Tag: crimes

  • Afenifere seeks govt’s help to stop crimes

    Afenifere seeks govt’s help to stop crimes

    Pan Yoruba socio-political group, Afenifere in United States, has called on President Bola Tinubu administration and the governors to address crimes by youths.

    The group insisted the country is witnessing increased robbery, kidnapping, drug abuse, and ritual killings for pecuniary reasons.

    In a statement, the president, Dr. Akindutire Durojaiye, said the group would not watch undesirable elements, in pursuit of an ostentatious lifestyle, mislead youths to self-destruct. “We believe if the Southwest becomes uncomfortable for these criminals, other governors would follow suit and subsequently paralyse their nefarious activities and possibly run them out of the country.”

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    The statement reads: “We acknowledge that things are hard for the people due to economic downturn. Also, poor economic situation and broken value system are some factors responsible for this malaise. We call on the Federal Government to declare an emergency on this problem before it degenerates further. The perpetrators are becoming more daring as they flaunt the proceeds of their crimes without fear of being questioned! This is evident in the lavish display of wealth and ostentatious lifestyles at social gatherings, including tertiary institutions and social media.

    “Now with festivities approaching, the quest for money increases, so is the temptation for crime. Therefore, we call on Southwest  governors to liaise with the Federal Government to deploy security during this period and after…’’

     We will not watch some undesirable elements … mislead our youths to self-destruct. We believe if Southwest becomes uncomfortable for these criminals, other governors would follow suit and paralyse them and, possibly, run them out of the country…’’

  • UN High Commissioner says signs of war crimes in Gaza

    UN High Commissioner says signs of war crimes in Gaza

    The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk says he sees signs of war crimes and the possibility of crimes against humanity in the Israeli Hamas war.

     Türk cites indiscriminate gunfire and military action against civilian facilities.

     He said in Geneva that 70 percent of those affected by heavy bombardments were women and minors.

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     “It can be assumed that the majority of those who have been hurt are civilians. Of course, courts must ultimately judge who has committed which offenses,”

     Türk said there were indications that crimes against humanity might also have been committed.

     “In view of the disproportionate and very heavy bombardments, combined with the lack of effective humanitarian aid, there are serious concerns that need to be examined more closely,’’

  • Aladura churches decry corruption, crimes

    The church is worried by the spate of killings, corruption and crimes in the land as the 2019 elections draw near.

    At a press conference the United Aladura Churches (UAC) said leaders had turned the country to one of the most corrupt in the world despite many of the being either Christians or Muslims.

    UAC president, Superior Evangelist S. O. Banjo addressed reporters at the Celestial Church of Christ (CCC) headquarters in Makoko, Lagos to kick off the organisation’s 14thanniversary,

    “We at the UAC are worried at the rising crime rate, especially the odious and most unacceptable incidence of rape and abduction, particularly of minors. The government should take steps to review the laws to ensure punishment for offenders,” Banjo said.

    The UAC hailed the Federal Government for not legalising sodomy and lesbianism.

    “Neither of the two major religions encourages such a way of life, which the Almighty God denounces as an abomination, recommending severe penalties for offenders,” Banjo said.

    He noted that UAC, which comprised white garment churches, would not allow criminals in its fold.

    According to him, they would be exposed.

    “Incest needs to be given attention. The perpetrators should be punished. It is against our culture, religions and sense of human decency.

    “The essence of the United Aladura Churches is to bring sanity and discipline into the white garment churches, and to speak with one voice against evils in the society and in government. If one of our members commits an offence, we will not hesitate to expose such a person,” Banjo said.

    He said the UAC, which comprises Cherubim and Seraphim Church, Church of the Lord (Aladura), Celestial Church of Christ and Fellowship of Christ Ministries, has instituted checks to discipline erring members and ministers.

    The UAC president said the body’s unification process prompted the establishment of the United Aladura Church in the United Kingdom and United States of America.

    “We were admitted at the All Africa Conference of Churches in Nairobi, Kenya.”

    As part of the anniversary, Makoko residents benefited from a free medical service provided by the church.

    The programme ends tomorrow with a thanksgiving service at the CCC, Makoko.

     

  • Bayelsa warns youths against electoral violence, crimes 

    BAYELSA State yesterday warned youths against engaging in violence in the general elections.

    Commissioner for Information and Orientation Daniel  Iworiso-Markson told youths that no ambition of any politician was worth the blood of anybody.

