Tag: invasion

  • Uneasy calm in Delta community after Shoprite invasion

    Uneasy calm pervaded Effurun, headquarters of Uvwie Local Government council of Delta state on Friday evening following the invasion of Delta’s Shoprite mall by army of angry youths.

    Several shops were smashed and robbed by hoodlums who took advantage of the situation.

    Mobile phone shops, eateries and other outlets were smashed while properties worth millions of naira were destroyed.

    The incident was first misconstrued as a robbery siege, before normalcy was restored by combined team of police, navy among others.

    There were conflicting accounts of the incident that sparked off the mayhem, with the State Police Command blaming the embattled Chairman of the council area, Hon Henry Baro.

    Hon Baro, however, traced the incident to the unruly act of a rating of the Nigerian Navy, simply identified as Mouruf.

    Baro said he was beaten black and blue by the irate rating, after a vehicle clash, adding that he was a victim of brutality.

    He said the situation got out of hand when the military personnel dragged him by the neck while pummeling him with gun. It was his fate, he explained, that infuriated the youths who went on rampage.

    “I am a stakeholder in Shoprite; I struggled to ensure its establishment in Uvwie so I would be crazy to try to destroy it,” he added.

    While denouncing the activities of the youths, he said he made spirited effort to restore normalcy despite his ordeal.

    Nevertheless, Police Public Relations Officer, DSP Celestina Kalu, confirmed that the fracas was sparked off by the altercation between Baro and the naval rating.

    She added: “Meanwhile, detectives attached to State CID Asaba have commenced discreet investigation into the incident and any one found to be culpable would be brought to book.”

  • British invasion: ‘The Bini rejected Obaseki’s advice’

    A governorship aspirant of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Edo State, Godwin Obaseki, has said the Bini indigenes of the state suffered humiliation in the hands of British colonialists in 1887 when they failed to listened to the advice of his grandfather, Chief Agho Obaseki.

    Obaseki recalled that when the British entered Benin Kingdom and attempted to do business with the Bini, his grandfather advised the then Oba of Benin, Oba Ovonranmwen Nogbaisi, to sign a treaty with the foreigners.

    He regretted that the Bini did not heed his advice.

    According to him, the result was Britain’s invasion of Benin Kingdom and the looting of its treasure.

    Obaseki, who is also the chairman of the Edo State Economic Team, spoke yesterday in Benin, the state capital, when he hosted some of his relatives.

    The politician said he was ready to add economic value to Edo State.

    On why two Obasekis were seeking the governorship ticket of All Progressive Congress (APC) in this year’s governorship election, Obaseki said there was nothing wrong with the aspiration.

    He added: “The Obaseki family is the largest in Benin Kingdom; even more Obasekis can join the race for the party’s ticket.”

  • Police chief risks contempt over invasion of property

    A traditional ruler and businessman, Chief Moroof Owoola has accused the police of unlawful invasion of his property at Oke Ira Nla area of Eti Osa Local Government Area of Lagos State.

    The police action,he claimed, violated  a perpetual order issued by a Lagos High Court, Ikeja,restraining the police from invading the property.

    He said that  police operatives led by  Superintendent of Police, Stephen Ogbaje, stormed the  property at about 4 pm on Tuesday August 18, 2015; “harassed my workers and destroyed building materials at the site. They also arrested my brother, Idowu Jimoh, and seized some handsets and communication gadgets belonging to those working at the site despite a subsisting perpetual injunction against the Inspector General of Police and his men.”

    He said the court order given by Justice Lateefat Okunnu on May 25, 2015, was served on the office of the IGP and Federal Special Anti Robbery Squad (FEDSARS) Abuja as well as Lagos police commissioner, Area Commander of Area J, Ajah; Divisional Police Officer (DPO) of Langbasa Police Division; General Officer Commanding (GOC) 81 Division of Nigeria Army, Lagos and Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG) in charge of Zone 2, Lagos.

    “ I was therefore shocked that the police ignored the ruling and perpetrate illegality by invading my property. The actions of the IGP and his men are contemptuous in this regard and I won’t take it easy on this matter,” he said.

    Justice Okunnu had  berated the police for dabbling into a purely civil matter.

    The Force Public Relations Officer, Mr Emmanuel Ojukwu, failed  to respond to enquiries by our correspondent at press time.

  • WHAT INVASION HAS DONE FOR ME –LANCELOT IMASUEN

    WHAT INVASION HAS DONE FOR ME –LANCELOT IMASUEN

    PRODUCER of the acclaimed epic movie, Invasion 1897, Lancelot Imasuen, has already started counting his blessings, six months after the film premièred on the world stage.

    It will be recalled that the film premiered on December 5, in the country, and subsequently across the globe. It also got two nominations at the 2015 Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMAA), as announced in Los Angeles last Satrday.

    Lancelot, who has been busy touring the world with the film, said he’s satisfied with the recognition that Invasion 1897 has enjoyed so far at the international scene. “I feel very satisfied with the positive reaction I have has gotten so far for producing the film. Invasion 1897 has blessed me immensely as an individual. It has also given me global recognition beyond the shores of this country and opening doors for greater businesses,” Lancelot said, upon returning to the country last week after touring some major cities in America for the third time with the film.

    Sharing his excitement with movie journalists recently, the celebrated director cum producer said, “I just concluded the third round of Invasion 1897 global tour that has taken us to about 15 different cities around the world. We are also excited that the fire is catching up and the rebranding of Nollywood has come. The appraisal for the movie has been overwhelming. It’s not just a one off showing in these cities, but they are calling for more showing of the film.”

    Lancelot said, due to popular demand, Invasion 1897 will be showing again in cities like Dallas, Austin and Houston.

    “Once the audience left the hall satisfied they are telling others and the demand is really very high. Like a businessman, I am not in a hurry to release the film on DVD. It’s quite thrilling and bigger opportunities are opening up for collaborations especially in a city like Austin where the first Austin-Nollywood Incorporated as a company has been registered resulting from this movement with great Nigerians in diaspora supporting this project where we will see the berthing of Nollywood in major cities like the state of Texas. We are looking forward to the Nollywood film festival that is going to be taking place there soon as a result of this fallout. It has been quite satisfying for me as a film maker because when I started the production of Invasion 1897, I told people that I was a making a film for global audience. I have seen the dream come through.”

    According to him, the Benin Club of Houston is the brain behind this movement.

    “So, you see the movie getting so much excitement first among the Binis, Nigerians and Africans at large,” he said. “The global black race are identifying with the story and relating with the story. In the month of August, we are going to be showing the movie in Chicago, in a big museum. From Chicago, we move to Boston, which is another very important city to the Benin story. From there, we will move to Atlanta, New York, Dallas, Houston and rounding off in California as part of the Edo National Assembly globally, where they will be meeting. Also, my old boys school are going to be having a global convention in London where I will be one of the special guests and Invasion 1897 will be screened during the convention. Meeting great people, reaching out with our art, speaking for Africa and defending the black race is what Invasion 1897 as a movie was set out to do, and we are achieving the goal. He said the movie is not doing badly in terms of recouping his investment on the project.”

    On what happens after tour the global the movie, Lancelot who is satisfied with the positive reaction the movie has generated thus far, said that he will not only release the movie globally on DVD, but also, he will release Video on Demand, and Internet Rights.

  • Controversy trails SSS invasion of Lagos company

    Controversy trails SSS invasion of Lagos company

    State Security Service (SSS) operatives yesterday invaded the premises of a Lagos-based research and marketing company, TNS RMS, in Ojodu and whisked away some of its staff.

    The SSS men stormed the company’s premises about 11a.m and left about 2.pm.They were said to have ransacked its office and carted away materials from past research activities carried by the company.

    It was not clear at press time the reason for the invasion as initial online media reports linked the invasion of the company to an opinion poll currently being conducted by the company on the forthcoming governorship election in Osun State.

    An impeccable source who spoke in confidence, however, said that the invasion of the  company by SSS operatives may not be unconnected with a recent assignment carried out by the firm in Enugu State.

    “Some officials of the company had allegedly taken photographs of a military facility in Enugu during field research and were trailed by security operatives to the company’s head office in Ojodu, a Lagos suburb.”

    TNS RMS is a research company that engages in business, marketing and political research and surveys. The company has conducted election polls in Edo, Ekiti and is currently handling the pre-election poll for the forthcoming Osun State governorship election.

    When our correspondents visited the company about 3pm yesterday, many of its employees were seen going about their normal duties while a patrol van was parked at the main gate of the company.

    Attempts to speak with some members of the staff of the company proved abortive as many of them declined comments.

  • Invasion: Suswam seeks Fed Govt’s intervention

    Invasion: Suswam seeks Fed Govt’s intervention

    Benue State Governor Gabriel Suswam has condemned Tuesday’s attack on Torkula village.

    He also decried the burning of the Tor Tiv’s home and the attacks by Fulani herdsmen in Guma, Gwer-West, Makurdi and Agatu local government areas.

    Suswam said the attack was a game taken too far.

    In a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Cletus Akwaya, the governor said: “Seven People were killed on Tuesday and the home of the Tor Tiv, Alfred Akawe Torkula and several homes at Torkula in Guma Local Government were burnt in bloody attacks by Fulani herdsmen on Tiv communities.

    “The fresh wave of attacks by the Fulani herdsmen reached a new phase with the latest invasion, which saw hundreds of Tiv farmers fleeing from their homes on the boundary with neighbouring Nasarawa State.

    “In the Tuesday attacks, about 700 herdsmen, armed with sophisticated weapons, invaded Torkula village and attacked residents.

    “After several hours of military – like operations, seven persons in the community were found dead while houses, including the country home of the paramount ruler of the Tiv, the obvious target, were razed.

    “Since the attacks, there has been tension in the state, especially in the Tiv speaking areas, as community leaders have risen in condemnation of the incident, which they described as an affront on the traditional stool of the Tiv people.

    “The Tor Tiv, Dr Alfred Akawe Torkula, whose palace is in Gboko, hails from Torkula village. The Fulani, who arrived in the town well prepared for the dastardly mission, began by setting houses ablaze after which they opened fire on the unsuspecting residents who tried to escape.

    “Apart from the people who were killed, several others were injured while some persons were declared missing.”

    He said the number of the attackers raised the question as to whether or not they were herdsmen or militia pursuing a different agenda.

    The governor said it was regrettable that the incessant, bloody attacks on the farmers have persisted, despite the security arrangements put in place by his administration.

    He said the government was working with the Armed Forces, police and para-military agencies to carry out patrols and provide surveillance in villages along the boundaries between Benue and Nasarawa states.

    Suswam said he had done everything possible to stop Fulani attacks on Tiv people.

    He called on the Federal Government to support the state in its bid to contain the Fulani invasions and provide relief materials to the displaced persons.

    The governor regretted the displacement of thousands of Tiv farmers. He lamented the plight of school children kept out of school in the last three years as a result of the protracted crisis in the affected four local government areas.

    Suswam appealed to the people of the state to be calm even in the face of unprovoked attacks by the Fulani herdsmen .

    He urged the people to continue to regard and treat the Fulani as their kin with whom they have shared historical excellent relations.

    The governor called on the Federal Government to create ranches and grazing reserves for the herdsmen.

    He said he would write to the Presidency tomorrow; and appealed to the Federal Government to intervene to avoid a war.

    “I have travelled to Nassarwa more than 10 times, but in the end the attacks continued.

    “For three years, I have spent huge sums of money on security that I cannot even mention, I have done everything possible, yet the attacks continue.

    “I will take a letter to the Presidency tomorrow to intervene before a war breaks out,” he said.

  • Atiku condemns police invasion of G-7 governors’ meeting

    Atiku condemns police invasion of G-7 governors’ meeting

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has condemned Sunday’s disruption of the G-7 governors’ meeting in Abuja.

    The G-7 governors are the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governors, who support the now banned Kawu Baraje-led new PDP.

    Atiku spoke in Abuja when the Niger Delta chapter of the Bishop and Eminent Clerics Forum of Nigeria visited him.

    He said the police action was despicable.

    The former vice president, who also spoke on the proposed National Conference, noted that though he was not opposed to it, the conference might clash with the 2015 campaigns.

    Atiku decried the harassment and intimidation of the G-7 governors and members of the new PDP.

    He said: “I am opposed to what the government has done. I have said it before: there is fundamental freedom of association under our constitution and democratic dispensation.”

    “It is totally wrong. I don’t support what the government has done. I don’t support the government using the police to disrupt peaceful meetings.”

    On the proposed national dialogue, Atiku said the Goodluck Jonathan administration lacked the capacity to handle the 2015 campaigns and the conference.

    He said: “I don’t object to it. But my only problem is that it is timed in such a way that the conference is likely to overlap with campaign and I think government can’t handle both events at the same time.”

    Atiku said the visit was part of consultations on how to achieve unity, peace and stability in the country.

    The challenges facing the nation “require everybody’s hand on deck. Government alone cannot do it.”

    When asked their mission, the clerics, led by Prophet Jones Ode Erue, said they were out for consultation and dialogue on how to find solutions to the nation’s challenges.

    Erue said: “It is just dialogue. Peace dialogue. We are doing consultation. We felt that everybody seems to be failing in the Nigerian project and the unity of this project and sustainable peace and coexistence.

    “We are torched by the insecurity and impunity and the way the nation is going. It all started like a joke and it is becoming an excursion into irreversible doom and we the Bishops and Clerics can no longer fold our hands to see our nation go down the drain.

    “So, we felt we should go on to consult stakeholders on how we can bring them to a proper dialogue and achieve sustainable peace and keep the Nigerian project going.”

    On when the group will reach out to the Federal Government, Erue said, “We are reaching out to everybody. If we don’t reach out to the government then it is going to be biased.

    “We are here on the principle of truth and we are prepared to tell anybody you are wrong and that there should be concessions between both parties. We are midwifing peace.”

     

     

  • Outrage over invasion of G-7 governors’ meeting

    Outrage over invasion of G-7 governors’ meeting

    There was outrage yesterday over Sunday’s invasion of the meeting of the Group of seven (G-7) Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governors in Abuja.

    The governors’ meeting at the Kano Governor’s Lodge was broken into by a police team.

    Yesterday, the Progressive Governors’ Forum (PGF) and the Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM) faulted the police.

    A former Minister of Aviation, Mr. Femi Fani-Kayode, chided the police for the action.

    The governors, in a statement titled “Nigerian police: Now Armed Wing of PDP”, said :”We wish to emphatically restate our resolve to join hands and work with our colleagues in G7 and New PDP to ensure that the current regressive trend towards authoritarianism, increasing poverty, unemployment and incompetent leadership is arrested.”

    While stating its determination to rescue the country and provide security and prosperity for the citizenry, the forum noted that another four years of the PDP and the current administration will be ominous to all Nigerians.

    “The PGF also restates its position that another four years of the PDP and the current administration will spell doom for Nigeria and its over 170 million people, and reiterate our determination to rescue the country and provide security and prosperity for Nigerians”.

    The statement condemned the police action against Nigerians who had their constitutional right of association curtailed.

    The police action, said the governors, is not only alarming but also demonstrates clearly that the force, instead of carrying out its constitutional responsibilities of maintaining peace and order, has become no more than the armed wing of the ruling PDP.

    The statement reads: “Coming barely a week after storming the Adamawa State Governor’s Lodge in Abuja to disrupt a lawful meeting of like-minded individuals, and despite public outcry at the tactics of the police, the Force, in clear violation of all rules of civility, still went ahead to disrupt a G7 caucus meeting at the Kano State Governor’s Lodge on the 3rd November, 2013, in Asokoro, Abuja.

    “If the Nigeria Police has not become the armed wing of the PDP, why should the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) in charge of Asokoro Police Unit, CSP Nnanna Ama, burst into the venue and order the meeting stopped, threatening to mobilise troops to abort it if his order was not obeyed?

    “For a DPO to have the impudence to force his way into the meeting of perceived opponents of President Goodluck Jonathan to disrupt a meeting of governors and members of the Senate and the House of Representatives that were duly elected by Nigerians, and threaten them with arrest can only indicate that the orders must have come from the Presidency. But for the police to carry out what is evidently an illegal order reflects a new low in the history of Nigeria police.

    “The PGF hereby condemns in totality the antics of the Nigeria police in breaking up peaceful meetings and harassing Nigerians, while also calling for a probe into the PDP – Nigeria Police relations. Is the police established and paid to serve all Nigerians or merely to serve the interests of the PDP? If the police have become the armed wing of the PDP, then what differentiates it from the terror tactics of those who seek to violently impose their political beliefs on others?

    “The PGF insaluting the resilience, tenacity and patriotic commitment of the G7 Governors and all leaders of the New PDP, calls on them to continue the fight to rescue Nigeria from the grip of a tiny clique that has cornered the political space in the country and now regards the rights and commonwealth of Nigerians as disposable in their desperation to continue in office despite growing unrest in the polity occasioned by PDP’s politics of poverty and exclusion.”

    The PDM called on Nigerians to resist bad governance and hold political leaders accountable for their roles while in government.

    In a statement yesterday, the National Chairman of the PDM, Mallam Bashir Ibrahim, berated the spate of uncontrolled tide of intolerance and highhandedness being displayed by the Federal Government.

    The chairman said security agencies were now making life difficult for all discernible forces against the ruling party.

    His words: “Nigeria is not and cannot become a Banana Republic and nobody should turn it into one. We all fought for democracy and no one should return the country to the dark age of militarisation and jungle justice.

    “The wave of tyranny and dictatorship against the G-7 and other opposition members should be resisted in earnest. All bonafide citizens of our great country deserve their freedom of speech, association and political affiliation.”

    The statement added that the party received yesterday defectors from the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (COC), led by a former senator, Rufai Hanga.

    The party chairman was quoted as telling the defectors that the PDM had learnt from the mistakes of other parties in gross abuse of registration, party ownership, godfatherism and lack of internal democracy.

    Fani-Kayode said: ‘’Nigeria is in the grip of fascism again. The G7 governors met at the Kano State’s governor’s Lodge last night (Sunday) in Abuja. As they were holding their meeting the DPO of Asokoro police station burst in with his men and tried to stop them from meeting citing ‘’orders from above’’.

    “This is a very serious issue and it clearly indicates that we are back in the days of totalitaniarism and fascism in Nigeria. In the next few days, weeks and months every single person that is in opposition to the Jonathan government must expect the worse from them.

    “If they can do this sort of thing to sitting governors who have immunity from arrest and court proceedings what won’t they do to the rest of us. May God deliver Nigeria from these desperate people. Worse still the episode has an ethnic colouration and agenda to it.

    “I condemn this behaviour in the strongest terms and I join many others in calling on President Jonathan to rein in his Gestapo and stop this madness. I also commend the high level of maturity, decorum and restraint displayed by the G-7 Governors and their respective security teams in the face of this unprovoked aggression and deep provocation. Had it not been for that restraint anything could have happened, blood may have been shed and innocent lives may have been lost.

    “This is supposed to be a democracy and not a military or civilian dictatorship. It is time that people started standing up for their basic rights in this country. I call on every Nigerian to resist the Gestapo-like tactics, lawlessnes, tyranny and intimidation of the Jonathan administration and to compel it to ensure that its security forces work within the ambit, dictates and framework of the law. An attack on or violation of the basic rights of any one of us by the government and its security agencies is an attack on all’.’

  • Baga paralysed by fear after invasion

    BAGA, Borno State, a few residents stand amid razed houses and charred vehicles in the fishing town of Baga, still mostly deserted nearly two weeks after fierce fighting between troops and Islamist insurgents.

    The bloody events of April 16 and 17 in the remote town which left almost 200 people dead are still murky and mired in heated debate.

    “The soldiers can claim they did not burn our homes because it happened in the dark,” resident Gaji Bukar told AFP on a tour of the village under military supervision.

    “But (my) area was burnt the following morning in broad daylight by soldiers who went door-to-door setting fire to homes and everybody saw them.”

    The military has denied accusations it deliberately shot civilians and set the blazes that razed nearly half the town, which lies near Lake Chad in the northeast corner of Borno State, the stronghold of radical Islamist group Boko Haram.

    Scores of people, including soldiers, insurgents and scores of civilians were killed, according to rescue officials and local leaders, making it the deadliest-ever episode in the Boko Haram conflict which has cost 3,600 lives since 2009.

