Tag: Chris Anyanwu

  • Court adjourns Anyanwu’s N550m defamation suit against Ohakim to March 17

    Court adjourns Anyanwu’s N550m defamation suit against Ohakim to March 17

    A High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in Jabi, Abuja, has adjourned further hearing in the N550 million defamation suit filed by Senator Chris Anyanwu against a former governor of Imo State, Ikedi Ohakim, till March 17.

    Hearing in the case was to resume yesterday but was aborted owing to the absence of the judge, Justice M. I. Sani, who was said to be indisposed.

    Anyanwu sued Ohakim over comments the ex-governor allegedly made in an interview published in the January 12 edition of The Nation newspapers, which the Senator claimed were defamatory.

    The claimant is demanding N550 million in damages, alongside a public apology to be published in two national newspapers, including The Nation.

    Read Also:Court of Appeal lists 360 appeals in special Lagos sitting

    Following the filing of the suit, The Nation, which was listed as the second defendant, issued a full retraction and public apology to Senator Anyanwu on June 1, last year, and the claimant thereby discontinued the suit against newspaper and had its name struck out.

    The adjournment yesterday was the fourth since hearing opened in the case on October 13, last year.

    Only one of the five witnesses listed by Senator Anyanwu has so far commenced her testimony.

    Reacting to the latest adjournment, Senator Anyanwu expressed sympathy for the judge’s health.

    She expressed hope for a swift progression of the case upon the judge’s return.

  • Anyanwu wasted eight years in Senate, says Okorocha

    Imo State governor, Rochas Okorocha has slammed former Senator Chris Anyanwu over her recent  remarks about his administration.

    The Governor said Anyanwu does not have the moral justification to criticize his administration after she “wasted eight years in the Senate with nothing to show for it”.

    A statement signed by the  Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Sam Onwuemeodo, noted that ” Senator Anyanwu has no moral justification to run down Governor Rochas Okorocha, whose achievements in less than eight years have surpassed the achievements of all those who had governed the State before him put together”.

    According to the statement, “Senator Anyanwu had taken up on Governor Okorocha in the media, talking about how Imo people are set to take back their State from the governor. And one may be forced to ask Senator Anyanwu, which State and which Imo people?

    “She was in the Senate for eight solid years for Owerri zone, let her mention one achievement her eight years in the Senate brought to Owerri zone or to the State, either as entities or as individuals”.

    It continued that, ” the only thing she did for the eight years, was to build a radio station for herself which is called Hot FM in Owerri, with the staff not being paid salaries for years. Also, the only major appointment she got was in the Revenue Mobilization Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) and she gave it to her husband, Dr. Casmir Anyanwu.

    “The truth is that there is a class war going on in the State at the moment. And the crux of the matter is 2019. The elite and godfathers who felt displaced by Governor Rochas Okorocha since 2011 are fighting to stage a come-back, targeting 2019. These elements should stop deceiving the public with their pretences”.

    It added further that, “for instance, those who call themselves stakeholders sneaked into an uncompleted building Friday night and came out to say they had conducted APC State Congress. Look at the photographs they have sent out. Do you conduct Congress at night and in an uncompleted building?

    “Again, the first question you ask about a government is the extent that government has served the people who own the mandate abinitio. They have been honest to themselves not to accuse Rochas of non-performance. On our own, we have claimed that Okorocha has more than one thousand verifiable projects to his credit and has achieved more than all those before him. And nobody has said it is not true.

    “If Rochas has more than one thousand projects and has achieved more than those before him put together, what is then the issue? The issue is that the elite and the godfathers have run dry since Rochas came and they want to come and recover all they have lost since 2011.

    “And Rochas Okorocha never endorsed Uche Nwosu for the fun of it. He only wants to ensure that someone who would continue to work for Imo people and continue to keep these elite and godfathers in check, takes over from him. Don’t forget that when the PDP was in power, the usual story was that there was no money.

    “But today, aside the functional free education, Imo people have seen total transformation of the State at all levels. And they are there for people to see. And for those who do not know, Imo people will never never allow these elite and godfathers to come and hold them to ransom again.

