Tag: death

  • Death for Morsi and life for Mubarak

    Fair trial under the rule of law, surely has variants. One uncanny type, is the Egyptian model.May be because, democracy there, is in infancy, despite the age of that ancient civilisation. Last Saturday, May 16, an Egyptian court sentenced the first democratically elected, but ousted President Mohammed Morsi and 105 others, mainly from the abolished, but feared Muslim Brotherhood, to death, for their role during the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak. A week earlier, an Egyptian court after several rigmarole, also sentenced former President Mubarak and his two sons, to three years in prison for corruption, during his 30 years rule.

    Morsi and company were sentenced to death for their role in a mass jail break, during the 2011 uprising that eventually ended the Mubarak era. According to media report, armed members of Hamas entered Egypt through illegal tunnels during the uprising and taking advantage of the crisis, they fought their way to various prisons, to release Morsi and several other members of the Islamic brotherhood, who were in jail. In the process many prison guards were killed, while thousands of other prisoners were set free. Parts of the jails stormed by the attackers, were also destroyed.

    Amnesty International (AI) has, however, described the trial, as a charade. According to Al Jazeera report, Al said: “condemning Mohammed Morsi to death after more grossly unfair trials shows a complete disregard for human rights … he was held for months incommunicado without judicial oversight and that he didn’t have a lawyer to represent him”. Again Morsi and 12 other defendants were last month sentenced to 20 years imprisonment, for their role in the detention and torture of protesters outside the presidential palace, in the uprising, in December 2012; that eventually culminated in his ouster bythe military. For Morsi, there will be several more trial days ahead, as there are many more charges against him.

    While it may be tenable to hold Morsi and his Islamic Brotherhood, partly responsible for mismanaging the gains of the 2011 revolution that toppled the authoritarian rule of Mubarak, it is ridiculous that a so called democratically elected government of Gen Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, would allow this abuse of the judicial process, for temporal gains. Unless there is a change, Egypt’s sputtering democracy may wobble and fumble to a final stop, in the nearest future. According to assistant Professor Abdullah Al- Arian of Georgetown University, School of Foreign Service in Qatar, there are over 41,000 Egyptians in prison on political charges.

    In an article: “The many trials of Mohammed Morsi”, the history scholar holds the judiciary, as an accomplice in the degradation of democracy in Egypt. He wrote: “There is a method to madness that has become the Egyptian judiciary.” He furthered, “not to be outdone, the Egyptian judiciary has played an equally critical role throughout these events.  Its ruling throughout the post Mubarak’s transition from the dissolution of Egypt’s democratically elected parliament to its failure to convict any official from the former regime ensure that any attempt at revolutionary change would be thwarted”.

    Conversely for former President Mubarak, he and his two sons got a mere three years jail term, for what had been dubbed by the media, as the ‘presidential palaces’ affair. The media has not missed the irony that Mubarak’s trial was conducted in the same court, were Morsi was earlier sentenced to 20 years in jail. Again unlike Morsi, Mubarak was granted bail in 2013, and has since been staying at a military hospital. However like Morsi, he faced several charges after his ouster in 2011, but the tide changed in his favour, as soon as the revolution that toppled him was truncated, following the ouster of the Islamic Brotherhood, which won the first democratic election, but couldn’t manage their victory.

    In December 2012, this column had forewarned President Morsi thus: “Political power apparently tastes like a honeyed alcohol or a sweetened intoxicant. And when there is substance abuse as in most third world countries, the result is ruination. But for the eternal vigilance of Egyptians, President Mohammed Morsy’s careless overdose of that dangerous drug would have turned to an addiction. Nonetheless, Morsy and his Muslim brotherhood despite warning signals from their countrymen appears hell bent on taking that historical country through the ignominious road of the disgraced former President, Hosni Mubarak. By his request to be allowed to exercise autocratic powers for a period, the President was asking for a medical clearance for a pre-arranged insanity in other not to be culpable for a planned murder”.

  • Girl stabs brother to death over argument

    A 21-year-old girl, Omasan Ogbe, yesterday stabbed her teenage brother, Laju, to death during an argument over house chores.

