Tag: destroyed

  • Goods worth over N1b destroyed in Onitsha market fire 

    Goods worth over N1b destroyed in Onitsha market fire 

    Goods worth over N1billion were destroyed yesterday in Onitsha as fire gutted the Polythene Producers Industrial Cluster.

    The cluster is located near Ekene Workshop,between Awada and the commercial city of Onitsha

    Victims were seen at the scene of the fire folding their arms and bemoaning their fate.

    Chairmen of the clusters Anthony Ubakasi and Johnson Okolo attributed the fire to epileptic power supply by Enugu Electricity Distribution Company (EEDC).

    They lamented the lack of space for them to operate in separate warehouses/factories as over 20 Small Scale Industries were operating in a warehouse with multiple machines.

    Ubakasi said some of the affected small scale industry operators would have saved some of their machines, goods and raw materials if they were on doing night duties.

    “But unfortunately EEDC is giving them two hours light in the night and they stopped night duties because, the time is not even enough for their machine to heat for production”

    Okolo blamed the EEDC and the government for not recognising their contribution towards industrialisation and reduction of unemployment.

    They appealed to Anambra State Governor Willie Obiano to pay them a visit to see things for himself, having failed to visit them in February 2017, when similar incident occurred .

    One of the victims Chuks Eze said he lost nine Side Sealing Cutting machines, worth N1.5 million each, one Compressor, worth about N300,000, two Bottom Sealing Machines one N12 million among others.

    Another victim Ikechukwu Emehige said he lost four Cutting machines, worth N900,000, each, a 40 Horse Power Electric Motor, worth about N1,9 million, three Air blower each worth N600, 000, one Compressor worth among others too.

    Paul Agadinulo lost Printing machine he bought N8 million and installed in September 2017, and lost IPA, Butternol, rolls of BOPP, more that 50 Rubber Stereos and gallons of ink worth more than N13 million.

    The only woman victim, Eunice Onuora, said she lost to the inferno, two Bottom Sealing Machines worth N10 million, three Side Sealing machines worth N1.9 million, a Cutting machine worth N1.7 million and others

  • One dies, 100 houses destroyed in Sokoto rainstorm

    One person died and about 100 houses were destroyed in a rainstorm that swept through 15 villages in Illela Local Government Area of Sokoto State, the Chairman, Abdullahi Haruna, told reporters yesterday.

    Haruna said seven others, including a mother and her three children, were injured in the Friday disaster. Six of the seven have been discharged from the hospital.

    According to him, the council secretariat, schools and other public places were destroyed.

    “The strong wind and heavy rain started about 5pm on Friday, and lasted for 30 minutes, but the damage it caused was enormous.

    “So far, we have identified more than 100 houses destroyed. A committee has been set up to assess the extent of the damage,” Haruna said.

    The chairman attributed the extent of the damage to the use of substandard building materials.

    He directed the Works Department of the council to enforce compliance with standard building regulations forthwith.

    Haruna added that the council had contacted the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) and the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) for help, and their responses were positive.

  • Enyimba’s bus destroyed in Katsina

    Enyimba’s bus destroyed in Katsina

    •Peoples’ Elephants goalkeeper Dauda punches ball boy

    Hell was let loose at the Karkanda Stadium, Katsina yesterday after the NPFL matchday 18 encounter between Katsina United and Enyimba which ended 2-1 in favour of the home team.

    A ball boy was rushed to the hospital after Enyimba’s Ghanaian goalkeeper Fatau Dauda punched him after Katsina United fired the winning goal seven minutes from time.

    Dauda then had to be escorted by policemen from the pitch soon after the match.

    Fans of Katsina United later attacked Enyimba, smashing their bus and inflicting various degrees of injuries on players of the away team.

  • Past mismanagement destroyed economy, says govt

    Past mismanagement destroyed economy, says govt

    THE poor state of the country’s economy is the direct consequence of its mismanagement and the looting of the national treasury under the immediate past administration, the Federal Government said yesterday.

    Segun Adeyemi, the senior adviser to Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said this in a statement issued yesterday in Abuja.

    The statement stressed that the nation’s economic challenge, especially the depreciation in the naira exchange rate, should not be blamed on “any so-called mismanagement by the Buhari administration”.

    This followed Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu’s comments over the “downward slide” of the nation’s economy.

