Tag: Delta

  • Delta community raises alarm over alleged ‘invasion’

    Some Ogbe-Ijoh communities in Warri South West of Delta State have raised the alarm over alleged harassment and victimisation by men of the Navy.

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), which raised the alarm in a statement  in Warri yesterday, by the Chairman of Ogbe-Ijoh/Warri clan of the body, Smart Okosu, called on the Naval authorities to call the men of the Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) Delta to order.

    Although efforts to get an official response from NNS Delta were futile, a source at the base said the allegations were false and an attempt to cover criminality.

    According to the statement by IYC, operatives of NNS Delta had allegedly been invading some communities; Kurogbene, Bennett Island and Souragbene; shooting, breaking into homes and stealing valuables.

  • 23-yr-old Delta polytechnic graduate arrested for kidnapping, murder

    23-yr-old Delta polytechnic graduate arrested for kidnapping, murder

    A 23- year- old National Diploma (ND) graduate of the Delta State Polytechnic Ogwashi-Uku, Obed Ikenna Oluchi yesterday confessed to have been lured into crime because of his desperation for money to repay his creditor.

    He said he ventured into crime after he embezzled money meant for online sports betting at the betting house where he worked.

    He made this confession yesterday at the Delta State Police Command where he was paraded alongside four others for attempted kidnapping and armed robbery.

    According to him, “I work with Bet9ja.I just completed my ND from Delta State Poly Ogwashi-Uku. I studied Office Management and Technology. I was misled by a friend, because I needed money. A policeman came to our betting shop and he played a game worth N30, 000 which I only booked but did not bet because I thought it will not win. But the game won and the policemen wanted to claim his winnings worth over N250, 000. Because I did not bet the coupon I could not give him his winnings. So it was an attempt to find money that lured me into crime. The owner of the betting shop was angry when he found out what happened”.

    Delta State Police Commissioner, Mr. Zanna Ibrahim who briefed reporters said the suspect was a member of a gang that attacked Mr. Amobi Molokwu in front of his gate behind Cornerstone International School ,off Okpanam, but he narrowly escaped .

    He said the hoodlums succeeded in robbing him of his RAV 4 Jeep with a number plate ASB 176 AV, his phones and other valuables, adding that “intelligence gathered technologically led to the arrest of Ignatius Obagha in whose possession the victim’s Infinix phone was recovered.”

    Ibrahim said Ignatius Obagha following his arrest confessed and mentioned Obed Ikenna Oluchi, Ifeanyi Aniekwe,Ifeanyi Nwosu and Mustapha Ali a.k.a Bababyo as gang members .

    Ibrahim said Obed Ikenna Oluchi was also involved in the robbery incident that occurred at Globe Supermarket, Okpanam on 27/7/2017 resulting in the murder of a lawyer Festus Ashiedu.

    Obed Ikenna said he did not know he was going to use a gun and that he thought he was only going to help his friend carry the N1.5 million during the robbery at the supermarket.

    He denied killing the lawyer, adding that the lawyer was struggling with their gang leader with the keys of his cars and he was shot in the process.

    His words: “I was not the one who killed the man, it was the ring leader that killed the lawyer. Someone switched off the ignition of our getaway car so our leader wanted to snatch the car from him and was struggling with our ringleader for the car keys and was shot. Our attempt to rob the supermarket failed as the N1.5 million had already been moved before we got there”.

  • Stop inciting communal crises, activist warns Delta govt

    •Allegations laughable, says govt

    The Delta State government has been accused of encouraging communal crises in anticipation of electoral gains in the 2019 general election.

    The warning, by human rights activist and constitutional lawyer, Oghenejabor Ikimi, came against the backdrop of similar allegations following crisis in Odimodi, Ugborodo and Ogbe-Ijoh/Aladja in Burutu, Warri Southwest, Udu local government areas of the state.

    Ikimi, in a statement in Warri yesterday urged the government to disband the Ugborodo Community Management Committee, which it allegedly instituted against the wish of the people.

    But Chief Press Secretary to the governor, Charles Aniagu, said the government was working to restore peace in the communities, noting that the allegation was laughable.