    The incident occurred in Ugbuwangue, Warri, Delta State.

    It was learnt that Omasan asked Laju, who was the only son of the family, to do the dishes.

    The boy was said to have resisted, reminding his sister that he had fetched water and was tired.

    The argument was said to have resulted in a fight. Laju reportedly slammed the sister on the floor.

    He was said to have run to the back of their home, his sister wielding a kitchen knife behind him.

    Omasan allegedly stabbed Laju in the chest, when he caught up with him.

    A family source, who spoke in confidence, said: “He fell to the ground and started screaming for help. People rushed to the house to help the boy.”

    Laju was rushed to the Warri Central Hospital but he died because he lost a lot of blood.

    He was buried in front of his father’s house at Ugbuwangue.

    As the reality of her action dawned on her, Omasan was said to have attempted an escape.

    But she was apprehended by neighbours and handed over to the police.

    Attempts to speak with the children’s mother were unsuccessful.

    Their father was said to have died over 10 years ago.

    The woman was still in shock at the time of filing this report.

    Police spokesman Celestina Kalu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), confirmed the teenager’s death.

    She said investigation had begun into the matter.

  • Tragedy in Warri as girl stabs brother to death

    The Ogbe family in the Ugbuwangue axis of Warri, Delta state, was Tuesday thrown into deep mourning as one of their daughters, known as Omasan, stabbed her teenage younger brother, Laju, to death.

    The Nation learnt that Omasan, a 21-year old, was involved in an argument with Laju over house chores, which the younger one was said to have resisted.

    According to a source, when Omasan asked Laju, who was the only son of the family, to do the dishes, the boy was said to have resisted, reminding his sister that he had already fetched water and was tired to do more.

    The argument resulted to a physical fight and at some point; Laju slammed the sister on the floor. He reportedly ran to the back with his sister on his trail, wilding a kitchen knife and eventually stabbed him in the chest.

    ‘’He fell to the ground, started screaming,  and calling for help before people rushed to the house to attempt to help the boy,’’ the source said.

    By the time Laju got help and was rushed to the Warri Central Hospital, he has passed away as he was said to have lost much blood. He was later buried in front of his father’s house at Ugbuwangue.

    Meanwhile, realising the magnitude of her action, Omasan, was said to have attempted an escape, but was grabbed by the people around and handed over to the police.

    Attempt to get a reaction from the children’s only parent; their mother, as their father was said to have passed away over ten years ago, was unsuccessful.

    She was still in shock as at the time of filing this report.

    Police Public Relations Officer in Delta State, Celestina Kalu, confirmed the teenager’s death.

    She added that investigations into the case had commenced.

  • Emenike escapes death in Turkey

    Emenike escapes death in Turkey

    Emmanuel Emenike and the  rest of his Fenerbahçe teammates were lucky men after a gunman fired shots at the team’s bus on their way back from a 5-1 win over Caykur Rizespor.

    Fenerbahce’s team bus was shot at by attackers armed with shotguns, leaving the vehicle’s driver wounded but the players and staff unharmed.

    Emenike, who has been battling poor form and almost walked off the pitch two weeks ago following boos from his team fans,  was punished for his actions as he was left on the bench until the 55th minute when they were already five goals up but he will still have a reason to cheer after escaping unhurt from the gun shot incident, which almost ran the car off a cliff as bullets hit the team driver.

    The driver was hospitalised with wounds he suffered from the attack and doctors have since confirmed that a metal object was found in the driver’s head, which was bleeding profusely upon his arrival.

    Location of the shooting at Trabzon lead to suggestions by Fenerbahce’s vice president Mahmut Uslu that Trabzonspor supporters were behind the attack, though there is no evidence to support such assertions.

    There has been no love lost between Fenerbahce and Trabzonspor since the aftermath of the 2010-2011 season, when the former won the title ahead of the latter despite being embroiled in a match-fixing scandal.

    Trabzon’s Governor Abdulcelil Oz initially claimed the damage was done with stones but released a subsequent statement suggesting the bus was definitely shot at.