    Ekweremadu warned that unless urgent steps were taken by the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led Federal Government to arrest the situation, the country might witness a major revolution.

    But Mohammed said: “If there was still any honour left among thieves, there is no way the leaders of a party under whose watch the nation’s economy suffered a monumental mismanagement and the Central Bank was turned to the ATM or piggy bank of a few people will have the temerity to insult a government that is working hard to turn things around or the citizens who are bearing the brunt of such mismanagement.

    “It is now clear to all Nigerians that if the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had won the last general elections, Nigeria’s economy would not have survived one more month, considering the battering it received under the immediate past administration.

    “It is, therefore, unconscionable that those who should show contrition and hunker down to avoid public opprobrium are the same ones pointing an accusing finger at the Buhari Administration.”

    The minister described the comments credited to the Deputy Senate President as the clearest indication yet that the PDP and its leaders were still in denial about the massive looting they allegedly inflicted on the economy.

    “Senator Ekweremadu complained about the depreciation of the Naira without telling Nigerians who ‘dollarised’ the Nigerian economy by bribing many individuals and groups with dollars during the last elections, thus inflicting a knock-out punch on the local currency. He also failed to tell Nigerians which government presided over the frenzied mop-up of dollars, either for ‘armsgate’ or for slush fund purposes, from the CBN to a point where it almost ran out of the hard currency,” he said.

    The minister added that even though the Buhari administration met an economy that was in coma, it had refused to use that as an excuse for inaction.

    Mohammed said the All Progressives Congress (APC) administration has been working hard on measures that would turn the economy around “and offer relief to the citizenry by lifting millions, not thousands, of people out of poverty through a massive social intervention policy”.

    The minister explained that the outcome of the months of hard work would manifest soon in the 2016 national budget, which, he said, would give succour to millions of Nigerians who were reeling from fallout of the errors of the immediate past administration.

    He advised the leaders of the PDP and members of the immediate past administration, who were allegedly involved in the emerging cases of “looting spree” to urgently return the funds they have stolen out of the commonwealth to government’s coffers.

    “They are lucky that Nigerians are not as incautious as they are, otherwise they would not be able to walk around freely, not to talk of having the effrontery to fire darts at the government that inherited their rot or the people who are suffering the consequences.

    “They looted the billions of naira that were allocated for the fight against insurgency, causing many innocent and patriotic soldiers to die needlessly, yet they are not remorseful. They looted the treasury to influence the last elections, doling out money as if it was going out of fashion, yet they continue to grandstand.

    “In the latest revelation, a minister under the immediate past dispensation admitted to sharing N600 million to six chairmen of the Contact and Mobilisation Committee of the PDP for the last general elections, N300 million to an account given by a former PDP chairman, N200 million to a PDP governorship candidate and N100 million to a former PDP governor. This is just one case out of many; yet these revelations are but a tip of the iceberg of what Nigerians will hear in the days ahead,” Mohammed said.

    The minister assured that despite the “mind-boggling revelations” about looting and the mismanagement by “self-styled economic wizards, the economy will bounce back under the watch of Buhari, who is bringing probity and transparency back into governance”.

  • Scores feared killed, property destroyed as flood ravages Taraba

    Scores of people and domestic animals are feared killed after some local governments in Taraba State suffered severe flooding.

    The most affected local government councils are Karim Lamido and Lau.

    The flood was caused by torrential downpour, even as the people are yet to witness the anticipated release of water from a Cameroon dam.

    Local boats and canoes are being used to convey affected persons, particularly children and the aged, to safer areas.

    A House of Assembly member from Karim Lamido, Edward Baraya confirmed reports of disaster and death but was not certain about the casualty figure.

    The Council Caretaker Chairman of Karim Lamido, Idi Danfulani, also said many residents were feared killed in his council but could not give exact figures of the dead.

    In Lau, many buildings shook to their foundations while farm crops, houses and vehicles were submerged.

    Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku is said to have directed all chairmen of the affected councils to forward reports of flood disaster in their domains to the Bureau for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs.

    Caretaker Chairman of Lau, Nelson Banker was seen submitting his Flood Report at the Bureau on Thursday.

    Danfulani told The Nation he would be touring his entire council on Friday, to undertake detailed statistics of lives and property lost.

    Taraba, which has had its share of disastrous flooding in 2015, is one of the states that lost people, houses, animals and farmlands to the devastating floods of 2012.

