Tag: fight

  • How to fight corruption in Africa, by don

    Kolawole Olaniyan’s Corruption and Human Rights Law in Africa is a unique departure in many senses from typical books on corruption.

    Some recent writings want us to believe that corruption is only a recently developed deviation in public morality. It is not. Corruption has been with us from the creation of humankind. The Roman Empire, for example, was already plagued by the buying of votes. Corruption is mentioned in the Bible, the Koran, Hindi writings, the teachings of Buddha and in Hebrew scriptures. In ancient Greece, Plato wrote in his ‘laws’: “The servants of the nations are to render their services without any taking of presents…The disobedient shall, if convicted, die without ceremony”.

    This is evidence to the fact that corruption and indeed the struggle to combat it, has been there since the history of humankind.

    In the first sentence of his book, Corruption and Human Rights Law in Africa, Dr. Kolawole Olaniyan, restates this irrefutable truth, that “Corruption is as old as humanity”.

    Olaniyan in this book brings us face-to-face with the dangers of corruption not only to socio-economic and political development across the globe, but in Africa in particular, and that in spite of the concerted efforts to combat this scourge at national, regional and global levels, it continues to flourish with catastrophic consequences on the enjoyment of human and peoples’ rights in Africa.

    While recognising the efforts made through the criminal law frameworks, at national, regional and global levels, to combat corruption, Olaniyan challenges us to think outside the box, and adopt the more attractive and all-embracing human rights law approach, to complement, but not replace, the criminal law approach. He wonders why despite the increasing global recognition of the connection between corruption and human rights, the two concepts are still to a large extent, treated separately.

    Focusing on Africa, Olaniyan examines the source of corruption (large scale) in the continent, the criminal law instruments and mechanisms put in place to combat corruption nationally, sub-regionally and continentally, the clear lack of understanding of the very concept and absence of definition, and above all, the effects of corruption on the human and peoples’ rights guaranteed in the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights. The approaches adopted to combat corruption by the national legal frameworks, as well as the approaches provided in the four regional and global instruments examined in this book, demonstrate a clear disconnect between corruption and human rights.

    Due to the very nature of corruption, the secrecy under which it is practiced, lack of understanding of the very concept, absence of a clear and universal definition, coupled with the manner it is conceived by different peoples in different places, it is almost impossible to determine with certainty or exactitude the level of corruption in a state, and its effects on ordinary individuals. For the most part, because of this lack of understanding and confusion, corruption was and still is considered a victimless crime.

    Olaniyan deflates this narrow understanding and has demonstrated in Corruption and Human Rights Law in Africa, that corruption has as its principal victim, the ordinary citizens, who are usually the most vulnerable in society, and who because of the lack of understanding of the real effects of corruption, usually end up without any effective remedy. That is why he propounds in this book that “as a matter of justice and fairness, they (victims) should ideally be entitled to an effective remedy through the anticorruption legal framework or human rights law.

    In Chapter One, Olaniyan discusses the historical and conceptual frameworks of corruption and human rights law, noting that whereas the effects of corruption on human rights may seem self-evident, this link is rarely seriously explored, because ‘corruption is still narrowly considered as an ordinary crime and victimless”. He exposes the reason for this narrow mindedness, arguing that “at the heart of the matter is the reliance on a restrictive notion of corruption to address the grave problem that it has become (and its effects on human rights).

    The lack of understanding of the very concept of corruption and its impact on human rights is exacerbated by the lack of a universal definition of the term corruption, and the few definitions that do exist, are usually vague, imprecise, sometimes confusing and limited to criminal and law enforcement fields, and almost never include the victim element of corruption,  or reflect elements of the accountability of states for the human rights violations faced by victims of large scale corruption.

    Chapter Two looks at the international dimension of corruption and establishes a link between corruption, money laundering and poverty. Using three African countries (Angola, Equatorial Guinea and Nigeria) to illustrate this relationship, Olaniyan demonstrates the challenges faced prosecuting large scale corruption perpetrated by high-ranking government officials, including Heads of State and Government and close members of their families.  The difficulty of proving a case of corruption is enormous, but even when proven, Olaniyan notes that “the fundamental weakness of assets recovery” becomes glaring. It is usually not clear whether the entire asset is fully recovered and how the recovered asset is used to provide effective remedy to citizens who are the real victims of corruption. In this Chapter, Olaniyan recognises the important role Courts can and do play in holding African leaders accountable for the sake of victims of human rights violations caused by corruption.