    Ikimi, who regretted the loss of lives and destruction of property, called on the government to release the White Paper of the report of the panel that looked into the Aladja/Ogbe-Ijoh crisis.

    According to the activist, the communities could have continued living in peace, if the government did not instigate crisis, as is the case with Ugborodo, or refused to foster peaceful and harmonious living, as is the case with Aladja and Ogbe-Ijoh.

    “The age-long communal boundary dispute between Aladja in Udu Local Government Area and Ogbe-Ijoh in Warri South West Local Government Area is a case in point.

    “The Delta State government set up a panel, headed by Professor Abednego Ekoko last year, on the Aladja/Ogbe-Ijoh communal crises. The panel submitted its report months ago. But the government is yet to issue a White Paper, while a cold war, tacitly fuelled by the government ahead of the 2019 general election, is escalating between them.

    “The intra-Ugborodo crisis  began when the last surviving trustee of the community died in March, 2015, and to avoid a vacuum, the Ugborodo Administrative Committee was inaugurated on May 13, 2017, to manage its internal affairs.

    “Rather than evolve confidence-building measures to promote peace in Ugborodo, the state government on the May 30, 2017, in collaboration with some multinationals, inaugurated a parallel Ugborodo management committee at the Government House Annex in Warri outside Ugborodo to run the community.

    “Finally, I call on the government to release and implement the White Paper on the Professor Ekoko-led Aladja/Ogbe-Ijoh panel. I also call on the government to dismantle the parallel executives it set up on May 30, 2017, at the Government House Annex in Warri”, the statement said.

    Reacting to the allegation, Aniagu said the state cannot profit from communal crises, adding that the administration is sorting out the two cases.

    “It is laughable for anybody to say communal crises can be used for electoral gains, on the other hand, communal crises reduces electoral gains because No. 1, the money you need for the development of the people is what you will now deploy to quelling crises and when there are crises, we lose our people.

    “The governor is pained by what is happening in the two cases you mentioned and we are taking steps to address them. In the case of the Aladja/Ogbe-Ijoh crisis, the governor has set up a committee, which submitted its report, but we cannot jump into action to produce a White Paper, it has to be studied. The tendencies that may likely deepen such crises will have to be dealt with.

    “In the case of Ugborodo, we are taking steps to ensure they live in peace. Such peace enables us to bring development to them, just as it enables us to have people who will support the government, and  key into government programmes”, Aniagu said.

