Tag: David Cameron

  • Former PM Cameron appointed to British House of Lords

    Former PM Cameron appointed to British House of Lords

    David Cameron, the former British Prime Minister, would be the country’s new foreign minister, the office of prime minister Rishi Sunak said on Monday.

    Cameron is also to be appointed to the British House of Lords, parliament’s upper chamber.

    His return to government is a big surprise.

    Cameron was prime minister from 2010 to 2016 and served as the leader of the Conservative Party from 2005 to 2016.

    Read Also: Give 13 percent derivation directly to communities, APC chieftain tells Tinubu

    He resigned following a referendum on whether the United Kingdom should leave the EU was approved in 2016.

    Cameron came under strong criticism for pushing the referendum through.

    Earlier Monday, Suella Braverman was sacked as home secretary following an unauthorised article she wrote criticising the policing of pro-Palestinian protests, Britain’s Press Association (PA) reported.

    She was replaced by James Cleverly, who had been foreign secretary.

    The Conservative Party said Sunak is carrying out a wider reshuffle which “strengthens his team in government to deliver long-term decisions for a brighter future,’’ PA reported.

    The reshuffle had been expected for some time, as Sunak is facing miserable poll ratings, with a general election due next year.

    (dpa/NAN) (www.nannews.ng)

  • David Cameron makes dramatic return to UK Govt

    David Cameron makes dramatic return to UK Govt

    David Cameron has made a dramatic return to the British Government as foreign secretary following a reshufflement triggered by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s decision to sack Suella Braverman from the Home Office.

    The former prime minister replaced James Cleverly as foreign secretary and would be given a peerage that is a seat in the upper chamber, the House of Lords.

    Cleverly takes on the job of home secretary after Sunak ended Braverman’s controversial tenure in the job.

    Sacking one of the leading figures on the Conservative right could pose difficulties for the prime minister as he seeks to get his party united behind him.

    He would be ready for a general election, expected next year.

    The appointment of Cameron was a massive shock in Westminster.

    The shock was not just because of the return of a former prime minister to government the first since Alec Douglas-Home but also because of his views on China.

    During the Cameron administration, there was a “golden era” of UK-China co-operation, something Sunak described as “naive” last year following growing tensions with Beijing.

    Cameron had also been critical of Sunak’s decision to scrap the northern leg of HS2, the high-speed rail project.

    The prime minister used his Conservative conference speech to distance himself from the legacy of his predecessors.

    Read Also: Give 13 percent derivation directly to communities, APC chieftain tells Tinubu

    But the former prime minister made clear he backed Sunak and would work with him to help the Conservatives win the general election expected next year.

    “Though I may have disagreed with some individual decisions, it is clear to me that Rishi Sunak is a strong and capable prime minister.

    “Who is showing exemplary leadership at a difficult time,’’ the new foreign secretary said.

    “I want to help him to deliver the security and prosperity our country needs and be part of the strongest possible team that serves the United Kingdom and that can be presented to the country when the general election is held.”

    Ominously for Sunak, Braverman said she would have “more to say in due course” about her exit, which followed rows over comments about homeless people and the policing of pro-Palestinian marches.

    Braverman said: “It has been the greatest privilege of my life to serve as home secretary.”

    Former minister Andrea Jenkyns said Braverman had been “sacked for speaking the truth and it was a bad call by Rishi caving in to the left.”

    News of Braverman’s exit came as Defence Minister James Heappey was touring broadcast studios.

    Minutes before she was sacked, he had told LBC that Sunak and his team in No 10 had been “very clear she (Braverman) has his confidence.

    “In that sense, one would imagine that she will continue.”

    But he was told on air during an ITV “Good Morning Britain’’ interview that she had been sacked.

    “Your viewers will be enjoying my discomfort, but it is in this case difficult to offer commentary when I just don’t know what is going on.”

    Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey said: “Suella Braverman was never fit to be home secretary. Rishi Sunak knew this and he still appointed her.