  • Bricklayer machetes neighbour to death

    An Ebute Meta Chief Magistrate’s Court in Lagos has remanded a 29-year-old bricklayer, Ibrahim Tijani, in Prison for allegedly killing his neighbour, Bashorun Okanla.

    Chief Magistrate M.O Tanimola said the accused would remain in custody, pending legal advice from the Directorate of Public Prosecutions (DPP).

    The accused, who resides at Okun in Ajah area of Lagos, is facing a charge of murder.

    Prosecuting Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Elizabeth Ekuma told the court that the late Okanla had complained about the fumes from Tijani’s generator which was filtering into his apartment.

    “An argument ensued between the duo which led Tijani to enter his room, and pick a cutlass which he used to attack the deceased on one of his legs and the left hand”, she said.

    Okanla, she said, died in hospital.

    ASP Ekuma said the offence was committed on February 8, around 2.30pm at Okun Ajah, Lagos.

    The prosecutor said the offence contravened Section 221 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State.

    The magistrate adjourned the case till April 15, pending advice from DPP.

  • Fed Govt probes death of Aisha Falode’s son

    Fed Govt probes death of Aisha Falode’s son

    The Federal Government may have begun the probe into  the death of 19-year-old Toba Falode, who was allegedly killed in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on February 16, last year, it was learnt yesterday.

    Toba, the late son of renowned sports journalist, Mrs Aisha Falode, was said to have been pushed from his 17th floor apartment on February 16, last year, by a Saudi Arabia teenager who accused  the deceased of having an affair with his girlfriend.

    Although testimonies of Toba’s friends, who were at his apartment when the incidence occurred and exhibits gathered from the scene fingered the suspect, Faisal Aldakmary Al-Nasser, the Dubai police investigation said Toba fell from the railings. He was said to have sat on the railings with his feet off the ground.

    Several efforts by Mrs. Falode, her lawyer Festus Keyamo and rights activist, Dr. Joe Okey-Odumakin to get the Nigerian Embassy in Dubai to prevail on the country’s police to reopen the case proved abortive.

    The situation had pushed the bereaved mother to ponder the worth of a Nigerian life and the activities of the Foreign Affairs Ministry.

    Mrs Falode spoke yesterday in Lagos at Toba’s one-year rememberance at the Trinity House, Zion Centre,  Lekki,Lagos. The popular broadcaster and television host spoke of her plan to start a foundation to give succour to women who lose their children in  questionable circumstances.

    Expressing hope that Toba would get justice, Mrs Falode said the Federal Government, through the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation, had written the Dubai Government.

    She urged Nigerians to hold the Foreign Affairs Ministry accountable for the death of Nigerians abroad, especially in suspicious circumstances.

    She blamed the Nigerian Embassy in UAE for not making sufficient efforts on the incident, despite written, oral and pictoral evidence presented to it.

    Mrs Falode urged the government to ensure that her son and other young Nigerians killed in foreign lands get justice.

  • Homosexuality: Man stoned to death in Syria

    Homosexuality: Man stoned to death in Syria

    Disturbing images have shown a man being thrown from a tower for his sexuality in the town of Tal Abyad in Syria.

    The man, who sat on a plastic chair was also blindfolded before he was hurled out of the building which was at least 7 storey as punishment for ‘being gay’.

    According to local media reports, the man who appears to be in his 50s after being thrown from the roof of the tower block, miraculously survived the fall, but that did not stop him from being stoned to death.

    The man was flanked by two masked men in dark clothing and army fatigues, whom people believe to be ISIS militants.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights believes that the man’s crime was having a ‘homosexual affair’.

    The man who appeared to have survived the fall was seen sitting at the foot of the building, when onlookers began to gather around him, throwing stones at him until he became unconscious.

  •  Fayose death wish for Buhari

    Recently, the Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose placed an advert on the front page of The Punch suggesting that the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Muhammadu Buhari, will die in office if elected president.

    The advert, which has the pictures of Murtala Muhammed, Sani Abacha, and Umaru Yar’Adua – past Nigerian leaders who died in office was accompanied by excerpt from the Bible book of Deuteronomy 30 verse 19.