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) in a recent sensitisation workshop in Jalingo, the Taraba State capital, warned of possible flood disaster. It identified vulnerable communities that could be affected.

    NEMA Head of Operation Appolos Jediel identified Lau, Shomo, Garin-Dogo, Kunini, Donadda, Bwai, Ibi, Njibu, Donga, and Takum as vulnerable communities in Taraba Northern and Southern zones.

    NEMA also raised the alarm over possible release of water from the Lagdo Dam in neighbouring Cameroon in the peak of the rainy season, residents of Taraba’s flood prone areas are living in fear.

  • How PDP was destroyed, by BoT chair Haliru

    How PDP was destroyed, by BoT chair Haliru

    The Acting Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Board of Trustees (BoT), Dr. Bello Haliru Mohammed, yesterday said the violation of the zoning principle by vested interests destroyed the party.

    Mohammed, in a statement by his media aide, Mr. Emeka Nwakpa, attributed the fast declining fortune of the PDP to the abrogation of the zoning principle in 2011.

    The party jettisoned zoning to pave the way for the emergence of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan as presidential candidate — a development which Mohammed said severely undermined the principle of equity and justice on which the party was founded.

    According to him, the PDP paid dearly for it with the loss of power at the centre in the last general election.

    He added that the development created crises of confidence among key stakeholders and eroded sense of belonging among many party faithful.

    Mohammed said: “When the founding fathers formed the party in 1998, they established the principle of justice and equity whereby power resided with the people, who could decide who became what at any point in time.

    “But over the time, the party swerved away and breached the principle thereby disrupting its internal democracy. When in 2011 the party abandoned its zoning formula, the party dealt on itself a major blow because that action served the first notice that it had disconnected with the masses. So we must go back to the culture of zoning and rotation of offices.

    “The PDP remains the only true national party in the country with its flag in all nooks and crannies whose members are assured that they can always aspire to any available position as long as zoning and rotation hold sway as a cardinal policy of the party”.

    He stated that it was high time the party addressed the situation where critical decisions were being dictated by the whims of a few moneybags and “higher bidders”, to the exclusion of other members.

    “We must run away from a practice that leaves the party at the mercy of moneybags who, more often than not, seek to hijack the processes of the party at the detriment of promoting genuine internal democracy through which only capable, credible and popular candidates can emerge to contest elections with assurance of victory”, he stated.

    Harping on the need to respect the supremacy of the party, the BoT chair said elected and appointed office holders should not be allowed to dominate party decisions while party meetings should be restricted to party offices in the states and the national level.

    “The policies and manifesto of the party should also guide the activities of public office holders who are either elected or appointed on the platform of the party in line with good governance and best practices”, Mohammed said.

    On party funding, he canvassed a system that will allow members make their statutory contributions to the party as prescribed by the party’s constitution, noting that it is a major sustainable means of getting the party to meet its obligations and responsibilities.

    He requested that the party give more attention to elders and founding fathers, many of whom he observed, are still in the party but are indifferent to the affairs and fortunes of the party, owing to lack of patronage.

    The BoT Chairman said, “In recent years, many of our leaders, elders and founding fathers have been abandoned in spite of their abiding interest in the party.

    “Some have left, some chose to remain but are either inactive, unconcerned or indifferent because nobody has bothered to look for them. This is not acceptable. If there is any time we need them for advice and counsel, it is now”.

    Incidentally, it was the same Mohammed that moved the motion for the adoption of former President Jonathan as the sole presidential candidate of the party for the 2015 general election.

    Moving the motion at a National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting at the party’s national secretariat, Mohammed said: “We have never taken a wrong decision before. We cannot change a winning formula that has been working for us since 1999.

    “In PDP, we have a tradition of queuing up behind our leaders. President Jonathan has performed creditably as attested to by all the organs of the party.

    “Therefore, for the good of Nigeria and for the good work that the PDP is doing for the country, I move that the NEC endorses the candidacy of President Goodluck Jonathan as the party’s candidate in the 2015 election”.

    The motion was seconded by Second Republic governor of the old Anambra state, Senator Jim Nwobodo. It was adopted with a resounding ayes by the gathering of eminent party leaders.

  • Worship centres destroyed in Kaduna

    A church and two mosques have been destroyed by youths in Kachia town, Southern Kaduna.

    A source said trouble started when a fence which was being erected around the Eid praying ground in the area was pulled down.