    In Chapter Three, the book examines the national legal frameworks for fighting corruption in Africa. Today, it is rare to find any country in Africa without legal frameworks or institutions to fight and combat corruption, the only difference being on the legal system of the country (common law or civil law) or whether the country has ratified and domesticated a treaty in their legal system.

    Using the same three countries mentioned in Chapter two as case studies, it is clear that the legal frameworks are in two main categories: constitutional and legislative. The constitutional provisions to fight corruption are particularly important, in terms of their potential to serve as a code of behavior, however, Olaniyan cast a shadow on them as effective tools to fight corruption, because they ‘are deemed programmatic and aspirational goals and therefore are mostly not justiciable, in the sense that citizens have no legal standing to challenge the government for non-compliance”.

    In the use of constitutional or legal framework, there are major obstacles in the fight against corruption, including the use of immunity clauses, prosecutorial discretion and political appointees, and the independence and effectiveness of anti-corruption mechanisms, executive interference and political pressure. Olaniyan proposes solutions to some of the obstacles, suggesting with respect to immunity clauses that “a public official, regardless of their title or office, will receive immunity that corresponds only to lawful official actions, and not serious crimes like corruption”.

    Olaniyan examines the international legal frameworks for fighting corruption across Africa in Chapter Four, and identifies three phases in the internationalization of the fight against corruption, namely: the tolerance of corruption in international business transactions, the twofold denial of the negative effects of corrup­tion, and political resistance to adopting strong instruments to address the problem, and the engagement and discussions around develop­ment and governance concerns in developing countries. The latter phase coinciding with the end of the Cold War, globalization, increased technology, and the establishment of Transparency International.

    Comparing anti-corruption treaties adopted at sub-regional, continental and global levels, Olaniyan concludes that the objects and purposes of all the four anti-corruption treaties examined in this book are essentially the same. Some of the instruments make passive references to human rights while others omit any explicit reference to human rights, and there is no reflection of a strong tendency to recognize the connection between corruption, development, good governance and human rights in the normative content of the instruments.

    Chapter Five on the effects of corruption on human and peoples’ rights describes in detail the devastating effects of corruption on the full and effective enjoyment of the human and peoples’ rights guaranteed in the African Charter and other human rights instruments. By revealing the immense human consequences of corruption, Olaniyan makes a case for human rights law to serve as a veritable complementary framework to combat corruption. Using a catalogue of rights guaranteed under the Charter and other human rights instruments on the continent, he demonstrates the strong causal relationship between corruption and human and peoples’ rights, as well as clearly identifies the direct victims of human rights violations in each case. While recognising the rich jurisprudence developed by the African Commission, Olaniyan believes supranational human rights bodies such as the Commission and the Court can and should use the broad mandates conferred on them, to advance a human rights based approach to combating corruption.

    The potential of human rights law in combatting corruption in Africa, as the title suggests, in Chapter 6, demonstrates that human rights law and mechanisms have the capacity to provide more effective remedies to victims of corruption than the traditional criminal law mechanisms. The longstanding legal principle of ubi jus, ibi remedium gives credence to Olaniyan’s thesis and provides a perfect platform for human rights law as a satisfactory complementary framework to combat corruption.

    The effectiveness of the traditional criminal law instruments as the only approach to fighting corruption is put on the spotlight in this book.  Olaniyan does not call for the abandonment of one approach over the other. While identifying the strengths and weaknesses of both approaches, he believes they can and should complement each other.

    A clear warning is sent out to the international community when Olaniyan reminds us that “corruption breeds terrorism (and other organised crimes), encourages money laundering (and vice versa), precipitates poverty, undermines the operations of the rule of law, the working of the institutions of governance and, ultimately, leads or contributes to violations of human rights, and as such sufficient political will must be mustered to heed this warning.

    Olaniyan also argues: “If Africa is to truly exercise its sovereignty – both political and economic – it must make as its utmost priority the betterment of its peoples without distinction of any kind.”

