Tag: DSS

  • DSS ransacks home of Reuters correspondent in Bayelsa

    DSS ransacks home of Reuters correspondent in Bayelsa

    •Security operatives seize computers, others

    Armed men from the Department of State Security (DSS) have invaded the home of Mr. Tife Owolabi, the correspondent of international news agency, Thomas Reuters.

    The security men, who were said to have accused the correspondent of espionage, took away personal computers and other electronic gadgets.

    The security operatives,  armed with automatic rifles and pistols, were said to have searched the home of Owolabi for over four hours, claiming to be acting on orders from Abuja.

    After the search, the security men left with the mobile telephones of the Reuters reporter and those belonging to his wife, Jane.

    It was gathered that the invasion followed an invitation for a brief chat extended to Owolabi by the department on Friday.

    It was learnt that the correspondent was quizzed for hours and later released to the state chairman of Nigerian Union of journalists (NUJ), Mr. Tare Akono.

    Owolabi who confirmed the development in a text message, said: “The DSS men stormed my apartment on Saturday to conduct a search and claimed it was based on an order from Abuja. The DSS men claimed that I am unpatriotic owing to my job and relationship with the Thomas Reuters.

    “They claimed that they gathered that I sent or planning to send “negative” report to the outside world. I believe it is a deliberate clampdown on international journalists. All my working tools, including gadgets, cameras, laptops, iPad and hard drives, are with them. I was asked to report back on Monday (today).”

  • DSS reassures Nigerians on security

    DSS reassures Nigerians on security

    THE Department of State Service (DSS) has reassured Nigerians of their safety irrespective of their location following rumours of likely violence during the rescheduled general election.

    Its spokesperson Marilyn Ogar, in a statement yesterday in Abuja, warned those spreading rumours of violence to desist or face the wrath of the law.

    The statement reads: “It has come to the knowledge of security agencies that people are relocating to their states of origin in anticipation of violence during the forthcoming general elections in the country.

    “We wish to reassure the public of their safety wherever they reside as adequate security is assured for all before, during and after the elections.

    “We want to also seize this opportunity to caution those who spread falsehood or rumours of violence to desist from such acts. Those who intend to foment trouble are hereby warned that there will be no hiding place, as the long arm of the law will fish them out.”

  • DSS arrests, releases Sylva over threat to First Lady

    DSS arrests, releases Sylva over threat to First Lady

    Operatives of the Department of State Service (DSS) on Friday arrested a former Governor of Bayelsa State, Mr. Timipre Sylva, in Abuja for unclear offences.

    Curiously, Sylva was picked up on the day President Goodluck Jonathan with his campaign team was in Bayelsa State for a presidential rally.

    Sylva is the leader of the All Progressive Congress (APC) in the state.

    A DSS source, however, said the governor was only invited for questioning and was later released.

    He said the invitation would have been in connection with the series of threats by some youth groups to publicly disgrace the First Lady, Dame Patience at the rally.

    Youth groups under the aegis of the Bayelsa Youth Vanguard (BYV) and Mangrove Boys of Bayelsa (MBB) had threatened on different occasions to deal with Mrs. Jonathan if she accompanied her husband to the rally.

    The both predicated their stance on the meddling of Mrs. Jonathan in Bayelsa politics, undermining and plotting to unseat Governor Seriake Dickson.

    A source from the Aso Rock Villa hinted that the security agencies where working on the theory that the opposition was behind the groups.

    The source who pleaded anonymity said: “They are of the opinion that the real intention of persons behind the threats is to embarrass the President and give the world the impression that even at home Jonathan is not wanted.

  • Police, DSS ‘arrest’ council chairman

    Police, DSS ‘arrest’ council chairman

    Security operatives yesterday ‘arrested’ the Chairman of Oyo West Local Government Area of Oyo State, Soji Ojo-Awo.

    It was gathered that the arrest was not unconnected with the pulling down of the billboard of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate, Teslim Folarin, which was said to have been erected in front of the local government secretariat.

    Sources said PDP members  complained to the police and the Department of State Security (DSS) in Ibadan, the state capital.