    “It was the prime minister’s sheer cowardice that kept her in the job even for this long.

    “We are witnessing a broken party and a broken government, both of which are breaking this country.”

    In his first comments in the new role, cleverly said it was an honour to be appointed as Home Secretary.

    “The goal is clear. My job is to keep people in this country safe,” he said.

    In the junior ranks, Will Quince and Neil O’Brien both quit as health ministers, while veteran schools minister Nick Gibb also left his post.

    (dpa/NAN) (www.nannews.ng)

  • Malala excited after winning place at Oxford University

    Malala excited after winning place at Oxford University

    Pakistani education activist Malala Yousafzai said on Thursday she was “excited” after winning a place to study at Oxford University.

    Yousafzai, the youngest winner of the Nobel Peace Prize when she was 17, said she had been accepted at Oxford to study Politics, Philosophy, and Economics.

    She joined thousands of other students in Britain in discovering where they will go to university after getting their final school results.

    Others to have studied the same course at Oxford, one of the world’s top universities, include former British Prime Minister David Cameron and late Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.

    Yousafzai, now 20, came to prominence when a Taliban gunman shot her in the head in 2012, after she was targeted for her campaign against efforts by the Taliban to deny women education.

    She won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014.

    “So excited to go to Oxford!! Well done to all A-level students, the hardest year. Best wishes for life ahead!” she said in a tweet.

    A-levels are final year exams for school students.

    After recovering from the Taliban attack, she has attended school in England.

    Early figures showed a fall in the number of places allocated by universities, although the proportion of students scoring top grades rose.

    University admissions service UCAS said on its website the decrease in the number of university acceptances had been driven by a fall in acceptances from older students and fewer students from the European Union.

    UCAS said 416,310 people had been accepted to degree courses on A-level results day, down two percent compared to 2016.

    Over one in four of the grades was an A or A*, the best ratings, up 0.5 percentage points in 2016.

  • Millennial’s voting preferences, lessons for future elections

    A Post-UK election analysis by the Financial Times suggests that better-educated people tend to vote for left-wing or centrist causes, while those who never went to university are more likely to vote for right-wing or populist parties. It concludes that Tories made heavy forays into working class territories previously considered the exclusive domain of the Labour Party, even though, overall, the Conservatives’ showing at last week’s poll was poorer.

    An analysis of the trends in the recent elections in France reveals similar results. Emmanuel Macron, for instance, won his highest votes in Paris, home to France’ most literate population. He garnered 34.8% in the first round and scooped a whopping 89.7% of the Parisian vote in the second round.

    Polling from Lord Ashcroft’s also suggests that the Conservatives beat Labour to the middle-class votes by just three percent in the 2017 election. For context, in the 1974 elections, the Tories took 56% of the middle-class vote while Labour managed 19%. As a consequence, Labour seems to have narrowed the difference in a manner that convinces some analysts that if an election was called today, the Labour Party led by Jeremy Corbyn will lead the Brexit negotiations in the coming days.

    The Brits were faced with two choices – a ‘Strong and Stable’ incumbent and a wobbly Labour leader, whose affinity towards the IRA was played up in the weeks before Polling Day. In what some analysts described as an ‘unnecessary election,’ British Prime Minister Theresa May insisted she needed her proverbial hand strengthened by a strong majority to face her counterpart leaders in Brussels for the Brexit negotiations.

    It turned out that the slim majority that made her the Prime Minister, following the referendum that blew her predecessor David Cameron apart, will be eroded. The foregoing has exposed Mrs May to varied attacks both home and abroad.

    The day after the elections, following her declaration to form a government with the ‘support’ of the Democratic Unionist Party, a Northern Ireland caucus, political commentator Robin Oakley called her damaged goods with diminished authority. He believed that the Prime Minister had lost the confidence of Britons to lead the country out of the EU.

