Tag: Niger

  • NSCDC nabs three suspected mast vandals in Niger

    NSCDC nabs three suspected mast vandals in Niger

    The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps ( NSCDC ), Niger Command, has arrested three suspected mast vandals in Bosso Local Government Area of the state.

    Mr Philip Ayuba, the Commandant of the NSCDC in the state, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Minna on Monday.

    Ayuba said that the suspects were arrested by the Corps following an intelligence information received from a good Samaritan.

    Those arrested include: Friday Samuel (25 years) Mark Ayuba (23 years) and Awal Ali (30 years).

    ” They were arrested in possession of 1200 meters of telecommunications armour cable, two diggers and two galvanised steels which they used in perpetrating the crime,” he said.

    The commandant said that the suspects had since owned up to the crime and made confessional statements.

    He said that the suspects came into the state from Adamawa and Yobe to look for means of livelihood but due to their inability to secure a job as they claimed, they indulged in the act.

    He said that the suspects would soon be charged to court after investigation.

    Ayuba called for more support from residents in the state by giving with useful information that would lead to the arrest of criminals.

    Read Also: NSCDC uncovers prostitution ring among students in Borno

  • NCS collects N2.1bn in Niger

    NCS collects N2.1bn in Niger

    The Niger Area Command of the Nigeria Customs Service ( NCS ), collected N2.1 billion revenue from January to October, the area comptroller, Benjamin Binga, has said.

    Binga made this disclosure in an interview in Minna on Friday.

    “Our revenue target for the year is N2.8 billion and so far, we have collected N2.1 billion,’’ he said.

    He expressed optimism that the command would meet the target due to the commitment of its personnel and concrete measures put in place to ensure diligence in revenue collection.

    Binga warned smugglers and others aiding and abetting them to desist from any form of smuggling.

    The comptroller said that the service would go extra miles to confront the  smugglers.

    “We are ready through the various security strategies put in place to ensure the arrest and prosecution of all those involved in smuggling,’’ he said.

    Binga called for more support from the border communities to assist the service with intelligence information about the movement of smugglers.

    NAN

  • Ex- governor Aliyu docked for money laundering

    Ex- governor Aliyu docked for money laundering

    Former Niger governor Babangida Aliyu was on Thursday arraigned before a Federal High Court in Minna on charge of money laundering.

    The ex governor was arraigned alongside a former Commissioner of Environment, Umar Nasko, on 8-count charge of criminal conspiracy and money laundering.

    The offences are contrary to section 18(a) of the money laundering Act, 2011 as amended and punishable under section 15(3) of same Act.

    The two are accused of laundering ecological funds of over N1.940bn released by the Federal Government to the state in 2014.

    The case was transferred from the Federal High Court Abuja to the Minna division at the instance of the defendants.

    When they charges were read to the defendants, they both pleaded not guilty.

    The EFCC prosecutor, Ben Ikani, thereafter prayed the court to remand the accused persons in prison and adjourn the matter for commencement of hearing.

    Ikani urged the court to refuse the accused persons bail given the seriousness of their offence and the magnitude of the punishment.

    Counsel to the first and second defendants, Olajide Ayodele (SAN) and Mamman Osuman (SAN), however, prayed the court to use its discretion to admit their clients to bail.

    They both argued that if granted bail the accused persons will provide reasonable sure ties to stand for them.

    In her ruling, the presiding judge, Yellim Bogoro, admitted the defendants to bail in the sum of N250m each and two sureties, one of whom  must be a civil servant not less than the level of a director.

    Bogoro also ordered them to surrender their international passport to the court registry.

    She gave them 48 hours to fulfill their bail conditions and adjourned the matter until Jan.22, 2018 for hearing.

    NAN

  • Revenue: Customs collects N163m in October – Official

    Revenue: Customs collects N163m in October – Official

    The Niger Area Command of the Nigeria Customs Service ( NCS ), on Wednesday said that it had collected N163 million as revenue in October.

    The Area Comptroller of Customs, Mr Binga Benjamin, made this disclosure in an interview in Minna.

    He implored residents of the border communities to always provide the command some useful  information about  the activities of rice and vehicle smugglers.

    “We have put in place sensitive security measures in all identified illegal routes used by smugglers;

    “And we will continue to strengthen the existing cordial relationship with the border communities in order to prevent smuggling;

    “My area of supervision is a ‘no go area’ for any kind of smuggling business as armed personnel have been stationed there to prevent illegal activities”.

    He said that the area command would reward handsomely any person or group, who might provide useful information leading to  the arrest and prosecutions of  smugglers.