    “Therefore in 2019, Owelle will talk to Imo people and tell them the route to follow. And you wonder what these folks will tell Imo people. Once Imo people hear that these people are coming to start their Share-The-Money slogan again, at the expense of free education and so on, they are finished”.

  • Two die after eating fresh fish in Ebonyi

    Two persons died on Thursday in Ezillo community, Ishielu local government area of Ebonyi State, after eating a fresh fish.

    Another was said to have become blind after eating the fish.

    The victims are labourers hired by one Mr. Alieze for his construction work.

    A resident of the community who gave his name as Odoh Onyinyechi told The Nation that the victims were working and decided to observe rest when they went to a near-by stream where they harvested the fish seen as poisonous by the community.

    She said: ‘’ A man from our community went to the town and brought people to work for him. The people later went to the stream to fetch water and came back with some fishes.

    ‘’We told them that these fishes are forbidden in our area because we don’t consume them and if you must eat it, you must remove the scale but I don’t think they listened to our advise.

    ‘’Before we could know it, two of the labourers died and one of them could not see anymore. We don’t eat this particular fish species for any reason and we always tell anyone found with it to prepare it properly if you must eat it,” she said.

    Another resident of the area, who preferred anonymity, said he saw the victims harvesting the fish in the stream and warned them not to eat it.

    ‘’Those people were busy harvesting fishes in our stream and I went closer to them and saw the fishes. I told them not to eat one of the species which were among the ones they harvested. I told them to ensure they remove the scale before preparing it because the scale is very dangerous,” the resident said.

    The state’s Police Public Relations officer, Chris Anyanwu, could not be reached for confirmation as he was said to be out of town on official assignment.

  • Senate endorses life jail for rapists

    Senate on Wednesday prescribed life imprisonment for rapists and other sexual offenders.

    This followed the passage of the Sexual Offences Bill which prescribes life jail for sexual offenders including rape, child sex tourism and people who deliberately infect others with the Human Immuno Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (HIV/AIDS).

    The Bill that was sponsored by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Navy, Senator Chris Anyanwu, is expected to get the concurrence of the House of Representatives on Thursday.

    The Bill also prescribed life imprisonment for gang rape and 10 years jail for incest and child pornography respectively or a fine of N2million

    Other sexual offences would also attract 14 years jail term.

    Chairman, Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, Senator Umaru Dahiru, in his report said the Bill is meant to redefine and consolidate existing laws on sexual offences.

    Senator Anyanwu, however expressed joy over the passage of the Bill which was introduced in Senate in 2013.

    According to her, the Sexual Offences Bill “seeks to make a comprehensive legislation on sexual offences by criminalising certain acts such as sexual tourism, child pornograhpy and cultural and religious sexual offences in our criminal jurisprudence.

    “The Bill also provides for effective witness protection programme in order to protect victims and witnesses in trial for sexual offences.

    “It also provides for compulsory documentation, supervision of sexual offenders and medical treatment for victims which is in line with the global trend and finally, and most importantly, it provides for adequate and stringent punishments to perpetrators.”

    In addition, the new sexual offences Bill has criminalized acts of people who deliberately lace drinks with drugs with intent to stupefy and sexually abuse them.

    It also frowns at having sexual relations with people with mental disabilities, among others.

  • PDP candidate nabbed for murder in Ebonyi

    A House of Assembly candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ebonyi State, Mr. Chidi Ejem, has been arrested by the police over a murder case.

    Ejem, aged 38 was arrested alongside 36 other persons over the killing of a 36- year- old man, Udu Emegha at the weekend.

    The state’s police spokesman, Chris Anyanwu, who made the disclosure in Abakaliki, said Emegha was killed during an attack on Labour Party supporters in the state.

    He said, ‘’A group of hoodlums numbering up to 23 were led by one Emmanuel Innocent from Amaigbo Etiti Edda and they besieged the house of the deceased and attacked him, beating him to comma.