    Iworiso-Markson, who spoke when the Special Assistant to Governor Seriake Dickson on Student Affairs, Atti Moses, led youths to his office in Yenagoa, appealed to them to desist from crimes.

    He praised them for appreciating Dickson’s efforts in empowering youths, and promised them of better days ahead.

    He said: “Let me thank you for this visit and express my enthusiasm in seeing youths like you being productively engaged. I want all of you to be the best that you can. Use your ideas and talents to rule your world.

    “Let me remind you that as youths, you represent the hope of Bayelsa. The governor believes in youths so much, and if you conduct yourself well, the governor will recognise and do more for you.

    “There is no short cut to success. Task yourselves and go for leadership training. The exposure you get will add up and build you to discharge your responsibility effectively”.

    Earlier, Moses, who presented the Bayelsa Youths Leadership Award for Excellence to the commissioner for his support and achievements in office, thanked Dickson for involving young ones in decision-making.

    Moses, who is a member of the Nigeria Youth Parliament, said Dickson exposed them to governance by building their capacity and enhancing their potential.

    He hailed the governor for the gesture and assured him of their support.

    The youth leader also hailed Iworiso-Markson for his strategic management of public information, which he said earned the state accolades, and his support for the development of youths in Bayelsa.

    He described the commissioner as a leading light and role model for youths.

     

  •  EFCC advocates media partnership to tackle crimes

     EFCC advocates media partnership to tackle crimes

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Port Harcourt zone, has advocated a media partnership to tackle financial crimes in private and public sectors, the Head of Operations, Nnaghe Obon Itam, has said.

    He spoke yesterday with reporters in Port Harcourt, Rivers State capital.

    Itam was the director of Internal Affairs, EFCC, Abuja. He took over from Ishaku Salihu as Port Harcourt head of Operations.

    Itam said:  ”We depend on your goodwill and not just your cooperation, the collaboration of the media in enlightening, educating and informing the populace about our activities. We want the media to partner us to tackle financial crimes.”

    He said with the synergy by the media, the commission would tackle corruption.

    “Until the cancer of corruption is dealt with, we may not realise the development we desire. If we don’t tackle corruption, we will not develop the economy.”

    Itam said the commission would fight corruption, which had ravaged the country.

    He decried bunkering and pipeline vandalism in Niger Delta, stressing that the commission is determined to reduce crimes in the region.

    Itam said: “When you have a corruption- laden government, the economy will also be corruption-laden.”

  • Speaker seeks divine help against crimes

    Speaker seeks divine help against crimes

    The  Speaker of Bayelsa State House of Assembly, Mr. Kombowei Benson, is seeking divine intervention to tackle kidnapping, militancy, killing, oil bunkering and other crimes in his constituency.

    The Nation learnt that Benson, who represents Southern Ijaw 4, was worried by these vices  and had hired clerics to heal his constituency.

    He was said to have contacted Rev. Uma Ukpai to lead other clerics to his local government for a three-day crusade to discourage people from crimes.

    Benson, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Aotendeike Boloigha, said the crusade was organised to improve his community.

    The Speaker, who addressed heads of clans, paramount rulers and chairmen of community development committees (CDC), said it was unacceptable for a community, hitherto known for peace and good neighbourliness, to assume a negative identity.

    He said: “Travelling to our once very peaceful environment is now done with the presence of heavily armed military men. Traditional and social functions are not left out.”

    The Chairman of Central Planning Committee and General Overseer, Doxa Family Church, Rev. T. Y. Emmanuel, said the programme was timely, adding that it is time for the people to come together.

    He urged every family to participate, saying the Bishop of Ogbia Diocese of Anglican Communion, Rt. Rev. James Aye-Oruwori is among those expected at the crusade.

    King Timi-Ododo, paramount ruler of Ikebiri I community, who spoke for the monarchs, described the Speaker as a leader who identifies with the people.

    Pastor Job Molo, the CDC chairman of Azuzuama community, on behalf of his counterparts from other communities, said they would mobilise people to the crusade.

  • Why hard drugs, crimes ravage Nigeria

    Why hard drugs, crimes ravage Nigeria

    Hard drugs and crime are twins menace ravaging the Nigerian society. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), in this news analysis, examines the menace and suggests ways out.

    In Nigeria today, the connection between drug and crime cannot be underestimated, going by the rate at which drugs are recovered from suspected criminals across the country.

