Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • JUST IN: Another injured FUOYE student dies

    One of the injured students during a clash on Tuesday between Police and protesting students of Federal University Oye Ekiti (FUOYE) has been confirmed dead.

    The deceased, Okonofua Joseph aka Joseph Icon, was a 300- level student of department of Biology Education.

    He also doubled as the Social Director of Faculty of Education Students Association.

    Our correspondent gathered he was shot by the police while walking on the streets.

    He was moved to the medical centre of the institution and transferred to Federal Medical Center, Ido, Ekiti State where he died.

    Though he was responding to treatment, he was said to have died in the early hours of Wednesday.

    Read Also: FUOYE shut as students attack Fayemi’s convoy

    The Students Union President, Oluwaseun Awodola, confirmed the development in a telephone interview with our correspondent.

    But the University’s Public Relations Officer, Mr Godfrey Bakje, was yet to respond to an SMS request for confirmation.

    His death brings to two the numbers of students killed during the protest while several injured are receiving treatment.

    Police operatives have been deployed to Oye and Ikole campuses of the institution, which has been shut down indefinitely.

  • JUST IN: Buhari chairs FEC meeting

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday presided over the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting.

    The meeting, which is the first under the second term administration of President Buhari, started around 11am in the Council Chamber with rendition of the National anthem.

    In his brief remarks at the beginning of the meeting, the President told the ministers that they cannot afford to fail Nigerians.

    Reminding them of the oath they took three weeks ago, he said they must give selfless service to the nation.

    At the meeting were the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha, Head of Service, Winifred Oyo-Ita and National Security Adviser, Babagana Monguno.

    Read Also; Buhari mourns former Vice Chancellor, Prof Adeniyi

    After confirmation of the appointment of the 43 Ministers by the Senate and two-day retreat in the Banquet Hall, the ministers were sworn in by the President on the 21st of August, 2019.

    Since the swearing in, the President had given the ministers some weeks to familiarise themselves with their ministries.

    The FEC meeting was still in progress at the time of filing this report.

    Details shortly…

  • BREAKING: PEPT strikes out portions of Atiku’s petition containing criminal allegations against security personnel

    In its second ruling on Wednesday, the PEPC upheld argument by INEC that it was wrong by the petitioners to raised criminal allegations of intimidation, harassment, corruption, etc against security personnel and some named persons, but who are not parties to the petition.

    The PEPC, in the second ruling on a motion by INEC, said the court lacked the vires (powers) to entertain any criminal allegations against any person, who is not before it.

    It proceeded to strike out portions of the petition by Atiku and the PDP, where such allegations are contained.

    Read Also:  Tribunal dismisses INEC’s motion against Atiku’s lead counsel

    Earlier in the ruling, the court upheld the petitioners’ contention that, issues of qualification and whether or not a candidate supplied false personal information to INEC before the election, could be heard before or after an election.

    The court said questions about a candidate’s qualification could be pre and post elections issues that could be heard being either a High Court or an election tribunal.

    It held that it has jurisdiction to determine thi issue of whether or not Buhari was qualified to contest the election and whether or not held lied in the personal information contained in the affidavit he submitted to INEC as alleged by the petitioners.

    Details shortly…

  • BREAKING: Tribunal dismisses INEC’s motion against Atiku’s lead counsel

    Presidential Tribunal on Wednesday dismissed the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) motion arguing that Atiku’s lead counsel, Livy Uzoukwu, is not a legal practitioner called to the Nigerian Bar.

    The tribunal held that INEC’s allegation is unfounded and that Uzoukwu was indeed called to the Nigerian Bar.

    Read Also: Buhari directs immedite conclusion of Minimum wage adjustment negotiation

    The tribunal also ruled that the lead counsel of the PDP was conferred senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN) in 1992, and proceeded to strike out the motion as filed by INEC.

    Details shortly…

  • Buhari directs immediate conclusion of Minimum wage adjustment negotiation

    Worried by the delay in the commencement of the implementation of the new National Minimum wage, President Muhammadu Buhari has directed the immediate conclusion of negotiation on the consequential adjustment between the government and the Joint National Public Service Negating Council to pay way for the implementation of the new wage regime.

    The President has also directed the setting up of a Presidential Committee on Salaries and Wages which will be saddled with the responsibility of receiving complains and reviewing salaries and work schedule as well as assigning appropriate salaries to different categories of workers.

    Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige who disclosed hen he received the leadership and members of the Labour Correspondents Association of Nigeria (LACAN) in his office said the President has directed that a time limit be set for the conclusion of negotiation between government and workers.

    Negotiation between the government and workers representatives have stalled severally as a result of both sides holding on to their presentation and refusing to shift ground.

    At the last sitting of the negotiating team, it was agreed that the government team should take both presentation to the President for intervention, while a meeting was scheduled for September 4th, but was later rescheduled.

    Ngige said the President was worried that the delay in concluding negotiation will lead to a huge backlog of arrears that many states may not be in a position to pay as the states were waiting for the conclusion of negotiation at the federal level.

    The Minister disclosed the intention of government to reinvigorate factory inspectorate in the country to ensure that workers work in decent work environment saying “my department of inspectorate, as well as Employment and Wage, are going to do more. We are going to fund them so that we can star full factory inspection and make sure that nobody is under employed and that those in employment get what they deserved in the world of work so that they can have decent work.

    Read Also: Buhari mourns former Vice Chancellor, Prof Adeniyi

    “Part of it is the new minimum wage which the President signed in April. It is a pity that after signing it, May came and a lot of us were sent on compulsory leave. We are now coming back from leave. If you remember, a committee was set u and I was a member.

    “When we left, the Permanent Secretary took our place and were negotiating with the Joint negotiating Council on the consequential adjustment. The states are waiting for that and it is not proper for us not to fast track that negotiation so that even the states will not have too much backlog to pay when the consequential adjustment is concluded.

    “We have our own budgeted for in the 2019 budget and we are going to also budget for it in the 2020 budget. We are concerned about the states because some of the states are not proactive like us.

    “So, the sooner we conclude at the federal level and the Joint Negotiating Councils in the states takes it from there and negotiate with the states, the better for everybody. If we spill this into next year, I am not sure how many states will be able to pay the backlog which will lead us to another round of negotiation.

    “It is the determination of the President and this administration to fast track the negotiation on consequential adjustment. I have just received a correspondence from the Chief of Staff to the President and we are putting a deadline to that negotiation.

    “We are fast-tracking it because the government will also want to put in place a Presidential Committee on Salaries and Allowances that will be able to take request after this consequential adjustment.

    “That same committee will appraise the level of workload and evaluate all cadre of work and come out with salaries and allowances commensurate with each. It is one of the things that the government has decided and I have just seen the correspondence.

    “When the details are out, we will let you know. That is to show workers both in the public and private sector that this government is labour-friendly and we want them to be in the decent work world.”
    The Minister traced the recent security challenges in the country to increasing level of unemployment, saying “we have seen the symptom called unemployment which are very visible.

    “When you hear about Boko Haram, that is one of the symptoms, when you hear about banditry and IPOB, it is one of the symptom of jobless people. So, for me, the President has decided that we must fight unemployment. We have to fight because the indices are terrible and that does not call for cheers. We have to decide and wear our thinking cap and take our country away from the doldrums.

    “The President is committed to recreating the middle class in Nigeria. He is committed to lifting at least 100 million people out of poverty and the only way if for our economy to improve. When our economy improves, we would deal a big blow to poverty, social insecurity and also insecurity of lives and property. We have to make our country a better place because we cannot run away from that. We all have a collective responsibility.

    “This Ministry will come out with many programmes that will help the government to recreate the middle class that has vanished from the country. We have a situation now where you have the top most rich who are very rich and those at the bottom. Even down there at the bottom, you still have people who cannot be compartmentalised into the middle class.

    “Those who are work in Nigeria, the government is trying its best. We have many programmes that has kept people at work. We have refused redundancy being declared, we are fighting casualisation and we are not happy with contract appointment. We don’t want contract appointment in the private sector. We want people given their jobs with full benefit.”

  • Buhari mourns former Vice Chancellor, Prof Adeniyi

    President Muhammadu Buhari has sent condolences to the family of former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ilorin, Professor Emeritus Adeoye Adeniyi, with an assurance that his contributions to national development, especially the educational sector, will always be remembered.

    The President, in a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Chief Femi Adesina, commiserated with the Governing Board of the University of Ilorin, staff and students over the passing of the 4th Vice-Chancellor of the university, who served for seven years, leaving behind a strong legacy of academic excellence.

    Read Also: LIVE UPDATES: Buhari vs Atiku: Tribunal ruling on 2019 election

    As a renowned Professor of Pediatrics and Child Health, President Buhari affirmed that the late Vice-Chancellor’s choice of teaching, research, and providing child care services was most remarkable, reflecting his love for humanity and ensuring a healthy society.

    The President prayed that God will grant Adeniyi’s soul eternal rest.

  • Security beefed up around Court of Appeal, Abuja

    Security was beefed up on Wednesday within the vicinity of the Court of Appeal, Abuja, as the Presidential Election Petition Tribunal delivers judgment in the petition filed by Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its candidate, Atiku Abubakar challenging president Muhammadu Buhari’s victory in the Feb. 23 general election.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that security personnel comprising mainly men of the Nigeria Police, the Department of State Services and the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps mounted security checks at both ends of the stretch of the road to the court.

    NAN reports that lawyers and journalists who arrived the court premises located in the Three Arms Zone, were subjected to checks by security personnel.

    NAN reports that tribunal on Aug.21 reserved judgment in the petition after parties adopted their addresses.

    Justice Mohammed Garba, Chairman of the five-man panel of justices had stated that the judgment date would be communicated to parties.

    NAN reports that the president was declared the winner of the election after scoring 15,191,847 votes as against Atiku’s 11, 262,978 votes.

    While adopting his address, Chief Wole Olanipekun, SAN, Counsel for Buhari, had described the petition as a sham as it lacked substance and merit.

    “I have handled a few electoral petition cases, this is one petition that yarns for help, for assistance and for evidence but could not get any.

    “Apart from the hype the matter has generated, there is nothing in law to support the allegations before the tribunal, Olanipekun said.

    On the qualification of the president, Olanipekun said Section 131 (b) had settled that matter.

    “I make bold to say that the Constitution and case laws had not compelled the candidates of the election to tendered certificates or attached same to INEC form before submission.

    “The laws only mandate any person contesting election in the country to have gone to school up to Secondary School level,’’ he said.

    On the issue of election results transmission by electronic means, the counsel said the use of such technology must be provided for in the Electoral Act.

    “The allegation on the management of server by INEC is vague. Where is the server? This is a million dollar question that the petitioners could not substantiate.

    “My Lords, this petition was not properly diagnosed, the action was ill-advised, I therefore urge the tribunal not to bow to sentiment or public opinion that does not represent the law.

    “This petition is liable to be dismissed with a considerable cost’’, Olanipekun said.

    On his part, Mr Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, Counsel for All Progressive Congress (APC) said he could not help but take the liberty to align himself with the submissions made Olanipekun.

    “My Lords it is disheartening to see that this petition still remains watery at this stage.

    “The petition made allegations they could not proof. We have done a table showing how the petitioners have proven the case so far.

    “The election took place in 119,976 Polling Units, 8,901 Wards in 774 Local Government Areas across the country.

    “It is sad therefore to see that the petitioners only called 62 witnesses. Out of this figure, only five witnesses gave direct evidence of what happened in polling units on the day of election.

    “I feel sad that this matter has been starved of evidence and therefore deserves to be dismissed,’’ Fagbemi said.

    Also, Mr Yunus Usman, SAN, Counsel for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) urged the panel to uphold all of its objections raised against the admissibility of all pieces of documentary and oral evidence led by the petitioners.

    Usman submitted that the electoral body conducted the Feb.23 presidential election in total compliance with provisions of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended).

    He also urged the panel to disregard the petitioners’ claims that the results of the election were transmitted electronically to a central server managed by INEC, adding that it was the “greatest lie of the century’’.

    Read Also: PDP chairman, Secondus arrives tribunal

    He submitted that it was laughable when the petitioners made pleadings that suggested that only the PDP and APC and their candidates contested the election.

    Usman prayed the tribunal to take judicial notice of the fact that the Electoral Act 2010 prohibited the transmission of election results electronically.

    According to him, the law only provides for manual transmission of election results.

    Usman said that all the witnesses presented by the petitioners admitted to the fact that transmission of election results electronically had no placed in the country’s statute books at the moment.

    In countering allegations that INEC abandoned its pleadings by not presenting witnesses, the counsel said the commission simply extracted salient pieces of evidence from the petitioners’ pleadings to solidify its defence.

    “It would have amounted to wasting the time of the tribunal for us to call witnesses when the petitioners could not discharge the burden of proof on allegations they had made,’’ he said.

    Usman thereafter prayed the court to dismiss the petition for lack of merit.

    Meanwhile, Dr Livy Uzoukwu, SAN, Counsel for the petitioners urged the tribunal to discountenance the addresses of the respondents, adding that the petitioners had indeed discharged the burden of proof.

    He said the tribunal must exercise its powers in good conscience to uphold the petition and return Abubakar as president.

    Uzoukwu further said the second respondent (Buhari) was unable to present his Secondary School Certificate before the tribunal in order to rest the allegation.

    “My Lords, we pray the panel to judiciously and judicially evaluate our evidence in context of whether we have justified our allegation against Buhari’s certificate or not.

    On the issue of server, Uzoukwu said INEC had operated, activated and stored the Feb.23 election results in a centrally controlled server.

    NAN reports that the tribunal would have to rule on all pending interlocutory applications filed by parties before delivering judgment on the main appeal.

  • BREAKING: PDP chairman, Secondus arrives tribunal

    National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Uche Secondus has also walked in.

    He is the latest of dignitaries to arrive at the venue of the much expected judgment in the petition by Atiku Abubakar and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    PDP and Atiku are challenging the outcome of the last presidential election, won by Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC).