Tag: criminality

  • Punish perpetrators of criminality, Baptist tells govt

    Punish perpetrators of criminality, Baptist tells govt

    Baptist World Alliance (BWA) has attributed the wide spate of insecurity in Nigeria and in parts of the world to corruption and inability of government in punishing perpetrators of crime and criminality.

    The General Secretary of BWA, Rev Dr Elijah Brown said this at a press conference organised as part of the Annual Gathering of BWA held at EKO Hotel, Lagos. The programme which started July 6 will end – 12th July. 

    The theme of the programme,  ‘To live as Ambassadors of Peace,’ and will bring together leaders, educators, public office holders, and leadership experts from across the world.

    Read Also: Blackout in southeast as national grid collapses again

    It will feature training, discussions, paper presentations, and plenary sessions. Three areas will be explored which are: Poverty and hunger, peace and justice amid violent conflict, and religious freedom for all.

    Brown said that the rule of law is the foundation of societies that will flourish and prosper, welcoming and ensuring that every citizen of the country has access to livelihood, has access to equal rights, and that those who engage in acts of injustice and violence are held accountable.

  • Criminality, insecurity and judicial quandry

    We are in a maze of path mired in criminality, insecurity and political brigandage.  Corruption is at the root of criminality and other national malaise which we have been grappling with and unable to tackle.  Some President once upon a time tried to define corruption and stealing but left the word more confused.  In spite of what appears to be a quaint understanding of our developmental problems, we have not been able to deplore the right tools and political will to arrest the situation.  The nest of corruption is at the heart of the bureaucracy of different levels of government.   Government officials swim in the cesspool of corruption, stealing monies meant for providing infrastructure and other developmental programmes for the wellbeing of the people.  The government is not able to deal decisively with the felons because of weak institution and politicking.

    How can an anti-graft agency of government tell the world that they recovered sacks containing huge sums of money at an international airport and are not able to apprehend the person behind it? Not even with the aid of security cameras in the vicinity of the airport.  Strange things indeed happen in this country!  There have been other hauls since that time and it increases in its mind-boggling harvest each time.   The latest is the $43 Million (United States Dollars) found in a high brow apartment building in Ikoyi Lagos.  The government appears complicit unveiling the identity of the owner.  If indeed it was an agency of government that owes the money, it speaks volume of the ways and manners we run government.  In the first place, machinery would have been put in place to secure the building and give notice to any other government agencies of their presence.  Secondly, it would beat any sound security thinking to keep such money for government agency in a private apartment building; this sounds too good to be believed.

    There is armed banditry in our neighbourhoods and on the highways because the rich and powerful have denied the ordinary citizens the opportunity of living by stealing monies meant to provide basic infrastructures.  There is kidnapping and militancy across the country because the poor have since discovered that it is only the force of arms and violence that will bring our leaders to their senses that those on the fringe of society have the right to live.

    It is not in doubt that President Buhari has a resolute commitment to the fight against graft in the country especially those in government.  The major problem is that he does not seem to have people around him committed to the same course; so, he is a lone ranger.   It is a vain wish for the people to expect the federal government and its officials to engage in a true war against corruption.  The reason is that those behind the graft are the same government officials and their minions who control institutions and agencies of government fighting the war.

    We have no reason to be borrowing money from London or Paris Clubs or the World Bank. The loots that our leaders have frittered away properly harnessed would be enough to make our country one of the richest in the world. We should ask the right questions and drop the divisive sectarian consideration of ethnicity and religion.  Look at the political leaders; they are Muslims and Christians, northerners and southerners alike in the same parties.

    While our leaders compete to outdo one another in stealing public fund, other countries have since left us, carving out territories in Space, including those that had the misfortune of the same historical and colonial experience as Nigeria. The return of crime is so huge in Nigeria that it has become a thriving enterprise; stealing in government offices, armed robbery, kidnapping just name it.  Everybody is involved, including the security agencies.

    Insecurity did not begin and will not end with the defeat of the Boko Haram insurgents.  The arteries of insecurity have spread to all nooks and crannies of the country.  Insecurity manifest all around us as we travel the roads around the country where you see street urchins and bandits mounting road blocks and harassing road users and extorting money from them while the security agents look the other way.

    Who is to be blamed?  As saying goes, the fish begins to rotten from the head.  The government has failed to play its part in tackling issues of criminality, corruption and insecurity.  What people in government have done and continue to do is to equate their personal safety and security to the security of the citizens and the entire state.  That is why almost the entire personnel of the Nigeria Police Force have been turned into personal guards and security details to government officials and their minions leaving the whole country at the mercy of the criminal gangs.

    For those who are regular commuters on road Abuja – Kaduna, the import of this will make some impressions on you.  As soon as the Abuja Airport was shut down for the so-called repair of the tarmac, the Abuja road that was a death trap and nightmare to travellers was quickly fixed and with armed security at every other kilometre.  This is complemented by Police and the Nigerian Air Force aerial patrols and surveillance.  As if that was not enough the government took it upon itself to charter vehicles for commuters between Abuja Airport and Kaduna Airports with tax payers’ money.  These are people who can and are ordinarily able to pay because they have the wherewithal.

    When ordinary citizens die daily on that road due to lack of maintenance and blind sports created by robbers and kidnappers, it mattered not to the government.    The same government cannot provide and sustain mass transit for the citizens at a subsidized rate.  This is the same government that would not allow ordinary citizen to enjoy fuel or kerosene subsidy.

    Do we blame the people?  The people have failed to take the government to task. The Civil Society and Non Government Organisations including organized labour are not serving any useful purpose of ensuring good governance and accountability.  They allowed themselves for pecuniary consideration to be used to protect the interest of appointees of government and contractors holding the short end of the stick having fallen out of favour with the government of the day.

    The Nigerian judiciary has been the weeping child over the failure and inability to rein in the criminals on the streets, the thieving government officials and their minimal pairs in the National Assembly.  The lawyers and judges do not see themselves as any different from the maddening crowd.  The philosophical and intellectual bearing associated the Nigerian judiciary of the past has atrophied as merchants and traders have taken over as lawyers and judges.   The people cannot go to sleep and expect miracle, we have to occupy Nigeria as the civilized world is doing and put our demand for a true change and purposeful leadership.

     

    • Kebonkwu Esq is an Abuja-based attorney.
  • I’ll end criminality in Mushin, says aspirant

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) chairmanship aspirant for Mushin Local Government Area in the forthcoming local government election in Lagos State, Omoshola Omojuwa has promised to end all forms of criminality in the area if elected. He said the inattention given to issues relating to youths’ development by past leaders impelled some of the youth in the council to take to violent activities.

    Omojuwa added that he had already commenced discussions with experts on how to engage the youth in productive ventures, noting that every ward would benefit from the scheme.

    He said: “I am vying for the chairmanship of the council in order to make a serious statement. I am learning from the exemplary leadership qualities of our former state governors and the present one. Many of us did not give former Governor Babatunde Fashola the chance but he surpassed our imaginations.

    “That is a statement that too many things are still possible. That is the mind that I am bringing to Mushin. We have to change a lot of things, we have to change our thinking; we have to correct the negative impression people have about Mushin. We have to inject certain things into Mushin. We have to get our primary health care working; we have to ensure that schools under our control are functioning.”

    The aspirant stressed that no fewer than 13 APC aspirants were contesting in the polls, noting that he had the experience and laudable programmes to win the election.

    “This is not my first time of contesting; I have contributed so much to the system politically and community wise. I will say I am known to my people.

    “Many of the leaders are aware of my antecedents. The leaders have one or two things to say about me, so I believe I am more popular.

    “Apart from the primary health care and primary education, I am introducing what is called crime prevention mechanism in Mushin. Through my background as a security expert and in view of my belief in peaceful atmosphere where people can come into Mushin without being molested or harassed, I have this programme of training at least 10 youths from each ward on crime prevention.

    “They will join hands with what we call neighbourhood watch to prevent crime in Mushin. They are going to work for us. They are going to work like undercover, where their identity will not be disclosed. They will be trained and issued certificate and their value will be explored. I assure you that the project will be financed by those I had already contacted and are ready to support it in order to make the place safe,” the aspirant said.

    Omojuwa said it was time politicians looked beyond allocation from the Federal Government, noting that corporate organisations in Mushin council would be encouraged to support his administration.

    “I am not going to tax the people; we are mobilising some people who are ready to support us in terms of corporate contributions to the development of Mushin. I will properly approach our indigenous companies, those who are ready to sponsor security development in Mushin to do so. We have so many who are ready to donate generously into the crime prevention fund which I am not going to be part of the signatories.

  • ‘Criminality has no religious coloration’

    ‘Criminality has no religious coloration’

    An Islamic organisation, Al-Mu’minaat, has called on world leaders and Nigeria to stop giving religious and ethnic coloration to crimes.
    Such sentiment, it said, portends danger to humanity.
    At a briefing at its Jibowu, Lagos National Headquarters, to mark the World Hijab Day (WHD), yesterday its President, Hajia Nimatullah Abdullateef-Abdulquadir while responding to United States (US) President Donald Trump’s Executive Order banning citizens of six Muslim countries from entering US, said the order was out of order.
    President Trump’s order, she said, was tantamount to racism and religious intolerance, adding that no religion preaches violence.
    She enjoined Trump to yield the calls of other world leaders including his immediate predecessor Barack Obama and British Prime Minister Theresa May to withdraw the order.
    Hajia Abdullateef-Abdulquadir condemned the harassment of hijab-wearing Muslim women, saying “the challenges faced by Muslim women in the country as a result of their desire to wear the hijab continue to leave a bitter taste in our mouth, especially when juxtaposed with the unlimited freedom enjoyed by other women who choose to dress in any manner of their liking including sometimes in semi-clad attires.
    “Just as any lady is free to exercise her right by dressing the way she likes, a Muslim lady who has chosen to obey Allah in her mode of dressing must be allowed to exercise her right. However, Muslim women are daily subjected to intimidation, discrimination and harassment for wearing the hijab.
    “Even in a case of court granted support for the constitutionally guaranteed right to school pupils to wear the hijab as is the case in Lagos State, the right of the Muslim woman to wear hijab is only respected in the breach.”
    She named the Federal Road Safety Corp (FRSC), Nigerian Immigration Services, and the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) among organisations denying Muslim women their fundamental right.
    “These organisations always insist on Muslim sisters removing their hijab before their photo is captured for drivers’ license, international passport and National Identity card. Some banks also insist on the hijab being removed before Muslim women could do biometric verification. In many places of work, including ministries and parastatals, the harassment of Muslims women wearing Hijab goes on unabated,” she said.
    Hajia Abdullateef-Abdulquadir called on the government to check the excesses of officials that are perpetrating “this act of oppression and injustice against Muslim women. We also call on both national and state assemblies to enact appropriate legislations that will guarantee the right of Muslim women to dress according to their religious belief.
    “To mark the WHD, we invite all Muslim women in the country to adorn the hijab and exercise their right freely. Non-Muslims are also invited to experience Hijab for one day as it is done in other parts of the World to foster understanding among the different religions in the country.”

