Tag: defence

  • Defence Ministry joins arms purchase probe

    Defence Ministry joins arms purchase probe

    The Federal Ministry of Defence was stopped from taking part in arms procurement, Permanent Secretary Ismaila Aliyu said yesterday

    According to him, the Services took over completely what should be part of the ministry’s  responsibilities.

    He believes the probe of arms purchases ordered by President Muhammadu Buhari will ensure cost effectiveness in future procurement.

    Aliyu, addressing reporters at the State House after a meeting of top officials of the ministry with the President, said President Buhari had approved the inclusion of a representative of the Ministry on the panel.

    He said: “Mr President has asked that the Ministry of Defence be included in that committee. The ministry was very involved in the procurement in those years. So, definitely we have something to present to that committee.

    “We are now part and parcel of that committee. The ministry is very excited that this committee has been formed.

    “Apart from the administrative and financial support, it is to make sure that the policy thrust is being complied with, procurement of relevant equipment, according to specification of the armed forces, is being complied with and we are very happy for that.

    “At the end of this, we hope to have procurement that will be value-added, cost effective and will meet our needs both locally and internationally.”

    “Definitely the ministry was involved in the procurement of arms but in recent years the responsibility was shifted to the services,” he added.

    On the meeting with the President, he said: “This is a family meeting. We have briefed him. Mr. President is happy with the operations of the ministry, the operation of the fight against insurgency, there is substantial progress – and achievements.

    “He has asked us to continue with the momentum and he is very willing to support the needs of the armed forces.”

    Aliyu said the new service chiefs are doing everything possible to win the war against Boko Haram before the three months deadline.

  • In defence of my Archbishop

    Archbishop Mathew Hassan Kukah has been under severe stress and strain these past weeks.  His role, agenda as well as the motive of the peace group he empanelled have come under deep scrutiny. His view as a cleric who daily seeks forgiveness of sins, no matter how grave, that Jonathan’s act of conceding defeat must be appreciated even if he stole all the monies in the world has been described as ‘dishonest’ by thePunch newspapers because  it ‘raises larger questions about our moral values’. Osita Okechukwu of CNPP has described Kukah’s argument as ‘subtle blackmail’.

    A prominent member of his peace group, the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar has distanced himself from Kukah’s call for remission of punishment. The Congregation of Catholic Bishops has pitched its tent with Buhari. His other platform that was expected to be more sympathetic has turned itself into an intellectual lynch mob. Yet the only weakness of this Nigerian patriot is his passion for the country. This he has abundantly demonstrated in the last few years by serving selflessly in various ad hoc committees set up to address the ‘Nigerian question’, starting with the Oputa Panel .

    Kukah is a cleric greatly misunderstood.  Having taking vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, Kukah cannot be seen as supporting corrupt practices. For him, “We all must defeat the ogre of corruption which has consumed our past, destroyed our present and threatens our future.” He, however, believes ‘corruption is a symptom of our semi-primitive state of existence which can only be defeated by development and not by threats, moral exhortations or lachrymal denunciations but by adopting scientific skills; an understanding of the causative factors’. And here, he does not speak as a cleric. ”I consider myself a public intellectual”, he says, “My job is to stir the hornet’s nest, generating new ideas and pointing the way forward.  I make mistakes; my views are not gospel and people are free and welcome to nourish me with new ideas.”

    If he, therefore, says, “Nigerians must have heroes and heroines; people whose names will inspire some awe, not because they are saints but because of what they have done,” he is speaking as a stakeholder in the Nigeria project. And if for him, Jonathan, like all our surviving leaders who many have accused of betraying our nation, fits the bill, he is not asking anyone to swallow his prejudices which are likely going to be coloured by his accident of being a member of an oppressed minority ethnic group that has for years fought for self- actualization and membership of a persecuted minority religion. Above all, Kukah’s critics must be told he is protected by our federal system which as a social philosophy strives to liberate individual and groups from the tyranny of the state.

    With the above clarification, we can go back to Kukah’s thesis. First he says ‘corruption is a factor of underdevelopment in Africa’. But so is leadership. We cannot separate leadership from crisis of underdevelopment which manifests in various forms.  I am not sure if any of our leaders, including the incumbent President Buhari whose first policy statement is fighting corruption at the LGA when there is no known federation where the centre usurps the functions of states and local governments, has sincerely articulated our crisis of nationhood.

