Tag: Illegal

  • Agency declares war against illegal mast installation

    Agency declares war against illegal mast installation

    The Lagos State Infrastructure Maintenance and Regulatory Agency (LASIMRA) has declared war against illegal installation of masts, towers and other appurtenances of telecommunications in the metropolis.

    Its General Manager, Mr Babajide Odekunle, told reporters that the agency would embark on a state-wide regulatory inspection and standards compliance audit of such infrastructure.

    According to him, the exercise is geared towards ensuring orderly development of urban infrastructure in the construction and operation of telecommunications infrastructure deployed by telecommunications, tower operators and mobile network operators.

    Odekunle said: “Removal of abandoned and non-compliant masts and towers: So far, we have started the activity around Ikeja and its environs and about 95 masts, towers have been decommissioned; the agency has also set up a task force named ‘Zero tolerance on non-compliant mast and towers on Lagos Island’, which is saddled with the responsibility of combing Lagos Island to discover substandard as well as illegal or unpermitted masts, towers.”

    He explained that  the task force constituted two weeks ago has identified over 20 masts and towers that either did not meet acceptable standards or were erected illegally, adding that about eight have been decommissioned.

    According to him, the agency is also planning to establish zonal offices in Badagry, Epe and Ikorodu to strengthen its monitoring and compliance activities.

    “Inter-agency cooperation with Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA), Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA), Lagos State Safety Commission (LSSC) and Lagos State Parks and Gardens Agency (LASPARK) is already established in order to serve the citizens of the state better.

    “The Agency would like to encourage the public to be their brothers’ keeper by giving timely and adequate information on any suspected activities around their neighbourhood that relates to digging of roads/pathways, erection of mast, towers either on the ground or on the rooftop, laying of cables, pipes etc. Be that whistleblower by contacting us,” he said.

    Odekunle said the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode administration placed premium on the safety and security.

    “Therefore, any institution, individual found to be perpetrating acts that is against the tenets of acceptable guidelines of government agencies, would be prosecuted accordingly,” he said.

  • Ogun gets panel to check illegal drug

    The Ogun State government has set up a committee to fish out illegal drug dealers and those patronising them, to rid the state of drug-related crimes.

    The government said it would not tolerate illegal drug dealers in any part of the state.

    Director of Pharmaceutical Services in the Ministry of Health Mr. Olufemi Fafiolu addressed reporters in Abeokuta, the state capital, on the increase in illegal drug dealers and outlets.

    Fafiolu said the committee would raid and picket illegal and counterfeit drug premises, outlets and unwholesome processed food outlets this month.

    He warned those engaged in illegal drug businesses to desist.

    The director noted that anyone caught would face the full wrath of the law.

    The state government, according to the director, “is worried by the influx of illegal drug dealers from Lagos State into the state, and the government will not fold its arms while unscrupulous elements perpetrate illegal drug deals”.

  • Illegal recruitments

    •Such problems will persist for as long as we keep shielding the perpetrators

    Rather than keep inundating Nigerians with grim statistics of infractions in government’s establishments, the Federal Government should begin to apply sanctions against perpetrators of the infractions, some bordering on the criminal. We cannot remember how many times the government had alerted that government had been paying hundreds of ghost workers, but hardly has there been any attempt to hand over those involved to the security agencies for investigation and possible prosecution. Yet, we all know that ghosts cannot collect salaries and if they can, they cannot do the documentations to the point of being paid.

    What we are hearing now is that many government’s ministries, departments and parastatals (MDAs) have been doing large-scale illegal recruitments. The Acting Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Dr. Habiba Lawal, said in a circular to the Chief of Staff to the President, National Assembly, service chiefs, heads of ministries and agencies, amongst others, that many of the MDAs have been doing the illegal recruitments ostensibly to replace members of the staff who had left the system, without following the due process.

    The memo, titled “Streamlining procedures for recruitment into federal agencies” said inter alia: “”The attention of the President has been drawn to reports of massive and indiscriminate clandestine recruitments in federal ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) in flagrant disregard of rules and established procedures for recruitment in the public service.