    Bukar’s account was supported by statements given to Human Rights Watch by residents who say that the morning after brutal fighting between soldiers and insurgents on April 16, the military returned to Baga and set fire to homes.

    “We had no hand in setting the fire,” Brigadier-General Austin Edokpayi told AFP as his troops guided journalists through the dusty streets, the blackened rubble of destroyed buildings visible throughout.

    He said a four-hour gun battle started on the evening of April 16 as soldiers tried to thwart an impending attack by the insurgents. A military statement explained that troops returned the next morning to “mop up.”

    Edokpayi commands a multi-national force that includes troops from Chad, Niger and Nigeria, which is responsible for the region where porous borders allow criminal and insurgent groups to freely flow between countries.

    Parts of the state have fallen under Boko Haram’s control, he told journalists, a rare admission from the security services which typically seek to portray the Islamists as being on the defensive.

    “Some areas are now dominated by these terrorists and people live under their laws,” he said.

    He described Baga as a town paralysed by fear, where “nobody dares say anything against (Boko Haram) because if you do that, they come after you.”

    Dripping sweat under a searing sun as he piled up the wreckage of his burnt-down home, Usman Mohammed, 42, told AFP that scores of his neighbours are still in hiding, fearing the fighting could resume.

    “Many people are still in the bush,” he said, adding that Boko Haram had sent word to stay away from Baga as more attacks were coming.

    Certain neighbourhoods were declared off-limits to journalists by their military chaperones, areas that residents said had been the hardest hit.

    AFP reporters visited one area where two rows of freshly dug graves protruded from the desert terrain, each marked by a series of small sticks.

    “They should allow you to visit the two other cemeteries where most of the victims were buried,” said resident Adamu Bulama.

    The military has said that the absence of mass graves in Baga proves the death tolls have been inflated, insisting that only 37 people died, including 30 militants, six civilians and one soldier.

    Senator Maina Lawan, a Baga native who represents northern Borno, told AFP that he visited a series of graves last week and provided a death toll of 228.

    The Red Cross has said that 187 people were killed.

    The Boko Haram conflict, which the insurgents say is aimed at creating an Islamic state in northern Nigeria, has seen scores of deadly attacks across the north and centre of the country, Africa’s most populous and top oil producer.

    But the level of destruction in Baga appears unprecedented.

    Nigerian lawmakers have called for an independent investigation, while Human Rights Watch said the events of April 16 and 17 needed to be probed by the International Criminal Court.

    The rights group warned of signs that Nigeria “has tried to cover up” the abuses in Baga, publishing satellite images identifying 2,275 buildings apparently destroyed by fire, a figure the military has categorically dismissed.

    A relief effort has been launched, with 642 people being sheltered in a makeshift camp, according to the National Emergency Management Agency.

    But residents and Lawan, the senator, told AFP much more is needed including food supplies as normal trade in the area had stopped following the attacks.

    Mohammed, the 42-year-old resident, said some of his neighbours had no plans to come back.

    “Even those who are willing to return have stayed away,” he said, “because they have lost their homes to fire and have nowhere to stay.”

    Source: AFP

  • Women protest invasion of farms in Delta

    OVER two hundred women from Ohoro-Uwheru community of Ughelli North Local Government Area of Delta State yesterday marched on the council secretariat to protest the invasion of their farmlands by suspected Fulani herdsmen.

    The women carried palm fronds and placards with inscriptions that read: “nama nama people have taken over our farmlands”; “We are afraid to go into our farmland for fear of rape” ; “They are killing our husbands and children, government should intervene.”

    A protester, Mrs. Rose Osiebe, said since the Fulani herdsmen came into their land, so many women have been defiled in the bush.

    “They have killed our husbands and children and any attempt by the youths to challenge them always end in a bloodbath.

    “Two weeks ago, three indigenes of the community were killed by the Fulani herdsmen.

    “We have complained several times at the Ughelli Police A Division, all to no avail.

    “We call on the Chairman, Caretaker Committee, Ughelli North Council Area Friday Akpoyibo to come to our rescue.”

    Friday urged them to be calm and assured that the issue would be reported at the appropriate quarters.