    We must ask ourselves why our past leaders behaved like foreign conquerors with little faith in our nation. In four years, 1979-1983, Shagari’s NPN administration frittered away all the foreign reserve left behind by Obasanjo in 1979. The economy collapsed while his NPN wheelers and dealers became intoxicated with specially branded imported “Akinloye Champagne’ to wash down their profligate consumption.

    Buhari came in on a rescue mission rejecting IMF liberalisation dose and insisted Nigerians will not eat grain until they produced their own grain. Babangida sent him to detention, embraced IMF liberalisation, paving the way for the collapse of our budding industries, today’s N1b daily importation of grains, and exchange rate of about N2 to $1 to today N212 to $1. And in an act of betrayal of our nation, he went on to annul the most credible election in our nation’s history. Abdulsalami Abubakar is tarred by the inexplicable death of MKO Abiola in his custody on the eve of his expected release after serving his expected four-year presidency in detention instead of presidential palace desecrated by Abacha. Shonekan who neither contested nor won an election was an impostor used by crafty Babangida to supplant MKO Abiola, his fellow Egba.

    Obasanjo has publicly admitted tampering with the democratic process in 1979, imposition of Yar Adua in 2007 and Jonathan in 2011. He has been accused of presiding over the worst-conducted presidential election in our nation’s history in 2007. Statesmen are not leaders who exploit ethnic and religious fears of citizens for personal gains but those who demonstrated their faith in their nations through selfless service.

    We similarly have no evidence to support Kukah’s unrestrained declaration that “Jonathan will be remembered as a great Nigerian statesman who put God and nation first”. Not many will see promoting religious intolerance by moving from church to synagogue in Nigeria, from Jerusalem to Nazareth and to Rome with indicted government officials and governors without character and using every opportunity to exploit our ethnic divisions for electoral victory, as evidence of putting the nation first.

    Kukah also wants the nation to treat Jonathan well so as not to “give excuse to those African leaders who want to go to their grave from the throne bringing shame to Africa and diminishing their people, breeding hatred and war by their greed.” Here also, Kukah seems to suffer from selective perception.  We find no evidence to show Jonathan conceded defeat out of altruism. What we know is that Jonathan who played Dr Okwelieze Nwodo against Vincent Ogbulafor to immorally secure the PDP ticket in 2010, outwitted the northern states’ governors as well as his godfather he later dismissed as ‘Motor Park tout’, is a very resourceful politician. He had undermined the credibility of the military by involving them in “Ekitigate’, Osun pacification and in shifting the date of the election to buy time. He had frittered away the goodwill of the people by allegedly funding TAM led by those EFCC had questioned over the N1.7t fuel subsidy scam to assault Nigerians with lies.

    Besides pressure from the international community, Obasanjo, Jonathan’s estranged godfather has become his nemesis. With Elder Orubebe’s theatrics after he had lost the election in four of the nation’s six geo-political zones, he was smart enough to concede defeat without first consulting PDP wheelers and dealers that he claimed had caged him. He sensed if he had done otherwise and violence broke out, he would have ended up in The Hague just like Gbagbo.

  • Ortom closes defence at tribunal

    Benue State Governor Samuel  Ortom has closed his defence at the Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Makurdi.

    He told the tribunal that he resigned his membership of the Peoples Democratic Party  (PDP) and registered with the All Progressives Congress (APC) last December 9.

    A statement by his Special Adviser on Media Mr Teherv Agezua said a former PDP Nzorov ward chairman in Guma Local Government Area, Felix Agbaka and incumbent APC Nzorov ward chairman  Adikpe Ezekiel testified for Ortom.

    Agbaka tendered the governor’s resignation letter from the PDP.

    Ezekiel said he registered Ortom on the same date and issued him a membership card.

    The ward chairman, who identified both the card and register, also stated that he wrote to the party’s council chairman notifying him about what he described as the ‘big catch’ and later took the party register to the state secretariat.

    He also identified the letter he wrote to the local government party chairman. The letter, alongside all the other documents were admitted and marked accordingly.

    The other respondents to the petition, the APC and Independent Electoral Commission (INEC), have equally entered their defence and called witnesses.

    Agezua said the governor, last weekend assigned portfolios to his commissioners and special advisers.  The governor  made the announcement at the end of a three-day retreat at Benue Peoples House.