    ‘’ The said Udu Emegha gave up the ghost, later the team of police operatives rounded up the said Emmanuel and others in the house of one Chidi Ejem. Chidi is a candidate of House of Assembly and a 38-year- old man.

    ‘’The exhibits recovered include three cutlasses with blood stain, a single barrel gun and some expanded cartridges.

    ‘’The state CID has just commenced investigation into the matter and the cause of this murder will be unraveled. We have in our net Chidi Ejem, Emmanuel Innocent and 35 others. So far we have arrested 37 suspects in connection with the murder, “Anyanwu disclosed.

  • Ihedioha hijacked congress, says Anyanwu

    Ihedioha hijacked congress, says Anyanwu

    •Ihedioha: allegation untrue

    The senator representing Imo East, Chris Anyanwu, has accused House of Representatives Deputy Speaker Emeka Ihedioha of hijacking last Saturday’s Imo State congress of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    In a petition to PDP National Chairman Adamu Mu’azu, the senator urged the party’s national leadership to call Ihedioha to order. This followed his alleged manipulation of the state congress.

    But Ihedioha, in a statement yesterday by the Director General of his campaign organisation, Chris Okewulonu, described the allegation as a malicious attempt to smear his reputation.

     

     

    Meanwhile in the strong worded petition she signed and made available to Newsmen, Anyanwu, maintained that if Ihedioha was not called to order on account of the irregularities that marred the congress, it could trigger the breakdown of Law and Order and also hamper the chances of the party in the state.

    Anyanwu, also in the petition, requested for the cancellation of any figure of the results submitted from her ward in Enyiogugu in Aboh Mbaise Council Area of the State.

    She said: “Emeka Ihedioha introduced a brazenly twist to party congress, he moved people from Mbutu,Uvuru,Umuhu,Nguru and all other wards in Aboh Mbaise, brought them to Enyiogugu ward and directed them to queue up to be filmed, he left after doing that with the 35 vehicles including three truck loads of policemen.

    But Ihedioha insisted that, “Senator Chris Anyanwu’s allegation, no doubt, is only aimed at smearing the reputation of the Deputy Speaker as there is no iota of truth whatsoever in this unfortunate and brazen falsehood.

    “Rather than admitting that her loyalists lost woefully at the polls, she is directing her anger at Chief ihedioha whose concern, like every other leader, was only to ensure that the exercise was peaceful and hitch free in accordance with the guidelines of the party.

     

  • Controversy trails Sexual Offences Bill

    Controversy trails Sexual Offences Bill

    The relevance or otherwise of the Sexual Offences Bill in relation to extant laws yesterday led to a sharp disagreement between two Senators.

    The disagreement arose during a public hearing between the sponsor of the Bill, Senator Chris Anyanwu and a member of the committee and Chairman of the Senate Committee on Rules and Business, Senator Ita Enang.

    The public hearing was organized by the Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters in Abuja.

    Enang had raised critical legal issues concerning the new Bill bordering on the concurrent and exclusive legislative lists between the Federal and State Governments.

    He explained that the provisions of the new Bill were already captured in both the Penal and Criminal Codes and sought to know if an existing law can be reenacted instead of amendment.

    He noted contended that the National Assembly cannot make laws on rape for the states.

    He stated that the National Assembly can only make laws for the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and not the states of the Federation.

    He said the various provisions proposed in the bill are a repeat of existing laws on rape across the various states of the federation.

    According to him, the best the National Assembly can do, is to amend the laws, saying that “these are the issues for determination before the public hearing.”

    Enang suggested that if existing laws are weak, what was required is to strengthen the system of enforcement and not to duplicate the laws.

    But Senator Anyanwu countered Enang’s position by saying that the bill has nothing to do with the numerous legal books being cited by Enang, because “incidents of rape have become so common place in Nigeria without any of the existing laws catching up with the perpetrators,”

     

    She argued that there are items in the bill that are not contained in some of the existing laws, pointing out that the bill if passed, can be adopted by the states.

    Anyanwu said: “The problem of rape in Nigeria as it is today has gone beyond jurisdictional argument by lawyers. It is a problem for the whole society to solve by whatever way possible.

    “We are looking to see a harmonized law that can be copied by the states. We are not looking to encroach into the jurisdiction of states.”

    The Minister of Women Affairs, Hajia Zainab Maina, kicked against option of fine provided in the bill for sexual Offences with a child, child trafficking and child sex tourism.

    Maina insisted that the proposal is not strong enough to serve as deterrent to offenders.

    She said: “In order to curtail the upsurge in the scourge of rape of persons especially women and girls, it is important that the penalties attached to these offences be punitive and prohibitive for natural and jurisdiction persons respectively.

    “Consequently, we consider the sum ranging from N500,000, N1million, N3million penalties for offenders to be a slap on the wrist.

    “These organizations/ companies peddle in women, girls and drugs and have immense financial resources at their disposal.

    “Therefore, the payment of penalties stipulated in the Bill will not in any way affect their resources. The amount should be increased in order to deter would be perpetrators of this offence.

    “Offenders should go to jail straight upon conviction without any option of fine and stay there for a very long period of time that would make way for collapse of their businesses.”

     

     

  • Abducted students: Senate raises committee to meet Jonathan

    Abducted students: Senate raises committee to meet Jonathan

    The Senate has constituted a 22-man committee to meet President Goodluck Jonathan over the abducted 234 female students in Borno State.
    Senate President, David Mark, would lead 21 other Senators to the meeting with the President.
    The Senate had on Tuesday unanimously resolved to send a delegation to the President over the lingering Boko Haram insurgency in the country, especially the abduction of 234 Senior Secondary School students of the Federal Government Girls College, Chibok in Borno State.
    Senator Olubunmi Adetunmbi, representing Ekiti North had during a debate on the floor of the Senate on Tuesday suggested that a delegation of the upper chamber meet with the President over the worrisome situation.
    Mark, on Wednesday announced the names of 21 Senators who will accompany him on the mission to the President.
    The meeting is expected to take place at the Aso Rock Villa on WWednesday night.
    The listed lawmakers include those from the troubled states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe and they are Senators Boluwaji Kunlere, Babafemi Ojudu, Zainab Kure, Alkali Jajere, James Manager, Helen Esuene, Chris Anyanwu, Ali Ndume, Ahmed Zannah, Mai’na Ma’aji Lawan, Nenadi Usman, Mohammed Magoro, and Emmanuel Bwacha.
    Others are – Ahmed Lawan, , Barnabas Gemade, Sola Adeyeye, Bindowo Jibrilla, Ehigie Uzamere, Bello Tukur, Bukar Abba Ibrahim, and Eyinnaya Abaribe.
    Mark while announcing the list said: “You will all recalled that we agreed to a suggestion by one of the distinguished Senators during our debate on the motion on the abducted girls on Tuesday that a delegation of the Senate should meet with Mr. President on the issue.
    “I have called the President (Goodluck Jonathan), on phone and he said we should come by 10pm on Wednesday night. I will suggest that those concerned should come to my residence so that we can go to the villa in a bus or two.”
    It was gathered that the parley would enable the executive and the legislature, exchange ideas on how best to rescue the abducted school girls out of the hands of their abductors and reunite them with their parents.

  • ‘Inspiring change for  female politicians’

    ‘Inspiring change for female politicians’

    The theme for the celebration of this year’s International Women’s Day is Inspiring Change. Yetunde Oladeinde assesses the strides recorded as well as some of the challenges facing Nigerian women in politics.

    THE first International Women’s Day was held in 1911 and ever since the date has been significant for women all over the world. It is a day to celebrate achievements in the social, political and economic spheres while focusing world attention on areas requiring further action.

    At the moment, the 2015 election is around the corner and different interest groups are busy strategising to carve a niche for themselves. Nigerian women, interestingly, have for long been playing crucial roles in the political life of the country, and this has contributed in no small measure in shaping the political system of the nation.

    It is, therefore, pertinent to find out how women in politics can inspire change and increase the number of women in elective positions across the country. For Iyabo Anisulowo, “Women are more in politics now, unlike in those days. But there are also categories of women, some are just there to support the men; they sing and dance. While some are activists, agitating for political positions to pull their weight and show that they can also do what the men are doing.

    “But because of lack of enough education, the women have not been able to occupy some of these positions. We want more women to contest election, even if they are not going to win, at least people will know that we tried to wrestle power from the men. But we are improving now.”

    She added that “Politics is also very expensive to play and most women are poor. For instance, when we go for rallies, you have to pay for buses to convey your supporters, cook food, among other things. In developed countries, it is not like that. You can interact with your people through the use of technology. Women are not also violent in nature. Politics now involves thuggery and the usage of arms, and only a few women can withstand that.”

    It is also important to look at the women who have made a mark against the odds. One of such women is Chris Anyanwu, a politician and journalist, who has recorded a number of milestones. The achievements came with a number of obstacles like her incarceration during the Abacha regime. “I fully realise that my incarceration was a well-calculated plan by General Abacha and a certain misogynist clique in the ruling circle to force me out of the profession and by it send a strong signal to the female elite that there are limits for women in this society. The tragic demise of the only other female publisher and the gory murder of three outstanding and outspoken women in the country during this same period all fit into this pattern of behaviour,” she said.

    Abike Dabiri-Erewa, member of the Nigeria Federal House of Representatives representing Ikorodu Constituency in Lagos State, is another politician and journalist who has set a pace for many. In the House, Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa is distinguishing herself by working tirelessly as she sponsored a bill that would grant freedom to practice journalism after a certain qualification.

    Professor Dora Akunyili, former Director General of NAFDAC and politician, is another amazon that comes to mind. In year 2010, she resigned her appointment as the minister of information in the President Jonathan cabinet and decided to pick a senatorial form on the platform of APGA in Anambra State to contest for a seat in the upper federal legislative chamber in the 2011general elections. Unfortunately, she was not successful at the polls.

    During the 2011 presidential election, Sarah Jubril stood out as the only woman who challenged President Goodluck Jonathan and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar for the presidential flag of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.

    And across the 63 political parties, she was the only woman who struggled to occupy the Aso Rock seat of power.

    According to Jubril, “Women had been grossly marginalised in the power-sharing arrangement, with no woman occupying the nation’s highest office since independence in 1960.And this is in spite of the fact that women account for about 51% of the voting population of the country. The highest office a woman has occupied is Speaker of the House of Representatives, which Hon. Patricia Etteh held for four months and 26 days between June and October 2007 before she was compelled to quit over alleged graft.”

    A veteran presidential aspirant of sorts and in her early 60s, Jubril’s presidential ambition dates back to 1992. She was an aspirant in the defunct Social Democratic Party, SDP, in the botched Third Republic. She also aspired in 1998 on the platform of the PDP and lost the presidential ticket to Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, who went on to win the polls.

    Despite the difficulties faced by women in politics, they continue with their political ambition, contributing enormously to the political and national development in their own way as the challenges militating against them are not present, although Nigeria is yet to have a female president. Women over the years could be said to have recorded

    some measure of appreciable political achievement in other political fields of endeavours, meeting their political objectives with limited support and resources at their disposal.

    In 1957, during the pre-independence era of Nigeria, a couple of women political activists such as Mrs. Margaret Ekpo, Mrs. Janet Mokelu and Ms. Young were members of the Eastern House of Assembly. The late Mrs. Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, though not a full-fledged politician, was a very strong force to reckon with in the politics of the Western Region.

    Hajia Gambo Sawaba also waged a fierce battle for the political and cultural emancipation of women in the north. One can say that women have always played viable political roles in Nigeria in spite of all the limitations and encumbrances. In addition, the Babangida era marked a turning point in the history of women struggle in Nigeria, when Maryam Babangida institutionalised the office of the first lady in 1987.