    “Many MDAs have been carrying out recruitments in the guise of replacement of existing staff without following due process,” she claimed.

    Rather than talking tough about sanctions, the acting SGF rolled out was she called guidelines to streamline the process and procedures for recruitment and appointment into the public service. These include: adherence to manpower budget for proposed recruitment, which must be approved by the supervising agency or ministry; obtaining of waiver to recruit from the office of the Head of Service of the Federation; appropriate budgetary provisions to accommodate the proposed recruitment and letter of clearance from the director-general of the budget office of the federation to confirm budgetary provision for the proposed recruitment.

    Other guidelines include approval of Federal Character Commission for the distribution of vacancies for the proposed recruitment to ensure equitable distribution of vacancies; representation of the Federal Civil Service Commission as observers in the recruitment process in the ministries, representatives of the office of the head of service of the federation, in order to ensure compliance with extant rules and provision of recruitment.

    If we may ask, is the problem that of lack of guidelines or of people who have just made up their minds to sideline the process? We say this because this is not the first time the Federal Government is raising the alarm over such recruitments. Indeed, the problem, like most Nigerian public service problems, has been with us for decades. As recently as 2013, Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Federal Character, Ahmed Idris, said that his committee discovered that almost all federal agencies were involved in the malpractice. Indeed, he threatened that those involved would be prosecuted. That was under the Goodluck Jonathan presidency in which everything goes. With the expected change that the present government promised, we thought such a thing would have been eradicated or significantly reduced. But this cannot be in a situation where, instead of being sanctioned, those perpetrating the malpractice are merely being reminded to follow due process.

    Yet, what they are doing has grave implications for the country’s unity as most of the cases are replete with allegations of favouritism and cronyism. Not only that, it has huge implications for the government’s wage bill, which, even as things stand, is mind-boggling. Worse still, such recruitments make nonsense of the many attempts to bring sanity into the government’s payroll.

    It is high time government began to name and shame those involved in malpractices such as this. Corruption cannot be fought by keeping secret those perpetrating it.

  • Censors Board reconstitutes taskforce on illegal movies

    Censors Board reconstitutes taskforce on illegal movies

    It was a heart lifting development for filmmakers who attended the inauguration of a special taskforce, constituted by the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB) to checkmate the upsurge of unlicensed and unclassified movies in the country.

    The move was one of the steps taken by the new Executive Director of the NFVCB, Alhaji Adedayo Thomas, who assumed office barely three months ago.

    The feat, according to many, was a subtle approach to minimize piracy of intellectual property in Nigeria.

    Inaugurating the 8-man taskforce at the Ikoyi office of the agency, Thomas said the reconstituted national taskforce against unwholesome movies, was one of the mandates given him by President Muhammadu Buhari “to revitalize the dying dreams of the founding fathers of the film industry, whose shear efforts brought the sector to phenomenal limelight, but have so far recorded pains and tears as a result of the sabotaging works of people bent on crippling the industry.”

    Acknowledging that  the Nigerian motion picture industry was built on the sweat and toils of its doyens, and not by government, the NFVCB boss said, “My own responsibility therefore as one of the representatives of the government is to rekindle dashed hopes and fertilize the soil for their seeds to thrive and reap bountiful harvests from their toils and labours in the sector.”

    According to Thomas, the entertainment industry in Nigeria is the second largest employer of labour in Nigeria after agricultural sector; estimated to employ over one million Nigerians, hence the policy objectives of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) of the Buhari administration is to increase film production by 15 percent on an annual basis, export videos to generate USD1 billion in foreign exchange by 2020 and improve enforcement of intellectual property rights for artistic works produced in Nigeria.

    To achieve this, Thomas said, comes the need to enforce intellectual property rights in the film industry.

    “We have therefore selected men and women of impeccable character, cutting across various interests in the industry, thoroughbred professionals who have immensely contributed to the sector, and who know exactly where the shoe pinches,”

    Chaired by the NFVCB ED himself, the national taskforce which is headed by veteran filmmaker, Patron/Advisor to the Board, Chief Eddie Ugboma, has as its members, Head of Lagos State Film Censors Board, Mr. Dele Balogun; notable marketer, Igwe Gab Okoye, aka Gabosky; and notable northern Nigerian filmmakers, Hajia Aisha Alilu and Mallam Malik Awah. Others are actor Saint Obi and film marketers Norbert Ajaegbu and Olatunji Ojetola.

    According to the ED, the taskforce will work closely with members of the Police, National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) and other relevant agencies to achieve results.

    The taskforce is expected to specifically look into issues regarding proliferation of unclassified or unapproved movies, Influx of foreign movies dubbed in indigenous languages, and movie distribution by unlicensed agents.

    In their acceptance remarks, the members of the taskforce were unanimous on the need to bring sanity to the film industry.

  • Ogun warns illegal miners

    Miners without the requisite approval by the state government risk  sanctions, the Ogun State government has said.

    The warning came on the heels of the continued operation of unlicensed miners. The government advised miners  to follow due process by obtaining necessary documents for their work.

    The Commissioner for Environment, Mr. Bolaji Oyeleye, spokewhile inspecting an illegal mining site at Atan Ota in Ado-Odo/Ota Local Government Area (LGA) of the state.

    Oyeleye, who was represented by the Head of Environmental Task Force Team B, Mr. Kunle Adeotan, said miners should desist from illegal mining as it leads to desertification, flooding and other natural disasters.

    “Miners should desist from illegal mining to avoid desertification, flooding and other natural disasters,” Oyeleye said.

    The Commissioner, in a statement signed by the Ministry’s Press Officer, Mrs. Patience Idowu, said the miners  at the site were doing so without mining lease, Environmental Impact Assessment certificate and other requisite documents.

    She said the government would not watch such illegality in any other part of the state.

    Mrs Idowu urged miners to get the documents.

  • Film Censors Board to block illegal film-trade routes in Katsina

    Film Censors Board to block illegal film-trade routes in Katsina

    •As ED commends state over creation on film department

    Executive Director of National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB), Mr. Adedayo Thomas has proposed a joint border patrol with relevant authorities to checkmate the inflow and outflow of films in Katsina State.

    He made this known during a courtesy call on the Emir of Katsina, Alh. (Dr.) Abdulmumini Kabir Usman, as part of his familiarization visits to stakeholders in the film industry, noting that Katsina State serves as a route through which films are either imported or exported.

    Thomas who averred that the Nigeria film industry has the potentials to redefine sound education, moral values and an increased GDP, decried the use of the State as a sales medium for uncensored and unclassified movies, saying that most foreign films are directly translated into the local language without authorisation of the Board. Such act, he said, is capable of jeopardising the moral values of the state, while the Board and the State are also denied accruable revenues.

    The NFVCB chief who also met with the Katsina State Commissioner for Information, Culture and Home Affairs, Alhaji Hamza Muhammad Brodo, commended the State for creating a department of film in the Ministry, in recognition of the paramount role the film industry plays in shaping the society and its attendant socio-economic benefits, which according to him, accounts for about 1.5% contribution to the GDP.

    He promised to partner the State on enlightenment campaigns, capacity building, disclosing that the NFVCB has opened an operations center in the State, located at the Federal Secretariat.

    The Emir, who urged the NFVCB to ensure that moral standards of each region are put into consideration when censoring and classifying films, pledged the support of the Emirate towards the Board’s activities.

    On his part, the State Commissioner for Information disclosed that the State has so far collaborated with local and international bodies to project the image and potentials of the Katsina through documentaries, jingles and films, and promised to present a position to the State Executive Council on the need to create the Katsina State Film and Video Censors Board.

    Also present at the meeting were the Permanent Secretary, Alhaji Musa Rabi’u Mahuta, and the Director of Films at the Ministry, Alhaji Habib Bello Usman, who noted that the Katsina State Film and Video Censors Board, if created, will complement the activities of NFVCB, provide job opportunities and improve on the State’s revenue base.

    The NFVCB boss later proceeded to Katsina State Television where he was hosted on a programme tagged “Guest Moment”.  He urged parents to ensure that they censor what their children watch, emphasizing the dangers of uncensored and unclassified movies.

     

  • ‘Illegal miners ‘ll not benefit from $150m fund’

    The Federal Government has said illegal mining firms  will not benefit from the $150 million grant given by the World Bank to support the Ministry of Mines and Steel Development.

    This follows the government’s decision to allow operators with reasonable level of commitment to operate in the industry, develop strategic mining areas for growth and further make the sector one of the major contributors to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Yinka Oyebode,  an aide to the Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Dr Kayode Fayemi, told The Nation  on phone that the fund would be used to finance exploration and production of solid minerals. He added that the government was looking at two significant areas for the disbursement of the loans.

    The government, he noted, wants operators with tangible evidence of operation as well as those working in principal mining areas to benefit from the facility.

    He described operators with tangible evidence as those with  proven track records of performance while principal mining areas operators mine strategic minerals.

    According to him, the decision by the government to provide funds for the mining of strategic minerals is in line with the Roadmap for Sustainable Growth in the Mining Sector, adding that the idea would help crystallise the government’s ambition of making the sector one of the major contributors to the GDP.

    He said industrial minerals, metallic minerals, construction minerals and precious stones were among those in strategic areas, which the Federal Government planned to fund.

    He stated that industrial minerals include limestone, barite, kaolin, gypsum feldspar, while metallic minerals are gold, iron, ore, lead, zinc, cassiterite and columbite; granite, marble, dimension stone, gravel, laterite, and sand are construction minerals and precious stones include sapphire, tourmaline, emerald, topaz, amethyst, and garnet.

    Oyebode said: “Two major areas are of great importance to the ministry and the Federal Government as regard the disbursement of the $150million World Bank gave to the sector.

    “First is allowing operators with tangible evidence of operation and those operators who operate in strategic minerals areas to benefit from the loans.  This implies that operators who fail to show enough evidence of participating in the industry would not get the loans.”

    Oyebode stated that while some operators are working in the sector, others are not. He said many people applied for the loans, adding that the government needed to vet the list of the applicants in order to ensure that the money is judiciously spent.

    He said after the vetting, the government will determine those that are eligible for the loans.

    He said the application for the loans, follows an advertorial published in the national dailies for that purpose by the government asking for qualified operators to apply for the loans in order to be able to fund their projects and further encourage the growth of the sector.

    A lot of applications have been received and screened for that purpose. Qualified applicants would emerge and get the loans soon for the growth of the industry, he added.

    He said prior to this period, members of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) have met and approved the loans, adding that the approval meant that the loans are ready for disbursement.

  • Pain as NRC demolishes illegal structures

    Pain as NRC demolishes illegal structures

    These people (NRC officials) have finished me. There is nothing my children and I will eat again. As you can see, my source of livelihood has just been destroyed by the Railway Corporation. I don’t know where to start again. As I am talking to you, I don’t have anything again…We are not aware of any rent paid by the occupants of the illegal structures.

    So, everything has ended today,” Mrs Adijat Olowonyo, 76, uttered in hushed tone as she sat hopelessly on the rubbles of her wooden shelter demolished by a task force working on the orders of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC).

    Her son, Monsuru, 32, and three grandchildren, who lived in the shanty with her, burrowed through the debris to pick any valuable materials left under the heap of logs and plywood. Looking dazed and forlorn, Mrs Olowonyo, a petty trader, wept in silence as the bulldozer ripped through a row of shanties, leaving a trail of wreckage in a neighbourhood she has lived ‘comfortably’ for 35 years.

    “I don’t know where to go from here,” Mrs Olowonyo retorted when the reporter asked what her next move was.

    Apparently helpless, she said: “I knew this place does not belong to me, but I did not know I will leave railway line in this (embarrassing) manner.”

    Mrs Olowonyo, who is a native of Ifo Local Government Area in Ogun State, said: “I will return to my village.”

    Had she been given ample time to prepare for the demolition, she said she would have suffered minimal loss, because she would have moved her belongings out peaceably to a safe location. But, the notice was short, just as the loss she suffered was incalculable.

    This aptly described the tears, pain, agony and anxiety of residents of railway, following the demolition of illegal structures and shanties built along rail track. No fewer than 2,000 shanties have been demolished in the exercise, which began from railway corridors in Mushin to Yaba, Surulere, Oshodi, Ikeja, Iju-Ishaga, Agbado and Alakuko, among others.

    The demolition was carried out by NRC Committee for Removal of Illegal Structures led by Mr Anthony Ochuko Onyokoko.

    At Mushin axis, the demolition started at 8:00 a.m. when many of the traders were yet to open for business.

    The exercise is to pave the way for the commencement of the 155-kilometre Lagos-Ibadan standard gauge modern rail project of the Federal Government, which was launched in February by the Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo.

    Managing Director of the NRC, Fidet Okhiria, at a press conference said no “illegal structure” built within 50 feet from the railway line would be spared by the corporation’s bulldozers, pointing out that only property owners with valid documents would be compensated.

     

    Victims’ painful laments

     

    Before the demolition, the railway corridors were dotted with brick and wooden structures, which served as shelters for deprived families and vagabonds. The entire perimeter of the railway corridors used to be separated from the residential area by iron fence placed 50 feet away from the rail track.

    As human activities increased around the corridors, the iron fence was pulled down and shanties were raised along the track, leaving a dangerous distance of about four feet away from the rail track. Crimes also thrived in the neighbourhood, because it housed criminals and smokers of Indian hemp.

    Some of the residents converted the space for trading, building makeshift shops and kiosks. However, the residents did not just move to occupy the space illegally. They claimed the NRC gave them “informal approval” to build the structures along the railway corridors.

    Southwest Report gathered that some of the residents began living on the railway line in the early 1960s and paid regular rent and lease to the railway corporation.

    Pa Ebenezer Ogunyemi, whose three-room wooden shelter, was pulled down by the NRC’s bulldozer, claimed he usually paid rent to “designated official” of the corporation. In tears, Ogunyemi was hapless when the structures were pulled down by the NRC.

    A 39-year-old single mother of four, who identified herself as Iya Ibeji, said railway line became a new abode for her after she was ejected from her one-room apartment in nearby Akinbode Street. She said she paid rent to the railway corporation through a third party, which initially got NRC’s approval to build the structure.

    Iya Ibeji said: “I have been rendered homeless. There is no place in which my children and I will sleep again. Since my husband abandoned us many years ago, we have been surviving on the profit I made from my petty trade. I was ejected from a one-room apartment and I moved to this place some four years ago to start another life. Now that they have demolished everywhere, I don’t know where to go from here. I can’t afford to pay rent for a single room, because houses in Mushin are expensive.”

     

    Traders count losses

     

    Traders along the demolished railway corridors could not be consoled as they counted their losses. Mrs Kabirat Adeniji, 48, who operated a wholesale store of assorted drinks, rolled on the ground as her three concrete shops were pulled down by the bulldozer. She said she had recently stocked her shops with goods worth N500, 000.

    Mrs Adeniji, who said she rented the three shops 18 years ago, said: “These people (NRC officials) have finished me. There is nothing my children and I will eat again. As you can see, my source of livelihood has just been destroyed by the Railway Corporation. I don’t know where to start again. As I am talking to you, I don’t have anything again.”

    Mrs Bola Jacob, another trader, who opened a grocery shop in the railway corridor the previous week before the demolition, put her loss at N380, 000, because she did not have the opportunity to move her wares to a safe place.

    She said: “I moved to this place in early April, after paying two sets of rents; one to the landlord of the house which my shop is attached to and the other to a railway corporation official. If I had known the government is ready to demolish the structures on railway line, I would not have paid for the shop. I have lost close to N380, 000 worth of goods, because the demolition happened suddenly. I appeal to the government to help me, because I have lost everything I invested in the business.”

    Pelumi Aluko, a hairdresser, was lucky. She had moved all her machinery and other handy equipment out of the wooden shanty before the NRC’s bulldozer got to the spot. She, however, regretted paying rent to an NRC official days before the demolition.

     

    Fifty-Four-year-old

    mosque, churches gone

     

    While traders and residents lamented their losses, members of religious houses built on the railway corridors gathered to take stock of cost of the demolition. No fewer than eight churches, three mosques and two preparatory schools were reduced to rubbles in the exercise.

    Imam of a 54-year-old Orire Mosque demolished at Tinuola axis of the railway line, Alhaji Abdulazeez Ajetunmobi, said the mosque was built on the approval of the NRC.

    He said: “This mosque was built in 1963 and there was no prior notice for the demolition. We only saw the NRC officials a day before the demolition was carried out. They came to mark residential buildings and shops along the rail track for demolition. We were not told the demolition would be carried out the second day. Had we been notified, we would have started to relocate the mosque’s properties.

    I could not quantify in cash the amount we lost after the mosque was pulled down. Only last month, we spent N2.5 million to renovate the mosque and carried out some capital projects. We bought new sound system and mordernised the ceiling. These cost the mosque’s worshippers millions. Everything is gone now.”

    Coordinator of a demolished Sunday school of a Pentecostal church adjacent to the mosque, Mr Israel Komolafe, said the exercise took the church by surprise. He said the church had been occupying the space for 16 years and had been paying monthly rent to NRC officials. He said the corporation did not give notice to vacate the space.

    Prophet Eri Atobatele whose Cherubim and Seraphim (Ijo Temidire) Church was marked for demolition said he paid N275, 000 six months ago to rent the property. He appealed to NRC not to demolish the church, since it is far from the rail track.

    Arguments ensued between the NRC officials and a septuagenarian, Pa Madamidola Aremu, whose property, leased to Cherubim and Seraphim Church, was marked for demolition. Aremu, who claimed to have Queen’s Conveyance approving the perimeter of the property, accused NRC of encroachment on his property. He threatened to sue the corporation if the property is demolished.

     

    Notorious crime spot pulled down

     

    The demolition is probably a blessing in disguise for those living around Mushin Train Station. What is known as HQ – a dangerous smokers’ spot – was pulled down during demolition. Until it was cleared, HQ used to be dangerous corner for unwary passersby. It was den of narcotics abusers, smokers of Indian hemp and notorious bandits, who carried out their nefarious activities in broad daylight.

    Southwest Report learnt that the Lagos police taskforce had cleared the crime site many times in the last 20 years, but the effort was not successful because of the connivance of property owners around the axis whose houses were used as safe haven to store the unlawful items.

    The clearing of HQ may have excited the residents and frequent passersby, but it may be a temporary relief until the NRC permanently barricades its corridors from the buildings around the axis.

     

    ‘They gave us short notice’

     

    The victims complained that the railway corporation did not give them enough time to remove their properties and relocate before the demolition. Some of them could not pick their belongings while the bulldozer cleared the illegal shanties and concrete structures.

    Southwest Report gathered that the occupants got notice to vacate the shanties less than 24 hours before the exercise was carried out. It was also gathered that the NRC officials were in the area the previous day to mark the illegal structures for demolition. It took many of the traders by surprise when the NRC officials led a contingent of riot policemen to carry out the demolition the following day.

    While they admitted the corridors belong to the NRC, the affected persons accused the corporation of insensitivity, saying NRC was wrong not to give them time to relocate after its officials collected monthly rent from them.