    The exercise saw the appointment  of the former  Managing Partner, Michael Gusa and  Company, as Commissioner for Justice and Attorney-General.

    Other commissioners and special advisers assigned portfolios are: David Olofu (Finance); Odeh Ageh (Information and Orientation); Emmanuel Manger (Works and Transport);  Nick Wende (Water Resources and Environment); Mwuese Mnyim – Women Affairs; Professor Dennis Ityavyar – Education, Science and Technology; James Anbua – Agriculture; Arts, Culture and Tourism – Sekav Iyortyom; Youths and Sports–Onoja Lawrence; Housing and Urban Development -John Otokpa; Industry, Trade and Investment – Dr.  Tersoo Kpelai; Health and Human Services –Dr. Cecilia Ojabo

    Gusa was born on May 27, 1967 at Mbakyan, Ugee Ward in Gwer Local Government Area, Benue state.

    He started early education at Local Government Education Authority, LGEA Primary school, Agasha, 1973, moved to LGEA Primary School Abinsi, and completed at St. Patrick’s Roman Catholic Mission, R.C.M. Primary School, Taraku, in 1978.

    Thereafter he proceeded to Gaadi Comprehensive College, Vandeikya, between 1979 and 1980 and later moved to Mount Saint Gabriel’s Secondary School, Makurdi; 1980-1984, obtaining the General Certificate of Education, GCE Ordinary Level.

    Mr. Gusa also attended the School of Basic Studies, Makurdi from 1984-1986 and obtained the Interim Joint Matriculation Board, IJMB, certificate in 1986.

    He gained admission into Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria in 1987 obtained the Bachelor’s Degree in Law in 1990 and proceeded to Nigeria Law School, Lagos from where he graduated in 1991 and was called to the bar in the same year.

    He was Counsel in Chambers at Lobi Chambers, Makurdi, 1992-1993; Principal Partner, Michael Gusa and Company, 1994-2005; Special Assistant to the Governor, 2005-7; Senior Special Assistant to the Governor, Poverty Alleviation, 2008-11 and 2013 to February, 2015 as well as Managing Partner, Michael Gusa and Company, before his appointment as commissioner.

  • Bank opens  defence in Braithwaite’s N10b suit

    Bank opens defence in Braithwaite’s N10b suit

    Elder statesman Dr. Tunji Braithwate told a Lagos High Court sitting in Ikeja yesterday that the 14-storey head office building built by Standard Chartered Bank on Ahmadu Bello Way, Victoria Island did not comply with the approval given the bank by the Lagos State Ministry of Environment and the final report on Enviromental Impact Assessment (EIA) Act 2004.

    Dr. Braithwaite spoke while cross examining one of the defence witnesses ,  Adeboye Fowora, a  Senior Project Manager with the bank at the resumed hearing of the N10 billion suit instituted against the bank.

    Standard Chartered Bank opened its defence yesterday.

    When the bank’s counsel, A.A. Adegbonmire, opened defence for the bank, the first witness, Susan Oluwole who once worked in the bank’s Corporate Real Estate Services Department, while under cross examination by Dr. Braithwaite, also stated that the head office building has reached completion stage.

    Ms Oluwole claimed that she was only aware “to a little extent” of the July 15, 2007 judgment delivered by Justice  Okoro  which Braithwaite claimed stopped the bank from going further ahead with the construction of the building at the second level.

    Adegbonmire objected to further cross examination of the witness. Justice Doris Okuwobi adjourned the matter till tomorrow for continuation of hearing.

  • Bank opens defence in Braithwaite’s N10b suit

    Elder statesman Dr. Tunji Braithwate told a Lagos High Court sitting in Ikeja yesterday that the 14-storey head office building built by Standard Chartered Bank on Ahmadu Bello Way, Victoria Island did not comply with the approval given the bank by the Lagos State Ministry of Environment and the final report on Enviromental Impact Assessment (EIA) Act 2004.

    Dr. Braithwaite spoke while cross examining one of the defence witnesses ,  Adeboye Fowora, a  Senior Project Manager with the bank at the resumed hearing of the N10 billion suit instituted against the bank.

    Standard Chartered Bank opened its defence yesterday.

    When the bank’s counsel, A.A. Adegbonmire, opened defence for the bank, the first witness, Susan Oluwole who once worked in the bank’s Corporate Real Estate Services Department, while under cross examination by Dr. Braithwaite, also stated that the head office building has reached completion stage.