    ”Nigerians be warned! Nigeria…I have set before thee life and death. Therefore, choose life that both thee, and thy seed may live,” it said, suggesting that General Buhari represents death, while his rival, President Goodluck Jonathan represents life. The advert put a huge question mark over the picture of General Buhari, which was placed beside the pictures of the late leaders. The advert then asked its readers: “Will you allow history to repeat itself? Enough of State burials.”

    It is crystal clear that Fayose and his cohorts are not only desperate, they are playing God by professing death for somebody on account of age and election. Fayose’ divisive advert is enough to plunge the country into political cum ethnic crisis, especially at this critical period when the polls are gathering momentum. If not, why was the advert placed on a day that President Jonathan was in Sokoto State for campaign rally? It may not be out of place to infer that the move was part of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) strategy to see if the forthcoming polls would be scuttled or postponed as result of induced violence or provocation of the North.

    But the North and the APC’s reaction to it have shown that they are more sagacious politically than President Jonathan and his PDP cohorts. Fayose and the PDP have forgotten that there is no correlation between age and death because sickness and death knows no age or tribe. Even if the likes of Sani Abacha, Murtala Mohammed, and Umaru Yar’Adua died in office as presidents of the country at different times, why would Fayose single out deceased former presidents of the country from the North in the advert? Have Fayose and the PDP forgotten that General JTU Aguiyi Ironsi from Abia State, like Murtala Muhammed, was killed while in office as Head of State? Or is it, as stated by the Buhari Campaign Organisation, that the PDP and its agents are planning to kill Buhari if he wins the election?

    Just like Fayose, every Nigerian has antecedents, and we know ourselves well. It is often said that leopard can never change her colour. A pig will ever remain so no matter how many times you bathe it. Claiming change of character in old age is a ruse; one cannot learn using left hand in old age.

    In PDP and the Presidency are many characters like Fayose who believe they know better than Nigerians. Unfortunately for them, Nigerians know them well as accidental and opportunistic leaders. One of the presidential aides recently declared that wat is better for the country to disintegrate, instead of APC winning the presidential election! Those behind the retinue of advertorials for President Jonathan’s re-election in print and electronic media are greatest beneficiaries of subsidy, aviation and power sector scams. They have used the money to form different support groups for President Jonathan’s re-election. Two of them that symbolized fraud and corruption before Jonathan’s government were from South-east zone. They lack character and integrity, but these are President’s friends who are driving his campaign with the country’s looted fund. These are people being celebrated in the Presidency today where corruption, sycophancy and mediocrity are being adored, celebrated, and encouraged.

    With this calibre of people hobnobbing with President Jonathan, Nigerians were not surprised at Fayose’s action. In the coming days, many more of such provocative, insensitive and divisive adverts, actions or comments will emanate from the president’s camp, because they have no useful message to give Nigerians. Fayose’s advert has also shown that those who claimed to be working for President Jonathan’s re-election are indirectly working against it, by doing more damage to his image.

    Again by the advert content, Fayose has agreed that Buhari will win the election, except that he wishes that he will die in office like Abacha, Muhammed and Yar Adua. What a daft and preposterous thinking by those who call themselves leaders! Recall that some of the President’s cohorts have been comparing him with great world leaders like late Dr. Nelson Mandela, US President Barack Obama and others without showing the correlation between Jonathan’s personality and that of these great world leaders. Unlike people like Fayose and other supporters of Jonathan’s re-election, the issue at stake now is not about age or death, it is about leadership, antecedents, performance and the future of the country. Besides, God is the creator and controller of the universe and not a mere mortal. Politicians must draw a parallel line between God and politics of hatred, because of its consequences. The holy writ says: “But anyone who hates a brother or sister is in the darkness and walks around in the darkness. They do not know where they are going, because the darkness has blinded them.”

     

    • Olayinka, a cleric wrote from Ikeja, Lagos.
  • Save us from canal of death, residents cry out

    Save us from canal of death, residents cry out

    Residents of Abule-Oki and eight other adjoining communities in Agbado Oke-Odo Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of Lagos State have appealed to the state government to complete the dredging and the concrete lining of the Aboru canal.