    According to him, “Sovereignty implies conducting an independent foreign and internal policy, building of schools, construction of roads, in brief, all types of activity directed towards the welfare of people. Sovereignty cannot be conceived as the right to kill millions of innocent people. Sovereignty is not a licence for states and senior public officials to commit acts of corruption that imperil human dignity, and with it citizens’ lives and hopes for a better future. Sovereignty should not (and cannot) be invoked to shield perpetrators of corruption from justice or victims from accessing effective remedies. The legal protection of human and peoples’ rights should therefore be the primary aim of the African Union and its member-states. Deploying human rights law as a complementary frame­work to prevent and combat corruption can contribute to continental (and global) efforts to improve both the effectiveness of the regional human rights mechanisms and the instruments against corruption.”

    Even so, “the key to success is ensuring global implementation of [anti-corruption] instruments [and human rights law] at the national levels, and establishing effective mechanisms for the international com­munity to enforce collectively the spirit and the letter of national commit­ments.” He proposes the establishment of a number of well thought out supra-national institutions to help in the fight against corruption in Africa. The apprehension that can be expressed here is that, with an already cash-strapped African Union, with a proliferation of institutions that are usually poorly funded, the institutions being proposed by Olaniyan will suffer the same fate and rendered them weak, ineffective, manipulated and perhaps, themselves corrupt, bringing us back to Olaniyan to proffer another solution.

    This excellent book by Olaniyan lends itself to be read and reread in order to understand the relationship between corruption, development, the rule of law, governance and human rights. It is only when this relationship is understood and fully established that we can begin to deconstruct, in a constructive way, policies, guidelines, laws and appropriate mechanisms to effectively combat corruption.

    The book’s excellent quality is buttressed by the fact that it was thoroughly reviewed by a host of law professors, including 6 anonymous reviewers commissioned by the Oxford University Press.

    I agree with the renowned Professor of International Law and one of America’s best legal brains, Dinah Shelton of the George Washington University Law School when she said of Olaniyan’s book: “His focus is Africa but the valuable lessons he teaches in this comprehensive study can resonate throughout the world. The result is a comprehensive and holistic legal framework for addressing some of the root causes of human rights violations and poverty, not only in Africa, but wherever corruption exists.”

    I can’t recommend this book enough. Corruption and human rights law in Africa is a perfect companion for all, but more importantly, for students interested in policy development, university lecturers, government policy makers, human rights and anti corruption advocates, and intergovernmental organisations seeking effective ways of combating corruption (such as the African Union and the United Nations).

     

    • Dr Eno is Chief Registrar, African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights in Arusha, Tanzania
  • Fight against breast cancer

    SIR: There are many survivors of breast cancer today because of early detection, which is the best prevention from dying of cancer. The least we can do to fight breast cancer is to create awareness amongst parents and schools, especially among young girls.

    Here are some roles you can play to help fight this disease: Be aware of the disease; know the symptoms and signs of breast cancer: Always visit an health care professional if you notice anything unusual lump and encourage your family and friends to go to the doctor to get a breast check to rule out the possibility of having breast cancer.

    Every person should know the symptoms and signs of breast cancer for the purpose of early detection. If there are no symptoms, regular screenings are always important. Your doctor can check for breast cancer before you have any noticeable symptoms.

    Let’s avail ourselves of these information and avoid the emotional and physical anguish of cancer, not to mention the huge financial cost and possible fatality in most cases just because the disease was diagnosed late.

    • Esther Ndubuisi wrote in from the Department of Mass Communication, Kwara State University

     

  • How to fight hunger

    A professor of Food Chemistry of EKSU Ibiyinka Ogunlade, believes the government can arrest  hunger and food insecurity through proper education on how to make abundant food available to all.

    Ogunlade said proper awareness drive and a robust advocacy on abundant food production coupled with research and implementation of its findings would provide an avenue to arrest the situation particularly in Nigeria.

    Delivering the 41st inaugural lecture of EKSU titled: “Food and Education: Catalyst for sustainable development “, Ogunlade suggested the establishment of small scale industries for effective mode of utilisation of weeds in food and chemical industries. He stressed that governments must have the political will to take such measures in arresting food insecurity.

    She also recommended the establishment of Agro-based industries which could convert farm products into finished produce, such as pounded yam from yam, cocoa and coffee beans to all types of beverages and tea.

