in his statement, claimed he was offered $1,000 to deliver the drugs in Dubai. “I was given the drug at Onitsha by a friend who paid me $1,000 to smuggle it to Dubai. Unfortunately, I was arrested in the process. I am from a poor home. I dropped out of a secondary school in 1996 during my first year owing to lack of funds,” Chinweike, who hails from Uli in Anambra State, said.

    Chairman/Chief Executive of the NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade, warned drug traffickers to quit the criminal trade or face the consequences as contained in the NDLEA Act. “If drug barons fail to quit the criminal trade, they will continue to be arrested and prosecuted. This arrest and similar ones are clear signals that drug traffickers will end up in prison custody if they fail to quit. The agency has intensified search operations at all exit points,” Giade said, adding that the suspect would soon be charged to court.

  • OAU student caught ‘flushing baby’

    A student of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, was yesterday “caught” trying to flush her newly born baby in the toilet.

    The 400-level student of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Diana Oyinlola Rotimi, allegedly gave birth to the baby in a toilet at Moremi Hostel.

    She was allegedly caught trying to flush the baby in the toilet by cleaners.

    It was learnt that a cleaner heard the baby’s cries and alerted her colleagues.

    Sources said they forced the toilet door open and found Diana pouring water on the baby in the closet. The floor was reportedly stained with blood.

    It was gathered that one of the cleaners removed the baby boy, who was alive but bleeding from the nose, from the closet.

    OAU’s spokesman Biodun Olanrewaju gave a different version of the incident.

    Olanrewaju said some students reported that the girl went into labour in the toilet and raised the alarm, which attracted students in the hostel.

    He said the Dean of Students’ Affairs, Dr. Latifat Durosimi, and other senior officials of the institution have taken the girl and the baby to the university’s Health Centre.

    Olanrewaju said the institution was investigating the incident.

     

  • Student caught with songster Damoche’s phone

    Student caught with songster Damoche’s phone

    The police have made a headway in their investigation into the death of Damino Damoche, a pop star and final year Banking and Finance student of Lagos State University (LASU).

    A student, Durojaiye Olaleye, was arrested yesterday for allegedly being in possession of the late Damoche’s mobile phone.

    Olaleye was arrested by operatives from the Lagos State Police Command who stormed the institution’s Ojo campus, following the confessional statements made by the 34 suspects arrested earlier.

    Police spokesperson Ngozi Braide, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said the suspect had been handed over to homicide detectives at the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID), Panti, Yaba, for interrogation.

    It was gathered that when the policemen got to LASU, some students tried to stop them from arresting the suspect. Their action reportedly led to a clash between the suspect’s loyalists and those who wanted him arrested.

    Unconfirmed reports said some students were killed and some injured.

    Braide dismissed the claim, saying the atmosphere was only charged. “There was no clash and nobody was killed or injured,” she said.

    The late Damoche a.k.a Obotshe was shot dead in front of the school’s gate last Thursday. Seventy persons were arrested on Sunday by the police over the incident.

    Thirty-six of them were released, leaving 34 others who are helping the police in their investigation.

    Meanwhile, Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Adeyemi Ikuforiji yesterday said a law would soon be enacted to tackle cultism in higher institutions.

    Ikuforiji said while fielding questions at the maiden edition of Legislative-Civil Society Parley with the theme: “Leveraging good governance through the legislative process: The roles of stakeholders”.

    The programme, initiated by Chairman, House Committee on information, Strategy, Security and Publicity, Hon. Segun Olulade, would be held quarterly.

    Describing the recent killings at LASU as barbaric, Ikuforiji questioned why some students would turn a citadel of learning to a combat ground and said that an anti-cultism law was long overdue.

    “We will start the process of putting such law in place that will ban cultism in our higher institutions,” he said.

    On the restriction of commercial motorcycles’ operation, he debunked the notion that the government banned Okada.

    He said: “We did not ban Okada from operating. There are just certain rules; we don’t want Okada to ply the Expressways. Sincerely, we are aware that the police excesses are becoming too much and unbearable. And as we all know, it is impossible for us as lawmakers to go on the streets and drag the issue with policemen; we just hope that with time, things will get better.”

    While noting civil society groups’ role in nation building and entrenchment of democracy, Ikuforiji hailed them for maintaining the same commitment even after the return to democratic rule.

  • Student, another man caught with hard drugs

    A 31-year-old student, Dike Chibuzor, has been arrested by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) with 1.430 kilogrammes of cocaine.

    In a statement yesterday, the agency said Chibuzor was caught at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport (MMIA) in Lagos, during passengers’ screening on a Qatar Airline flight. The substance was found in his luggage.

    The statement said the agency also discovered wraps of cocaine inside Garbon-bound packs of baby powder in the luggage of another passenger, Iwegbuna Ebele.

    The discovery, it added, was made inside a luggage containing artificial hair, perfumes and artificial nails. It was to be sent as unaccompanied luggage to Gabon on Askye Airline.

    The drug found with Chibuzor, the statement by NDLEA Airport Commander Hamzat Umar said, “was industrially packed in a way that we had to cut the sides of the bag with a knife to discover the drugs. It would take a professional to detect the drugs the way they were packed.”

    The suspect, a student of a university in Malaysia, was said to have confessed that he was promised $4,000 if he successfully delivered the consignment to Malaysia.

    The Orlu, Imo State-born suspect, according to the statement, said: “I was asked to take an empty bag to Malaysia for $4,000. When I got to the airport, the drug was discovered. That was how I got involved.”

    Ebele said: “I was given N130,000 by my childhood friend to buy female hair attachment, artificial nails and perfumes. My friend later called me that somebody would give me children’s powder which I would add to whatever I bought. The person called me and gave me the powder which I added to the goods. It was in the process of search that the cocaine was discovered. I am a technician who specialises in repairing air-conditioning units.”

    Ebele, who hails from Akwu-Ukwu, Orifite, Anambra State, graduated from Orifite Boys Secondary School in the state.

    NDLEA Chairman/Chief Executive, Ahmadu Giade, who condemned drug trafficking, urged the public to learn from the arrests.