    Ms Oluwole claimed that she was only aware “to a little extent” of the July 15, 2007 judgment delivered by Justice  Okoro  which Braithwaite claimed stopped the bank from going further ahead with the construction of the building at the second level.

    Adegbonmire objected to further cross examination of the witness. Justice Doris Okuwobi adjourned the matter till tomorrow for continuation of hearing.

  • Fani-Kayode ends defence in money laundering charge

    Fani-Kayode ends defence in money laundering charge

    Director of Media and Publicity of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Presidential Campaign Organisation Chief Femi Fani-Kayode yesterday closed his defence in his trial for alleged money laundering.

    His lawyers, led by Mr. Ifedayo Adedipe (SAN), told Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia of the Federal High Court in Lagos that the defence had no more witnesses to call.

    “My Lord, we have since reviewed the case of the prosecution in relation with the defence, and having been satisfied, we are no longer calling any witness,” Adedipe said.

    Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) lawyer Mr. Festus Keyamo said he would require about two weeks to file his final written address.

    The judge would, at the next proceedings, rule on an application by the defence seeking an order to discharge one of Fani-Kayode’s sureties, Wale Ajisebutu.

    The surety said he was withdrawing because he needed the original title documents of his landed property “to meet certain personal and urgent matters.”

    Ajisebutu had in 2009 deposited the title documents into the court’s custody in fulfillment of the bail conditions granted Fani-kayode by the court.

    The defence, in its application dated March 11, is also praying the court to replace Ajisebutu with one Ogbor Elliot.

    Fani-Kayode was accused of making a transaction exceeding N500,000 on September 20, 2006, which was not done through a financial institution, by accepting N2.1 million in cash. The money was paid into his personal bank account by his aide, Supo Agbaje, while he served as Minister of Culture and Tourism.

    The defendant pleaded not guilty to the alleged offence, which EFCC said contravenes the Money Laundering Act.

    Justice Ofili-Ajumogobia adjourned till May 4 for closing arguments.

  • Labour vows to paralyse Defence Ministry

    Labour vows to paralyse Defence Ministry

    Organised labour, acting  under the aegis of the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN), has vowed to paralyse activities at the Ministry of Defence if urgent steps are not taken to pay its civilian employees their allowances, including promotion arrears outstanding since 2011.

    In a statement endorsed by its Secretary-General, Comrade Alade Bashir Lawal, the union expressed surprise that an institution, which prides itself as an epitome of discipline, equity, and fairness could choose to oppress and dehumanise thousands of its civilian workers by denying them their entitlements.

    The union said efforts to bring the management of the Ministry to the negotiation table to discuss labour issues have been frustrated.

    It, therefore, gave the Ministry of Defence 14 days, with effect from March 12,  to convene the meeting or face industrial action.

    “It is necessary to emphasise that if within this period the meeting is not called, the national leadership of the union should not be held responsible if thousands of civilian employees in the Ministry of Defence decide to resort to self-help to resolve the impasse,” the union warned.

    ASCSN regretted that though the national leadership of the union and the management of the ministry had agreed that there should be quarterly meetings to address the  labour issues and new ones that might emerge, no meeting had been held since the agreement was reached on December 16, last year.

    The issues in dispute, according to Lawal include, non-payment of promotion arrears since 2011 to date, non-placement of staff after their promotion, short-payment/non-payment of salary arrears, non-payment of hanging salaries.

    Others are neglect of Lagos and other outstations in training programmes, non-payment of death benefits and package/repatriation allowance and delay in conversion/upgrading of staff.

    The union recalled that the first quarterly meeting was fixed for February 5,  but was subsequently re-scheduled for February 10 on the excuse that the Permanent Secretary, who chose to be part of the meeting, was out of the country.

    He said: “On the 10th of February, when the national leadership of the unions arrived at Ship House, Abuja to attend the re-scheduled meeting, no management team of the Ministry of Defence was available for the parley.  All efforts to get information on why the meeting could not hold proved abortive.

    “The Deputy Director, Staff Welfare, however, promised that he will liaise with the Permanent Secretary with a view to getting a new date for the first quarterly meeting.  Unfortunate, no meeting has been fixed up-till now.”

  • In defence of Obasanjo

    SIR: In 1982 when economic ship of our dear nation was sinking, the sage of our time, Chief Obafemi Awolowo voiced out to the consternation of the mediocre leadership of our Second Republic. He was vilified, castigated and condemned. Events in the later part of the regime however vindicated him. The eye sees not itself except by reflection.