    Mrs May, however, said the U.K. now more than ever needed certainty that she was now poised to offer. One imagines this certainty has to do greatly with the impending Brexit negotiations with the EU leadership. This was despite many EU leaders taunting her after the results of the poll became public. The already wounded Prime Minister had become a laughing stock. Though her party lost seats in the elections, the Conservatives won the majority of seats as well as the highest number of votes.

    The percentage of votes accrued to the Tories under Theresa May in this ‘post-Brexit’ election, was more than what sent both Tony Blair (40.7% & 35.2% in 2001 & 2005 respectively) and David Cameron’s (36.1% & 36.9% in 2010 & 2015) to Downing Street. But can you blame anyone for chastising Theresa May, who made the election a personal contest with Jeremy Corbyn? He was a punching bag but the ‘Strong and Stable’ leader shied away from all debates.

    A Town Hall engagement that followed with an interview with Jeremy Paxman had to feature the two leaders on separate platforms. This arrangement and the subsequent decision not to take part in a debate with other candidates in the election spelt her doom. Many could no longer defend her ‘Strong and Stable’ mantra. Her U-turn over proposals in her Party’s manifesto was also perceived as an utter disregard for the voting populace and a resolve not to subject her party’s policies to scrutiny.

    The London Bridge and Borough Market terror attack days before the election probably drove the last nail into her coffin. It brought to the fore how decisions of her Party, with her as Home Secretary earlier and now Premier have contributed to reduced spending on the police and its concomitant decrease in police numbers on London’s streets.

    In all of this, Millennials were probably keen observers. They were only interested in policies that furthered their interests and aspirations. Many believe the outturn of the elections was also to ensure that Britain’s leaders ‘talked’ to each other in this bid to sever ties with the European Union. I differ on that one.

    It is nearly impossible for voters in an election to agree in their political choices to bring leaders from diametrically opposed sides to do business. The hung Parliament, the outcome of last week’s election, is better explained by voters aged 18-24 years, whose shift to Jeremy Corbyn’s campaign shored up his votes 51 points more than the national average.

    Many analysts believe that if the youth feel rewarded by their massive turnout and voting for their preferred candidate, their engagement could be sustained, further shifting the voting patterns in the UK towards Labour.

    Given the expected renewed commitment of Millennials in voting on their everyday realities, politicians seeking to attract them can’t be fixated on their ideals and history. Corbyn asked voters to judge him on his politics today as well as the policies his party offered and we saw the verdict. Can we conclude that the verdict for the Conservative Party under the watch of Theresa May was a verdict of her politics and policies both as Home Secretary and Prime Minister?

    The dynamics of the Brexit votes and Trump’s emergence in the White House and last week’s UK election must tell politicians that the largest pool of voters don’t just care about who leads parties but they also care about how the leader remains committed to following through his or her policies, the strength of his or her engagement and how those policies touch their daily realities.

    I rest my case.

    Kobby Mensah is a Freelance Journalist with interest in politics and business reporting.
    
    He last worked as head of politics and lead producer for EIB Network's Starr FM and
    
    GHOne TV, where he led teams to implement Town Hall events in the run up to Ghana's
    
    2016 elections. He also benefited from US 2016 election reporting under the State
    
    Department and Foreign Press Office's Youth in Politics Initiative.
  • May’s bid for stronger Brexit hand at stake in UK election

    May’s bid for stronger Brexit hand at stake in UK election

    British Prime Minister Theresa May faces the voters on Thursday in an election she called to strengthen her hand in looming Brexit talks, with her personal authority at stake after a campaign that saw her lead in opinion polls contract.

    Voting began at 0600 GMT amid tight security nationwide after two Islamist attacks killed 30 people in Manchester and London in less than two weeks, thrusting the issue of how to counter violent extremism to the top of the agenda in the closing stages of the campaign.

    A final flurry of opinion polls gave May’s Conservatives a lead ranging between five and 12 percentage points over the main opposition Labour Party, suggesting she would increase her majority, but not win the landslide foreseen when she called the election seven weeks ago.