    He said: “There is a parcel of land which the Muslims use for their Eid prayers. They decided to fence it because, according to them, people come in there to defecate.

    “In the process of fencing the land, the people around claimed they have exceeded the boundary and pulled down the fence.

    “Last night, the Muslim youths decided to attack the Nasara Baptist Church and burn it down. In retaliation, Christian youths burnt down the mosque at Government College, Kachia and another mosque in the area.

    “The situation has been brought under control and I can confirm to you that there was no death.”

    Another source said: “When the fence was demolished, the youths alerted the local government chairman, Peter Agaite and he promised to repair the damaged portion, but failed to do so. That was why both sides went on a damage spree.”

    Governor Ramalan Yero has warned that the government will not allow enemies of peace cause mayhem in the state. He directed security agencies not to spare anyone found fomenting trouble.

    The governor in a statement by his Director-General, Media and Publicity, Ahmed Maiyaki, said the administration will no longer tolerate act of unwarranted violence against innocent citizens.

    He called on the people in Kachia town and environs to remain calm and shun any attempt by enemies of peace to escalate misunderstanding in the area.

    The governor called on residents to avoid taking laws in their hands as the government was working with security agencies to ensure the protection of life and property.

    The statement said: “Government will not fold its arms and allow “enemies of peace” cause mayhem in our state.

    “I call on all law abiding citizens to go about their businesses without fear of intimidation as security forces have been directed to deal with trouble makers.”

    Yero assured the people that security agencies have begun investigations into the cause of the crisis and will not spare anyone found culpable “no matter their status in the society”.

    “We will no longer tolerate these acts of unwarranted violence against innocent citizens; enough is enough.”

    The governor said the government will continue to pursue its peace building agenda and will not rest on its oars, until Kaduna is returned to its pre-crises era.

    Police spokesman Aminu Lawan said the situation has been brought under control.

    He said: “Our men are fully on ground. No life was lost, but we don’t have the number of worship places that were burnt.

    “We will let you know in due course as we don’t want to give wrong figures.”

  • Who wants Borno destroyed?

    At the beginning, we all thought it was one of those bad dreams that would soon blow over. It, however, didn’t take long for us to be proved wrong, as the climate of fear resurrected once more, taking us back to the ugly days when we had to sleep with our eyes wide open. No thanks to the ugly events of that fateful Monday, the harrowing experience and the trauma are back.

    After months of respite from the intimidation and onslaught of Boko Haram sect, the inhabitants of Maiduguri woke up on Monday, December 2, 2013, to find themselves at the mercy of the insurgents, rubbishing the long-held belief that the state capital is safe.

    But just as the residents of the once-peaceful state were beginning to recover from the shock of the attack, news filtered in of another audacious attack carried out by the insurgents on the 202 Tank Battalion in Bama town about 50 kilometers from Maiduguri.

    Fifteen soldiers were allegedly killed in the Bama attack, while the Boko Haram lost 50 of its member to the firepower of the military. There were also said to be civilian casualties.

    According to reports by the Borno Radio Television (BRTV), the insurgents who carried out the Monday attack came in large numbers and left through the same route after wreaking havoc on the people.

    According to sources, the insurgents came in vehicles and on camels with sophisticated weapons, including anti-aircraft guns. They were said to have first attacked the 33 Artillery Regiment along Maiduguri-Damaturu road, later moved to the 79 Composite Group of the Nigerian Air Force, a short distance away.

    The level of destruction at the Air Force base was alarming.

    They allegedly destroyed five helicopters, mechanical workshop, vehicles and residential quarters. They also set on fire some buildings in the Artillery Barrack. Reports had it that it took the intervention of a fighter jet from Yola to avert what seemed an eventual dooms day for the people of Maiduguri.

    Even while the people were yet to recover from the pains of the wounds inflicted by the December attack, Boko Haram carried out another major attack on Maiduguri on Tuesday, January 14, 2014.

    Described as one of the deadliest attacks in recent times, the bomb explosion at the post office area, along Shehu Laminu Way, the commercial nerve centre of Maiduguri, claimed about 30 lives, and left several others injured. The attacks marked the return of Maiduguri to the ‘night of long knives’.

    It is shocking that in less than two months, Boko Haram carried out two major audacious attacks in Maiduguri and its environ, killing several hundreds and maiming even more in its trailing of destruction.

    To say that the audacity and mode of the recent attacks is worrisome is begging the question. The question on the lips of the residents now is, if military barracks where people seek refuge in the past is no longer safe from attacks, where would the defenseless people run to the next time Boko Haram comes calling?

    Borno State has never had it this bad. The last five years have been traumatic and frightening for the people of the once peaceful state.

    In its editorial on the Maiduguri airport attack, the Daily Trust wrote: “That Maiduguri, a city under curfew for several months completely surrounded by various formations of the military, military police and civil people, a city in virtual lockdown, could come under such sustained attack over several hours, calls to question the integrity of the military leadership and the intelligence services around them.

    “According to reports, security sources stated that ‘the insurgents had a field day throughout the time they operated, between 3.30am and 8 o’clock in the morning’, a period of almost five hours, and that a security official was reported to have said that it was only after the arrival of a military fighter jet from Yola, Adamawa State (half an hour away), that the insurgents retreated. The big question here is, retreated to where?

    “In fact, the question to precede this should be, how did the insurgents reach Maiduguri, and then the Air Force Base, in the first place, when the military had been telling the public that Boko Haram had been contained in a ‘little corner’ around Sambisa Forest and the mountains around Gwoza far to the South of Borno State? The reality is that such statements have exposed the military to ridicule because they grossly underestimate the capacity of the enemy they face.

    “Borno State is one of the largest in the country by landmass, and the only way the insurgents could have launched such a daring attack from their ‘little corner’ would have been to drop in from the air, which was not the case. In a state full blanketed in the cordon of emergency rule, how could the insurgents move from one place to another with such ease, when all other citizens cannot?

    “What mode of transportation did the insurgents use to

    avoid the inevitable indications of vehicular movement? What footpaths and cattle tracks did they use that were not known by the security forces? The most ironic of the reports say the insurgents ‘caught the military napping.’ One would have thought that, in an emergency such as the North East is under; no one would be napping, let alone sleeping, to be caught in such a grievous condition.”

    It is, however, particularly shocking that since the disbandment of the Joint Task force in Borno State and the takeover of its functions by the newly-established 7th Division of theState by the insurgents or whoever has been responsible the attacks have become more deadly and ferocious, with deadly attacks carried out in Benisheikh, Mainok, Maiduguri, Sabon Gari, Damboa and Bama.

    The meteoric rise in the number of attacks has now raised a lot of questions, just as it is thought-provoking. The questions on the lips of the people are: ‘Who wants Borno destroyed?’, ‘Why the ceaseless and unprovoked attacks on Borno?’ and ‘Who wants to make Borno a theatre of war, a habitat of orphans, widows, people with severed limb and, in Shakespeare’s words, the ‘architecture of ruins?’

    Other questions agitating the minds of the residents include:

    ‘How come the insurgents seem to be having the upper hand in spite of the assurances from the authorities that things are under control?’, ‘Could there by fifth columnists within the military, making it very easy for the enemies to carry out attacks?’, ‘Though there are patriotic men in the rank and file of the military who want the insurgency to come to an end, how far is the allegation that there are some members of the military who would not want the debacle to end so long as they are benefiting monetarily or otherwise?’, ‘Why is Borno State singled out by the insurgents for more heat?’ and ‘Have the insurgents infiltrated the military, making the battle against the insurgency more complex and difficult?’

    However, this is not surprising, bearing in mind that President Goodluck Jonathan had pointed out before now that the Boko Haram sect had infiltrated his administration, the judiciary, legislature and the nation’s security agencies.

    Similarly, while receiving members of the Turaki-led Committee on Boko Haram Amnesty/Reconciliation in audience at the Government House, Maiduguri, Governor Kashim Shettima also pointed out that there are various brands of Boko Haram. According to Kashim, there is the religious Boko Haram; you also have the political Boko Haram and criminal Boko Haram, among others.

    It may not be out of place to say that all the groups or categories of the Boko Haram sect have at one point or the other operated and are still operating in Borno State. The question arising from this is, who wants Borno destroyed or in perpetual bondage?

    It is instructive to also note that about a month back, the Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, who is also the Supervising Minister of Defence Ministry, pointed out in a Radio Nigeria phone-in-programme that the inherited security challenges in the North East was the result of local politics.