    NAN

  • Niger spends N4.3bn on schools’ renovation, furniture

    Niger spends N4.3bn on schools’ renovation, furniture

    Niger government said it spent N4.3 billion on renovation of 5,065 classrooms, construction of 123 blocks of classrooms and 2,0 96 toilets in some selected schools in the state.

    The Permanent Secretary in the state Ministry of Education, Alhaji Yahaya Garba, made this known in an interview in Minna on Wednesday.

    He said that the state government also provided furniture for the staff members in some selected schools.

    He explained that the expended fund was part of the counterpart funding from the Universal Basic Education Commission ( UBEC ) intervention programme for 2013 and 2014, which could not be accessed by the previous administration in the state.

    Garba further explained that part of the fund was used in reconstructing and renovating nine schools selected across the three senatorial zones of the state.

    He listed the schools and colleges renovated to include: Government Girls Modern School, Bida; Justice Idris Legbo Science College, Kutigi; Government Science College, Baro and Maryam Babangida Girls Science College, Minna.

    Others were: Government Science College Izom; Government Secondary School, Tegina; Mu’azu Commercial College Kotangora; Government Girls  Science School Kotangora and Government Secondary School, Rijau among others.

    According to him, the state government is collaborating with Abuja-based Baze University to train teachers that handle entrepreneurship studies.

    He said that entrepreneurship studies would be included in the curriculum of the nine of the schools renovated.

    Garba said that the state government would invest N10 million in the training, which would begin in November.

    The permanent secretary also said that the state government had disbursed N170 million to 7, 503 students studying in higher institutions of learning across the country and N55 million to 105 students studying abroad.

    NAN

  • NSCDC nabs cable vandal in Niger – Commandant

    NSCDC nabs cable vandal in Niger – Commandant

    The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps ( NSCDC ), Niger Command, has arrested one Mohammed Ndayagi for alleged vandalism of high tension aluminium conductor cable belonging to AEDC in Gbako Local Government Area.

    The Corps Commandant, Mr Philip Ayuba, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), in Minna on Tuesday.

    He said that the suspect was arrested by officer and men of the Corps on routine patrol in Gbako Local Government Area of the state for alleged vandalism of Abuja Electricity Distribution Company ( AEDC ) electric cables.

    He said that the suspect confessed to the crime during investigation but said they work as a cartel, saying that other suspects are being monitored for possible arrest.

    He said that the suspect would be charged to court after investigation.

    He called on members of the general public to imbibe the culture of providing intelligence information on residents tempering with public facilities to the security agencies.

    NAN

  • Niger, Benin pay Fed Govt N19 billion for electricity

    Niger, Benin pay Fed Govt N19 billion for electricity

    The  Federal Government has received $64.63 million, about  (N19.7 billion) from Niger and Benin Republics as payment for electricity supplied to them, the Minister of Power Works and Housing, Raji Babatunde Fashola, said yesterday.

    He said, the Nigeria Electricity Bulk Trading Company (NBET) is expected to work out the modalities before onward distribution of the fund to the Electricity Distribution Companies (DisCos).

    He spoke at the 21st Monthly Power Sector Ministerial /Stakeholders meeting in Asaba, Delta State. It was hosted by Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC).

    The minister had earlier commissioned the 215MVA Asaba sub-station transformer, which, he said, will reduce the incidence of load shedding in the area.

    But speaking in the meeting, Fashola said: “I have some good news for you as well. Some money has come in form the power we sell to Benin Republic and Niger Republic; people wonder why this is so. They are a product of treaties and agreements.

    “They also help our own economy.  So we have a total of $64,630,055 that has been recovered. So, NBET will work out the modality for distribution. And hopefully by next month, you too, should be able to report that you have received an alert.”

    The minister also announced that the Federal Executive Council had approved to resolve a meter contract dispute that it entered with a contractor since 2003, but the government’s approval last Thursday resulted in a court settle which implies that the contractor can now have N37billion plus the interest that accrued over the time for provision of meters to the DisCos.

    Fashola  urged interested DisCos to liaise with the ministry and contractor for supply of meters to their customers, adding that the deal is strictly between the contractor and the power firm while the ministry is only to make the facilitation with the meter supplier.

    He however urged the parties to note that the agreements will reach on meter supply will be subject to the regulation that the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) is about to present.

    He said: “But on a progressive note, I am also happy to report that the approval by the Federal Executive Council to resolve a meter contract dispute entered into since 2003, has now culminated in a court settlement that was concluded November 9.

  • Father, son arrested over killing of 100-year old woman

    Father, son arrested over killing of 100-year old woman

    An eighty-year old grandfather, Kwacha Manu and son, Likita Manu have been arranged by the Niger state Police Command for  alleged involvement in the death of  a 100 years old woman, Inne Kaiyo in Marke Gada Maje, Rijau Local Government of Niger State.
    Inne is said to be the mother of Kwacha and grandmother of Likita.
    Investigations revealed that Kwacha allegedly killed his mother for purportedly killing Likitas’ daughter who is his grand daughter, through witchcraft in Gada Maje.
    It was gathered that following the death of 17 years old Magajiya, her grandfather, Kwacha who could not bear the pain of the loss of his grandchild used sticks to flog his mother to death.
    According to reports Inne Kaiyo had allegedly used her witchcraft to kill some people in her extended family with Magajiya as the 9th victim.
    Kwacha who admitted to have flogged his mother claimed that he only flogged her on her legs which was not enough to have killed her.
    ” After killing my grand daughter, I could not just let her go free, so I used a little dry stick to cane her on legs and the same time asking her why she killed her great grandchild, who took care of me, unlike her that does nothing for me. And  she just died.
    ” The case of my grand daughter is a well known issue in our area to leaders, people and every efforts we made to free the young girl all failed. She died on the way to the hospital at 8am, last week Thursday,” he stated.
    Asked how they knew his mother was responsible, Kwacha said, ” We got to know through my late grand daughter, Magajiya, when she was sick. She cried and begged her great grand mother, Inne Kaiyo to release her soul. And we all begged my mother to release her and she refused. I am also aware that my mother was a witch.”
    Saddened  by the loss of his mother and grand daughter, Kwacha said, ” Its really painful, but we have taken it as an act of God.”
    The father to Magajiya, Likita said he was not in the village when the event occurred and that he had no hand in the killing of his grandmother.
    ” I don’t know why the police arrested me. Aside, from pain of loosing my daughter, my two other children are critically sick back home. Since, the incident happened, I have not even seen the corpse of my late child. And I have no issue with my father over what happened, its an act of God.”
    Parading the suspects, the State Police Public Relations Officer, Abigail Unaeze said the father and son were arrested for culpable homicide and have confessed to have committed the crime.
    She said that the case would soon be charged to court.
  • Niger set aside N308m for road project

    Mashegu Local Government Area, Niger, on Sunday said that it has earmarked N308 million for the construction of 15-kilometre road linking the council Headquarters and other parts of the state.

    Malam Saidu Kaboji, chairman of the council, made this known to newsmen after inspecting the progress of work on the road, which was already 75 per cent completion.

    Kabogi, who did not give the amount of money that has been paid to the contractor out of the contract sum, said that the local government could not boast of any access road to the council headquarters.

    “Since our local government was created in 1996 by late Gen. Sani Abacha’s administration, despite the fact that it has the highest allocation from the federation account, this road had been neglected,’’ he said.

    He said that the project, which has six month completion period, was awarded in July and was expected to be completed before the end of the year.

    The council boss said that the project when completed would boost economic activities of the area and increase revenue base of the council.

    “This road project when completed will reduce the stress of our people using the road and encourage farmers to bring their farm produce to the market,’’ he said.

    He noted that despite the accusation of financial misappropriation against the council by some opposition in the area, the construction of the road remained one of the achievements of his administration.

    “This road is one of the priorities of my administration because I see it as not only a disgrace that a local government that was created 21 years ago cannot boast of an access road. This lack of access road had brought untold hardship on the people.

    “Our people are predominantly farmers and when they harvest their produce, they find it difficult to move them to the market. This explain why after we were done with electrification of about 60 communities, providing them with transformers, we decided to embark on this road construction,” he said.

     

  • U.S., Niger disagree on what happened on fatal mission

    U.S., Niger disagree on what happened on fatal mission

    A month after an Islamist ambush in Niger killed eight U.S. and Nigerien troops, the two sides’ officials still cannot agree on the sequence of events leading to the incident.

    Four soldiers from each nation were killed when a joint patrol was attacked on Oct. 4 by dozens of militants with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.

    The incident drew attention to the little-known U.S. military presence in Niger at a time when many Americans are weary of U.S. involvement in conflicts abroad and Nigeriens are chafing at the growing presence of foreign troops on their soil.

    The U.S. has 800 soldiers operating in the largely desert West African nation, more than France, which has 4,000 in the wider Sahel trying to tackle Islamist militancy.

    The main U.S. base in Africa is in Djibouti, which supports about 4,000 personnel.

    A Pentagon investigation into the incident, led by a two-star general from U.S. Africa Command, may take weeks.
    The Pentagon says it has not settled on any final version of events.

    Through interviews in Niger’s capital Niamey and Washington, Reuters has tried to piece together the events of Oct. 3 to Oct. 6, when the last U.S. soldier’s body was recovered.

    Accounts by Nigerien and American officials differ over the mission’s objectives, and whether and how they may have changed.

    The one consistent thread is that they appear to have been woefully unprepared for their enemy.

    U.S. and Niger officials agree that on Oct. 3, 12 U.S. Special Forces and 30 Nigeriens left Niamey and headed north to the Mali border.

    The Pentagon said 26 similar patrols had taken place in the area in the past six months without enemy contact.

    After that, the stories of the two sides diverge.

    “It was an intelligence mission but also a mission of an operational nature,” Niger Interior Minister Mohamed Bazoum told Reuters in an interview.

    “It was in a zone that was considered safe, not enemy territory.”

    Specifically, the mission aimed to detain and question a suspected recruiter for Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, an Islamic State affiliate, according to a senior Nigerien security source with knowledge of the operation and two mid-level government sources, all of whom declined to be named.

    The senior source said the mission was thought low enough risk that they had no armoured vehicles or body armour.

    U.S. officials vehemently contradict this account.

    “The service members involved in this unfortunate incident were unequivocally not directed to do a ‘kill or capture mission’.

    “They were on a reconnaissance mission,” the Pentagon said in statement sent to Reuters on Thursday.

    The Pentagon added that it would provide more details once the investigation is complete.

    All three Nigerien sources said the target was a mid-ranking commander called Doundou Chefou who was recruiting disgruntled youths from the Fulani ethnic group along Niger-Mali border.

    A Nigerien sources said that Chefou commanded Islamic State fighters affiliated to the movement led by an Arabic-speaking north African called Adnan Al-Sahrawi.

    According to the senior Nigerien security official, the team initially sought Chefou out near a remote border village on Oct. 3.

    He said they found a militant camp there but no fighters.

    The official said after that, Nigerien intelligence officials on the team received fresh orders from their headquarters to pursue him in the village of Tongo Tongo, so they stayed the night nearby.

    Three U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that while it is true the team was given an additional task mid-mission, it was never in pursuit of a militant.

    The U.S. officials said their soldiers were asked to work with the Nigerien troops to be on standby to help a second U.S. military team whose mission was indeed to pursue a militant.

    That mission was called off, however.

    It is unclear when or why.

    “Did the mission change? That’s one of the questions being asked. I can’t tell you definitively the answer to that question,” Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in October.

    The U.S. officials said the first team was asked to gather intelligence on the militant.

    The Americans could do this under U.S. military rules of engagement that allow American forces to accompany partner forces only when the chances of enemy contact are “unlikely.”

    Asked about the existence of a second mission, none of the Nigerien sources were aware of it.

    U.S. and Nigerien officials agree the team was ambushed after they met local leaders in Tongo Tongo on Oct. 4.

    One of the Nigerien government sources said the militants first came with just a few gunmen with AK47s on motorbikes to slow them down, and later brought out heavier 12.7mm machine guns, sniper rifles and rocket-propelled grenades.

    That might explain why the team took an hour to call for help, one of the issues that has most disturbed senior Pentagon officials, because the initial attack may have only involved light arms.

    A few minutes after the team called for air support, a surveillance drone appeared, providing a live feed, but it took another hour before French military aircraft arrived.

    Diplomatic sources said they were unable to drop bombs because of how close the fighting was.

    One U.S. official said at least some of the four U.S. soldiers killed were then separated from the convoy.

    They included Sgt. David Johnson, whose body was not recovered for two days.

    It is unclear why.

    It is unlikely the U.S. will back away from Niger because of its central location in the Sahel and because of the proliferation of militant groups around it, including Nigeria’s Islamic State-linked Boko Haram and al-Qaeda affiliates.

    Several current and former U.S. officials with Africa experience said they expected U.S. military focus on the Sahel to grow, not decrease.

    Retired general Donald Bolduc, who led U.S. special operations in Africa until June, said the military should retain a small “footprint” in Africa but needed more intelligence and surveillance resources and medical and air support.

    He said while the most assets have gone to the Middle East and Afghanistan, “there needs to be … a different perspective on how we allocate the resources between theatres.”

    He expressed surprise at the idea that the unit which was ambushed had been redirected to focus on a militant leader.

    Senior militant leaders are normally well protected, Bolduc said, with rings of security guards and layers of militants who communicate with one another via radio.

    “I‘m as confused about it as you are,” he said. “That’s not how it’s done. … The resources and planning didn’t seem to be there for that kind of operation.”

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