Tag: crimes

  • ‘How church can fight crimes’

    ‘How church can fight crimes’

    The desperation for quick wealth can be checked even without much ado by the police and other law-enforcement agencies, a cleric said yesterday.

    The Bishop, Diocese of Lagos Mainland, the Rt. Rev Isaac Ayo Olawuyi, said if religious organisations de-emphasised prosperity preaching, which, he said, breeds morbid materialism, and harp on salvation, people would learn to wait on God.

    He condemned the rising spate of various crimes across the country, especially armed robbery, kidnapping ritual killing, assassination, looting of public treasury, corruption, prostitution and exploitation/oppression of the poor.

    Maintaining that the police would have less jobs in their hands if people turn to God and cease struggling for the vanities of life, the frontline cleric added: “Open any newspaper today, watch the television, listen to the radio or get to any gathering, what you hear are scary news of one crime or the other to the extent that the capacity of our security agencies has been over-stretched. This is where the church needs to play its role.”

    “Our bible teaches us that if we seek first the Kingdom of God, he would add to it, all the good things of life that we now daily crave. This is where some sections of our religious organisations are getting things wrong. Rather than emphasise the ultimate salvation of people’s souls after their earthly sojourn, all we hear now are sermons about how to drive posh cars, pay heavy tithes and build mansions all over the place.

    “It is time we woke up from our pathetic illusion to realise that life is not only ephemeral but vain without Christ. Therefore, our brethrens must be made to realise that in order to live a Christ-like life and ultimately secure a place in heaven, they must eschew the habit of get-rich-quick-at-all-costs,” Rev Olawuyi admonished.

    He urged the rich and the highly-placed at all levels and strata in the society to spare a thought for the less-privileged, whom he said, constitute the majority of the nation’s populace.

    “How righteous are you in your relationship with God? How fair are you to your fellowmen? How do you treat your maids and servants? Do you think about your next destination after this life? Does your heart harbour hatred and malice? Do you cheat? These are among the questions we must address to puncture the worsening tension in the land,” Rev Olawuyi said.

    The government at all levels, he however advised, must stop treating the welfare of the masses and the unemployed with levity because according to him, when a person is deprived and hungry, he is naturally predisposed to crimes in order to eke out a living.

  • Navy: foreigners behind most crimes on Nigerian waters

    Navy: foreigners behind most crimes on Nigerian waters

    •European naval vessel impounded

    The Navy has said piracy, oil theft and other sea crimes committed in the nation’s maritime domain are mostly perpetuated by foreigners.

    The Flag Officer Commanding (FOC), Western Naval Command (WNC), Rear Admiral Sanmi Alade, spoke yesterday on the involvement of foreigners in high seas crimes at the command’s headquarters in Lagos when he hosted crew members of a visiting British ship, HMS Iron Duke.

    Alade, who said the navy was poised to take full control of the nation’s waterways by ridding them of private security and criminals, added that the waterways should not be a private affair.

    He said: “Given the occurrences on our waters, the navy is now set to take complete ownership. A lot of people and nations have interest in our waters for obvious reasons. With the decline in piracy in the Gulf of Eden, it would not be wrong to say that most of the elements have left that area and found their way in the Gulf of Guinea, including our waters.

    “Some foreigners have been arrested in our waters for perpetrating illegalities. Most criminality in our waters is carried out by foreigners and not Nigerians.

    “The era when the navy had challenges of platforms will soon be over because we will take delivery of some ships before the end of the year and command our waterways. We will take full command once again and there will be no need for private security here and there because our water is not private.

    “We have some private security companies registered with the Nigerian Navy. They have a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with us, like Ocean Marine Company. We allow them to operate with their vessels. But normally, we attach our personnel to such vessels.”

    On the allegation that multi-national oil companies steal crude in Nigeria’s maritime area, Alade said oil theft was not being treated with kid gloves.

    According to him, anyone arrested is appropriately dealt with.

    Alade said: “Piracy and illegality on the seas are not beyond us. The responsibility of ensuring the security of the Nigerian maritime domain is that of the Nigerian Navy. We are poised to take total control of the Nigerian waters and rid it of any form of illegalities.”

    The Commanding Officer, HMS Iron Duke, Commander Tom Tredery said the ship came to Nigeria to work and train with the Nigerian Navy.

    He said: “We are looking forward to training and exercising together. The role of the navy is to work together and ensure that that freedom and safety are in place. Our range of training includes navigation, engineering, damage control and fire fighting, boarding party and security operations…”

  • Securities regulators move to check cross-border crimes

    Securities regulators move to check cross-border crimes

    he International Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), the umbrella body for capital market regulators, has strengthened its information-sharing and cooperation framework to curb cross-border financial services misconduct that can weaken global markets and undermine investor confidence.

    IOSCO has adopted measures to encourage non-signatory members to sign the IOSCO Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding on cooperation and exchange of information, which was established in 2002, to fight the cross-border financial misdemeanours and encourage cooperation across jurisdictions.

    IOSCO approved a resolution that calls for gradually restricting opportunities of non-signatory members to influence key IOSCO decisions due to the limited support they can provide to IOSCO´s enforcement efforts, noting that as long as jurisdictions remain outside the international enforcement regime of the MMoU, they offer potential safe havens for wrong doers and create gaps in IOSCO´s global enforcement network.

    According to the resolutions, all outstanding non-signatory members will be restricted from nominating candidates from their organisation for election or appointment to leadership positions as from September 30, this year.

    Also, as from March 31, 2014, all outstanding non-signatory members in leadership positions will be asked to step down while the participation of non-signatory members in IOSCO Policy Committees will be suspended as from June 30 2014.

    The voting rights of all remaining non-signatory members will be suspended as from September 30, 2014.

    Additionally, the resolution suggests that members take precautions when exercising their authorisation or supervisory and enforcement responsibilities in respect of entities or individuals linked to non-signatory jurisdictions.

    Some IOSCO members already have measures to that effect in place. The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission, for example, expects an overseas company seeking a listing on the local exchange to be incorporated in a jurisdiction where arrangements are in place to ensure reasonable regulatory cooperation. India requires foreign investors in Indian mutual funds and equity shares to fulfill criteria, including being “resident in a country that is a signatory to IOSCO´s MMoU or a signatory of a bilateral MoU with” the Securities and Exchange Board of India.

    The resolution may lead members to think carefully before deciding to cooperate with non MMoU signatories and to consider whether to request additional assurances or conditions before assisting non-signatories or providing information.

    IOSCO had in February published a list of members who had not yet signed the MMoU. IOSCO also pledged to provide a comprehensive program of technical assistance and political support to non-signatory members who required it.

    The MMoU provides a vehicle through which securities regulators share with each other essential investigative material, such as beneficial ownership information, and securities and derivatives transaction records, including bank and brokerage records. It sets out specific requirements for the exchange of information, ensuring that no domestic banking secrecy, blocking laws or regulations prevent the provision of enforcement information among securities regulators.

    IOSCO stated that the resolution would encourage national governments and parliaments to adopt the measures that support securities commissions in their efforts to comply with the MMoU. Twenty-eight members still need to sign the MMoU, and the list of members who have formally expressed their commitment to seek the legislative and administrative changes necessary for achieving the MMoU compliance is 23.

    The Institut Nacional Andorrà de Finances [1] (INAF) and the State Securities Commission of Vietnam (SSC),had last week formally signed the MMoU, bringing the number of signatories to 97 out of a total of 125 eligible IOSCO members.

    Nigeria is a member of the board of IOSCO. The board is the governing and standard-setting body of IOSCO and is made up of 32 securities regulators. Other members included securities regulatory authorities of Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Chile, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Italy, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands, Ontario, Pakistan, Portugal, Quebec, Romania, Singapore, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, Trinidad and Tobago, United Kingdom and the United States.

     

  • How Nigeria can use DNA testing to curb crimes,by experts

    How Nigeria can use DNA testing to curb crimes,by experts

    INSPECTOR Charles Odigwe and Corporal Felix Egbosun were policemen attached to Ogidi Divisional Police Station in Anambra State.

    The two officers were dismissed from the Police Force in September 2010 for torturing 45-year-old Osita Okafor to death in a police cell.

    Okafor was away when his neighbour, Hyacinth Agbo, was arrested by some policemen for an alleged armed robbery offence.

    The policemen confiscated some property of Okafor, alleging that he was fingered in the robbery incident.

    When Okafor returned, he later went to the police station with his friend to reclaim his property but both of them were detained.

    Okafor later died from injuries inflicted on him by the two police officers in their attempt to extract information from him about the robbery.

    Observers maintain that stories like that of Okafor are commonplace in the country, as torture has somewhat become an acceptable means of extracting information from suspects.

    However, experts in cell biology and genetics insist that this should not be so since there are innovative methods of extracting information from suspects.

    The experts, at a recent DNA (deoxyribonucleic) forensics colloquium entitled “From Crime Scene to Courtroom: The DNA Evidence”, held at the University of Lagos, underscored the usefulness of DNA analysis in efforts to track down criminals.

    Prof. Bode Gbenle, who spoke on “DNA Fingerprinting in Forensic Science” noted that that DNA fingerprinting in forensic science, which started in the 19th Century in a laborious manual style, had now been made easier via the use of computers.

    “The advent of computers in the 1970s has made fingerprinting much easier, as the electronic process takes less time and produces more accurate matches.

    “The production of patterns of DNA bands that are unique to individuals make them useful in forensic examinations,” he said.

    Gbenle added: “What differentiates the chemical structure of everyone’s DNA from another is the order of the base pairs contained therein.”

    The professor stressed that it was the difference in the sequence of millions of base pairs in each person’s DNA that was unique, adding that it could also be used to distinguish one individual from another.

    “Scientists use a small number of sequences of DNA that are known to be different among individuals in a very clear manner; they analyse them to get a certain probability of a match,” he said.

    Prof. Oluseso Omidiji, who delivered a lecture on “DNA: The Molecule of Life”, said the human DNA was one part of the human life that remained for a long time.

    Omidiji, who is from the Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, University of Lagos, said contemporary crime detection procedures involved using some elements in human life, like the DNA.

    He underscored the need for such activities due to the fact that only living things could commit crimes.

    Omidiji said the DNA samples could be used in tracing criminals because they constituted an element in human life left at crime scenes.

    He said research had shown that the DNA contained materials that were very reliable in determining their sources of origin; adding, therefore, that the use of DNA analysis in crime investigations could exonerate or confirm the complicity of a suspect.

    Dr Mathias Okoye, the Director of Nebraska Forensic Medical Services in the U.S., stressed that Nigeria should not be left behind in the global efforts to acquire the DNA analysis technology.

    He noted that some smaller African countries had acquired the technology.

    “Laboratory procedures are very important in finding criminals because its results are usually more accurate. However, before you can use the technology effectively, you must have trained hands and relevant equipment to do quality forensic examination. To conduct quality forensic analysis, you need well-trained biochemists, who have expertise in protein biochemistry,” he said.

    Okoye, who is a medical doctor and forensic pathologist, warned that those who were not competent enough in carrying out DNA analysis should not be pushed into it so as to avoid any temptation to “cook up results”.

    He noted that before examining crime scenes for samples, investigators should first get preliminary information from callers and persons around the crime scene.

    Okoye, nonetheless, stressed that the investigators should be methodical in their documentation, adding that they should “examine blood stain patterns at the crime scene”.

    He emphasised that proper documentation would help the investigators to reconstruct the scene “in order to verify or contradict an alibi or testimony”.

    Okoye advised that before scaling up the practice of DNA analysis, the country should enact a “DNA Evidence and Allied Matters” legislation to take care of certain issues regarding human rights and standards which might crop up.

    The Vice-Chancellor of University of Lagos, Prof. Rahaman Bello, underscored the need for the establishment of a forensic institute in the university to train more experts in forensic biology.

    He also stressed the need to advance the knowledge of security agencies in forensic technology in order to boost crime detection in the country.

    The Executive Director, Inquaba Biotec of South Africa, Mr Oliver Preisig, said his company’s interest in co-sponsoring the colloquium was hinged on the need to expand knowledge of Nigerians in DNA analysis as this could help the country in crimes’ detection.

    All the same, stakeholders agree that Nigeria should commence extensive use of DNA analysis in its crime investigation efforts.

    They, however, stress the need for a proper legislation to take care of possible abuses.

  • Okada accounts for 25%  of crimes in Lagos

    Okada accounts for 25% of crimes in Lagos

    About 25 per cent of crimes committed in State were aided by commercial motorcycle operators otherwise called okada riders.

    The Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Ade Ipaiye, stated this in Lagos at a stakeholders’ forum on the new traffic law organised for local government officials.

    Represented by Mr Olanrewaju Akinsola, Ipaiye said the figure was the outcome of a recent research conducted by the Ministry of Health.

    He said no responsible government would continue to watch the rising spate of robbery and havoc being caused by the reckless okada operators.

    Ipaiye said the state government was concerned about the situation, hence the enactment of the traffic law.

    According to him, this is meant to regulate the commercial motorcycle business and also to sanitise the public transportation system in the state.

    He noted that the traffic law was not entirely new, recalling that it was first enacted in 1949 to serve only about 300, 000 people.

    Ipaiye said the state’s population currently stands at 18 million.

    The commissioner stressed that the old traffic law, having been amended six times, needed to be fine-tuned in line with the current situation.

    “When a law has been amended several times, there are bound to be issues of ambiguity,” he said.

    Beside security, he said the new law would also address specifically the issues of standard, safety and sanity.

    He also spoke on the use of motorcycles by courier service companies and other dispatch riders adding only only approved motorbikes, with 200cc engines, would be allowed, just as he added that the riders must use the right number plate, attach the mail cabin and carry no passengers.

    “You will also apply to the commissioner for a permit,” he said.

    The commissioner explained that the 200cc engine was approved based on the recommendation of experts that it is the minimum engine capacity for commuting.

    Although he said that the state government did not outlaw the operation of commercial motorcycles, he warned that the business must be done in accordance with the law.

    Ipaiye also said that no branding of commercial vehicles operating in the state would be allowed outside the approved state colour.

    Rearing of animals on the road, hawking in traffic, begging and washing of vehicles is now forbidden, he said.

    Selling of alcoholic drinks and herbal concortion would no longer be allowed within 100 metres of any bus stops and motor parks, the commissioner said.