  • Two killed in renewed Ugborodo leadership crisis

    Two killed in renewed Ugborodo leadership crisis

    Two persons, Pa Benson Okoturo and Samuel Mayomi, have been reported dead following a violent confrontation between two factions in the lingering leadership crisis in Ugborodo community, Warri South-West council area of Delta state.
    The incident, which was sparked by an attempt to prevent leaders and members of the recently inaugurated Ugborodo Community Management Committee (CMC) from gaining access into the community, by a group opposed to the Austin Oborogbeyi-led committee, also led to the alleged abduction and later release of five members of the committee’s entourage.
    The committee and a host of other members of the community, numbering over 300, had embarked on the journey to their home community, Ugborodo, to attend a congress, reportedly called by the Eghara-Aja (oldest man), Pa Wellington Ojogor, to address the community on how the committee intended to execute its task.
    There had been a long drawn conflict over who should constitute the local authority over the community, with some interests, led by the community’s Olaja-Orori (spiritual head) of the community, Benson Omadeli, rejecting what they viewed it as an attempt by nonresident elites of the community and the state government to foist the then Export Processing Zone (EPZ) Interface Committee, on them.
    However, to calm the tension in the oil-rich community down, the Dr Ifeanyi Okowa-led administration, in May 2017, inaugurated the new committee, which included the EPZ committee and representatives from the community. The committee was inaugurated in Warri, but to make its debut entrance into Ugborodo when the situation turned ugly on Tuesday.
    The Nation gathered that trouble started when a group of community youths, led by the Ugborodo Youths President, Ofe Nene Penda, resisted the boats carrying the committee’s party from landing on Ugborodo soil, saying they were not recognised by the community.
    Narrating the incident, a member of my Ugborodo CMC, Alex Eyengho, said while Pa Okoturo collapsed as a result of shock he suffered on hearing gunshots fired by the resisting group and later died at a hospital in Warri, Mayomi drowned when the attackers caused the boat he was in to capsize.
    Eyengho, who alleged that those who attacked his group were heavily armed, also called on the federal government to immediately militarise Ugborodo and environs to curtail the dangerous lawlessness going on in the area and also called for an immediate proscription of all youths activities in Delta state.
    “I can now also confirm to you that one Samuel Mayomi got drowned and died yesterday as a result of the attack on one of the boats by Ofe and co.
    “Also, a member of the Ugborodo Community Management Committee, Mr. Benson Okoturo also died from the shock of sporadic gunshots. He was about joining a boat from the Madangho jetty to Ode-Ugborodo for the meeting when the sporadic shooting started between Kpokpo and Madangho. He collapsed on the spot and  was rushed to a Warri hospital where he died.
    “We formally applied to the Delta state police command who gave us about a 100 man police team lead by Superintendent Sola Adebayor. Shockingly, these security operatives watch like spectators as the armed men intercepted us between Kpokpor and Madangho.
    “They told the police they won’t allow us to come down to convene the meeting. They openly fired their guns in the air in the presence of the police. In presence of the police they rammed one of their boats into one of our boats which sank and resulted in drowning of Mayoma.
    “They were wielding guns and other dangerous weapons, and Superintendent Adebayo’s only response was that they have no mandate to use extreme force, advising us to retreat. The police complacency gave the criminals liberty to also abduct five of us, tortured them mercilessly before releasing them through navy.
    “The criminals in the community are not faceless. Those sponsoring this unending violence are same community criminals engaged in ceaseless bunkering in the community. They want the community to remain inaccessible to protect their oil crimes. It is difficult to explain that with a naval base and army post in the area, these criminals still enjoy impunity to steal oil, kill and destroy,” Eyengho said.
    When contacted, Benson Omadeli, Olaja-Orori (Spiritual Head) of Ugborodo, an authority on ground, said, “I am not in town, I am away, travelled, so I cannot say what is actually happening at the moment”, promising to forward a contact of another home based authority to speak which he never did.
    Efforts to get a confirmation of the development from the state’s police command was not immediately possible as the Police Commissioner, Zanna Ibrahim, could not be reached on phone and the spokesman of the command, DSP Andrew Aniamaka, who was in Abuja for a training, pleaded for more time to get his facts together.
    However, when reached for conirmation, the Commander of the Nigeria Navy Ship (NNS) Delta, Commodore Ibrahim Dewu, said he had not been briefed of the entire story yet, but knew there was a confrontation in the community, involving two groups from the community.
    “I heard the groups that was going to the community were in their boats, approaching the community when the group resisting them came in another boat and ran into one of the boats of the visiting team to hit them.
    “I’m just coming from the security council meeting so I don’t really know the outcome of everything; I don’t about the people who lost their lives. I only heard about it from the DSS Director who was briefing, but I know that in the community, a group was coming to gain access, another group stopped them. I don’t have the full details, but I know there was problem yesterday,”Dewu said.
  • Delta committed to peace, youth  development, says Okowa

    Delta committed to peace, youth development, says Okowa

    Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa has said his administration will continue to promote youth development.

    Okowa spoke when he received a delegation of youths, led by Mr Kenneth Okorie, chairman, Delta State Youth Council, yesterday in Asaba.

    Okorie led youths on a peace walk to mark the grand finale of the International Youth Week celebration.

    The governor, who was represented by the Chief of Staff, Government House, Mr Tam Brisibe, said the government’s programmes and policies were tilted towards youth development.

    Okowa commended them for the peaceful manner they conducted their affairs while marking the week, assuring them that more youths would be considered for employment.

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has advised youth corps members to shun crimes during their service year in the state.

    Dickson spoke at the end of Batch ‘A’ Stream II Orientation Ceremony yesterday in Kaiama, Kolokuma/Opokuma Local Government Area.

    The governor was represented by Serana Dokubo-Spiff, secretary to the state government and chairman, NYSC Governing Board.

    “As you proceed to the next stage of the service year, I urge you, while in your various places of your primary assignment to shun all forms of crime. Always ensure that the evil forces do not influence you as you perform the national service. Above all, always be security-conscious in your environment,” he said.

    Dickson congratulated them for completing the orientation programme, which he said, is the first in the four-phase programme.

     

     

     

     

  • Police nab sex worker for stabbing client to death

    Police nab sex worker for stabbing client to death

    The Police in Delta have arrested a commercial sex worker who allegedly stabbed her client to death during an argument at Destar Hotel, Asaba, Delta, on July 18 .

    The Spokesman of the Police Command in the state, DSP Andrew Aniamaka, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Asaba that the police responded to a distress call from the hotel after the incident.

    “The suspect is currently in police custody.

    “A day after the incident, the “C Division’’ in Asaba carried out preliminary investigation on the case and transferred it to Homicide Section of the State Criminal Investigation Department (CID).

    “As I speak to you, homicide detectives have commenced full investigation into the case with a view to unraveling what actually transpired between the suspect and the victim to establish culpability.”

    The hotel has now been deserted, and attempt to speak with its manager was unsuccessful as he was said to have traveled out of Asaba.

    However, a bar attendant, who preferred anonymity, said the incident had thrown “the stakeholders” into a mourning mood.

    “The sad incident started like a normal argument inside the hotel room, and before we realised it, a man was down with a fatal stab.

    “The incident happened at about 10.45 p.m., so nobody could actually say what led to the fracas.

    One of the few sex workers in the hotel who also spoke anonymously, described the incident as horrible and unfortunate, saying it had brought “our business to a standstill’’.

    “However, I will like to use this opportunity to advise our clients to always respect themselves when they come here.

    “Many of the clients do invite trouble to themselves. I rest my case,” she said.

    The victim was a married man with four children.

  • Final year student dies 28 days to graduation

    Final year student dies 28 days to graduation

    A final year student of the Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) in Effurun, Delta State, David Anyie Okuta,  slumped and died four weeks to his final examination. The Higher National Diploma (HND) II student was said to have died of a heart-related disease, hours after he voted in the school’s Students’ Union Government (SUG) election. GBENGA OJO reports.

    The Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) in Effurun, Delta State, was literally in ecstatic mood penultimate Saturday, because of the Students’ Union Government (SUG) elections. As the results were announced, excitement pervaded the campus; victorious candidates held rallies across faculties to celebrate their triumph.

    Tragedy, however, struck amidst the euphoria: a Higher National Diploma (HND) II student, David Anyie Okuta, slumped and died a few hours after he cast his ballots in the SUG elections. Like a thunderbolt, the news hit the campus, casting a pall of grief on the ecstatic atmosphere.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that shortly after he voted, the late David left the campus for Sapele, joining members of Winners Campus Fellowship on a field trip as part of the fellowship’s handing-over ceremony. When they got to their destination, it was gathered that the deceased complained of cold and started vomiting. He asked to use the toilet, where he was said to have slumped.

    In an attempt to save his life, his colleagues rushed him to a hospital in Sapele, but the effort turned out futile when he was pronounced dead.

    A member of the fellowship, who pleaded for anonymity, said the late David was not feeling well before he embarked on the trip.

    He said: “When he started feeling strange, the late David told me that he needed to return to school. He told me he was not feeling fine and he was placed on drugs. I didn’t ask him the nature of his sickness, because I believed it was not life-threatening. When he realised that he did not have his drugs with him in Sapele, he became nervous. Then, he started vomiting.”

    The fellowship’s librarian, Rita Chukwu, HND II Electrical Electronics Engineering student, said: “When we noticed the late David was vomiting, we approached him to know what was wrong with him. We were able to stabilise him for a while. Then, he told us he wanted to go to the toilet. We allowed him. Then, he collapsed in the toilet. We rushed him to the nearby hospital, where he was confirmed dead.”

    A source at the hospital where the late David received treatment before embarking on the trip told CAMPUSLIFE that he was treated for heart-related disease.

    A drama ensued after David was pronounced dead. His colleagues, who did not believe the news, took the body to another hospital, hoping that he could be revived. When he was confirmed dead at the second hospital, the fellowship members took the body to Winners Chapel’s headquarter in Sapele, where they prayed for his revival. When David did not revive after hours of prayers, reality set in for the fellowship members. They took the body to a morgue in Warri.

    The late David was said to be the only son of his parents. He was born on July 31, 1991, and hailed from Bekwara Local Government Area of Cross River State.

    When students got the news on the campus, many of them who saw the late David when he cast his votes did not believe it.

    A student, Obong Ekanem, said: “I saw him on Saturday morning during the SUG election. He was sighted leaving the arena where we all gathered for games and swimming. He was accompanied out of the arena by a lady.”

    The late David was nicknamed “genius” because of his brilliance and his involvement in activities of different students’ associations. He was said to be one of the best students of the Department of Petroleum and Natural Gas Processing.

    He was the president of Association of Cross River State Students, General Secretary of Winners Campus Fellowship, Junior Chamber International (JCI) and Nigerian Society of Chemical Engineers (NSCHE).

    His close friend, James Gbobi, described him as “a guardian angel”, saying the late David derived pleasure in helping people.

    He said: “The late David was a good listener and he had the ability to simplify difficult problems for the understanding of others. Even our lecturers respected him because of his brilliance. He never contested for any of  the positions he held. All was offered to him, because of his skills for service delivery.

    “He never wanted anybody to pity him on anything. This was why he did not tell anyone about his health conditions. As his close friends, we knew he was on drugs, but we did not have any idea of what those drugs were meant for. And he never told us.”

    Another roommate, Howells Emakpor, said the late David would have graduated with distinction. He described the deceased as “peace-loving” and a “problem solver”.

    “David would have graduated with a distinction. He was a brilliant student, who took great pleasure in helping other students to do better in their studies. The best tribute we can pay to him is to share our knowledge with others,” Howells said.

    During the procession held to mourn the deceased, students lamented the loss as they paid glowing tributes to the late David. Clad in black clothes, the mourners moved round the campus, singing dirges and sorrowful songs. Some of them wept uncontrollably.

    Addressing the grieving students on behalf of management, Director of Corporate Affairs Mr. Brown Ukanefimone said the school authorities sympathised with students on the loss.

    He said: “The school urges you all to bear the loss with courage, because death is the end of all mortals. You must take solace in the fact that he led exemplary life. We use this opportunity to appeal to you all to go for regular check up to ascertain the state of your health.”

    Students’ Affairs Officer Mr. Joseph Ajima, also advised students to go for regular check up, adding that there was need for students to always take permission whenever they wanted to leave the school for off-campus engagements.

    Deputy Director of Academics Mr. O.C. Isakpere urged students to live life devoid of sins, admonishing them to entrust their daily affairs in the hand of God.

    The fellowship president, David Ayana, described the late David as “a good Christian”, noting that he lived a life worthy of emulation. He said: “His life was short, but he touched many lives within this short period. He was many students’ hero, because he deployed his brilliance to help people struggling to cope with their studies.”

    The outgoing SUG president, Theophilus Ukuyoma, described the late David as “a wonderful comrade”, saying students would never forget his contributions to the development of unionism on the campus.

    The Head of Petroleum and Natural Gas Processing Department, Mr. J. Evwodere, said the tributes showed the late David was loved by his colleagues.

    He said: “If these beautiful words from students are anything to go by, it is a testimony that David was popular among his colleagues. Death is necessary end of all humans. We must lead a good life, because we will give account one day.”

    The late David was buried last Saturday in Ikom, his hometown in Cross River State.

     

  • A dedicated Councillor would have done better than Uduaghan- Utomi

    A dedicated Councillor would have done better than Uduaghan- Utomi

    Professor Patrick Utomi has berated former Delta state governor, Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan, for allegedly wasting countless opportunities the state had to develop, saying a good elected Councillor  would have done better.

    In response to Dr Uduaghan’s recent negative shot at him in the media, Professor Utomi, who is also a member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), narrated how he contributed to make the Uduaghan administration take certain open advantages of available opportunities to develop the state, which he state the former governor wasted.

    Utomi said he had thought that the former governor would have been sorry and sober for wasting several opportunities the state had under his watch, adding that his (Uduaghan’s) attempt at spinning the story of how the state was misruled around would not sell as the people of the state had not forgotten what his era looked like.

    He, however, added that he had been at the vanguard of a new leadership focus for the state because he believed that the people deserve better than what the past and current leadership had given to them.

    “A good Councillor would have done much better for the people than Uduaghan did as Governor. There is extreme misuse of the opportunities available to Delta State. It will take a serious and truly capable government to vigorously tap its potentials and create jobs for our teeming youths.

    “This is one of the many reasons why I believe Delta State needs new political leadership in 2019. Deltans are not meant to suffer from the jeopardy of a clueless administration, especially at this critical phase of our existence.

    “I would have imagined that Uduaghan will be very sober and saddened by his legacy of mismanagement and gross wastage that he left behind in Delta State. Trying to spin his poor record in the hope that Deltans would have forgotten so soon is a failed attempt to rewrite history. Undoubtedly, he knows that only few Deltans speak well of him and it is his pain to struggle with that reality.

    “As he grapples with history, what is more important to Deltans today is how we can rectify the wrong policies, decisions and actions of the past, so that we can create a government that would not only meet the needs of our people today but guarantee a better life for successive generations.

    “This is the task that I have offered to commit myself to between now and 2023. We are looking forward to 2019 with hope and renewed zeal for the beginning of a ‘New Delta’ teeming with opportunities and alive with possibilities,” Utomi said.

  • Okowa restates commitment to youths, sports development

    Okowa restates commitment to youths, sports development

    Gov. Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta has restated his administration’s commitment to the development of sports and empowerment of youths.

    Okowa made the assertion as the 2017 Warri Relays and Confederation of Africa Athletics Grand (CAA) Prix 2 began at the Delta Polytechnic, Ozoro, Isoko North Local Government Area of the state.

    The event, organised by the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) in conjunction with the Delta Government, is meant to prepare the country’s athletes for future national and international competitions.

    The governor, represented by the Speaker, Delta House of Assembly, Mr Sheriff Oborevwori, said the government would continue to support the development of sports.

    “We are always glad to be part of this type of event and other activities geared towards the encouragement, empowerment and development of our youths.

    “My administration will continue to support athletics and other sports.

    “As you are already aware, Delta is a home for sports and we have produced international and national champions for decades,’’ he said.

    The President of AFN, Chief Solomon Ogba, commended the Delta Government for the sponsorship.

    Ogba also said the state was famous for producing national and international champions, including Blessing Okagbare, an Olympic medalist in 200m.

    Some of the events featured at the event included 100m (men and women), 4x100m relay, javelin and high jump.

  • Explosion rocks Koko town in Delta

    There was an atmosphere of panic across Koko town in Warri North council area of Delta state Tuesday evening as a massive explosion rattled the town.

    The explosion, which occurred within the premises of Ebenco Global Link Limited in Koko, happened at about 6:25pm and reportedly impacted the company’s immediate neighbourhood.

    Although details were still sketchy as at the time of filing this report, The Nation gathered that a container within the premises of the company suddenly exploded, sending the bits and pieces into the air and the surroundings.

    A community source, who pleaded anonymity told The Nation that there were no casualties, adding though that the lid of an exploded drum or container, which flew out of the company’s yard, landed on the roof of one of the adjoining houses, pierced the roof into the living room.

    “It was like an explosive that burst out from the yard. What came out was like the cover of a container, the thing sprang up and went like 60 metres away and landed on somebody’s house, bursts the roof and pierced into the parlour. But to God be the glory, nobody was injured in the house,” he revealed.

    Another reliable source, Comrade Omatsola Gboye, who said he had not gone out yet, promised to investigate and come out with full details later. He was yet to return when this report was filed.

    Efforts to get the police spokesman in Delta state, DSP Andrew Aniamaka to confirm development was not successful.

    It would be recalled that Ebenco was recently at the heart of a toxic waste dump controversy in Koko town.