    According to them, the non-completion of the walls of Arigbanla canal have exposed them to and put them at the mercy of a deluge of flood, which at its peak often rises up to nine feet, submerging everything and destroying lives and property.

    Rising from a meeting last Thursday, the residents urged  Governor Babatunde Fashola to; “save them and their properties from the ‘confluence of fury’ of the flood in their neighbourhood.”

    They argued that they had continued to suffer environmental degradation as a result of government’s effort to de-flood some parts of the state.

    According to them, their communities, which has been laid waste by flood had never experienced such and had been immune to the savagery of the floods until the area became a melting point for about eight separate flood water paths. Abule Oki, they specifically claimed, now receives waste water from Ahmaddiya, Agbelekale/Ekoro, Papa Ashafa/Mulero, Orile Agege/Dopemu, Oke Shagun, Akinola and Oke-Odo/Abule Egba.

    “Many more canals have been channeled into this area, leaving Abule Oki, Akinola, Raji Rasaki and adjoining communities more devastated by the flood abatement activities of the government,” a resident said.

    The Chairman of the Committee on Canal Dredging of the communities, Alhaji Kamarudeen Bamidele, said Abule Oki which is the confluence point for all the flood water channeled to the area, is worse hit as the contractor – Messrs Dully Dredging and Construction Company have abandoned the work.

    The chairman expressed the residents’ displeasure that the project which was awarded since February 2012 with a 12-month completion has been abandoned, with dire consequences to the people. According to him, the project ought to have been completed since January 2013.

    Bamidele, a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) retiree, alleged the loss of several lives and properties to the perennial flooding as a result of the neglect of the canal dredging.

    He said: “Personally, I lost over N14 million in a fish pond investment in 2011, when we experienced the worst devastating flood that necessitated this canal dredging. Several landlords lost their homes to the flood and many tenants relocated because the entire area became submerged. So many houses sunk and several houses were abandoned and were overgrown with weeds as if they were virgin lands.”

    But the area was never prone to flood. In fact, flood, according to Superior Evangelist Stephen Oduntan of the Celestial Church of Christ, who is also the Vice Chairman of the Canal Dredging Committee, was a rarity.

    “This area was never prone to flood when I moved into this area in the 70s,” he recalled.

    Continuing, he said: “We were never troubled by flood. In, fact, this same river that is now heavily polluted, was where we baptized new converts. Everything changed a little over a decade ago and since then, things have never been the same again.”

    Bamidele claimed that everybody in the government, including the governor and the two concerned government agencies – the Ministries of the Environment and Information & Strategy, knew about the plight of his people in the hands of the confluence of fury.  He wondered why the government would fold its arms while a contractor who claimed (at a stakeholders meeting while the project was about to start) would walk from without any repercussion.

    He said: “Sequel to the flood disaster of 2011, government decided to dredge all canals around the state and Arigbanla was dredged and the concrete lining was done, since then, they never experienced flooding in those areas again.

    “When they met with us, we were assured that our canal would be dredged and a concrete lining carried out at three different locations. We were told a ‘gang’ would work from Ahmaddiya Area at Oke-Odo down to Agbelekale, the second ‘gang’ shall work from Pleasure Bus Stop along the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway to link up with Arigbanla, from where waste water from Abbatoir and other canals have been channeled, into Abule Oki and the third gang would work from Akinola Area towards Command.

    “While work started at a slow pace at the Ahmaddiya/Agbelekale axis, nothing was done at the Abule Oki/Akinola end, and this axis, especially Abule Oki is where you have this heavy flood confluence.

    “One of the assurances we were given then, was that a concrete median lining would be constructed along this confluence to channel the flood water, but nothing of such has been done.”

    The chairman wondered why the contractor would fail to address the dredging and concrete lining of the Aboru canal from Abeokuta Expressway (Arigbanla end), where the flood hit hardest and nothing had been done till date.