  • Community policing will help in reducing crime – Ambode

    Community policing will help in reducing crime – Ambode

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode on Wednesday said that the fight against crime and all forms of criminality would be better enhanced if efforts are geared towards embracing community policing to complement the police and other law enforcement agencies.

    Governor Ambode, who stated this at the swearing-in ceremony of the Chairman and members of the Board of the State’s Neighbourhood Safety Corp Agency, said community policing was needed to assist law enforcement agencies which, according to him, are already over stretched judging by the enormous task of securing the country.

    Speaking at the ceremony held at Lagos House in Ikeja, Governor Ambode said right from the onset, the major thrust of his administration has always been the security of lives and properties of Lagosians, adding that the Neighborhood Agency, which was an initiative aimed at safe guarding the communities through community policing, was another testimony of the commitment of the State Government to the safety of lives and properties and a demonstration of a promise kept to all citizens.

    The Governor recalled the provision of security at the State level with the massive provision of equipment such as patrol vehicles, motor bikes, boats and helicopter on several occasions to police and other security agencies, saying that such had aided law enforcement outfits in the State in effectively discharging their duties.

    “You will agree with me that the Police and indeed all other security forces within the State and even the country at large are quite stretched, and some form of “community” or “local policing” is required to boost and support the great job the Nigeria Police is presently doing.

    “The creation of this Agency marks another step towards ensuring the protection of lives and properties at the grass root level. Corp members recruited by the Agency are meant to interact with the people at the communities. It is expected that with the visible presence of the Corp members within a particular community, the likelihood of crime will be drastically reduced,” the Governor said.

    He added that the Agency, which replaced the Neighbourhood Watch, has the responsibility of assisting the Police, and its mode of operation will essentially be in intelligence gathering, protection of lives and properties, maintaining law and Order amongst others.

    The Governor also said the Agency has been empowered pursuant to its enabling law, to recruit eligible persons as Corp members in all Local Government Areas of the State.

    He, however, emphasized that the Agency was not meant to compete, but to complement the efforts of the Police Force, adding that the State Government, through the Board, would develop clear policies and strategies for the implementation of the law.

    While reiterating the determination of his administration to commit resources to ensure success of the objectives of the Agency, the Governor said its realization would make Lagos a place where residents and all intending foreign and local investors can do business in safety and comfort.

    He also charged members of the newly inaugurated board to consider their appointments as call to duty, adding that the task making Lagos great and taking it to greater heights was that of all.

    Besides, the Governor commended the foresight, efforts and industry of the Speaker and members of the Lagos State House of Assembly for initiating the bill that culminated in the enactment of the Lagos State Neighborhood Safety Agency Law 2016, saying their intellectualism in sponsoring the bill and the proactiveness in considering the passage of the law was admirable.

    Members of the Board are Mr. Israel Ajao (Chairman), Alhaji Tajudeen Quadri, SP Yinka Egbeyemi, Mr. Razaq Balogun, Chief Tunde Aboyade, Mr. Ishola Laguda, Mrs Kofoworola Adegboye, Mr. Dengel Anifowoshe, Mrs. Ronke Ogabi, CSP Suleiman Lewi, Mr. O. Eziana and Mr Adegboyega Bajulaiye who will serve as Executive Secretary.

    Responding, Ajao who was a former Commissioner of Police in Lagos and Ogun States and DIG in charge of Criminal Investigation, said he had no doubt as to the passion and commitment of Governor Ambode to safety and security, adding that members of the Agency would hit the ground running towards the set objectives.

    He said considering the complexities of Lagos being home to Nigerians and foreigners from all works of life, the Agency would contribute its quota towards realization of the objectives of making Lagos a safe place for residents and investors.

    The event was graced by the State’s Deputy Governor, Dr. Mrs Idiat OIuranti Adebule; Deputy Speaker of Lagos State House of Assembly, Wasiu Sanni Eshilokun and other principal officers of the House; members of the State Executive Council, party chieftains, among others.

  • The criminality of budget padding

    Last week, Honourable Yakubu Dogara, the Speaker of the House of Representatives arrogantly maintained that he would not subject himself to the investigation being conducted by both the Nigeria Police Force and the Economic and Financial Commission. As far as he is concerned, he enjoys immunity under the provisions of the Legislative Houses Powers and Privileges Act. The embattled Speaker also claimed that the padding of the 2016 is not a criminal offence. Honourable Dogara’s confidence is likely to have been anchored on the statement credited to the Presidency that the budget was not padded in any material particular.

    Before then, the All Progressive Congress had decided to follow the discredited path of the Peoples Democratic Party by treating the serious allegation of monumental corruption  as a “family affair’’ of the ruling party. But unlike the PDP, the party failed to act timeously. In other words, a cover up is no longer possible at this stage as the cat has been let out of the bag.  For now, Honourable Dogara has no choice but to defend the criminal allegations. Contrary to his misleading contention, the Legislative Houses Powers and Privileges Act has not conferred immunity on him with respect to allegations of criminal offences. Since the immunity conferred by the Act is limited to contributions to debates by members of the National Assembly the Speaker cannot ward off the invitation of the Police and the EFCC to react to the criminal allegations levelled against him by Honourable Abdulmumin Jibrin.

    The Speaker  ensured that Honourable Jibrin was removed as the chairman of the Appropriation Committee of the House when it was confirmed by the House that he had allocated projects worth N4 billion to his constituency. The House kicked against Jibrin on the ground that the remaining 359 members have been left to share the remaining N36 billion out of N40 billion. While not denying the allegation, Honourable Jibrin disclosed that the Speaker and some principal officers had unilaterally inserted 2,000 items, otherwise called constituency budgets in the budget. He also accused the Speaker of corrupt enrichment through the acquisition of farms and other properties. Although the Speaker has failed to deny the serious allegations, he has threatened to sue Honourable Jibrin for defaming him.

    It would be recalled that the initial budget was withdrawn by President Buhari when the National Assembly members accused some top civil servants of padding the 2016 budget. It was so scandalous that the federal government undertook to sanction the public officers who had altered the budget. At that juncture, the President promptly removed the illegal insertions and resent the corrected budget to both chambers of the parliament. Thereafter, the budget was debated and passed and sent to the President for his assent.  It was signed into law by President Buhari when he believed that it had been properly passed by the members of the National Assembly.

    But it has now emerged that about 20 legislators in both chambers of the National Assembly altered the budget by inserting constituency projects worth N100 billion in the Appropriation Bill. Both the Senate and the House allocated to themselves N60 billion and N4o billion respectively. If it is established that the alterations were effected after the passing of the budget by both houses, the issue at hand goes beyond padding. A clear case of conspiracy, fraud, forgery and corruption can be established against the suspects.

    Padding takes place when legislators resolve to rewrite the budget by introducing new items outside the estimates prepared and presented to them by the President. The controversy over the padding of budget was laid to rest with the enactment of the Fiscal Responsibility Act, 2007 which has imposed a duty on the finance minister to source input from certain institutions including the National Assembly during the course of preparing the budget. That is when negotiations and horse trading with the executive by the legislators is allowed.  But neither the Constitution nor the Fiscal Responsibility Act has empowered the National Assembly members to rewrite the national budget by including constituency projects whose costs are arbitrarily fixed by the legislators.

    Under section 81 of the Constitution, the President is given the exclusive power to cause the budget to be prepared.  Upon the preparation of the budget by the executive, it shall be laid or presented to the National Assembly by the President. In debating the Appropriation Bill, the legislators may reduce the estimates if there are errors or inflation of the cost of items or if certain items provided for has been purchased before or for any other genuine reasons. But the National Assembly cannot increase the budget in any manner whatsoever.  So the unilateral introduction of constituency projects is totally illegal and unconstitutional.

    By introducing new items, the National Assembly has usurped the powers of the President to prepare the budget. In other words, the legislators would have prepared the budget and laid it before themselves and then passed it.  That is a negation of the doctrine of separation of powers. The appropriation bill or amended appropriation bill is not like other bills. Whereas other bills shall emanate from either of the two houses, money bills shall emanate from the President. So a money bill is a special bill which cannot be subjected to additions by the National Assembly because it has no power to prepare it.

    Padding is an unconstitutional infraction when the estimates are increased on the floor of the House. The infraction becomes criminal when the Appropriation Bill is altered by a few legislators after it had been passed by both houses of the National Assembly. In the instant case, Honourable Jibrin is alleged to have altered the budget by inserting projects worth N4 billion while a handful of other legislators led by the Speaker are alleged to have included 2,000 items in the budget. Since the President was then misled to sign it as the Appropriation Bill properly passed by both houses, the principal officers of the National Assembly cannot turn round to seek protection under the Legislative Houses Powers and Privileges Act.

    It is unfortunate that Honourable Dogara has never heard of the word “padding” before now. It is not new in our legislative history.  While the 2005 Appropriation Bill was under consideration in the Senate, some senators including the Senate President padded the budget of a ministry after allegedly collecting N55 million bribe from a minister. The scandal led to the removal of the Senate President who was later charged with his indicted colleagues and the minister. The Supreme Court has recently ordered that the suspects be tried for corruption having thrown out the preliminary objections filed against the charges by them at the trial court.

    If legislators conspire with themselves to pad the budget to fund the purchase of exotic cars and payment of unauthorised jumbo emoluments, it is a criminal offence. The allegations of Honourable Jibrin have gone beyond the padding of the budget. The serious issue which the Speaker and other principal officers have not addressed is that the alterations of the budget took place outside the plenary session of the house. This is the crux of the matter. A former senator was arrested recently and the EFCC stumbled on a document which set out how N60 billion was shared among some legislators. The EFCC should investigate the source of the fund. Where did fund come from? Jibrin’s complaint should provide the country a golden opportunity to get to the root of criminality in the National Assembly.

    Regardless of the interference of the ruling party and the denial of the allegation of the padding of the 2016 budget by the Presidency, the Police and the EFCC should proceed with the investigation of the allegations of Honourable Jibrin against the leadership of the House and the counter-allegations of his colleagues against him. Up till now, the N115 billion budget of the National Assembly in the 2016 budget has been shrouded in secrecy. The ongoing investigation should reveal the details of the budget.

     

    • Falana, SAN, writes from Lagos.
  • Ambode: Lagos won’t tolerate criminality

    Ambode: Lagos won’t tolerate criminality

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode yesterday warned that the state will not tolerate criminality from any quarters.

    He spoke after yesterday’s rescue of the Babington Macaulay Junior Seminary schoolgirls kidnapped in Ikorodu last Monday.

    The governor, who addressed reporters at the Government House in Alausa, said: “Let me warn that the State Government will not tolerate kidnapping or any forms of crime in the state. Our position is clear and unambiguous; Lagos State has the capacity and the will to go after every form of crime and criminality in order to safeguard lives and property in the state.”

    He expressed relief and excitement at the rescue of the girls by security operatives.

    “The Lagos State Police Command, the Department of State Service and members of the Armed Forces worked tirelessly round the clock in the last six days to secure the release of the children. I thank them for a good job.

    “The three girls have been safely reunited with their families and the Government wishes to assure Lagosians that their security is top priority and it will not relent in ensuring that Lagos remains safe and secure,” he said.

    Ambode said one of the suspected kidnappers –Emmanuel Arigidi- was arrested during the operation by security operatives to release the abducted children.

    “As our daughters are reunited with their mothers and other members of their families, I would like to seize this opportunity to wish all mothers in Lagos State and Nigeria at large a happy Mothers’ Day,” he said.

  • Ese: don’t mix criminality with religion, say Soyinka, Falana

    Ese: don’t mix criminality with religion, say Soyinka, Falana

    Nobel laureate Prof Wole Soyinka and activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) yesterday condemned the Federal Government’s failure to prosecute Senator Ahmed Yerima who allegedly married an Egyptian girl of 13.

    Soyinka said failure to punish such acts embolden others to engage in them.

    He also faulted attempts to justify Ese Oruru’s abduction and conversion to Islam.

    At a joint briefing in Lagos, Soyinka and Falana said Ese’s abduction was an act of criminality that must not go unpunished.

    Soyinka disagreed with a professor of Islamic Eschatology and Director of Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), Ishaq Akintola, who claimed that Islam has no age barrier in marriage.

    “I want to ask him (Akintola), who invoked religion in the first place? What everybody was screaming was that this was a crime, a criminal act. Who brought religion into a purely criminal act? People should be very careful when they speak. They should take care not to worsen an already inexcusable situation by dragging religion into it,” Soyinka said.

    According to the Nobel laureate, specialists in human physiology had declared that at a certain age, a girl-child is not fit for sexual intercourse with “a grizzled, horny adult”.

    “So, who exactly brings religion into issues of governance, of constitution, of law? We’re saying that there’s something higher than the protocols of any religion, and has to be higher simply because those who inhabit this border called Nigeria belong to more than one religion.

    “There has to be a commonality which directs our conduct, which organises our lives. As inadequate as it is, it is the Constitution.

    “For me – I don’t know about you – the welfare of a child is even more important than money that is stolen. You can always retrieve the money, but when you damage a child with a fistula, which ruins a child for life, if you believe in God, you’re committing a crime against God.

    “If you steal money, you commit crime against the circular society, but when you damage a child because of your own depravity, you ruin that child for life, you traumatise that child, so don’t come and tell me that you’re religious and pious.”

    Soyinka noted that during the Yerima child-marriage saga, scholars highlighted tenets from the Quran which proved Yerima wrong.

    “A governor, now senator, boasts that he has a right to marry and consummated a marriage with a 13-year-old, when it’s proven that he actually paid the father who was a driver in Egypt, and we screamed at the time that this was a crime, not only in Nigeria but in a Moslem country – Egypt; that this was cross-border sex trafficking, in addition to flouting the laws of this nation and Egypt.

    “He took the girl from school and then announces his right to consummate the marriage – that his religion permitted him to do so,” Soyinka said.

    According to him, acts of impunity inevitably lead to problems such as Boko Haram.

    “When you invoke religion, there are others who will say: ‘O, you say you are pious, but I am holier than you, therefore I can interpret that same source the way I want to authorise me to kill you, your wife, your brothers, your family; because I say you’re not holy enough and I can prove it.’ That is what happens when we allow people to get away with impunity based on religion.

    “So, let’s take religion out of this. We’re talking about pure criminality and it is my demand, and will always remain my demand, that until you make an example of people like Yerima, there will be thousands of Yunusa, the man who abducted Ese,” Soyinka said.

    Soyinka said demanding justice for Ese does not mean being against Islam.

    “I sympathise with his (Akintola’s) feeling that his religion is under siege. But he should look for other reasons. He shouldn’t try and suggest that people hate Islam. Don’t say that people are Islamophobic. That’s rubbish.

    “We’re against crimes, defined by the Constitution, the legal structure that bind us all together, and we say leave religion out of it. Any religious practice involves a continuous debate. But when we’re talking about crime please don’t diffuse the subject. When we say Yerima should be prosecuted, don’t diffuse it,” Soyinka said.

    He also faulted the idea that it is culturally acceptable to marry under-age girls. According to him, culture changes.

    “Culture is not static. It’s dynamic. It constantly evolves. There are hard-core materials in any culture, but culture itself, especially the practice, in view of greater knowledge, discoveries, even as a result of learning from other cultures, we adopt what we have always considered sacrosanct, because at the bottom of it all, at the heart of it all, culture is about human beings, about humanity.

    “There’s no culture without humanity. It’s human beings who create culture and who are guided by it and who adapt them.

    “So, when I read anything which suggests that a culture is sacrosanct, I just wonder on what planet they are living, because history contradicts this absolutely.”

    Falana said under Section 38 (2) of the 1999 Constitution, no child of school age should be forced to convert to another religion other than his parents’.

    The section says: “No person attending any place of education shall be required to receive religious instruction or to take part in or attend any religious ceremony or observance if such instruction ceremony or observance relates to a religion other than his own, or religion not approved by his parent or guardian.”

    Falana said Ese was attending a school in Bayelsa State when Yunusa allegedly abducted her to Kano State and forcefully converted her to Islam without her parents’ approval.

    “That is a violation of Section 38 of the Constitution,” Falana said.

    Falana noted that Yunusa’s father had spoken out that he warned his son not to bring Ese to Kano, adding that when the Emir learned of it, he directed security agencies to intervene.

    “There is a United Nations convention for the rights of the child. Nigeria as a UN member ratified the convention and domesticated the law in 2003. Since 2003, we have had the Child’s Right Act. Under Section 15 of the Act, every child in Nigeria shall be educated at the expense of the state from primary to junior secondary school.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, in 2004, we also enacted the Compulsory Universal Basic Education Act that has also imposed a duty on the state to ensure that every child is educated from primary to junior secondary school.

    “In fact, under that law, it is a criminal offence not to allow your child to be educated. What Yunusa has done by taking that girl from her school in Yenegoa is a violation of that law.

    “About 24 states have adopted the Child’s Right Act, and under the law, which is applicable in Bayelsa State, what Yunusa did is purely criminal – kidnapping, forced marriage, rape, sexual assault on a girl who was 13 last year. Now she has been put in a family way. You can imagine the danger to the health of that girl.

    “That is why all Nigerians must rise to retrieve all under-age children that have been forced into illegal marriages. We need a national movement against child marriage in our country,” Falana said.

  • ‘How long shall Southeast, Delta suffer criminality?’

    ‘How long shall Southeast, Delta suffer criminality?’

    FIRST, I must congratulate all my brothers, the governors of the Southeast and Delta who assumed office almost three months ago. I have followed your programmes from your first day in office and I can boldly say that there is hope for our people. I have no doubt whatsoever that you will justify the great confidence our people have placed in you with a masterful performance. My brother, Governor Rochas Okorocha who has been there earlier than all of us, I congratulate you too on your second coming. I have no doubt that you will finish strong! Igbo bu Igbo, ekenem unu!

    Ladies and gentlemen, this may well be our finest hour as a people… the turning point in our march to greatness that must tip the scale of progress in favour of our people. I say this with every sense of responsibility because, recent experience has shown that living in an increasingly dangerous world, the only panacea for economic growth and development is a safe and secure environment.

    Our World

    Ladies and gentlemen, our world has never been an easy place to live in. Through the ages, humanity has always been blighted by one concern or the other. Sadly, most of mankind’s greatest anxieties were caused by man’s own hands. I speak of the Trans-Atlantic Slave trade, I speak of Apartheid South Africa, I speak of the World Wars and finally I speak of the present climate of fear, brought upon us by terrorists. To bring the matter closer home, I also speak of our home grown headaches – Boko Haram, kidnapping, violent armed robbery, child trafficking and other petty crimes that rob us of a deserved peace of mind.

    Speaking about mankind’s never-ending struggle for a better world, the great French philosopher, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the author of The Social Contract, observed in 1762 that “man is born free, and everywhere, he is in chains.” Ladies and gentlemen, man is in a different kind of chain today. Although we have made steady progress from the era of the divine monarchies of Europe that inspired Rousseau’s timeless quote, to modern democracy with its many freedoms, our chains are no less heavy than they were. Strangely, from pre-history to the many wonders of science we have today, man remains the sole architect of his own fears!

    The Peculiar Challenges of the South East & Delta

    Years of ferocious assaults on cities and communities in the South East and Delta by successive robbery gangs and kidnap cells have driven meaningful investments away and stifled the economic growth of the region. In Anambra State in particular, we have experienced waves of gang rules in the commercial city of Onitsha that were so dominant that constituted authorities felt helpless under their brutal onslaught. The story is very much the same across the states in the region and Delta State. It may vary in degrees from one state to another but this region has had a most troubling crime history for far too long. The time has come to wipe this dark history away!

    Ladies and gentlemen, we have assembled here today to interrogate our circumstances; to ask ourselves hard questions and to set for ourselves a common agenda. The pertinent question we must ask ourselves is how long? How long shall the South East and Delta State and other contiguous states bear the brunt of brazen criminality and meaningless brigandage? How long shall our people’s well known enterprising spirit be driven away to nourish distant lands while our homeland wallows in squalor? How long shall we continue to fall to the barrel of a gun pointed at us by our own brothers, friends and kinsmen who are caught up in violent crimes?

    The Anambra Story

    Ladies and gentlemen, the economic survival of our people depends on how well we answer these questions. In Anambra State, we have made bold efforts to answer these questions. We have fought and won the war against crime and criminality. We have driven kidnappers, armed robbers and drug barons out of our cities and communities. With the sustained efforts of Operation Kpochapu, Operation Sheba and other tactical initiatives, with the committed vigilance of the officers and men of the Anambra State Police Command and the solid support of the Nigerian Army, the Navy and the Department of State Security, we have cleansed Anambra State of criminals. With the tremendous support of the Vigilante Groups under the professional care of the retired former Commissioner of Police in Delta State, we have routed kidnappers and armed robbers from Anambra State.  We have freed our social and economic space for businesses to thrive along with leisure. We have cleaned up the state and flung open our doors to investors, attracting substantial investments to the tune of $2.4bn in the past 17 months. All around Anambra, there is a new sense of freedom among our people. But our freedom cannot be complete until our neighbours begin to experience a new atmosphere of liberty. Recent experience has shown that a security threat in one location is a security threat to the surrounding regions. So, our freedom over crime will remain incomplete, so long as the armed robbers and kidnappers we drive away from Anambra State can find safety anywhere in this region.

    Fellow Nigerians, our recent experience has shown that any meaningful effort to address security threats will miss the target if it does not involve an entire region or an economic block. There are so many instances where contiguous states that are blighted by a common security threat have pulled expertise and resources together to overcome it. For instance, Nigeria is currently working together with Cameroun, Niger and Chad to overcome the threat posed by Boko Haram in the North East. We must therefore work together to overcome the challenge of insecurity in our region.

    Winning Together

    Fellow Nigerians, we must fight this war together, win it together and enjoy the economic and social benefits of victory together. We cannot afford the consequences of a prolonged failure in this regard in an emerging Nigeria with clearly demarcated regional economic blocks. From the concentration of businesses in specific locations in the country that, it is saddening to see that 55 years after independence, Nigeria has yet to make the expected leap out of the regional economies of the pre-and- post-independence era. It is indeed disheartening to note that our national economic planning has left some regions scratching for survival while others are in full bloom. But there is no time to indulge in unproductive excuses or ring our hands in blame. If we cast a look backwards to where we are coming from, we shall remember that we have overcome greater adversities in our march to the present day. We shall also remember that any economic setback we have suffered as a people will take only time and planning to overcome. Indeed, we shall be better than our fathers. And the time to make that happen is now!

    An Eastern Economic Agenda

    Ladies and gentlemen, I must not fail to remind us that the time has come to set an Eastern Economic Agenda. The shrinking of spaces for migrant people across the country calls for a robust economic and social agenda that will make our people less vulnerable to increasing hostilities around the world. There is a strident call by History on every leader from this region which we cannot ignore. Posterity looks onto us to build a befitting economy for the South East and Delta State. And for us to even contemplate anything of that magnitude, we must first find a lasting solution to insecurity in the region. This all important Conference is therefore an economic call to arms. We must all rise to wage a successful war on insecurity as a precursor to economic prosperity and greater fulfilment.

    Brothers and sisters, as we settle down to the business of the day, I would like to remind you that in the words of the great Nelson Mandela, “it always seems impossible until it’s done.”