    Further, she advocated that Nigerians should return to nature food programme in what she described as “Return to Nature” warning against consumption of junks which could result in the occurrence of diseases such as cancer and diabetes, among others.

     

     

  • Security agents fight over result sheet

    Security agents fight over result sheet

    There was confusion yesterday at Ijero-Ekiti in Ekiti State, as security agents fought at the Ijero Local Government Collation Centre.

    It was learnt that shortly after the result was declared, security operatives demanded Form EC8C, which contained the result of the presidential poll in the council.

    Security operatives drawn from the Police, Department of State Services (DSS), Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, Nigeria Immigration Service and others were involved in the scuffle.

    As the brawl degenerated, DSS officers took away the Electoral Officer, simply identified as Mrs. Ogundipe, to an unknown destination.

    The Collation Officer, Francis Adebayo, later ran to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) office in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital, without the collation sheet.

    Adebayo, who said he escaped being shot, said the original result was in Mrs. Ogundipe’s possession.

    But the Collation officer’s claim was refuted by the Returning Officer of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who gave his as Gen. Ayeni (rtd) and his counterpart in the All Progressives Congress (APC), Ojo Atibioke.

    They said there was no commotion in Ijero, adding that the argument was between security agencies and election officials.

    Parties, however, accepted the duplicate copy brought by Adebayo, which  reflected the results as endorsed by their agents.

  • Ighalo: Watford will fight their way back to EPL

    Ighalo: Watford will fight their way back to EPL


    Your career has been on the  high since you move to Watford, what’s the secret?

    IGHALO: Well, not when I joined Watford but right from my time in Spain with Granada. It was only last season that was bad because I had an injury that kept me out for four months. Here in England, I think I am getting used to the league and it suits me. It was not easy in the beginning but hard work is paying off.

     

    Watford missed promotion last season, are you sure the team will make it this season?

    Yes, we can, we have good quality players and management.  But we still need to work hard because there are good teams in the league who want promotion tickets too.

     

    You have scored 17 goals already, any number of goals you wish to score?

    If I can reach the 20-goal mark, I will be happy but I don’t have a target. I don’t want to put myself under unnecessary pressure. I will just keep working hard.

     

    What can you say about Italian, Spanish and English leagues?

    The league in Spain is all about skills and ball possession. In Italy, it is physical and more tactical. Here in the English Championship, it is physical and tough, the tempo here in England is high, you must be fit and ready to run from the beginning of the game till the end.

     

    What are your set goals for the season?

    Promotion to the premier league is my priority, any other thing that follow is a bonus.

     

    Did you have your parents’ backing when started playing the game?

    My dad was not happy with me playing football from the beginning because he wanted me to go to school and be a graduate like some of my brothers and sisters. In fact he would beat me up when I went out to play football, but he is now a proud father.

     

    What exactly did he want you to become?

    I would have become a lawyer today.

     

    You have played for Nigeria’s U-20 team, do you dream of appearing for the Super Eagles?

    Yes, of course. It is every footballer’s dream to play for the national team. So, I am patiently waiting for my time to get into the Super Eagles.

     

    Who is the biggest football personality you have met?

    That has to be Samuel Eto’o.  It was three years ago while I was with Udinese. We played against his team, at that time Anzhi, in a Europa League game. He is a legend and a very humble man. In fact, he gave me his jersey.

     

    What did he tell you?

    He advised me to be humble and keep working hard.

     

    What has becoming a family man done to you and your career?

    It changed everything about me, I know some people depend on me and I don’t think about myself only before I do anything but think about my family in making decisions.

     

    Which is your toughest game for Watford so far?

    That was the recent game against Blackburn Rovers. They were too physical.

     

    What do you do at your leisure time?

    I watch sport channels and Nigerian movies. Other times I sleep.

     

    Who are your favourite actors?

    Mr. Ibu, Nkem Owoh and Charles Inoje

  • UPU: ‘we won’t fight Omene’

    The President-General of the new Urhobo Progress Union (UPU), Chief Tuesday Onoge, has said his faction of the group will no longer join issues with his predecessor, Chief Joe Omene, in the media.

    Onoge spoke at the weekend when he hosted the youth wing of the UPU, led by Freeborn Mukoro, at his Ekpan home, in Uvwie Local Government Area.