    In fact, the economy of Nigeria was at the brink of collapse before Buhari /Idiagbon struck on December 31, 1983 and the military junta saved the most populous black nation from the economic wreck.

    Today, we have similar situation; the conservative ruling class is the driver of our economy. The mediocre leadership of the Second Republic has resurrected in the ruling PDP. Good enough, we also have another man warning us of the dangers ahead. Like Chief Obafemi  Awolowo, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has been warning the current political players and alerting the nation of the inept leadership. We have many reasons to believe Obasanjo; after all, he is the third eye. Experience more than anything outweighs age and the man is proud of both. Kleptomania is the order of the day. In the words of Shakespeare “If correction lies in the hand of he that committed wrong, to whom do we complain?”

    Obasanjo’s whistle is the hunter’s call to a straying dog. The snooty lieutenants in the Jonathan administration should be thankful to Obasanjo rather than taking cudgels against him. His warnings should serve as a wakeup call to embrace change. If they do not know, Nigeria is greater than all of us. Posterity awaits us all. But they should know that investment is consumption suspended. The message of General Mohammadu Buhari (GMB) is apt and concise “If we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill all of us”.

    Before corruption will kill us though, we will all vote it out.

     

    •  Adelani Olawuyi,

    Odooba – Ogbomoso. 

  • Open letter to defence chiefs

    SIR: This letter is vital to you at this moment in the background of predictions that Nigeria will break up in 2015. There is a dangerous trend afflicting the military today: politicians are gradually involving the institution in the wars they create. Before now, many people were of the view that soldiers will always rise against bigotry. But that’s simply not true. If tension could tear the military’s fabric apart before before the  civil war, it can happen again.

    Sirs, why should a garrison of the military be allocated to guard the homes, entourage and kinfolks of people of influence when these personnel are needed in the field to protect national interests especially in the light of emerging internal security challenges?

    Shouldn’t the government fashion out a way to give licences to retired military personnel to establish private security companies like Blackwater (a private military Army in the US that even went to foreign mission in Iraq before the ignoble shootings that led to the withdrawal of its license) to be supervised by the Army Intelligence so that the military will be left to concentrate on their regimental duties while the private security companies go on to protect those that can afford their services?

    The military over time has displayed skill and courage within and outside Nigeria. The country needs to appreciate their worth not only as the fight against the insurgency rages but at all times and its members in-and-out of service must not be left to suffer in ignominy.

    Your time in office should be used to get the political class to address the needs of the military more. Past military leaders have baulked at acquiring modern armaments for fear of coups; civilian administrators likewise have either towed same line or refused to convoke bi-partisan meetings needed to help the military.

     

    • Simon Abah,

    Port Harcourt,

    Rivers State

  • In defence of INEC

    SIR: The recent addition of 30,000 polling units by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is a right step in the right direction. As Nigeria heads for its most heated election, all hands must be on deck, all necessary actions taken to ensure a free, fair and credible elections. A lot has been said about the 22,000 polling units added to the North asd against the 8,000 for the South – a decision that did not go down well with some elements in southern Nigeria. The Southern Peoples Assembly was quick to condemn the decision and threaten legal action against it.

    In my view, the addition of the polling units was a right move in the right direction. Northern Nigeria accounts for over 60 percent of the country’s population. As a result, some units have up to one thousand registered voters. Dala local government in Kano State, with over 1.9 million people, is the most populated local government in Nigeria. The local government needs addition polling units.

    Secondly, with the current crisis in the North-east, a lot of people have been displaced. The displaced people are Nigerians and they have to exercise their franchise. In some towns like Bama, Konduga etc were the local government has been sacked, the people are now dispersed across Nigeria, especially to Kano and Abuja. The additional polling unit should be added where the displaced people are located. Some states like Niger, Borno, Kaduna, Adamawa, and Nasarawa are very large, hence the need for more addition polling units so that everybody can vote within reasonable distance. For instance, Niger and Borno states are larger than the entire South-east.

    Nigerians must learn to have faith in their institutions particularly now that INEC is headed by an individual generally seen as credible. Politicizing every national issue is unehlpful at the moment. Nigerians must unite to ensure a free, fair and credible elections in 2015.

     

    • Comrade Abdulbaqi Aliyu Jari