    Voting ends at 2100 GMT.

    There will be an exit poll as soon as voting finishes.

    The first handful of seat results are expected to be announced by 2300 GMT, with the vast majority of the 650 constituencies due to announce results between 0200 GMT and 0500 GMT on Friday morning.

    Both main parties were on the defensive after Saturday’s van and knife attack in the heart of London.

    May faced questions over cuts in the number of police officers during her six years as interior minister and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn drew criticism for, among other things, voting against some counter-terrorism legislation.

    British police investigating the London attacks said they had arrested three more suspects late on Wednesday as footage of the dramatic moment officers shot dead the assailants appeared online.

    Two of the men, aged 27 and 29, were held on suspicion of preparing acts of terrorism while the third was detained over suspected drugs offences.

    In the final hours of campaigning, both leaders returned to their core campaign messages.

    “If we get Brexit right, we can build a Britain that is more prosperous and more secure, a Britain in which prosperity and opportunity is shared by all,” May said in a last appeal to voters to trust her to “knuckle down and get the job done”.

    After becoming prime minister without an election taking place in the turmoil that followed last year’s EU referendum, May wants a personal mandate and a parliamentary majority bigger than the one she inherited from predecessor David Cameron.

    Basing her campaign on the slogan of “strong and stable leadership”, she has said she alone could face the 27 other EU leaders and clinch a deal that would give Britain control over immigration policy while ensuring favorable trading terms.

    She has portrayed Corbyn as the weak and hapless leader of a spendthrift party that would hit voters with a “tax bombshell”, crash the economy and flounder in the Brexit negotiations.

    Corbyn has hit back that Conservative fiscal austerity imposed since 2010 has hurt the poor and widened social inequalities.

    May’s campaign has not gone to plan, and as the poll leads of 20 points or more she was enjoying when she called the early election in April have shrunk, talk of a landslide victory has faded and her personal standing has taken a hit.

    As a result, the extent of her control over her fractious party and of her margin for maneuver going into the Brexit talks will hinge on the size of her majority, and on whether it is perceived to be a significant improvement on Cameron’s.

    Provided she wins, she will have averted at least one risk: by pushing back the date of the following election to 2022 rather than 2020 as originally planned, she has ensured she will not face crunch time in the Brexit talks at the same time as an election.

    Some in the EU are hoping May does increase her majority, on the basis that the main risk for the bloc is a collapse in talks, and that is more easily avoided with a British government that is not vulnerable at home.

    “We need a government strong enough to negotiate,” a senior EU lawmaker told Reuters this week.

    But others have sought to downplay the impact of the election regardless of the outcome, suggesting that it was little more than a domestic political sideshow.

    Meanwhile, veteran left-winger Corbyn, who was written off as a no-hoper by most political analysts, surprised on the upside with a policy-rich campaign that drew large, fervent crowds to his events, although skeptics say his appeal in the broader electorate is limited.

    He proposes building a fairer society through policies such as raising taxes for the richest five per cent, scrapping university tuition fees and investing 250 billion pounds (315 billion dollars) in infrastructure,
    plans which the Conservatives say are fiscally irresponsible.

    “Labour’s campaign has already changed the face of British politics,” Corbyn said in a final campaign rally.

    “As we prepare for government, we have already changed the debate and given people hope. Hope that it doesn’t have to be like this, that inequality can be tackled, that austerity can be ended, that you can stand up to the elites and the cynics.”

    There was only one point of agreement between May and Corbyn, which was that the strongest signal that Britons could send to show they were not cowed by the recent spate of attacks would be to go out and vote.

     

  • British PM resumes campaigning three days before national election

    British PM resumes campaigning three days before national election

    British Prime Minister Theresa May resumes campaigning on Monday after a deadly militant attack on London Bridge.

    May said Britain must be tougher in stamping out Islamist extremism after three knife-wielding assailants rammed a hired van into pedestrians on London Bridge and stabbed others nearby, killing seven people and injuring 48.

    After the third militant attack in Britain in less than three months, May said Thursday’s election would go ahead but said Britain had been far too tolerant of extremism.

    “Violence can never be allowed to disrupt the democratic process,” May, who served as interior minister from 2010 to 2016, said outside her Downing Street office.

    Islamic State, which is losing territory in Syria and Iraq to an offensive backed by a U.S.-led coalition, said its militants were responsible for the attack, according to the group’s media agency Amaq.

    Islamist militants have carried out scores of deadly attacks in Europe, Russia, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and the United States over the past two years.

    In an early morning raids in east London, British counter-terrorism police detained more people on Monday.

    Police arrested 12 people in the Barking district of east London following the attack, though one was later released.

    Police have not released the names of the attackers and British newspapers refrained from identifying the men.

    It was not immediately clear how the attack would impact the election, though the issue of security has been thrust to the forefront of the campaign after the London Bridge and Manchester attacks.

    The campaign was suspended for several days last month when a suicide bomber killed 22 people at a concert by Ariana Grande in Manchester.

    Grande gave an emotional performance on Sunday at a benefit gig in the city for the victims of the attack, singing with a choir of local schoolchildren, including some who had been at her show.

    Before the London Bridge attack, May’s gamble on a June 8 snap election had been thrust into doubt after polls showed her Conservative Party’s lead had collapsed in recent weeks.

    While British pollsters all predict May will win the most seats in Thursday’s election, they have given an array of different numbers for how big her win will be, ranging from a landslide victory to a much more slender win without a majority.

    Some polls indicate the election could be close, possibly throwing Britain into political deadlock just days before formal Brexit talks with the European Union are due to begin on June 19.

    May called the snap election in a bid to strengthen her hand in negotiations on Britain’s exit from the European Union, to win more time to deal with the impact of the divorce and to strengthen her grip on the Conservative Party.

    If she fails to beat handsomely the 12-seat majority her predecessor David Cameron won in 2015, her electoral gamble will have failed and her authority will be undermined both inside the Conservative Party and at talks with 27 other EU leaders.

    May said the series of attacks were not connected in terms of planning and execution, but were inspired by what she called a “single, evil ideology of Islamist extremism” that represented a perversion of Islam and of the truth.

    As a former interior minister, May’s record on security is also under scrutiny, she reduced police numbers and oversaw the domestic intelligence agency, MI5.

    Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn criticised May, who was interior minister from 2010 to 2016, for cutting police numbers during her tenure in charge of the interior ministry.

    “The mass murderers who brought terror to our streets in London and Manchester want our election to be halted. They want democracy halted,” Corbyn said in Carlisle, northern England.

    “They want their violence to overwhelm our right to vote in a fair and peaceful election and to go about our lives freely.”

    “That is why it would be completely wrong to postpone Thursday’s vote, or to suspend our campaigning any longer.”

  • Sagay: A corrupt judge commits crime against humanity

    Sagay: A corrupt judge commits crime against humanity

    • PACAC reviews activities one year after
    Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), Prof Itse Sagay (SAN) on Monday came hard on those condemning the arrest of two Supreme Court justices and other judges by the Department of State Services (DSS), saying such critics ignore the implications of judicial corruption.
    According to him, it is as if a corrupt judge is committing a crime against humanity because he holds the power of life and death and is expected by the society to be above board.
    Sagay said where a society loses confidence in the judiciary, it would resort to self-help,
    He spoke in Abuja at a news conference by PACAC to review its activities since it was established last August by President Muhammadu Buhari.
    Sagay thinks many Nigerians do not appreciate the sincerity of the Federal Government’s anti-corruption battle, saying it was as if many preferred the old order, which he said would have turned Nigeria to country worse than Zimbabwe
    He said: “I think that those who have criticised the DSS and the manner the search was conducted or even criticized the whole idea of a search being conducted seem not to have looked at the implications of judicial corruption.
    “At the end of the day when there is corruption anywhere, who do you take the matter to? It is to the judge. The judge is the ultimate and in fact, the buck stops at his court. So, if that judge is complicit in the corruption then that is the end of the fight against corruption. That is the awful implication!
    “So, any judge who is corrupt is committing a crime – in fact, one can even say it’s a crime against humanity because it just destroys our confidence in a system which should sustain the state in law and order. It encourages people to resort to self-help because there is no hope in taking a matter to court.”
    Sagay said the judiciary became so corrupt that it endorsed violent elections in which thousands lost their lives.
    “Today, just to give an example, we have some sitting governors whom we all knew that they did not win an election. Because they killed their way into office, people are still dying in those states, for them to sustain themselves in that office.
    “Yet some courts at the highest level gave approval to the process that brought those people to what I would call their bloody seats on which they are sitting. These are some of the things we are talking about. If the judiciary is corrupt, the only body, the only arm of government that has the power of life and death over Nigerians, if they are corrupt, then it is frightening,” he said.
    Sagay believes many commentators ignored the monies allegedly found on the judges, saying: “The other thing that surprises me is that a lot of people have made commentaries criticising what has been happening and have ignored the outcome of these searches completely.
    “Isn’t it enough that billions of Naira were found in private residences? Don’t you associate these billions of Naira with the fact that your roads are in a state of disrepair, that your hospitals are under-equipped or ill-equipped, and that schools are dilapidated and that it affects your daily life? What of those in the public service today who cannot get salaries paid because all these monies came from the public purse?
    “The point I am making is that we seem to want to eat an omelet without breaking eggs; that is what Nigerians want. There are Nigerians who say ‘Ooh, we are suffering a lot of hardship since the Buhari government came and that we are better off under corruption’.
    “Isn’t that the most terrible thing for anybody to mouth, without considering what would have happened if Buhari had not come? If that had been the case, I don’t think that there would have been a country today; I think that Zimbabwe would have been better because this is a government that is operating on little or no budget because by the time they came in, what was existing had been squandered completely and shared among those now being defended with cries of ‘human rights’.
    “What I am saying is that it is very discouraging because if you are struggling for the masses of this country, for the welfare of Nigerians, for improvement of the standard of living and then you are not encouraged, the tendency is for you to give up. For people to prefer corruption to the integrity that we are seeing in government today is very shocking. And I can tell you that if I were in government, I would have been extremely discouraged.
    “We cannot have it both ways! We need the judiciary but we need an upright judiciary; without that, one arm of government would collapse, democracy would collapse. Let us think of the implication of what is going on. If we don’t put the judiciary right and we don’t have a judiciary in which we have confidence, a judiciary with integrity and honour, a judiciary with moral authority; then, we have no government and we have no democracy.”
    Sagay said it would have been unthinkable for the DSS to raid the homes of judges even under military rule when courts gave several verdicts against the government, all because of the high level of integrity the judges had.
    “You people remember the era of Justices Eso, Oputa, Aniagolu, Nnamani, Idigbe, Mohammed Bello, and Obaseki? Which DSS would have dared to even question any of those people? Nobody! No agency of government would have dared it. They gave a lot of their judgments against the military government. I can cite over 20 judgments which they gave against military government.
    “They gave a judgment against Buhari’s military government, saying he had no power to retire some people, the Manager of the Fire service in Lagos, Garba. It was held that his retirement (by the military regime) was illegal.
    “I can cite so many! There was also Ojukwu’s case and everybody knows that. It (Supreme Court) held that the powers that be, the military government could not engage in self-help by preventing Ojukwu from living in his father’s house. Ojukwu got judgment and instead of appealing, they went and threw him out.
    “Then, the Supreme Court held that for throwing him out and preventing him from accessing his father’s house, rather than appealing that judgment, they (military) are deprived of the right to come to this court.
    “That moral authority has crashed and therefore, having crashed, like a tree that has fallen, ants, lizards and all sorts of things can climb over it. You bring yourself down and then, whatever happens after that is your own fault.
    “The ordinary man like you and I could be guilty of corruption but a judge should never be guilty of corruption. Once a judge does that, he brings himself to our level and so, cannot complain if he is treated the same way that you and I are treated. That is what has happened. Let us be objective and be fair to this country with our commentary and not be narrow-minded,” Sagay said.
    PACAC Executive Secretary, Prof Bolaji Owasanoye said the arrested judges should be suspended while their trial lasts and until they clear their names.
    He noted that a member of the committee had to step down when serious allegations were made against him.
    Owasanoye said: “The National Judicial Council (NJC) did not suggest in their respond that they’re suspending the judges. But what should be the proper thing? The proper thing of course is for the judges to be suspended. The reason is because all over the world, if a judge is going to be appearing before a court on criminal charges, you ask yourself, is it appropriate for the judge to continue to sit in another respect?
    “I’m talking about best practices here. After all when other people are being tried, we argue that they should step down. We’re not talking of an administrative issue here; we’re talking about a crime. I think that the proper thing to do is actually for the judges to be given that charge to defend themselves.
    “In other climes, when a policy that somebody initiates does not even work well, they resign. David Cameron resigned simply because Britain voted to leave the European Union (Brexit). He didn’t do anything wrong.  Clearly, the honourable thing is for the NJC to give those judges an opportunity to go and defend themselves and then if they’re cleared they can take back their jobs strengthened.
    “Again, there are situations in which NJC has been investigating the judges behind the scene and technically has not allowed them to preside over cases, even though those allegations may not be criminal in nature. So is this not even much more sensitive and a more compelling reason to suspend them?”

    A PACAC member, Prof Femi Odekunle, said those faulting the judges’ arrest missed the point.

    “There are those who are making arguments that amount to shenanigans, to shield people. Corruption in the judiciary is not the same as corruption in the marketplace; the judiciary is the soul of our nation. Therefore, anything that could be done with it should be done.
    “Concerning the legality of whether the DSS has power to do what it did or not, we have evidence and it is even commonsensical to realize that corruption is a security issue by the nature of its volume, character and seriousness in Nigeria.
    “It is a security issue. Take the direct example, the Dasuki case; when people who were supposed to defend the territorial integrity of the country actually took the money meant to buy arms and ammunition and distributed it anyhow. Is that not a security issue? When you steal the money meant to build roads, accidents occur, people die. These constitute security issues.
    “My argument in papers I did before is that the DSS should, in training their staff, particularly the senior officers, ensure they have the perception to see corruption as a security issue,” he said.
    Another PACAC member, Prof Sadiq Radda, while justifying the judges’ arrest, said less emphasis should be laid on legal justice.
    He said: “Journalists should make it abundantly clear to all Nigerians that there is a world of difference between legal justice and social justice. What we seem to be emphasizing in Nigeria is legal justice; we use all technicalties, all the little rules and all the techniques of making sure that people go scot-free but we could as well look at the issue of social justice.
    “Social justice connotes that people who have been in government positions, have amassed wealth that is quite visible; therefore, there is need to develop methodologies to ensure that they are exposed such that those who aspire to be in such positions are discouraged. The less we rely on technicalties that’ll be to the detriment of the country, the better it would be for us all.”
    Another member, Prof Etannibi Alemika called for new standards of behavior, which he thinks should start at the level of the individual .
    “We must behave with an understanding of the philosophical foundation of the law because that is the only defence. We need to set new standards of behavior for our country; the law alone will not help us. The state should not be lawless but citizens should not also be lawless in order not to evoke the wrath of lawless state agencies,” he said.
  • Cameron resigns from UK parliament

    Cameron resigns from UK parliament

    Former British Prime Minister David Cameron, who stepped down from the United Kingdom (UK)’s top office as a result of the vote for Britain to exit Europe (Brexit) in July, has resigned from the UK parliament.