     

  • Pirates and the audacity of criminality

    Recently, a group of Nigerian Nollywood artistes took their protest against piracy to the Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola. Their goal was to seek the assistance of the Governor in curbing the evil activities of pirates who are bent on taking them out of business.  The actors, who were led in the protest by leading cinematographer, Tunde Kelani, complained bitterly against what they described as the menacing activities of pirates in the country. As part of their demands, the actors requested that a state of emergency be declared on piracy in the country. They also demanded a declaration of piracy as an economic crime. This is in addition to making those who buy and sell pirated works accountable to the law. They equally wanted more government commitment to the copyright law in Nigeria.

    Of recent, the onslaught against piracy has taken a global dimension.  Across the globe, various strategies ranging from raids, seizures, destruction of pirated works and arrests are geared towards curtailing the global plague that has cost individuals and organisations billions of dollars in income losses. The subject of piracy, which centers on unlawful and fraudulent production and circulation of original works, cuts across almost every sector. Before now, discussions on piracy are often restricted to works of art. But, the reality is that piracy rears its ugly head in such sectors as fashion, manufacturing, media and films, pharmacy, medicine, technology, publishing among others.

    However, for the purpose of this piece, emphasis would be placed on piracy of movies. In Nigeria, piracy of works arts, especially movies, has become a serious clog in the wheel of progress of the movie industry. It has grown to become a big money spinning industry for perpetrators of this nefarious act and their collaborators. The result is that while pirates often smile to the bank for stealing another person’s intellectual idea, the original owners of the work wallow in misery and poverty.  Pioneer theater icon, Moses Olaiya Adejumo, popularly referred to as ‘Baba Sala’, is one of the numerous movie producers in the country that has become victims of the wicked activities of movie pirates. No thanks to pirates, Baba Sala’s fortune has nosedived so remarkably that many do not even know that he still very much alive. The truth, however, is that Baba Sala is still alive only that he is yet to recover from the distress and anguish that the piracy of his popular movie, ‘Orun Moru’ , has brought upon him.

    Unfortunately, rather than being curtailed, there seems to be an upsurge in the activities of pirates across the country, especially in the last few months. According to Kelani: “Previously, those involved in piracy wait for the release of films before they pirate hem. But the new trend now is that the films that are still in the cinema and not officially released by the producers, are pirated and sold openly on the streets unhindered”.

    Of recent, it has been one tale of woes or the other from movies producers in the country.  Highly rated movies such as ‘October 1’  and ‘Phone Swap’ by Kunle Afolayan, ‘Arugba’ and ‘Maami’  by Tunde Kelani, ’30 Days in Atlanta’ by Ayo Makun, ‘The Meeting’ by Rita Dominic, ‘Tango With Me’ by Mahmood Balogun , to mention but a few, have been profoundly pirated  to the dismay of their original  owners.

    From the way things currently stand, it seems as if pirates have learnt the art of beating not only the law of the nation but equally the custodians and enforcers of the law. Or else, how does one explain a situation where vendors of pirated movies hawk such on the streets of Lagos and, indeed, other cities across the country, with such amazing audacity and bravado? The situation becomes even more worrisome considering the revelation by some of the Nollywood actors that they know the particular place where the piracy of their work take place on a massive commercial scale in Lagos, but have tried unsuccessfully, even with the aid of law enforcement agents, to deal with the culprits.

    This, of course, is a dangerous trend which if not properly tackled might be sending a bad signal that crime pays while hardwork counts for nothing. In an already battered economy and a nation where creativity is not well appreciated, giving pirates the freedom to operate without restraint could destroy the promising Nollywood industry in the country. Doing this would be counterproductive as the movie industry has the potential of generating thousands of direct and indirect jobs for different categories of people in the country. In the United States of America and India, for instance, the movie industry is pivotal to the survival economy of both countries as it has become a multi-billion dollar venture.

    There is, therefore, an urgent need to strengthen the various laws against piracy in the country. It is, for instance, rather ridiculous that the few pirates that have been prosecuted, after over six years of money and time consuming legal tussles, were sentenced to just three months of imprisonment  with an option of N10, 000 fine. With a weak legal framework like this, piracy would certainly continue to thrive. In India, piracy is a capital offence that carries death penalty. Also in the United Kingdom, there is an anti-piracy squad that regularly clampdown on pirates. In America, anyone found guilty of piracy is sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. As it has been demanded by the movie producers, piracy should be elevated to the status of an economic crime, which it really is in reality, and should be made to attract stiffer penalties.

     However, as it has been rightly observed by Governor Fashola, tackling piracy will require a lot, especially given that it is a technologically empowered crime. Efforts should be made to develop applications or softwares that would make piracy a complex and tedious enterprise. One other strategy that can help in checkmating piracy is development of community cinemas. Since pirates could only tamper with movies that are in DVDs, massive investment in cinemas by relevant stakeholders could save movie producers from the pains of piracy. This is the trend in nations where the movie industry thrives.

    On a final note, since piracy has become a veritable source of livelihood for those who indulge in it, getting rid of it will be as difficult as getting rid of corruption from the Nigerian socio –economic and political system. But, it is a task that is possible. All we need is the political will to tackle this scourge. After all, it is often said that where there is a will, there is a way.

    Ogunbiyi is of the Features Unit, Ministry of Information & Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja.