Tag: missing

  • Fate of missing soldiers, policeman remains unknown

    Fate of missing soldiers, policeman remains unknown

    About one month after two soldiers and a mobile policeman attached to the Joint Task Force, ‘Operation Pulo (Oil) Shield” and their boat driver went missing in the creeks of the Niger Delta their whereabouts remain unknown. Their fate has become a subject of hush discussions in the barracks and military formations.

    The team was on a mission that is as mysterious as their whereabouts when they went missing  between Warri South West and Burutu local government areas of Delta State. Their  family members are anxious for news about them and the leadership of the Joint Task Force is yet to provide any plausible explanation as to what happened to them.

    Initial reports said they were killed by suspected illegal bunkering gangs. It was gathered that the criminals either shot and killed the military men or overran and sank their boat.

    The Commander of Sector 1 of the task force, Lt.-Col Bassey, who was contacted by our reporter, refused to divulge the details of the investigation into the incident. He said the military authority have merely declared the troops “missing”.  That was shortly after The Nation exclusively reported the incident.

    In spite of the commander’s claim, there are strong signals that the JTF may have given up the hope of finding the soldiers. It was learnt that the task force could not  confirm their deaths because their remains have not been recovered. It was gathered that that much was contained in the report of an investigation presented by Lt Col Bassey to the military hierarchy on the incident.

    A source at the Effurun Barracks base of the Sector I of the task force said : “We have concluded that the soldiers are died; what is only confusing is the circumstance of their death. What we are interested in are their bodies and how to retrieve their arms and ammunition.

    We want to find those (bodies and arms) and close the case,” the source told our reporter on condition of anonymity at the initial stage of the investigation.

    Since then, a massive search and manhunt launched by the soldiers’ colleagues have failed to yield fruits. Initial report that the remains of the soldiers were retrieved and deposited at the morgue of a government hospital in Warri was deflated by the military. Also, a report of the discovery of two bodies matching the description of two of the missing military men in a riverside community in the area could not be independently confirmed.

    A high ranking officer at the JTF Sector I also said the case was even more puzzling because “Those of us from the riverside areas know that the corpse of someone who drowns needs just about 24 hours to come to the surface of the water. It is been more than that now and we are yet to have any sign of their remains; something must be wrong somewhere.”

    The deployment of troops and detectives to the area to find the soldiers dead or alive, like other efforts, was futile. Instead, it led to mass exodus of panicky residents, particularly able-bodied men and women from the area because of fear of reprisal attacks by the military.

    Some of those who fled the area in search of safe haven in Warri and other towns in the wake of the search expressed perplexity over what transpired between the military and the suspected illegal bunkerers, particularly because of alleged cozy relationship between both sides in the illegal business of crude of theft in the area.

    Some of those who spoke with our reporter said the illicit oil deals were done by gangs led mostly by former militants with active supports of men of the JTF and the Nigerian Navy. “Anybody who knows the waterways, creeks and the strategic location of military posts will tell you that no vessel, even a speedboat, can pass into the open sea without soldiers seeing and searching them.

    “The soldiers and the boys doing these business are friends; they meet regularly drink together and share ideas and money. So, whenever there is any arrest or incidents like this it is only because something has gone wrong.”

    An Ijaw leader and traditional ruler in a Warri kingdom disclosed that he was forced to write a petition to Brigade Commander of the Nigerian Army in Benin City, when every effort made to get the JTF to destroy some illegal bunkering sites failed to elicit any action. “Instead of tackling the criminals as I demanded, the JTF men were advising me to be careful of getting involved because those behind the crime are very powerful. I saw a deliberate plot to force me into silence and allow business as usual to continue.”

    Our source said the petition to the military high command in Benin brought about some action and the closure of the bunkering site, but said, “I know that they merely moved from that place to a more welcoming area.”

    Independent investigations revealed that pipeline vandalism and theft of crude oil have gradually increased in the Forcados and Warri area of Delta State and locations around the Bayelsa axis of the Ramos River in recent times.

    An independent anti-bunkering group, Heroes of Peace Initiative, in a confidential letter to the Commanding Officer of the 3 Battalion, Effurun , in September 2014, noted that illegal bunkering activities had spiked up in the area. The letter, which was obtained by our reporter, detailed how the operation was being carried with list of the operators’ assets, location and modus operandi.

    It noted: “These bunkerers are currently using three to four flat bottom vessels to convey petroleum products monthly; that is one flat bottom vessel a week and they also have about 17 to 20 Cotonou boats, (with) which they load on a daily basis, especially night hours and conveying these products from one place to another freely, despite the watching eyes of the Nigerian Army, the Navy and the JTF present at the waters.”

    The group offered to provide pictorial evidences on the activities of the illegal bunkerers, should the JTF require their assistance to bring the perpetrators to book, adding, “You may as well send us your email address so that we would forward same to you.”

    zikoregha says half the story has not be toldHeroes of Faith Coordinator, Chief Futek Zikoregha told our reporter that the open offer was neither accepted by the task force nor was action taken to clamp down on the hotspot areas listed to include around Abrabebe Community and points on the Forcados Trunkline, Agip pipeline in Beniboye and Forcados Export line.

    Meanwhile, the insinuation that the fate of the missing soldiers was connected to the illegal oil deal was further fueled by the unwillingness of the relevant military authority to open up on the mission and circumstance under which the troops went missing in the volatile scene. There was also rumour but in the communities and the JTF that the occupants of the ill-fated boat were on illegal assignment when they disappeared.

    A local, who spoke on strict condition of anonymity, said, “Those who said the soldiers were on official duty should answer the question of why they used a private boat and a local driver, who is not on the payroll of the JTF. Do the JTF use local boat for ‘routine patrol’ instead of their gunboats?”

    Another very reliable source and informant for the military authority in the area told our reporter that prior to the incident there were altercations between the military men and the illegal bunkering ring leaders over the sharing of loots.

    It was gathered that trouble first started when the criminals allegedly paid some soldiers for access to an illegal bunkering point in the area.  “The way the deal done is that the operators give the JTF men money for a specific time or quantity of product to be loaded. During that time the JTF would not patrol the area where the loading is taking place but after the expiration of that time, the soldiers would resume their normal patrol.

    “The soldiers after collecting their share gave the boys the agreed hours to load the vessel that was brought into the creek. Unfortunately for them, the vessel did not complete loading before the time ran out. When the guys went to the soldiers, they said that they had already used up their time and if they wanted more time, they should pay additional money. “

    It was learnt that when the aggrieved party defied the order and went ahead with the loading, the crewmembers were arrested and taken to a military base where the man who brought the vessel was asked to pay a certain sum of money or risk having the boat’s crewmembers paraded before camera and newsmen. It was against this back ground of tension between the illegal partners that the soldiers went missing.

    Chief Zikoregha, who is the founder of the Heroes of Peace (Hope) Initiative and former Chairman of Forcados Community, said the allegations were not misplaced, adding that it was impossible for illegal rogue vessels to load their cargoes of stolen crude if JTF are not involved.

    “One of the ringleaders is a ‘repentant’ former militant leader, who patrols the area with mobile policemen and personal security details given to him by the Federal Government. Policemen who should be used to secure society are under the command of persons who use them for intimidation, harassment and illegal bunkering,” he said.

    Asked on the fate of the missing soldier, Zikorogha said “half the story has not been told,” and urged our reporter to dig deeper to ascertain why the two sides that had enjoyed cordial relationship suddenly fell apart enough to the point that soldiers were attacked and probably killed.

    Several attempts to get a formal interview with the JTF leadership proved abortive. The Coordinator of the task force’s Media Centre, Lt Col Ado Isa declined our request for comment on the incident. The military spokesperson who was recently posted to the task force, said the Commander of the JTF, Major General Emmanuel Atewe, had adequately addressed the issue during a press brief. But our finding revealed that the top army officer only spoke generally on soldiers who were killed in another incident in Bayelsa State.

  • Jonathan: Laughing at missing trillions

    SIR: President Goodluck Jonathan received the forensic audit report on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation on February 2, 2015. It was served like revenge – cold! – almost one whole year after the Federal Government commissioned the audit in response to public outcry over the claim made by then Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, Lamido Sanusi, that $20 billion was not remitted to the Federation Account by NNPC.

    The submission happened a day after former CBN governor, Charles Soludo, released a clincher on the state of the economy, a highly charged riposte to the judgment of his person and his tenure by Madam Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy.  Soludo estimated that a lot of money has disappeared under Okonjo-Iweala’s watch : N30 trillion!

    The submission of the report reawakened embers in the memory. Only very few people still remember that there was a shakedown of the NNPC, the holy of holies of corruption in Nigeria. We had moved on, not in the least because we supposed that meat will come out of the eater. There was a more current and important missing, the missing of human beings. Chibok girls and others taken into captivity by the death cult named Boko Haram. The submission had a necromantic effect. It recalled the ghost.

    On the day Okonjo-Iweala announced the appointment of PriceWaterHouseCoopers for the auditing, she said the investigation would take 16 weeks. PWC does not have a reputation for clumsiness. If anything, it has an almost unblemished track record professionalism and integrity. It is arguably the best pick anyone could make for such tasks. So why did the submission of the report take so long?

    Some reports say the audit was completed on schedule and was ready for submission. The only problem was that the Jonathan administration did not want to glimpse the picture of the secrets of its painted sepulcher.

    The submission was apparently arranged to extinguish the Soludo question. It is less than two weeks to the Presidential polls. This is the time you need weighty endorsements. Not a red capped Professor overseas stoking excitement in your challenger’s camp.

    In his campaign rallies, Jonathan talks up his capacity for leniency. While seeking to contrast himself with his apparently stern rival, Jonathan introduces himself as the hater of jails; the one who would rather shield you than permit you to get your deserts. No, I won’t send you to jail because some valuable was guilty of tempting you to make it disappear!

    In my own city of Enugu, President Jonathan, a PhD, asked a rally of thousands, ‘’how much did Jim Nwobodo stole? Money not up to the price of a Peugeot and Buhari regime send him to jail. Is that good enough?’’

    Now Jonathan has a sense of proportion that is difficult to calibrate. While you reckon that the theft of a coin makes a thief, Jonathan believes and propagates the idea that there is some threshold, a magic sum ostensibly known only to him, that someone has to labour hard to appropriate before they qualify to be numbered among transgressors. That concept of relativity spewed forth that viral and virulent wisecrack,’’ stealing is not corruption’’.

    So the odds are that if the amount established to have disappeared in the audit report is in the realms of stealing, that is, not equal to or greater than corruption, the audit is a wasted venture. The white paper will reach his desk and then end up in the disused part of his library labeled WHITE PAPERS.

    Now, the theft of ‘’ money not up to the price of a Peugeot’’ in the eighties has evolved to the  procurement of two bulletproof BMW cars at N225 million. The generation that stole ‘’money not up to a Peugeot’’ has begotten a much more ambitious one. The children sent to rob by their fathers are not sneaking in: they are kicking the door open!

    President Jonathan says ‘’ the kind of figure people bandy in the papers look so ridiculous’’. The kind of money he permits people to steal without consequence is anything but ridiculous. But when you have a warped sense of humor, you can see comedy in the figures that are reported stolen in the country you lead!

     

    • Emmanuel Uchenna Ugwu

    @emmaugwutheman

  • Soludo insists N30tr missing under Okonjo-Iweala

    Soludo insists N30tr missing under Okonjo-Iweala

    • Ex-CBN boss announces ceasefire

    Former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Prof Charles Soludo yesterday insisted that more than N30 trillion is missing from the treasury under the watch of Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

    However, Soludo said he had declared a ceasefire following Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala’s decision not to respond to the allegation that N30 trillion cannot be accounted for under her watch.

    He announced the ceasefire yesterday in a three-paragraph statement titled: ‘I stand by my statements.’

    Soludo said he was withholding parts two and three of his articles because the minister was no longer ready to join in the war of words.

    His letter reads: “My attention has been drawn to statements credited to the Hon. Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, in response to my latest article and call for a structured debate on the issues.

    “According to the report, she no longer wants to join issues with me.  In the circumstance of the moment, I therefore withhold parts two and three of my promised three-part response.

    “Let me also state for the avoidance of doubt that I stand by every statement I made in the two articles viz: ‘Buhari Vs Jonathan: Beyond the Elections’ and ‘Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and the Missing Trillions’.

    “ In particular, I insist that over N30 trillion has either been stolen or unaccounted for, or grossly mismanaged over the last few years. This figure does not include the estimated $40.9 billion (N8.6 trillion at parallel market exchange rate or nearly two years’ Federal Government budget) which the African Union’s (AU) recent report claims to be “stolen” from Nigeria each year.

    “I wish to thank Nigerians all over the world, who have been contributing to this timely debate. This is election time and it is expected that some vested interests will either choose to live in denial or attempt to politicise the issues.

    “But from the debate so far, I am convinced that our economic management won’t be the same again. Once our managers know that the citizens will rigorously and vigorously challenge them to account, the welfare of the citizens will be better for it.

    “Whoever wins has his job cut out for him, and to the extent that this debate has challenged the respective teams to seriously re-examine their blueprints to guarantee the security and prosperity of every Nigerian, my objective is accomplished.  I love my country Nigeria, and as I said before, I won’t keep quiet again.

    “Once more, Nigeria must survive and prosper beyond Buhari or Jonathan!,” he stated.

  • Anxiety over missing boy in Ebonyi

    There is tension in Ndiechi village, Ndufu Echara community, in Ikwo Local Government Area of Ebonyi State, over the alleged abduction of an 8-year-old boy, Godwin Onaga.

    Master Onaga was said to have been kidnapped by unknown persons, who invaded his father’s compound.

    Sources told The Nation that the abductors demanded N1.5 million ransom.

    The victim’s father, Chief Godwin Onaga, said he had issues with some persons in the village, who wanted to take his land, adding that he suspected them to be responsible for his son’s abduction.

    He said the incident gave him psychological torture and urged the police to arrest the perpetrators to enable his son, whom he noted had been in custody for three weeks, to regain freedom.

    The command yesterday declared a 20-year-old man in Ohaozara Local Government, Aneke Michael Ogbu, missing.

    Ogbu, an indigene of Uburu, left home for Abakaliki to buy the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board’s (JAMB’) scratch card and did not return.

    Police spokesman Chris Anyanwu, who confirmed the incident, said Ogbu was last seen on January 9.

  • Missing $20b: Buhari demands release of audit report

    Missing $20b: Buhari demands release of audit report

    All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate Gen. Muhammadu Buhari has demanded the relaese of the forensic audit on the missing $20 billion oil cash.

    Gen. Buhari, in a statement yesterday, said the report must be released “in the spirit of the war against corruption”.

    The APC presidential standard bearer accused the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of “digging graves in search of rumours” to confuse the voters.

    The statement, signed by the Director of Communication of the Buhari Campaign Organisation, Mr. Dele Alake, reads: “There is a clear linkage between the billions of naira lost to corruption and the poor living conditions of our people: it is the resources meant for the  development of our people that are diverted to service the greed of a few. It is the fear of the unknown in a country where both family and government social welfare have collapsed that fuels the avarice of those in offices to steal for generations unborn.

    It is indeed true that, by sheer force of personal examples, I and my running mate, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, have demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt that it is possible to live above the greed that dominates the system.

    “I believe our spiritual anchors as men who fear The Almighty and are resolved to live our lives according to His admonitions have played very critical roles in developing our capacity to lead. As Christians go and return from churches, as Muslims and men of other faiths observe their spiritual obligations, we believe our individual commitments to serve our Creator will inspire us to shun corruption.

    “We say this fully conscious of the need to strengthen these spiritual values by creating a system that cares for the poor and the downtrodden; a system that gives jobs to the unemployed; provides electricity so that the artisans and the middle class can be productive and expands infrastructure to enable the corporate sector reduce cost of operations.

    “The details of the roadmap to prosperity has been powerfully articulated in the manifesto of our party, the All Progressives Congress. We have signed this manifesto to commit ourselves to faithfully execute it as our contract with the people of Nigeria.

    “Let us reiterate that we have already declared war against corruption, resolved to achieve food security, provide accelerated power supply, integrate the country’s transport network, promote free education and provide affordable health care service.

    “What we bring to the table is not just these ideas. What we offer Nigerians is that we shall, day and night, 24 hours per day, seven days a week, stake our intergrity as men of discipline and transparency to make life better for the average Nigerian by executing these policies in the shortest possible time.

    “What we bring to the table is an unblemished record of patriotism to our country and an enviable standard of hardwork and fulfillment of pledges that we have not seen in the handling of our national affairs in the last few years.

    “In the spirit of the war against corruption, we demand the release of the Audit Report of the Missing 20 billion dollars.

    “Clearly unable to oppose us with an equally clean and unassailable ticket, we can understand why our opponents are running from pillar to post, digging graves in search of rumours in the impossible hope of misinforming unsuspecting voters and spinning a web of blackmail and deceit.

    “In this electoral contest of vision and moral stature, only the guilty needs to be afraid. Luckily, our lives are like the open book. We challenge our opponents to stake their desire to lead Nigeria again on what they have achieved with the billions of resources they received. This is not the time for distractions and red herrings. Nigerians are the ultimate judge of stewardship. They will deliver their verdict, loud and clear to the world on February 14, 2015.”

    Speaking at a media parley at the weekend, Osinbajo said his party would return the country to the path of progress, if elected next February.

    The professor of Law said the APC would not treat the issue of governance with levity and that its leaders will take responsibility and not offer excuses to Nigerians as it is being done today.

    According to him, what Nigerians expect from the government is solution to problems and not explanations on why the economy is bad, why they cannot get protection from terror attacks and why commercial kidnapping rages on in some parts of the country.

    Osinbajo bared his mind in Lagos at an interactive parley with the media. He said the APC was on a rescue mission as it has drawn up a blueprint on how to revamp the economy and give Nigerians hope.

    He blamed the dwindling fortune of Nigerians on the mismanagement of the people’s commonwealth by the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which he said had run out of ideas on how to get the country on the right track.

    Osinbajo also defended Gen. Buhari on his role in the enforcement of a retroactive Decree and the romance with the Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC) in his days as military Head of State.

    He described as a wrong notion to link his emergence as Gen. Buhari’s running mate to an imposition by the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu.

    According to the eminent lawyer, he emerged after two attempts to arrive at a consensus running mate collapsed.

    He told his audience that he was picked by Gen. Buhari and the APC National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, with approval of the party’s leadership.

    Osinbajo said the problems of the land would have been more than 50 per cent solved with Gen Buhari in the saddle as President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.

    His words: “It’s going to be the first time that Nigerians will see the Commander-in-Chief as somebody who will not condone indiscipline and corruption.

    “Whatever anybody says about the former Head of State, there is no controversy that he is widely respected for his anti-corruption posture and his penchance for discipline.

    “I think what is important is leadership. As it is today, the leadership is unsure of itself. The leadership is uncertain. The Commander-in-Chief must take responsibility for everything. It is not good enough for the Commander-in-Chief to say my enemy did this, my enemy did that.”

    On how the APC plans to make a difference in government, Osinbajo said the mismanagement of resources and not lack had been the bane of the country, even as he disagreed that the size of government was weighing the economy down.

    “The size of government is not accountable for corruption. What is responsible is stealing and mismanagement of public funds,” Osinbajo said, pointing out that the APC will break away from the routine way of running government, which he alleged has never produced the desired result.

    He said a Gen. Buhari administration, if elected, will implement to the letter the APC manifesto as contained in the party’s “Roadmap to a New Nigeria” blueprint.

    The APC running mate listed the contents to include: provision of immediate relief, jobs, quality education, affordable housing, qualitative healthcare services and social welfare for the less advantaged and the aged.

    Osinbajo said the APC will accord security of lives and properties priority, adding that the dearth of equipment in the military and inadequate kitting of the security outfits was unacceptable after the government’s claim that it has invested trillions of naira in security.

    He said the Federal Government got it wrong from the scratch by accusing the opposition of being the promoters of terrorism even without first investigating.

    According to him, it will be difficult for any government to win the war against terror without radically addressing unemployment, adding that the devil will always find work for every idle hand.

    Osinbajo urged Nigerians to stop seeing Gen. Buhari in a military garb but as a law-abiding Nigerian, whose action will be guided by the rule of law, pointing out that there are marked differences between the military and democratic dispensations.

    Osinbajo reminded that it took extra-judicial killings of some former Ghanaian leaders by the then President Jerry Rawlings to return the West African nation to the path of greatness.

    He said being on the same ticket with the retired General to serve the country has not in any way compromised his faith as a pastor, his calling as a teacher and his stand as a lawyer.

    His words: “As a pastor, I preach in my church on Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. And my message is on grace. Even David, an adulterer and murderer received grace from God and he was forgiven.

    “That Gen. Buhari made mistake, in the heady days of the military does not mean he is not capable of doing good in a democratic dispensation. Even as a military Head of State, Gen. Buhari stood for discipline and against corruption. These are attributes nobody can take away from him.”

    Osinbajo noted that the impunity under the PDP government was unacceptable.

    He cited the attack on two High Court judges in Ado-Ekiti by supporters of then PDP governor-elect, the refusal to reinstate the former President of the Appeal Court, Justice Ayo Salami, despite court rulings, and the unilateral stripping of House of Representatives Speaker, Aminul Tambuwal of his privileges as the number three citizen by Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Suleiman Abba, as some of the impunities under the present democratic dispensation.

    “Nigeria cannot continue like this. It is unacceptable,” Osinbajo said.

  • AirAsia plane with 162 passengers missing

    AirAsia plane with 162 passengers missing

    The search for an AirAsia plane carrying 162 passengers, including 17 children, was yesterday called off for poor visibility. The aircraft lost contact with Indonesian air traffic control early yesterday.

    Before communication was lost, AirAsia Flight QZ 8501 asked to deviate from its planned flight route — from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore — because of weather conditions, AirAsia said in a statement.

    There was conflicting information about when exactly the aircraft went missing. AirAsia said contact was lost at 7:24 a.m. yesterday (7:24 p.m. Saturday ET), but Indonesian aviation authorities said it happened earlier, at 6:17 a.m.

    “At this time, search and rescue operations are being conducted under the guidance of the Indonesian Civil Aviation Authority,” AirAsia said.

    Of the people on board the Airbus A320-200, 156 are Indonesians, three are South Koreans, a Frenchman, a Malaysian and a Singaporean, the airline said.

    Seventeen children, including one infant, are among the passengers, the carrier said. Seven of the people on board are crew members.

    “Thank you for all your thoughts and prayers. We must stay strong,” AirAsia Chief Executive Tony Fernandes said on Twitter. He later announced he was travelling to Surabaya, saying most of the passengers are from there.

    As news of the missing plane spread, the airline changed the colour of its logo on its social media accounts from red to gray.

    The Flight 8501 “was requesting deviation due to en route weather before communication with the aircraft was lost,” the airline said.

    From the flight tracking websites, almost the entire flight path appeared to be over the sea.

    Bad weather was in evidence in the region at the time, Cable Network News (CNN) meteorologist Derek Van Dam said.

    “We still had lines of very heavy thunderstorms” when the plane was flying, Van Dam said. “But keep in mind, turbulence doesn’t necessarily bring down airplanes,” he added.

    CNN aviation analyst Mary Schiavo questioned whether weather would have been a factor in what happened to the plane.

    “Ordinarily, the pilots would get the updated weather from air traffic control and, of course, their onboard radar,” said Schiavo, a former Inspector-General for the United States (US) Department of Transportation. “So whether there was (bad) weather in the area would not be a mystery.”

    AirAsia is a Malaysia-based airline that is popular in the region as a budget carrier. It has about 100 destinations, with affiliate companies in several Asian countries.

    The missing plane is operated by AirAsia’s Indonesian affiliate, in which the Malaysian company holds a 48.9 per cent stake, according to its website.

    The Malaysian government said it was ready to offer assistance to Indonesian and Singaporean authorities.

    “Very sad to hear that AirAsia Indonesia QZ8501 is missing,” Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Twitter. “My thoughts are with the families.”

    The loss of contact with the AirAsia plane came 10 months after the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which dropped off radar over Southeast Asia on March 8 with 239 people on board.

    The Malaysian Airlines plane, a Boeing 777-200ER, lost contact with air traffic control over the South China Sea between Malaysia and Vietnam.

    Searchers have yet to find any debris from Flight 370, which officials believe crashed in the southern Indian Ocean after veering dramatically off course.

    US President Barack Obama has been briefed about the missing AirAsia plane, White House spokesman Eric Schultz said, adding that US officials will continue to monitor the situation.

  • ‘Missing 219 Chibok girls are targets’

    Members of the #BringBackOurGirls (#BBOG) have warned the government against sweeping the abduction of the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls under the carpet.

    They said the girls had been in captivity for over eight months, adding that even the most strong-willed person could easily get influenced within such a period.

    The campaigners noted that the 219 girls still missing were potential targets for their abductors.

    They said it was surprising that the government had refused to take the issue of the Chibok girls seriously and what the country is up to.

    A member of the group, Maureen Kabrik, spoke yesterday in Abuja at the usual venue of the campaigners calling for the rescue of the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls.

    Ms Kabrik said: “If they continue to sweep everything under the carpet in this country, with this level of insurgency, you stand to wonder and ask yourself what this country is up to.”

  • Missing baggage tops air passengers’ complaints

    The Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority ( NCAA) has identified missing baggage aboard foreign carriers as the major complaints lodged with it for resolution by Nigerians in the last two years.

    Apart from missing luggage, overbooking of flights, denied boarding, mishandled/misrouted baggage as well as pilferage also featured prominently among complaints lodged by passengers.

    Disclosing this, NCAA’s General Manager, Public Affairs, Mr Fan Ndubuoke, said its Directorate of Consumer Protection has resolved over 55,000 complaints from passengers in the last two years.

    The NCAA said some of the passengers’complaints were roll over cases resolved alongside the figures for the period under review.

    The spokesman of the regulatory authority, Mr Fan Ndubuoke, put the figures for 2013 at 15,839. He said 13,954 of the complaints were received from international airlines operations, while 382 complaints were received from 65,368 domestic airline operations.

    He said the bulk of complaints from passengers were in the categories of overbooking of flights, denied boarding, mishandled/misrouted baggage, baggage pilferage and discourtesy of airline staff.

    The resolution, according to Ndubuoke, swas achieved through the extensive training of Consumer Protection Officers who monitored flight operations at the various airports.

    The NCAA personnel, he said, were trained to handle airline receipting processing, mediation and resolution of complaints from aggrieved passengers.

  • Girl goes missing after clubbing

    Girl goes missing after clubbing

    Where is Annabel Nzubechukwu Edeh? The whereabouts of the 300-Level English Language and Literature student of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) in Awka, Anambra State, remain unknown, six weeks after she joined her friends to visit a night club off-campus. OLUCHUKWU IGWE (500-Level Chemical Engineering) reports.

    They were six girls, who went to Lounge 24 Gaga, a nightclub in Awka, the Anambra State capital, on September 17. They are Calista, Uju, Lovelyn, Ada, Chika and Annabel. All of them are friends and live close to one another. When they returned to their hostels the following morning, one of them – Annabel – could not be found.

    Where is Annabel? This was the question classmates of Annabel Nzubechukwu Edeh could not answer. The 300-Level English Language and Literature student of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) in Awka has not been seen anywhere, 43 days after she went to the night club with her friends.

    Was she kidnapped? Is she dead? These are some of the questions being asked by her distraught family members and friends. She is the only girl in a family of three.

    Annabel, 24, a native of Enugu State, was last seen on Wednesday, September 17 evening, when she left her Paradise City Hostel in Iyiagu Estate, Awka.

    When she was leaving the club, Annabel reportedly left at midnight with a guy she met at the club. That was the last time she was seen.

    Annabel’s friend and hostel mate, who simply gave her name as Ifeoma, said after clubbing, the girls decided to find a place to sleep before returning to their hostels. But Annabel, she said, told her friends she wanted to go with Mmiri, a male acquaintance, she met at the club. She was said to have told her friends that she was in need of money, which could have informed her decision to go away with the guy.

    When she did not return in the morning, it was learnt that Ada and Chika called Annabel’s phone but were disappointed to hear a male voice claiming to have found the phone on the ground and asked the ‘owner’ to come for it.

    Ada and Chika, it was gathered, retrieved the phone and contacted Annabel’s elder brother, Ifeanyi, who reported the matter at the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) in Awka.

    CAMPUSLIFE learnt that Ada and Chika were detained for alleged complicity but were later released on bail.

    When contacted on the phone, it was learnt that Mmiri claimed Annabel left his house at 3:30am when she refused to enter his room.

    But, after the conversation, Mmiri reportedly switched off his phone and stopped going to a popular bar, where he drinks with his friends. He is nowhere to be found.

    Our correspondent’s efforts to speak with Annabel’s friends she went to the nightclub with were futile. All of them declined to comment on the issue.

    Annabel’s roommate, Ukamaka, gave an account of what happened when she spoke to CAMPUSLIFE on telephone.

    She said: “Annabel told me she was going to the club that evening. Her friends, Ada and Chika, waited in the compound till they were joined by their other friends. I had a premonition of the incident in a dream I had the previous night. I told her not to go to the club but she refused. When the other three girls arrived, they all left together. When she did not return in the morning, I called her line but nobody picked. Later, a man claimed he found it.”

    Asked to describe the kind of person Annabel is, Ukamaka said that her roommate is a good Christian and hardworking, saying Annabel is a good tailor. “I believe Annabel is a victim of circumstance,” Ukamaka said.

    Ifeanyi said his family remained devastated by the incident. “We are devastated at the moment. When I received the news, I travelled from Onitsha to Awka to report the matter at the police station. The matter is still being attended to at SCID and “B” Division. We have even gone spiritual to seek God’s help to find my missing sister. Our Dad is late but mum is highly disorganised.”

    Ifeanyi said the matter had been reported to the UNIZIK management.

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited Annabel’s mother in Onitsha, she fought back tears as neighbours consoled her. She said: “I warned my daughter to stay clear of bad friends, but she would not listen. When she was admitted in a hospital a few months ago, my spirit never accepted the kind of girls who visited her. Now, they have done their worst. I can’t see my daughter, now. Where is my only daughter? Annabel was seven months in my womb when my husband died.”

    Mrs Edeh said she had consulted a prophet, who confirmed to her that her daughter is alive but held captive somewhere. She claimed that the prophet informed her that it was Annabel’s friends that facilitated her ‘abduction’ and threatened to sue them if her daughter did not return within days.

    She added: “All I am asking is the safe return of my daughter. I have no other girl. If she was kidnapped, those holding her would have called us. I am confused. We are only praying to God and hoping that she returns home safe and alive. I am pleading with anyone, who knows her whereabouts, to give useful information that can help us to locate her.”

     

  • Woman held for girl’s murder, missing son

    A woman has been arrested for the murder of a four-year-old girl in Lagos.

    She was arrested by operatives attached to the Orile Police Station, following the death of Nosifat Mubo who was recovered after she was declared missing with her seven-year-old brother, Lateef, on October 3.

    Their father, Moshood Mubo of 305, Church Street, Lagos Island, reported at Adeniji Adele Police Station that two of his children left home around 6pm to buy biscuits on the street but did not return.

    On October 9, Lateef was recovered from a woman, Aminat Akanni of 20, Mosallashi Street, Alakara bus stop, Orile, who allegedly stole the siblings.

    When detectives at Orile Police Station, where the case was earlier reported, interrogated her, she confessed to stealing the siblings and taking them to where she “murdered” Nosifat.

    Further investigations revealed that Aminat is the step-mother of the children she stole, “owing to a misunderstanding she had with her husband and his first wife.”

    The woman was said to have confessed to drowning the child and dropping her dead body at Orile where she was discovered by the police.

    The command’s spokesman Kenneth Nwosu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), confirmed the incident, saying that the case had been transferred to Orile Police Station for further action.