    For example, some groups in Borno have for some time now been calling on President Goodluck Jonathan to stop former governor of Borno State, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff from coming to Maiduguri. The allegation is that his departure, after visiting the state, was always followed by an attack on Maiduguri or elsewhere in the state.

    But the pro-Sheriff group had consistently denied this allegation, describing it as the handiwork of Sheriff’s enemies. They in turn accused Sheriff’s opponents of being the masterminds of the attacks, aimed at creating a sense of insecurity in the state. Without doubt, there is more to the accusation and counter-accusation between these two groups than meets the ordinary eyes.

    It will be recalled that the Boko Haram sect leadership had distanced itself from some attacks, especially in Borno. So, who are the people behind these ceaseless attacks on Maiduguri?

    Who are the politicians toying with the destiny of Borno and who are the people frustrating the efforts of the federal and Borno State governments to end the carnage?

    But one thing is sure in all of this: Those who have murdered sleep in Borno on the altar of politics, ambition or for any other unjustifiable reason, have murdered their own sleep and will

    themselves sleep no more.

    Before the fateful day, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff had arrived Borno via Gombe airport. There were allegations that Senator Ali Modu Sheriff, who is said to be nursing senatorial ambition in 2015, had wanted to visit Borno for some time now, but was prevented from doing so because of the security implications of such visit.

    However, following the death of Alhaji Mohammed

    Malafiya, the Emir of Shani, Senator Ali came to Borno to condole with the people of Shani on the death of their Emir. And on arrival at the Gombe airport, he drove straight to Shani through Biu.

    Report had it that the presence of Senator Ali Modu in Borno State generated tension and anxiety in the light of the alleged security implications of such visit. However, trouble started to manifest when on the same day, Governor Kashim Shettima was on a visit to Maiduguri Airport to inspect some equipment sent from Lagos by the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) to the station which had been temporarily closed down following the attack on the Airforce base.

    According to a report, about the same time the governor was on his way to the airport, a presidential aircraft conveying Alhaji Mohammed Imam landed at the Maiduguri airport. He was said to have arrived to prepare the ground for Sheriff’s arrival.

    On their way to the airport, some thugs who were allegedly waiting for Mohammed Imam sighted the governor’s convoy and started hurling stones and sachets of water at the governor’s entourage and making provocative statements. At this point, the military and police operatives dispersed the thugs with tear gas, while the governor calmed down members of his entourage.

    In what looked like a retaliatory measure, thugs and youths, believed to have sympathy for Governor Kashim, two days after the airport episode broke into the convoy of Senator Ali Sheriff after his visit to the Shehu of Borno palace. Report has it that the attackers were chanting “Wanyana, Wanyana”, meaning “we don’t want you” and “Kilado”, interpreted as “enemy”.

    The worst came after the bomb blast when all hell was let loose. There was confusion and pandemonium as the people ran for their lives.

    Youths in their hundreds ran amock, targeting the Campaign Headquarters of Senator Ali Modu in the state capital and his house in the Government Reservation Area (GRA).

    No doubt, President Jonathan was right when he explained that the insurgents have gravitated from locals to international in arms or weaponry, as they assault their targets with sophisticated modern warfare arsenals.

    The president equally stated that efforts were on to locate the sources of their weapons and their sponsors. Without sentiments, one must commend the Federal Government for its efforts, both local and international, aimed at halting the insurgency.

    However, it is indeed sad that up till now, neither the foreign or local sponsors of this group or groups has been identified.

    But it is baffling that despite the amount of money spent on the nation’s intelligence agencies, not a single local sponsor of this heinous crime has been identified, at least not to the knowledge of the public.

    The effrontery with which the insurgents inflict devastating pains, especially on military locations, no doubt is indicative of local sponsors, local collaborators and local informants. No foreign businessman or entrepreneur will take his goods to where there is no market. This mean that the foreign arms dealers have the local arms buyers within and around us. They must be identified if this orgy of destruction must be stopped.

    Besides, our security agencies must be proactive; they must work a step ahead of the insurgents in whatever colouration.

    Most of the time, our security agencies are on the defence, leading to the need to device new strategies in the light of the sophistication of our ever-increasing opponents.

    It will be a tragedy and a dent on the nation if for any reason a rag-tag group or any outfit in uniform for whatsoever reason is allowed to rubbish the reputation of the world acclaimed Nigerian Army.