    The UPU chief explained that Omene was removed because he allegedly misled the Urhobo.

  • When two elephants fight…

    The Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti, has been shut over workers’ and students’ unrest.  ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA reports on the impasse and the  students’ plea for the school’s reopening.

    The New Year began on a troublesome note at the Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti. Last January 5 protest by the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Polytechnics (SSANIP) and Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU)  followed by that of students last Tuesday led to its indefinite closure.

    While the workers want the Rector, Dr Taiwo Akande, removed for alleged highhandedness and misappropriation, among others, the students are more interested in returning to school.

    The polytechnic, established in 1982, used to be one of the most peaceful in the country.  But the story is changing. In the past two years, it has been battling an unstable academic calendar caused by industrial disputes.

    The nationwide strikes by the ASUP, SSANIP and NASU between April 2013 and July 2014 kept the students at home for about 11 months.

    The ASUP strike was to protest the non-implementation of the Consolidated Tertiary Institutions Salary Scale (CONTISS) 15 migration for workers in the lower cadre and its arrears from 2009; discrimination against polytechnic graduates; non-release of the White Paper on the Visitations to Federal Polytechnics; and calls for the establishment of a National Polytechnics Commission (NPC) to regulate polytechnics.

    It started in April 2013 and was suspended on July 17, following the Senate Committee on Education’s intervention .  The strike resumed on October 4, 2013 and was suspended last July, following Education Minister Ibrahim Shekarau’s, promise to address the union’s demands.

    After losing a session to the national strike, the students looked forward to a stable academic calendar but their hopes were dashed when the union’s local chapter began fresh agitation for the implementation of the CONTISS 15 on January 5.

    CONTISS 15, however, seems a smokescreen for the strike.  During the January 5 protest, the unionists called for the rector’s removal for alleged misappropriation autocratic tendencies, favouritism and nepotism.  They vowed not to return to work until the government clears the rector of the allegations.

    They also complained of “illegal pension deductions from contract staff benefits in flagrant disregard of the polytechnic’s financial regulations”.

    Last Monday, the unions met again and resolved to continue the strike.  This triggered last Tuesday’s students’ protest, which led to the school’s closure.

    In an interview with The Nation, ASUP Chairman, Tunji Owoeye defended the workers’ decision.  He called on Mallam Shekarau to order Dr Akande to step asidepending her  investigation by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences (ICPC).

    He said the rector should be sacked for alleged “non-implementation of CONTISS 15 as directed by the government, non-remittance of staff contributions to cooperative societies, deduction of pension from contract and casual workers, non-refund of pension deduction, highhandedness in policy implementation, award of contracts without following due process and over-employment.

    “As we speak now, CONTISS 15 is operational in all the polytechnics in this country, except Federal Polytechnic, Ado Ekiti. She cajoled us in October, 2013, promising to start when the finances improve, only to turn around and told us there was no such plan for us”.

    He also complained that those newly-employed are pitched against older workers.

    Owoeye said: “The entire polytechnic community is tired of her administration and her leadership style. Several times she has tried to polarise institution and de-unionise us using the different devices including divide and rule and tribal sentiments.

    “Most recent is the use of new workers against the old which accounted for why she over-bloated the system with frivolous employments.”

    NASU Chairman, Adekunle Adeniyi accused the rector of placing workers of the same cadre on different grade levels based on fraternity with her, alleging that this is causing acrimony among workers.

    He said: “We want the Federal Government to set up panel to investigate the activities of the current management. Pending that time, we appeal to the Minister of Education to suspend Dr Akande to prevent the investigations from being impeded.”

    But the rector’s backers are denying the allegations.  A new worker (who does not wish to be named) refuted the claims that the rector supervised indiscriminate employment.

    She said: “The labour unions are wrong in accusing the rector of overstaffing the polytechnic workforce. The recruitment exercise and the eventual employment of new staff underwent due process.

    “There were vacancies in various units and departments and these vacancies must be filled. The positions were advertised, candidates applied and they were subjected to various tests, examinations and assessments before they were eventually employed.

    “What offence did the rector commit by filling the vacancies in line with the regulations? They should look for other excuses in their bid to ensure the removal of the innocent woman”.

    Refuting the allegations, Mrs Akande advised the workers to wait for the outcome of the EFCC and ICPC investigations.