    According to Britain’s Press Association on Monday, Cameron announced that he will stand down as a member of parliament for his constituency of Witney immediately.

    Details shortly…

    [news_box style=”2″ display=”tag” link_target=”_blank” tag=”Brexit” count=”5″ show_more=”on” show_more_type=”link”]

  • Cameron bows out with jokes

    Cameron bows out with jokes

    David Cameron entertained parliament with a series of farewell quips on Wednesday in his last appearance as prime minister before making way for Theresa May to lead the monumental task of extricating Britain from the EU.

    “This morning I had meetings with ministerial colleagues and others.

    “Other than one meeting this afternoon with Her Majesty the Queen, the diary for the rest of my day is remarkably light,’’ Cameron said to roars of laughter in a packed House of Commons.

    He was due to present his resignation to the queen at Buckingham Palace at around 1600 GMT.

    Then May will pay her own visit to the monarch to be formally entrusted with the job, before entering 10 Downing Street to become Britain’s second woman prime minister after Margaret Thatcher.

    Meanwhile Cameron stepped down after Britons rejected his entreaties and voted in a June 23 referendum to quit the EU, weakening the 28-nation bloc and creating huge economic uncertainty.

    Apart from the task of executing ‘Brexit’, May must try to unite a divided party and a nation in which many, on the evidence of the vote, feel angry with the political elite.

    There was an atmosphere of hilarity in parliament as Cameron traded humorous jabs with beleaguered opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn,in spite of the serious backdrop.

    “I am beginning to admire his tenacity; he is reminding me of the black knight in Monty Python’s Holy Grail.

    “He is been kicked so many times but he says ‘Keep going, it is only a flesh wound, I admire that,’’ Cameron said.

    He took the opportunity to trumpet his government’s achievements in generating one of the fastest growth rates among western economies, chopping the budget deficit, creating 2.5 million jobs and legalising gay marriage.

    However his legacy would be overshadowed by his failed referendum gamble, which he had hoped would keep Britain at the heart of a reformed EU.

  •  “Brexit” will affect Diaspora remittances to Nigeria- Don

     “Brexit” will affect Diaspora remittances to Nigeria- Don

    Britain’s exit from the European Union (EU) will cause a contraction of the Diaspora remittances from Britain, a don, Prof. Isaac Albert, said on Monday.

    Albert, the Director, Institute for Peace and Strategic Studies, University of Ibadan, made the assertion while speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos on the impact of Brexit.

    Brexit is the exit of Britain from the EU on June 23 through a referendum.

    He noted that Britain hosted many Nigerians and a contraction of its economy would discourage Nigerians from travelling there.

    “We have a very large Diaspora population in the U.K; with Brexit, I see the British economy contracting.

    “As the British economy becomes affected negatively by their exit from the EU, fewer Nigerians will be willing to travel to Britain,” Albert said.

    The don expressed optimism that Britain would get over the present challenges sooner than later, but noted that it might exploit countries with close ties to it on its way to recovery.

    On the political dimension to the Brexit, Albert said that Britain opted out from the EU because it felt it did not have much to gain from it.

    He, however, said that it was contradictory for Britain to respect the rights and wishes of its citizens in pulling out from the EU, since it stood in the way of other groups in Nigeria in their quest for self-determination.

    While noting that as a scholar, he had never been an advocate for secession, Albert said that it was a universally accepted principle that if a group of people wanted to be on their own, they should be allowed to do so.

    He urged the leadership of Britain to be more altruistic and sincere in superintending over the wishes of people of other nationalities in their quest for self-determination.

    NAN recalls that the British people had voted to pull out of the EU, a decision that prompted the Prime Minister, David Cameron’s decision to resign.

    Brexit had also affected global stocks negatively as seen by a contraction in most developed and emerging economies, especially in Asia.

    At the parallel market segment of the market, traders were confused as to the price they could place on the British Pound Sterling as uncertainties stared them in the face at the outcome of the referendum.