    Ojo-Awo was said to have been summoned by the agencies. He wrote statements and was detained.

    The council chairman was said to have insisted that he knew nothing about the destruction and that it was wrong for the opposition to erect a billboard at the entrance of the council secretariat at Ojongbondu.

    The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Olayiwola Adeyemi, saved the situation from degenerating as supporters of the All Progressives Congress (APC) were moblising for what they referred to as “arbitrary use of security agencies by the PDP to harass, intimidate and victimise the progressives”.

    Some of the aggrieved APC members accused the PDP of removing their candidates’ posters and replacing them with those of PDP’s candidates.

  • APC slams DSS, Police for silence on threats by ex-militants

    APC slams DSS, Police for silence on threats by ex-militants

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has slammed the Directorate of State Service (DSS) and the police for their “loud silence” on the threats of war by ex-militants.

    The failure of the security agencies to act is an indication of their double standard and lack of fairness, the party said in a statement issued yesterday in Lagos by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed.

    To the APC, Chief Government Ekpemukpolo (alias Tompolo), Mujadeen Asari-Dokubo and others met at the Government House in Bayelsa, threatening to go to war should President Goodluck Jonathan lose the February 14 election.

    It is insightful to

    note that the same security agencies that reacted with hysteria to the harmless comments by Governor Rotimi Amaechi have suddenly lost their voices when the ex-militants threatened to wage war on the nation.

    ‘’When Governor Amaechi said soldiers had the right to protest if their welfare was not taken care of, the DSS was at its most efficient level, with its voluble spokesperson threatening fire

    and brimstone and only stopping short of arresting the governor, despite his immunity.

    ‘’When the same Governor Amaechi said the APC will form a parallel government if the Feb. 14th and 28th elections are rigged, the same DSS and the police sought to outdo each other with threats and condemnation of what they called ‘inciting comments’, even when Governor

    Amaechi’s warning was conditional.

    ‘’Now, the ex-militants have said President Jonathan must be re-elected or they will unleash violence on the country. In other words, it is immaterial whether or not he loses in a free and fair

    elections. There is no clearer indication of impunity than the action of the ex-militants, who issued their threats in the Bayelsa government house, with the governor of the state in attendance.

    ‘’More than a week later, the DSS has been missing in action while the police, in what can pass as a most shocking reaction, said they are still studying the ex-militants’ comments. Even after former Defence Minister Gen.Theophilus Danjuma called for the arrest of the ex-militants for their treasonable threats, and the ex-militants had the audacity to repeat the threats, the police still continued to ‘study’ the threats. This is simply unbelievable,’’ it said.

    APC said the implication of the conspiracy of inaction by the DSS and the police is that, under the administration of President Jonathan, there are different rules for different Nigerians, wondering how the security agencies can be trusted to provide a level playing ground for

    all political parties before, during and after the forthcoming general elections.

    ‘’For supporters of President Jonathan, there is no law, there is no police, there is no DSS. Their support for the President is a licence for lawlessness and irresponsibility, and if at all there is any law, they remain far above such law. That is why they could dare the entire nation by issuing such treasonable comments and get away with their action,’’ the party said.

    It called on Nigerians to take note of the glaring double standard of the security agencies, while urging local and international observers to closely monitor the activities of the security agents before, during and after the polls.

    ‘’On our part, the fact that the DSS and the police, both of which have issued their last warnings against those making inciting comments, have failed to move against the war-mongering ex-militants is a confirmation of what we have always believed: that national institutions have been deployed in the pursuit of partisan, rather than national interests under the Administration of President Jonathan,’’ APC said.

  • DSS parades kidnapper of two-year-old boy 

    DSS parades kidnapper of two-year-old boy 

    The Kogi State Department of State Security (DSS) yesterday paraded a 21-year-old mobile phone seller, Sunday Okafor, for allegedly kidnapping a two-year-old boy, Prince Robert.

    State Director Mike Fubara said Okafor was arrested while attempting to smuggle the child from Lokoja to Togo for N200,000.

    The DSS director said operatives of the department burst the child-stealing syndicate to which Okafor allegedly belongs, when it discovered that some people were planning to kidnap children for rituals because of next month’s general elections.