    Speaking through the Deputy Registrar (Information and Protocol), Ade Adeyemi-Adejolu, the rector, said her administration has been transparent in all its financial dealings.

    She accused the workers of pursuing parochial and selfish agenda and not following due process before going on strike.  Dr Akande urged them to embrace dialogue.

    On Monday, she issued a statement that she would no longer  comment on the crisis.

    The statement signed by Adeyemi-Adejolu, reads: “I am to notify you of a directive from above asking all parties on the current industrial impasse in the Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti to refrain from press chat or responding to press enquiries for the time being.

    “Consequently, the Rector, Dr. Taiwo Akande, has asked me to plead with you that she would not be responding to requests for press interview on the issues of the current trade dispute in the institution until it is finally resolved.  Thank you for your understanding and considerations.”

    With the two ‘elephants’ fighting, the students are the ‘grass’ suffering.

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) is backing the rector. It accused the institution’s Students Union leadership of doing little to address students’ interest.

    NANS called on the unions to call of the strike in the interest of students who spent greater part of last year at home because of a national strike.

    NANS Vice President in the Southwest Sunday Ashefon played a role in last week’s students protest  mobilising them to resist the workers’ continued strike.

    In a statement by NANS Ekiti Axis Coordinator Adetunji Bankole, the association urged the striking workers to return to work.

    “We have spoken to students’ leaders of some polytechnics and have realised that no polytechnic in Nigeria is still paying CONTISS 15; then why should the striking workers waste students’ time and resources? Why can’t they face the Federal Government and stop tarnishing the image of the Rector”, he said.

    NANS Vice chairman in Ekiti State, Oluwapelumi Ogunmekun lamented that strikes had disrupted academic activities in the polytechnic in the last one year.

    He accused the management and union of playing games with the destiny.  He accused the Student Union leaders of the compromise hence NANS’ involvement in the “fight on behalf of the students”.

    But, the SUG president, Oladapo Ajibola, denied the allegation saying he said he was also part of the protest to ensure the crisis resolution.

    He explained that the students had been on campus since January 4 doing nothing. The union, he said, would have another meeting with the management to find a way out of the crisis.

    But for most of the students, whether CONTISS 15 is implemented or the rector goes or not do not matter as long as school resumes.

    This was clear in the placards they bore during the protest.  Some of them read: “Mama Rector, Trade Unions, Help Our Future”; “We Want To Graduate”; “ASUP and Management, don’t Destroy our Future”; “Our Mates in other Institutions have Graduated, Please we want to Graduate.”

    A student, who simply, gave her name as Ope, urged the Rector to do everything to resolve her differences with the unions to enable them return to class.

    She said: “We are tired of this crisis, can you imagine that we have some HND students that have spent almost seven years in this polytechnic when they are not medical students?   We were at home for greater part of last year because of the nationwide strike embarked upon by all unions agitating for better working conditions. But we students are the ones bearing the brunt.  You journalists please help us appeal to them, the rector, the management and the unions must sit down and talk so that we can continue with our studies.”

    Another student, Femi Owoeye, said the students are paying dearly for the strike.

    “It appears the management and the unions are not concerned about our future. Last year’s strike cost many of us the opportunity of being mobilised for the Youth Service.  In this New Year, we don’t know what it holds for us with this latest industrial action. Even if other unions are on strike, we thought that ASUP would be considerate and suspend its strike for academic work to continue.

    “But its resolve to continue with the strike has put our future in jeopardy. I am calling on the Federal Government to set up a panel to investigate this crisis if they cannot resolve it internally among themselves.  We don’t want to spend extra year on the campus, this is one crisis too many,” he said.

    Deputy Rector (Academics) Afolabi Bamidele explained that the management is working hard to resolve the crisis .

    The management, he said, met with the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) officials in Abuja in a bid to resolve the crisis, arguing that the students had to leave the school for all issues to be resolved.

    Dr. Akande assumed office in December 2009.  She was reappointed for a second term of four years in December 2013.

     

  • A fight to keep off bulldozers

    A fight to keep off bulldozers

    If there is anything traders at Kubwa Market want above everything else, it is to preserve their investments by stopping bulldozers from tearing down the facility. They have the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) and the dreaded private developers to contend with.

    The FCTA, in early December, served the traders a seven-day ultimatum to quit. The sellers took to the streets, protesting the authority’s action and plan. They know the implications of private developers coming in. Bulldozers will pull down the market, throwing them into all sorts of trouble. The FCT is replete with such cases and they want to avoid it.

    What are they doing about it? A lot. Apart from the protest, the traders have also offered to build the satellite town market themselves rather than have developers set foot in it. They equally briefed a lawyer who wasted no time in suing the FCTA, hoping to stop it in its tracks.

    Although the plan to demolish the market was given almost the same time as the Dutse market which was demolished last year, the Area Council, according to the chairman, Hon. Peter Ushafa felt that it will be better to demolish each market separately and give those at Kubwa, some time to get ready after that of Dutse before the market was brought down.

    The traders in their protest stated that the Area Council had not provided them with an alternative place to trade before the demolition, they said that the market was their only means of livelihood and that even though they support development, it should not be at their peril.

    In an interview with our correspondent, chairman of peace and security in Kubwa market, Cashmere Obialor, said “What we are saying is that the Kubwa market has been in existence for more than 30 years, it is not a virgin land that you will say, go and clear like that. People feed their families from here and take refuge in this market; there are many widows who feed their families from this market and now they are coming to demolish this place without giving us an alternative place.

    “What we are trying to tell the government is that we are Nigerians and citizens of this country; many of us don’t have any other place to turn to, by the time they come and demolish the market, it will mean that they want to cause more crime in this Kubwa. They need to provide an alternative place to the traders if they want to develop the market pending when they finish and the traders can return.

    “If the government goes ahead to insist on demolition after this seven days, then they should be ready to kill the whole people in this market because we are not going to run, when they come out with their solders and their arms, nobody is going to run, they will have to kill to the last person in this market before they can demolish it, we have not agreed on anything with anybody, they have not even tried to get out stands, if they call us, we are the leaders of the market, we will tell them how we want our people to be carried along.”

    Public Relations Officer, Bwari Area Council Dauda Basha in a telephone interview confirmed the demolition notice placed at the market but denied the knowledge of a dispute between the council and traders or they had been protesting.

    He said that discussions had been going on between the council and traders for long about the planned demolition and the Area Council had actually gone ahead and found the traders an alternative place to trade until the modern market is complete.

    He added, “The area council is working on a place to take them to right now, the space we have is is too small so when we get an alternative place, they will be relocated but we have given the place up to private developers to develop and they already have their equipments on the ground which is expensive to maintain.”

    The Lawyer who spoke in a phone interview on behalf of the tradersý Barr Maxwell Oparaý, said that they have served a court notice to the Abuja Metropolitan Council and Bwari Area Council and that any attempt to demolish the market will be a breach of peace and will be met with stiff resistance.

    His words: “These traders in the first instance are there because the government allocated papers to them, they were called for the verification of their papers which they went for to confirm they were truly allocated and they paid the necessary fee that they were asked to pay.

    “The traders are asking that if the government wants to build a modern market for them, they should give them the plan of the kind of market they want to build, the traders are ready to build it with government supervision, the traders are ready to build the Kubwa market with their money, all they are asking, is the government’s support and plan.”

    He also said, “ýThe allocation given to the traders was given by the Bwari Area Councilý, they went back to the Area Council to regularise the papers, why are they now being asked to vacate their shops?

    “The council claimed that they were going to relocate them to a temporary site but when the traders arrived at the site, it was just a vacant land that looked like it was cleared by someone to build a house.

    ”We are suing Abuja Metropolitan Council under FCDAý and we have also taken the court notice to the Bwari Area Council, we have served the both of them a court order and we are asking the court to declare that they have no right to intrude on the market, that the court should declare that the Abuja traders are the owners of the market and that if the Kubwa traders decide to build the market, they will be allowed to build it and after it is completed, they will take over, we are now waiting for a court date to be fixed.

    “The Kubwa market traders are peaceful set of people but any attempt by the Area Council, FCT administration or developers ýto demolish the market will amount to breech of peace, we have written to all of them that any attempt to demolish the market illegally will meet with stiff resistance and in the course of resistance, anything can happen, we pray it does not get to that point, they have called us for a meeting which was adjourned from the 24th of December 2014 and we are hoping for another meeting soon.”

     

  • ‘How church can fight crimes’

    ‘How church can fight crimes’

    The desperation for quick wealth can be checked even without much ado by the police and other law-enforcement agencies, a cleric said yesterday.

    The Bishop, Diocese of Lagos Mainland, the Rt. Rev Isaac Ayo Olawuyi, said if religious organisations de-emphasised prosperity preaching, which, he said, breeds morbid materialism, and harp on salvation, people would learn to wait on God.

    He condemned the rising spate of various crimes across the country, especially armed robbery, kidnapping ritual killing, assassination, looting of public treasury, corruption, prostitution and exploitation/oppression of the poor.

    Maintaining that the police would have less jobs in their hands if people turn to God and cease struggling for the vanities of life, the frontline cleric added: “Open any newspaper today, watch the television, listen to the radio or get to any gathering, what you hear are scary news of one crime or the other to the extent that the capacity of our security agencies has been over-stretched. This is where the church needs to play its role.”

    “Our bible teaches us that if we seek first the Kingdom of God, he would add to it, all the good things of life that we now daily crave. This is where some sections of our religious organisations are getting things wrong. Rather than emphasise the ultimate salvation of people’s souls after their earthly sojourn, all we hear now are sermons about how to drive posh cars, pay heavy tithes and build mansions all over the place.

    “It is time we woke up from our pathetic illusion to realise that life is not only ephemeral but vain without Christ. Therefore, our brethrens must be made to realise that in order to live a Christ-like life and ultimately secure a place in heaven, they must eschew the habit of get-rich-quick-at-all-costs,” Rev Olawuyi admonished.

    He urged the rich and the highly-placed at all levels and strata in the society to spare a thought for the less-privileged, whom he said, constitute the majority of the nation’s populace.

    “How righteous are you in your relationship with God? How fair are you to your fellowmen? How do you treat your maids and servants? Do you think about your next destination after this life? Does your heart harbour hatred and malice? Do you cheat? These are among the questions we must address to puncture the worsening tension in the land,” Rev Olawuyi said.

    The government at all levels, he however advised, must stop treating the welfare of the masses and the unemployed with levity because according to him, when a person is deprived and hungry, he is naturally predisposed to crimes in order to eke out a living.

  • Lamorde seeks journalists’ help to fight corruption

    Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Chairman Ibrahim Lamorde has urged journalists to assist the commission in the war against corruption.

    He said the EFCC relied on the media to expose acts of malfeasance and draw attention to the challenges facing the anti-corruption campaign across Nigeria.

    Lamorde addressed some select reporters in the Northwest yesterday in Kano at a workshop with the theme: Reporting Economic and Financial Crimes, organised by the agency.

    The EFCC chairman, who was represented by the Director of Media and Publicity, Mr. Osita Nwajah, said the commission got 117 convictions on various financial crime cases in 2013.

    He said: “As a commission, we have stepped up financial intelligence and tracking of illicit transactions across the borders.

    “The policing of the major entry and exit points in our country, in the last two years, recorded the seizure of huge sums of money, at the three major airports in Lagos, Kano and Port Harcourt. Some of the suspects in the cases have been prosecuted and convicted.”

    The EFCC chairman said the commission was investigating alleged corruption in the Judiciary, particularly in justice delivery process.

    Lamorde said: “EFCC has decided to sanitise the system by investigating some of the alleged cases of corruption involving high-level officers. Some of the cases are ongoing, although one of them has sued the commission in a bid to forestall further action.”

    The commission chairman assured that it was committed to bringing the culprits to justice.

    He said the EFCC would probe cases of malfeasance in the Judiciary and other sectors, such as the pension and subsidy cases.

    Kano State Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Information Alhaji Mohammed Danyaro said objectivity, which had been the core value of reportage, had been abandoned.

    The ministry head noted that this had made Nigerians to become easily enticed with bad news.

    He said rather than promote unity in diversity, the media preferred the opposite.

    Danyaro said: “The issue of control of the media has become part of the leading struggle for the control of power. It has, therefore, become very worrisome that a large assessment of the media content lately suggests that the media are now leading a sharp deviation from the projection of national interest and integration.

    “Nigerian media are emphasising on North/South division. Everything is about region, religion or sensationalism, rather than the promotion of oneness.”