    In fact, many curious observers have rightly concluded that the audacity with which most dangerous crimes are being committed nowadays cannot be divorced from the unrestricted access to and use of hard drugs and other psychotropic substances by the perpetrators. This is moreso a truism as security agents continues to make hauls of hard drugs at virtually every crime scene.

    And closely linked to this growing twins menace is their third leg of the troika – cultism – now prevalent in many neighbourhoods in the country.

    In 2017, over 600 suspects were arrested by the police for various drug-induced crimes ranging from armed robbery, kidnap and cultism in Lagos State alone. Similarly, Lagos State Commandant of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Sule Aliyu, said the agency recovers over 10 tons of drugs and prosecute more than 300 suspects in the state annually.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Edgal Imohimi, on Oct. 17, 2017 destroyed N50 million worth of drugs recovered during raids on hoodlums’ hideouts across the state.

    Imohimi had said at the various town hall meetings he held on assumption of office in Lagos last year that community leaders kept complaining about the twins menace of drug abuse and cultism in virtually all the neighbourhoods in the state.

    His words: “When people have access to drugs, it emboldens them to get involved in crimes. Cultism is also a problem where teenagers are involved in cult-related violence and narcotic substances are recovered from them which is enough to draw the attention of the police.

    “Children now take cough syrups to get high. What are we doing as parents and guardians. We should surprise our children once in a while and search their rooms to know if they are doing drugs.”

    Available police statistics show that 98 per cent of 200 suspected cultists arrested in Lagos State last year were youths between the age of 17 and 35 years. This goes to show that cultism has gone beyond campuses of tertiary institutions to junior schools and even neighbourhoods, as teenage school children and artisans in communities are initiated into various secret cult goups.

    National Coordinator of the Oodua Peoples’ Congress (OPC), Gani Adams, said it was unfortunate that cultists have shifted their base from the universities to neighbourhoods as artisans, such as vulcanisers, mechanics and others are now members of dreaded secret cults.

    According to Adams, young boys in their teens are being initiated into cults which is a very dangerous signal and threat to the security of life and property.

    “All these cultists are being recruited by prominent people in the society, especially politicians and leaders, who use them to perpetrate evil in the society.

    “In this vein, we must do something to stop this trend, because it is going out of proportion. The public transporters, including their unions and associations, have to be checkmated,” the OPC leader had said when he met Imohimi over the ugly trend.

    In a bid to check drug abuse on campus, NAN recalls that the University of Lagos had provided a drug test kit in its medical centre to examine students suspected to be on hard drugs.

    Former UNILAG Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Rahaman Bello, told a NAN forum in Lagos last November that the initiative was necessary because drug abuse was on the increase in the nation’s tertiary institutions.

    Bello said that about 100 students of the university tested positive to the use of hard drugs in 2016.

    “One hundred out of over 50,000 students may seem insignificant, but to us, one person on drug is a problem to the university community,” the former vice chancellor had said.

    A security expert, Mrs Tanwa Ashiru, CEO, says it is important to change society’s approach to fighting drug abuse and trafficking at community level before changing the narrative.

    Ashiru, Chief Executive of Bulwark Intelligence, saus Nigerians often celebrate bad things, stressing that there is need to engage with communities in fighting illegal use of drugs in the society.

    “We need to focus on changing the way communities view and respond to the troika of drug abuse, cultism and crime and government must lead the campaign by walking the talk as our little efforts can at least put Nigerians in the right frame of mind,” she said.

    It is therefore imperative for all to engage the country’s youths, representing over 50 percent and the most active part of the Nigeria’s over 180 million population on the dangers of drugs, cultism and crimes to themselves and the society at large.

  • AIG Zone 5 urges Police chiefs to reduce crimes

    The Assistant Inspector General of Police, Zone 5, Abubakar Adamu Mohammed, has directed commissioners of Police in Edo, Delta and Bayelsa states to adopt robust crime prevention strategies to reduce crimes.

    Abubakar said the strategies should be in line with democratic policing, community policing and partnership to ensure that crime and criminality are reduced in these last months of the year.

    A statement signed by Zone 5  spokesman, DSP Emeka Iheanacho, said the AIG gave the order as part of efforts to ensure a crime-free Eid-el-Kabir.

    The statement said the AIG also ordered the commissioners to tighten security in their commands, most especially churches, mosques, recreation centres, cinema halls, as well as radio and television stations.

    It quoted the AIG as saying that men of Striking and Tactical Squad, Safer Highway, Explosive Ordinance Division (EOD) and conventional patrol team be deployed to link roads, city centres and strategic locations in the three states.

  • Diary of crimes

    Diary of crimes

    • June 16, 2012: 53-year-old Mbarikatta Uboma kidnapped on arrival from Hungary. Demanded N10 million but settled for N2million after keeping the victim for three days.
    • August 3, 2012: Director, Ocean Glory Commodities, Apapa, Paul Cole, 34, from Ohafia in Abia State kidnapped at Festac Town together with the firm’s General Manager, Jude Ugoje and a worker, Piriye Gogo. Released on August 6 after paying N5 million ransom.

    August 19, 2012: A Lebanese, Mohammed Jamal, 22, kidnapped at Ajah. He was blindfolded and whisked away by three armed men. He was released after paying N7 million.

    September 19, 2012: Kingsley Nwokenta, 34, kidnapped at Mile 2 and released after paying N1.5 million ransom. Nwokenta’s black Toyota Venza and other accessories were taken.

    • October 10, 2012: Anthony Ozoanidobi, 41, kidnapped on Marwa Road, Satellite Town. He paid N1.5 million for his release.
    • August 20, 2012: Leo Abraham, 58, was kidnapped and release after paying N5 million.
    • January 21, 2016: Aspanda, Trade Fair businessman Cosmas Ojukwu, 45, kidnapped at Festac Town. Amount and manner of his release was not disclosed.
    • Chief James Uduji picked up close to his 7th Avenue, Festac Town residence. He was detained for six weeks and released after parting with $1 million.
    • Chief Raymond Okoye was kidnapped in 2015 and was detained for two months until his relatives raised $1 million.
    • Uche Okoroafor, trader was abducted in 2015 and held captive for three months until his family paid $1 million.
    • Another businessman, Elias Ukachukwu, kidnapped in November 2015 and forced to pay $1 million but denied freedom. His abductors for another $1 million on grounds that the victim’s relatives were rude to them. Ukachukwu stayed in their den for several months and it is unclear how and when he regained freedom.
    • Francis Umeh, an Aspanda auto parts dealer kidnapped in July 2016 at Raji Rasaki Estate, Ago Palace Way, Okota. He spent two months and paid an undisclosed amount of dollars as ransom.
    • Evans and his gang members met their waterloo with the kidnap of billionaire pharmacist Innocent Duru, who they wanted to kill after collecting ransom. The victim, who was in their den at 21, Prophet Asaye Close, New Igando in Lagos for over five months, eventually escaped and gave useful information to the police, which led to the busting of the gang.

    • Compiled by Precious Igbonwelundu
  • More women arrested for drug-related crimes

    More women arrested for drug-related crimes

    The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has revealed that 11 percent of global opiate users live in Africa, with more than half from  West and central Africa.
    The body revealed this on Thursday while launching 2016 annual report of the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) report and precursors report in Lagos.
    The INCB report has it that the number of women arrested for drug-related crimes has increased significantly.
    The Project Officer, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Ms Harsheth Virk said the reason for the development  is because once imprisoned, drug use is more prevalent among female prisoners than male prisoners.
    “There is a strong link between sex work and drug use. Some women turn to sex work as a means to support a drug dependent lifestyle,  while sex workers may use drugs to cope with the demands and nature of their work.
    Giving further insight into the report, Ms Virk said there is an increased involvement of African nationals reported in drug trafficking incidents worldwide, adding that  “West Africa has been increasingly affected by criminal operations that involve not only trafficking of cocaine from South America to Europe but also distribution for local abuse and illicit manufacture of synthetic drugs destined mainly for markets in Asia.”
    “According to the UNODC 11 percent of global opiate users live in Africa and more than half of these live in West Africa and Central Africa. Opiates originating from Afghanistan are increasingly being trafficked to East and West Africa, either for local consumption or onward shipment.
    NAFDAC Acting Director general (GD), Mrs Yetunde Oni represented by the Director Narcotic and Controlled Substance Directorate, Dr Umar Musa said the agency is trying its best in ensuring the availability of controlled substances for medical and scientific purposes, while also preventing their diversion.
    “This is achieved routinely through the issuance of the necessary papers. The Agency has carried out a number of education and awareness campaigns to discourage initial use and strengthen resistance against drug abuse. We have also published a Drug Abuse Handbook to adequately inform the public about the dangers of drug misuse and abuse,” said Mrs Oni.