    The victim’s father, Henry Robert, said he had known the suspect for a long time.

    Robert, said Okafor, had been visiting his home to play with Prince, adding that it never occurred to him that the man was nursing an evil plan.

    Okafor, who claimed to be a mobile phone seller at the Paparanda Square in Lokoja, confessed to the crime when he spoke with reporters yesterday.

    He said he was conscripted into the act by a friend, Okoro, who is at large.

  • APC accuses PDP, DSS of planning to rig poll

    APC accuses PDP, DSS of planning to rig poll

    The Imo State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has accused the Department of State Security (DSS) of colluding with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to rig the governorship election.

    The party also accused the security agency of plotting to clamp down on its members over trumped-up allegations of operating fake voters register and issuing fake permanent voter cards (PVCs).

    The Chairman, Dr. Hillary Eke, said the allegation by the DSS that the APC, at the instance of Governor Rochas Okorocha, was registering voters to issue them fake PVCs, was part of the plot to bring the party into disrepute.

    He said APC, as a progressive party, which has set a record of performance, could not indulge in illegality, adding that the position of the DSS on the matter had confirmed the fear that the agency was partisan.

    Eke said: “APC has done well in the state. We have no cause to worry. The activities of the DSS are unbecoming. How can they make such allegations without investigations? It shows where they are heading. But APC will rely on the votes of the electorate and not on manipulation.”

    The Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Chief Chidi Ibe, criticised the DSS on the purported illegal voter registration, saying it was partisan.

    He said its action could undermine the elections.

    According to him, to allege that the governor and APC were behind the fake voters register without investigation, showed that the DSS was partisan.

    “This is not right for our democracy. They should allow the electorate to determine who wins the election.”

    Okorocha described the allegation as unfounded and malicious.

  • APC petitions IGP, INEC, DSS  on advert against Buhari

    APC petitions IGP, INEC, DSS on advert against Buhari

    THE All progressives Congress (APC) Presidential Campaign Organisation (APCPCO) has petitioned the Inspector General of Police, Suleiman Abba, and the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega, on the  Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) advert sponsored by Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose wishing its presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, death.

    The petition by the director general of the campaign organisation and Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, condemned the PDP and Fayose for portraying Gen. Buhari as a dead man walking, to scare Nigerians from voting for him in the February 14 election.

    He said the portrayal of Buhari as a man likely to die in office just like past northern leaders like Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, General Sani Abacha and General Murtala Muhammed was “morbid and reckless” and that such irresponsible political advert is not only “in bad taste, but also capable of undermining law and order in the country.”

    The strongly-worded petition was copied to the Director General of the Department of State Security (DSS), and the editor-in-chief of the two newspapers that published the advert as well as the Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria (APCON).

    The two paged letter reads: “I wish to, on behalf of the APC Presidential Campaign Organisation, draw your attention to the above named newspaper advertisement that appeared on  January 19, 2015 on the front pages of two national newspapers, namely, The Sun and The Punch.

    “The advertisement signed by Governor of Ekiti State Mr. Ayo Fayose, ostensibly to further the electoral fortune and political advantage of his party man, President Goodluck Jonathan, is in bad taste and capable, if not checked, to undermine law and order in our country before the general elections, which starts on February 14, 2015.

    “In the advertisement captioned “Nigerians be warned”, the sponsor, Mr. Ayo Fayose, went morbid and reckless in his effort to attract support for his favoured candidate in the forthcoming elections.

    “The Ekiti governor depicted the presidential candidate of APC as a man who may likely die in office the way the former Head of State, General Murtala Mohammed, former Head of State, late General Sani Abacha and former President, late Umaru Musa Yar’Adua died in office for the simple unscientific reason that the APC presidential candidate was 72 years old.

    “You will agree with me that advertorials of this kind that insinuate the death of a man who is still alive is unbecoming, irresponsible and downright insensitive. It is capable of causing the breach of the peace across the nation and exacerbates the current unsavoury state of national insecurity and thus, put a huge strain on your office.