    Borno State, with the largest land mass in the country, shares borders with the republics of Chad, Niger and Cameroun and the security implications of such location is obvious. It is, therefore imperative that special attention be given to the state. A stitch in time saves nine.

  • Buildings, cars destroyed as LASU students protest

    t began like a mild protest, but it degenerated into full-scale violence. Students at the Ojo Campus of the Lagos State University (LASU) stormed the Administrative Blocks 1 and 2, one of which houses the office of the Vice-Chancellor, Prof John Oladapo Obafunwa. They chased the workers away, vandalising virtually everything in sight.

    The creaking sound emanating from the smashing of windshields and the clatter of clubs against air conditioners, computers and office files by the rampaging students created panic. Many fled in fear.

    Obafunwa’s official car and that of his Personal Assistant were vandalised; the former was turned upside down after its windshield was smashed.

    Most of the students who led the attack were veiled.

    There were unconfirmed reports that some of the students who were once rusticated by the school’s management joined in the violent attack.

    The crisis worsened when Obafunwa’s security aides attempted to force him out of his office by hurling teargas canisters to scare the students away.

    The repeated explosion of the canisters caused a stampede; some students and workers got unconscious and were rushed to the emergency section of the school’s health centre.

    It took several hours for the police to contain the crisis as the students, who regrouped in corners, repeatedly hurled stones at them. Obafunwa was eventually rescued to safety.

    The students had begun a subtle protest with the management to reopen its portal for them to register ahead of the second semester examination, which began yesterday. It was learned that the Vice Chancellor turned down their request. This irked the students, who set up bonfires.

    Yesterday, when the students realised that some of their colleagues wanted to start writing examinations, they kicked.

    At about 1pm, the university opened the portal, but it was late as the damage had been done. The news came through a bulletin by the management, titled: “University management re-opens students’ registration portal for 2 days”.

    The management has urged the staff, students and the university’s entire community to remain calm.

  • Abacha’s influence on Fasehun almost destroyed Yoruba, says Gani Adams

    THE disagreement between the founder of the Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC), Dr. Frederick Fasehun, and the National Coordinator, Otunba Gani Adams, continued yesterday.

    Fifteen years after the death of former Head of State Gen. Sani Abacha, Adams said the dictator “used” Fasehun to “almost destroy” the congress and the Yoruba race.

    Adams said Fasehun’s latest romance with the late Abacha’s Chief Security Officer (CSO), Major Hamza al-Mustapha, and his attack on members of the All Progressives Congress (APC), was a clear indication of how Fasehun used his position to betray the Yoruba’s cause during the Abacha regime.

    He urged politicians to be wary of Fasehun.

    Fasehun, who recently resuscitated the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), has been expressing his willingness to campaign for the re-election of President Goodluck Jonathan in 2015.

    In a recent interview, he accused Adams of being sponsored by his detractors to criticise him.

    Adams, who spoke with Freedom Online (www.freedomonline.com.ng), said he was not surprised that Fasehun is “working against Yoruba interest because he did it in the past”.

    He challenged Fasehun to “a popularity test” in the streets of any town in Yorubaland, “if he is truly sure of his acceptance”.

    Adams said: “In a newspaper recently, Baba Fasehun was casting aspersion on my person. It is now very clear to me that he has chosen to tread the path of perfidy and self-destruct, with all the dire consequences. “Ordinarily, I would have dismissed the comments as one coming from a drowning man seeking to hold onto anything for survival, having realised his grievous and damning miscalculation, but there is need for me to set the records straight.

    “While trying to justify his support for Maj. al-Mustapha, Fasehun, in the story, entitled: ‘Gani Adams sponsored to criticise me”, claimed that I was sponsored to criticise him and that the sponsors were afraid of his (Fasehun’s) acceptance in the North.

    “As laughable as this accusation may seem, I want him and his cohorts to stick to the subject matter, rather than beat around it. My criticism was based on his unholy romance with al-Mustapha, who was fingered in the killing of Alhaja Kudirat Abiola, a Yoruba woman and wife of the late MKO Abiola, the martyr of our democracy.

    “He also told people that I said his visit to Kano had given his party a political mileage in the North and that we are losing members in droves. With his threat, I want him to name those who sponsored me to attack him or bury his head in shame and keep quiet.

    “Unlike him, I, Otunba Gani Adams, remain consistent with the dream behind the formation of the OPC, which is to fight for the rights of the Yoruba and the right for self-determination.”