    Some of them said the NRC’s Station Manager in Mushin, whose name was identified as Mr Ojo, collected rent in cash on behalf of the corporation.

    Mrs Aluko, a hairdresser, said her shop was demolished a day after she paid N2, 000 to the NRC official as rent. She wondered why the occupants were not notified of the demolition before they paid the rents.

    In protest, some of the traders besieged the Mushin station of the NRC to get back the rents paid to Ojo, who allegedly ran away on sighting the crowd.

  • Abia govt: Stop illegal demotion of Mrs. Ezichi

    The Young Leaders Association of Nigeria, also known as Nigerian Youths Forum, Abia State Chapter, condemns the continuous victimisation of the Headmistress of Amaetiti Primary School, Asaga Ohafia.

    Her only offence was her plea for over five months unpaid salaries to be paid by the Governor Okezie Ikpeazu-led administration. She was allegedly whisked away from her place of work to Umuahia and thereafter handed a transfer letter to another primary school in Ukwa-East Local Government Area to resume as a classroom teacher.

    She was accused of “embarrassing” Mrs. Nkechi Ikpeazu, the wife of the governor, who was in the school to kick-off her one free meal programme for primary school pupils. The ‘embarrassment’ was that Mrs. Ezichi, a mother, pleaded with Mrs. Ikpeazu, a fellow mother, to intercede on behalf of the teachers to the state government for their over five months unpaid salaries to enable them buy food for their children, pay house rents, take care of their medical needs, pay debts, and other needs. But instead of taking pity on these starving teachers who are putting in their best to groom the primary school pupils for a greater society, the government demoted her and transferred her to a remote area. This is the height of injustice and inhumanity. No other type of humiliation can be worse than this.

    We are bewildered that the Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) and Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) Abia State chapters have not said anything about this woman’s fate.

    The Young Leaders Association of Nigeria therefore condemns this undue maltreatment of this worthy Abia citizen by the government. We demand that the governor should not only reinstate Mrs. Ezichi but also pay all the teachers’ their entitlements.

     

    • By Duke Imandu

    Press Secretary, Young Leaders Association of Nigeria, Abia State Chapter

  • My suspension from APC is illegal, says Osagie

    A former Minority Whip of the House of Representatives, Samson Osagie, has said his suspension from the All Progressives Congress (APC) is illegal, ill-motivated and of no effect.

    Osagie and 29 others were suspended at the weekend for alleged anti-party activities.

    A former Edo State Information Commissioner Charles Idahosa announced the suspension while the party’s Secretary, Chief Osaro Idah, ratified it.

    But Osagie said the suspension was evidence of what he called the reign of impunity in the Edo State chapter of the party and allegedly done to massage Idahosa’s ego.

    The former lawmaker said the suspension was a fallout of the governorship primaries, adding that it was because of their support for the aspiration of the former deputy governor, Dr Pius Odubu.

    Osagie said APC won the governorship election at his Umagbae South Ward whereas Idahosa could not deliver his unit in Ehor village.

    The former lawmaker said it was inconceivable for anybody to think that he worked against the APC while he was a member of the Presidential Inauguration Committee set up by the party’s National Working Committee (NWC).

    He said: “The State Secretary, Chief Osaro Idah, who illegally ratified the notice of suspension, knows the truth in the matter. It’s the fallout of the last governorship primaries in which I played a prominent role in supporting former Deputy Governor Pius Odubu against the incumbent governor.

    “For him and his cousin, Charles Idahosa, it is payback time for daring to disagree with them on who Uhunmwode delegates should support in the primaries. After the primaries, together with others, we worked for the party’s victory in Uhunmwode.

    “It is important to let the public know that neither myself nor any of those allegedly suspended with me was ever invited by any organ of the party for trial on the alleged anti-party activities.

    “I am confident that reason will prevail and the right-thinking leaders of the party in the state will see through the hollowness of the action of these people and lay it to rest.”