    “It is also important to point out that the advertisement is a breach of the accord on non-violence signed by the presidential candidates of all political parties taking part in the February 14 election, including the two leading political parties – the PDP and the APC.

    “We further wish to state that the advertorial is not only sinister and inhuman in its intention, it is also un-African and offends the sensibility of all decent men and women in any society.

    “We hereby respectfully demand that you use your exalted and responsible office to investigate the origin of the said advertorial and the motives of the latter with a view to calling the sponsors to order and prevent a repeat in the interest of peace in our country.

    “Please, accept the assurance of my highest regard.”

  • DSS arrests editor in defiance of court

    The Department of Security Services (DSS) has arrested  the Editor-in-Chief of Tentacle Magazine, Innocent  Nwachukwu.

    The journalist, according to his counsel, Chief Aloy Ezenduka, was forcefully taken from his Ikotun, Lagos home on January 14, this year and taken to Abuja over a story titled: ”20 threats against Jonathan’s re-election survey” published on September 22, 2014 edition of the magazine.

    This was in spite of a Federal High Court which restrained the DSS from arresting the journalist.

    Justice M. N. Yunusa had on December 30, 2014 issued the order while ruling on a Motion Ex-parte application filed by the journalist through his counsel against the DSS.

    Joined as correspondent in the suit was the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF).

    The judge had granted all the prayers of the applicant.

    After hearing the arguments of the applicant, through his counsel, the judge had ordered the parties to maintain status quo ante bellum and stay further action pending the determination of the Motion on Notice filed by the applicant.

    Justice Yunusa also granted the applicant an order for substituted service of the Originating Motion and all other processes accompanying same and subsequent processes on the first and second respondents by Airway Courier at DSS office, Abuja.

    He said such service shall be deemed as good and proper service on the respondents.

    He adjourned the matter to February 9, this year for report of compliance.

    Rather than obey the order, the DSS  operatives arrested the journalist.

    Ezenduka said in a statement that the development confirmed their fears that the earlier invitation extended to the journalist “was a ploy to harass, intimidate and gag his client’s freedom of the press, of professional and right to disseminate information without undue molestation from any person, including DSS”.

    The lawyer claimed that officials of the DSS also visited the office of his client “in a commando-style invasion” and vandalised the place, remove computers, working and private documents, beat and manhandled the staff and seized manuscripts of the January 16, this year’s edition of the magazine.

    Ezenduka urged the DSS release his client unconditionally in obedience to the court order.

    He threatened to  sue the director-general of theDSS and claim compensation for human right abuse.

     

     

     

  • Election 2015: Whither the police, DSS, armed forces?

    How primed are the security agencies for the general elections, starting with the presidential and National Assembly elections on February 14 and the governorship and state legislature elections two weeks later?

    That question is vital, given the grim security challenge in the North east and parts of the Northwest.

    On January 12, at a forum organised in Abuja by the African Policy Research Institute, Prof Attahiru Jega, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) chair, expressed doubt at the possibility of elections in the Northeast.

    “A place like Borno State,” he warned, “unless something is done about those that have been displaced, to be realistic, we must say that it may be impossible to hold elections everywhere, in every local government, in every constituency in these three states (Adamawa, Borno and Yobe, all under emergency) in the Northeast”.

    Though Prof. Jega pledged his commission was doing everything to reduce, to the barest minimum, the number of disenfranchised Nigerians, it is clear the key to “something being done” is enhanced security, the forte of the security forces.

    So, are the police, the core civil security agency, the Department of State Security (DSS), Nigeria’s version of secret police that has nevertheless become very visible of late and the armed forces (tangentially involved in election matters), well primed for this one?  It is not easy to say, though the omens would appear rather grim.

    To start with, the security challenge in the Northeast — and to some extent, part of the Northwest like Kano and Kaduna, with their occasional bloody witnesses of sorties from suicide bombers — the military appears to have its hands full.

    No less the police, from flashpoints across the country, where hideous violence is already rearing its head.  News from Jos, Plateau State, speak of partisans, suspected to be All Progressives’ Congress (APC) sympathisers, destroying a branded campaign minibus belonging to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    More harrowing: another report, from the same Jos, that some youths, reportedly sympathetic to the arrested suspects on the vandalised bus, torched a local police station, allegedly to spring the suspects.

    Much earlier, came  reports that the PDP could not find drivers to recruit to drive its branded campaign vehicles from Abuja to Kano.  To solve this problem, another report suggested President Jonathan was contemplating a presidential order to soldiers to help drive the vehicles.

    It is not clear if the President eventually gave the order.  But if he did, it would have involved the security agencies in partisan political endeavour, which could further dress these agencies in partisan cloak, in the run-up to the general elections next month.

    On the other side, in Rivers, another flashpoint, the APC would appear the butt of hideous violence, from the hands of suspected PDP partisans.

    At the kick-off of the campaign of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, the APC presidential candidate, gunmen shot at a vehicle carrying APC supporters to the Adokiye Amaisimaka Stadium venue of the event, injuring the occupants.

    A few days later, a bomb went off at the Okrika, Port Harcourt, APC campaign headquarters, with fingers of guilt, again pointing towards suspected PDP partisans.  Okirika is particularly symbolic in the menace of violence, which appears set to beset Rivers State.

    Okrika is the hometown of the President’s wife, Dame Patience, who picks no bones on her support for Nyesom Wike, the PDP Rivers gubernatorial candidate, to the extent of even openly declaring him the “next governor” of Rivers.

    The proposed redevelopment of Okrika and  the imperative of Governor Amaechi levelling its waterfront shacks to achieve his goal, was where the Patience-Amaechi tiff first broke into the open.  Though the Okrika APC secretariat bombing has elicited a public peaceful  protest from local youths, sympathetic to the APC cause, the police say they are still investigating the matter.

    Another grim news of violence from the Rivers front: Kingsley Emenike, an APC leader in Ward 19, Obio-Akpor, Rivers, was badly injured by political opponents on Monday night.   That is the spectre of violence in the run-up to the elections. And to add salt to injury, the police reportedly arrested the victim yesterday.

    How fast the police move to bring to book the alleged perpetrators of  violence, in Jos, Plateau State, Port Harcourt, Rivers State and indeed, all over the country, would decide whether or not the elections would  be peaceful, free, fair and credible.

    Aside from these basic challenges however, the security agencies face pre-poll credibility crises, of their own.

    The DSS, for example, twice raided the APC Data Centre in Lagos (despite a court order forbidding it from carrying out a second raid), echoing the United States (US) Watergate scandal, that put paid to President Richard Nixon’s political career and came out with “findings” the APC has dismissed as “hogwash”.

    So, have “gunmen” raided the Abuja home of John Odigie-Oyegun, APC national chairman, reportedly holding his family hostage and searching his room, even in his absence, according to a news release by APC national spokesperson Alhaji Lai Mohammed.  Was that armed robbery or some covert security operation? The APC is calling for a probe.

    Thus, on the virtual eve of a major election, the DSS is perceived, at least from the point of view of the major opposition party, of being “partisan”.  No matter the merit or otherwise of that allegation, the DSS is entering a crucial election season, lugging an image problem.  That cannot be good for its essence as an impartial agency of state, sworn to fairness, to all partisan divides.

    The police too appear entering the period with hardly any less albatross.  Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Suleiman Abba, from his rather unwise intervention in Aminu Tambuwal vs. the PDP in the contentious speakership issue and the subsequent police invasion of the National Assembly, has done the image of the institution under him hardly any good.

    Neither has the threat by Jelili Adesiyan, the Police Affairs Minister, that he had ordered the IGP and the DSS Director-General, to “arrest” anyone making “inciting comments”, given that the threats were basically directed at President Jonathan’s opponents.

    Add the fact that, at both Ekiti and Osun governorship elections, the duo of Adesiyan (Police Affairs) and Musiliu Obanikoro (the erswhile Minister of  State (Defence), tried to marshal the security agencies to help skew the polls, does not, in any way, raise public confidence in the security agencies.

    For this election to be credible and acceptable to all parties, security is key.  So, security agencies must not only be above suspicion, they must be clearly seen to be so.