    He said the two culverts constructed on Jimoh Street and Ige Street should be removed and replaced by bridges as the former have continued to worsen the people’s plights and pains because they are usually silted, leading to heavy flooding.

    He listed the demands of the communities to include the immediate dredging of the Aboru canal to reduce the pains of residents of the about 10 communities affected by the flood the population of which he put at over eight million.

    Every month, he said, residents spend between N18, 000 and N25, 000 to clear the canal and the culverts of debris which has resulted into a reduction in incidences of flooding anytime it rains.

    “We do not know our fate anymore. We have lived with this neglect for over two years now and that is why we are appealing to the government to come to our aid before the next rainy season,” he said.

    Another community leader, Mr. Solomon Agboghoroma, who have been living in Abule Oki since 1979, said the incidences of flooding was alien to the community until the last decade when government’s activities became more pronounced.

    He said: “Now, I spend between N300,000 –N400,000 yearly to reinforce my fence and protect my house from flood, yet, water usually submerge my house every time it rained heavily in the area. I no longer have tenants because the entire ground floor has been taken over by flood.”

    Agboghoroma said government should come to the aid of the residents to prevent grave loss of lives and property.

    Bamidele, who presented series of letters sent to the state governor on the aborted canal dredging, the latest of which was sent to the governor on September 29, 2014, pleaded with the government to revisit the Aboru canal dredging as further delay would further threaten integrity of the culverts, the base of which has been exposed and weakened by the volume of water passing underneath.

    All attempts to get any response from the supervising engineer, Mr Ajadi proved abortive as he neither picked his calls nor responded to the SMS sent to his mobile telephone devise.

    He said what the communities needed was not palliative measures such as the similar measures carried in August last year never solved the problem.

    He said the communities should be looking forward to steps being taken that would assure a lasting solution and save the residents from the yearly flooding that has put their existence in the area perpetual threat.

    But, the state government said: “Dredging of Akinola River is an ongoing project with the dredging work along the downstream of the channel to the discharge point at Aiyetoro Bridge in Ogun State completed.

    “The contractor was advised to concentrate on the dredging of the downstream in order to create adequate capacity for the channel and for effective discharge of other channels/drains (collectors and tributaries) that are contributing to the channel. It should be mentioned that one of the tributaries to the channel is Ilo-Awela River of which its dredging is at advance stage.

    “With the dredging of the downstream completed (from Ige Street in Akboru to Aiyetoro Bridge in Ogun State), the catchment of Aboru and Command are now flood free.

    “The Ministry has concentrated on the need to ensure that the entire catchment area of the channel is flood free.

    “What is uppermost to the State Government is the functionality of the canal and the need to reduce /eliminate the incidence of flooding in the areas.”

  • Tension in Delta community over suspected cultist’s death

    There was pandemonium at the weekend in Okpanam, Oshimili North Local Government Area of Delta State, following the alleged killing of a man for suspected cult-related activities.

    The incident occurred at Obodogba Quarters after rival cult groups clashed over money-sharing.

    Okpanam is a suburb of Asaba, the Delta State capital.

    It was gathered that over 20 cultists used dangerous weapons, including battle axes, cutlasses, cudgels and knives, in the clash that led to the death of a cultist.

    Police spokesperson Celestina Kalu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said the victim died on the way to the hospital.

    She said one person had been arrested in connection with the incident.

    The spokesperson said the command would apprehend other fleeing cultists from their hideouts.

    Kalu urged the residents to remain calm and go about their lawful activities.

    An eyewitness said the deceased, who hailed from Abakiliki, the Ebonyi State capital, had been stabbed in the neck when his “cult group” clashed with another group in the town.

    It was learnt that trouble started when a member of the Baga cult, simply identified as Ozuronye, had his debts forgiven.

    But a rival cult, Two-Two,  ambushed Ozuronye and beat him up.

    An eyewitness said: “Obviously, Ozuronye went to mobilise his members for revenge. The groups met at Obodogba Quarters and unleashed violence.

    Some of them sustained severe injuries, including Ozuronye, who died on the way to hospital.”

    A source said the body of the deceased had been deposited at a hospital’s mortuary.